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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 19, 1913)
i THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND SUNDAY HORNING, OCT CHER 19, 1-15. I: THE JOURNAL AH !NI)EPtNtCfT HltWRPAPSB J. a. iAVMHM .Paaltok I tnry VMnlag twevpt SowUrt aa itt Sunday saoratng at Taa JvnnI Balls. I - tug, Broadway en YunblU'ata.. Pnrtlaad. Of. - m iiwH at um poatrfi at PottlaaoV or fo , limnamlMloa tAieagfc !! Baalls aa aeooaA alaaa - natter. l;KiH.lNKa ; Mala TITSa Dtavacarhaa. f KKk.KiA. AuvKUTituKu ftKfMKHiiNTArivi lis best suited to the Chinese charao-1 Growth, and prosperity of both city 1 750 of the po !: CTS '.y iTwii 1 " tBa reaent "mo. : ' . and country? depend .upon it more poIltfvMadero For centuries It ' baa been : part of tha entire) Soathera FacUto system th. Chinese conscience. How can a carries 40,000,000 passengers a philosophy such as this be replaced year, , ;' , In a generation! , - ' The experlenca' of Los Angeles Is Unless : Yuan and bis associates being dnpllcate'd In other sections are living denials of yOonfocUnlsnt, of ; the Ulnteds States' where inter unless they discard - wisdom and urban lines are'' established. Elec truth, Christianity need fcave no trlclty will carry the passengers of fears. In China. But the ben who the future. - The) lnternrban car Is '! J1!" ' SZ'ZXZt IV trying to 1 lead , China out of now recognised as the people's most eohveyancevj .a BulKHn. Caleata, . "ecclptloa Term by asall at aa ! p. uimva aiaiaa o Maaioei- ,:, 'v DAILY i va raw 1 vaa nu , (3.60 4 Oh Om raa .tb .......f DAILY AND SUNDAY ;...STAO I Oh asoattt ......I . Each man's chimney 1 his guld en milestone; . .... . Xs the central point from which , ha measures t ' w Every distance Through the gateways of the world around him. - ' ' H. W. Xxmgfellow. , i moura Mm the next day.' ; There was no occasion for going to the polls when the result was fixed In advance there was no wisdom in tempting fate. !.4 ' :' . -:''!..:' ' ','r''m' V ) f : Because the t Mexicans .lacked schooling in ubo of their franchise rights,; but were well schooled " in the danger , of , voting wrong, there was little wonder that even at 4Tt:ctlZZ?2&v: in-every pnianon. went to the was chosen at a fair election, but the figures are lllustra tive of the present problem In that country. v;A "r' t I COMMISSIONER DALT Is rtehL : r.. ""Tw!: uer f thm vain of th liAalfh ' Ti,- - . I ci w i,o, people, me Vote partmen- " " 1 : 'UZ V 1 W "Mi-93fr They are making heavy cut. In property, not from the ln '9Vj''' W6 vot?" the budeet allowance fft thut hrfn.i T,.f r.i. v k "r"".41"'1 . uuerrero, wicn partment May not a too rigid ioL de ' rran 71 lev Drove to be a false conomvf . lord. : it .hAnM I,-, w- ..- 7.wwu' . iU wiiu a popuia- l - - . i i -" i w i tinn nr AnowtAw m .ja allowed by the budeet v committee war . anfl n' rAw 1?". Cru counUng ; 981,- for testing the dairy herds for tuto bercnlosis. The health denartment rr, f ti.. . vruyvruons prevaueo insists that at least; four, will, be reaulrinr tb. : tenant to ret water .iB?. W A DOLLARS AJfP LIVES RE the city commissioners sure I they have adequate conception than upon any other one factor. FOR EFFICIENCY -'s- f TUB UPSTATE PRESS necessary. reauiring the tenant to get water IT".. M v-r.' Jw .cf . - , 1 " e, I A-UH . UlflUHIlir IIHLWMm 1 II mm -tTA-iri ATttBa-W uan tne commissioners independently. Commissioner "iDalv - afford to hamper the, pure milk would make the water service . M.jrl?:" HE , up-state newspaper 'men movement oy witnnoiaing tne neip of the property Itself and have the U. Z i:.:.:: ill : have been in session in Port- necessary to efficiency? ' landlord Include the" water In thek.. -X,r. -',."v. land. ; - co" flaleaZ0 to 70 general transaction in which he lets . - ' ..I vat vetrlnarians. Th ritv run. - ., . . ' . e"-""1 w i eiecon, tnere ..vwo uravu.ou. ,m uiau JIUV WUH I : -" - . -T - . ' iU ! JBMIIJii IU, JIM i WOriU .OIWOIIlA DA ' llttl TITAimA-t .rdahln . nnon tha lanfllnrd. 'nnt. I-A.nt.i. . w back, in advertising. besieges WPe6' os forvflO. Wlthstandlna- tha s fact that tearfnl .. T. ".ZCrr-I-TL-il" .VrJ .f" P1-1-- beard in various Ces it will require- years for Mexico up-state publications. in all ir iuor tor eiiecuveneBB 10 uius I n n a rt Ara Tn fa- The mail overwhelms them with place f the of testing within d beBt Mg11iaUd apartments wai d lciateaT Sex? I kind, of copywlth: .. request easy rehf daymen? flats ln lugm wate " aIgSSterd tne latest to recover from the terrorism': of that It ! ,eled ire it k . nrovldaa that th r.ttv ahall , tjt- 117 1 J T ... . '. . 7. T . . . -;uuouyiA- vaas represenutuve V4 vu- jioyor MfW8i.,'BHiA '" A-,,,, ' . :. uie zee ior h incinaea in ine renuu election Is almost an imDosslhUity ? chra, .r,-oA . ' . 