THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, DAY EVENING, ju: 1:1: HEJOURNAL AS I i DPTENDK5T NEWSPAPER. 8. JACKSON... Pniiiuher ul.H.hwl -"Tf eilti (pt Bnnrfur) and evert Kiuidar nwrnlna at The. Journal Bul!d ing, rilta and lemhUl etreeta, rortliBd. Or. Entered it the fioatofflc t Portland. Or., for treneraleslon Uirousb fba mail eeond-eUaa H attrr. ..... V XELKPnoSRS Main TITS; Home," AWI. AH department renohed by thxe number. Tell tha operator what department you want. FOREIGN' APVEETIS1NO BEPRESKNTATIVK. BnJm(n ft Kentnor Co., Bnrnawlek BulMlna;, t2S Fifth imiH, New Tork 1007-08 Boye tiuliulnt-, Cbk-afo. Siihucrlptlm 'o raw by mall or t any addraaa in the Culted States. Canada or Mexico: DAILT. On yr.. .15.00 On month ... .80 BTJNDA. ,-. - 'One year... .....13.50 I On month.. I .33 ... . DAILY AND SUN DAT. One rr.....'...7.80 0n month....... I .(13 To be conscious that you ara. ignorant la a great step to knowledge. Disraeli. JfE AND GEORGE lOMETHING is- added to the gaiety r politics by the ef forts of a certain organ In Portland to parade and ex ploit. George Brownell as a political reformer, and as the paragon of po litical righteousness for the present time. "-Oregonlan. " ' Does the Oregonlan mean to dis parage Mr. Brownell? If so, how different its mood from that at the legislative session of 1903, when Mr. Brownell was the very apple of the Oregonlan' eyev.; There was then the coquetry of the sweet girl graduate and her bean between Editor Scott and Mr. Brownell, and when a great hope of being United States senator was upon Mr. Scott that night, he flashed a telegram to Mr, Brownell at Salem. It was a sweet, seductive telegram, and was phrased in these dulcet words: "Now Is the time; if you can help me, It will be appre ciated." Is It because George didn't help that "me" sow gives him the Icy eye? KEEP UP THE FIGHT TIIE FIGHT for the removal ot 1 the lockage charge at Oregon City has been won, but there la more fighting for the people of the region to do. The channel must be deepened and steamers that are Independent of the railroad . Hues must be operated. The Albany con vention realized this and named a committee to plan for larger use of the liver by shippers. Under real competition of . the boats against the railroads, wheat used to be trans ported from the head of navigation on the river to Portland for 7 cents per 100 pounds, i ,. The same process will give shippers the bene fit Of an even better rate now and to get that benefit, the Independent lines should be provided. The 're moval of the lockage fee will in It self be an encouragement to com peting lines. Shippers themselves can mightily increase this encourage ment by such cooperation in behalf of independent lines as is proposed by the committee named at the Al bany convention. , The freed river, and the steamboating sentiment that shippers tan make will In turn be stimulus to congress for continued deepening of the river channel. There Is literally no field in which Wil lamette valley cities and .Willamette valley shippers and consumers can do more to help themselves. V The fact that the fight for free locks has been won Is proof to them of what we can do if we only try. The locks fight was a. far harder struggle than that which is yet to be made can possibly be. Not in a spirit of antagonism to the railroads, but. in the endeavor to conserve the in terests ot the shippers, producers, merchants, artisans and consumers of a greater Willamette valley, the struggle for a deepened and navi gated Willamette should be pursued. It is a struggle that can be won, and one in which the rewards will be worth almost infinitely more than they will cost in effort r THE EXPECTED AS WAS expected, the Oregonlan newspaper advocates the pro posed grant of waterfront to the 0. R. & N. by which the rarirpad i':- will almost : completely belt with i its - line : the east i side waterfront and forever " keep ' any other, railroad line from entering that part of the city. It has always aided and abetted Bchemes by which the publio interest has been sacri ficed to private interest It says: : "The Journal newspaper, organ of the interests that seized streets ' In Portland during a period of 30 year for their own aggrandizement, with out rendering any return .whatever to the city, is strangely excited now oyer this exchange of benefits be- i tween the city and the railroad, but' its distress is useless." ; " r ; J Since The Journal came into ex istence it has opposed every improp er gift of streets attempted In Port land, fit now opposes the belting of the waterfront of (his city by any tingle railroad, and contends that It should be the policy to keep the city wide open to every railroad that wants-- tcr reach the waterfront , It maintains that every railroad should nave equal privileges in the etty and that no single railroad should have, a monopoly-of the waterfront. The Journal ; opposed the great gift of a franchise by which the Port land Railway,'; Light & Power com pany got practical control of : the gonlan advocated it. - The Journal rxposod and opposed 4he attempted ;,!ock Bottom swindle; the jOregonlan advocated It. The Journal's expos al i -a