HIJ WEEKLY OREGON STATESMAN.' TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10. 190S-- THE OXGON V.IEKLY STATtS?.UN Published Yvry TDetdsT and Friday by iha STATESMAN ICBUSHINO COMPANY X. 3. HEXDK.RK9. Manager. icbsceiittos sates. fw year, In advance..... ............. Hi mntilba, in ad ranee..... ......... Three month, in adrance tin year, a Use... ............. li in I- The Statesman bas been established frr aeaHjr IMlr-two year, and it has none subscribers who b4Te received U .early ibai kor. and nur who hare read it lor a gcneraM. Kome of these obieet having tne naner dur-ontinoed at tb time of expiration of l b-ir subucnpcioua. For the benefit at these, sad for other reasons we baseeoneiaded to dicoulina sob cription only when nattfled to do so. Alt persons paying: when sabacribinr. or payloc in adrance. will bar the benefit of tbe dollar rale. Bat if tbey An not pay fr i months, tne rate will be II.25 a year. Hereafter we will send tbe paper to all responsibie persons who order it. lLocb ihey ins; that tbey are to pay 11-25 a year, in eathey la the 4BbecripUon account ran oxer tax months. In order that there may be no misoa derrtanlin-. we will keep this notice standing at this place in the paper. CIRCULATION (SWORN) OVER 4000 BED THE POPULAR VOTE SHOULD PREVAIL. . The Eugene Register still baa the .... - i.- pangs of recurrent nightmare to wrestle with. It professes to being opposed to the election of Mr. Geer to' the Senate ' tecause of "the course he pursued dur ' Jng the last campaign. But whatever course he irtirsued 1 or did not pursue during the last campaign was well known to every, voter in the state on elation day. It was the firstcampaign for ten years that be was not actively in the campaign, and the fact that last rpring ho was not. was as well known on election day h it is now,:.The fact . was exploited by nearly every paper in the state, hoping to cut dowrf. his vote by that means. It was one of tbe ques tions passed on by the people. The Reg ister should know! that its antics ' in this matter are fantastic but harmless. All Mr. Geer did in the last campaign is embraced In w hat he did not do. As i the head of the administration,, and, therefore, of the Republican party in the state, he was notified by those who . ... organized the last Republican State Convention that whatever ability he had as a campaign sptsaker was wholly Insufficient to wmmend bim for en dorsement. The; Register was of those ' who were quite sure that Mr. Geers ability to make a campaign of the state would be so short of that which would be required, that his nomination would nietn defeat, probably to the whole ticket. I The only way to avoid defeat was to defeat Mr. Geer In the State Conven tion. for his influence as a campaigner. save for the worse, was gone. However, after the plan. was success fully carried out by the Register and its allies, ami Mr. Oeer assumed, that their estimate of him was correct, and, therefore, remained at home in order to do no damage to the cause, he is now abutted by these same patriots for not insisting upon exercising that influence in the campaign 'which for months they had claimed he no longer possessed! j It was a common remark that wher ever Mr. Fulton and Mr. Furnish made speeches the Republican vole "Ml ?oft most. The ceturns uniformly show this. If thf-y had both remained at home; as Mr. Geer did, nothing is mow? certain than that Mr. Furnish would have been elected.. In that case, perhaps, either Clatsop or Umatilla county might have cast its ordinary Republican vote, land thereby defeated Chamberlain. j If the Register really thinks the peo ple wanted Mr. Geer on the campaign ahddefeated Furnish because he was not, it should not have been so earnestly in favor of notifying him last spring that his appearance in the field as a candidate would, knock the whole Re publican party Into smithereens. ? The Register Has as blind then as II Is daft now. j J be their candiatee for U. S. Senators, and have voter .or every candidate whose name was presented to " them. That, other names were not voted for in no wise affects tbe good .faith with which they cast their votes. 4 But some man who wants to be Sen ator says that the ; vote for Geer amounts to nothing because the afore said candidate saw proper to not" sub mit bis name to the people. Therefore, the people were powerless, to express any intelligent opinion on the ques tion! Therefore, the aforesaid candi date has the people at bis" mercy and turns up bis nose at their expression at the polls. :"t And such transparent folly as this Is put forth each day by men who profess to represent the people as an excuse for slapping them in the face! Gentle men. do yon care tor the good name of the state or-are you mindful for! the fu ture of the Republican party here? , IS IT IMPOSSIBLE FOR YOU TO CAST ASIDE THE INFLUENCES SUR ROUNDING YOU IN THE LOBBIES, CREATED FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. LONG ENOUGH ;TO RE MEMBER THE MEN j ON THE FARMS AND IN THE WORK SHOPS WHO WILL SURELY HAVE TO BE RECKONED WITH LATER ON. IP THIS GAME SHOULD SUCCEED? The man or men who refused to Ije candidates for U. S. Senator? have 1 no rights In this contest VbichSare to be considered for one minute' as against the first duty of respecting the voice of. the people. You are on untenable ground now, and your success' would not make it more so. Representative Paulsen's honest expression a few dayn ago was an expression -which he well knows is that of nine-tenths of the people of Oregon. FLAT SALARIES. LOOK HERE, GENTLEMEN. . Can it be possible that the Republi can niriTioem ; oi ine legislature are d-af to the voice of the people ami blind to the consequences that rwill surely follow a persistence In the course so far pursued by a, majority of them? The ieople of Oregon are not foots that they may be relied , upon to endorse 'any old program that may be handed out to them. They have voted on who should It is noticeable, and as surprising as noticeable, that papers which erstwhile were on the rampage in their frenzied efforts to show the taxpayers that flat salaries would save them at least $50. 000 a year, are at this time, when the work should be done, if at all. siniply "sayin nuffln." If whole pages in black type and display headlines were neces sary six molnth3 ago to properly pre sent the matter to the people and t arouse them to the enormity of the gi gantic graft, why is It not now all th more Important In the interest of suf fering humanity to day by day Impress the matter -upon the-Legislature before it becomes everlastingly too late? t For $54,000 a year Is no small sum to be cut off from a graft, and if the Statesman had the figures at hand, i would print them every day.- What has become of they flat salary.-agitation, anyway? Is it any the less? one of the burning issues of the twentieth century than it was in the days that "are for ever gone? ; WELLINGTON HEARD FROM. ansssBBinsal I ana . , " ' 'W n i Tnasmnnmati mmi i mi a"ss .The Cause of Many Sudden Deaths. There Is a disease prevailing in this country most danrerous because so decen- r - ... m m .. - ... uve. Many sudder. deaths are caused by it rheart disease, pneumonia. T- heart failure or apoplexy are oiien the result of kidney disease. If kidney trouble is al lowed to advance the kidney-poisoned blood will attack tbe Vital orp-ans or th.m LJ J i . . Nancys msmserves creak dovn and waste away cell by cell. - - Bladder troubles most ahvavs result fmm a derangement of the kidneys and a cure is ..V I 1 r f . uiMuuwi Suidssi py a. proper treatment of ine Kjaneys. ; it you are feeJing badly you can make no mistake by taking Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney, fiver and It corrects inability to hold urute and scald ing pain tn passing H, and overcomes that unpleasant necessity of being compelled to go often during the day, and to get up many times during the nieht. The mild and th extraordinary effect of Swamp-Root is soon reaHzed. It stands the highest for its won derful cures of the most distressing cases. Swamp-Root is pleasant to take and sold by all drareists in fifty-cent and nm-dollar sizea ooiijes. I ou may have sample bottle of this wonderful new dis covery and a book that tells all about it. both rb sent free by mail. Address Dr. Kilmer & Co. Binghamton. N. Y. .When writing mention reading this generous offer in this paper. Don't make any mistake, but remember the name. Swamp-Root. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and tbe address, Binghamton, n .. on every Dottle. ' DOWN OUR THROATS! We believe -Oregon are very much more apt to ex in iettin&r thepeople have their way' in 'press their sentiments and wishes at Senatorial elections, provided, they the ballot box than senator urowneu i meekly follow the program we have 4 to faithfully represent them in the Joint mapped -out for them, otherwise . tbe convention, "unless. Indeed, he changes people be d d.' ' A -FRESH BATCH OF EXCUSES. What Mr. Brownell favors, and .why his course and obeys Instructions, In stead of grandiloquently declaring that 45,000 voters -can't cram any theory down my Throat!" : ' :J -i.v: - At the sheriff's sale of real estate, for laxes- yesicroay,. every piece- on the whole li&jt was' sold. The county did not have to bid in a single piece. There were; several reasons for this, imon; them being the fact that the sale wan tvelL advertised. The .expense of the advertising wks lower't'han it has been in the past slightly lower than ;it was last yeiir but It was thorough. ! The But that was the President of the! and how long you can depend on 'bis Senate, enthused by his position and , result was that there were a great many favoring it, are always questions whose surroundings. It Was not the samel bidders, prepared to take all the prop- answers must iJtcessarily be more or bumble' and deprecatory IndivlduaJ.Jcrty offered. . It pa ysto advertise, and less enigmatieaLi His speech in favor running for office and declaiming to the Jit pays to conduct business of the of direct nominations was a gem, until rustic voters of Eagle Creek or Spring- county in a business manner, the same Senator Mulkey touched Wra. up on hiswater that "this is a fcoyenunentof the as &(gobd business man would conduct vote each dar for United States Sen-' nannio hv th. nonni. fnr ih. nnli his own affairs.' ature when Jila matured faculty for'trust me! If there Is any theory you j setting au arouna a question Diossomeu ; would Uke 'tor.cram down my throat, I Q .W. James, of Baker-City, has been forth in sparkling effulgence. ; I gentlemen, you will finds that part ofl annolnted bv Rovernor numh-hin ... . . ; . .. . 1 ' T. : my anatomy, indefinitely 7 elastic i Superintendent of the . Oregon State CTears,, tears.) - - I Penitentiary, to take charge April 1st. Vlaryland Republican for a little while inded two Maryland men of that party 11 the Senate.. An excellent Senator is Vlr. McComas. He is a man of excel enf ability and he is serving with -redit. Of Wellington it can be said hat. he Js a freak and not an interest- ng one, He is in fact a tedious chump. Held in despite by the Democrats, mos of the members who are of his own artyt regard him with contempt, and Maryland Republicanism feels ashamed -f him.: In the second half of his tern ie has shown some lit tie .sense in tha "ie has shown enough to keep still muel f the time, and that is the limit to hir merit.-. - i ..' MRS. MAYRICK AGAIN. After declaring that tbe Mays law Is til right just as it stands, he added that he did not propose to respect it this time, because It: didvnot work as we expected it would." He even explained that there was but one Republican can didate on the ticket, therefore, the 45,- 000 votes for Mr Geer mean nothing to him. No, siree! .. But There will be thousands of Re publican in this state wno will . insist on asking these insurgent gentlemen how the Mays law is going to be of any benefit to the people if the bosses flat- y refuse to furnish them with candi dates. This is a question that will not lownT-i The last Legislature . foresaw hat -'a S- Convert -n m.ght not do inything a K.U In the oa ef of nom natitig 'a '-andidatc, as the last one Tid, sure, enough, so the privilege of jlacirg names n Jne ticket directly by he people was conferred. ) But suppose there are several '., men vho would like, to go to the United States Senate, and but one of them has the courage to submit his name to the - 1 ,jfopJe, then; what? Is that man to be ungied out, 'for special punishment bv the Legislature, for being willing to con fide In "the people, and the votes of that :dy given to the others for well, for what? ' 'For iheir cowardice? , That is the present situation precise- y. Mr. James is jat the present time deputy When papers like the Eugene Regis-1 county, clerk of Baker county. IIe is ter advise the Republican party to com- spoken of as; an efUclejit man. and be -mit suicide a second time within one will no doubt conduct the affairs of the year, because Mr. Geer did not take an Penitentiary In aM .creditable manner, active part InJ the last campaign. It1 In fact there were,, a number of camii should remember that the people know datea for the place who, would have fill-l that the alleged reason is not its re as- ed the posHfon. most creditably. The on at alL In the campaign of 1900 Mr. sad thing about such contests is the Geer stumped j the, entire state In the fact that, only one? man ,caji be suceejs- nt-inar and araln in t h fall.' He waslfui. a tmiuiuiiie men iut aiijr ihiii-v, uui i , , volunteered the service and at his own The Senate may yet repair the great expense. both times. Rut, notwithstand- mistake of defeating thedirect printary Ing this, the Eugene Register and all bill. The vote was yesterday reion- its present allies were as bitterly op- sidered and the'blll recommitte!. , It posed to his renomination as Governor I stands now where It did before, or w ill as tney are now opposea to his election If the committee shall report It and to the Senatorship. . He might have have It "put on its final passage. ; The campaigned in every township in the people demand the passage of the bill. Btata jiast spring, and these men who and it should' be put through. are opposing hint- now would be oppos- JUSI ine 8me- ine P01 OI.u The n,ost fearful thing about tt.e waa th anifMl nnmaillnn tn klm hi !..'. ,. .. eoaj-tny tleeJ of Elliott Lyons in fore Hie State Convention last spring. Ukmg. the ,,..,,.,. f whenj his record for campaigning was by hut relatives.: who re good peoPre. uiiMucBuuiKu itiiu . . unquesiionaoie. 1 n't,- and Mr. Wood, hut for nr airoin, Mr Mr. Brownell is In favor of the I ,-. ' " . " 1 I fitter Th niinnnrw ftTnr m t. , M I - .-.w ...v. mm . tu-v. . iu ia, proviuea always, that thel1 K, a heartless fool a man la h wUl, bring such sorrow upon his fam ily, the members of which have n ays.l conducted thenuu-lv-ps v..' wi was not a question between Mr. Geer and law abiding citizens! ! These matters were allv passed upon at the ihjIIs, by the people, in their Indi vidual booths, voting intelligently. It The bulletin that reaches the Ameri can 10 neny that his "countenaCe isl., an press about twice a year with re- kminr with c-onTO-s i , m . - " " ' -'v"m3 .Miviia. ard to - Mrs. Florence Maybrick 4 t fon ? : T nances, of getting out of the" Englisl she has been detained vote down, and everybody knows it, as well as the result of It- will of the people and to escape a condemn ation that surely awaits a "disregard of One lesson should be asP' enough. jossesi may- consent to give the people he proper candidate at the right time-l-Thw , wt Umm t . 1 .. . ! .. . . v . I ' " -.... ' uurci nr, ,uk ieopie ne a a. Itls'now in order for another gentle- Sad Roughs I had a bad cough -for six wfeks and could find 00 relief un til I tried Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. One-fourth of a bottle cared me. L, Hawn, Newington, Ont. Neglected colds always f 1 a Sicau an 5omciiiing serious. They run I into chronic oronchitis, pneumonia, asthma, or consumption. ' Don't wait, but j take Ayer's Cherry Pectoral just as soon as your cough begins. . A few doses wi II cure you then. 2sZi2' rofimlt ynnrdnrtAr. If ha sars tsko It. IHirtom nT. If b tea rnq no tn take !. then doot take it. He knows. Ayer's Pills cure any tendency to biliousness or constipation, ana thus hasten recovery. Purely vege table. Gently laxative. ; j.c. vrRro,twtn.u'. George L. Wellington will end his t:a- reer In the Federal Senate. Apparently he wanted to fire a parting shot; he in troduced. a few days ago, a proposed amendment to the. Constitution of the United States which prohibits the hold ing of a fortune exceeding ten million dollars by any one Individual of th United States. In ease of such holding. the amendment provides that the ex cess shall be conde nmned and be for feited to the United States; Why draw the line at ten millions? 1 ne logic mat makes an excess over ten millions too high, can be applied so as to make It appear that a fortune of wn minions is -at least ten times too great and that the outside limit for an individual holdings should be fixed at not more ttian one million. But the Argument against the one million mark s just as potent as the one against the ten million, and so the scaling-down process can with- proprletry be kept up until one lands at tbe communistic pro position that one man Is entitled to have Just as much as every other man has to tbe thrifty and to the shiftless share and share alike. , h ' - ' ' That , the accumulation of vast for tunes, and rr of , vast powerj in the bands of individuals Is uaf, there can be no question; the tendencies In that direction are wrong. The great tpody of people In this country still believe, however, that there j la Intelligence in American citizenship to check the wrong tendency and to restrain corpor porate accumulation of too mirh wealtn nd jiower. 1 Possibly thoe who hold this view are mistaken. Up totdate there is no reason to believe that they are; on the contrary. It is reasonable to anticipate that there will be such an ad justment of economic i forces as will bring the producing and theicoutmmin? elments into right relation, j ;.. ! Meanwhile the I rroposilioiji to tlx a 1 ten million dollar limit hegai the whoi- question. It assumes that the accumu latlon of a fortune as targe as ten mi f- lions is ait right and propen and , there is . no warrant whatever for that as sumption. Were an accurate census taken it would be found, lit fact, tht there are not many ten mil! km do!Ur fortunes in the United SUtes. If many millions are too much.. ten millions are to much for an iniividual rtoMitig. " , However, it may be accepted ! s sure thing, thinks a writer in hii ei t-bange that this question on Its meriu was not In the mind of Senator Wel lington when he offered bis amendment. He is about to pass into oiivion; b- trison where "hese many years, is non' in cii-tala tion. v , ( EXCUSB8 EXAMINED. The Eugen Rcg'ster has had another "impression." The" result of its last If Greater Salem, as represented by the limits established by the'new i I-.ar-ter, does not make a showing of over 20.000 people in the Federal Census of 1910.' it will be, largely tbe fault of the people now here.. By. united and per sistent efforts, the number can. lie pushed up to the 30,000 mark by that ' time. ' r .-"'. . . Senator Mitchell wUI Drobablv Im The fantastic squirming now being star-gaxlng effort is the statement that! afnrprf-iv Ia ,. . .. Th. l...ll.l ; ,.k I. . .It : . . . . J . . I .. . 1 " "-'I""" .uc al iMiervaii! juHunuuigM Dy certain Republican mem 4 1 uniess Multnomah county gets. In and I nesa by his Oregon friends who a frequent enough to be a remUideAo thej bers.pr the Legislature, uriique; though I cts Fulton to the Senate, whose elec- speculating upon the prospect of hCv oublic t,hat this woman, an American, ht i,will be found tame when compar- Won; the Corvallis Gazette says would inr two Kntnm i'.i. .V. und guilty of poisoning the rich. tend fed With i siniltar performance which I ontrnry to the -commercial inter- aeionl He iw fl-trably object' lucrijr cnKUbiimau sne naa marneo, is win Te necessary When they, undertake I esis or Portland," tbe "bress and the i .k-. .. ...... i. ? ;T' . I - : a r - a - - " vs. iviiiji PV tl v- b-.an km ..111. a t. - I llAArtlA n-an . . 1 f , ' , . uoiiiaae me oig rair. commodatine as all that. This threat is In exact line. with the et ween these bulletins, there Is no ces-I For instance. Mr. Eddy, who Voted I '"ethods employed here In Salem toi ; Wi'-L..i..! 1J ....... . . . . . ... I- i . - I. I " I ic:Bicoim a.y . n. iigm anu nope nation in the efforts to get Mrs. May- I for the Mays law two years a no. oo-lforce members to vote aaainst their I , . - ' i : i i i w . aviaziUK a I inn ail tt iiriiini iukmi tin -r inn . ;a nis . country aipio-i poses complying with It now because. I w wnenor Senator. Every i till doin time. I lo "square, themselves" with their cori- While 'there are intervening periods I "tituents. irick released matic establishment, under a succession of Ambassadors and Ministers at the rourt of St. James, has tried to- use it? 'jest offices - in behalf of the woman. But they do things differently in Eng land; over .there they don't sentence capital prisoners to life terms or long because, "hes-Tor Senator. Every state and Lerfalaf ure is " the nromise th.i ir,Hi. as he says. -it does not take from the Federal office is being promised right Vect methods of taxation will be in- gisiature me right to vote for whom I ten just for one more vote, any- auurted. which will in time pro- ttfnr?; me one should have "nere. "ine Astoria people are now vjde a 11 the? revenues necessary for "f, m iu, ear two oe nostue oecause Fulton did carrying on the 'state government. """w- . - - . not noia up tne Fair" until his elec- And Mr. Eddy objects to complying Itlon was forced from the Legislature! i in tne vote or tne peoole because I "ose are the methods. By all means erms and presently, on any trumped-J their vote is not binding "only advis-j'orce an election that will not come up plea, -turn the condemned person jory. The advice of tbe people is not! from an unhampered expression AZ, loose. I wanted. - The admission is mado thilOOO votes from t). ... .i.i ; . I I -- , f ' O-.Y. llVUllllg AH sorts or pleas have been argned I mere advice pf the people cuts no j in this contest- The idea is to knock or Mrs. Maybrickfthe last of therrf ap-jce. In, other, words.' nothing but I the Fair unless Fulton is elected! The pears to be exhausted. Yet there are J force wUI ause us to listen to the! Astoria contingent and the I Register no signs of coming release, and hile j I-eople. ' 1 say so. "The people be d d." -What the pitiful story was told two yeartLagol And in his running colkxjuy with Mr. I the Constitution -between friends?" that her declining health would result j Burleight a few days ago, Mr. Eddy in- " ,M?r "el,ln ,inm a lew wee8 " sbeiuu.re ny. n tne Wallow gentleman f:-The ' Oregon Senate made a misUke ere aeta.neo in prison, sne is slive and s m ravor ot reflecting the senU- yesterdar In defeatlna- hairM.t n . If .. i . a i .. I ki. . . - I - T "" ... u u udJrf accora.ng to au , .uit.iuents. ne was notjary bilL It was a serious mistake. r "wm, Bvirif; inrn-raii yoiw rjffiinst mat tnose wno are the proposed measure, and the favor not. pporting Mr. Oeer are not com- able action of even one of them would Pi1n with the will of the people, was have Wred Its passage, the majority the strongest argument that he made party will be blamed for the defeat of .sprv,BK Mr. isuneigh s statement the bUL The matter that th Tills, rrvnrtlr ,mlU.,,-. m I - . wwo- over and over again in future cam- tename beamed with Congressional palgna. The people of Oregon .re Z . tJ : ! rtnigglinr to befree frora riniro . . . a . . . . ... . . . M Ti . IINI c NMH IHU all II ST . PII IfkP I 1 - . . J . maae at. ine last session or the LegisIa-17. ' , " mnoa. i nis was one of the ture for VU popular vote on Senator in ' genueman to do, since, preliminaries thereto. In I some way or order, as was plainly aald by the advoTl V"? uemwa sir. eer other, in the course of U me, tliey will cates of the meaaeure. that another I " " " m ,ri mmaeii work themselves free. It may fake "BRAVING PUBLIC OPINION.9 Xow and then a Fulton paper shouts that this Senatorial deadlock Is a dis grace to the state and should be ended at once. I i": , . . . , ' ".' The Statesman .coincides with th' sentiments exactly." Provision' and 'discreet." deadlock;; would be imnoasible. Evm feature of the law has been complied jpeo,,e' with and the popular vote was taken In accordance with It. As required by its provisions, the name of 'the "highest candidate" was presented to the Joint convention as an "instruction" to the Legislature. - ' All this at admitted by everybody. -Hot n more attention basbeen paid to it by those who had the law passed than as if 45.0OO coyotes had playfully Jonled In midnight chorus. The aer tion of majority of the legislature dayby day Is equivalent to saying, "if you expected us to regard your votes, you should have voted for some other man for Senator. Why didn't 45.004 of you write in the name W C. W. Fulton. aa t voters did? , Then the popular vote would have been worth something. In fact, when we see proper to give, yo? "oauii ior. senator you, have o rignt to vote tor anybody. If the man want elected eees proper to jiot ro ' Z- - - m-jiwaeinent, tnen the people have no right to vote tor any man.; no matter who be Is. whom the mere people may nominate. " We are tbe bosses, and if we want to nullify fhej ww m any given rear hv riih. to ne the. better representative of ; hislnoiitii Mml..uM. ........ .. .ir ; ..-r.-nv., uv.n.. uui tney w it. xjepena upon that. These TWfl WSaVlvf iA - u.tll I .a... . A" ,n thc 0reS" Legislature at this Conrression.1 , " "" h trt1 wn the right. .1:, , . . 7- and demands pf. the teori. arv m.v(. their last play in thia state for long time The hall of legislation will iKt know-them again until the" hiernot y of tne, voters becomes poor. There will deal nd not a new deal with the same old cards, either. STILL MORE EXCUSES. iKrfdingcaiididatea 'for United tits Senator, we pnn-we to tr-a.-h ikIfJ...? sought to be once m.re In eviden... i ip keep hands off our buain ..! If a sort of farewell appearam-e. The re-4 they don t we 'DO NT PROPOSE 4ft markable political revolution that made HAVE THEIR WORK CRAUiiD ff- Brownell remarked tbe other day in Mv Senate that he "didn't believe In any",' taie trying to cram' down our threats- the theory that the 45.000 votes forGer meant anything else than that 4S,0f people preferred him for Senator rather than the Democratic candidate." Then the 45.00 votes were really caat by Republicans, and does the flamboy ant. Senator from Clackamas undertake tMaJr that many Republicans can be found In the state who would vote for ar lby.did not want, merely be there was .not some one on the tlckej agaittst him of the same faith? Statesman did what was In Its iWT.t. e,ec Mn Governor. out as a. matter ot history it wishes to remind Mr. Brownell and hi. Insurgent "V ; tht 'the same Republicans who gave MKGeer over 12,9 majority be- ca,frtv.,he was on Ums ticket .and they,! theAjrore. had to vote for hlm"at the same- time found a, way to turn a Re-1 It is , pnrase amonr several paper, which favored the Mays aw until they found that "it did not worf a e expected It would." that the poptllarvote does not mean, anything more; in n that the people preferreH G itolw?4.i Well. since nobody but itepuoitcaDs prefered Geer to Wood. men, arter all. the point Is admitted that those 4S.AAS n.i , . I . - -v ,c ironi tie- PbUii.,.i (Mjh. . . Then: it is nnauy conceded that the Democrats did not vote for Geer :in order to put the Republicans m hole.- And since no man votes fn- a candidate, for any of fice unless he wants him for that oftlc that is. if the said , voter Is sanej hat are you going to do. gentlemen, with .those 45.000 voters whom you are PuQiran majority of 1 gainst Mn in.IU,r Furnish and to actually elect hi- Li .. . "re-nl "early porst, V " , w mattentlve to your doings as ...The rank .nH a.. J. ,w ' ' ' . J500 Swm to hUnlr suppose. It Is not OI to ee the ,iga of the tiroes. Blnger Hermann Is '.wavering be tweenj running: for the Senate, bec om ing a candidate for Congress, or pra--ticing law in Roseburg. In the moan, time, his family, remains in Washing ton. ,)' ----- -: Save Your Hair viih 1 CrlimnrinA oiiaiuu CDfjciira Soap and Dressings I of 'Caticnra, For tMinj lha iteir Grow wha v .!- Ill EIS3 FeILs. . 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