1 herds unon the fillna- of annllcatton. I - . I u xuiposmouKy, r ouu-o, wuuvj io,i-- -- r . ' ' 7T1 cnrge. t is nii oniy reosouaoie, I . The most that could he tmtTA church fairs, state fairs, school fairs. How can all herds be tested when H I but it Is modern business method to i La LTJ1 orld's fairs, charity balls. une f e- .if o tt.ttar-r'U' of offlciaVwho w Rivals, health committees, ; charity do it and the city is provld ngbut The plan Is of great value to the mote the welfare of Mexlcws. Thev tcommlttees, development commit- oner There -are enough applications cUy, y The collection of water "fees. SnnotbeTlamed , forThriJ imol lees, promotion committees, public on file ,now In the ijhemist's now ftR tlm0Bt appaUing burden, is ance, supersSn and SSS ntr AnTnTn4fta -.nAt .ntr.-A "m- office to keen one veterinarian fully , :... ......;-, ..- "uro" y n r. v , iney r.w. . yiu (uouvi . -' " ::. ' . 1 . .1 easy, luexpensire sua simple. , a ne some of the. exDloiters are Amerl. Fhow. exposition and '. committee I i; Tne onaget committee auows hut -t.nria mmi tnr'th mtl ehowers the publication of flee with V Pctors.-Thmnic or- chaf lt t onw becomes the Thera U every 'tt' wtojlnt. ntniiA.tafn.f- ano.A- at.ratr- in1r1 I dln8D.Ce Shd Common DrndenCA re-U. a . ' ""oa : "tt mn' vHwavaM w vunvvi ao aau 'uwaw ' ' " -t ' ' . ay - , a iii hi n hhi nr i n nwn . ,nrar v n t a i aama mhahIii a. a a, a- - At a . . a . In, ,An,,.n;fiT, t.a a..,,- oiiim that each dairv be liumeeted Z77ZTZZ? VTiTZ 77 Z "T". we ngni in r" " . . - ' --vi me ciiy, 10 see ai it is paia. ; I Mexico, for 'Americans f have vu v.. fi. v- il. iHi Mnh naf an1 friar SA(I I . . ... . I av, auniiwui i, ura community, - never realijsing ; tbatanA8. v ' white paper - must be paid . for in I Any saving inaugurated at the ex dollars, that ; orintera 3 must i have pense of eff iciencr Is a costly econ- hioney for food, clothing and shelter I omy. ; One of the noblest move- find? that publication offices cannot I ments .;ver-forwarded in Portland wagte antf in6meiencr. .. 1 I ji I 4. tK. .4mttf.l. fnw n.,viff naff An if I .... . ' con Mr. Daly is also right as to water trlbuted; much to wronr don Tri meters. . tie wouia install aDout zo. Mexican people. uuu meters in xvi, ana nave tne city completely metered In 1916. THE TWO IIAWTIIORXES An unmetered water system means I 1 icta anTt lnaff1.Anr . " . . ' I -bTTT.TAV TTATO-Tri-TMT7I rpubslst on warm windv: ; of a metered system ' means eonser- I leased from the federal penlten- ri aUU8 WUU IUO lain Wtt Oia uWii.;i,;WW,p "vv I vr.n tiif ff!MAnf T vnaTiTts.wf tlftrv At AtliTi lof Waas.v Jree puWcity folk, Is the real S"f0i, user will pay for what he gets L He had been Imprisoned a little fcgent ;rMh , doesn't advertise bnt thejrell-being of .every individual. get wbat u pari -for mor- than six months ; because he wanta ms name menuoneo in every i v iirem usu w w v , ; Tf v.,. n wn n,h( n.i . rrnifA c.. sale,he doctor who doesn't adver- effeeness;inj Uie health; depart. help pay for the water his neighbor mails to defraud people into buying June uecause fl MJI wa I DrQiei-1 ; , w un uu .w6t v aa la h oh nnrlAv Pnrf. WorthlAaa tntnlns- atnrV vTT. a. Wonalivbut wants .. hteHama Cm jth ;iw4;4 . kltn : t ': "con- j, .t :,-atin. in prlson was shortened because of t f "seon a case oi acciaenv ana feryea uy , pvhw- uu By , thege &nd other plangt ; Com. exemplary conduct. t because ne says it aoesn t nay. out aerswoa. wanreTer uuuw n ue tna rata- v.fom M , a r...i. f mm fhan TrifnaT intAu-.- . t- ,wanta the reporterto drop around lt ln Myinghuman life and thoroughness and fttaey.; a name whlcb should have held nr1 an pita tin fn- fha mm. : a Aa I nmtaottn o fha nithUfl irnlnit fllmmiu I .: , .. " , .c,';,Wlii.. .. ' .. . . " ri7::. I :,: "vK7 - -,r:r;fj::.;y. mm to xne pamway I integrity. He .iwlndow. : r ; r , , : . .; ' v ; Ibulk o? .the. budget or the ; figures In addition, there Is the profes-lof the tax levy. .. One of the virtues lKlonal TirfR ae-nnt wlin 1a natrl A Ma I at (.nniml8Bion 1 rnvernmfint la that -: J . . : - . .. . . I . . a . - i j eaiary oecause; oi ms s versaunty in lie is oeuevea 10 nave too muca ueuri 5 working the newspapers for free I to play lives against dollars publicity..". He Is : th cunnlngest, I Portland's present FOR THE FESTIVAL : W is the son of Nathaniel Hawthorne. whose nathe" WW "always be cher- ;v MISSIONARIES By Pr. Frank Crane. Copyrlrht. 