Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Weekly Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1900-1924 | View Entire Issue (May 6, 1902)
li TT" rrr'J t'TFf IV :TATF,,,, - Pnbliubcd every Toe day and Friday by the STATESMAN PCBUSHINGI COMPANY ft. J. nrSLt&U Ki, Manager. ' - . . One Tear, iaaivatjc. ........ ........ roonibn- is &too. ........ 1 bree mouiR in adranc. ......... . un ear, en tii&e. . ............. fltfl The B'aUMijnbiitiublUhedr nearly have received u nearly tbu long, and mtiyjcame profitable, and there waa more bo nre inw h jot a Kti miwo. nonm c&eaa v&ject to uvinf m paper aironunnca - at & u H expiration el tbrir aafaacriptiooa. Jfor lh vent-tit oi tiee. an for other resaona we hreaci4ed to diao&ntisu at cnpUon. oi.r when nt4 lode m. All perwtts paying hare the beaettt U ine ooUar rate. But U I bey do not pay I r moaiba. tfes rate wiu be 1 1.25 umfAi a wean Hereafter wcwUlMfl4 the paper tutu teapooaiUs perMta who oilr ll, though tbe mar not tend iba moil, with the naoerttand inc that titty are to pa. 1X25 a year, ia cat they let tbe MbaprlptlwB aceoont run oxer tlx mon. ba. Ia- order i bat there Bay be no mlaua oencaadinf, we wtu seep Mis notice stataiur KWIwHm.r. CIRCULATION (SWORN) OVER 4000.1 STATE REPUBLICAN TICKET. , ' Governor. K ...,,' : , . W. J. FURNISH, of Umatilla bounty. Supreme Judge. R. S. BEAN, of Lone County. Secretary of Stats. - 1 1 I, DUNBAR, of Clatsop Count. State Treasurd". . C. S. MOORE, of Klamath County. Superintendent of Public Instruction. J. II. Acker-man, of Multnomah County. Attorney General. ' A M. CRAWFORD, of Douglas County. Stats Printer. J. It. WHITNEY", of Unn County. FIRST CONGRESSIONAL7 DISTRICT TICKET. . i ror congressman. THOMAS II. TONQUE,' ot Hltlsboro. THIRD. SENATORIAL TICKET. DISTRICT li For Joint Senator. -War. II. HOBSON. of Stayton. MARION COUNTY REPUBLICAN Stats Senator. E. SI. CROISAN, of Salem. SQUIRE FARRAR, of Salem. Representatives. ' '". i FRANK DAVEY, of Salem. ' E. T. JUqD. of Aumsvllle. THOS. B. KAY, of Salem, i A. M. LAFOLLETT, of Brooks. J. D. SIMMONS, of Monitor. - Sheriff. : : . JOHN F. STE1WER- of Jefferson. -Clerk. JOHN YT. ROLAND, of Salem. ' Recorder. ' JOHN C. SIEGMUND, ofjQervils. Treasurer. W. Y "RICHARDSON, of Stayton. Commissioner. WM. MILEY, of Aurora. Assessor. - CHARLES LEMFJCKjE, of Buttevllle, . '...-".''Surveyor."' BYRON m HERRICK JR, of Turner, ; Coroner.: A. M. CIOUGH, ef Salem. . Justice of the Peaoe. (Salem District) ,. E. D. HORC1AN, of Salem No. 1. Constable. ' GEORGE II.- IRWIN, of Salem No, 2. TOO INFLUENTIAL. .For an outburst of hot air. there has fti nothing in the prafnt campaign to tomire with the expionlon of Col. W. K. Hutcher in a speech at Baker City; recently. Colonel Butcher is the genial Democratic candidate for Con- greis Hi the Kt'cond District against Viliitmiion. In dlncuHHing his merits for the honor hw' seeks and the advan tages that will accrue to the state by ...virtue of his influence at Washington. If elected, he says; , i "I can get anything I want in Con gress bei-uusc I'll be the only Democrat Oregon Ias ever sent there in twenty years and the next House will.be Dem ocratic'. "No p",ker or comSnltteei oh rules will gag nie. and if my1 colleague should be a ItetutUcan he will not be in It, as our Democratic majority will rule in 'committee tis well i us on the Hoot. They will simply ask, 'Mr. Butch - cr; what do you want for, OpegonT ", When Mr.. Butcher wore called uion to name the wants of Oregon he would naturally- turn to the Democratic plat-q form upon which he was elected to as certain the wishes of his constituents. The first thlngthi.it would meet his gaze jwould Ik the demand of the Oregon ,Iemocrats"for th policy Of scuttle In ,thf I'hiUj'i4n. That Is one thing he would ask. If Mr. Butcher: would have as much influence at Washington as . he-.thlnka., he would and could get any thing he might i ask. the argument is the very best why he should be kept at home. Oegon don't want to endorse the scuttle policy, and it won't send Mr Butcher to Congress. : . THE PRICE OF BEEF. Th.e sharp rise in the price of beef has causet the public to seek for the taue. says the Toledo Blade. Nothing promote Individual interest In 'under standing the mutation ; of industrial condition so much as an addition t.J the usual price -of the product. . Yet the