Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993, September 30, 1909, Image 3

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TH E C E N 8 U 8 P O S IT IO N S .
Appointment Clerk Plndell Explains
Method o f Application.
OREGON 8 A LE S SE CO N D .
b IL E T Z SE E K IN G P A T E N T «.
Washington, Sept. 24. — Appoint­
ment C l«rk Pindell, o f the U. S. Cen­
sus bureau, states on tbs subject o f
the census examination, October 28d,
that the distinction between to# perm­
anent census fores and the additional
temporary employes provided by the
Thirteenth Centos act is quits import*
ant and should be remembered.
As
vacancies occur on the permanent cqw-
sus they w ill be filled, ns heretofore,
hy transfers from elsewhere In the
service, or by selections from tbs ex­
isting registers o f the civil service
commission.
Parsons now on tbs registers o f tbs
commission are, therefore, eligib le for
appointment to vacancies on too perm­
anent census roll, bat there is no great*
er opportunity during the decennial pe­
riod for such appointments than there
has been heretofore.
The additional
temporary positions, authorised by the
Thirteenth Census set, except those
above $ 1 . 2 <ft) per annum which w ill ba
filled largely by transfer* from tha
permanent census roll, w ill be given to
those persons who paw tha test • x un­
ination on October 28rd. Those now
on the registers o f the civil servios
commission, who desire appointment to
teas additional census places, should
taka the test examination aa their pres­
ent elig ib ility avails them nothing in
respect to appointments to these posi­
tions. The fact that a person is on
the civil service register doss not pre­
vent him from taking this test exam­
ination.
Blank application forms sod too cir­
cular o f instructions wara ready far
distribution by September 10 th. A s
soon ss the applicant completes his ap­
plication in every respect, it should be
addressed and forwarded to the U. 8 .
C ivil Service commission, Washington,
D. C., and not to tha census bureau.
Cara should bo taken that tha enve­
lope containing the application ia prop­
erly addressed and sufficient postage
•tamps are affixed.
I f the application
is satisfactory s card w ill ba mailed the
applicant and it w ill admit him to tha
examination. An application must be
filed in sufficient time to arrange fo r
the examination at tbs piece selected.
No request w ill be granted fo r aa ex­
amination otherwise than as scheduled
fo r the cities and states on October
Total Receipts o f General Land Office Court o f Equity la Hearing Oregon
Pall O ff, Howavar.
Homestead Casus.
Washington, Sept. 21 .— Proceedings
Washington, Sapt. 26.— The total
caah raeaipta o f tha ganara! land office looking to compelling the patenting of
fo r tha fiscal year andad Juna 30, laat, the long-suspended Silets homestead en­
wara 911,627,687, which ia a dacraasa tries in Oregon were began in the eonrt
o f about $ 1 , 000,000 compared with tha of equity in this city today. 8 tearman
pravioua. year, according to a state­
ment issued by tha commiaaiooer to ­
day.
the secretary o f the isterior and the
O f tha total rsosipfes, $9,286,284 was commissioner o f the general lgnd office
roceiyed from tha talas o f public lands ‘from promulgating final decisions now
and $169,491 was received as reclama­ in course o f preparation, directing the
tion water right chargea. O f the aalet cancellation o f tne entries in question
o f public land«, tha reclamation fund until the final hearing on a bill for a
w ill receive approximately $8,600,000. mandatonr injunction compelling the is­
North Dakota loada the states in suance o f final receivers' receipts as o f
dates o f reception of final pnd commu­
the amount o f receipts from tha salat tation proofs at the Portland land of-
o f public lands, with a total o f $1,282,- fiee.
686 , and Oregon is next, with a total
These esses* were adjudicated by tbs
o f $969,968. The total area o f land interior department upon contests filed
pa tap tad during tha last fiscal yeaur against entries long after the lapse of
two years from the dates on whieb
waa 18,072,177 a
proofs were received at the Portland
office, and it ia contended by counsel
T A F T W A N T S NEGRO V O T E S .
for the claimants that'the department
acted without its power in authonizing
Oeplorss Any Discrimination Against proceedings under contests filed after
Black Man.
that period, it being argued that nub-
mis.ion to the register and Receiver of
Washington, Sept. 28.— T a ft has
proofs, regular in form and unobjec­
placed himself on record, in a letter tionable, entitled the claimants to final
to a local newspaper, as being opposed receiver’s receipts on the dates when
to suffrage restrictions intended to dis^ such proofs cams in the hands o f the
criminate against the negro race. In register, and the receiver had later, it
answer to a letter asking his opinion is alleged, defaulted in his doty under
Concerning the franchise amendment n law in withholding th« issuance of
to the Maryland conktitntion which is such certificates at that time.
Counsel contend that the issuance of
proposed, tha president says:
“ I t ia deliberately drawn to impose receiver’s certificates was n ministerial
act, which might have been compelled
educational and other qualifications fo r
by mandamus, inasmuch as the proofs
the suffrage upon negroes and to ex­ when received at the Portland, office
em pt everybody else from such qualifi­ w dre unobjectionable. Had the certifi­
cations.
cates been issued when the proofs were
“ This ia a gross injustice and is a presented at Portland, the contests
violation o f the spirit o f the fifteenth brought more than two years after the
amendment.
I t ought to be voted making o f proofs would havq been
down by every one who is a Democrat barred by the provisions o f the set o f
o r a Republican, who is in favor o f a March 8, 1891. ________
square deal.”
Rasin Wine Fight On.
Washington,
Sept. 24.— The taxabil­
Internal Revenue Increases.
ity o f rasin wine was threshed oat at a
Washington, Sept. 24.— There was
five hoars’ bearing before the commis­
an aggregate increase o f $1.190,087 in
sioner at internal revenue today and
internal revenue receipts fo r last
month, aa compared with the corres­ decision on tbs question was reserved.
The rasin fight dstes back five y ea n
ponding period o f 1908, the receipts
and was brought to s head last autumn, 2 8 r d . ____________________
aggregating $20,284,786. For spirits
when an (order was issued by the in­
the total revenue was
$9,819,872,
ternal revenue commissioner holding
T A F T S T A R T S W A TE R .
which is an increase o f over $286,000
that rasin wine was taxable.
This or­
as compared with the 1908 receipts for
der was saspended from time to time
the same month: tobacco receipts ag­
Opens Gates to Famous Gunnison
and was to have gone into effect Sep­
gregated $4,740,088, which is an in­
Tunnol in Colorado.
tember 1 last, but was postponed for
crease o f almost half a million dollars;
80 days to permit the incoming com­
Montroce,
Colo., SepL 24.— Presi­
fermented liquors $6,078,640, which
missioner to consider the case.
dent T a ft spent yesterday on the west­
is an increase o f almost $600,000.
ern slope o f the Rocky mountains amid
a succession o f magnificent scenes. In
Old Capitol Guido Dios.
D eaf Mutes to Help.
Washington, Sept 26.— One o f the many respeeta his day was ona.of toe
Washington, Sept. 22.— Believing
most interesting he has had sines lea v­
that deaf mutes would make good oper­ most «tr ik in g and picturesque fig
ing Boston.
around
the
capitol
building
wet
ators fo r the puncturing and tabulating
Late in the afternoon Mr. T a ft stood
machines to be used in compiling the moved by too death today o f John Cal-
on the brink o f the deepest irrigation
laa
O
’
Loughlln,
a
form
er
Confederate
returns o f the next census. Secretary
Nagel, o f the Department o f Commerce soldier, old railrood man and fa r many ditch in the W est and fa r out in the
»a n a guide at the capitol. Ha was fo o b ill o f tha mountains, with not a
and Labor, is inclined to eppoint them
to such positions, i f capable men ap- personally known to all the present settlement in sight, made the elec­
trical connection that started a flow o f
ly. This work requires great care in and many former members o f the
water throogh the Gunnison tunnel
ts performance, fo r the reason that ate and boose and daring his
tost w ill reclaim 140,000 acres o f arid
vies
a
t
the
capitol
has
shewn
to
there is no way to obtain a cheek on
tads o f visitors too interesting ob­ land. The greatest irrigation project
th e result and the secretary can see no
tbs United States government ever has
reason why the deaf and duyiD should jects about that historic building.
undertaken
waa to o l put in operation
n et be especially efficient. '
£ V
and tbe opening won th « ooeaskml of
T o Sell Canal Zone Junk.
Jsp Laborers to Re-Enter.
Washington, S e p t 22 . — A t the o f­ a joyous celebration throughout the
Washington. Sept. 28.— A ll the Jap­ fices o f toe Panama Canal commission valley o f the Uncompahgre.
During hie travels yesterday tha
anese laborer! who, while returning bids were opened today for. the sale o f
President had ample opportunity to
from the Conneries in Canada where what remains o f the old French com­
they had been working during the sum­ pany’s machinery in the canal sons. study the effect o f irrigation. For a
long time his train ran through stretch­
mer, were held up by the United States The amount o f this junk is estimated
es o f country where ss fa r so th « eye
100,000
tons,
and
includes
old
at
over
immigration officers, have been order­
could reach the only vegetation in
ed re-admitted into this country. The locomotives, dump ears, barges, dredg-
sight consisted o f a few g reanewood
hs
and
miscellaneous
junk
le
ft
on
the
Department o f Commerce and Labor,
bushes or sagebrush. The > out o f s
in deciding in favor o f the Japanese, isthmus by the French, together with
rocky canyon the train would suddenly
a
quantity
accumulated
sines
the
begin­
holds that the laborers want to Canada
com« upon a veritable oasis, where
fo r temporary purposes only and bad ning o f operations by the Americans.
fields o f a lfa lfa and miles o f orchards
no intention o f abandoning their domi-
told
o f tbe miracle wrought by the
U
ndo
Sam
to
Rescue.
' c ile in this country.
Washington, SepL 26. — Ons hun­ touch o f water.
The tunnel has been hewn through
Cuba Is Sadly Stricken.
dred American citizens stranded at
six miles o f a mounntain ..range and
Washington, Sept. 24.— More than Nome w ill be brought to Seattle on a
Telegraphic orders when tbe project is completed next
ten lives were loot and property worth revenue cutter.
over $ 2 . 000,000 destroyed-in the torna­ went forward today from Assistant spring it w ill divert tbe waters o f the
Gunnison river, now flowing to the
do which recently swept over the prov­ Secretary o f tbs Treasury H ill direct­
ince o f Finer del Rio. Cubs.
Reports ing the deputy collector o f customs at G ulf o f California, to tbe valley on
o f demage are just reaching Havana. Seward, Alaska, to have a revenue this sids o f tbe mountains, where
miner private projects o f irrigation
More than 2,000 people are without cutter proceed at once from Seward to
already have told the wonders o f the
Nome,
there
to
take
on
board
the
men
abetter or supplies.
Several hundred
•oil.
houses and huta and tobacco barns, sev­ and woman who are destitute.
eral thousand acres o f tobacco and many
Austrian Capital fo r California.
Seize Japanese Poachers.
small vessel 4 along tha coast warn de­
Los Angeles, S e p t 24.— Plans for
Washington, Sept.
24. — Another
stroyed.
__________
seizure o f Japanese, alleged seal poach­ utilizing testers from the Colorado for
Red Oross Asks fo r Aid.
*
power,
ers. this time at Walrus island, in the generation o f electric
Washington, Sept. 28.— Tha Nation­ Alaskan waters, was reported to the launched two years ago by Count Ap-
al Red Cross today issued an apeal to Treasury department today in a tele­ ponyi, an engineer o f international rep­
all its branches in the United States to gram from San Francisco.
Special utation, who form erly held a colonel's
procure food and clothing fo r tha bene­ Agent Judge seised two boats with a commission in the Austrian army, are
fit o f flood sufferers in Mexico. In a total o f six Japanese on September 2, being matured rapidly, according to
dispatch to the State department today and the men were brought to San Fran­ information given out by the count
Consul Hanna at Monterey further de­ cisco yesterday by the revenue cutter today. Behind the p roject ha stated,
is Count Lsscio Sschenyi, who mar­
picted the great loss and intenae suffer­ Bear.
ried Gladys V anderbilt and through
ing occasioned by the Mexlean floods.
T o Oollect Tonnage Tax.
him the Rothschilds have been inter­
“ The conditions are terrible,” be tele­
graphed, adding that he ia assisting in
Washington, S e p t 23.— Collection ested.
«v a ry way possible.
x
o f the tonnage tax under the tariff
Madrid Denies Defeat.
law. recently enacted by congress, w ill
Riding T est Is Criticized.
Madrid, S e p t 24.— The government
ba begun on October 6 . Notice to
Washington', S e p t 22.— The Rooee* tost effect has bean sent by Acting is either unwilling or unable to give a
v e lt riding teat fo r the officers o f the Secretary Ormsby McHsrg, o f the De­ statement o f tbs Spanish casualties in
army is a detriment to the service#, partment o f Commerce and Labor, to tbe latest fighting with tbe Moors in
Morocco. Tbe news o f a Spanish de­
rather than an aid in effidenqy. This, all collectors o f customs.
feat received at Paris is discredited
in substance, ia the severe criticism o f
Lear to Succeed M cH srg.
here, and tbe government declares the
the testa made by General A lbert L.
I t is an­
Myer, commanding tha Department o f
Washington.
SspL 22. — Charles Spanish victory is complete
Texas, hi his annual report.
General Lear, o f California, solicitor o f the nounced that the tribesmen era expect­
Mayer favors yearly examinations o f Department o f Commerce and Labor, ed soon to ask fo r pesos. I t is known
all officers to ascertain their fltneea for is mentioned bore fo r successor to that the loos has bean heavy. I t is
their duties.
Ormsby McHarg, assistant secretary, said 409 w are killed on «ach side.
■■y -
.
whoa# resignation from the depart
•78,681 Allans Oomwf *
ment becomes
I
effective October 1.
Frederick Grant fo r Présidant.
Washington, S a p t 22.— A net In­
* Chicago, SapL 24.— Major General
Ballinger Is T o Join Taft.
crease o f 678,681 in the population o f
Frederick Dent Grant, non o f tha fam­
tha United States by tha arrival and
Washington, S e p t 22 .— Secretary
is loader o f the Union forces during
departure o f allena occurred during the Ballinger le ft this evening fo r Denver, the C ivil war, Is being boomed as the
laat fiscal yaar, aghlnet an increase o f where be w ill join President T a ft on presidential candidate o f the Prohibi­
209,867 over tha previous yaar. Thera his Western trip.
Mr. Ballinger ex­ tion party in 1912, by members o f tbe
a fallin g a f in Immigration from pects td . aoeotnpany Mr. T h ft only as organisation who era assembling in
170 aliens during tha pravioua fia- tar as Seattle, and to return bora to­ this city to celebrate tbs fortieth anni
782,870
,78$ last year.
«al year to 761,78$
ward ton latter part o f October.
Mrsary o f tha birth o f tha party.
t
KING OF CURES
FOR
FOR
THE WONDER WORKER
FOR
J d r . KING’S 1
AND
NEl a B< m BtIf
THROAT
1
LUNGS
FOR COUGHS AND COLDS |
PREVENTS PNEUMONIA
I had the moat deMUtating cough a mortal w as ever afflicted with, and
whoa I left m y bed It would surely be lo r m y grave. Our doctor proaoi
but »hank« be to God, four bottles of Dr. K ing's R ow Discovery cured m so
a ll sound and w ell___M R S. E V A UNCAPH ER , Grovertown, lad .
that
Prtw 60s SS4 $1.00 A B S O L U T E L Y G U A R A N T E E D ! Tital Bittta Fm
•OLD ANO O U A R A N T H D BY
C. F. M O O R E
P apers
IS GOVERNMENT NECESSARY TO RANT
B y Count Luo Tototol.
— 1 _
The governmental order o f 'things is a torn-
K j porary and certainly not a perpetual form
FI
of life. And just ss the life of an Individual
Is not stationary but continually changes,
moves on and perfects Itrelf, so the life of
all mankind is unceasingly changing, mov-
JL
Ing on and perfecting itself. As each lndl-
vldual once played with toys, learned the
lessons, worked, got married, brought up
children, gained wisdom with age, so the life of na­
tions also changes and perfects Itself, only not like an
individual, in a few years, but in the course of cen­
turies and ages. And as for man the chief changes oc­
cur in the invisible, spiritual sphere of his religions
consciousness.
People who, owing to the existence o f government
organizations, have advantageous positions, picture to
themselves the Ufa o f people deprived of governmental
authority as a wild disorder, a struggle of all against
ail. Just as If we were speaking, not of the life of ani­
mals, for animals live peacefully, without governmental
violence, but of some terrible creatures prompted In
their activity solely by hatred and madness. But they
imagine men to be such merely because they attribute
to them qualities contrary to human nature, but which
have been perverted by that same government organisa­
tion under which they themselves have grown np, and
which in spits o f the tact that It is evidently unneces­
sary and merely harmful they oontlnue to uphold.
And. therefore, to the question, What would life be
without government? there would be but One answer—
namely: that there would certainly not be all the evil
which Is created by government. There wonld not be
property in land, there would be no taxes spent on
things unnecessary for the people; there wonld not be
the Mpsrat|on of tha nation#, the enslavement of some
by others; there wonld not be the waste of the people’s
best powers in preparations for wars; there wonld not
be the fear o f bomb* on the one side and of gallows on
the other; there would not be the insane luxury of
some and the still more Insane destitution of others
ijl
B
jr
W H AT IS THE SECRET OF HAPPINESS T
By Sidney Dark.
The wise man discovers exactly what he
needs to be happy and endeavors persistently
to acquire the essentials.
The unhappy man Is s dull man, and ths
dull man Is the man without a soul. That
Is the truth, and the whole truth. The dull
man eata and drlnka and- works and sleeps
and grumbles and sniggers snd is just a rate­
payer. Most of na have to do all these things.
W# have to be ratepayers. Tbe horror comes when we
are jnst ratepayers— and nothing more.
The dull man never laughs at himself, never plsys
the fool, never loses his head— never dreams A street
Is s street to him, not the scene of daily and Innumer­
able dramas. A child la a child, not a bewildering
conundrum. He believes the evidence of his eyes (h#
actually boasts of it ), snd fhnetes that things really
are as he sees them. There is no conceivable error so
utterly false, no heresy so mischievous
Dullness means a lack of imagination, and without
imagination life and happiness are both lmposslbls
Religion and art, from one point of view, share ths
same mission. They bring to men the sense of amaze­
ment. They teach us that ths world is s wonderful
U T B DT A X ENGLISH BANK.
owmm P e e s l i a r
K a le s
la tp o a e «
l»o a
C le r k s a a « O tk a r B m » l * r * a .
Notwithstanding that all valuables
are safely locked away at the end of
ths day In fire and burglar proof — fee.
to which are attached automatic
alarms which act when locked and un­
locked. every bank la specially guarded
by at leaat on* watchman; but still
furthsr precaution is taken by ths es­
tablishment of resident clerks with
whom tbe guard has Instant communi­
cation In ca— of surprl—. Should the
watchman fall asleep a tell-tale clock
w ill show In tba morning th* length
of hla slumber, for It ts his duty to
mark off ths pegs oa it every quarter
of an hour during tbe night.
Until the— night watchmen arrive at
7 o'clock or thereabouts th* juniors,
says a writer ta the Pall Mall Maga-
itne, hou—keep or keep guard In turn
—that la to ja y . after th* bank's husl-
•a la flnlahad for tbs day they stay
itn relieved of their watch. The
peopl T
m m m m
fairy palaes, the palace of hourly m iracles Then we
discover that we ourselves are most amazing creatures
The dull man la not Interested la himself, has no self-
love. I am certain that no man can love his neighbor
unless he has learned to love himself. From ourselves
we discover humanity.
