Image provided by: Eugene Water & Electric Board; Eugene, OR
About The Eugene weekly guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1899-1904 | View Entire Issue (May 26, 1900)
r higen l’UKDA «TTPPT -TC-ngETTT -■ Ln VITALLY IMPORTANT IS THIS CAMPAIGN TO THE PEOPLE U l’ierce . I Stuart eit K rotier u Whitakel V« One of the many simple remolies Ureeu........ can be applied to trusts ia to «top Party Lines Will Not Be So Tightly tliat granting them subsidies, either din- t I ly as is proposed t>y the ship subsidy Drawn as Usual. bill, or Indirectly by extravagant tar-, Iff discrimination. Fer I Schulmer Coagrt lertiard liai rane Co O o ---- ------------------------- - • E. K Hl UH AH. < 'ounty H. R. K Commis J. R. Hl Clerk— H. M. M Sheriff— W. W. t Treasurt A. H. 1‘.’ School H W. M. 5 AsHtswor E. R. PJ 8urveyo [JM’Ol Uoroner- JR. W. »RICINO lustice— ; eo . w Jonstabl ’. M. M —• C( J quel <1 as to □cy of I n pa ri sc J : huso crimini ane just Lie to »1 •• i coiint. jring I isoli li es were earned he past the 1.1 920C e Fiet iers d o ants fo as, etc. he wor reasoi ned a | wages b the it lowing installi thè co ♦451.1 te pret thè e I lo Hit quali! il Wit: ere art Ofl like et thè ta eslion. proti ng up thè cc r out o »unty i of ti ni witi igs, co t cour jbt in heir co triff W he wiì :ta) Ni not to y in p* cria . be tu Ila of < he ca TY Tl •iueea anali bank eld or <1 foi burini er ( «aus! II fine a vet ie fori io lb« No measure has ever passed both sent Oregon In Congress—His In houa«*s of congress against such oppo tegrity and Great Ability Un sltlou as the Puerto Rican tariff bill questioned by All has evoked. No party Is or ever will be strong enough to bear unharmed The Union nominee for Congress the strain of the passage of a tress- State ure thus opposed —Washington Post man for the Second district, Senator Wm. ftiAth, was born in (Republican). orooxiyu, N. c. Y„ x„ April .^»** 22, 1854. Two Brooklyn, years later his father moved to Min THAT LEGISLATIVE SESSION nesota, where the youth grew to mam AND ITS GORGEOUS GRAFT hood, attending school until be was 16 years of age. when, like many other young men of the West, be started out A Recognised Republican Authority in the world to carve out bls own for tune. However, he was a natural stu Lambaste Those Who Were dent, and pursued a course of study at Guilty of Paltering. Fairbault, Minnesota. His advance "The course pursued by the legisla was rapid, and beiore be became of ture durlug the session just closed— age was principal of the school in the aud the remark applies to the special town where he was raised, a school of session as w-idl—was directed largely 500 pupils, and It was often remarked by the purpose which prevailed in the by bis townsmen that the principal of organization of the bouse. The motive the school was drawing per capita tax that controlled the organization of the from the state's apportionment of bouse was the prtection of the state school funds. Afterward he was one printer. The “combine” and the of the faculty of the Suattuck military "graft” were uppermost there. Mult school for four years. Retiring from in merehan- nomah’s trading liegau with the pilot school work he engaged _ bill and the apportionment bill and dis»-, and also began the study of law. was extended later to the tax collector Iielng admitted to practice In 1886. He bill; aud to get these through votes came to Oregon 12 years ago, and for were promised and given for bills the past eleven years has practiced his which take enormous sums out of the profession in Baker City, being recog state treasury for the lieneflt of partic- nixed as one of the leading lawyers of ular localities largely at the expense of that place. He was the first president of the the taxpayers of Multnomah. A week liefore the adjournment. It became evl Baker City Chamber of Commerce, dent titat pretty much the whole body and was urged to retain the position, of grafts had formed an Invincible but declined because of the stress of combine, and that argument, appeal or business. Mr. Smith was