XCnKKXY bnECflN STATESMAN, TUESDAY. OCTOP.Cn 7. 1902. KZ GHEGON VVECKLY STATES' 1 KH Th " nodiy peop m the com- rn unity are those -who can most on tne clergyman In jume of trouble.! It 1 seldom that the services of the clergyman receive any other re war J Pobllabed rrf TnMdy and FrMij by lb ; ; STATESMAN fl'BLXSiriNG COMPANY , i , R. J. BENtiklCKS, Manager. than that of1 a good conscience which , does not buy clothing' for his wife and SUBSCRIrTluN KATES. One year, in ae7....t,.i...l.. ...... $1.00 hi uivuiba, ta dnu .. ...... . .46 14f mouth, la !......;........ .2" I children. The ungodly rase, but when - " j It conies to being married or; burled Tbe ttratetman has U-u -xUUinhed for nearly ; OP visited when thev b rlck the I.r-f.itr-tro rear, and U naaaoue aiibecriben who or Vllea wnen tney are sick, tne cler- hve received it nearly that loo?, snd maajri gyman Is called on ferventy ana with who bive id it for' a rewntum. himii of 1 -.i ,.. ttrt- 0iet to having tn uper ii-nti nnj out regard to bis ' own ; convenience. at ue liiM A Mftinumta of ttwlr ulacripliooa. ittt tbe benefit f theae. api for other munet Lave concluded to rt5ouLinn! hIi criftln nly h-n n -Utied U do to. All pena payioc wbert MlmcrlMne. or i.attnr in adT.nrt-. win havtl benefit of tbe dollar rale. But ll tfcey do nbt py 1 r moat ha, the rate will te !.2& uerouter wiu kuq ine paper to au tle peraoaa who Older it. though Uicf hit jr not eod lite money, with the nnantni- a year, refs(ibie peraoon who Older lug thai tUay are t pay tlJtr a year, to can? tfiy ' the iiubrribtloa oncotic t ran oxer six tnon.bii. la order that there asay be. no rolsun demand in a;, we will keep ttiia notice atacdiog t ttala phtxx in the pf-r. , CIRCULATION (SWORN) OVER 4000 i " i t KILLING TIME IS MORAL AND INTELLECTUAL SUICIDE.' il; i .What do you do with your evenings? Do you waste them or do you employ 'them well? It would be safe to say that the majority of men squander tht-ir leisure, Thf y go home to din ner, after theJr day's, work, i Dinner r over, they put on their hats and has ten downtown,-If they are, young, lor ( they sink Into aneay chair and tii) ? ti sleep. If they have passed the lark " Ing age of adolescence , The boys who go down town, lounge about: the cor ners all evening. The elders who stay r borne sleep all night. ' .. f ; :' Time, ! somebody has said, is the stuff that life Is mad.e of, and we ought t keep a strict account of how we spend It. The evening is the It-Is ure time of most men, arhl i leisure should not be wasted In idleness, but should be turned tofuse. - r Every man ind Woman ought !to read some gtxxi book for an hour ,or two hours each day. Having resolved Xdr do this, a man ought to muke itj a wllemn duty, as It were a religious of flee, to stick to his resolution. ' Noth 'ag shouKl be permitted to interfere with his readings If, on any day, he must be otherwise employed during his reading hour,' let him make It up at om other time during the same day. And If: he cannot rd the full time today, let him make up for it to The. suggestion that he has earned compensation is treated as amost bias rhem by those Wlo blaspheme daily without the slightest compunction.: We are glad that orwt clergyman has had the nerve to stand up for his rights. ' No man expects a lawyer or physician or dentist or veterinarian to give services - without compensation. and by the same token no one seems to think of paying a clergyman for his services, which' are, so necessary and Iso comforting. The ministers of the various religions do more gratuitous work than members of any other call ing on earth, and while they are raying up large treasure In heaven, most !of them woTild not be averse to a little money with which to bring up their families. We hope there will be many who will insist on; this Idea of the eternal fitness of things. Philadelphia Inquirer. ' J ; PRICES AND WAGES. morrow. 