Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Weekly Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1900-1924 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 26, 1900)
ML, Wl SliMl Published every Tuesday and Friday v: by the . . -..; j STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. 266 Commercial SL, Salem, Or.' Ri J. HENDRICKS, Manager; SUBSCRI PTION RATES t f I One year, in advance... ......... $1 00 Six months, in advance..... I 50 EUBSCRIBKRS DESIRINO THELjO diets of their paper changed mast stat the name .of their former postofl.ee, as well as of the office to which they wish the paper changed. , ' 1 : ! Twice-a-week Statesman, $1 a year. i! I ' : i , The poultry show being held at -Ashland is reported to be a great suc cess.; - In the interest of convenience j for oyr mechanical department,; on account of work connected with the Twice-a-week. Statesman, the "Editorials of -the People" will hereafter appear in J the Daily of each Thursday morning, j in stead of Wednesday, as heretofore. Will our. "editors" who contribute! to 'this department, and all who are likely to contribute, please take notice. Have your articles reach the office Tuesday evening if possible, and not later than Wednesday noon. So far, we have not refused to publish a single article that has been sent in for this depart mentj We do not limit the range of subjects, nor the position taken by any contributor. We should like to j sec some! "editorials" tv our women read ers. .There is a vast field of discussion and information that might be touched tipfm by the bright wOroen of i the Statesman's big family. They ; could make the department interesting both to women and men. f We print in this isue an editorial article taken from the Seattle Post Intclligcnccr, on "Ths Flax Industry." There need be no speculation or any kind of tloubt on the part of Governor Rogers concerning the growing of the best kind of flax fibre in Oregon-.-S-pecially in Western Oregon, where a fibre may be. produced fully equal to that, of 'the districts of Europe most celebrated for fine flax. As the Post Intclligcncer says, the making of grain bags at the ienitcntiary at Walla Wal la, would lead to the' manufacture j. of finer fabrics. It would be but the be ginning, of a great industry. The Statesman urged the Oregon legis lature at its last session to take up this work at our penitentiary. ,. It should have been done. There is no reason in the world why Oregon and Wash ington should not supply the United States with, its , linen manufactures, thus putting $40,006,003 to $50,000,000 a year into the pockets -of our people, which is" now sent to foreign countries. Think of what a hive of industry this would create! It would ' support! in thrift a larger population than is now in these, two states. . -S . TAG AL'SYM PATJ I Y. The "American Anti-ImperialisticJ League, with headquarters- at Chica go, is freely distributing a serrsJ of publications which it terms "Liberty Tracts," one of which, entitled! "A Liberty Catechism," "..recently came to the address of an old vetersn in Salem, who felt very indignant that his Ameri can patriotism should be insulted j by sending him such a document. The publication consists of a : series; of questions and answer, formed to suit one' another and are shrewdly mislead ing, in that they assume that the policy of the United States toward the Philip pines is of a certain nature and kind (which it is not) and then proceed to show wherein this policy is. wrong. But, even with all the reprehensible prevari cation for which the Atk nson school of writers is - noted, their reasoning is as false in many instances as the as sumptions tipon wh'ch it is based. jFor instance, in answer to the question why it wojIJ be' wrong for this country to assume to govern a dependent people,, the "Catechism" says: 1 "Because, all peoples have an Inher ent and inalienable right to their liber ty the right to live their own lives in their own way and to govern them selves or to be governed as they choose and by whom they choose. .Whether such government be good or bad does not in the slightest degree affect that right- It is a natural right which ex ists for the savage in the same degree as for the most enlightened manthe tight to govern himself in his Own way? and neither for his benefit, nor, for our profit, nor for the advancement of civ ilization have any right to interlere with its free and ttntrammelcd exercise. Ma terial gain can never compensate i: for loss of freedom- Without doubt there are instances where an inferior people may seem to need the temporary guid ance of a superior nation, and nvght be benefited