broke up the Ciystem under tklithe Oregonlan pocketed $50,- 000 in onejpf the worst steals ever pulled oft In this city under the gulso of a delinquent tax list; the Ore gonlan profited enormously from the scheme and advocated its retentldn Before it makes further charges against The Journal the Oregonlan should humbly beg the pardon ot all Oregon for the $25,000 telegram sent to Salem during the legislative session of 1903. Until the Oregon lan has cleared its skirts of that charge it Is not in position to at tack anything or anybody. Twenty five thousand dollars for the pur chase of a bunch of votes for Mr. Scott for United States senator, the patronage of the office trafficked off even before there was an elec tion, and the Influence of the Ore gonlan and Telegram to beat Mitch ell were the terms of the $25,000 telegram as charged by Lincoln Stef fens in his well known book, and as published throughout the United States by the American magazine. It Is a charge that no one has ever at tempted to- disprove, although right here in Portland are the men by whom the truth or falsity of the transaction . can be established. Caught, as it has been so many times with the goods on, the Oregonlan Is not in position to" rebuke sin even in a sooner dog, much less attack a re spectable newspaper against which not one specification of infidelity to the public ever has been brought REJECTS THE TOUNPATION THE DICTATION as to educa tional "matters attempted by the management of the Carne gie Foundation la resented at Brown university of Providence, R. I. A special committee of the board of control ha recommended to the corporation that the university shall not accept for that Institution the pensions the Foundation provides un der certain requirements to retiring college professors. Six of the nine members united in rejecting the pen.-1 sions and the remaining three did noJJ join in a minority report. The ma jority members take the ground that the Foundation, so far from Increas ing the independence of those col leges to which it gives aid, tends rather to restrict it Their belief is that if pensions are to be given, the institution ; should provide - its own pension fund ' 1 1 ' The action at Brown la the logical result of the dictation attempted by the Foundation. It ha assumed the high prerogative of attempting to di rect the educational system of states. In a letter to T the governor of that state, it demanded that Ohio change its educational arrangements,' even with reference to normal schools, or otherwise no pensions-would be af forded by the Foundation to retiring professors in that ; state. ; It : pre scribes entrance requirements re gardless of whether or not a state is sufficiently advanced educationally and; unless the Carnegie standard is met, the Carnegie pension is with held. In practical effect, the man agement assumes that for the few paltry pensions it pays, the Founda tionals to be permitted, to direct the educational system of . the country. The independence of Brown univer sity in rejecting the so-called bene fits is likely to be followed by other institutions. The Unlted States com missioner! of education, the United States congress, the state superin tendents of public instruction and the legislatures of the various states. as well as the people of the country ought not to resign tneir functions as to education and give them over en tirely to the Carnegie Foundation. - r BEEF NEVER BOJSIGH - BEEF WAS never so high before in June, or indeed at any. time of year, since the latter years M A. 1 a . m. ., oi ine great viivii war, wnen u was quoted in greenback prices. It 1b a prime necessity of food, not only for the rich but for the compara tively poor; for the worklngmen and their families, in this country. These men earn only moderate wages; most of them support families and live at home; hence the constantly rising price of beef is an important matter. Among the multitude of conven tions held lately was one of the Mas ter, Butchers', Association of New York state and among the resolu tions they adopted was this: "We de mand the .elimination . of tariff on animals used as human food. We attribute the higher cost of living to a great extent to the tariff on the necessities of life and principally that on meat. "" '. These men' speak " not " only for themselves and their trade, but, for all consumers of moderate means. American beef, packed in Chicago, Omaha or Kansas City, is sold today In Europe cheaper than it Is sold in New York, In Illinois, in Kansas or in Oregon. It cannot be presumed that it is sold in Europe at a loss; the Inevitable conclusion is that it is sold in America at too high prices, at trust prices. The butchers say so themselves. They do not get the ex tra profit, it goes to the trust Meat foods ought to come in en tirely or nearly free of duty, They should hear no more than a revenue duty, at most. This would not hurt stockgrowersbecauBe the trust fixes. pretty nearly and ' generally, the prices paid for animals, as well as the prices tor meats. The thing to do is to break the cinch of the trust on both" producers and consumers, and this can be done effectually only by taking off or