4 Perseverance will make reading j a habit and a pleasure.. The keenest ' pleasures of life are drawn from books, and a man that has the read- Ing habit., would rrfther have It than .fifty thousand dollars. In order to get the most out of read- .ing. one should read with some sys tern, suggests a writer-in tha San Fram-Isco Bulletin. It Iswell to cover a limited period of history and toreud everything, formal histories. bioKmph. leSt. autobiographies, memoirs, diaries and letters, relating to that Terlod. Or let the thread of ones reading ' be some bra rich of natural or political Science, such as biology or economics, . Itut If one confine himself 'only ; la rvtandard novels and' plays, and g through Shakespeare, Dickens,! ThaJt eray; Hiott, Jane Austen and others of -the first cia,ss of writers, he will brood en a ndj improve his mind and fit liifti i self better for his day's work. Make use of the, odds and chds of "time which most of us "give to dawl ling. Mont of the Knglish classics enn lx had in jHK ket edWIons for ten cents or a quarter of a dollar, and a man who finds himself . with ten minutes on his hands, occasionally 1 well provided If he has a good book with him. . j. :-''-'r- i l . - ' - i j . The expression, "killing .time." Is ab horrent. Why should wewlsh to kill time? Time Is gtven us for a pur pose, f We ought to make the most of It. The man who says he has noth- Ing- to do Is." Ignorant or: negllgerH of his duty to himself the duty of mak In ghimself a better, wiser, broader, minded man day by day." Killing time is Intf llMtllflt an.t mikr.l i , f I 4. C,i. rnents are precious. They are not to ibe thrown away. There Is always something tv do. A NEWSPAPER'S PLEA FOR THE CLERGY. ; j ; There Is a -tendency-on the part of some- editors to make merry over the fact that sv New York clergyman has recovered In the courts a fee for con- asked to go a long distance to attend a funeral of one who was not a par Ishoner. lie put in a bill; which was contested,, but the 'Jury awarded nioarrwe compensation. This, we i think,'" was Just. If a physician Is en -tKi'etl tq pay for caring for . sick per son wh is not the clergyman, when the deceased is not a member of th congregation to whom he Is paid tc minister? r ' Tri' .M 4 c . f 1 - ... . . persons think that clergymen - are haVenborn individual who live on free grace mnd, , undying love and are not subject to the same necessities a ordinary mortals. The clergyman iriay receive a very amah salary, but he Is expected to keep a free hotel for all WM 't the town. Is supposed to be at -he beck and catKof every one. night day, and to labor fti the vineyard of the Lord, principally to gratify his conoienee, and la not expected to eat any more than the !!.. the field.- The old .controversy has been reviv ed In an'T&istern paper over th ques tion, whether a laborer Is benefited by a rise In wages when it Is accompanied by a corresponding rise In the price of things the laborer has to buy. Does It da a man any good to handle two dol lars instead of one, if the one dollar will buy as much as the two dollars did at a former time? Doubling the wages and reducing by one-half the purchas ing power 1 of .money,' It Is contended, confers no benefit upon the laborer. To prices which accompanies a rise In purfces which' accompanies a rise in wages should extend to all the commo ditiea the laliorer has to buy. His taxes should -be doubled with the doubling of his wages. The' five-cent carfare should be increased to ten cents when wages rise fromone dollar to two dol lars a day. If . the lawvreguated the prices of things and 4 he" rates of wages, the : contention might Je made good. Hut experience shows that a man who can save no money on an income of a dollar a day may, with the exercise of the same degree of economy, make a small saving on an Income of two dol lars per day. One of the parties to this controversy says: "Wages cannot be increased by a protective tariff, simply because .the profitableness of the in dustral system is not increased by M." It is the increased profitableness of the industrial "system under a protective tariff that exposes the protective policy to criticism Advocates of free trade assert that employers get a lion's Share of the increase in prices result ing from duties on imports. The in crease in wages. It is contended, only comes after an Increased 'demand for labor has caused a Vise in the rates of wages. . ';" - China Is an example' of lowwages and jr.heap commoli4ies, and the Uult ed Stages,- of the .opposite industrial condition. China and its dependencies Include an area of about 4,&ob.OK) square miles. Its population Is roundly estimated at 400,000,000, The United States has about 3,500,000 square miles an "5,000.000 people. Wages and com-" moditles are higher In the United .Htates than In any other courrtry and lower in China. May not the ' much grater. prosietity of Hie United States be attributed in large part to the stim ulant high wages imparts to the la borer? ' THE MAN OF HER CHOICE. alines By Shampoos wltb teachers who hare made the juvenile mind a life study. . , MM And light drosinjt with CUTICURA purest of cmoHknt ikia cures. vThis treatment at once stops tilling hair. removes crusts, scales, ana danaruff, soothes irritated Itching' sarfaces. stim ulates the hair follicles, supplies the roots with nourishment, ana makes the hair' grow upon a sweet, wholesome, healthy scalp when all else tails. Millions Use CtmcuKA Soap, ssalated -by CcncuSA Oistmest, for preserving, pnrfying, and besotl tying the skin. 4 for cleasalng the scalp of erasts,-scales, and dandruff and the topping of falling hair, for softening, whiten, tng, and soothing red, rough, and sore hands, for baby rsshes, itcblngs, snd chsfinrs, and for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, snd nuraery. Millions of women nae Ctmct'KA Soar Is the form of baths for annoying Irrita tions, inflammations, snd chsnnga, or too free or offenalve perspiration, in the form of wshes for ulcerative weaknesses, and for many sanative, sntiaeptie pnrpoaes which readily anggeat themselves to women. Complete Humour Cure, $1. Ccticura Hoaf (25c.J, tocleasM the skin of crusts and scales, and soften ths thickened eutiole, C'ctioi ba UIstmsst C0c.), to in stantly aiiar itcbine ana inflammation, and soothe snd oesl, and Gcticura Rcsoi.vkst nixs (zae.;, to oooi and ctesnse the blood. " Cuticl'SA Bbsoivsst Pnxs (Cboeoiato Coated) ara a saw, taatcleaa, odorleaa, eoonomioal a'lb atllata for tha oclebratae liquid Ccttccba Ks SOL.VSST aa wall aa for all other blood purlftera snd humoor cares. In ac raw-cap vlala, eontain. log 10 doaea, price, 25c Sold difoarhoa h Warid. Britl.h Dapoti 9-V, CaartarhooM Sq Laadoa. t'rench lrpat R da t ria. Paris. Forraa iauo AMU Csaa. Coar- 34a Rasa Baataa. U. S. A. A contract was recently placed on file In the Marion county recorder's office, whereby a hop grower contracts with a responsible firm of buyers In Salem, for five yars, beginning with 103 and ending" with 1S07, to deliver the product of his yard In the bale at 14 cents a pound. This Is placing bop growing for the farmer on a substan tial basis. lie can . produce and cure the hops end deliver ihem. at 14 cents a pound at a profit at a profit of four to seven cents a pound, owing td the amount he figures! for hjown labor, and the proportion of his own labor he gives. - lie can grow and cure hops cheaper than . can his competitor In New Tork or in England. Perhaps he will at the end of the time find that he could have made more money by selling each year in the open market. And he may find that he has made an advantageous arrangement.' PARK AMD WASHINGTON, PORTLAND, OREGON Tbe school where thorougli work is done; where the reason Is always given; where confidence is developed; where booliLeepin. is taught exactly ms books are kept In bnsiness; where ghorthand is made easy ; where penmanshi p is at its best ; - where hundreds cf bookkeepeis and stenogmrthers have been edncated for success in life; where thousands more will be. Open all the year. Catalogue free. A. P. ARMSTRONG, LU ., PRINCIPAL suffocating In the coils of ; monopoly Willamette University, out of debt and even most of the Popull3ts have and with a 1100,000 endowment fund. A CLEAN FAIR. The lady managers of the Louisiana Purchase Exposition have decided not tocater to the element of our popula tion whose tastes conflict with the re quirements of the part of the people represented by the AVoman'e Christian Temperance