I know a nun who la happy dreaming of the glorias
of a wonderful gray wonder-world. I know a Salva­
tionist who Is happy because he Is a son o f God. I
know a cheeerful. roystoring, often penniless writer
who Is happy because to him all men are good fellows
and all women adorable. The happy Socialist dreams
of the brotherhood of men; tbe cantankerous Social lit
yearns to interfere with his fellows
It often happens that the men who stimulate imag­
ination and encourage our dreams themselves tall to
attain happiness. They stand oa tha mountain sad
point out ths way. but they themselves never reach
the land o f delight They are. however, the great men,
and yon and I are the common wayfarers Their way la
not our way. and it may be that their sorrow is mors
precious than our joy.
ENGLAND DESTINED TO L0B8 OF INDIA.
B y Salat N M U Singh.
" ' LJ
It is net hard to understand the reason
Why the Britisher is destined to lose India.
P j no matter what cones—Ions he may make ts
g j
th« Indian. The minute the Englishman fan­
cy
trod need the Indian to the literature of tbe
¥
Occident a grave began to be automatically
JL
dug for him. This grave digging has been go-
Ing on fob at least fifty years Each suc-
I S L l seeding year has given a new impetus to the
educated Indiana, accelerating the process
The day has arrived In the history o f Hladoostaa
when the aspirations of ths most intelligent of its na-
tlves have reached a point where they are utterly intol­
erant of foreign dependence and guidance. To a— a
phrase o f tbe times, th* Indian wants to be "the whole
show.” This attitude Is fast becoming volcanic in tend­
ency, and this bod— no good to the Englishman in
India.
Tbe example and th* Inspiration of America baa been
of the greatest help to tha Hindoo. On account of Its
old-time isolation India, notwithstanding Its al— and
undoubted strength, waa practically helpless But to
tha klowledg# of Occidents! literature has been added
the knowledge of Occidental literature baa been added
the Occident There are many Hindoos In the United
States at present and they have learned something of
W —tern resourcefulness not only in education but ia
polities They have taken or sent some of this knowl­
edge horns When ths awakening is complete England’s
grasp w ill be loosened.
Two hundred thousand Englishmen domineer over
321,000.000 natives, and the day will not dawn to-mor­
row when England lets the Indiana have complete
charge of their foreign and military affairs Recently
Lord Rtpon, a former Viceroy of India, —Id: “ It la
impossible to place the military affairs of India under
the control of the people of India. We, and we alone,
must decide how many troops It ia necessary to main­
tain there and what money ia needed to k—p that force
in efficiency.”
\
England’s Interests In India clash with tbo— of the
natives of ths land. When the teeming millions o f
India awaks to realise what is best for them the Eng­
lishman w ill become abeolntely incapable of holding
India.
JO
duty o f “ housekeeping” is not alto­
gether unpopular, for th* ambitious
youngster has now tbe run o f the
building, and to ll o f the novelty of the
situation be can a— for him—If how
things look from “ the seats of ths
mighty” by occupying the chairs of his
chiefs for a few brief moments.
Constantly dealing with th* public, a
bank cashier or “ teller” baa tranaac-
tlono of all kinds— tbe dishonest class
being specially guarded against One
day an Individual dashed into a bank
and laid hands (o r rather a stick) on
a money bag which was within reach
and disappeared into the tog. Hla raid
was not entirely successful, tor the bag
contained not gold bat a pair of chick­
ens that tba cashier bad laid la for his
private consumption.
Many aro tbe rules and rognlatlons
of the various beaks, and It ia — well
for the youngster to make him—If
thoroughly conversent with them from
the beginning. • There Is one Institu­
tion that allows its darks n certain
•am yearly for wearing a white tie;
another requires tbs donning of a frock
coat and top bat; still another prohib­
its their appearing with any hair on
the fa ce Then there la a house which
has a rule that under no pretext must
a clerk take any notice of its partner*
in the street
One old house has what ia called a
"black book” for ths recording of mis­
takes. and a man's name appearing In
this means that ths offender has th «
doubtful honor of looking for his col­
league's error*. Others again prevent
their employ— from marrying until
they reach a certain specified salary.
Some of th* more modern institutions
require a man to be of a certain else.
For thin laat rule It la difficult to find
any other reason than that big, well-
fed clerks give an air of prosperity to
tbo concern.
A man who thinks mors of a dollar
than he do— of his — Hf-raepect la In-
suit-proof.
A cirsio *1
la al— to h a r«
V