191S. by Frank Craae.) Whoever given himself p to a rreat Idea wlU build better than he luowa, What he definitely intends may be limited by the narrowness of his age, of tho institution with which he is Identi fied: or of his own ltm(At '1.vl! hut w'iw Limn aiA uiwo, turge Wlla vua feu1 roua xrunaga or aestlny. r- a - Among the people - who An rien In futurity are the missionaries. A The nominating idea of the' mission ary Dimaaii, or, of missionary boards, may be to win more members to this or that sect,: The actual forthcoming is a tar Tr.uer ana srranaer ming. v , ? V , is tne oeveiopment of world-cltltn hlp.' It is world-weddlnir . It la that imernauonai commerce of Ideals, which if Of far more imDortanna than Interna. tlonallxtng the sal , of gteel , rails er kerosene. t ,.V Ueutenaht-Colonel Elllah W. HalfoM Is a remarkable man. .After long and successful political and JouraallsUo career, followed by soma years as army iwymaaier. aa retired becauaa nf . and, Instead of doing- nothing undertook the leadership of the Layman's Mission ary Movement la the denominatlnn tn which tie belongs, - Recently he wrote an arucie in a religious weekly la which he. ouotes these. wedas'-j.-uwr.MSi--rfc "BUOdenly the outside world, has be come aware of what the missionaries really mean and the mlslsonarlaa have come to iook straight at their own work and see It as It really Is the soul of the Christian civilisation laboring to apreaa useix mrougnout tna-entire hu maa race." , : 4 ': : v-.-. -When good Saint Aurustlna and bis companions invaded England they had m mind to enlarae tha church.- Thav uiu mori wey esiaousnea isngiisn elvlli When the PllerlrA Fathers umt to America It was to find scope for their pecuuar religion. . They laid the founda tions or American democracy, , s ,,. Likewise the missionaries now in China, Japan and else where mar be con sciously cultivating belr own sect but unconsciously they are jolnlnr : bands with commerce and education to bring Ik. . 1 . . 1 . . 1 iw m men inio unity. - , ,, . America la nowhere dolnap tha dntv fata ha a laid upon her more than In her missionary enterprises, Alexander Hamilton saia: -it is ours to be either the grave In which the hopes of the world shall be entombed, or the pillar of cloud which shall pilot the race to millennial glory." , , Ex-President Taft hu rrnriitlv 'run. ieBsea xnat ne couM 'not have adminis tered the affairs of the Philippines, aa he did with such success, but for the preseno and Influence of Christian mis sionaries. ' . ' ..V.-V". ... . Alexander McArthur. M. P.. wHta? "I believe the advancement of civilisa tion, the extension of commerce, tha in. crease oi Knowledge in art, science, and literature, the promotion of civil anrt religious liberty, the development of countries rich la undiscovered mineral and vegetable wealth, are all Intimately Identified with and. to a much larva extent than most people are aware, de- pouueni unon too worx OI tna mlaalnn. ary, and I hold that the miaalonarv hu done more to civilise and benefit the worm man any ana an other agencies combined." NEWS FORECAST FOR THE COMING' WEEK B aball soon know bow wen ished by the American people.' The in next jtiose jrestavai is name Hattthorna will last m long w ue uottneeo. as English literature lasts. .Tne canvass for nbscrfo- icariv m 1 nm fint ka expenditure tlong begins tomorrow. There onrht th crnrlanesa nr im.H . ciueai, oiu wiui winning ways, ior conserve puoiw uoaim - is mi 10 oe a generous reSDOnse.- : . inr this eonnti tha , wnu Irkn.U .mil. .Jl.... ..il.lll,.l T. nm,.nn aHIk . .TV .. .... " . o buiuv, auurcn. auu tuuiw .: uu. . jvimtHuwwu , n.ui eir oeioro ua um rssxrvai oeen lllsh ridicule, Nathaniel Hawthorne aoulful (eyes, and, when p he fgeU other ciUes, it is a humiliating out. undertaken under more .favorable brought bis suprema talent to our I""""" "" " uaiai- uewDya-i lay, nrio an wuio w. . ei. i auoijiuea. ver , . oeiore was the defense and established 5 America's t a.Aa . t-1 f A,tL . aVfa, A I A. t . ala. laTS - ll ',; Mm .A - aa.IAaI I a . a. ...' . I 1 " lyvr jjuuiuaer wr at muca ieti i Minneapolis, cenis jr capua, popular cnaracier oi tne activity so I standing in the world of letters. I ttuout me ! ouico tuai . me agent I uunaio, sx; vioveiana, s: opoKane, i emDnasizea. '- v . v f Whan tha un rait i wania 10 out, especially m tne way I B a , uetroit, sa; a juaianapoiis, . is; gof advertising. v- , ; - I Kansu .City, 7 ' St, ;r Loaia,'' 90; 5 . In no activity in the world Is I Denver, $1; San Francisco, $1.52; f there so much endeavor to get some-1 Seattle, $2; Portland, 14 cents. for , nothing as Is attempted -on the newspaper business. No ac- i tlTity In the ; world gives as much rto the public gratis, and gets as few thankg .back .vC"-i 5 For all the boosting of the com' Cmunlty, for all the constructive agi- grace DTTERURBAJf CAR LINES 0 N ANOTHER page of today's Journal is an ar title telling how electric car lines center ing : In , Los Angeles and ex- The government and organization there was an attempt to save him of the work are strictly represento- from prison. A pardon for Natban tive, with 62 of the busldess organl- iel Hawthorne's son was asked,, not rations or the city represented. It because there was any desire to con. to n arrangement under which done the offense, but rather on ac- proaa vision ana eirecuve manage- count of the name Hawthorne. It ment are certain to characterize' the was . urgel that ' the United states 1914 show. - . i : should not cast odium unon a Haw- ' The festival is to be confined to thorne, the son of; America's fore- three and one-hair days, from Tues- most novelist The Durnose was not I rla w fiMn . '- a TJV-I dm, mI.V. . V 1 a - . v . a. a- , trr.Z"." 