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About Weekly Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1900-1924 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 22, 1902)
WEEKLY OP.rnON' KTATnSMAN. F'RIDAY, AUGUST' SS, 1595 5 - Published evry TaewlsT and Friday by I lis STATESMAN ITBUotllNO COMPAJiY B. J. HEN'llU Kr, Manager. ; One Trr, in lTne..v.-i..,,....,,.....-..l.. flJW f it uionrha, in advance... .............. . IlincnoaiM in iifae....'.'v..... ya jtsr, on lime f. ' U2S The 8 .aitumaa has eta4?ihed for ce-ly ftityHtiro year, and it Iih dome utWTib-r wbu iitve refK-irt-d it pearly Cbat krair, and imd; hr have read it Ve jrrueraMou. Moroe if l!we ot.jwt to bavin ti.a paper da-ori tinned . tt (be time ol tipinu j,uovl ibrir ulaeriptiona. Vitr the benefit thee.and for other mcotu w have concluded to1i-joiHino rub criptloiw n!T wht-ti a ufted to do m. All pemou payjnr ties autjw:rtMrt. or .avid in advaore, wl.l have t benefit ul tbe'rtullar rate. But U they 1o not pty I r r.x Dionihn, tbe rate trill be J.5 a Tear. Henlttt we anil tend the paper W all refnMble penon who oider it, tMiii they - may not id ilie notify, wild the itnurUnd io that tbr ar to t fl-26 yvmr.iu ca4lii-y l'l the aubwtrifrtloa avcoobt rue oxer six Bipnib. It, order tliat fbrr mj be wo Biiaan ieriaiiJinc,.we will-keep'lliia uol.ee ctacdiug al )ac ia the p)M;r. . . . CIRCULATION (SWORN) OVER 4000 IT PAYS TO MAKE FRIENDS; THEN WHY MAKE ENEMIES.; ; i Some men there are who leave ene mies thick inthelr wake. They cannot walk around a corner without going out of ' their way : to offend someone.! If. a stranger asks them a civil question they reply, rudely. If an acquaintance comes to them for a, slight " courtesy they deny .'it orgrant it so grudgingly, and In so Insulting a 'manner that be goes away hating instead of grateful. They delight in uttering and repeating ugly remarks about friends and stran gers, needles of the fact that such re marks are always carried home. Satire i&nd sarcasm ' are- commonly on j their tongues. They practice the . charity neither of silence nor of speech. But la the long, run they pay heavily . for the pleasure of making enemies.' ; The man who plays the dogin'of0ee, whether it be a public or a private cilice, is a f ooL Courtesy is so 'cheap and rudeness costs so much that none but fools M ill deliberately and needless ly .offend even the weakest and most Insignificant persons. The manager of a business house, the foreman of a shop, ah employe of a public office, any man la place or power, may bettecure of ills position, may be Independent ot any man's favor may have no' present use for friends and no feur of enemies, bdt be knows, not and cannot i know how 4oon or. in, what way he may be obliged to seek favors from the persons whom he scornj today and treats rude ly. , Fortune's winning wheel puts men in strange posiliwns. '. ! -. I'uiiteuess, courtcttts, favors are re p.fcrl not Infreiuently With ingratitude, and vnt sometimes wonders whether it is worth wif.tto to trv to pk-asc people w1kiii one diet$ riot have to please. But. a writer In' a contemporary insists, , It is 'worthwhile, for ithe humblest office boy mfy one day have' his chance to pay back. .a hundred fold slights and insults -which . were laid, upon him wan tonly by a niun who did' not Imagine that the boy would ever be li a losltlon to harthlm..- - V: pj , jl ' The prudent politician and the pru dtit 1MB of a-flalrs are schooled In this wisdom! iiss you People- may forget the kind-; d -H.hem, but thea will not forget -Injuries or insults. They may not be. rich lu .gratitude, but they are very protae to revenge and will go far to evtn up un injury. Men have; re ceived a knockout blow in business or luetics from a hidden enemy of jwbose very existence they knew nothing. One never knows what connections a strai-fcf-r or even a friend may have, or what Influence he nfiy control either now or In the future. roiiteness may be preached not only ou utilitarian but also on esthetic and "econo'tdcal grounds. It beautifies so cial Intercourse, smooths the way of life and, to a mind .rightly constituted, the way of politeness 1 the way of least resistance. To be rude Is !gener uI3y,more trouble than to be courteous. Hut there Is a limit to courtesy and that llfnit is the ' border of CompWls ancy or w'cakness. To make friends is iiuble 'arul honorable only wbtn ltjnay , 1 done with a clear conscience "; and Miihout lot sirif -respect. An honest I'Kin must psieii Ihe courage to make enemies- when that U". necessary for right's Wake. - " Vi - FAVORS HEVISION. Secretary of lheTrcaury Leslie M. Fhaw pyj he has beenmisrepresented. 