elected state protest would tie a waste of words. senator for Baker and Malheur coun After this condition hail become a ties two years ago. In the senate he fixed thing, the delivery of the goods is-came a leader, and on account of tiecame a mere matter of detail. If the record he made as a legislator, there was a failure anywhere, it was was appointed by Governor Geer one mere accident attributable to passing of the regents of the State University. The Voters Are Hereby Given a Few Wholesome Facts to Ponder Over and Act Upon at the Polls on June 4. Joint He H, M. V Reprobe LEVI ( ° illy the ofl 0 he to A Man Eminently Qualified to Repre MEN AND NOT PARTISANS ARE WANTED For I Hasanl o I doubtless pass at the next s«rs»ion, THOS. G. GREENE •along with other subsidy schemes of •evil import. In the end it may be a FOR SUPREME udge ! good thing. It takes just this kind of barefaced looting to arouse the peop e into action. And when the peop e take the senatorial question into their One Eminently Fitted to Dos.« Judicial Ermine. * own bands, senators like Hanna will inees on the Ticket. whistle very small when It comes to saying what the Senate shall or shall not do.-From the New York Journal, SELF-MADE-WELL-MADE MAN and reproduced in Oregonian, as en KNOWN AS AN ABLE LAWYH dorsement made. IT IS VERY WELL; BUT HON. WILLIAM SMITH '1HERE ARE ABOUT FORTY MORE AND HIS CANDIDACY BIG TRUSTS THAT HAVE HELP THROUGH PROTECTIVE TARIFF AND SHOULD BE DEALT WITH IN THE SAME WAY. Editor Scott. One of the Moat Popular Nom Probably the most Important electhji Caldwell, F. M. Westfall, John McFar- that bus ever affected Oregon will oc land, C. Pattison. Johu Millard and « ur June 4, 1900. Questions of vital John Crowder. After a spirited ffi»- importance to the «tote will be settled cusslon, the following resolution was by those chosen to represent us II is adopted: •■Resolved, That It Is the sense of Imperative that meu of well known fitness uud probity bo placed in office. this meeting that ou? representative, Partisan politics for tte; time will Thomas H. Tongue, has not done his prolxibly be waived and those < andl duti' In the matter of seeurl'ig pen dates will be elected who will serve sions for Indian war veterans.”—Ore the people in the best manner possi gonian. • hie. It is not the province of this pa per to eulogize those nominated by the recent conventions. W«* will not pan PROCTOR’S PROTEST egyrise the postulaats. We will state AGAINST OUTRAGE the cold facts as we timl tuem ami give the reader a consenaus of oplrion aud let him Judge of the truth for blmstlf. In a recent imrnoer of the What a Rock-Ribbed «nd Moun Corvallis Times, one of the most prom tain-Buttressed Man Says. lueul aud influential newspapers in this state, appeared the following eti comiuin on tlie Hou. Bernard Daly, of ¡jikevlew, ami former Slate Senator: NOT REPUBLICAN IN SENTIMENT "It la a pleasure, through t“e Times, to introduce to tlie people of Betitou county Dr. Bernal«! Daly, Democratic Senator Redfield P-octor, of Vermont, aud People'» caudmate for congress In Hie Celebrated Speech, March iu the FlrlSt district. A man of pure 30, Excoriate« the Sanhedrim« character, of more commanding mati- of the G. O. P. for Perfidy. hood never apprar«*«l ls-fore electors for their suffrage. He was liorn in I submit in parallel columns the Ireland In 185*, and is a true type of statement of the principles of the tlA* generous hearted uini brilliant measure taxiug the colouies ami the y*i*h-American citizen. When a small disposition of the proceeds aud that of boy he came to America and settled our bills in regard to Borto Rico. The iu the South, where he grew to man statement of the act by Klug G«-orge hood. He graduated with .ionols from is au extract from Lord Johu Russell's the Ohio Normal University July 23d. "Life of Fox”: 1880. Subsequently tie studied uiedl "The bH'd'lmpuslug duties on certahi clue ill the m«*dlcal uepartment of tile kinds of merchandise when Imported “TWO OF A XIND” BEAT A CRIPPLE Unlv«.