7.T . 77" Z, 7 I tanrUn 1ntA tha an.,,tn- rfv- .w. ;- wm w save wm troo, out to save inviolate ; BUOn: " . lflB v: re- -5.-7 rrTv.. ... I omething doing airtbe time.- It the reputation hla father bad estab- Fformfor all the appeal;- behalf try ts Uve bunt un that city ,,1 f ":" rS v be no The attempt f, pm.?en?u- rranh features, and better lowed to take lta course, and Julian The features are to be made bet- alty following ; crime. Had Julian aw- . p I a a - I WAAa . W IfelLaV AVI AvB a, AAA DBa BI1U UHLLHr I inWRIl III a.SBj 1 1 - 1 II niM mm n n I TI I1DT1 I f en, ' l :fS? -.f0' contrlbnr cause fwL th bUBlaeB$ men wh0 wU1 hav Hawthorne served bis term in prle- lnserttons.ee pub. freeex-Q halt at the beglnnlag on.; It was right, ;AU sons should lrL'zT? .V,1 hitoB,' ..na,, 01 at.tta fnd be(taught that a father's proud 5 let r.r an dStjon. f fji a "p lum?a- ot them from pen JBkAUVa tU VTAJLAAAA UAAAVaf VAUQVW I Vy- I VQVivat iturn crave .wnen ne IS oeaa ana let U , go at - carina; inem at,Panc. from such a eommlttaa .. wnnlrl nav r-atr.r-,1 tin Wnf.h . v. - UltUMr own Annntum rnt It AaIIv.i . . . r . aw,.t , " i. .h ; V " , now heads tne enterprise should be a tarnished name. We can sav we h VA -wteelvllaa aa a aa I A av aa aa fallV I ElB LIl. 1 f - III H. 11 . VI fl tTSl VlEl VhfJl I ' ' . h."uu - r.: fi,rhr: J Nathaniel Haw- r ui , uerowar no ciwaea more - -r ,. ;:.?:" ."u' contributes , it meant that they will thorne's son committed a. crito i wuiiuuiui u luiBrvm vr auiy aa I - - - k"a I II tu8 festlV tef lay a ewjflower. on,the urb - not onl,, ulM ZSTZ onX , of the 7"w.paper.man than in any. former year. , Tl,at as- wnt:to-prison that act of clemency la the average up-state editor. s RELIGION IX CHINA 'ivartwAl 4 em a.,a' VmImI.ai .a f aa-a.A ' a-a.AV..ll a. a. aa a, aaAL.i- v' rnnntrv Tha 1MA'M. ,.i,a- - . v"a uuiulB uinov wuMiAuuy y .ers ex- H-vt. v": T J " noma . oe) -i adequately and cellencleg should keep the law's ; v" :: -r . .VA amply underwritten. It ought not hand off a criminal .son. I lines - build up the city and develop it is tne nuness ; or money or lack of money , that will make ot mar. the . festival week. Let this per to I p CHRISTIAN missionaries are said the country. I to he much concerned leBtl The 1910 census rave Loa a. i Chi"'s new government adopt geles a populaUon of 819,000. which vwnch1 as Port! , Confuslanlsm as the national In three years has grown to 400.- "8n!n "! llWnn :, Pmrnl,.,.. I ana , .,7-v.. ' 'J-. Ul VU : 1U0S nor " V A UCUk I 4. UCDO WVV.V BU V TfitUlll IUB 111 I!I1T- I . Titan . l..nmnH. V.. . I .. . , . . I inttfte. ua.ua iu.uiuuivui luut ia saia i poraiea ny iiuiiis. jLuternroan car ! to believe that the hope of China I lines, f by I connecting Los Angeles lies in retaining the best of the old I with : 42 incorporated cities and t order, of things, and Confucianism towns within a radius of 85 miles, Pis as much a part of Chinese civlll- and ' by - making the city readily pzation as Christianity is of Western available to country residents, have Haviuzaiion, - " I bound together a contributing popu FRANCE AND SPAIN TEE MEXICAN ELECTION 1 XT .-TV r:r.:..:r . ri'.r"" ".mar the. festival week. -- Let this Tiis long-preoictea jrranco-span J 7" -Z""?' popuiauon ot ei,Ugg, which week., Tesoonsea be such as Port. I ish alliance aeems to be fairly on the way to consummation. President Polncare has prom Ised to return King Alfonso's recent visit to France, and the incident is given significance as making prob- t able a complete understanding he. na Mexican 'election l eet for tweon the two; governments. The next ; Sunday. ; , - y . I people of both, countries .are said to It recalls that there has been be heartily in favor ' of a" comnact nnt (yna Toit aiarrmn in Mst. fA. Mntn.i Att Ana aa... - ... - S &:"- vm-a a. .- . . t I ...... . ' . . " - I '.-. , ,- .vi mm,iui.w iw,,uwiiiito J,;, t. A , . . v O00iarT ""on v.or (i ov.vvv peopie. ? js there co in a generation.: and that even Spain would benefit moBt from m!u tr'.r-'tr.v ,oa" ny uesuon .-! " In such an election, only 20,148 such an 'alliance C That nation la anes, win ne treatod with the rreat-1 wonder dtv of America? - ' ' ' I vntna vara rant w i Mm.i.H., .i L.. t..i.M - . a.. evidence that, they will be free tolneneer carriers. " Then came th nnl. '"n fainiHt Af u. . Li.a. i. ,i.vi v conunue their efforts in rn a m i. a . ...a.i. . m.m..i.Il . .... ,.. i . . . . ... . - mMI. :iTthina v.7aT r" f ,w IT 'r. W fcoiuouui oy wie evenw iouowwr- ms success- siae mat or any or tne great pow- public Nothing has occurred to in-1 nlon or the tracks. PatcaI carrvtn- f..t -avni n. -iri v. I . . i. -i . Qicato mat China will deliberately I aoon arew into freight carrrina?. and infn thi nmaMnA at nM ,,. i. ..' iv. . . v-..a '..V rtHT-n lta ha.V T I 7 .T 1 i I ' . 