5 :. Is not against re'Jion of the tari i t. He U In favor ot revision orthe t r. rr. " " - , . ; - ' . ' 'Whrnever Cfenfirrejts reaches the f. tUK-loplon that the friends of protection ,re .ftrons einMKh to conservatively i .(i.Hfy certain fci licdules t nJLo meet hmgd conlitiona. an 1 at th same t ii" sstjccfpsfuJIy reBift the efTrts of c.prKijilllon to revl.c the aifire tar I -T l.tw. thus p.mclyrinff buslnciss fur a f .on." . .; ;. ,;: , . lOvery . fcinccrt' protectionist is In fa- ; r of revision of the thrift at the time vi hen -conditions fire as outlfied by Mr. r.').iw. And when Congress thinks U -r 1 3 ready for the revision the matter -h t to be turned over to experts In f e Rne, of the admlnUtratlon of tarift ' !hvs. ;- . ' 1: . " -' . . 'V There are men In the New York Ap I t iter's cHlce "who-, could be , truste3 ' the task and when the tight man f'luni hls amendments otiht to be " 'f 1 a3 submitted, whhout .any -' '-'-:!? 2 en the' part of Congressmen Viiiid'a frantic desire The tariff law Is a thing that ought not to be tinkered with. The inter- ests affected are too vast and come too near to jtbe. prosperity and well beingl of the American peojIe. V : A LONG GOOD ROAD. It is gratifying to learn, through a rpbrt recently made by W. L. Dickin son, treasurer of the New j York ' and Chicago Road Association, and also through 'Albert ; A. Pope, its ' president, that the preliminary steps taken to ac complish the construction of a contin ious highway from New York -to Ubi cago .hare brought highly satisfactory results. 'Treasurer Dickinson who has lately completed a tour of the route to be followed . by r the new road, , states that the : different authorities xf the - y - - towns and- counties to. te traversed by the thoroughfare are . heartily ' for the project and promise to aid H to the ex nt of their power." Statistics' show that good roads ag gregating 350 miles in length already; xist-along the proposed route;; which 'ndlcate that only about &00 miles of new road' Will need to be built In order &. connect the two cities In the manner leslred. The lws governing the con Mtructlon of such a highway appear to present no obstacle, excent in the state of Indiana, where, it is said, they will have to be amended slightly before the plan can be-: carrieU out. . An important feature of the treasur er's Investigation was his discovery lhat the, various town and county offi cers with whom he consulted appre elate thoroughly the benefit they will derive from the .highway when it Is completed. They do not overlook the fact that this great avenue, together with the'Sany branch roads which will diverge from it, will j greatly increase' I he value of their property by facili fating transportation, and will also add In a general way, to their domestic prosperity. A ;-' We hope that the : prediction made soma weeks ago by the association 's vice prcsldoirtj that, "within three or four years a grand trunk highway be tween New York and Chicago "will be an accomplished fact," will be! ful filled; and. Judging from the zeal and success which have attended the moyc- ment so far, it will be. New York Bun. i 'i-i''-?- i :' -! ! r---" 1 . The movement for the construction of permanent highways is not confined ty any particular section. of the coun try. It extends all over, the United Statea, and it Ir more intense in the better ' settled and wealthier districts. A permanent highway from New York lo Chicago will prove a valuable object lesson for the rest of the country. COQg. ROADS. Good roads is a, hackneyed topic in the Northwest. " So Is the selling j, of hogs and titignr'and muslin.' Out it Is i topic that age will not Wither -nor rust corrupt. .