;:ic:ic:;iSTAT::i?i PnbUahodr mrj TaMdiy an- Friday by tha BTATZSUAJi rCBUSHZSO COMPJLKT S. J. BTNDRirKS, Manager. T. T. GA, editor. BTTBSCRIPTIOK KAT-CS. I Om n a.vaie. ....... ........ ........ tLt fix aaoatas. in adranoe., Threw moBUi, la advanca.. ........ ....... .25 Hneyear, on Urn.......................... L2 ' v -. - '-V: v - Tba statesman baa been eaUbUahed tnr nearly CftyHwo reara, and it baa. aossa aabscribers wbo e?e recclred It nearly that looj, and many wbo har ead It lor a gacerattoa. 80 me ot tbeoa objct to airwf Uia paper dla"onUnoed at tbe tint of ex pLrua o( tbrir subscriptiona. tor the bunefit I ti.eae.and (or other reasons we hare ejncl ade4 todiMOontinoe aab criptions only wbea notified to do ao. A". person paylnc when sobacribnr;, or paying la adranre, will bar tb beacat of tbe dollar rale Bat U they do aot pay for ai-c months, tbe rat will bo a year. Uercal tor we wtU aeud tbo paper to all responsible person wbo frr&r it, tboairb they may not aeadtae money, with the understand In g taatlbey are to pay fl M a year, la cat a they tat tbe aubacrtptloa account run over sis a-onUta. la order that there may be ao snixnn dersundiog. wo will keep this notica stacdinc at tbla plaoa la tbe paper. , CIRCULATION (SWORN) OVER 4000 Light Time and Love Time. (Atlanta Constitution.) I ' What of life's tempests Tbe wrath and the wrongl -It's light time and love time, ; And life is a song! Though thick on the life-way The red thorns may throng, . Light time that 's love time Makes all life a song! IX ' ' . What of the sorrow That tomes in a sight Dear, it is light time The dark shadows flyl , Sweet sing the valleys The high hills and strong; "Light time is love time, And life is a. Kng! " - GEOGRAPHY AND POLITICAL KOMXNATIOJrfS. Our uprightly little exchange at Au rora, the Borealis, discovers a "weak point" in the Republican county tieket in tbe fact hat "most of the offices were landed in Salem, -the rest ol the county leing but scantily represented.' We find this paragraph copied in the Woodburn Independent, which, in the same issue, eonineides with this notion, though it also says that " on the Rep resentative ticket ISorth Marion re ceived a full-share of recognition from the Kepublican convention. J. IT. Set tlcmier, of Woooourn, J. L. Calvert, of Hubbard, and J. II. lutchie, of Scotts Mills, were chosen. " - i . t-' t . - - - But all this leads to the inquiry, Why pay so much heed to the geograph ical location of candidates for public officer An undue regard for the-location in which a candidate lives at the expense of the qualifications of the candidate himself, has weakened more tickets a hundred times over than it has 'ever strengthened them. This is the one mistake that every county con vention is most likely to make and generally docs fall into. The proper rule to obey in the selec tion of candidates for public office is to- select the men entirely regardless of where they may live. If the most available and competent and popular man in the county for the position of county clerk appears to be a citizen of Brcitcnbush precinct, he is the very man to nominate, and if the very best - man for sheriff, from all view points, apears to be one who also lives In Breitenbush, there is no good reason under the sun why he should not be nominated, also. 5 I ' ! In the' present instance, circumstances pointed to two Salem men as the proper nominees for judge and sheriff. They are both strong men of excellent qualifications,- neither enhanced nor di minished because they live in Salem. Can any voter name one advantage to any citizen' of Salem which is his be cause the sheriff or the judge may re- side heref If the sheriff had ben chosen from Sublimity precinct for Instance, would "that have been of the slightest bene-t to that precinct or to any man in it, save to. the sheriff himself! And if so, howl .Even his deputy would probr ably be taken from some other pre cinct. And if Aurora, which had I a " I suffered terribly for 12 years. The doctors said taj blood was all turning to water. At last 1 tried Af er's Sirsaparilla, and was soon feeling all rigntsgain." Mrs.J. w FiaU, Hadlyme, Ct. : No matter how long you have been ill, nor how poorly you may be today, Ayer's , Sarsaparilla is the best medicine you can take for purifying and en riching the blood. Don't doubt it; put your whole trust in lt, A XvSSSi Ask yonr doctor what he thinks of tbla grand old familT mrdtcin. Follow bis 4 rice and wa will r-a aatisfied. i Recovery will never be complete if the liver is inactive. Ayer's Pills are liver pills. Purely vegetable. J. CATER CO., Lowell. Mass. m r 32 Weak? inost excellent man as a candidate lor the sheriff's office, had succeeded in its aspiration, it would not have bene .fitted a single citizen of that thrifty locality, to the value of a eent daring his term of office, save the officer him self. There is not a voter in Stayton precinct who will ever know the ' dif ference between choosing both the candidates for sheriff and judge from Salem and selecting one from Butte ville and the other from Aumsville. Of all possible grounds . upon which - to base an objection to nominee this is the least well taken. i Besides, Mr. Culver will make pre cisely as good an officer for every Citi zen