1 . T J "v lu"' .. ' u uw-u W1U1 i , , 7- -r"1 VU1 i"o"y. : I now tne company operating tne lines wished to establish that the revolu- a debt of nearlv two hillion ifniiam Spain's Interests lh Morocco need at tention; ' but ; without support from some other country Spain can make little progress in Morocco or else where. . .fyjht';-K fttf? England is said to favor the alli ance; on account of Its' bearing upon international politics of : Europe as a whole. A Franco-Spanish alli ance; would ; give Europe, as one writer declares, a valuable buttress in an allied Spain and an increased influence over : the Mediterranean seaboard. England, France and Rus sia may secure the balance of power as .' against 1 the : group of nations beaded .by Germany. i T , -IOMrtPbottld not be has 1600 freight cars. It does most tlon ; was not Intended to ; put him j i7i r;' aquesj of the rreignt carrying in iouthern in power, but to overcome DIas and ., . ' i. i vttuiuium, uwiuuui in jw ceufc uiiioaao an eiecuon oy tne people pos- illgion in the aesse that fWe use' the all less than carload lota i in ; the sibl.i Ha waited six "months for " , iJ . ,,, . a,8C""on oi towng it serves. ; ' This phenomenal tha excitement to cool before call toe mysteries of lUe, no reference to growth in freight traffic came; for ing an election. ; He disbanded and the : oul s immortality. Confucius the sam season' that; multiplication disarmed his 1 army ' and the polls was - deified . after bls death, but of passenger traffic came. " rIt was were In charge of da la Barre, whose scholars sre divided as. to whether because of greater convenience. sympathiei were more with the old bis teachings are a religion or mere- , Six hundred passenger cars carry regime than they were with Madero. ? phUosopby" of living. 225.000 persons 78.000, miles every Madero was elected by an almost Confucianism deala wholly with day.. These people "patronize . the unanimous vote, but during the 82 the TeltMon of man to man. It clectrltf lines because the interutban years DIas' was In office the Mexl lncludes five cardinal vlrtueshu- car takes them directly to the place can - people were not taught nor inanity. vuprlghtnessr decorum,;, wig. they wish to go. , both coming . and were they allowed to use the bal- n and truth. It baa become part going.' Seventy-two , mllUon pas- lot To rote against Dlai meant tZ Ctlncra Ind saX character, sengerf aye carried Jji-a.yearr while that thai Mexican's: . family; would WAShlnirton. D. C Oct. IS Ttata iaa. eiaions of high importance are expected from the supreme court on- its first de cision day, Monday, although the court Itself has given no indications of its intentions The esses of most public Interest and Importance are the long pending "Intermountain rata case," in volving the long and short haul rates, and the Kentucky rate case, which In volves the validity of the McChord act enabling the state railroad commission to fix reasonable rates on Interstate business. . ( ',! -' .y.--.., -;.) ci President Wilson will go to Philadel phia Saturday to speak at the. r edu cation of Congress Hah. The same night i he will leave for Mobile, Ala where he Is to deliver an Addraaa ha. fore the Southern Commercial Congress Former President Taft is to apeak at the dedication of the G rover Cleve land Memorial Tower at Princeton uni versity on Wednesday the same day on which the graduate college ot ; the university Is also to be opened, iv Colonel Theodore Roosevelt Is sched uled to arrive at Rio de Janeiro on Tuesday, and the following day he Is to deliver a leotura in tha Hrini. capital on "American Internationalism'' lung ueorge Is to become the guest , Ftafford, formerly i of New Tork, at nday for a week's IN EARLIER DAYS ,-1'y Frt'd Lockley. (if Cor Counted i Mrs, Siimucl Coli Houghton Hall on Ahootingr. .Arrangements are ! , progrrBS to make the celebration of Trafalgar , Day throughout the BritiH'o empire more lrrw pressive and -on a larger scale Tuesday than 'on any occasion Klnce the annl versary of Nelon'a victory became an annual observance. Primaries are to be held Tuesday In the Third congressional district of .Massachusetts to nnmlnot. i.ntlMnta to i.t--. r.Tr- -i 6r. ' The Chicago, Burlington 'St ' Qulncj railroad has fixed Monday as the day for opting to traffic lta new line from Casper. Wyo.. to Kirby. Mont. In New York city commencing "WeJ- Aesday and continuing for 10 days, an exposition is to bo held to show the advancement made by the negro race In the United States during the last 60 years. ' The exposition Is also Intended to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the emancipation proclamation. ' Recent progress in the worldwide fight Against tuberculosis is to be