*rslty of Loulsville, Kent in ky, into the colonies, required the payment aud was graduated by that ltistllutloti of such duties «0 be made Ln gold aud silver, agd ordered them to be paid 11- with high hours. Dr. Daly cairn* to Oregon and located to tlie exclKspior, where, with the.p’O for th«* practi«.*e of 111» profession at duce of all forms of parllameutary du laikevlew Iu 1887. In 1892 he was ties, they were to be set apart as sep ele<-t«>«l to the hous«.* of representatives arate fund to be applied under the dis aud In 1896 was elect«*«! to the State position of parliament for defraying Bern e. In this eoutest he carried his the future charges of protecting, Je own county by ail average majority of fendiug and securing the colonies.”— 247, w’ lle tlie Republican stat«* ticket Russell’s Lifihof lex. Vol. 1. page 45. currhxl the county by an average ma Under our uieasui • l'orto Rico is to jor'tv of 150. a fact that jipeakH vol- be taxed and the islur ' pay both ways lie «•. for Dr. Daly’s iiopularlty at on merchandise which they ship to, or i .»me, and Is a living testimonial of receive from this country, and we hl* character as a man. have provide«! that the amount here For soim* ye<rs Dr. Daly wi'Y, a ,0*- tofore or hereafter so received "shall g«*ut of the State Agr cultural Colh-ge. tie placed at the disposal of the presi and for ten years in* has b«*en presi dent, to be used for the government «lent of the Agricultural S<>«4*ty of now existing or which may hereafter latke couutv. As a member of the be established In l'orto Rico, for the Semite, he «■«» on two occasions aid and relief of the p«*oph* thereof, given th«* complimentary vole of the aud for public «duration, public works, Populists and Democrats for president and other governmental purposes of that body. |therein,'* until otherwise provided by Dr. Daly's record as a legislator 1>*( |»w. clean In every respect; lie la the au Murk the resemblance In these two tlior of the Homestead Exemption law propositions, that th«* duties Iu each ns well aa of tin* act r®x'uliug th«* case, laith past and future, are to l»e Railroad Uommiaslon. to which the set aside for the iH'iietit of th«* coun Republleana point with prld<* in tli<©r try taxevl. Th«* o4'ly difference is tliat, stat«* platform, lit* also iutnalucttd wlille our measure taxes merchandise aud had passed the bill requiring Isitli going to and coming from Porto county clerks to tak<* acknowledge Rico, th«* British bill taxed o2’ly a 11m- meuts In penalon matters free of lt«*<i nuiiilier of articles coming to tills charge. It wan Dr. Daly who intro country, «lid not tax our exports, and duce«I Senati R»>solutloll No. 12. which tills difference is In favor of Klug parsed unanimously, ns follows, to George. • wit: I’.u® there Is another vast difference "Whereas, tin* p«*ople of tlie state of In the two cases. King George and Oregou, ri'gardless of party attilia Ills ministry undertook to Imp«»»«* a tax T ongue —“I say, Malcom, if be can stand this and doesn’t tlon*. are d«*alr«>iis of expressing upon English |H*x>ple, peoph* of their their d«*ep f«*elln;<j of gratitude to and own ra«*e ami blo«xl, w»ho knew their die we can give him another dose of “ plain duty ” next term, n their admiration for tin* courage of th«* rights and dared maintain them; who we are in it.” «Jregon soldiers wlio liavc so nobly of knew tha^ the hearts of tlie English* M oody —“Hush I Don’t speak too loud. The people are fered their llv«*n In «lefriise of o|i pisipli* were with them. We impose presst'd humanity Iu avenging tin* loss these taxes u;>on a |ie«>ple uuus«xl to beginning to wake up. Sing low bass.” of the Maine, in l>elialf of civilization assert their rights In th«* past, ami and to maintain tin* hoiuir and pres |siw ericas I*» maintain them If they tlgv of th«* American nag; and where had; tqion a people who welcom«*d our whims. The regular course was im He has ever taken a deep interest In educational affairs, serving three years an. th«* heartn of some o* our people army w hen It land«*«! upon their island mediately resumed. It is useless to dwell