-We''. must have better pad for the farmers.. : The conven tion to be hold la Portland, October IS 15, under Federal auspices, Vill teat public Interest In the" matter, and good will result from It if the people will have It o Ideas" on the road quei tion are plentiful as .' mdsquitoes in Jersey," but practical and scientific In formation is scarce. Some of this may be had at the Portland good-roads con vention.' - : 'J - ' -An Indiana engineer h as. been esti mating !the cost of transportation by road and has produced a strong argu- ruent fr gool roads.1 lie figures that the cost of moving one ton by horse lower over one mile of dry. sandy road is 61 cents; over wet sand,- Zt cents; over ruts and mud, 39 .cents; over an earth road, dry and hard, 2S cents; over a broken stone road In good condition, 8 cents; over a compact grix vel roidJ.S cents; over wood or store pjtvtng, M cents, and so on. The bet ter the quality of the road the less the tost 4 of transportation, so that " it is economy to build not merely good roads hut the - very best roads. Oregon lan, Wednesday. : , Kvcry meinber of every county court and many- of the road supervisors and engineers ought'to -be -present at the Portland meeting. Apd then an effort ought to be , made, to-secure a train next year,. to cotrie under Government auspices-and demonstrate the mehods of good roads construction In Oregon, preferrably at the 1503 State Pair.' If the ma Her Is kept alive, -Oregon may lake the lead among the states In the matter ot the construction . of good rci da. A refutation of this kind would b a great thing for Oregon. There is talk of a big hotel at New port next year.' Such an improvement, with an extension of the railroad to that place from .Yaqulna. City, and a few other betterments that will suggest Ihinstivcs, will make of that ne of the finest summer resorts on the coast. Agulnaldo is said to be coming to this country to ictire. Let's see; what did he do t make btnifelf a drawing cidf 'Hut lie the prtfident cf the anti Imperialist League or something of that kind? San Jose-Mercury. Mr. Bryan's second declination Ihe Prerldcnllal nonnnstion that not yet been ofTe-ied him has been ciived. The pogtfccript. however. isvt arrived." .":-1 . has re-, has - Nw York is to have a ?'). ( post of.ee. ' Salem's, new Jll5.f'"J -post ftlce do this city for a time. v ho htve the-oi U j Impaired Digestion! J May not be all thai is meant by dyspepsia f now, bet it will be if neglected- - . The uneasiness after eating, fits of nerv- f0' eaifcicfce.-"oarncss of he.stomacli, 'aihet ouagmatfiB oeicoins may not oe very Daa now, bai, they will be if the stomach Is sufTered to grow weaker. . ; Pjpopsia Is such a miserable iseam that the tendencr to it should be given early attenUon. This is completely over come by . r- Hood's Sarsaparilla which ttretcthena tbewbole digestive system THE APPROACHING SHADOW FREE SOUP HOUSES. OF - , Another public -man. has fallen under the ban of the Oregoniaruf This time it Is no' less a personage than Secretary Shaw of t the ) Treasury ; Department, whose speech on tariff revision, deliv ered a day or two ago In the Vermont campaign is declared 'to be "not Idio tic, but, what is much-worse, rank dis honesty." i ;T .' ! " ; Of course. It is always desirable for men In high places to measure up to the standaid erected for them by .the Ort gonlan, and,' of 'course, when one falls to do so, especially on the 'tariff question, be is necessarily, "rankly dis honest." ; Hence the ideficiency of this erstwhile Iowa statesman. While Governor Shaw was one of the clearest' and most effective " advocates of the gold standard, whose views at?' corded exactly with those of the Ore gonlan, i he was not only honest, but bright. ' He kaew what he was talking about and the "attention of the uniform ed masses was directed bis way ; for needed light, but when her asserts that it will be good policy for this country to go slow in the matter of revising he protective a u ties unaer wnicn me pres ent : prosperity of the cowntry has been made possible, he at once becomes a dishonest public man. .' ', , - While the Statesman has always ad mired the man who . Is never wrong. and . who knows H, and who for that reason is not afraid to callmen names who differ frm him, yet it remembers that our Infallible contemporarydown the way has a leaning toward free trade that is peculiarly ' its own, as a perusal of its files .will; abundantly