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About Washington County news. (Forest Grove, Washington County, Or.) 1903-1911 | View Entire Issue (May 22, 1903)
THE Page Four. W A S H IN G T O N CO UNTY NEW S, FO REST GROVE, OREG ON, MAY 22, 1903. I Current Comment-Tim ely T opics County News •* By *• AUSTIN CfiAIG Tuesday aUernoou by falling against WASHINGTON COUNTY N E W S a rock. Dra. I.arge and Via put thg injured member in a plaster cast. REPUBLICAN Proprietor WILL FRENCH Forest Grove, Oregon Contractor Jerome expects to begin work this week on Mr. McEldowney’s new residence. He is now busy witb the foundation of Frank Wagner's dwelling on Pacific avenue. Six Pages $ 1 .0 0 a Y e a r In Advance company or eeived by the person or persons tv, Whenever any person corporation owning or eontroling any newspaper or period ical of any kind, or whenever any said newspaper or One Dollar a Year in Advance. all business communica tions to the Proprietor. periodical from such persons or persons to wfiom said newspaper or periodical Is All matter for publication should be addressed mailed, to: ‘’Editor Washington shall be deemed to be a gift, and no County News.” debt or obligation shall accrue against Eighth • grads examinations have RGANIZED LABOR IS P A R T IC U L A R L Y DENUNCIATORY OF TRUSTS, BUT W H A T GREATER T R U S T IS THERE T H A N ITSELF? IT IS THE GRAND TR U S T OF T H c TIMES. IT IS THE MUSCLE TRUST, THE TRU ST OF MEN WHO MAKE TH E IR LIVING BY M AN U AL LABOR. Application made for entry at the any such person or persons, whether iostofflce o f said newspaper or periodlca.1 is re- as second class mail matter. I t is to be hoped that, in accordance with the Nelson amendment to the department o f commerce superintendent, 16 of the I t who were privileged to take the examination be bill, the government, in turning the searchlight o f publicity on ing present. The papers will be re the trusts, w ill not forget organized labor. I f any institution needs to be exposed to the limelight, it is certainly trades unionism. Hut viewed at Salem. it is not only a trust its e lf; it is a creator o f other trusts— o f cap John O'Neal, a young man residing italistic trusts, as distinguished from labor trusts. O N E OE T H E two miles north of here, was thrown L E A D IN G C A U S E S EOH T H E F O R M A T IO N O F A N U M out of a wagon Saturday morning, and B E R O F T H E I N D U S T R I A L C O M B IN A T IO N S H A S B E E N the wheel passed over and broke the T H E N E C E S S IT Y T H A T H A S C O N F R O N T E D EM PLO Y right leg near the ankle. Dr. Ward ER S TO U N IT E T H A T T H E E X A C T IO N S OE L A B O R upon questions supplied by the state Issued Every Friday in the Year. Address By DAVID M. PARRY. President National Associa tion o f Manufacturers been going on at the public school paper or periodical, shall mail or send without arst receiving an order for repainted. Cotton’s Annotated Codes and Stat utes of Oregon. Office in Abbott Building. any person or persons in this stai- to his home and had it whom it is sent or not.— Bellinger & editor or proprietor of any such news any such newspaper or periodical to ORGANIZED LABOR. TH E GREAT M USCLE TRUST Forest Grove, Oregon, set the limb and Mr. O’Neal is getting along nieely. M U ¡ITT B E M O R E E F F E C T IV E L Y D E A L T the contrast alone of the two men as "Wberu Hulls the Oregon." 'ihe Lewis and Clark Centennial and they showed themselves here is reason for a big Hermann vote. North P a d lie Exposition, BY WAY OF Mrs. Esther M. Hall of Sherwood, w ife o f J. V. Hall, aged 24 years, who has been bedridden the past six weekb Portland, 1905. and removed to a sanitarium at Port A tip-over on the mountain, neai INTRODUCTION. Walt A new paper, bet not new to the past of Washington county, Us people, Smith's, on the Wilson river land two weeks ago, died last week. The remains were buried at the Hood Viow Cemetery. road, threw Mr. and Mrs. F. Seve. a rce and Mrs. Bunn from a carriage A husband, brother and three small children survive her. in which they were being driven over its resources, its needs and its ways, The News feels no sense of strange ness nor recognizes any necessity lor Mr. Bunn Memorial Sunday.— Sunday, May 24, was badly cut in the face and the being the day ..at apart for old soldleri by S. Iron o f Tillamook. They were passing to attend ehwrch In a body, all over Emmett Quick’s wagon and drove out our land, J. B. Matthews’ Post, which county’s quota, making the number up into the brush, having a narrow escape always observes this custom, cordially to the state's average, but The News from a very serious acckleut. Both invites all old soldiers of any war to seeks to occupy a field now vacant, to ladies fainted away in the excitement. join us on this occasion. The Post will fill the position which It believes is The Tillamook travelers took the early meet at V ert’s Hall at 10 o’clock A. to be the future of country news M , form in lino and march to Tuesday train to Portland. papers, to supplement with local news E. Church. Tho column will start, at as carefully gathered, well or d»ro d 10:40 sharp. F. 8. BARNES. Introduction. Its advent fills the and attractively presented the great dallies with which It could sustain n<) others bruised. Chas. Lorenz, who works at Wm. Lyda’s sawmill, fractured his foot Post Commander. F. B. S TA R R E TT. Ajt. rivalry but which now are visiting wan? Burners' homes and will la thru penetrate everywhere, as the rural de livery systum extends ita advantages to the remotest residences. W IT H . W W W t II I I a « - 1 r - The col umns point the way toward what may Organized labor is not only seeking to absorb with its tentacles all the manual workers o f the cities and factories, hut it is also reaching out to take in the farm laborers. Unions o f the latter are reported to be rapidly growing in Illinois and Indiana. I t is also stated that they are preparing to exact double the wages hereto fore [»aid fo r this class o f labor. I f a compact organization of fann hands could he formed, a very serious problem would con front not only the farmers, but the entire country. There can he no doubt that such an organization would demand, with all the unreasonableness o f ignorance, a wage scale that would greatly en hance the cost o f living to each and every one and would in all likelihood bring about the ruin o f our immense export trade in grain and flour. ORGANIZED LABOR AND THE SOCIALIST P A R T Y DIFFER IN ONE ESSENTIAL RESPECT. THE FORMER SEEKS TO BRING ABOUT SOCIALISM BY FORCIBLE METHODS, AND THE LA TTE R SEEKS THE SAME END THROUGH THE BALLO T BOX. Its attempts to compel the shortening o f the hours o f labor without regard to the effect on industrial welfare, its dictation of uniform wage scales, which place the indolent and inapt on the same footing with energy and capability, and the absolute power it arrogates to itself over the individual on the theory that the individual has no rights which the many need respect, are all car dinal principles o f socialism. S O C IA L IS M IS A D E N I A L O F I N D I V I D U A L A N D P R O P E R T Y R IG H T S , A N D SO, A LSO , IS T R A D E S U N IO N IS M W H E N R E D U C E D T O IT S L A S T A N A L Y S IS . be expected when the news gathering A Year of Prosperity For the West la systematized and the rush of get ting out the first issue settles Into the regular routine. It. If By GEORGE GOULD, Head o f the Gould System o f Railroads If you Uks it, taks K creditably rspresanta the CAN SEE A F U LL YEAR OF PR O S P E R IT Y AHEAD FOR THE WEST, THE P H YSIC AL CONDITION OF THE RAILROADS IN THE W E S T W AS NEVER BETTER T H A N IT IS NOW. county, send it to your friends, and if you don’t see in its pages what you want, ask for it. A ll our earnings are going ahead o f the largest REAMES, HERMANN AND R008E- VE LT. period we have ever had. I have never seen wheat look so Well in all my experience in Democratlc opponents of the Repub- the west as it does today. I B E L IE V E T H A T I T Heap candidate (or congressman are exercised over the possibility of Mr Hermann not being as welcome WHERE CARNATION CREAM IS MADE— FORFST GROVE. a guest at the W hite House as one A. E. Reames, but it Is noticeable that Pres ident Roosevelt did not lavlte W I L L B E SOM E T IM E T H E W E S T W IL L E V E R N E E D TO C A L L O N N E W Y O R K FOR M ONEY. The western bankers have their own money to lend to their own people, unless money should get so high in W all Reames to accompany him on his trip I t o b Salem to Portland. ‘ Neither has WHAT TH E RICH MAN be Yet given an Interview In Reames' behalf, advising believers la Repub lican principles to vote (er the gen CANNOT PURCHASE tleman whose omtnent qualMlcatlone aye all summed up in that he was not By President CHARLES W. ELIOT o f Harvard born otH of Oregon, la a son-in-law of the late Republican Representative In Congress (who abhorred bis him less ashamed to acknowledge be In some Democratic doctrines, though the district attorney still feels It a duty to neglect his office of pros ecutlng attorney In Eastern Oregon to foist on the people of Webfoot an un representative Representative), with- out capability or convictions, and is being boosted p rind paly as a means o f Increasing the circulation In the First District nf a youthful IMrtland paper. Washington county will do th* proper thing by Mr. Reames' candidacy as.J la respect to the memory of his regretted father-in-law express Its ap preciation o f the honors the Repub lican part# showed Mr. Tongue by giving the RepnMfeea nominee rn an- dlinlnished Republican majority. But & and three coadjutors were hanged for piracy. 1783—James Otis, patriot or ator of the Revolution, killed by lightning at Andover. Mass.; born 1725. “ Oti» was a flame of fire,'* said Adams, referring to the first 1 speech, in 1761. “ With niipnal. • • • n rapid torrent of Burnside, impetuous eloquence he hurried away all before him. American independence was then and there born.’* 1798—Thomas Hood, English humorous poet, lyjrn in London; died there 1845. J£24—Ambrose E. Burnside, eminent Fed eral general, born at Liberty, Ind.; died 1881. 1850—Jane Porter, author of “ Thaddeus of Warsaw” and other heroic novels, died; born 1776. 1896—General Lucius Fairchild died in Madison, W Is.; born 1811. 2300—Francis Blcknell Carpenter, noted American portrait artist, famed for his painting of the “ Emancipation Procla im relation,” died in New York city; born f 1830. May 24 In History. 2750—Stephen Girard, eccentric millionaire and philanthropist, born near Bor deaux, France; died in Philadelphia 1831. 1795-Silus Wright, governor of and sena tor from New York, born at Amherst, Mass.; died 1847. 1819—The Savannah, first steamer to cross tile Atlantic, left Savam.ah; reached Liverpool in 25 days. The Savannah was the result of ten years’ experi menting in vessels and machinery for ocean navigation. She proceeded to Russia from England and returned from St. Petersburg to New York in 26 days. Both sails and steam were used. 1879—William Lloyd Garrison, abolitionist and journalist, died In New York; born 1805. 1899—Senor Don Emilio Castelar, Spanish republican statesman, died at Murcia, Spain; born 1832. 1902—Lord P^uncefote, British ambassa dor to the United States, died In Washington; born 1828. May 25 In History, 1803—Ralph Waldo Emerson born at Bos ton; died 1882. Emerson at Harvard was rather a reader than a student. He passed much of his time In the li brary and was not brilliant In the classroom. Ordained as a Unitarian preacher, he rebelled against the ortho dox views of the Lord’s supper and resigned. A fter a trip to Europe he began to lecture and to write. Tran scendentalism was his field, and he contributed to the organ of that school of thought, tfte Dial, becoming its ed itor in 1842. Emerson’s most famous production is his volume of studies called “ Representative Men.” 1S94—Dr. Alexander Kohut, a distinguish ed rabbi and oriental scholar, died in New York city; born 1842. 1899— Rosa Bonheur, famous animal paint er. died at Fontainebleau; born 1821. 1900— Signor Giuseppe Puente, famous op era baritone, died in Germany; born 1840. May 26 In History. 