on this sniuie- as a mem 1 st of the school l>oard of are t*l«*«*dlng ns a renult of tin* lonn by ns friend* who had come to fn*«* them alckuesn or In battle of some loved front tin* mls-ruh* of Spain, and who ful history. Everyluxly Is aware of It; Baker City, and has been one of the* ouea to them most dear; therefor«*, be luive «*ouducte«l th«*m*elves In the moat the work has lieen done In the eyes of factors that have aided in making the It rem>lve<l by tin* Bcuiite. the house |M*n«vabI«> manner; upon a people to the whole iieople, and some day there public schools of Baker the pride of concurring, that the congratulations whom wte promised to bring “th«* Im w ill be a reckoning for such business. the city. As a member of the l>oard and admiration ami conlltlenee of the munilies and blessing* of th«* liberal The form of this corruption—for cor of regent* of jfie State University he p«*opl«* of th«* state of Oregon, la* ami institutions of our government," am! ruption It is is that of bribery. There has display^. marN-d activity and In tii«* name la fervliy extend«*d to tin* to whom w«* mol sai«l by th«* mouth of were “side stakes" too. on every "deal" terest. Oregon noldii*rw In tin* I'tiillppliies. ami our highest officla.a, ihat to establish and members who wen* too conscien As a legislator Mr. Smith's record in that the %mpathy of th«* peopl«* be free trad«* was "our plain d tty" de- tious to “go on the ground floor” wilh the s|>eclal session of 1898 and regu Mkjjl tin* Mim* In liereby extend«*«! to mi<nde«l t»y "th«* highest «*on*!derxtk>us the rest, found themselves mere "dead lar session of 1899 is without a blem the inounS.ng friends of tin* heroic ¡of Ju’tl««* ami good faith."—Morning heads” in th*- legislative enterprise. ish. He was ever found In opposition Men fairly honest ill their own busi to every measure that did not have d«ad That th«* secretary ofqitate In* Oregouan, April 9th, 1900. ness, fell in with this game aud be good motives behind it, and living an and Is hereby ra«|iieHt«*<l to transmit a came partners In it—excusing them able debater, was able to make his op copy of th«*H<* resolutions to tin* com selves on the gniund that, though It position to bad measures and support MOULDS THE MOODY MUD mandllig officer of the Oregon regi was a "blank outrage.” It “had to be of good measures telt incut at Mniilln. ami that said offlerr! done."—Oregonian, February 19th, t*4* ami he 1« hereby r,*quest»al upon I It will lndetsl be a fortunate thing reivlpt of auch «*«>py to eaiiseiln* natm* What an Eaatarn Oregon Filtor Say« 1899. for the entire state If he is elected to to b«* rend to each «*ompany of Ills congress, for In hftn the people w411 of ths Simon Ring. The sporting men of Portland ate said regiment.'* The Portland Telegram says: "Mult said to be offering to bet that 11. W. have an able and fearless champion. • Ilin vote on every propemition «x»m- nomab county Is satisfied with Mai Ing before th«» legislature was on tin* colm Moody," as congressman from Corbett will be the next United States •THE OREGONIAN WILL TELL senator for Oregon. A worse calamity aide of right nml Juntlev. the Second district, By Multnomah might befall th»* »taje. but at thia tine* MR. TONGUE THAT HE CANNOT Dr. Daly has some Interest In tin* county "The Telegram" means the Re BE RE ELECTED ON THIS ISSUE.’ bank of 1aik«*vi«*w. a private banking pubtlcan* in control o, polities In Port we cannot guess what it could b* Mr. Corbett's money may buy him —Oregonian. Institution, but his ¡tank hrs never land. The fact Is. Malcolm Moody Is fore«'l<Hi«st a mortgage ami lias never "pledged to Portland" au<l Joe Simon a seat In th«* senate, but he «*ould never t win the votes of th«* peopl«* t>y deserv HANNA SAYS "MUST" for«*«*«! a collection or su»*«l anvoiie^ Is the power behind the thron«* which * TO OBSEQUIOUS SENATE. l Thun end* a brl^f refen*mv> to on«* moulds the Moodv mud to hla own i“K wb«> la a man among men Ills iwrot will Mah'olm Mtsxly. beenuae BEYOND ANY DOUBT THERE Aid the rHagiag Puppets Bead the »»reiigth with th«* p«*opl«* III li.1’ own locallt) Is an unfailing key to hla of Simon and tlio-e who Simon r»pre WAS AN OVERWHELMING SENTI Pregaaat Kaee That Thrift character. There the lin«*a of political sent», "belon*« to Portland." bag ami y^NT OF OPPOSITION IN THE May Follow Fawaiag. breech«*», and Eastern Oregon has REPUBLICAN CONVENTION TO demarkatlon are literally t>lott«sl out With symptom of baffled rage Sena neither n-pres.