show. Free trade, or a dangerous ap proach toward it a few years ago, Is what ailed the" country during a period of depression hot yet forgotten by a great many people, and the States man's opjnion.ls that Secretary Shaw Is on the right track. ' The Oregoniun further declares that If Secretary Shaw's advice is taken by Congress, Iowa will go .Democratic and so will other states. .Kow will the Urogonian 8ay that it thinks the country-should go Iemocratlc!if Secretar Shaw's advice Is taken I I And if no. then the question arises, what kind of a Republican is a man who thinks the country should go Democratic because. forsooth, the condKion of? the country during 4he Democratic er a few years agj Svaa preferable to the present! -rr TZ REFERENDUM... ........... -' " . ' i'- -r'' Charles-8. Hamlin, one of the men seekingVthe IemoeraUc mmilnatioh for Governor of Massachusetts, desires to have a referendum plank i In his plat form.; .,-:::' This Is calling out a lot of more or less flippant -remarks on the Populistic and Socialistic character of .his appeaf for suf ort, "v As Oregon has the ref erendum 'and the, initiative as a part of the organic law of the state, and as this Is the only state in the Union with such a Constitutional provision, we are naturally somewhat Interested In con tests along this line in other-states. It is true that ; the principle of the initiativeand referendum. In its broad est J application, has received little at tention I tram: either of the two great parties of the ccuntry; but it Is very fur from being of Populist origin.- It may be said to-be as old as the Ameri can Government In its American appli cation, and as a df vice for extending the pure democracy of the town, meet ing Into the govyrn ment of the state It Is to be styled as 'strictly democratic and In no wise revolutionary." ' It may brden the way to the adoption of So cialistic projects, but in Kself it Is no more Socialistic than is the fundamen tal principle of democracy. " ; : ; ' This demand tiat theTpeopld be em powered to pass upon legislation and compel the submission' of . particular measures, to popular, vote is frequently spoken of us an "attack on representa tive government,". It should rather be called an attack -on mlsrepresentatlve gove rnment. While It Is true that the representative system Is partly the out. growth of class distrust of the mass of the peopltvlt is mainly an attempt to put Into every-day workable form'' a popular government on a scale which forbids the assemblage of the people at a given place to enact their laws. It was. designed to be a truly representa tive government of the peiople- rather than of the representatives, reflecting and crystal UIng Into law; the? will of the. people, so far as manifest, rather than the particular will of the elected representative- : And in the early sub mission of state Constitutions to pop ular vote we have not only an original American endorsenent of the referen duitvirnciple, but a recognition of rep resentative government" as an essen tially pcpular government In origin. The citizens of Los Angeles have expended nearly jZTA.GW within' thVpajjt t' n ye ara In advertising, exhibition. 'etc.,: for th purpose of attracting aet- ttlera and olherwbie iadTeftiJlng; their I City. It .might be pertinent to add that J Los Angeles showed the largest . per centage -of gain la population during those ten Vears of any city in America, Here, la an item for the people of Salem and of the Willamette valley to-ponder.-There is a promise of some good things in this line on the' part of the people now. The movement ought to grow and be persisted In. Salem can be . a city of &0.000 people in ten years, .if the energy Is displayed here in?that time that has been exhibited in the past ten- years by the people of Los Angeles. No question about It. : And ttaa contribu tions can be so placed that every dollar expended will make r.n investmen that will bring back large and permanent returns. "- - - The printing and publishing business done in the Statesman building" now amounts to about i $10,000 per quarter. Or 140,000 per year That Is, the year 1902 will see, $40,000 taken In (and paid out) by . the Statesman ' and Its allied Publications. About $19,000, or. nearly half the sum is