present advance In beef is the logi cal result of two-muses.' The one Is , Iticmtsed demand for meat; the second a reduction in the supply. . The. first was the logical sequence of the untaxing expansion of our Indus tries fnxn 1SJ onward. People had more morrey. Uvey bought better food and more of It, and the result was a l-trgc increase-in the consumption of beef. The dcin tml encroached on the supply. Then came the drouth In the West last yesr.w shortage ot pastur age. -of the corn crop, and high pric-f of fetil. ftock Misers say a steer enrt twice as much to raise now as he dU la is4, even before be fs fed corn to J fatten him for C market. The ani mala were sold for veal, instead of Do log reared to maturity. Another case of a reduced supply bf cattle is the settlement of the West, and the gradual reduction xt range area This Is aided, too, by the Increase of jft sheep in the Western and Southwest 1-251 ern ran area. With the revival ofpros jperity In 1897, wool-raising again be i money In aheep than In cattle. A vast increase in the number of sheep on the -h-j n,.,. ..... anj r- ranges followed. There were and are too many animals for the pasturage, and conflicts have occurred in many . .... . . . , . - - " There may, be, and probably is, an accentuation' of the price of beef be i eaUJM. 'of a combination among the . Mctrin1 Kti f Hehlrirl th' If the eanaeji r,i enumerated above.- Tbe Attorney Oen . - - - w. ----- eral, at the direction of the President, has taken up tbe matter of cornblna lion, and if it really exists, and can be reached under the Sherman anti-trust law, any advance due to it will bet, rem ! edied. Dut neither legal proceedings nor octs of Congress can afford any remedy for the main factors In the ad vance. ' ' ... f THE SAME OLD ISSUE. An article by E. B. Sargent, of New Haven, recently sent oat, by the Free Trade League, contains the following Fre raw material should be de rnanded not for our export business alone, but to benefit the whole Ameri- canpjople; not as an end, but as a first step ins. steady, constant progress to words the only just and permanent condition for a free country In a recent Issue, the Baltimore Sun, one of the leading Democratic newspa pers of the United States, contains the following: "High duties on many of the raw materials of our manufacturers neces? sarily cause them to cost too much to permit their competing under all cir cumstances with the products of free trade countries. . Here we .have thej same old issue Free raw materials, protected manu factured goods. Is this what, the .Ore gon Democrats mean in demanding In their platform a tariff for revenue on ly? If so, it means free trade In every product that Oregon produces, and a tariff upon practically, everything that Oregon people buy. . . j ' ; , . - It would mean free trade in cattle, horses, sheep, wool, hldf, all classes of fruits, potatoes, onions and all oth er clannes of vegetables, coal, lumber, barley, oats, oatmeal, cerrala, and all 1 of the food products tha t are raised on the . farms, ranges and orchards of 'Or egon. It would restore us to" precisely the conditions under which we lived from 1893 until 1897. GEER'S CANDIDACY. Petitions are in circulation over the state asking Oovernor Geer to allow his name to go on the Republican ticket as candidate for. Unite! States Senator, Geer has .decided to allow the people of Oregon to express themselves at thw polls on bis candidacy, and it Is hiRhly probable that- other aspirants will at-u pear on me same Dauot. The law by which names for Senator can bft placed upon the official ballot to De votcd for by the people was in Produced by Senator Mays and passed th houses of the last Legislature. While It does not make the man who receives th hlhet riumhor nf votes h& ntxt Smattlr. It does give the ikk- pie of the state the chance to express their preference aVid should Influence the Legislature! In Its selection of. Sen ator. Until the Constitution of the United-States Is changed we cannot elect a United SUitea Senator except by vote of the legislature. But the choices ot the people for Senator selected under .provisions of the Mays law ought to be the choice- of the Legislature. Other wise Oregon cannot truthfully say It Is In favor of election of United" States Senator by direct vote. Register, : ' '.' ' 1 ," LJLi-i ' ! ... ' ' I