-ntatlon in the lower or rHK pvERTO RICO TARIFF BILL when H»*niar«l Daly la In th«* field. tor Hanua has thrust bis 19.000,000 This In »^e fruit of a genial dl*poslton. tin* upix r ho^ae of <*ongn*«« U hat TlIK REASON WHY MEMBERS subsidy steal In his inside pocket, the Portlaiwl I el.•gram please« to d«*« pjp ^tYT ASSERT IT WAS BB- of a finely balntMS'd character, and of Ignat«* a» "Multnomah county" I* ““ where It will remain until the next U the CAUSE A PART OF THE DELEGA session of congress. In doing this the pmionilnatlng lntrlllg«*u>'« L l*ctt«*r «*ontrwlllng force In th«* Republican j jion IN CONGRESS HAD SI P man never app«*al<*«l to the voters of and will probably remain ao a» |*ORTED THE BILL.—Orvgvnlan. Republican boss Is said to have ex the First district for support Slmv party claimed; "That bill must o»n«l shall long »» ex Senator Corbett 1 h«x gal Aprll H J900 his triumphant electl«»n Is unqu<**tlon loping, vaunting ambition to ■bino pasa at the next session." If this ahlne In In aNv deeerv*d. d«*a«*rv<sl. It I« 1« almost certain «vrialn to l>olltl<*» and wields an Influential aack sNv country is to be coerced Into present h*p|>en " Representative Tongue publishes a ing $».(<*} '"»> a year to .-w-nator Hanna Pendleton Esst Oregonian. From ~ four column letter to the voter» of Or and his friends. In heaven’s name let May 11, ilk«'. egon In which be pleads for their sup. us make It in the shape of an ott- INDIAN WAR VETERANS In the part where he refers tn right gift, and not at the point of a Ton'll«*'» whole conitresslonal record port. Accuse Cswgresswisn Tougur of Not »how» that he I* for the trust* an<1 not his vote on the l'orto Rico rape case senatorial robber’s pistol, or through he pleads the baby act and acknowl a subterfuge calculated to ..revive the Deis* W’» Duty. the people. I edges that It la a wrong, but he was public. When .senator Hanna says • -------- the Senate "shall do thia, that or the R«*esn»v the paper trust has put np forced to add hla share to the crime. other thing, he means It He Is in a ALBANY. Or. May 1« At a meet Portland Dispatch tag "f the Indian War Veterans the the prfe-v of printing paper to an nn- position to whip that bony into line following delegates were electisi t > the I'onselonable figure. Representative De slmHy because Senators x,T>aot elect In politic* there Is a difference b* 1 grand encampment to be held In Port ' ri«*, of California, has Introduced s ed by the people, and ha,r of them land Juno 14 Jason Wheeler. Jo*a* bill to repeal the duty on printing ps tweeu duty and duties This Is < •x cannot call their political souls their the Porto Rican tariff. Darla T. A. Rigg*. Q Farlow, V. H per and th* material of which It la etuplliled by own. The ship subsidy «trai win I ® • requi the a for b ■••»»■J J NOTHING IN THE REPUBLICAN STATE PLATFORM IS MORE IM PORTANT THAN ONE PLANK THAT ISN'T THERE. THIS IS THE DEMAND FOR JUSTICE FOIL POR TO RICO.—Oregonian, April 13, 1900. The constitution of the» United States, we are told, does not “run ’ in our new possessions. This is the basis of the argument for treatment of Puerto Rico aud the Philippine Islands' as alien territory—though the doctrine is not applied to Hawaii. It seems, then, that since the constitution is of no effect in Porto Rico and the Philip pines. congress may disregard all con stitutional limitations as to affairs in the Islands. It may pass bills of at tainder and expost facto laws, as to them; it may grant titles of nobility to persons in the islands; It may pass laws to Impair the obligation of con tracts; may take away private prop erty without compensation, order peo ple to be hanged without trial, and do everything else that tue constitution Inhibits or forbids, in the state of the Union. Such is the absurdity into which that nrgument runs.