represented in wages paid. It is well enough for the busi ness men of Salem to know that more than half this money comes from out side points." The postage bill of the Statesman Pub. Co., forpaper mailed from the Statesman building for the month of July, was' $109.39. - The total of newspapqr postage paid at the Sa leni office for the month was probably hot more than-$10 additional. The cash receipts (and expenditures) . will very soon be at , least j $4,000 - per. month That the reader may realize that there has been rapid expansion, requiring vigorous and persistent effort, tt is on ly' necessary to state that the business done three years ago was only about $1,000 per month.' There is no good reason why the business now done may not - be .doubled within the next ve years. The Democratic leaders are now in deavorlng to line up the. rank and file of that party on the tariff question. which will, no doubt, be the main issue In the next campaign, leaving imperial ism, free silver, . and several . other paramount Issues" to the POilullst or any other "old party that is willing to take these cast-off relics of the last two campaigns. Ten years ago. the pcpplo barkened , to the , song ; of the free- trader. -but the tarLff fr, revenue wave that swept the Democratic party into power, instead of finding a nice quiet beach prepared for it when it reached the shore, went - to pieces a on the 'rocks of finance and nearly broke llus whole country at the sanie time. To iiake a dismal failure of the only Cliaitce they had in thirty years to run the t affairs of the Government is not the best record, and their . inly hope is that the people will forget it. rThe people who are to build the rail-! r--d from Coos Bay to S< Lake are starting right. They ' are . organizing an immigration dcpartitWnt, before a pille , of the road is constructed, : and tl.ey will at once begin the settlement and development of the country,- so that the railroad will have business as Sotsti as it ia built. The construction 01 this line will mean tens and Scores ot thousands of new people In Southeast- efii and Southwestern Oregon,- and vast eoinm'crcial "interests ' where little or nothing has been done or "attempted before. New towns will spring up along th'i. lin,; and established towrs and cities will grow as their reKldentfc scarcely j dreame I of. Out of the wil derness iind the forest will spring well settled and prosperous communities, , Kalem's interest In good roads. In order to be productive of. complete suc cess, must be both enthusiastic T and permanent. ; It will take a long time artI an immense amount of hard work to get 'good roads, leading out of the Capital City in every direction. The President's ( idea to haVe the the names of all .regulars who die In Philippines telegraphed . bi-weekly shows thatlie considers a regular sol dier something more than t cog In t military 1 machine.' Such Jdcas help to elevate thu service. . f The Dallas-Palis City railroad Is to be built lOgaln, this time clear through --- .... Oast. Ttl' to the c uc-n a connection with Ha k m will iUying line. make. It a. complete and Uncle 1 Sam IsabouP to adopt a new field piece of light weight and high power, it will next be in order to fin a somebody who Is willing to be shot at. a'CVWt lKk.lns 4&r - J"".r. PR. - V 'a- lna bar ara la Ih. "wi kUxt ot at om- f Mnauoa. . f Eureka Harness Oil 1,. KntymsJcMtbetrariMMiaMtb i lther aoft aixl pitaMt. rm)a n in com. rami 10 iwat cwm ioag w n vmiranif man. . Bt4 ntT'hni ta iai itl ' n- 1 hi, "t? mi. atu r .... .- ;i,f - '5TANDARD Vv OIL CO. Give - VWNT-v'' -B. a . ft M ' 1 I HUM X' I Horsed Chance! PARK. AND WASHINGTON, PORTLAND, OREGON . The school where thorough work Is done; 5 where, the reaison aln-ays given; where confidence is developed; where bookkeeping fs Uught exactly as books arc kept in business; where ihorthand is' made easy ; where penmanship is at its best ; where hundreds of rookkecpers and stenographers liave been educated for success in life; where thousands more will be. Open all the year. Catalogue free. A. P. ARMSTRONG, LL. D., PRINCIPAL vnimtm mwmsin - l962-Opening ADnouncement-19bS Collcse of Liberal. Arts.. VIIege Of Music tTollege of Oratory College of Art College of Theology ....Sept. 16 ....Sept. 1G ....Sept. 16 ....Sept. 16 ....Sept. 16 ; Tuition Rates Reksoriable. . I '.:'..: Catalogue Sent Upon Application. j '.- ' ' ' ' f'L ' rA A ' : - A - A J Board and room at JmrcUng Hal! t.T.10 iH-rweck. CScskI lKarci with furiiislicil room can Ih had in the city for fcL5') t f 100 ht. wt-ek in private fatuilies.' Htuck'iits can Ujard tliunisf;lves frcveu $1 er week. ! ' - ' - ' JOHN H. COLEMAN. President. Salem, Oregon. The University of Oregon EUGENE, The first Hcmesfer, St.wion l2-5 Wednesday, Hcptcmber If, Tiic 0eii8 wecJiiesoay, r-npu.'iioer i, aijh mi. .. following sciioow tuia colleges are ooui-prise-l iti the University: (Jrtuluaio School, College of Literature, hJcience aud Arts, College of Hcicuco and irineeritig, University Academy, ricliOol if Music, tfc.hool of McdHne, fckltool f Law, Tuition free, exceptlntr in Schools of Lanr, Medicine and Music. (Incidental fee $10. Ktudent-Hody tax 2..r0 ier year.), twt jof living from 5100 to tiuo ivf year. '- v ' Vttr Catalogue addiv GOOD MEWS TO Ttic ct lc lira ted anil ' Kfi f '1 1 I for the past 1 5 year VyHfi etablercmcdirs, rre Cwi Pink Jlre, Hpisootlc, Il -J vm. nr. nnal 13 Ymizj ?2 crista. I"ri---aoVfit rtrr ptukafr. P tnail.crrt.'' Fmil - -' oDiteua icuciw rnMin r. PAlfl UtKK liimi Ihia m t wi. M , nu,gwti otm. w u PERSONAL AND GENERAL. A Sal'ra man tells a story on an Eastern. "Oregon hotel kecror. He aays several gentlemen were sitting around the hotel fire one evening, discussing the improvements being made In the town, , "Have you heard of the , Im provement our landlord - la , going .to make? inoulred one of the guests. The fearers said ; they -had not,' when- tne j-iiest averred that he wa going to put in an elevalor Asking how he , was ojng to run it, the gu-tt said that was eaey he was going to put pedals on the bed bugs and let thc-m run it.. This jiiraged. the landlord, who. dctiared In 1 luud snd excited tune of voice that there" was "not a single bed bug" in hi house. J : "lyam - willing to admit there la not a tingle bl bug," said the guest, ''for they are all married and have large families." " , ' , Our own Brngcr Hermann Lis with us ag.iin. It rej does our ffriula no less than his that in Orrcron rest the tillar4 f a- f .im that, rcacli un cirn to the Na'.hn's ' birh rcwucilv r!i3Se were humble beginnings, here in Oregon, and we feel all the humbter when he deigns to move among us. It gratifies us alsc that we can be to him the means of higher greatness. Oregon Ian. Indeed it dees. The Lord be praised! "Alfred- CoffT, the Umatilla c-ounty man, who, with, a pal,' held up a saloon t Freewater and shot Deputy Sheriff Kite hey. was for some years In tiie Oregon Iteform School. He wa a little fellow when first committed. Some time after he Was relcaned he was ent to the Penitentiary, where he served a short' term, for rtcallng or house, breaking. His name Is Alpheus oofer. He Is- from training. If not from birth, a- member of the criminal 'Iass. He is" a very cool, deliberative fellow. He has been giving the orTlclaU up that way quite a chase, and he may do some mean work ;. before he Is can- lured. Men ef his claims are, like It used to be said of the Indians In the cajiy tays,.,"only good Indians wLt-n they are lead Indians." Cofer was industrious. nd If he could havo bad his efforts ..iirned to better account or, pe rchance aad he been born differently, he rnlght iave mauc a goou citizen. - , - - o o o ' : ' . Out in the rtUBSlan settlement in Hussell county, Kansas, Miss I'auna Dyeewfwelckciuickie ." tond Joseph AiidrbiJ-kewempidcy were married last week. J One account says the nanx-s itended through the vetry out into :be street, J ' :- ooo ' '. t - v . . . . , ....... i Some Oregon graRKhoppcis hav eat en the leaves off of the out'ilo rows of the hop yards. Thoy rc sail to not be he native grasshoppers, but an mportation. They do not eat the barbs oft the biirb wire fcnci-k. as they di In 'Kansas, Jiowevcr. ..'As own as iney are acc limated, and grow wt-bs on their feet. s they-will -be h-innless, and will not disturb even the hop vin'-s. - - In PortlancL In here cement side walks are built on corners the e it y h, the names of the streets put into the' ce ment work In l.rrr plain U-tljra. Thl3 Is a great convenienae to strangers, and much better than the old, way of tack ing tin signs on -lbe telegraph pales. The names of the streets 0f HdU-m should be displayed in some way. f'.