735—'The Venerable Bede, first Anglo-Saxon his torian, died; born 672. 1703—Samuel Pepys, whose diary of common life in England Is noted, died. 1809—Joseph Haydn, music al composer, died; born 1732. 1840-Admiral William Sld-i ney Smith, a noted Brit-* ish officer In the wars with Napoleon, called Buckle, the hero of St. Jean d'Acre, died; born 1764. 1862—Henry Thomas Buckle, eminent Brit* ish historian, died at Damascus; born 1822. 1892—The greatest flood ever known on the Mississippi reached its highest point; loss of property from Kansas City to Now Orleans at least $50,000,000; many lives lost. 1902—Henry Greville (Alice Marie Durand), noted French author, died in Paris; born 1842. Jean Benjamin Constant, noted French painter, died in Paris; born 1846. May 27 In History, 1564—John Calvin (Jean Chauvln) born; died at Geneva 1599. 1794—Cornelius Vanderbilt, capitalist, born near Stapleton, N. Y .; died in New York Jan. 4, 1877. 1836—Jay Gould, financier, born in Dela ware county, N. Y .; died 1892. 1840—Nicolo Paganini, celebrated Italian violinist, died at Nice; born 1784. 1880—The hundredth anniversary of the birth of Thomas Moore, the celebrated Irish poet. 1896- Southern Illinois and eastern Mis souri devastated by a terrible tornado. In St. Louis the damage amounted to over $10.000,000; 321 buildings were total ly destroyed and 7 312 severely dam aged; deaths in St. Louis alone. 427. 1000— Lord Roberts’ army began the in vasion of the Transvaal in force. The Boxers begun their march toward P e king. May 28 In History. prla- cfeiee). (a the pupil of Cap*. 9am White (whose Dixie ancestry makes lief BEFORE street as to make it profitable to send it east. Mr. May 23 In History. 1701—Captain W illiam K'.-Jd Mr. Q. B. V. Russell has built a Art big porch Section 3882. tit DINGER HERMANN, OUR NEXT CONGRESSMAN. MKV-Oeorge I. of England ig ^ E W A N T M ORE H A P P IN E S S , M O RE R E A L born, a comparatively obscure German prince ~ S A T IS F A C T IO N , M ORE JO Y , M O R E E N J O Y ling, son of the elector o f Hanover, at Osna- M EN T. burg; died near there 1727; king of England It is said that we Americana are always trying ITU. 1867—I xml» John Rudolph . to get money-—more pay, higher wages, higher sal Agassiz, naturalist and geologist, born in Mo- aries, more profit in onr trade— and there is truth in | tier, Switzerland; d '« l ¡ w , Webster. that description of the American aim. N ow , is that the ultimate 1 loi-l. 1M*— Noah Webator, American lexicogra end o f life? Is* that the way to win greater happiness truer en pher, died In New H a rm ; born at West Hartford, t'ona. 17M. Webater joyment, deeper satisfactions ? went through Tale and served ua cap tain of the militia In a campaign be I T H I N K T H * FIR ST SOURCE, THE GREATEST SOURCE IN fore he was 21. In th« oourse of hla seeond M years he taught school. ed T H IS WORLD. 1» F A M IL Y LIFE. THE JOYS OF FATH E R AND ited paper» and a maguaine and pre MOTMRR AND CHILDREN AND GRAN DV A T HER AND GRAND- pared the famous spelling bank which iormed til« basis of a coaasMn school MOTMRR AND GRANDCHILDREN. T H B Y L A S T . education the drat half of the century. At the ripe ape of 3* Ha h-tcan the In the natural course o f life they last fifty, even sixty, yean», equally famous dirtlonary and devoted ten year* to Inquiry Into fbe origin of and they g r o w as time passes by. They are always increasing; our language He w o * 70 when the first edition appeared Worn the press, they are not diminishing satisfaetions. yet ha lived on IS yews to labor for Ua perfect!»«. Does the riuh man have any more o f these true n d high satis 1*9—U rie l suffering In «he southwest front flood*. Arkansas <lty Inundated factions than the poor man? N ot one whit monC l i e cannot and left» of house mts a# seres of land buy them. They are the result o f natural affection aad o f disci In Arkimeao bowtslana and Mississip pi submerged. plined character. They are absolutely unpurchasable in this world. 1*00—Total eclipse o f tMrsun.