by it; but the presumption is heavily against forcing them to accept g-jidancc. Tyrants cannot accept! this reasoning; true Americans musU'i , . If the foregoing was applied to a "people" in the true sense of the term to a people living as a" nation, wider a government of their own, with a code of laws or any peaceful system of gov t irmiiciu rccuumzeu uv inc imiaiiic i v mankind or even- by the - "people on der it then there might be some rea son in the argument that wou!d appeal to the intelligent mind. ':: f : ! y But that reasoning is intended to ap ply ' to the ( case of the warring Tagala of . Luzon, a mixed and irresponsible warring faction, who in no manner represent the whole people of the, Phil ippme archipelago and wo are a far greater s terror to the balance of the tribes of the islands than zny foreign powers are. The only efforts yet mad by the United States arc to quell the insarrenctkjnary and depredatory spirit of those Tagals. to restore peace -to the islands and to give thein-a stable gov-. eminent in accordance : with the de sires of their most intelligent and their responsible representatives. : When these efforts are crowned with success. and there is no possible opportunity for hesitation or argument until 1 they j hall be, then it. will be time to disco-r- er the kind of government most suita b!c to the desires and conditions of the whole people, and this the United States will give thenv with such safe guards and protective restrictions as will maW it permanent and peaceful. It passes comprehension, how any. Americana.; this time can promulgat such arrant hypocritical nonsense a these Tagal sympathizers are now sending forth. Still the subscribers to the Twice-a- week Statesman come in in clubs -in two and threes and half dozens. Our friendsj throughout the country are doing much better than we had reason to expect. They arc placing us under many obligations. A correspondent in the ! Roseburg Review reports that the "Hardscrabble Coyote Club is in working order. The Hardscrabble Coyote Club ought to be all right. It should never be in any other than working order. s In the basement of the high school at Sioux Falls, la., hot luncheons are to be. served to the pupils during the noon recess. The practice already pre vails in Omaha and some Other ad vanced cities. Its advocates believe that lights hot luncheons will do good to the health and the brains of the pu pils, whose cold snacks in school or quickj-gobb.ed messes at home are not to be encouraged. Sioux City will charge a moderate sum for th;.food. FOREIGN NOTES OF INTEREST Clrrrrf hfta follo-A-prl Tfalv's exam ple ih forbidding the exportation, of .- m. . t antiquities, xsotice nas Deen serveu on ' foreign governments and learned societies. A Bath parson, the Rev. Valetine I?owe ' who before takintr - orders was a colonel in the Royal Engineers, has thrown up his cure to enter the milita ry Service again. "' '. t J .. . 1 . .. rmvtnl-a Vl 1 1- A .LalMlUUfl 3 .-1.11111111 JT WilWIUtAS raiflp1 thf "I Inrversit v Press" lor books by Havelock Ellis and Dr. Fere, . . mm -k . T . 1 tiie head ot tne fans uicetre riospuai, which they assert are intended to cor rupt' morals. A curious bicycle fatality is reported front Wernigerode in the Hartz moun tains. A lawyer going to business on hU vi.-hf1 ift a catch in his neck after jouncing over a gutter, but paid no attention to it till ne got nomc ai night- He died two days after and the autopsy showed that .he had twisted the vertebrae of the neck. PECULIARITIES OF HORSES. An Old Trainer Tells Abput Whims ' of Some Animals. "Talking about people being pe rmUar ! remarked an old trainer out at the Bennings race track the other day, according to the Washington Star, '"if there is anything more pe culiar than race horses I haven't come across it- Race horses I mean, thor oughbreds, of course are as full of whims , as well, as a woman, and you've got to humor them just the same as women. I remember one I trained some years ago a horse, I mean, of course. He was a great one, and few of : them could show him the way in. Yet that fellow couldn't be exercised in preparing him for a race unless ; the boy on him was rigged out in the stable s regular colors. You couldn't fool him about it. either, for be I knew just as well whether the boy was fully dressed as we did. and if he wasn't you couldn't get the old fellow on the track. But when the toy put on the duds. why. the old horse would go : out and do all thai was wanted of him. ; . "' . : Then there ! was another tnat I had that wouldn't associate wkh other horses, and the consequence was that we had to train fhim by himself. Act ually had to wait every time until every other tio-se was off the track.. Then, when he had the whole track to him self, we had all we could do to get hrm off when we thought he had been given enough. This same one we had to i send to the post by himself, and when we got him there we had to keep away to ne side off from the bunch. Another one I had was just the oppo site, for he wouldn't go on the track, either for .exercise or for a race, un less he was accompanied by another horse. . :: ; if -: '.Then there is the horse that runs Iruc as, long as he is in the lead, but will stop and? give up the fight the moment another one gets near him or passes him. On the other hand, there is the horse "that will not try if the jockey carries a whip, while there are others that will not try unless they are given both whip and spurs. ; But. as I said, they are very peculiar, and have as Jiiany whwns as mankind. . t The Dowager, Princess of Russia and the Princess cf Wales hive tastes. en tirely in common. Bo:h are devoted to! art embroidery, painting in water cotors and are wonderful adepts at millinery. Fine Printirg, Statesman Job Office. EDITOR MOTHER AND DAUGHTER. - ' , . be libelous, nor attack persona in their Editor iSUtesman: The following-. Jnformat,on to glve or aak, you appeal to the people of ; the .United -j0ney and without price.)! States, snpposed to be the composition ! taOUJ seeing a largi loop-hole and irruption. . LSUt f The power- of; selecting possible ju- BnWwaTlenTreS shoald be taken entirely out of h"r "c corll -es inS tne hands of Vhe county court, which SStlJw es2l,is composed of three' men who cannot fVbehrifthe be acquainted ; wih ,all the truggle the Boers of South Africa are voters of the county and ! who may "now making, voiced by Senator Hale, have several strong 'reasons, for keep- of Maine recently the answer of- Co ing off certain very good element Iumbia, revised; is herewith offered: '"from the juries or for putting on cer- AUSTRALASIA TO COLUMBIA, tan elements favorable to themsleves ' ' ' and their friends, without sufficient re- Th Vminest to the First torn of gard for the genrale public weal. : England's Colonies. london Jan It. Frederick Graham who is understood to . be connected with the British colonial1 office, has sent the following cablegram to : the United States, addressed to the general manager of the Associated' Press, New York I attc.tr AT ASTA TO TtirR SISTER -COhVMBlXt Columbia, thou first-born; child, Sprung from the same jdear mother- land, ' - f "S." Ztl UV' Twas that stern lesson serv'd to save The future of our common race. henceforth she gave to each new b: -i. r . 1. t .a. J t t 1 The widest freedom on jearth's space. Arl mjnti mtv i--iom thi wnrld arnnnd. From pole to pole and clime to fi"!?"""-- 1 . rU ' With that dear tongue of thine and mine. The blood ff heroes that we share AVas shed in floods to keep us free, Let us unite, and who shall dare To threat the freedom of the sea? - J 1 6r utmost Tt'Sg? Tin mS' we'll sena Arid perish with the island home Of freedom, if we can ti defend. On earth's best vantage spots we stand ; No other ports to you iare free; Come, clasp with us our mother s hand. . And join our guardship of the sea. It will be noted, Mr. 'Graham con fesses in the second stanza that the resistance of the American colonies- to tHfl. mnf1iorl-nt wne thi rnMc of her ... ... . - giving 10 iiioe 01 anaua aim aus-i . . ... . r Ti. . . .1 f - i 1 a..-' i r:fil.: ; nt -i-tu winKi refnnm. - i ne t-i . i - r Esquimalt is a threat to us, ought .' . . . . . .'. i . to convince is that the bloodshed of o-r common race now going on jn South'Africa is not in the interest of treedom but for "a vantage spot" of truardshio of the sea" Britain as- sumes against the widest freedom. J. Mr COLUMBIA'S ANSWER. No, Australasia, sister mine; Tho' of the same old motherland And of one speech, the act not thine For death on liberty to stand. s Her harsh ill-usage less " stood. Before thy birth, the fate was mine. To plead in vain, her motherhood for law, lor justice, nguis aivmc. For . freedom, justice, truth and right I annealed to God before the world: Tho weak and poor, defied her might, The banner of the free, unfurled. Now, free flags wave o'er many lands, And you, even you. should Hope to cA. ' see Men, guns and ships, tof leave my i strand And check her tyranny on the seas. As in times past, no motner snail Invade our ships, impress our men; Gainst "spots of vantage. Rights a wan i . , We still defend as we did then. Not. hers the right to rule the waves; Mankind s best , interests . now de mand Weak nations shall not be her slaves- Justice must reign on sea and land. Ai freedom's child 'tis not for me. . In sentimental drool to deal; - High law is: "To thyself be true; Aiaice mine accora wiin manitinu s . t w t SELECTING JURIES; iiicmciuiui sire "nM;.:rir Jiirlinal 5nvit crattnn: ; v ! .. . . , . i , . cm ucaicrs ciiner. canceuea tneir or WTin the annual rxriod comes that 4 tne .English crop this season being a. v.-,-.i .j ... . . m-- i ,. . . - .j uvij iivis.yi iik jcuuicu uicir limns the county court makes its selectionf fo"1; to their own requirjements (be- b price, fearing a complete demorili of the list of citizens from which the! f now found to be 66r6 cwt.); prev b tion in the market. Mr, Ray final jurymen of the current year are to be duded any large, expori movement jy declined to carry out the agreement taken, the observing man who glances from the United States; while the con- ,an4 tj,. Association rescinded ,the over it and who is acquainted with ; ne neooie ana witn me omciais 01 me county must recognize a weakness in J.! F. Davis, a wealthy farmer resid ng near Harrisburg. arrived in the city yesterday afternoon and is visiting his brother; O. M. Davis. Ctmt SntHrimmXIaBf 10 ceats sad 2S eatif at &12 dreg store, WRITTEN AlS' tit 't .' m,t. ii.Mrmiit i mlnlilnd IrxM. nrrabUeli Tlnvited to con tr lb Umtt ' "i range o? ubjecta; t Each . precinct id the county should be allotted a number for jury purposes proportionate to the number of votes cast therein and men to fill this quota should be selected by election board of the precinct following each gener- al election, the list of names chosen to be entered in the back jof the, poll books and certified up to the county clerk The members of the election board are acquainted as a rule with the voters and are the , most judges of their fitness and competent representa- - tive character.- In this way, the pos -sibilitfes of collusion a,d favoritism would be reduced to a minimum and the county court would ttotjbe left the sole arbiter ot tate in an matters re- In the jury list 'recently puHished th namps tplprtpH frnni several of the precincts are notoriously non-repre- sentatives, the vyealth, intelligence and honest thrift of the communities be- ing entirely left out and sioecial pets chosen instead. ; j Our biennial election system would require the selection of two lists by the election boards--one toj seryc dur- ing the period from August 1, 1900 to gCSt ' another toj serve the lonowing iweive: momns, ana so on. Any form of local selectlion, where knowledge and acquaintances give a possibility of getting the best material, would be preferable to the present sys- tern.. JUSTITIA. ; ;' 0 0..-0- J-. '; THE HOP SITUATION. A review of the Editor Statesman : Jtw vp :, .1,:-, :. ,a.,i.i i,A K- : . . mis iiuivt - n4i33 . , ,. 5. tor the reason that many peculiar icon- . ( ditioris have arisen since harvesting ..-j , I ' wwlnK 10 ine rains ourmg yuigusi and the fore nart of f!f ntfrntifr. tr- 7 " rr " gether with a late attack of vermin, haTest time, found the crop not only bliehted with mould to a greater or ,c:- CA":"1' uul l,,c -ruv was green in ; itn (ucyuwn, um me cofesof the hop, owing toj the excess ji;mi, crc uiiusuany jiarge ana aim- cult to try; many growers Jcommenced picking earlier than they would have done if it were otherwise not for the was finally blight, and when the crop harvested, it was found that there was a crop of some where frorii 75,000 to 80,000 bales; the quality of which was below any crop the statej ever pro- " -A mm jm,mm.tm lU. A. iL. ? T" " . atone, was the s5nots detriment, but the lack of Strength, immature flavor, slack dry- ing and over drying, made the crop "w - ce 01 me cno.ee y "c gooa na- vor of the Washington frron Th i inc.. vvasnmgioq i crop, i.iie New York state crOp, while mouldy, was of exceptionally fine (flavor and readily found buyers. , ,n uoeiopca aunng narvest tnat tne crop I of the United Stated was about f0iiwe. . . .- . , i Bales- California,'. Oregon.. .... . 'Washington. . New : York 6tate. -.11 . vcn to Ro'fv .30,doo to 35,000 .50,000 to 60,000 X, . :7TTZ7 : v vii v aiu.vw w Jjf"-" baleis or a little more than was pro- duced in 1898, besides which we had a large stock of old hops m the hands - -r o- ITn-At "sift Diinn tli. fiO ! Son we exnorted from tfiia mttntrv - England bales, and imported . i 3,295 bales. f imemai- crops was ot sue ti tine quality - hiwuiici were muuecu to import to a greater extent than in j ; SOME OLD QUESTION. . Tiie following .was published Janu ary 5, 1801, in the Connecticut Coorant. This seems to 'prove that h; same dif ference of opinion was prevalent then as ndw; as to the exact time of the new century's birth: '- ! x i Precisely twelve o'clock last night, The eighteenth century took 'its flight Full .many a calculation head . Has racked Its brain, its ink has shed, To prove by metaphysics .fine A hundred makes but ninety-nine; While at their wisdom others wondered, But took one more to make a hundred, ' B" : vTilE ln M Statesman on weunnsua mum- ute article, of reasonable length. There he only eonSUlon Is that they nruat not private cnaracier. ii you oa.c er ana aavancing, wnm ww prices are will find here an pen field, without ruiing from 4 to 7 cents, with the bulk oflthe business at s'o 6 cents. , , prom fte ,th of October until now, of January the exports . andTmports' of thlse wefs who hops in the United . States figure .as Avocation were able, .and. many of follows: Imports of hoiis from Sep- them - dtd sell., the.r crops .at, pf.ce. tembcr ,st to January is, 1000 3.441, while, in4xvery ; instance with bales; imports of hops same time last profit, yet .figureShieb wdl not be season ifrs bales.;, . i, I realised : aga.fi. nless-somee man-. Exports of bops from SepUmUr mragent toJanuary IS. 1900, 29,650. bales; ex- and different plans advocated.,. .... .. . ports of hops, same time last season, Pending the agitation and circular 72, 118 bales. 1 , tion of false reports as to the marKet A few. of the dealers, foreseeing this conditions, the growers, of California, condition of affairs, figured that sales VVf shin gtou and , .New York states on a basis of the goods; costing 8 to haye been able to dispose of their 10 cents , would be profitable, ac crops at gbd advantage, , wh, the cordingiyt sold lor later aenvery, or in other words Isold , short. 4 ! jThe bug in Oregon commenced rather lateTon account of the poorness of the quality, and while about Octo- ber 15th ranged from 6 ' to 11 cents per pound, they were not satisfactory to some of the growers and the Ore- gbn Hop Growers' Association was organized, having for its object the en- hancing of prices. The idea of the Association .was broueht ud at a time when it would have been very bene- ficial to the growers of Oregon, if it had ben properly officered and man- .aged.' ". I have had considerable experience with growers' comb mat ons. and al- wive l,rr..,rhf 9 a successful is- i8qq' I had an sue,' so on October 30, SnfAr&iow a( -rnc tnrrt U with Mr. M. L. Jones the president of the' O. H. G. A., in which I advocated a plan in substance as follows: "That the Association nurchav frnm the members their crops at the then prevailing market price, paying for them 56 to 60 per cent, and giving them script stock for the balance due them. There would have been no dif- ficulty then fin -financing 5Q or 60 'per cent, ot the market value, as it was carjy in the season and the goods would have . been disposed of, the goods so purchased to be shipped out of the country and a selling committee go with them to the markets and dis- pose of them as the market would ab- sorb them, without depressing prices, The movement of such a large stock of goods a the Association then had under its control, from the source of supply, would nave . stimulated t the : : , .- inaiKci ncre wunoui mucn ouestion. . ' and the stimulus to the market here : . : - - would have been-ouickly reflected in inr uuiciat nuiivcu. so inai me prion could have been disposed of when they nrr;., - . j ....v aL uumuuii, 41 au u- vance oyer the cost to the Associa- tion, resulting in additional profit to holders of script. In case the mar- toets did not respond to the appar- cnt depletion of sucn a large stock,, then the condition would have been no worse than did exist, except that the crops of the members of the Associa- tion wduld have ben sold and disposed of." v ; . j T a!so outlined future work for the Association. In the wav of encourasr- ing the production of choice quality, the discouraging of hop raising by ir- resoortsible growers, the necessity : of formulating a contract that would M as bindin2 on the dealer as on the grower, the correction of a great manv abuses that exist in the trade and vari- ous other ideas that presented them- selves. a. u- i. v At this time the rulinc tinces were from 8 to it and no ht been made bciow 8 cents. I also had interviews with other directors "and submitted to them my plan for the As- .u.u r. . ......... " " T 1 1 1 rv tnm. ..rifir , . t-ie lull . ible by them; but at the , full meeting of the directors, my plan, which was written out and in the hands of one of the directors, was not even read' to the full directors' meeting, but, on "the contrary, a plan of consignment with J.,-, -m. t m . 