clearly set forth at the eleventh In ternational 'Anti-Tuberculosis Confer enoe, which 1 to begin it sessions in Berlin Wednesday. The leading nations of the world will be represented. ? Al though no "cure" for tuberculosis can be Teported, encouraging progress-will be recorded toward . the control of the disease by natural restorative ; means, food and fsesh alr,knd by modern meth ods of aanitatlodlslnfeetion and iso lation. .' '.i. "!' -i','- J ' Y-' Of worldwide Interest and Importance I first discussed the advisability of hold will be the eighth International Dry ling the1 Wolf meeting at Cbampoeg on Farming v Congress and Exposition, May a, 1S4. which resulted in the close which . li to assemble Wednesday . in I vote by which Oregon became American Tulsa, Okla., and. continue until Novem-1 territory. Ho was gieatly in favor of l. Tnirty-uve countnesr-inciuaing our ovnlnc- not onlv Alaska, but all of Canada and the United States. wlU bs CauAda. He thought the United States represeniea at mm exposition. if : -.. should take in all the continent of North iher.,?m.po,ant aV"nBB .?f ''aV1 America. When Secretary Seward went "My father. Dr. W. II. 'Oray, came t Oregon in 18S8," Said Captain y.'ii: .,m P. Gray of Pasco. "I was pjn in ( :. -1 gon City In itifoffiffiM'?'--- William Polk Gray. .1 reuaember vi. I was about four or, fv - years oM soir",TfU ' .'it i"y mi die initial sBoii for. 1 ; vi.vr .'.id nanTed him after President Polk. I named Jllrn the presld :it ) t strong stand on "64-40 " reversed bis attitude on and I have been sorry I after lilia ever since. ; So.. . a notion to wring the younj I am so disgusted "with Pre;-!.. I was about five years old, ana wii.I beard my father say that he sometimes had a notion to wring my neck, It scared me pretty badly. - My father was a man who usually meant what he said and , always did what he said h was going to do, so every time ; I saw him look stern X ran like a rabbit and hid, for fear he might be about to wring my neck. : p I , J:c rfJ :.-' - . . "My father was one-of the early day ' 1' - ...II. n p I m . vnvauaiuiiiva, . m na pvnur iu. y.....w mover and orlginatpr of ' the agitation for making Oreaon American territory. He got one or two others together and tlonal Counoll of Congregational church. at Kansag City; the American Mining congress. At rnuaaeipnia; tne woria-a Woman's Christian ' Temperance Union, at Brooklyn: the seventh national con ference of state And local taxation, at Buffalo;' the National Society for the Promotion of Industrial Education, at Grand Rapids; the United Textile Workers of America, at Philadelphia, and the thirty-first annual conference up to Alaska he took my father with him. on account of father's familiar ity with the Indian customs and lan guage..; Father came back from Alaska greatly Impressed with Seward's statea. mansb.!p. He said Seward was a high type of American. At that time Thomas Nast and others were cartooning Sew ard and showing Alaska as an Iceberg with a solitary polar bear guarding lu I remember hearing 1 father say when on Indian affairs and Philippine prob-1 someone criticized Seward's purchase of lems, at Lake Mohonk, N. Y. 1 1 Alaska, The only criticism . Z have to Other 'event to figure In -the new I make of Seward's purchase of Alaska of the week will be the big Portola I la that he didn't also buy BrtUch Co- restivAl in Ban Francisco ana tn. start I lumbta at the-same time.' ' . of the world tour of the Chicago AmerU I guess few fAmlUes are 'more Jyp can .league and New York National I lcallv western than our family, lit old. league baseball teams. Sheriff Word's . Enemies. (rum me BDicMllir, '. Behind the recall against Sheriff Word we find Idealistic And ' practial Socialists, theoretlo and ; direct-action anarohlsta, unpedeataled street f? corner building the flour mill for Dr. Whitman, orators, a VU. dishonest newspaper I By tb by that was the first flour- ana some others. There has been some l mill to be built on the Pacific . coast. est brother, John Henry Dlx.Oray, was bora in 1838 at Lapwai, while father was , building the mission buildings there for Dr. Spalding. J '." v H"'; ,--yZ"-s: The next child, my sister. Mrs. Car rie A. Kamm. now of Portland, was bora ' at Whitman mission when father was question a to the Identity of the others the providers of the money to uDuoise the vicious paper, for hall. advertising. And the speakers who re fuse to break the oominandment against bearing false witness unless they are adequately paid for it .;:.;. it is saia that a portion of the money used In the campaign for the recall of Sheriff Word has been contributed by men connected with the liquor interests. and investigation, shows there 1 some ground for the etatement The Spec tator Is sorry to learn that men who ar known te be . Identified with the saloons ar working in harmony with tb Socialists, anarchists, , ruffianly