greatly reducing the duty on food animals. ; . . . Probably the production of cattle has not declined as has been repre- jgqtediJb.ui.it It has, leLoiaJmport cattle and feed the people beef. This would also add Immensely to our vol ume of commerce '-with Soutlj Amer ica, Mexico and Canada. " The butchers are right; the tariff enables the meat trust to charge, ex tortionale prices for meat foods, and benefits nobody but themselves and some Republican politicians. The people have to "pay, pay, pay." , UNION DID NOT ASSEMBLYIZE E' VEN assemblyltes will do well to scrutinize carefully the alleged Information on which the Ore gonlan is feeding them. - Other wise, they will be led into situations they will regret -In recounting yes terday the counties that had era braced the assembly, the Oregonlan declared that Union had done so. Union has done nothing of the kind. The Union Republican says: "Theeffort Jast week to secure a meeting of the county Republican central committee for the purpose of passing upon the assembly plan did not bring forth a full attendance, and another meeting has been called for Saturday. The fact bf the matter is that the people do not think much of the assembly plan, county . officials have no use for it and politicians generally are fighting a little shy. of it until they can See which, way the cat is to Jump; The central ; com mittee will have a difficult task in sizing up public sentiment over the county, but if there is no response to a call it Is fair to 'presume that party representatives want none of it" 1 . But it is the interesting feature that is to come. Last Saturday was the day for the adjourned meeting, and as will be seen by a dispatch In .The Journal's news columns, no meeting was held. That is the way Union county went for the assembly. That is a sample of the "splendid en thusiasm" with which the tower. says Oregon counties are embracing its mongrel folly. SHORTENED HIGH SCHOOL COURSES - t A TWO YEARS' high school course is an interesting event uation in Chicago. , The Record-Herald says the plan of of fering the new course is meeting with wide approval. It addsthat, It is a well ascertained fact that not one in 100 among Chicago school children reaches the end of a high school course. ; The obstacle is financial inability to spend the four years required; The difficulty is InStact so clearly seen in advance that many pupils are deterred from entering high school at all." The new course is outlined In a bulletin Issued by the superintendent of the Chicago schools. The curricu lum banishes the dispersal of energy and Interest over the wide field of general culture and concentrates the pupils endeavor on topics that are fewer in number and more practical in purpose. The course Is so ar ranged as to give the pupil a thor ough training in some special course, together with instruction in such al lied subjects as will be Lelpf ul. : Its utilitarian value will be, that it will fix effort Hong definite and limited lines Instead of attempting to give a smattering in many fields. The experiment will be watched with much interest , It Is wldety charged by eminent educators that the high school has become the mere preparation for the college or uni versity, and that it has ceased to be of utilitarian value except to young Lpeople who are going deeply into cul tural education. The amazingly small per cent of high school graduates in proportion to the attendance in ele mentary schools is charged by these educators to the impractical field Into which the ' high schools have been pushed. The fact that in the collegiate course of the country's col leges there are only about 170,000 students, they maintain is proof that high school courses should be planned, not as a stepping stone to universities and colleges, . but as a completed education for high school pupils.. The new two years' course to be given the coming year in Chi cago is the fruit of agitation against the present high school system, and will be very likely to gain additional adherents for the more practical plan. .. "GENUINE REPUBLICANS" B' UT ASSEMBLY win be held. nevertheless, and all genuine Republicans will be fully rep resented In It Oregonlan. Now recurs the old question; who and what are "genuine" Republicans? Also, -why? 1 Mr. Simon is, we suppose, a "gen uine" Republican; .T.-B. Kay of Sa lem, is not , Then, why? And are there not a vast number of common people who have generally voted the Republican ticket, but whom the Ore gonlan would not admit as "genuine" Republicans? Who is to decide on genuineness? Evidently, the Oregonlan. But a lot. of ordinarily Republican voters don't regard the Oregonlan as their politi cal Bible any more. . Coos bay as well as the Columbia river is well provided for In the river and harbor blll- gets $400,000 for Its desired and needed channel im provement Some other Oregon riv ers and harbors are not sufficiently cared for, Uut on the whole Oregon cannot reasonably 'complain this time, v These appropriations will greatly aid its development ' Mr. Jack Johnson Informs ari Ig norant and wondering world that It Is summer in Australia when it Is winter here. He says that. this is very curious; he