—Orego nian, March 26, 1960. DR. BERNARD DALY IS NOT FOR GOLD STANDARD Bvlizvn That the Man Should Be Para mount tc the Dollar, and No Mistake. A Gentleman Who Possesses then, fidence of the Oregon State a an<4 I Legal C- — x _ and Fraternity Where- ever He I* Known. Thomas G. Greene, the UnU. didate for judge of th« Su Cls’ Court, was born In Washington*'*0* ty. Indiana, July 4. Ifcco, “ moved to Illinois In 186«;. and h*1* qulred a common school edu«-»»** Moultrie county. In that state as his graduation from the village hi * school, he taught country school t lug the winter aud worked on a «,« In summer, his father „elug a f«r and one of the early settlers tl tig ham county, HI. He t^gan ,7 p study of law In 1878, but eontlnw t>'<*' teaching for awhile, ano in .¿J pub moved to Chicago, where he lived fl I V years. He was reporter there and du some newspaper work, but most of, I M « time was employed by the BraditC priu company and was sent by that I r*dj pany in 1887 to Helena, Mont u „ I perlntendeut of Its office there R I < ame to Portland in May, Isas ln J7 I same capacity, but resigned in l»i I >Jr Since 1878, Mr. Greene has kept m I his studies, and upon leaving I cial pursuits in 1891, he begu / I practice of his profession in Purti.” I He was with the well known lawjZ I of Cox, Teal & Minor for awhile but I for five year« past has been a rnemb- I of the firm of Bauer & Greene, Pon. I land, and has acquired a fine gepen. I practice. He was married in Porthu I In 1890. « ^1 Since the Tilden aud Hendricks cm. pafgu in 1876, when be began to mut speeches at the county school bona "rallys” customary in Illinois, he his | taken an Interest in politics as a D«. ocrat, but has never sought either! I'll nomination or appointment to a pts | lie office of any kind and has nets | pi before been a candidate for office. Hi | 1111 activity in politics has not been «I Al much that of a violent partisan u A' that of an American citizen, stnnq for purer and better *«-lf governs: M through party Instrumentality, ull for a closer regard In legislatioa j the interests and will of the people. ■ As the Republican papers have been claiming that Dr. Daly is a gold stanu- ard man, the People's Press has taken pains to get the following information: From present Indications It is appar ent that the policy of the Republicans during this Campaign is to misrepre sent our candidates in every imagina ble manner, ami partcularly that of our candidate for congress In the first district, Dr. B. Daly, on the financial question. Dr. Daly's record on this question is well known. He was au ardent sup porter of Bryan in 1896, and contrib uted largely to the result in Lake county, his home, whereby tho county gave Bryan a good majority, although IS DROPPED TEMPORARUT. the county is strongly Republican. As ( ' a member of the legislature for a pe However, That --------- Thieving Job VII riod of six years. Dr. Daly's vote and Be Revived After the Election I voice were always recorded In favor of every resolution and question re The Hon. Malcolm A. Moody and tk lating to the free and unlimited coin Hon. Thomas B. Tongue, our presectl age of silver and as chairman of the representative*. are called upon to a I Democratic committee on platform in plain their action tn the proposed ship I 1898, at the state convention, signed subsidy steal that is being engineer and endorsed the conference tv port on through congress by Murk Hann*. Fori platfortp, which was adopted by Popu political effect the measure has ben I lists, ttemocrats and Sliver Republi temporarily dropped, but will be > cans. As a member of the senate he vlved after the presidential electka I was on two occasions given the com and made a law, unless the people I plimentary vote of Populists and Dem arise tiid crush these pliant tools vb I *->crats for president of that body.