Association. Mls Helen Gould was the author of a resolution which promises to eliminate from con- f ceyons anything that savors - of the abandoned tbe holy cause of the peo pul and are wallowing n bank accounts at such a time should a tribune of the peo-pul Invest 9100 in a bull calf? He might own a plain bull calf, bred on his own acres, but he should scorn e luxurious and an aristocratic scion of the Rose of Sharon family1. The price of milk goes up; and Joe Bailey, Instead of trying to relieve the stringency In the milk market, buys fancy bull calf! - la the mark 'President Coleman has s for 1902. No bounds have been jet for the work of '1903.; Itut It will prob ably Include at least one new bui'td Ing and an increase of attendance- in the College of Liberal Arts to 500. ; . The Portland Evenmg Telegram says: "Evidently the assessor of Till amook county has adopted a new pol icy, for the assessment of this year ..The limit of help 'which Salem will give Willamette University has not been' reached. Only a start has been made. And the rsources of the Pa rifle Northwest and the country at large In this respect have scarcely b-n togphed.- There Is room for work with out ending, and for success beyond present calculations. The managers of the Portland str. ct devices of th Midway of the Chicago amounts to $3,C33.1 23, which Is an in- J railway llnea are asking for many ad- Fair. It Is highly desirable that this test of nearly h 2,000,W0 over last of popular taste be made. The Chicago year's assessment. Probably the as Fair brought under public observation J sowor haH been putting fome new val forms of entertainment that would not jutions on the valuable timber lands in have, been permitted In shows under I in.a county owned by non-residents, private' management. The managers j au1 therein Is a hint for some other of th Chicago Fair acknowledged only a;4esHors. That is what the assessor a slender connection with the cohces-jof Tillamook county has been doing, skm entertainment. The concession- 1 and it will result In a stormy meeting aires rented ground 'in the fair en-!f lhe board of equalisation. The ac- closure and employed; such performers I tion ot the asnessor," If It Is sustained. as thoy thought would appeal to Xbej1'1 probably result lit a greater desire tastes of the masses of the people. It I orl ,.tne Part of Us owners to have the was a common saying during the prog- I tlmbr! turned- Into commercial pro- ress of the fair that for one person duft- It will not pay to hold it indefl who passed the gates to view the mar- I n,l'y and pay taxes on It. vela of human work on display, at last five came to wander through the I Among the exhibits at the Inter-state portion of the ground set apart fori far.L to be held at Spokane, Wash! ng- the concessionaires; Midway Plals dltlonai franchises for numerous x- tensions. Salem could afford to give a lot or franchises for extension of ner jtresnt lines, especially If tliey la.. out. into the country and to the Sur rounding towns. " . Dallas is booming. One of the It at luniii, in iiir .vaney. vvm next, yar - hve railroad connection with the fall timber of the Lucklamute.' High tl.jie. Salem was getting ready for a .motor line to lallas. It would be a rr at thing for both Salem and Iallas. " out of romances. The public Is fre quently assured ao that "ail the world I anees, so called. In one form or an loves a loverr." But courts apparently j other, have been features in resorts in must be excepted from the world that Jail our large cities that have given the loves a lover. Courts bear In mind the J police much trouble. The St. Louis Ex iaei mat it is a rather serious thing I position Is to be kept free of similar for a, father to have a daughter marry attractions. It will appeal to more the man of her choice when that, roan es'thetic . tastes. There will be conces is not able. or not willing to take care Fiona, but they' will be censored by f K Aw : ITl 1.- n I I. .1 I. ... . I v. , we nees trom me .