ATHEISM CHARGED.' Since the selection of Eugene F. Ware, of Topeka, Kan., as Commis sioner of Pensions to succeed II. Clay Evans, there have been attacks upon him by clergymen and others on ac count of his alleged atheism. This re calls the fact that when he once .as pired to b5 chosen as a member of 'Con--gress he was attacked on the su me ground, and this fact undoubtedly ac complished much toward his defeat for that office. A poem by Mr. Warw en ted the "Washerwoman's Song" was the basis of the1 charge. When it was first published It inade its author the tar get for many shafts of criticism from various sources." Th poem is as fol- In a very humble cot, In a rather quiet spot. In the suds and in the soap. Worked a woman full of hope, f i Working, singing, all alone; . . . L In a sort of undertone. -"With the Saviour for a friend. He will keep me to the end. Sometimes happening along, I hail heard the semi-song,. -And oft I used to smite. More in sympathy than guile. But I never said a word In regard to what I heard, ' As she ang about her friend -; Who could kep her to tbe enl Not In sorrow' orrln glee, . Working. ail day hmg was she, As herjchlMrcB, three.or tour. I1yei around Iter on th IhHr;. Uut in ntomrtoneKithe song - t 8he was humming all dy lung.' "With lb tSaviotir for a friend. He will keep me to the end." It's s song I do not king. For I scire believe a thing , Of the stories that ara tolJ Of the miracles of old: But I know that her belief Is the onyodyne of grief. And will always be a friend - That will keep her to the end. - I Just a trine lonesome she. Just as poo r as poor can be, -; But her spirits always rose- - . . Like the! bubbles ia the .clothes. And though widowed and alone,- Cheered her with the monotone, - Of a Savior and a friend Who would keep her to the end. I have seen her rub. and scrub. On tbe washboard in the tub. While tbe baby, sopped in suds. Rolled and tumbled in the duds; Or was paddling In the pools. With old scissors stuck In spools. She stilt humming of her friend. Who would keep, her to the end. . i - " - i ' Human hopes and human' creeds Havd thalr root In human needs; And 1 would not wish to strip " From the washerwoman's Hp Any song that she can sing. 4 Any hope! that song can bring; For the i woman has a friend. Who will keep her to the end. As a matter, of good business policy, It will pay all the Democrats, Populists and Socialists in and. about Salem to vote for Hon. Thos. H. Tongue for Con gressman J from this district. It "will pay, on account of Mr. Tongue's friend ship to the Salem Indian Training School, and hhi well known ability to provide for the needs and growth of that institution. He has been instru mental In i securing' the expenditure in this community of a great many thou sands of dollars each year for the sup port of this school, and in providing new buildings, etc, that were needed a great many thousands of dollars each year above the amount annually ex pttided .-before he took his seat in Con gress. The work of making this the greatest institution of its kind in the United States Is not yet complete. But a few more years of such growth as It has enjoyed While Mr. Tongue has been in Congress will place it in this proud and commanding position. '. The article in this Issue under the heading "Andrew Carnegie" is worthy of careful reading. Mr. Carnegie has come to the conclusion, evidently, that reciprocity, like free trade, is a good thing in theory, but that It may be come a dangerous and detrimental thing In practice. The safest way;for the United States, as a general rule. Is i ... to avoid entangling alliances with all nations'. Mr. Carnegie Is not the only man In 'thls country who has, chang ed his views In regard to reciprocity- while admitting that the tariff law needs some amendments. This is dan gerous ground, however and the work must be undertaken by men who are cqualntedl with the administration cf tariff -law K and who are conversant with the needs of this country and. above all. by friends of the protec tive principle. E. M. Croisani Squire Farrar and W. H. Hobson are 'among thd most sub stantial rnen of this county and wilt make . splendid representatives in the upper branch of the Legislature, bed sides they juvlll vote for a Republican for Unltm States Senator who will opiks the jolIcyiof scuttle. Oregon's