press. Word. Father was on of th moat resourceful : men X ever saw. ,. If he wanted to make something and had no tools, h would make the tools and then go ahead and make What he wanted. After he had : built the mill for Dr. Whitman, though . he bad never In bis life attempted mak ing mill stone, he quarried them out successfully, shaped them up and In-" stalled, them.' My father's father died' when my father was only lgbt years old. Ill older brother was a Presby terian minister. He bound out my father to a cabinet maker. v . ;. S-'-i''VrW- "Th next child to be bora Was Mary. wno later Became Mrs. TarbelL ' Sh and rag-tag for th rcall of also was born at Whitman staUon, and it was hoped that the liquor In-1 died In Portland In 185. . Her husband terests had wholly suppressed their am-1 at one time was the state treasurr of bitlon to run tb politics of Portland J Waahlnrton. " . th state. There was a sort of J VThe next child te be born was Sarah. 7iT- ! ,v : .r 'i axm r wno marnea uovernor Abernathy son. mSflJ.Z?? borh t Salem when father was to ta pontics of Oregon, and th former I .i.. n . ....... would dvot. their tlm'to making their ;nrMra 'xbmrnmthT u..l business a. inconspicuous and refpecta-1 KtLaTr'rJAfJ?. IaIL "Ia . DI a DOSSlbla It u an aama f r--. , ....... wwnv.nv, a ..-i .VL-.v... nauoa'wra ciaim wnere tna town ni .w.iiiuu v uui vaaracier mail d.i. ... v . i tha iwnni. Mfniii r I BAiem now stands, but traded it to J. stat a few year aeo "arian tor a farm on CJaUop Plains not th. peopl refrained from making Ore- pn. " gon ar dry stat a few years ago. f1 J",'0' afm Tha tnalnrrtv at .. ,.1. . rj I far from AstOfla. land believe that" Tom Word bas con-1 . waa next child to b born, be- auotea th affairs of bis office honestly vonx uregon city in 184. -and consclenUously. They think that I " "Th ' at ohlld, Albert . Williams when he drove the anarchists and trea- GrV. was born on their Clatsop Plains Hon-uttenng .i. w. w. from the streets I arm. JH is now captain of a steam that h was doina his duty, Thar ar I hoat on the lower Columbia. of th opinion that they ar very for-r ,ne next boy was Edwin Hall, who tunat in having a sheriff who arouses Idled whea b was eight years old, and th antagonism of th criminals by en- the next child, Tnnjman Powers, died TAMln mm . thai fi rr iqai aa .. akJ .Ll.i II I a. a. . 1 auu auiaiaing i wnen ne was two years Old. . ' , XU-maTo'AVar a L :Ud,'jaine. T. Gray, now nattAamVK0.rit!.-J.0' a h" harg. of th Tanana dlvl.lon lu Word "in ih ' trw7tht eSS ?J21:!1 l3Lr ghOrac: m1 with tha minnrltv. Th. . v..' l ,n WWgO, power to retaliate.' and th dealra i.m very emauy p arousea. . CHRISTIANITY AND DEMOCRACY From the. Philadelphia North American. It la estimated by Bishop Carpenter, an . authority whose ,, figures ar spected everywhere, - that at present the ChrlsUan population of th world Is (00,000,000, approximately one-third th total population of the glob. This is an Increase of ' 800,000,00 in little more than a century. In the same in terval th world's population has in creased about TS per cent. So Chris tianity, aas multiplied twice as rapidly a tn soman lamiiy. "Tom a Dusineas i stsndDoint and religion dally is becoming more bust. nessllke In its organization and admin istration this 1 TomarkaM growth - la attributed chiefly to the work of mis alonarlos. beginnink with the activities ofthe Jesuit and leading to similar efforts among Protestants. This, move ment, pow reaching into very 'comer ot the earth and employing scores of thousands of trained, efficient leaders. who have left horn, native land and all man commonly bold dear to further the cau of Christ was set la motion first by the far-sighted Loyola and later by an English cobbler named William Ca rey. He It was who aroused the pres ent interest of the Portestant churches in foreign missions. At a Baptist as sembly mor than a hundred year ago he "bad th effrontery to inquire If Christ's command to the apostles to go Into all th world and preach th ges pel' did not apply at that tlmV , The reply he got from th presiding- of fleer "Sit down, young man; when it pleases God to convert the heathen he WlU do it without your , help" is ac curately Indicative of the feeling then generally xltlng. But the shoe- nutker bad a dauntless spirit and in accordance with.'th -laws governing dauntless spirits, it conquered. As we . save said, from a business standpoint, Vthis rapid ' spread of th religion ot the cross ii attributed, ob viously with Justice, . to , tne mission1 aries. - They have bean and are ' th alas agents, so to speak.;- But eveq th ; ablest agents - cannot sell some thing that is not, wanted, spolally when forced to eompet with other agents already on" th ground and do ing an established business in some thing that their customer h have learned to want, '': In this case, w believe , It l-nh commodity'' itself , that compels. though