-u,r m, w m maae no concessions to lew Zealand, from Argentina In South ..... nusoana nas, provided for ft mey wouia call the depraved America, from Italy; from Algeria In her she usually returns -to her family, popular tastes. In other words, the Africa, from New South Wales Russia. The exceptional case Is that In which St. Ixuls show will not be edited ftoin Jaoan. ,Turkev. a AarottI tw. fie nai iaued to obtain the parental I ine ox omce, blessing. But even In some such cases W. R. Hearst, of the. New York Journal. Chicago American, and San Francisco Examiner, is a Tammany candidn-te for Congress In one of the J ton, October 6-14. will be elirhtv-five I York c,ty districts. He will no varieties of wiheat gaown on the O. R. I doubt be. eb-ctcl. , He Is certainly on & N. Co.'a experimental farm in Walla Walla county, that state. There is on their farm wheat from every wheat- growing country in the world, the pur pose being to find a wheat which would ripen early and not shatter. There Is grain which came from seed grown In of the strenuous States. men of the United Willamette University has now 201'. students registered in the Liberal Arts- (lcn.irlmj.nt Thl.' U . .' . ma Ulir lumc IK. Ill the total registration of last year. It is highly probable that the number this f year will be; as high as 309. - 1 tne aoors or the old family home fly open at her approach if she comes without t her ' husband. The "father knows perfectly well that It Is only his home, or that of other near relatives. that can afford honorable shelter to the THE TREASURY AND THE MONEY j .1 MARKET. (New YroK Sun.) mere is But one sentiment on the part or all those having business and financial interests at stake in this country concerning the t-Ds ink on nn unfortunate young woman who Is sep- j Monday by the Secretary of' the Treas- The appearances are tha. the canal Is to be built by the Panama route. company's farm sent a display 'of its The title of the French company is grain to the Paris Expostloa and was said to be good and ready to be passM awaraeo tne urand Prtx gold medal, and there Is nothing In the 'way that tne nrst premium for the best exhibit may not bo cleared ud. of grain grown by any one person or company. i now the Moros will nrobabiv be- goofl. The AinerUans have caplurf.l Germany's census yields curious lan- I r destroyed forty of their "forts," artiasre statistics. Of tha rx. 9t7 l t in. I and killed or wounded a hun.iro.i ...... 1 r . . . ..... .1 nrr .... . I . '. , . . . " . .... ... :rrj :T.n'. " hap- now nreHsntr lVL the empire. 51.SS3.1.S can without the loss of a single one of our nna s-as IniAMa .t . all be welcomed. All, this Is done in uutle. u,erwaemiln ral' the fulfilment of natural "laws. The The vital fact about this money "iniuie law wni. n nermMs a husband I mgency is this. sinu.Ivi Thr. n to come between a father and his daaghter does not effect a repeat of unpreceientea and extraordinary de- I mand for money, to carry on the busl- seak only German. 3,08(J.4S9 only Pol- I soldiers, two only being wounded. fh. 141.061 only Danish. C5.930 ' onl v Italian. 93,032 Moravian, 10305 Llth-I e OITer r 25 cnl a pound for uanian. ?I1,C79 Frem h. 20.217 English. ""fm ,a niaae quite general for g.HKl t- 101.03$ Dutch and Frisian. 62.CG2 Czech I Ma4ity, the! crop will probably begin niss of our country. Every branch of and Husslan, and smaller numbers I papl,,,y The contract hops trsde is stimulated to the utmost ex- Swedish. Koaniah pnni, um. are going forward now. tent, and as the inevitable accompanl-I ioort ,, Mavf,- . ment of such condition there is more . and MagyaT. 2-.'.9I8 person are or less general speculation. A few j nsua! tne numler, 169.C34. years aero we wort hngctin .knt eneakinz both (lot-man n n.i r..i:v. I - . w war a a a (aj U aru a 11 - a a mm Sfla. A I divorce cases which disgrace our court ability to undersell the -world In Irun Th -r. 2 !:a ..... w . ...1 .., . .... .. . . I ,. ...i i .,. . .. I " .-e.i.'