9 r 4 cents per pound for ?UaHty ,a"d 5 cents ffr Puni for choice quality, was considered and consummated with Mr. A. J. Ray, of ""-iti,. t f. i?..c.n t . .1- .1. ' ...v..i.jnic KitBidFicu iasi mai uie " croP was going to be ship- consignmeni, ana tne cast- same. Then came the plan of selling, k u. p-h 11, v ,r r Jones were to iro East and effect eaU Thus, by an unexampled riddle. The world's divided in the middle. The century, waking from its bed. Finds half mankind a day ahead; '. W'hile t'other half, with lingering pace, Have scarcely started in the race Strange, at the eighteen century's close When light in beams effulgent glows, I When bright illumination's ray . ; J Has chased the darkness far away, j Heads filled with mathematic lore, . j Dispute if two and two make fourl , . j Go on, ye scientific sages! j Collect. your light a few more ages;- L Perhaps,- as swells the vast amount, I A century hence you'll learn to count. i j ' . . 1 -j. ' PEOPLE";:. .i- J ,!" .a--., '. . , ,. : ,.t .u. .... . J 10 iwne M- of Mr. Jone that the market was firm. ...v. have on hand the surplus stock of the entire Unite states s An associatiol. of hopvgrowers prop- erly orgamzejdand managed is bound toj result in jgreat benefit to not only. the produccri but also to the dealers anjd sconsumjrs, but the management mist be sincere. in their ideas and work fo the beneft of everybody connected therewith, -aiid not for ths benefit of twb or thr persons. 1 hat associa- tiobs of producers can be. properly or- gahized and managed successfully is evidenced by the fruit growers associ- ation,' the riisin growers association and other . associations thai are of great ixrneni m iuc wi 01 v"- production Jtnd the proper marketing " prodjice; ibut. the manager must be 3U- DerSOn CiOable1 Of handling Iirge opfirations aid pot devote his tim; to making falsei statements and attempting to villify thd dealers and consumers with whom he is bound to come in contact. j Thus far the only thing that the Oregon Hpjp ' Growers Association has accomplished is to further demor- alize a demoralized., marlet. The Association has y not actually, sold a single oaie oi nc.ps, ana Mr. Ray and Mr. Jones are now returning to jthe. coast from the East, without having accomplished a single thing, except) to show to the Eastern dealer the weakness of their position. 1 have been in the hop buiiness for the , last, twenty-nine years, and last summer cast jmy die with, the Oregon growers, havig given up my Califor-r nia, Washington and. New York state Dusiness,' wiui me Kiea 01 acvounq'i .L- t in v iinie-io 111c vrci;tii cruu. auu um -1 , , , . verv s6rrv to see so manv of the Ort- .coin, growers .misled . into a false posi- nun: as 1101 lauiv i;iiv.i?iiivmvu, severely, but U looks as tnougn uie 'Ur --ifihn f.-r tln tTnitl "o i" States would be in the hands of the Oregon growers and be a great men-., ace to prices for the 1000 crops. ltve only remedy inai .1 can see now, is; to continue tne assocbuoii, um under "new management; which should -be with a business man at the nead, 'who is caDable .of understanding the exact condition of affairs, who will act trjue to the gijowers, who will not de- vote his time to villifysng those to whom he must of necessity sell, and who will be Strong enough in his methods that he cannot be mislead by oeoole who have an ax to crind. ; LOUIS R. SEARLES. i Salem. Tan. 2td. ' " ' - , . THE SPIRIlt IS WILLING, BUT i"- Vfc ia wa- yir i- . j TT t . We enlisted in the year of sixty-one, ci .Li ..... 1 11 . "t, X tTl a ,h setting Sun; 9Ur duSics a1 a so!dier wc never did ! sh".n. Out in Missoiuri with hard marching I . and fighting we made Price get up and run; 2ut' 1 te. W wsn't ntuc1hM1fuJn' Of men sick, Pwoundcd and killed we Had some. After the war' (was over and home we ! had come. f DQ. 1? e iaDiC inerc Thcn there WJ re four of us left; since W43 111ISMI1 K OI1C that timei Two more have been laid to rest. nd now butUwo are left But ready to go at the Master's rc- : ... for we are sure tie does au tnings ior- the best. AN OLD SOLDIER. WHERE CARES ARE FORGOT- . 1 ' TEN. . " The queen cf tie Netherlands is an enthusiastic amateur gardener, and owns a miniature .greenhouse which e manages entirely herself. . This is j j within a few minutes' walk of the pal- ace. ana ne visits i aaiiv. no maiicr I what the weather., t Once she remarked : Misses -Grace- and'. Mamie Babcock left yesterday afternoon for a visit with friends at Qregon City, Portland and Hood River. IBrFencer'sCOlDEflREUgFI ; A mi trrxrmo la tu, IN FLA MM ATIOIM 8orrUrot. Headache (6 minute), Tootb wtchm 1 mlnate), (Jold SorpeJ.'elona. etcpte. 55 1 uows-'Forminr Fevers. GRIP CUJiS INSIDE 0& OUXl Ilf . ii iy mmU Ktg. fVodonlti.S. in cMiM la um imii.iiiM 1