Inter ests demand a Republican to succeed Joseph Simon in the Senate, and a vote for a Democrat for the Legislature is uvotafor a Democrat' for United State Senator. ( The election of a Senator will be the most important thing tiie Legislature, at its . next session, will have to jjerform. Men must be elected to that body who are in sympathy with the policies -of the Republican party. and who will send a Republican to ..... Washington to represent Oregon and her Interests. r i Herr Most la. to go to jail -for the. pubication of an article on murder us a remedy for social evils just before the assassination of President McKin ley. He was sentenced at the time" to a year's imprisonment but took an ap peal from the decision' of the sentenc ing court. The appeal has been denied, and the sentence muaf be served. It ls. too bad that more of the advocates of anarchy and murder. can not be with him. In order that public officials might be secure. The next Legislature will pass a di rect nomination measure. The people of Oregon Want lt--demand it and for the sake of decency and fairness should have it. Only those will oppose such a bin who are so unpopular with the peo ple that they cannot get a nomination only ,lhrough machine methods. The Direct Nomination League organised at Salem will, icj.is. sincerely hoped by atl fair-minded men, secure the needed legislation. Woodburn Independent. Let t be remembered that Jerome Simmons, the Republicannominee for Representative, is not only fine look ing man, but Is an industrious and sub stantial farmer mhohas always taken a deep and Intelligent interest in pub lic affairs.. If elected, he will make an excellent man to look out for the inter ests of the people. This from the Salt Luke Tribune will raise the Ire of th club women; "The ass-Hnbly of several thousand club wo mn from all parts of the country will give 'a powerful impetus to lub work and cause a widesred diffusion of new ideitft.as to. styles of dress." Some of the Southern-. S'nat.'MK af horrltt'd over the water curetieatment A FIUiin renegades. It Is aptly re marked by an exchange that these Sea- ators believe dark-skinned ofttrntia 8h9uld be mercifully burned at the stake . i 1 ' . ' JThe Toledo Blade remarks that Dav id B. Hill does not seem to be felarmed over . the course ofthe Commoner, in opposing his presidential aspirations. But- It- may be Mr. H!B does not re ceive marked copies of Mr. Bryan's paper. , : . The thing about drastic measurus In the Philippines that really exasperates Democratic leaders, suggests an ex change, Is that the war is being ended Instead of : being allowed to drag through the Congressional campaign, The canvass being made by Mr, Fur nish and Mr. Fulton in Southern Ore- gon is attracting much attention ,and creating an enthusiastic interest in the I ticket. ,Threo hundred million copies of epeeiches delivered in Congress are to i be distributed .during the coming cam- iaign. ' What a flood! v A man's voice has been-beard IS mik-s in the Grand Canyon of . Colo rado. . And this was not during a cam paign, either. PERSONAL AND GENERAL. Several rears ago the Statesman was sued for 13009 fey a man because he had been called a Jimcrow detective by an kem prinked1 In this paper; ctpied from another paper, if the writer re members correctly. Hon. Tilmon Ford was the attorney for the Statesman He looked up the meaning of the word Jinrorow in Webster's new unabridged dictionary. . die found that it means "a machine for bending and straightening rails," and when applied to a detective a gentleman whd ' maEes crooked things straight. According to the defl nition, therefore, the 'term was a com pliment to the' man who wanted $3000 for bis 'damaged reputation and iacer ated feelings. That settled It. The suit ran up against the dictionary and stopped there. , , V Two or three weeks of fair weather is needed, i right now,, by V'he farmers having low or pooily drained land. They have a lot of seeding' to do vet It is not too late yet to sow oats, and will not be for a few weeks. But rain will be badly needed by these same farmers after the hoped for stretch of fair weather. Otherwise the ground will pack and refuse to give a aood .too. .. . .. . i o A servant girl killed herself Yester day in Portland because she could not find employment. Why didnU he ad v&rtise? There