w have no desire to underrate th faithful work or th missionaries. And w think this compelling power may spring from a eourc other than that commonly credited. Whll . we cannot of course, doubt the appeal of a call based upon an unconditional in vitation to ev third humanity; to -Come "When I was four rears old .n living at CTatsop Plalna, so my father neoiaaa i naa Detter go to school. I bad to walk two mile each moraine- anil night to schools My first teacher was Mis Rebecca Ketchum. . I went to this QAOAl TO' Vara . n, ... . v. ntt . . SLft U.i? J0. r.a weary and w wer. at Clatsop -plains th first aiin 7 ? . lTm you rest," rsoyienan church in that whole dis- .a b w a as a u loaiiii mre sser "n r o-eiei w9trm v i aAe a. a ..aa l. a, a . a-A Ataav a lam I Bm tMUaUU Kl, UUr UUUVVa' Alter gwwpP e,another M.,- organtsed on.- of th it frtK1... r:::: ' People there donated ground ' for a .,., -ll.l, ,v. . , -"wir uk.vu auu Uljr , umw DUUt , tOC IlrSt tLmMmV i2t Wno1' W)rW M church to b built in Clatsop Tcounty. ourishad in a0C.rC3r, TWch hd Whea 1 aht years old my' parents for. tea birth TS tSf11 1 de.rM moy-a Astoria. I went to Khool her uS-im. "".ButherlandlTh: river of human u llf. l".:. SZZ Z h knew preached and practiced. ""J."." " fays,vI you fw present day thinkersaVa a roo, jou win spoil the child that nh ldealV oi moSI'mfI!!5 er .danger of any of uet- . ow their origin to Jesus of Manreth. J 7 JT? k. . pul ,n tn toaJ" An eminent supporter of thl? viW r'Jl' Ws.tim using th rod. says: . 1 - 'yvrw , or rl "Our next tacher was Miss tlnooln. THIS vision was so int.na. h. h-w marriea JUog A.A. Skinner "w.hi-..kn?d0'n already at hsui" Xnl IVJSl?? Sr"."..0" a 1 ntr. : hVlr-r"J-a - 'a i m, - practical nrorram r w . . . - . y ian.y gouix for the mov.m.nt "oISnMSh,,,l '' h,!lboy t0 to work as In All tha aa-aa ... KT a..k. lnl" SAriy AS POSSlbl And as a tnatt.- proachabi philosophy of ; :piatorhas f? w mueh t,m t0 been material for thinking on the part lnt? mlwf "enerai John Adair, the of great men in aU th. great ages, but colIotopl customs, had enough pull th program of Jmii. ha. .k to mor th customs house ami tha .i. Ject of passionate struggle on th part Sttict0 upper Atori-" taww Astoria AT aAAn a a A A. aIV a , I II W PI Ah AJA1 VP V1 111 Saav mam- aa.A a . . a mm iu ail lines. ' ; , ,V c v - I . awraa na in OU1K s "PlAto proposed a rulership of wis of tn poP,,lat,on- My father fixed n men. Jesus nrorjoail an Bri.A...l Up a subscription naner and T of goodness, open to vry man, how-1 r0und t0 all of th stores and real ever humble,; who was willing to obey ,ncwi ot loww Astoria and got th peo- aiuguom. ., . . i ijr mm o Denver their -"Tet th sreataat a n I mall.''' X was to a-a twin. . .i. .... . arte . did not come teachin a I river mall and make two ,. m.. . 4 racy of th commonplaoe. i Hi ssn- onth for th steamer mall that came ' tial view of the potenUal greatness of rrom California and brought the mail " Z3L Bla,'as strong as the hammer fromrlh east Th atores paid81 a otThor in breaking up the old founds- month, whll th prlvat . individual ' tlon. H. could not place th sons of paid twenty-fir 'cents a month. I Zebedee on th right and th. anaaa that ..U. . 1 his kingdom.. The position was not a I mail -..deliver In Or.rnn .. 1.1 - gift; It was 4 reward of fitness.- . back In 1888. I stsrted .i "Against the cast system in every lu (the morning, summer and wlniar form, ancientand modern, h off.red at 6 .SO o'clock. It kepi m t-?r ? WLCn Mt PUCM !chJo1 t,mt ributta8Mt often tT-l'lT.,,,,,l,, h,a from tenty-fiv t fW Pounds Unctions of life must go. Plato's of mail, and for a tan aStl . JKMf-w and workersfwould efln?bng TJnj thVfelhat w.'i not do. DistincUons of wealth of in- pretty good loid. h t ...I , t . teHect. or of th moat tntimat. --ii ft! 1-a-T. Ja,..:?ow. 1 wed to hat . "But he produced a distinction arhtoh makes the blood and iron of nuritan. lam permanent In the vein of the race. ne i caning men out of vry rank, rich And poor, learned -and ia-norant. slave and tree, and this Is th note of recognition: 'Whosoever; shall do th Will Of God. th aama Is rnv tirnihw and my sister, and mother.'": ft i r i t " Without any wish to expos ourselves to a theological dispute, w venture th assertion that the success of the Christian religion Is dua as much to lta doctrine of equality of opportunity as to Us offer of salvation through grace, andfnlrgt 28 cents a month for it! I thought was erettv tnurt tf-.i. from 880 to 135 a month, m,-.. r.Mte?Ttm! UrnfX my : Father aid, .'It is Willy's money. Let him spend it as he pleases.; ; H. will have to learn, for himself.' 'Peaches i thos days were ten cents and oranges IS cents apiece, and I was th most popu- school with all of th big girls. I never was much of a hand at saving, and when a pretty girl or tw? SrJhJ of th,m vented oranges, and I had th money, they generally got the cranges." v: