the" Oregon' daily journal. Portland, Vriday; evening, july 21, 1911.
.0 -
,.-v,
THE JOURNAL
c. a.
.Publisher
closely approximated the facts. It
predicted a 4,000,000 crop In Umatll
la last year. Umatilla had a frac
tion over 4,000,000.
In any event, the reports from
Umatilla will not make the world's
Though a splendid
' 1 Fsbi'lsfe. rirnr awning (except Sunday) and
.' in, rut and Xamniu atroau. Portland, or, market panicky.
" e.-d .t th. M.u.fno.lt Portland, or., county, Umatilla Is but a small part
tar transmlaalon through the mall aa aecood-1 of the planet.
"""'"' The United States produced last
TELEPHONES Main T17S: Home. A-SOM. Tear nearly 700.000.000 bushels of
Of what concern to this
Is
Tail tbt operator vbat department you want. .' wneat.
a few hundred bushels
it tbt operator hat department you want,
rnin ini'TPTinun RirpRRHEVTATIVIC jCOtintry
nt min Kratoor cm.. Bronawiek Buiidtnit. more or less In Umatilla county,
Fifth erenne, New York; J21S Peoyla'a nr.rr, ,
(. Bonding. Chfcaiw. j -'peon
i ne world s wheat crop Is, In
round numbers, 3.500,000.000 bush
els. In such .a wilderness of wheat.
BnbacrtprloD Terms hj mat! or to any addreaa i
la tba United Statea or Mexico. i
daily.
Ona year.. 9,1.00 1 una month..
SUNDAY.
Ona rear....... .$180 On month..
' DAILY A.VD SUNDAY.
On year...... ..$7.50 Ona tBootb..
. .sal
f
69-
Sln every day take, ont a pa
tent for noma new Invention.
E. V. Whipple.
do Mr. Eaton and Mr. Conner really
believe that news of a crop failure
I from Helix or Pendleton would send
.m ' the world's wheat prices aviating?
j Do they think the nows of a bumper
I crop at Helix would demoralize the
markets of the earth? Nobody else
does.
is .... bCBt.
-a
-is
A PHILIPPIC
D
AVID GRAHAM PHILLIPS In
the current number of the Cos
mopolitan has left behind him
this " opinion of the "new"
' American woman; that she Is an ex
' otic, an orchid and to mate such
an erotic with the cabbage, the po
." tato, 'the turnip, the onion, the cax-
rotto link the new .American wo
man ' with the American man- is a
' performance to make the aesthetic
shudder and the practical thunder
ously protest; that the craze" for
""culture" has swept like a pestilence
through ihe J land, ? lnf octlng thou
sands, hundreds of thousands of the
- women whom latter day Industrial
conditions have released from the la-
bor that absorbed and kept sane our
mothers and our grandmothers and
so, made our progress possible; that
the "cultured" American woman ex
poses her beautiful soul like a pea
, cock's tall, pities herself in her lot
of having to live with a sordid money-grubbing
man and spends the re
sults of the grubbing freely In adorn-
:: Ing herself and less freely ,but too
k freely. In pau periling her "worthy
poor;" that she Is a woman whom
1 Jesus would have hesitated to shield
from the stoners; and if he ad seen
her In the Temple when he went to
, scourge the money lenders, would he
not have spared them?
Some of us know the type of wo
man at whom the late author never
once missed a chance to hurl a phil
ippic; others of us have heard of
her through the thunderings of those
. writers, who, like Phillips, hav lit
tle Regard for the refinements of
life, and a consuming passion for the
' commercial. But, exotic or parasite
or orchid though she be, she is the
; outgrowth of that same oommerclal-
- Ism.:- She i the creation of that
type " of man who"' subjugated life
to a relentless and sometimes
cruel pursuit of fame and- for
tune. To understand the growth of
THK LITTLE RED SCHOOLHOUSE
conierence or railroad presidents to 1 system of . government
consider means , for resisting the Crooks know their business,
raids 01 the legislative grafters. . The
extortion's of the boodllng legislators I On the witness stand before- the
were so nuge that the railroad pros- nouse investigating committee, Mr.
Idents were driven to desperate Thomas, head of the sugar trust,
measures of reslstenoe, cannot -even remember about his cor-
Grafting ran riot, and blackmail poratlon paying 85;000,000 for a
was a fine art. The legislative number or independent refineries, a!
function was not to make laws, but though he was a member of the coin-
to-squeeze money out of those who mute appointed to make the pur-
could be bled. Bills hostile to rail- chase. How can, the investigating
roads were introduced, and a price commltte, after several ' years have
collected for votes to beat the meas- elapsed, expect a sugar magnate to
ures. Bills were parsed or beaten, remember a mere trifle like that?
not for the welfare of the state, but
for the amount of greenbacks they
would bring to the Jackpot gang.
It is the first known Instance of
a conference to devise ways and
means for resisting legislative black
mailers.
Letters From ttc Peopl
COMMENT;
SMALL CHANGE
(Communications sent to,, The Journal
for publication , In this department
should not exceed 300 words In lena-th
The authority for it is no an(J rn.u1st b8 accompanied by the name
less a person that the governor of
Illinois. It affords a glimpse into
the depths to which grafting has de
scended in this country.
Wappenstein sentenced, Ruef in
and addreaa of the sender.)
s
Swats the Doctors
Portland, July 20. To the Editor of
The Journal Just back from the coun
try I have only Just now seen your edi
stripes. Link dead, Holtslaw ruined. . " . " "' , Z .n" J . "
ENTENCES from Mrs. Emmons Lorimer under investigation, these the aubiect. 1 beiiev. o h.va tn
Blaipe's talk at the National are ?Igns 01 tne rotten drama ana the doctors at th.lr word Instead of
Educational association in San melancholy, fruits of the system. ...... considering the evidence In. the case,.
Francisco are charged with a ' Tet. Mr. Trowbridge, the Chicago wneu you say the "medical men are
significance. One paragraph is: bond buyer told us the Oregon ays- BDre"" 01 we worms progress." Tney
The opportunity of the teacher is tem is wrong, and said we ought to ""i""1 ,"-" 'or ciim,n?
rtia o-no vi. ero huc.fc to the Tlllnnla nlan Mr ' " ""- '
woVld Vever' ' in he Uned Roberts: -on '-of hi. trr
States today, it mght be called the the Pennsylvania railroad,, direct- leans and eradicated yellow fever from
opportunity to save the country." or of the steel trust, and director of "al ltT wnen aenxai Butler ocoupied
Again Mrs. Blaine said: "There te Philadelphia National bank, said KT",.:. C",.T
are two sides to the money question the same- thing and declared that cent work, George Waring of New York
in teaching. You cannot serve God our system qibcou rages eastern mon- city deserving run credit at Havana,
and mammon. If the uplifting of eyed men from investing in Oregon. A" to. the "autogenoua vaccines," It
the child Is the aim of the teacher. In . Oregon, no conference of a Kin. IrX X .rVT
me money cannot De. 1 nererore tne governor ana rauroaa presiaenis nas morui coll. It wa manufactured from
money must notcannot be the to be called to devise means of re- his 'sputum," and given him to swallow
aim of teaching. " slstlng .blackmailers. Under' the ?ver "Ka1"- " anybody wants to be-
u I I I f a & ' let V. a 1 f n J . w J .
The time h come to take a sober Oregon system, railroads are safe " . Z,i Z J? . ...T "
new or ine dignity or tne teacher rrom jacxpot extoruons.
and her responsibilities. Our teach
era should be drawn from among the
noblest of our people. They are the
most Important people to a commun
ity after the mothers. If we would
have fine character in children, we
must necessarily put before them
BULL RUN
T
wot
evidence nothing
that would ne considered evidence In
oourt that it ever did any good. It
needs only a little faith In our natural
instincts to assure us that such treat
ment Is as harmful as it Is disgusting.
Instead of medical ertence eliminating
smallpox, it, is keeping It alive by ita
scheme of Inoculation. It la reasonable
HOUGH A Union disaster, the
South hae always viewed the
first battle of Bull Run as a to believe-that it would have vanished
traeedv. It was thn first for- alone: with its contemnnmrv th nlartia
fine models. "Give your children to mal trial at arms between the ,f 11 had be'n left t0 lh operation of
be educated by a slave," said an an- North and the Confrtrncv At mm- the cau8e tnat hav caused plague to
dent firAV nr1 InatP.rl f , 0r"1 nre?eracy. At SUU- dl8appear from c,vli)zatlon. But ,f
, , , " " " " 1 rinwn ir wsui n. mmn rnnr TnA n . n i i , . -.
do.. 111 . " . . ", - ""uuuuB.r cun.micu
n..o, incup uo.o vw. ii whole army was In panic and disor- m beasts and inoculated upon humans
is obvious that the responsibility of ,jer The first thought of the Bhat- w might expect to nave as much of it
the teacher la an uncommon one; it n, j as we ve of smallpox, it is hard to
is a tremendous one. ZZlTZi: Z.'"?.' up-to lta.
HOW does the teacher receive SUCh fnrA nf th trt,.mri0T,t rnnf-r- duced It have dlsanneared. Rut thi
responsiDiniyT it is natural to doctors are doing pretty well with
measure It by the figures opposite -1 , . . . smallpox. There were 14,262 cases and
her name on the monthly payroll. The, i' ."f a ?2 ifV'T? If th'8 yT ,up t0 inne
UUIDDU IrAVlO fiOW LUDV A DWlll UUlDUlt " " " " v - I4iuv,u flUU a,id0
by Johnston and Beauregard, a quick .ul pft",c' f u w nould prob-
, . , ably have got used to plague If It had
iuuvp ua uw uujjiuitxi iiaLiuiiai been Kent alive bv Inoculation
Tn. .t i vi ,..,, 1 capital, tne capture or wasmngton Keither win the claim hold water
th nllndirf r,it hZ.M t W th establishing Of the Confed- md,cal len" " conquered
the splendid daties intrusted to her , 8 diphtheria with antitoxin. There were
in tnelr highest and best sense, the - ...v reported 278 deaths from diphtheria in
teacher must be financially IndeDen- wou,(1 nave ltlmately turned, the the four weeks ending January 7 of
dent and accorded a place of honor the great American conflict, this , year, in , th. cities of th. united
In thA rnmmitnltv Thpro la llttl in maeea, many a nonnern onserver IB . - vvpuvwu,
in tne community, mere is little in- j,,v ,., against 145 deaths from scarlet fever in
centre to make two ideas grow still In doubt as to hat might. have the same territory and period. So that
where there was only one, when the been tne ultimate consequence of diphtheria still takes 90 per cent great-
to.oV... i fwH ,itt, .,nn.i Kin bucu b movw waa an me presuee 10 i"an lever, aunougn
and a staggering cost of living. The J? cognition JXand .l.
-Money Is not the beat measure ef a
It la none too earlv to nranairai for
cranio via tne jranama canal. .
If avarvbodv told exantlv th ' truth
bualnesa. chaos would result , .
. 1
New aorta of nennla ar lt tta tlu
being discovered; or developed. .
. a
Among those who look nleaaant. dnw.'
ing a hot spell ar. th. brewers. t .-.
The predlcters of an Am.rican-Jaiw
anese war aeom to be taking a vacation,
Some people let the water run moatlv
for .amusement It's nice to plajrwlth,!
There are people who magnify their
own irouoies, out enjoy moss or every
The man who cause, an extra mil.
01 goon roaa benefit, tils neighbors.
mo emits, ana numanuy.
1 - a '
The cratlon.of a lot more British
lords would be a rather lare-a nrirn to
yuy lor tne .ucce.a or in. i,iDeraj policy,
Bov Of nine .hot and klllod il ate.
ter of three, with a shotgun, left where
no couia got it - ji-ar too common 00-
currenco.
There ar. neoDl. who believe It al
most conclusiv. evldenc. of guilt if a
man wear. shoe, that fit the prob-
ouio aiioa pnau 01 a muraerer.
If big buslnes. Intereata ' are, VArrv.
irrn.ay aooui xne nezi presiaontlal
campaign and eleotlort, what a paxrlou.
Dimo me wm us m a ycavr xrom now.
It seem, but onlv a f.w dava am
inai 1 ne strong armea sower, went rortn
to sow. in damp chill air, on ground
kibv ana Dare, mev Dianrm tne ama.11.
dry seeds with care. 'Twa. Just a
little while ago that million, of tillers
went out to sow. The field, eoon
turned from gray to green, high grew
the stalk. In shower and sheen: arreen
changed to gold, and th. grains many
fold a story old aarata retold. A nii thA
hrftwn o rm txA (HUra want aww n ...
and said: "A goodly harvest 'twill be.''
The so wore now will tanned reaper, be
come, the sickles will clatter, the'threat).
era will hum, for rip. Is th. wheat, and
the world muat eat, and the reaper,
feel Joy In the harvest heat. And great
will ba the golden story of lowers and
reaper, when the harvest is o'er. 1
OREGOX SIDELIGHTS
A Suggestion From.
ebratlon.
we think in payrolls. Branded In
delibly on all our labors is the dol
lar mark.
be conquered,
The meningitis serum and th. t.t.-
true dienltv of her nositlon demands of the Confederacy,
that aha shall not nnnv tha anma 'But for tWO days the Victors at
a plant there must be careful study niche as the man who digs post holes Manassas remained Inactive. They J T,1 't? frauSl 'SS
or tne girl wno pastes laDelS on to- "Ufc """ "" " " there Is no evidence whatever to sup-
mato cans. j victory, which had come at the mo- port the claims that they cure or pre-
ment when Confederate defeat vent. ioctorn are not given a course
seemed Imminent. ,n '??lc. m elr coiieges. but they
. 1 "vuiu uc. iiicu wo Huouiu nave iesa
ai 11 o ciock me any or tne Dat- foolish statements
Of the condition of soil, exposure and
. moisture or sun to which it has been
subjected. Women harvest what
men have sowed. The "money grub
bing" man gives to the woman noth
ing but gold and poison because his
heart has long since congealed into a
cash register and his mind turned
Into that of an octopus. The orchid
women and. the gilded palaces in
which they are cultlvatu! are but
a part of the man's "system."
It is said that the late Mr. Phil
lips was an indefatigable' worker;
that the habit grew in him until it
crowded out everything else; that
he became almost an ascetic, giving
up socialj' life, ordinary pleasures,
even exercise, except walking. To
suspect the daring and brilliant
writer of sentiment would have been
to insult him. - He accounted refine
ment as a ' weakness. Even the do
mestic woman did
A COMIXO DISCOVERY
P
frnm h om t h nv
-TtTY k VTT TO - 1 J..I 4 . . I ....
vfiu.iL 10 au tueai Bite ior tie, the Union advance seemed irre- would then see the absurdity of claim
a meat packing plant. Bo says sistlble. At 1. the Confederate ,n lnat a gerum prevent, simply be
Thmnn T.aw a-nt nut frnm ! i n ,.' cause the Inoculated person doe. not
- Hum "! woyciiuB- 6, 1110 uuo develop a given disease.
iUicago 10 aeiermine tne cnar- wn nn lnne-nr rnhcsrvA nnrl- thn trv. rinrtr.ro v, nt 1 1
acter of .construction ' required for tne away of the shattered rezlments lns of records which determine their
the new schwarzschi d & Sulzbers-er Vipoma ...n mnmt m ., own erriciency or tne opposite. But
P'ant- more disordered.
Portland must bo such a site.
vatL. 1 a. 1 n i : 1
umerwise tue rs. ec o. company Heemed a Union victory rnnfrnt
wouia not spena nair a minion on a re8erves appeared and the Union ad
.w pmui cere. iNor wouia e vanc(5 was checked. With
bwirt people have located their cost
ly establishment in this city,
But at the moment of what
even from their own records their sci
ence can be shown to be a baseless
superstition. KENNETH SHELDON
Convict Labor Wajnted,
Pra1ri ltv Or fnl 10 T
one or Editor 'of The Journal One of the crv-
those sudden charges In the tide Of Ing needs of central Oregon Is for good
hnttlfi th fortnriAB of war ahlftAd roads and this section is ready for any
Capital understands its business. McT1nw11 was hatn and WRhin- r!an that result in the betterment
Men of money look ahead and rniintk. V . - ... or "r nigh ways. Why would It not be
... . , ,. j vuji.cu- leasit.ie ior uie governor to give us
the- cost and returns before . they Thn first htti of rtnii Pun the hem of o.,B of th rn. riirfin
piuuge. i-oruaim musi nave neen , nn nf the irrat Anlc-mnii n th squads from the pen?
investigated. Oregon must have been r.in ine uaiios Military road comes
n v.. I probed and the northwest dragnetted ft 0,fM lw kv
acrimonious ben. He. accuses her ofbefore " much money was invested the conntrjr today are on Mana38a8.
elng a "drag'J on man. and ..hls i Peking plants in this city
Later, all the public In these
parts will realize what the, beef pack
ers were first to see, t.nd that it that
M i l t 1 I
der and the practical thunderously f . 7 . v"' tv l it 7 T. v " , notwlth sword and cannon
largest single itero of expense.
" Surely, the philippic in question
Is one "to make the aesthetic shud-
The president is there. A few strag
gling survivors of the two armies
are there. A great host of Confeder
ate and Union veterans is there, but
protest" Would it not have been
more becoming 'and infinitely more
profitable to attack the gardener
rather than the plant, to assail the
"system" rather than the "spoils;"
and to have left "culture" entirely
out of the argument?
THEIR FEARS
B'
through this place and Is used fre
quently by motorists from Portland rind
a little work would make It one of the
best touring roads In the state and give
you city folks a chunce to Bee some of
the country that is going to make your
city the greatest opt the northwest. This
section affords a fine summer climate,
good fishing and hunting and, with a
little work on the roads, would he Just
are cutting 600 tons of alfalfa hay
on 300 acres seeded to the crop last
year. Tl.a seed camo from Utah,
and seems to be a variety peculiarly
adapted to the Willamette valley.
Tho Corvallls crop is perhaps an in
cident in the evolution by which a
huge and established livestock pro-
. ECAUSE A 5,000.000 bushel . duction Is later to explain Portland's
wheat crop is expected In Um-' fitness as a packing center.
tilla county and The Journal I It required years for tho discov-
printed statements to that ef-ery that Oregon could bo made the
feet, this newsnaDer is in rllR champion apple producer of the
with"1 L. D. Eaton of Pendleton and ! world. Not many years ago Hood
C. C. Conner of Helix. River lands were a drug :j the mar
Both have expressed their views !ket at '10 per' acre. Then, men
in the East Oreeonian. One doubts ! tramped over them never dreaming
The
Corvallls this' season two f armors "hand8 of blne Bnd gray are Gasped a nice distance from The Dalles for a
uorvaiis this season, two farmers t, and , substituted vacation trip. We have some of the
for bullets and blood.
THE CROOKB KNOW
ir tne imatilla crop will reach 6,
000.000 bushels. Both fear that the
news of a bumper crop in Umatilla
that $2000 an acre would not buy
some of the orchards in that valley.
as Is the case now. The fitness of
will reduce the wheat nrlre. hnA Oregon for orcharding bad not then
1 sugscests that the mthlirntinn ty,o been demonstrated. '
have been in the interest of bearish
it heat buyers.
Mr. Connor says he is very famll
' lar with crop conditions, lie says,
"""The predicted yield of Whitman
v county, Washington, has been low
ered from 60,000,000 to 34,000,000
"bushels."
A similar find Is yet to be made
with livestock.
SAFE IN. OREGON
HE LATE chief of police of Se
attle has been sentenced to
to prison. Abe Ruef is doing
of bribery. L'nk.
lJ-liW'' the fact that!the Illinois legislator who took a
uiiuiBua jivm mm year was 8-
T
000,000 and In 1909 13,000,000.
The Journal's prediction for this
v year for Whitman hi 15,000, ooo. No
, 'body ever heard tf 34,000,000, much
; less $0,000,000.
t t The fears of Mr, Eaton and Mr.
Connor are not Justified, . The Jour
nil; not wheat buyers, sent its mar
kH editor to Investigate the wheat
crop of the great" Inland empire. It
v has followed , the practice for seven
.ears,. Its predictions have always
bribe to vote for Lorimer,-is in his
grave, dead from the disgrace. An
other confessed briber in the same
scandal, Senator Holtslaw, la -a
broken man with a broken home,
ruined b.- the shamo. .
These are lurid facts. Even more
lurid was the testimony f Governor
Deneen at Washington.
Explaining Jackpot legislation , in
Illinois, he said that the demands of
legislative blatskmallers became so
Insistent, that he was called to a
..v;-, ,.r ,; " y:: .-., f I
J
finest hot springs in the hind, well
equipped to take care of the tourist. In
common with all tho people we are
very much interested In Governor
West's plans for helping the unfor
tunate convicts and are ready to aid In
any way we can. The care and trans
portation of the men could be looked
vote after rrom this end and other parts of
tne interior would no doubt be glad to
nelp also.
I'KAIRIB CITY. COMMERCIAL. CLUB,
WIIiLiIAM MUTH, Asst. Sftcy.
SEVEN FAMOUS QUEENS
"Oh. woman, perfact woman! . what
di.tinctlon
'Was meant to mankind when thou wast
made a devil!
What an Inviting hell Invented."
Beaumont and Fletcher,
Like so many other women of history,
most writer, hav. painted Catherine de'
Medici in her very worst light. They
have taken the opportunity. In many of
her missteps, to magnify them and to
so embellish and color them as to make
her appear a fiend Incarnate. Even
women writer., b. It said to their
shame, hav. pictured her as a character,
the mention of whose nam. must bring
a blush of .ham. to her sex. Mrs. E.
J. Richmond, In h.r "Woman, First and
Last," styles Catherine "Th. female
Nero of history."
It is with great difficulty that we are
today able to Judge of the true estimate
of historic characters. In the broad en
lightenment and careful research of the
present . day, however, many pages of
history are being revised and many sup-1
posedly set view, of national characters,
are being modified.
This Is true of the character of Cath
erine do Medici, who has doubtless suf
fered many wrongs at the hand of the
historian. She has, however, found one
champion In Balzac who has been' able
to see much that was noble and good
In this greatly maligned woman.
Historians have accused her of neg
lect of her children who were not
wicked enough for her taste." Balzac
pronounce, this a fabrication, but that
Instead she exercised a loving, careful
car. for them while they needed a moth
er', watchfulness.
Her own mother died when Catherine
was only a week old and she was there
fore deprived of the parental training so
necessary for the making of a good
woman. Until she- was eight year, old
eh. lived with relatives, and then1int!l
14, at a convent near Florence, Italy.
She left her. to marry Francis I, of
France, who was the Puke of Orleans.
It Is said she loved her husband with
sincere affection, and enjoyed many
busy year, of real happiness, and this
In spite of th. fact that he was hardly
an Ideal husband, particularly after he
had becom. king of Franc.
Diana de Poitiers, the Duchess of
Valentinols, under the pretense of Im
proving the manners of "the awkward
young nobleman, had acquired complete i
" xn. Baptists at datakaml. 'are pr-1 '-? --f. ':--Tnm:oUir,r
p?rr " T. T ?w C0urcn- : . In the Berlin "Tageblattr., wo-nfly,
' Th. work of excavating for th. base- PPard . display advertisement of the.
ment of the Cathollo church at Dufur excellent opportunities for th. location,
is in progre... ..- .. m of . industrial . plant, afforded by th.
The Gwynne Lumber company, new new harbor works at Gelsenklrcheh. for -mill
at Lostine Is belnar installed. Its I whtrK 4 .i.i.j 1... hi k n00. a.
capacity win be J5.000 fe.t. ; : i;' limn .'..'., w a w.
' m io vnotrii uci lilt U WUtl - - -- Tw "
burn Tribune, succeeding E. M,. and J. I kirchen lie. In th. Interior provinc. of
B. Barnes, a. .dltor and manager., .y v. a W..tnhalia. ; -w. tmr.nt rivaa run.
Lebonon Khrnraaa. J. w. Arahart I bjr Oelsenklrchen f Not the Rhinethat
planted DOtatoea Jun. 11 and on July II 11. mllea awav Tnanw.inn nf tha horhor
MgL W6r tWelVa "d fourtoen lncb9S Plan : r.veal. cana connecting with
V ,i . r" enBvring jo a , "narDor" on a ditch through the hum J
Interest capitalist. In a condensed milk nt . " . t1 -nfl ?
cannery project, ana nav. mgn nope, or r. w...Uo... 4
auccesa. : - . . , 000 spent , to attract new industries to J
Th.' Woodbum 'ind'epdent and th. "k9 -Bt Jjuttoy Pay T Undoubt- .
Stayton Mall ar. urging that commer- "alT t was. When your Teuton In-1;
clal club. b. organised fia thlr reapec- vest four marks In Improvements, h.
tlv. town., at once. V , f,rure" t; at lea.t flv. mark. ar.
Aum.vllla is to hav. electrio light. oon,n back.
from current a-nnnrntoil hv th waiar MOW Picture th. Rlttzena of tTtlt-a
nnwAF tha nnw. Iiimi Iha whMla A ti I NT.W Vnrlr 1 mut, I 1 - . v. - '
Aumsvlll. flouring mill. . Erl. canal and advertising that fact v
Sublimity. In Marlon county. 1. dry. wJI" VJ?"1
temporarily on account of fallur. of th. mic. T. .i SlBTiTl' . fa? -t"
dispenser at that place to ccmply with YIJca ,ted, with reap.ct t. th. 1
i .r . i - . i Aiiamm Mia kn-. - y, . i y. ..
iua AUiiiia i-ll ayi J li. iur iaoviibow I . ; " , wwuv mm uviaBLauiiuvu V; -
a a ; onn , eea -port Nor Is this .
Tha TTaf-r1hura Ttnllattn ana-a-aafa alaU azoeptlOnal lnatanea. DM vmr aver ,
a- payroll nrooositlon. that .XD.rlmsnt. I hear of Neus.T ' Not nan vrt a-o tt.
with flax raising b. made, and that fao- population had sunk to about 4600 and'
torle. b. established at Harrlaburar If tha Ji," ! 1 " I L .T .
-i . . ,n aomethlnr had to ba dnn. After,
7 .a I mtJOh deliberation. ther hnrmnA near. '
BVratr thia waek rirnv In a htm-1 ' i 13,900,000. mad. af tha dea-enerata ,'
dred head of fin. beef cattle from th. stream Erft a deep water' canal to the -
Wallowa country. Good beet cattl. ar. Rhln. and oonatruoted a commodious
becoming hard to find In this part of harbor, with carefully laid out lte. for
tn. country. Industrial nlanta No. r.. n .u m...;
U.1... i a-v. v. I flourishes, the lmnrovemanta an Tiavw
.MCbVAlUD vciii.nl , I, 1 U . i IIV i. - - - - . j ...
toliu. Lima company 1. commencing to ,n them.eivw, upward of 40 new L
burn lime at the mine 17 mile, east of factories hav. been secured, including ,
thl. rjlace. The dally output will be branches or t. n . :
.r?agerU: rl.JW" Wppuhitlon
a a j -" ' uaji way post on It. rao. ,
Tha nroanant nf fm varatlnn has toward th. .100.000 mark. In our noun.
appealed to a number of young Pen-1 try Neus. might be compared, in point
dletonians so stronsly that n.w re-1 of situation, tn . Nnrriai. r. - -i
emit, to th. rank, of Company L.. O. N. though without tha avantao-i. .Vw I
V,nail lllltril I. Wilt UO RQIU AURUOV 1 fcV All "..l. xa . . . "
at Astoria, during th. big Centennial eel- Uon PoulaUon, or Industrie But tm- 1
me laxpayer. or JNOm.tOwn OD.
Ugatlng themselves to th. extant of
$2,000,000 to provide a harbor and dock,
ag. on tho Schuylkllll At Dus.eldorf,
on th. Rhln., arly .xpendlture. aggre
gating close upon $6,000,000 for encour
aging river trafflo ar. being Increased
by many millions more. When Its nres-
. , m i - yviiv wm innuKuniira.
nviciiuauiry over mm wng ueiure n mai- niiauMn. .x .... , -
ried th. beautiful young Florentine, and PhU."tfdwfim .VS"
.he hold this ascendency by her. mar- i1'" elnd, f".w of h-
v.lous bwuty. tal.nt and amiability . Ug"e Wilmington with
during hi. llf.Uma. re.pect to rnanufacturing and com-
It is but natural on thta account that mr"-. N"h" Bl lmM n,any peo'
Catherln. had many bitter moments, f '! a"1 J'"1"? s many fae"
which may hav In a great measure, 7 ftp;Mves' Would Wilmington spend
prompted such features of her career as 5'00." to get started In the .am. way.
hav. been so strongly criticised. But nd that Investment a short
Catherine was diplomatic and always I'm. aftfrward? Mannheim has spent :,
treated tho royal favorlt. with marked snout, IS.000,000 on harbor improvements,
politeness, even though she saw her w,tb prlvat. investment, along it.
wearing th royal jewel, and knew that waterfront, that run Into, enormous flg-
th. Infatuated monarch had entwined ur""- As a manufacturing and dtstrlb- :
the royal H. with the patrician D. on t'ng center It take, nigh rank among
"the .culptured facad. of th. Louvr. the commercial cities of th. world, with
and upon the frescoes at Fontatnebl.au." fa population of about 176,000. Not long
Any woman. uner such painful . 't might hav. been likened to Littl.
periencea, would hfav. our .tronar svm- Rock, Ark. How doe Little Hock com- '
pathles. Mors o, probably, for a woman Pr ,th It today? In order to meet
who wa. less able to suppress h.r feel- I me increased requirement, of river
Ing. of indignation, Catherine was traffic, a new harbor, including about
mad. of sterner stuff and aha turned nin. mils, of quay walla and the open- ,
from tho neglect and impulse, for re- Ing of a basin of 600 acres, Is being con-
venge to nobler things. Like most Flor- atructed at Frankfort-on-th.-M.ln at a
entines ah. possessed a great lov. for cost of 13,680,000. Frankfort has a '
art, which ah. used In beautifying and population equal to that of Kansas City.
embellishing the royal palace. with After herculean effort, en tb. part of
prodigal splendor. Catherine also en- a few cltlsena, Kansas City I. Just get-
ncneo ma itoyai norary or pans witn ting on. line of packets started down
a greai nunrner or urecK and Latin the river.
manuscripts and with a portion of the
book, which her greatgrandfather, Lor
enzo de' Medici, purchased from the
Turk, after the taking of Constanti
nople. Although Catherine was always deep
ly engrossed tn national affairs, yet ah.
rouna considerable time to devote to
th. cha.e; she wa. skilled In archery
and rode gracefully. It was sh. who
Invented pommelled saddle.. Bhe was
al.o exceedingly fond of dancing.
Industry was one of her chief qual
ities. She studied constantly to do
things which would win her more es
teem on th. part of her subjects. Bhe
added luster to her dlndem by tho dls
cernlng and generous patronage she be
stowed on artists, who have acknowl
edged their debt of gratitude to her
in the eulogies they hav. handed down
to posterity.
Sh. was likewise fearless, a. wa
shown In her fortitude at th. alea-a of
nouen, in iduz, wnen she encouraged the
.oiaiers in the midst of the fight, heed
less of the balls and bullets which flew
arouno ner.
Catherine die' Medici.
Tanglefoot
By Miles
Overholt
IN ARIZONA,
Tomorrow Mary Tudor.
ERSEY CITY has rejected com
mission government by a ma
Jorlty of 1483 in a total
of 24,653.
Hoboken did the same, and so did
Brunswick In the same state. In
Trenton the commission nlan was
adopted. ' Practical Suggestions,
Tn all th ltn-... Tortland, July 19.-TO the Editor of
" mu , . Wi" The Journal I would Ilk. to give It as
the same. The political machines of my private opinion that if tho citizens
both parties opposed, go dlfi all that of t,,IR lcrvvn must take a stand for the
was pernicious and vicious in the wc,far? of thf'r children, they .houid
Hf of tho f,. m 'vl look after their bodies first, then their
...w v,. .i.o. x-yn iijc! uii, i munis.
were gooa citizens, and all forces In- If tho citizen who dislikes to have
terested In good government. 1118 cnllJ see the prizefight moving
Everywhere thn olrltima nin pictures would devote his energy toward
yerywnere, tne oidtlme plan of getting rid of the rats and filthy va
municipai government is better suit- cant lots he would b. dolna- somethW
ea to tne crooK, genteel or aban- worm wnjie.
doned. The crooked politician likes Fo.r m.yBelf.r Vllnk tho one b1 th,n
i,ot i,..,M i i-ortiana neeus is to compel her cltl-
lt better because there la more on- Una to u. carbarn rn-
portunity for personal profit at pub- ones), in that way there would not ba
11c expense. The crook of tho ntrp'or so much for the rats to feed oft
prefers it because it Is ineffective. , urBt t lJ1ln t),, Peofle Fort-
irresnonRlhlft nnrl Imnntt !?"u "'.'"". . . oouo.-oi
, lao DUDonic oiaerun or tna riin an
With councllmen, mayors, boards Then what will become of their chil-
and lesser satellites of a citv hail r" wnos. rauit win it be?
sharing official responsibility and all
hiding behind each other when tho
A VISITOR.
Pana'a sTt.nt.M.V
public is aroused, the crook who Frm the . Richmond Times-Dispatch,
profits from franchises, concessions, Why such a commotion in the news-
contracts and usual public business na,,er" hecLUS a man preferred a base
has better opportunity for .knM.ia-.' Ju me.to.-w d(lurhter's wedding?
- r . 0
gery.- tie so recognizes it in Jersey
City, Hoboken, Trenton and . else
where,, and lined up accordingly.
With the corrupt machine bosses
and bosslets in the New Jersey cit
ies not fighting each other,-but close
ly allied In a fight on the commis
sion plan, it ought to be easy for
people In other, cities to see what
Most men not excepting the groom, feel
funereal at a wedding, and a good hit
ter at the bat Is a fairer Bight by far
than a weak-kneed bridegroom.
. Tough. ' ,,
, "ThisJ Is a . peculiar world,", sighed
Harry, tho Hobo. ."I've always noticed
that, th. poorer, oook a : woman la 'th.
mor. likelier sh. is -to hav. some Cold
vittles left, for tn. When I ask her for
The West Road Commission.
From the Coos Bay Harbor.
Whatever one's view, of GovemorJ
West may be, politically or otherwise,
his recent appointment of a good roads
rr; mission must n-.ircly meet with tho
early approval of nl! N tlate in tho
Union needs good roads mor. than does
Oregon, and no state Is so sadly
neglected. This 'ommlnslon, which is
large one. every coun y lt the state
being recognized, will devise way. and
means for better roads, their conclu
ston to be placed before the next ses
sion of the legislature to become fixed
law. of our state. While It may seem
a trifle early to begin, w. are glad
the governor is thoughtful enough to
recognize one of our greatest needs
first and do hope that he will lend
cv.ry resistance to this commission to
t.ie .r.d that all Oregon -will redeem
herself to the world by building, many
miles of the best road.
them!"
; V H.'-.'f'A.f
Ten to One.
From the Saturday Post.
Mayor Carter H. Harrison and former
Mayor Edward F. Dunne of Chicago ran
against one another in the primaries
for the nomination for mayor a time
ago.
Mr, Harrison ha. a daughter. Miss
Ethel, aged 15, and Dunn. ha. 10 child
ren of assorted ages. A few days be
fore the primaries Miss Ethel asked her
mother: "Mamma, do you pray for
fathers nomination?
'Certainly I do, my dear; and 1 hone
you ao, loo.
Well," replied the daughter, n did at
the beginning, but I stopped after a
while."
Stopped?" asked th. shocked mother.
"Why did you stop?"
Why, I thought about those 10 little
Dunnes .11 dolnjg th. same thing and I
concluded I had no chanee.'V
i... 1. 1 ii i '
West's Prison Policy : .