are several tiundred women In Portland looking for girls to give permanent employment, and a good many in Salem. . ' .iV The 'water-cure that is made so much of, am practiced in, the Philippines, is not, a pleasant thing. . But there are a good many men in this state now, who wete with the Oregon troops overi there, who will testify that they would have 'been pleased to administer a worse cure tolsome of the treacherous! Filipino they had to deal with. I ,. ooo I Before- the meat trust gets through! wMh the courts. It may be hard for itj to make both ends meat. It may have! to make at last one end fish sucker, j ' o o o . Isn't It Just a little premature for ome of the candidates for fpeaker of the House of the Oregon Legislature next winter? They haven't been elect ed, yet. Some one who is not quite so previous may get me vace.. A HARMLESS RUNAWAY FRIGHTENED HORSES, ATTACHED TO A DELIVERY RIG. CAUSE A LITTLE EXCITEMENT. About 7 o'clock yesterday morning. he Capital City Bakery delivery team j was standing on front of the bakery on Court street, when for some reason. the horses became frightened at. the noise made by the approach of the Weils Fargo & Company express truck ind started to run. The team ran east on Court street to Church street, then m:rth on. Church to Chemeketa. and was on its way back to the bakery, evi dently over its fright when, in turning the corner -of Chemeketa and Hign streets, the 'delivery wagon was over- urned. and the team stopped." There was no one in the wagon and no damage was a one enriiv nwu, .nc of the axles of the wagon was slightly sprung. Over-Work Weakens Your Kidneys. UnUealfbY Uineys Make Impure Wood. All the blood In your body passes' through your kklneys once every three minutes. , i no r.ionc3 arc you .blood purifiers, they fit ter out the waste or impurities in the blood t( they are; sick ofou of order, they fail to dc. their work.r f - Pains, aches and rheu ma ism come from e." cess of uric acid in tbt LI . . J J . - . .... kidney trouble, ' Kidney trottbte causes quick or nstesa- heart beats, and makes one feet as thougi they had heart trouble, because the heart i. oirar-workinf' in surrsir. thick, kidnesr- potsonea otooa tnrourn vetrss ana aner-.ei. It used to D4 consioerea mat oniy urinary troubles were to be traced to tha kidneys, but now modern sclenoe proves that neariy all constitutional diseases nave thotr ceguv niner la kidney trouble. if you are sick you can make no mistake by first doctoring your kidneys. The mill and the extraordinary effect cf Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy I soon realized. It stands the highest for Its wonderful cures of the most distressing cases and Is sold on its merits . Tf by all druggists In fifty cent and one-dollar tit- Air You ma have A sample bottle by man nan r -. , - - .. - free, also pamphlet telling you how to find out If you have kidney or juaJer trouble., Mention this paper when writing Dr. Kilmer & Co.. Dtnghamton, li. T . FHF. PLATFORM AS ADOPTED pits tzi Fcllclfs f.!DE BY STATE CONVENTION GLORIOUS HISTORT OF THE PAR TY AND THE ACQUIREMENT OF THE PHILIPPINES. Opposed - to All Proposals i Looking Toward the Retirement from jhe Isl andsPresident's War .on Trusts Is Approved The Chinese! Exclusion Bill Is-Endorsed and th Grout BUI Following L the Republican platform In full, as adopted at rfortlapV an Wednesday.- April 2nd. by i-A ftate Republican Convention; The Republican party of Oregrtn, In State Convention assembled, proud of Ms rewrd and pasthUtory, its devo tion to the principles of hu! and human right fc. Its great! and , Im perishable names which lend luster and glory to the American Nation at home I hd among the nations of -the earth. ana as an assurance or i its con tinued fidelity to the great -principles for which it has contended! In the past In state and . National affairs, does hereby make and affirm the following declaration of its principles - The events of the late f trar. with Spain carried us hi to tbej Phllippnes Islands. We nold it to be consistent a-ith the principles ot". -liberty and of our National life ai d the i sovereignty of the United States should be main- tainea in tne isiandL. under such local self government as the people may be. or may become, fitted to participate in. v e therefore declare again! all pro posals looking to 4 he retirement of the Unted State from the Philippine Islands. ... President That in the- war which Roosevelt has Inaugurated against the gigantic combinations of incorporated capital he has the united and enthusi astic support of the Republican, party We demand and Insist umn ih. nat. age of the bill now pending in Con gress for the exclusion Of j Chinese. Known as the Mktchell-Kahn exclusion bin. - I H We reaffirm our allegiance to the principles of protection in! necessary cases of industries stilk iri their In I fancy or unable to compete With for j elgn productions. . : I We recognize the right of I labor to I organize and combine for mutual oro- j tection under the. Jaw. andj we mom I mend that the legislature enact necer I aary legts:atiOQ to protect labor In All its rights ard privileges, in the In J terert of American.: labor and the upr I building of the workingnvan! as the corner-stone of the- prosperity of our country, we recommend I that -Con- gress create a Department Of Labor in charge of a Secretary, with a seat in the Cabinet. I' t We demand that a law b passed by the next Legislature placing sll public officers of this state upon reasonable attiarlos, which shall not b increased during the incumbent's tern of office, and beyond such salary" thy ishall 're ceive no compensation as fei'S ior other wise. - I - i In order t promote the development f the' mineral resources of he state. we are In ravor or toe cncaiion ana maintenance of a mining .bureau by the state. . V j We declare our aprovaI and supjKrt of the suggestions of President Bouso- velt for the irrigation of thej at id lands if the country. This work should be undertaken by the I'nlted Mtates as 8Mm H9 tNtssible, and carrli-dl forward on a consistent lan under direction of the General Government. We urge our Representatives in Con gress and Senators to use eivCry effort I to. secure tht siely opepingj of the Col umbia river between the Dalles and Celllo. and for clearing the river of all obstructions to navigation from -Its mouth to the head of navigation. We urge afew renewed and continued effort for improvement , of our const harbrs and streams within the etaite. and the speedy construction of ah Isthmian canal. . . ' - j' That the public lands are -the heri tage of the common people and should be held in trust for the use and bene fit of I1 the people underl the home stead laws.' We. are therefore unal terably opposed to all plans, schemes or propositions for leaslrtgr public do mains, either to individuals to cor pTe'V or a policy by the state and the United States which shall further foster and support our fiheHes. and we request the; Legislature, to enact such further mestanres as may be found by experience necessary to obtain this re sult. Wo mand ani insist urnin the Im mediate rassago it .ongress of the United States jf the eomajrgarine bill known as the new Grout; bit:, now pending in the Senate. That we favor the proposed amend ment to the Jtate constltu ion provid inr for the Initiative and Referendum, and recommend Its' adopti on by the people of tbo state. - We declare our. approval iof the prin- clples of th primary law enacted by the Legiatatore at the see Ion of .1901. and we ask the LeglIaturl to extend features it this lsw so that in its main may apply to primary elections in all election precincts throughout the state. And, further recommend the election of United- States Senators by popular vote. N- THE STATE COMM ITT EE. Following Is the State CI - - . - - . - .. - . - . ntrl Co;n Repubfican mil tee, apfointed by the Convention: W, F. Matthew. rmtUnfi. cl.alrman.' Baker N.'C. Ithharis. Benton p. B. Hurt. Clackamas John C. Hra CUtatip W. L. lU.bb. Columbia T. C. W-tts. Coos W. J. Butler. . Crook M. E. Brink. Curry E. A. tUiity. 1 iey. " - v; i Douglas A. C- Msrjters. ' OF SIX WCCK3 Drg;rn;rg Momlar'june wim b. ron luctfd in one of the room.i pf th,. pnri" land Business CoUig; corner Park a. WsaMrgtonirreta. it wtlj be airirtT' -rhool of study. detcnrd io aii tcacin ra o hlsher gTsdNi In the AoruKt examina" ion. ruri:T particulars on applicant. flPPN il I Tlir vrm The rortlar.d Burinrsa CoI?i se ia orS a!! the year. StmVnla may enter at anr time, for aprlal braftrh.a or a rccular .ouriM.. and rrcelye In.iivUlual or claa i. unirtion. a prererred. Call or n. ,.