-r the benefit of visitors. This would be a very good way, - The fact is, many of the old residents of Salem do not' Normal Pepartment I'repanitory Dcivcrtment I;uk1ih:fs Department .... Colleger of Medicine College of Law - --; . - ..Sept. .16 ..Sept. 16 ;.Septr 16 ....Oct. 1 .:..oc's i-: OREGON A University School of M a sic i . Irvlag M. JIn. A. M-, !! Piano: Mr. Roh Mldley Iloileu - lieck. (Joseiry, Corlatowftkl, ricvi;ir---Mittka.)- ' -"M-.V Piano: : Mr. Arthur Ionix Fruv r. . (Five years with W. (1. NhkIi.) 1 ; VmcK MIhs 'Kva HliiiHon.' (Klii' ( Jiinwrvttlory , Tr' li M unit; jchi 1 ) Violis: - Mrs. John L. Jioi. (rpii- imt, Hp'ering.) " . ' .'- Thkouyi Mi Kva KHnHoii, lUtho Midgiuy Holleiilieck. Ternks furnished on applicatioii lo dean. Registrar of tbe Lnlrcrslly, ttigcnf, Urri n . . t ' . . - . -it-- HQR3E OWIMERA o a-lU rs mc rj'c from a rrt-ipc 01 m4 1 in t his cottatrr. cf pr.jr -v. - aeafc find s CORE fo KIAVf $ nnrl it eh- and I of Appetite. As a blood p.iril. Ho, Mir ll Vvtali.-Mi Htul Kt a ll Tmll w wmrwmm w . " - -- know ihe names of their streets, f A street e-iir conduc tor told the writer 0hj olhtr day that there are peile In jfi eastern part of the city who d i-ot tmw the nanies of the etreets tby live on. It would be moro metrop!!.!!, and more convenien-t in a hundred wiyi to have the streets plainly named. a.d it wculd not coHt iut h. If the mtiS clpality e-annot stund the cxih-ium-. .Pt it be aspes'ied to "the property holdi Many of them wonld voluntarily goj to the exiMnse and trouble of it; If it w;ere made general. A -r- . . o o . There will not be enough stalls fj-.tr alt the live stock coming to the Uale Fwlr. but. if the pleasant weather-etn-tinues It will not be uncomfortable! fur some of the stock to stand out In the open -air. . " ; ... .,. y' o O O r : vi - The grai growers around Frrhno . am coinplaining of cool weather. T4 . P ople would , want their overcoat In ' hades. Kan Jq. Mercury.- . This! Is pretty gool. The c-o M weather the' grape - ;erowers complain'of is aljti'Jt " 110 In lbe fhade. . . o o There are new entries nearly eifory day In the race for Superintendent) of th Pent tr-n I U ry. Mr. Drouthlt edltcr; of " the Tinits-Mountairioer at The D:ll' -J. and Mr. Haley, Of Pcndletf-n are aoV'Kg -the latest to enter ' ' "'- j .'A'Jy-. o'o 0 A' -1 ';:-' A newoomer thinks it Would ! a very goxI thing for Kab-m If a lot; of rotten arHl rlf kety excuse's for M l-;-walks were removed. So It would, j V There will be nmre people In F,lrm during the State Pair than.C'ver If.re In a sinisl week. Dir-ilng blithe keepers and all others who tan o'-ji::i-modate.-the visitor woulJ do well tV remcmlcr this..-,,, .' .,'--';. -;'j.n.. ' Th Sanr Jok Mc-rc-ury reports-that the Southern Pacific has to. run double see lion paasvngtr trains over the c-oast route.' The people are coming to the cKMt froaa the i-est, and Oregon, will: within a few weeks begin to get jher . A Cure for Choiara Infantom. -Last May. says Mrs. Curtis V.A'r. of iJsokwaJter. Ohio, "an Infant child of our neighbor's was suffeKng fforn. vhoh ra infantum. The doctor had given Up all hope of recovery. . I took a bot tle of ChamlxrMio'i Colic, Cholera lnd , Diarrhoea Itmedy to the house, telling them I felt sure It would clo good It u ed according to directions. , Irj iwo days' llTie the child had fully reeovf red' and fs now nearty a year since) a tig- ' orous. heathy girl. " I have -fpcom- -rm-n-led this re medy frequently and have never known it to fail In any jsin gle tanc." For sale by Store's Drugstores. - .V' V:':"L : - T K LKO R A P 1 1 Kit S TO MEET. . CI1 fC.'Aob. III.. Aug. 20. A call f or, the cenventfon of the commercial tle , graphem In Cliicago, on Jv-ptembcrr jpOth : was sent out today. The purposefu l . the forming of an international organ ization. - A WEALTHY GAMBLER. SAEATOGA. N. T.. Aug; 19. Charles It. Thomp;ion, better krtojm n as "Butch7 -Thompson, died here todsty. Thomp ssort was one of the richestlgmblers In thir country, and leaves property Val ued at $500,000. ' - , ; ' t Tjegal Elanks, Etateeman Job Offlee, - 'I.gaI Blanks. Statesman' Job OSce. "X