From th. ' Vale Enterprise
Governor West of Oreg.n take, an
optimistic view of human nature and
practice, what he preaches wheh he re
lease, penitentiary prisoner. , on -promises
df . good behavior. Of cours., hi.
confidence will no occasionally abused
as It was recently when a man h. had
thus favored stole a horse and ran away,
but th. balance will doubtless - be on
th. fright side;, Reformation, rather
than punishment is th. leading Idea in
moaern, prison .theories, i : ; w
The Coarse of Our Foreign Com-
mercc.
From the Chicago Herald.
Official reports on the foreign com
mere, of the United States indicate that
th. Atlantic coast ports ar. losing, while
gulf and Pacific coast ports are gaining
this business. In the 11 months ending
May 31 last the Import, of th. Atlantic
customs districts were $81,000,000 js.
than In the corresponding 11 month.
of 110. The gulf ports .how an In
creas. of $12,000,000, and Paelflo ooaat
ports an Increase of $11,000,000. Ex
ports from tho Atlantic coast districts
Increased 15 per. cent, but from the nilf
" ciues me increase was 22 per cent,
and from the Pacific coast 29 per cent.
With the development of tha Minin
slppl valley in manufacture, as well as
in . agricultural vroduct. and in 'trans
portation facilities, it is natural ' that
more and more of th. export and Import
naijic mm lormeriy went through New
York and other eastern Dorts shotiM.B-n
by way of New Orleans and other south
ern cities. Th. great, rich valley slopes
gently, almost everywhere uniformly,, to
iu MiiwiBsippi river and tha south. Tta
early railroad commerce was mostly
with the east because of transportation
tines mat roiiowed the coura. of settle
ment. Grain shipment, go largely now
to southern ports, whereas one. they
went almost wholly eastward. Ther.
ar. climatic disadvantages at th. gulf
port, for some traffic, but they are bo
ing overcome with the progress of ap-
puea science, ana tner. ar. some cli
matlo advantages. ' . "
That New York, Boston, Bait I mor.
ana oiner eastern ports will hav. a
great foroign commerc. for many years
because of th. manuf act ures of th. east
cannot be doubted. But th. gulf ports
and the raolfla coast will steadily gain
through development of their naturally
tributary. territory, , ,
Guinea Tigs as Lawn Mowers.
f From the Taooma Ledger. ';
Editor of the North Yakima R.nuhlt
say. Western Washington folk who use
guinea pig. a. lawn mowers and Angora
goat, as brush cutter, ar. laxy. : Sage
brush and desert editors can't comnra.
hand a country wher. there is something
for every ' living- creatur. to aat and
where human intelligence, well' directed,
g.ts the. right thing eaten : atuij. right
'XH-M- H' QON4 TO iJUS.. fL4 )
This is .aid to hav. happened In
Phoenix, Ariz. A barber as Id to hi.
helper on. day, ho says: "Why don't
you go ahead and shave that any? He's
been In the chair for half an hour."
Assistant says, say. he: "He", a
lunger and I'm waiting for 'lm to dl.
so I can charge $5 for th. Job."
And th. little birds .ang merrily on.
STRAWBERRIES.
Come forward, little children, and w.
will tell ybu about the strawberry.
The atrawberry. children, derive. Its
nam. from tho word, "straw," meaning
straw, and "berry," meaning berry.
The strawberry grows In tha mnn.
try the prices on them arrow In th
city. Strawberry linrai nt. .,.v.
tho .mall end at th. bottom ao that ttJrt
will harmonlia with th. berries plaeeif I
.nercin. ir tne larsre hrH
placed In th. small end of the box th.
strain might injur, the box for life.
Street hawkers sell strawberries after
the berrle. becom. a drug. If you want
to spring a little morbid! loke on ..
parent, you -might say that a street
hawker Is a druggist. .
W. knew a man one. who a...
enough money to buy a box of the first
berries 6f the wason, and then h.
mortgaged his atitqm.oblle and pur
chased enough cream o cover them It
was a great day 'for -that cltlten. r
Strawberries contain nearly a. m..h
water as a small sponge. That la why
soma persons don't like strawberries,
Di
isctmraging
(Contributed to The Journal by Walt Uaan t
tha famona Kanaaa nrt lit. eon, '
I ordered sortie potatoes down ..
grocers store; th. orlc. waa ar.M.i.i....
awful I sat me down and swore. Th. !
grocer man informs ma tha, n. n.
tay up there; the crop I. quit, a fall-'
so I see I'll have to .uhaiat nn v. .
and crusts; and this it Is that grind.
. tinnoa . oiam. tn. trusts. If K I
could blam. Picrp JMorgan, and roastXf
old Guggenheim, I'd do without potato.. "AT
imve.a, Duuy ttm... The cron has,''
been a failure hecnu.a tv,-
dry, and'so the Wall street baron, can "
pro v. an alibi. Now r
pumpkin and chew , th., moldy, prune t
trcet;is Immune. No on. wlir nav at
tentlon If I should rats. - Zl. p.&. '
my hearty, brokenther.'s " "0 on. J
can cuss. l'v. ponder.d till i'm weary
and ho way can I see to , ch.rg. th.
If I could only work it
D. th. goat. I d surely- run Tor .S
and ask you for your yot , "
Copyritht, init. hr
! '' I aaorm Ual thw Aiataa. 'I ' Ma fj
i h ' Vi"," i" ".4 j'V ' l.' - .j
''..f,..-.y..;.jiV,-.'..i
t.VS,--1-.;
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Art, , ,, ;.-