.ii muu ousumi a .m-Kimuy oij llgnt- I wit. ""lay vast is tne con- I Get man and St "r r ' .... ... i inmnrifin n , , . . . . . i . . I - ' ening tne nonus between parents andi int our iron gnu daughters, I,ve is often blind. The I rati r i nr -. In new. v.. I rather than in merplv m armul ni..c .. a9 ... "t. noge as our. resource f produc- I The way to pay off the balance i .umwrrwi jn ni uaupieri eyes. The I ""n are, we. cannot supply the home I tbe de the riHtural law. That natural law stands In all cases except when there is a e-mfiict between husband and fath er overthe daughter. The numerous man. French and Gcr-1 of It is reported from Washington that the President's efforts to Settle th coal strike are at an end. It is haul i.. believe the report. The President 1.4 not a uuitter. Push along the advertising fund for the Greater Salem Commercial Club. - A temporary Injunction has. been Issued by a Kcranton, PjL, court, re straining a young woman from marry Ing the man of her choice. The lnjune tlon was secured by the young woman's father on the ground that his consent to the marriage had not been obtained "f here will be-a pretty general uprais ing of hands In deprecation of this new use to which Injunctions may be put The,, right of daughters who", have reached their majority to marry -Jh man of their choice has been generally recognized. The phrase, "Love laughs at locksmiths rwmular In as well as No Hair? Mjr hair was falling out very fast and I was greatly alarmed. I then tried Ayer Hair Vigor and mj hair stopped falling at once. Mrs. C.A. McVay, Alexsndris, O. Theironbleis your hair does not have life enough. Act promptly. Save your hair. Feed it with Ayer's Hair Vigor. If the gray hairs are beginning to show, Ayer's Haic Vigor will restore color every UmC . II.M s bstua. Alt : If yoor dmrrlat cannot sapply yon, send us one dollar and we wiil express voa s bottle. Be sore and riva the nam f your nearest ex rrees ofiioe. Address, the least. -fi Ing, and not lag behind in a . - w ua I a a. Ul Ski 11 IX lllt'l 1 I n I VAPaif mm itt T a "" a . . Injunction process is an abuse?of tu- demana- The Mme stupendous nergyl. . mi ... ' T " I h r'Mem 'd In the grand pr(K-e:iron dJcial authoritv. but t h. H m every inaustry. Obviously, - ja..- , mat is movl - - - - . . . . ...... . ... a.. . . ,ii . iu.qrv i .r r9 aav.. i . ,h. . i " , . . . . . I uu ,,ruiij iim reaginj coin- I i" -i.c wi nucm can ai- the always, responsible father should merce and manufacturlns:. the mon.v ford'to -lv. a ni.i:ri-. be given some security against the kind "uPfrl of the country must . Increase they have alread'y pledged It m in or men who are defendants in actions B uc? "wei1 . do them w-i ...m.... ' " ' xei, wnai is tne source of our coun-I .v. , nl imy mvm as try's money supply? The circulating I business Investment, The bla- thine medium of the land const-ts. fin by far m "tore for the institution will not T V ; "te bd Pn come until, the. little things are taken the deposits of Government hnni . .are laaen care or, and the most Important little it-t-us to w taken care of for ditOrce. JUVENILE CtJU RTS. The folly, not to7 say, the sin. of sub- e lecting children to the cou.rt processes deposits of Government bonds. : as security. These Government bonds, as is well known, are constantly belmr re. llliswl In miitmKaw V. ! i- . m . a ht,H A.,., .i , .1" m traarn oi tne jv".r..tt iwi ouuna nam lea I raM that nvlr,. : . . - l -v i witri ii jr, in several states to the establishment I are-baying off our' national debt So of special cotu ts In which the ofTenses I that tn basis of currency; for a con- of persons of tender are mav be con tant,y increslng yolume of trade, with frilem Is to have" a brilliant theater season. It remains for the peop!. , nf the Capital City to show their at.f.re-- ciatlon. and they may be depended upon for that. ,.wr in me remaining $20,000 tne oebt. ' of President Coleman, of wSllamette vv "'"V a asaC Ilia T SJt i tin ' a I . sidered separately from those of .J ened criminals. New York has a court Simply to state this proposition em- bv tlJrZ 7 "ri"ul,on will bo paid of this character which holds dailv ses-1 Phaslxes its absurdity and Its danger. I'. . 01 ,nemlng year. Less slona and I. nri.l.t f " ' stem of currency which is a linan . month hence - . ' I ; ........ - by th five judge, of th, adult court of TloZrZ X""... special sessions. This court has Juris-I Shaw will , lead as . nothing else could diction over till cases of Juvenile crime kal to an early! reform of our, II nan - excent homUl.U : : wi. I cl' " Stem and the adontinn of nn . - " vfc mi, I .. . - - -... - . . " .juru to tne magnitude of ofir Is,riV,n,na for the School - - ... ' I trtn 1 tv m' tx-cret iry wiaw hat led the way. OBEYS THE ' SCRIPTURES Evidently -ome more good news In prospect this can be accomplished, and I A dr atan 'mrtwrnrnm, 4 a. P iunj increased to lie ana the year 13 will see the beginning of If the court over offenders under 12 years of age Is absolute. The Idea of reclaiming juvenile criminals through punishment that exposes them to the companion ship of hardened criminals la shown by AN UNWARRANTED BULL CALF. - wBBMaaMaa - Y. Sun: Ijr th ITon. Jfionh n'oi. -wa.-. WW It will with a steady swlriir th fn ... -- - iu ao great credit to the church In patronixlnir tne Northwtst. an,i -. o tne city where It is located. "ZZii: Zr , wrong don Bailey, of Texakf and the United ... ... ..... jur juvrniirj enouia De - The WOmMl nn .kit I Stataa Rrat. K ,r . r 1 1 - .- ""'u,rn OI " an- made to realise that the object of the feet which klc...! "!! I" ,8trlct Pennsyl court that deals with them la te re- Wall Street and iZJr"?: Xr"? - ut; the Tbe aim of the court will not be to claim them rather than to punish them, treadinc the Z. ! .7A ""7 th n..,imA .i.. ...... I . -. . " i"" "l piuto- i rwinj general tinti .1 - -i --v...WJ1 ccn cracy.- is Joe Ilane Irmiin. I .. cure convictions, but to brina- the VhiM tr, -.t . ' -" V-""s . to a realising Wn of the error of It. weaJthT . race for -estion. Involved between organized v-iia. ana organized labor. The wisest for a first offense will be ourselves to I needed in . . i - oviuuon or i the fact The vexed questions. many avoided. I gle have Whether the average rrlmina. Judge J chronicle the harrowing a m 4r tm M . I a ... .'.I - " - fmi.c.j-aiemmseix rrom ha.lHon. J. If. Dole, of ct,.,k.i bits of reasoning formed in dealing m-tiw I Tr,.w . 7' ... I -1 , IMS SUHl ID Mr. F!a!Irnn. I . . . adult offender remains to be meetx. The Shorthorn bull calf of the Pnl L , f GmraI sufTercd Judge that holds to the doctrine, fonce Sharon family for 1100." , tr0tn the fire of i nlay a criminal, always a crninal.- wUI be! At a time when, in fh- :... IZT" T "T1" eympathy. How. out of place in a Juvenile court. A I statesmen v , t, W ' "ere wHL te no sitting down and writer : in the JUn Franciscb Bulletin a growing richer i ,k! Insr over spilled milk." The burned suggests lliat; results might be locked Uwinr poorer;- when -lruc.ure,. wm be rebuilt, and the new Tor front the creation of. a court to be sucklns the lift Wood of th. ,t . P ' moe WlU be better i.j . - I nation: land more n),ai.ni:.i " .. the nrodurlrwr ... " l" Old - - ..v arc i onf S, HT - -T- -- presided over by mature women school 1 when Why Dr. Darrin Doe Not Hid Light Under a Bushel. Hi. They who search the Scripture will find therein., words advising mankind not to; make a practice of hiding lights under: a buMhel. .. We! do not know that it wan from studying the Bible that Ir. Darrin gt Ihe ,f advertising, but we do' know that since he has reside.! in Sa lem the doctor has not been afraid to -use printer's Ink. Kxpericnce has proven to the doc tor that In no other way can the af flicted learn so quickly that there is a , resent opportunity to be healed; that ; chronic cases can be cured; that new life and energy, ran be Imparted to , those within whose breasts hope of health had almost ceased to exist; that the worthy poor ran be treated free; that all others can receive treatment at a price to awommwlat their means at his office in the- Willamette Hotel. " CALIFORNIA PRUNES ? ENORMOUS PBODUCTION OF TUB ! SANTA CLARA VALLKY H ! ORCHARDS. " RAN JOSK. Cal.. Oct. 4. The South ern Pacific Ha 11 road Is preparing for ' thf laraest fshinmnt r,r riwiii ... thf month of Orlnlk, I , , v . , . - .... s; iMi-ii"! Jf ui, thd Fanta Clara valley. . The nmn crop of the state will 1?P.)0,001 pounds, of . which Santa Clara county will furnish 100,000.000 pounds. The entire crop will be dried within three weeks, "