—The wear the brand and collar of the Hu- 1 People’s Press. na ring. The Standard Oil Compu’l and other criminal trusts of their ill I hope to rob the public of millions < I THE SHIP SUBSIDY STEAL. dollars by the passage of the ship n F I The Oregonian has de- 1 The Fine Italian Hand of James J. sidy bill. nounced the steal In strong ter®. I Hill is in Evidence. Their lack of consideration for thepe- 1 They have the ship-subsidy bill up pie’s Interests and their friendly * I again in the senate. James J. 11111, tlon for the trust kings Is sufficient to I who is going into the steainfnlp bus»- condemn Tongue and Moody to o» I I ness on a large scale, wants no subsl- llvlon. There is but one way to thwart th» I dies, He reiterates<his objections, and says if the bill should pass It would machinations of Mark Hanna, defeat! mean in effect political suicide f.*r his henchmen at the polls. Votenl those who vote for it. A lot of gen should protect themselves againit »1 tlemen in congress are in tho imlitical most gigantic robliery ever attetopttll suicide business just now. What with upon the American people. El« I the effort to skin our new dependen Tongue and the steal is by your Mie I cies at om* end of th«* line and to give tlon. Vote for Daly.—Portland DI» I I subsidies to rich shipowners and pro- patch. te«llon to vast trusts at the other, the •--------------------- I Characteristic of the Max- I political undertaker may soon have business enough. Are not the great shipowners rich Dr. Bernard Daly, the union non>J* enough? Are they not making monev £>r congress, is the mau who enough? THE LEADING OBJECT the long 125 mile night ride tbrouj OF THIS EFFORT IS TO SUBSI ■ the snows of Eastern Oregon, DIZE LINES ALREADY DOING -x temi>erature below zero, to xt’tc! G BUSINESS ENORMOUSLY PROFIT ¡Sufferers of the Silver I.ske holorUj ABLE. The subsidy bill, as Mr. Hill on that awful, Christmas Eve of 1“ lias so conclusively «hewn, is "not to His personal sacrifices in order .0 ¡¡>*1 aid the small fry.’ but th«* multi mll- Ister professionally to the uuM'uiuM Iktnaires. It will not assist the men victims on that occasion endeared «■I who have a capital of I40.QP0. •Subsi to all who were fMaiillar with the I <lles are not for them, but are reserved cuiustanc«**.—Roseburg Review. for individuals an«l corporations whose Incomes are |20.000,000 a year or more. Wise Words of WxrniM* The small capitalists are to be taxed ■ so the big ones may be subsidized.”— Here Is an admonition that •- * Oregonian. have been he«*d«*d. It appeared or±l ally in the Chicago (Republican! iw A Good Republican Authority on ord. and was reproduc«sl in the 1 Tongue. goninn. April 2. I960: J Washington—Senator Fairbank» ■ | To a man up a tree It looks as if the the Republican caucus that I“"' , Hon. Thos. H. Tongue may ar*well say would go Democratic if 1 ’n^rrt,>jW| his political prayers. It would be an not give free trnde to Puerto unwise step in renominating him. This Mason aaid the sanie of pillinola all Republicans of this con^.-easlonal Simon »aid the sani«* of Oregon- di^rict know full well.-Woodburn In dependent. The Indian War Veterans shod'1 have expected much front r If the people of the First congres anyway. When he beat ta’i'le™ sional distrxt will do their duty •13 votes wasn’t It toe li ' Tongue will be returned to Washing the Grande Roude reservation ton—county. saved bis scalp? I I I I I I I DJ blic. [ I fi l A int< Mil I Ht flor IH mtn kfe. ThP Diab rom At f T acoma , Maty 5.—Officers of the steamship Tacoma, arrived fiom Y okohama yesterday, in speaking of the ^eat n her of Japanese flocking to the United States and British Coit* bia, say it was current talk at Yokohama that there would be <»00 Japanese leave their native country for British Columbia i* this Summer, and it is understood the number coming W • L nited States will be enormous. q .g The steamer Tosu Maru is now due on the Sound *’■ i," \ Japanese on board, and on the Dalynvostock, one of the * * l liners, ’ncrs. will w*’l I* be in b here ere * in n a few days with 90V more-"”*0 Daily TelegTam.