found it out by per sonal .experience. He had a fight In that couBtry-ooca on a yery. hot-day In December. This information should gain Mr. Johnson much pres tige and glory. Few of us were ever In Australia; a less number of us ever had a prize fight there In De cember. Having never been to school or traveled like Mr. Johnson, we sup posed that Australia was completely frozon up in December, the same as Labrador or Siberia. When Mr. Johnson wins, or gets licked, as the case may be, we doubt not that ho can get a position as professor of Geography in Chicago university. Senator La Follette has visited Roosevelt and may have elected him self to the Ananias club by reporting that he and the' former president talked politics, and that Rooseyelfis In fighting t trim," presumably meaning that he, Is getting ready to fight on La Follette's side. But Roosevelt may have been only draw ing the senator out ; The country needs a Roosevelt that is, a Roosevelt as estimated and portrayed- by- the Roosevelt enthus iasts; it heeds a big,: mightily influ ential, dominant man who wilt lead a fight for the Common People and who, if they are well served, will not care what becomes of Party. In the 'Marlon -TOttnty Republican assembly were 29 voterC-It was an Intensely enthusiastic "!' and an 1 im mensely representative gathering so the committeemen say. '. . Well, good advice is good, what ever its source; even If offered by a Democrat r Letters Frcrtn tlie People Raising Rates on the Gresham Line. Gates, Or.. June the Editor of The Journal. The announcement that the Portland Railway, Light & Power Co. Intends ' to advance its passenger rates on the O. W. P. division between the city limits' and Gresham comes like a bolt from the, heavens, and ; has aroused Indignant, protest from the peo ple living all along the line. The pres ent' rates were established seven years ago. Travel bas increased at such re markable rate that the company is taxed to accommodate lUlpatrons. Peo ple who use the line 4very day and patiently stand up in the coaches morn ings and evenings, unable to get seats, are dumbfounded at this evidence of avarice on the part of our publio car rier. . According to its own statement, the company Is doing a thriving busi ness and was never in more prosperous condition. James J. Hill has said: Double the traffic and I'll halve the rate." Our local carrier would advance the rate In the face of a tenfold In crease in traffic Who dlotates this un wlbe and shortsighted policy of creating a bitter publio sentiment by attempting to advance rates in the lace of a steadily and constantly growing busi ness? If our railroad officials want to pursue a policy that Inevitably leads to Socialism, they are now on the right track. CHARLES IL BENEDICT. The Common People's Day. The Philadelphia North American had notable editorial on the occasion of Roosevelt's homecoming, of which the following are extracts: This la a day of Jubilee. "y The sailing of one ship bearing; one man Into New York, harbor today pre sents the strangest condition In a na tion's history. Pleadingly, lovingly, trustingly, a proud people trained to boast of having a government of laws and not of men come thronging to one man, not in servile deferenoe, but in glad affection, clamoring: "We have missed you! We need you more than even It Is our crucial hour for the want of a friend! Speak) Take your time! But In the right hour speak, knowing that when you speak it Is to those who trust you and,: trusting, love you." . ; ... That la the real message that the common people of America will pass today to Theodore Roosevelt, outslnglng and putsparkllng any marconlgram. Fot this Is the -day of days ot Mr. Common People. - -- -; - - - Mr. Common People deserves his day. He is not such a futile, ignorant, in considerate individual as not to deserve something that Is all his own. In city flat and suburban home, in village coU tage and lonely farmhouse, there have been so many meetings in a way, po litical meetings of mute protest that it ts high time for an occasion of In spirational outburst of emotion. '' .' -.,;;.' i,'.:v( w So many thousands of men have felt that while the country they loved was growing richer and greater, while they had .been honest . and industrious and patriotic, they could not answer the Query of the woman's eyes why their children must quit school so soon and go to work; why her self sacrifices in the early years have meant noth ing; why to keep stomachs filled and backs clad It was necessary to part With' all the savings of the years.' Mi. Common Peoplet could not answer to himself those questions. However hard he worked, the more helpless he became. Some hideous unseen power was crushing him. He clung fast to the ideals of the fathers of the nation. He tried so hard to believe In his coun try and in democracy and all Ameri canism. But he was ground between the upper and nether millstones of priv ilege and politics until doubt of all our institutions sifted into' his soul. It is Mr. Common People's own day. He is not carrying a torch because he has been herded with other human cat tle to vote a pary ticket that has been hailed victorious at the polls where he has not really been represented. ; He Is not waving a flag because an admiral or a general, with good boys under him, has whipped lesser men In honor of "the" flag, that has come un happily to man less a guarantee of liberty and equality than it was meant to do for Mr. Common People. - Roosevelt's arrival means much more than Dewey'a or even than Grant's. The enemies then were alien. Those to be beaten now are within the nation's for tailed. And Roosevelt,' the square fight ing man, is the one and only one who came forward and told the disheartened garrison that, while the fight would be long and hard, It might be won. - :. . . ' :,;..; r: ; . " Mr. Common People knows that there was one man who was fought from first to finish, by all the agencies that make his life task harder. He knows that he and his fellows were impotent, dumb, hopeless sufferers. - He knows that Theodore Roosevelt stood first be hind him, then before and, while he lacked time for a knockout, gave that deadly enemy' a brace of black eyes and gave Mr. Common People at least time to breathe. ; ..;.;: .;,.'"- That is why this day Is the Unreason ing emotional' jubilee of the common people. Do not argue with them today. Thoy are cheering for Teddy Roosevelt And In our soul w believe today, more devoutly than ever before, that the voice of the people Is the voice of God. . ' National Issues. :-" From the Philadelphia Telegraph. The Oregonlan, of Portland, vhlch is classed as an Independent Republican journal, is on the lookout for a mauslve and monumental "Issue" which will fur nish the demarcation for opposing party COMMENT AND SMALL C1L1NGE Last call for June bride. . ? c cost of battleships Is also In- creas It's fine welther for either harvest or vacation. , Within a week now we shall know wnicti licked. ; Now President Taft feels better; per haps almost bully. . . . Beef steaks and Pullman berths are as high or higher than ever. -, .... ' ' ,'.;.''.. If Roosevelt atarta a new party it will have a big membership right away. Now Washington,1 D. C, wlir be a lonesome, muggy old town for a while. It Is quite commonly Supposed that It. will be a Simon-Republican assembly; No, Portland will not celebrate par. tlcularly. She's done had her celebra tion. Buy up the bridge bonds at home. This will add to Portland's already fine reputation abroad.- ... ' 1 .' V Pittsburg has had' another cloudburst But it will take more than water to clean up that town. ,.'; ' ....rve .:;;;."': Tor a man who has nothing, to say. Roosevelt continues to occupy a good deal of newspaper space. After all, sdme of the graduates learned something beside sports and athletics during the year, J.::. :'.:'..' s c-i; ;''!;" People srolna- to the mountains hmiM be especially careful at this season not to start any rorest ures. ' Oregon has a great supply of good things, but a few oil gushers would be welcome and would help -a lot v - The Oregon cherries taste Just as good as they look, and more than that in praise offthem could not be said. . ;'- m An exchange heads an editorial, "The Government's Cotton Suit" But can't the government afford a woolen suit? .But - if Arliona and New Mexico should elect Democratic senators, per haps the regulars would keep them out, after alL 4It will be a very poor crop year, ap parently in the eastern and middle west ern states, but the Pacific , northwest will turn out big crops, as usual , ' Next Monday the eloquent Fourth of July oratorwlU be heard numerously In the land. There will be millions of words, but perhaps not a new idea. When Arizona and New Mexico come In, there will be 48 stars on the flag, and that will be about the limit. Per haps Alaska will make the 49th and last. - ,'.''-'. ' .". ; : A Detroit "regular" paper alludes to them as "the friendless Insurgents.'.' Oh, they have millions of friends among the common people who don't talk very much. - ., A Kansas court has decided that It is the duty of pedestrians to dodge auto mobiles. But most pedestrians don't need a court decree to Induce them to dodge. . ; The Albany Democrat says there are 400 blind pigs in Portland, besides its 600 saloons. Being a strictly temperate and moral man, the editor of the Dem ocrat evidently could not nrove thin of tahls own personal knowledge. June 28 in History A great deal of Interest has always been manifested In the Great Eastern, the first big steamship to be built, and upon its first arrival In this country, on June 28, 1860, the newspapers were full of accounts of this "sea monster." Its subsequent use in conectlon with the laying of the Atlantic cable helped to continue this interest At the time of construction of the Great Eastern it was the largest ship in the world. It was completed in 1869 in England and started on Its trip from Southamp ton on June 17, 1860, crossing the At lantic in 11 days. , The length of the Great Eastern was 680 feet, beam 82, depth 48, and its gross tonnage 18,915. When this vessel is compared with the big steamships of today, It can readily be seen what a furore its appearance -in : our ' waters must - have ' created. The Mauretania and Lusatlnia, two of the biggest ships of today, are 790 feet In length, 88 feet wide and 66 feet deep, with a gross tonnage of 82,500. -. . During the year 1860 and the greater part of 1861 the Great Eastern made many voyages to and from Europe. In December, 1861, when political relations with the United States looked ominous, the Great Eastern, served as a troop ship. -, In 1864 negotiations were entered Into with tha Atlantic Telegraph ' company and 'the Telegraph Construction and Maintenance company for the employ ment of the Great Eastern as a cable laying ship. In 1867 the vessel .was con verted from $. cable-laying to a passen ger ship, in order to provide for the travel- to the Paris exposition. Later It war again used for cable work, and laid some of the most Important tele graphio cablese across the Atlantic, In the Mediterranean, In the Red sea, etc. In 1884 it became a coal hulk in the harbor of Gibraltar, and in 1887 it was sold, to be broken up, for $82,600. The Great Eastern reached New York on the twenty-eighth of June and was docked at 6 o'clock In the afternoon. The event created so much excitement In the city that business generally was neglected, and - multitudes of - people thronged the wharves ana roors to get a glance at tna .monster. wnen the boat, was passing Fort Lafayette in the harbor a salute was fired, which was promptly responded to from the four guns of the Great Eastern, and from this time onward, until her arrival in alignments In the fall congressional can vass and during the next national elec tion. Some of the editorial wisdom under the heading "A ; National Issue Needed" is thus uttered: , "No political party can stand united on any of the petty questions now agi tating congress. They are not national issues; they are sectional, i Tariff for revenue only Should be a national de mand, but such Is the humbug preached by politicians that it is yet impossible. The trend of socialism may add to the general confusion. That subject in volves many groups also.' The country needs an lssiuifof national and high moral Import. In none of the questions over .which congress has been contend ing Is there s.uch an Issue." There are people, plain voteri as well as practical politicians, who find the issues now before, congress, those that Interest the country, anything but triv ial or picayune. In the list of Issues which the Oregonlan sets up only. to topple overin a sor$ of Aunt-Sally-ln-the-alley gamewe note the curious omission bf such policies and tehdenciesi as conservation, downward revision of tbaiari;f.anohjiasiLoU.iyiqghjybat does the Oregonlan consider these if not the subject and text for political par ties? They certainly Interest-te people at large, particularly the related topics of a downwardly revised tariff law and the ; Increase in living expenses. "Na tional Issues," those that embitter and disrupt are happily not too frequent In NEWS IN BRIEF OREGON SIDELIGHTS Haying Is "in full blast."-' . Those beat. Dstlles peaches are hard to Urgent call Roseburg. dally fo residences In Springfield has employed an expert street ouuaer irom Los Angeles, Prairie Clt; ty, now become a railroad terminus, wi II be a big shipping point Many fine cherries are being shipped from Eugene to California and Puget The Eugene Register has a fine new press and has been enlarged . and im proved. ' Polk countrnan harvested over' S00 crans oi straw oerries irom xess man two acres. - . Some fine peaches were ripe and were put on the market in The Dalles last Thursday. - .. Aumsvllle has a new and "live" paper, the Advance, run by D. I. Seabury. It will help Aumsvllle grow.- ;. '..,.' . 'V ."' , V; '' i- Prominent Medford men are arrang ing to give a crowd of 200 of Spokane s leading men an automobile ride through the orchard district when ,they arrive In the valley about July t on their way to Reno. .-. ' -, Just now the boys of La Grande are having a hard time keeping away from the fruitgrower who is trying to em- ?loy cherry pickers. A great many of ho lads have stied up For the season, says the Observer, " , S ,; ,.. t. Contractors are hustling down, the cement walks in Union and our streets are a scene of "activity in consequence, says the Republican. - There , are no kickers, the people in general accept ing the order of the council as a good thing. . . Bryant's Park, where Albany win hold Its first annual Chautauqua, Is without doubt, one of the finest nat ural parks in the state, and through the untiring efforts of ..the Chautauqua management. Has been converted into one of the mosi picturesque spots in Linn county, says the Herald. -, .."-::- ' '.;.: .'.:-;;'- One of the strangest occurrences of the present day is reported -from Eu- Eene. The present incumbent of the ane county clerk's office announces his voluntary retirement from that of ficial position after 12 H years of con tinuous service.. He asserts that he has become weary with official life, i., There are no snakes on the plcnlo grounds this year, says the Brownsville times. Two boxes of snakes, great big ones, were sent to Brownsville for exhibition, but when the snake man found such exhibitions were prohibited the snakes were forwarded to Portland, where they eat 'em alive, This promises to be the best season in the history of this county, according to men who have lived here a long time and watched everything with care, says, the La Grande Observer. There is not a portion of the valley that la not show ing signs of great production and the farmers have their crops well in hand. .,.:;'. :'; ,,:' ?,:v: ;, ','.0 A California man said: "1 have in vested in farm lands In all parts of the coast country, from the Mexican border to the British Columbia line, and have paid from $16 to $15u0 an acre for It but I consider my Klamath county pur chose the best I have ever made. ; It is. I think, the best land in any of the coast states." TLc Great Eastern the North river, it was one continual ovation to the distinguished visitor. Cannon boomed, steam whistles shrieked, flags were dipped in graceful wel come, people . hurrahed, handkerchiefs waved, and demonstrations of a kindly nature came from every quarter. At the present time several times dally largor vessels pass in and out of the harbor of New York with ho attention being paid to their coming or going. When the vessel was nearly opposite the battery, the chimes of Old Trinity church were heard across the water, playing "Rule Britannia. Strange to say, only 43 passengers could be ound In the year 1860 to "venture" on the first voyage of "the most splendid ship that ever floated in the ocean"; but this was owing, of course, to the novelty and vastness of tha experiment and to tha serious doubts which had been so frequently expressed, from the very first conception of the enterprise, as to the manageableness of such a vessel In a storm at sea ' -.;.v During the time the vessel lay In port she was visited by tens of thousands of persons, who gladly paid the admis sion fee charged to Inspect the majestic structure. Large excursion parties came from all the principal cities of the Union, to view her lofty, walls of iron; her stupendous machinery, , and her marvelous Internal arrangements; and, in due time, opportunity was afforded those who wished to witness her sail ing qualities to be carried by the noble ship on pleasure excursions to Cape May and elsewhere a privilege which thousands availed themselves of, in cluding many persons eminent in nauti cal and scientific matters. " On June 28, 1776, occurred the fa mous battle of Fort Moultrie. It Is the date upon whiah Thomas Jefferson Wrote the Declaration of Independence In 1776; of the battle of Monmouth In 1778, and of the sea fight rbetween the Wasp and the Reindeer In 1814. It is the birthday of Peter , Paul Rubens, the distinguished painter (1677); the 'Earl of Derwentwater (1689); James Robert son, "The-Father of Tennessee" (1742); Richmond - M. Pearson, - the southern Jurist (1800); John Y.-Brown,-the Ken tucky statesman (1836);Lyman J. Gage, secretary of the treasury under McKln ley (1836); John Boyle O'Reilly, author and poet (1844),. and Otis. Skinner, the actor (1868). a nation's history. Once In Its history is sufficient for party - division on a policy like slavery. If there are no such issues as that now before the American people there is that one, always impor tant, of governmental adequacy and righteousness in purpose and methods. .. i The Plowman. . ' . Gea' up there, Brain! . Gee up there, . Hand! . - - - , . ,, : I am a tiller of the land. Ye are my oxen docile, strong, To make the furrow straight and long. I'll feed ye, rest ye, tend ye well, And stall ye at the evening bell. But now 'tjs morn; the uplands He To take their pulsing pregnancy. The plow Is set; its sheening steel Is eager for the harvest's weal. So haw there, ' Brain! and haw there, , Hand! -,! I am a tiller of the landA Richard Wlghtman In July "Hampton's." ' - The Dangerous Gun. v From the Tacoma Tribune. An Oregon -Judge hai decided that a gun "unloaded" Is not a deadly weap on. Yet all , the v evidence shows that It !s,the gunJthatjHS't Jadedthat jj;sj on ana juus eomeuoay every rew-days, and then it was a Michigan Judge who said a gun was dangerous without lock, stock or barrel, for he knew a man who whaled his wife with a ramrod. . Crops around Brownsville are simply splendid, says the Times TANGLEFOOT By Miles Overholt . "Kings on V.y Fln gfia" and "The "The Cubanola Glide." "Put on Your Old Gray lionnet" nnd half a dozen more. Drive me nearly crazy when the pride Sings 'em loud and awful In a tone , ' that makes me sore. Tina PARTICU LAR j SUMMER. Where did you put' mv f ura. itinmniH ? And where Is my palm leaf fan? Get my rubbers and parasol, I'm going - out with a man. I'm going out with a man, mamma, to take a walk jn the park; It'll probably rain and snow and hall from now until after dark. And yet the sun may shine, mamma, SI riH nanrVTN 1 A rv A xr At frnm Vi.n4 Bring my fur-lined gloves, mamma; to walk Is such, a treat Lay out my cool new summer dress, 'the one with the peek-a-boo; Where is 'my winter veil and cap and my other overshoe? , . ' The wind Is blowing like everything, but the sun la shining bright, It will be 90 degrees in the shade if It doesn't storm by night Yes, pack my trunks with winter duds, and, mother, call a dray; I'm, going out to the park, mamma, on , this glorious summer day. The New West magazine, R, Btoon," manager; V. C. Bean editor; ha? gone Into the hence. There's no use talking, you can't make a magazine In this country of Just Bacon and Beans. Par agraphers: Kindly improve upon this and charca samat ta mir anomint " IT HAD BEEN ABSORBED. "Is your fathaw'S estate hentalledT Inquired the British 'nobleman Of tha fair young thing he was about to make hls'n, and whose father had never yet been able to satiate his burning thirst "HentalledT What do you mean. Duker '..;;,-;; ",,,:-...' -; "Hi means, will the money come di rectly to you Is it hen tailed to you?" "I ayiivRa - vnri rinn't bnA . vinnnjii. There ain't no money coming. Hen tailed I No, It s been eocktailed." . A Stinging Swipe. From the Pendleton East Oregonlan. Hudson Bay grange has passed a res olution that serves as a stinging swipe to those who are tacking tha move for an assembly. .The resolution was passed at tha last meeting of Hudson . Bar grange, and in detail is as follows: Whereas, This grange at its regular - meeting of March 19, 1910, placed Itself on record as being In favor of the direct primary and the referendum; and Whereas, we are in direct opposition to the return to the oonventlon system of selecting candidates for either tha state or the county; and . .. " - Whereas, We are utterly opposed to machine politics and machine domina tion, we learn with surprise1 and Indig nation that one E. W. MoComaa, has recently called a meeting in Pendleton, which meeting had the audacity to speak for the Republican voters of Umatilla county; without in any publio way con sulting with the electors, or even with those whom they named as delegates;, and ' , . Whereas, They have had the lmper- tlnence to place among the list of dele- Vila. ttiA manu a ft. a avawmaaw a lodge, James Kirk, a gentleman who stands tor clean politics, f or straight going Republicanism, and who Is, more over, a staunch friend of the direct pri mary, this lodge places on record its abhorrence of tnls self-constituted com mittee and all its works, and begs to assure them that any man who comes into this section of the country asking for the support of the electorate, who is in any way branded with -the ear marks of the machine, will receive our unflinching opposition. , , Unanimously adopted by Hudson Bay grange. No. J 61, June 18, 1910. . . (Signed) - .... W. H. WITHERITE, W. M. , .'.' E. HOON, Secretary. (Seal) - If this resolution is an index, as it doubtless is, to tha sentiment of the people of this county with respect to the assemniy then Judge Lowell, knew vhltraAf ha annlra h.n h AaflaraA h bulk of the Republican voters are op-, posed to the .scheme. Hudson Bay grange has declared Itself in language so explicit that any one should be able to understand the same. ... - f r .i From the Louisville Courier-Journal. Our wandering Ulysses is home again. ne nas spoaen. - na nas spoicen line a man. He has spoken like a patriot He has spoken like an .American. We do not believe that he has the re motest thought of ever again becoming; a candidate for office. What could of fice do for such a man except to con sign him to the category of the vulgar -herd, and lower him In the esteem of half his countrymen? But .there is a great place for him and a great future. Let him but de clare his Independence Of machine poli tics and proclaim himself chief Justice of the high court of political arbitration and he will be so accepted by the en lightened and the progressive of all parties; Its purpose the purging of the) public service; its Jurisdiction wherever the need arises; Its authorization and authority, perfect disinterestedness and transparent procedure, master of itaelf, equally free and fearless of the hand made statesmen and tin-horn engineries of both the Democratic and Republican - D&rtlaB- U'hera theufrun mimta fh. publio honor and welfare, to Justice and Integrity; such as we are seeing at this moment in Mr. Roosevelt's own stats of New York and In the state of Illi nois. , Grief to Burn ; (Contributed t The Journal by Walt tlaaoa, the fotnoui Kanaat poet. Hla prose-poema an a Journal.) i There's always some trouble to fill us with woe; In winter the weather Is sloppy with snow; in summer it's hot and in spring, it is wet,, and the au-' tumn's the blamedesti calamity yet; and so we remark, as we' push through the crowd:- "Oh, why should the spirit of mortal be proud?" When one's back la all itchy there's no place to scratch; When you have a cigar then you can't find a match; when you're hungry as : thunder there's nothing to eat, and when you're not hungry there's grub and repeat. You 'buy a new shirt, and it fits like a shroud Oh, why should the spirit of Willie be proud? Oh, tha sugdr Is sour and tha vinegar's sweet you ve nous on your bosom and corns -on your feet, and all that you swallow Is poisoned with germs, described by the doctors in dog-Latin terms. ;And jcv jruu a.iD uaypy, you aiecKy chumosl v,u i my m tne blue 'noath vniir trnnil ; - u . xcro, ana splatter the earth with a loudburst of teais! You throw up your hats and you laugh with the crowdand that's wnjr ti.o ayirn i mortal 18 proud! CopyrIRR 1(110, br George Matthew Adami, l f A H l XT HMOtH