- estalcgue. I-arn what and how tti.A A. P. Arsstrag, 1.1 H, rtnelsnl.' Gilliam Jay Bower man. -Grant Clarence Johnson. Harney jy. Hanley. J.tckson-r-T. Cameron: Josephine il. C. Kinney, ' Klamath i R. Dclap. ,Lake H VI. Brattain. Iine L T. Hanisi. Uncoln-!-!!.. M. Holmes. ' Linn P. U. Kelly. Malheur I. W. Hope. Marion J. W. Poormsn. -Morrow Frank Robert. ' Multnomah W. F. Matthews. Polk-4-W. W. PrrclvaL Sherman W. II. Moure. Tillamook H. I Eddy. Umatilla J. f. Gurdane. : Union K. W. Davis. Wallowa F. D. McCully. Wjsco 'T. 1L Johnson. Washington W. D. WoLt Wheeler W. W. Steiwer. Tamhin W, A. Howe. FRANCIS VARGA i HUNGARIAN PATRIOT . SLOWLY DYING Stowed, away in the'!(ttle town" .f Leon, Iowa, confined for the greater part of the day In an invalid's . chair;' yet bright eyed and keen in remem-. brance, reposes' one of the makers of ureal history ttuilingBn,h la.t ctr.tjury. He Is Francis Varga,.and he wan ltua Kossufh's Judge-' Adro -ate 4i-iKi.il during the liungftrtan ' revolution in Varga, during the six months of his short reign, svnteix-cd 260 ndjlj;n-n tit the .block, and within two hnurf from Ihe pronouncement of the sontetiKe the I prlsont rs were dead. He was the otut supreme, am) from bis verdict tlurx was no appeal. Atns4 a rmtablesnd'ss Intrurii rit al In the history making of (hf wnild Is another resident of l.enn. ulao n Hungartiin-L'td.'Klaus Miidan.i6r wlm was Kei-rvtury of State cf Hungary for tiilrty years prevhtis to the i cluti'Mi. . , "I am willing to die, and I ill die . happy," says Varga. "True, the thlni? we fought for In that beloved old coun try were never realized, "but here, hi this New Hungary, w have had lib- , erty and freedom. This la truly the home of the free.. I love America at I once-loved Hungary." ; . Varga tiai one of the early- aeitU-ts ef the noted New Iluda colony of Hun garians, In. Iowa. The colony 'was n - Igina'lly founded by refugees of Hun gary, fleeing to escape the iere mintm of tha Austrfans and the RuMsl:tn. lif ter the fall of the-revolutloirary lioju a of. Kossuth and his followers. Statesman turned' farmers. M add rap. who had shared with Kossuth in th! highest honors of Hungary as a tn iii- ber of the trinity af the heid f lh prov.slonal government, arid .Var' i, Judge Advocate, tilled (the soil t:i l reajK-Hi s-ant reward. 'There were iimn failures and Varga was ' among llii number. - Then war came on and saved mmy of the hand tc. their original c:tlli;n;. Varga rose In defense of aiitl-sl.ivcy. Doculur county w& ti the Mito'Mii ' brIer,ftnd KUriifct -wiscrfaurc t-tf -! r- r ised the operations' of the slavery iym--pathc-rlxers . in that portion .r ' tin-ooun-t ry. : . r' .. : Four years Vargo gave, to pnti' i.tij.'K the county and the colony, an I v m rewarded by being made Clerk f 1.;- satur county. ..He served four vcira STfl vim then elected troamit ei-. J It held this pit co six yenrs'and wim re tained as a deputy. for eight year.s inor. strac-t business, which he reien'ty leaving the office he entered th wl rurricd fover to his son on account f falling health, lie was admitted f tii; Hungarian Bar'lu 1840, and hsu i" tlced law in this country in u srn way. . 1 , . . . - A TEXAS WONDER, HALL'S GREAT DISCOVERY. One small "bottle .f Hall s Great I'i . covery cures all-kidney and bladdT troubles, removes gravel, cures, di.i betea, seminal fmlssions. weak arid , lame backs, rheumatism and all ir regularities of the kidneys and Vas ter In both men and women, ' regulate wir troubles in chlklien. ir n sold by your druggist, will be sent ; mail on receipt of $1. One small .bt tle Is two month's treatment-. anI Xvill cure any case above mentloneJ Dr. E. W. Hall, sole rnanufaclurerr. Box. C2 St. Iouls. Mo., Send fr testi monials. Sold by all druggist, and at Oil. K. C. KTON'I-rS drua sforea.'iSa- lero, Orego. READ THIS- Bsndun. OreVDec. I. I90.L , Dr. E. W. Hall. St. Luis. MoIx-ar Sir: I have used youTexas Wonder for kidney and rheu.-natlc trouble. Its effects are wonderful. It has n" equal, and I can cheerfully recom mend It. Yours truly, . HARVEY HOWE. CASTOR I A . ror Jifactf sad Children. Th3 Up Yc3 H2T3 Abajs B::! Bears tha ros NOT IN THAT DIVISION. "One half Ihe world." remarked lb i K.J-natured' ftlrt. "don't know ho, lu. Alliee tin If lives" "N ' , I "That may be " sald the glrr wKh g'gnain . tit- l-ng ftTp nose, -nut t wniB'.-wwii to that half.- Chicago Trlbdne. " - v.