of the county, living, as he does. in one of the Salem precincts, as though he lived in ML AngeL- It can make no possible difference. "' People living in South Salem - precinct have the same Scott reason to find fault with Judge beeanse he lives In Salem No. 2, as the eitizen of ouverton has to raise a kick about the same circumstance. Mir. Cul ver and Mr. Scott live in different precincts, just ' as mneh so, as . though one resided in Abiqna and tbe other in Cbampoeg. . And it would make 'no difference to Salem if they both lived in Woodburn. Luckily, the Kepublican convention didn't nominate localities, but rather selected good men regardless o t " geo graphyand there are good men ia all the precincts for all the office i, but not enough positions to go arounl the more 's the pity. ' '4 THE 'MASSES' AND "CLASSES. Besides being" aeeused of havini signs" against the people of the Unit- ed States, the Jeffersonian banqueters ( the other night declared through Gov ernor Chamberlain that "the Democra tie party is the party o the people, the party of the masses in their struggle against the oppression of the trusts.'; There are a number of live Democra tic papers in the state, looking: after the interests of their party will not one of them be kind enough to b; more specific as to this question of wl o con stitute the "masses," and that other aggregation of d !! !!! , who are popularly known about campaign times as the classes!" Name ten men in Oregon who -elong to the detesta ble "classes," in order that we may, uiscover iusi now mucu uiuerence mere 1 j; 1 . t. .nir i .1 is between the candidates they vote for and those who reeeive the support i . ' of about ten thousand of the "masses." i The Statesman some lime ago reI quested any Democratic paper! which I might feel disposed, to print the name of the Democrat who made himself I famous land the log to tne extirpation 01 tne aggrega .K tto" 1 tion of trusts in the "interests of the f masses." Up to date, there has been mm ...... - - . ... .1 - - ' during the four years of Cleve-iatlon of iualltie nln kePt him free.p dates are no" later than we have 'a first administration bv seeurine from an inordinate ambition. Had he had. There waS later news in passage bv Coneress of a law look-:'llTed be wou,d hHVe been ' loyal npr pbrHan& y6pr J&ptcri,- but no response. The "masses" were iniw"'J i 4 the same helpless predicament in 1892 when tho celebrated campaign of that',8' the reltions between labor and year was in progress as they are said caPital nd the integrity of his eharae-, to be now. The classes" were the j ter as a business man and" poKtieian, , very same grasping, devouring scoun- ma0 him deserving of the tributes. drels at that time that they are at Pai1 to his memorT by his sorrowing . present. The country could never be in J colleagues in the UnTted States Senate. ;, greater danger than that.it was noti- But tBe government moves on nndis- fied.was upon it, and relief could only 'turbed in iu accustomed channels, as, come through the election of a Demo- ik did wnen McKinley was suddenly cratic Congress that would throttle the taken way, and, fortunately, as itf monster with the firm irrip of remedial wiU continue to do, irrespective of the . legis.ation in the "interest, of the masses." I T 1 . .1 . 11 r. ' - xui, me name oi ine feniocraiic leg islator who immortalized himself the succeeding four years in this in re spect has slipped our memory. Of course the relief afforded "the masses',' through the legislation enacted during turuugu ine jt-giBiauua enacieu uunng ) the Democratic ascendency of 1892-6 is j easily recalled, but the nam. of the immortal Legislator who initiated the movement is not just at hand, though, after all, the name of the benefactor is not of so much importance as the bene faction itself. Tbe condition that eon fronted us was of vastly more concern than the theory that produced it. ' "AME&HXCAX POLITICS." Under the above caption, Henry Litchfield West has a very interesting article in the April number of the Forum, in the course of which a de served tribute is paid not only to the great executive ability of Senator Hanna, but to the really statesman like: qualities he developed with such remarkable rapidity during the last ten rears of his life. Unknown to tbe people of this country ten years ago, outside his own state of Ohio, be be came within a decade the most widely discussed public man in the United States, and his reputation gradually but uninterruptedly gained in the es teem of his fellow men until the day of his death. : On Thursday ,the United States Sen ate devoted an hour to the pronouncing of eulogies upon Senator Hanna 's mem ory as a : statesman . and Republican leader, and with the " performance of that last duty of his j colleagues the great Dbioan takes his place in the his tory of the country he did so much to develop in many directions. The writer recalls scores of pleasant incidents con nected with the Ohio campaign in the fall of 1901, of which Senator Hanna was a part, and had numerous opportu nities of seeing the undoubted personal popularity he enjoyed among those we call the "common people.",- That ; he was a friend to the laboring man 'and to his interests no one could deny, either by the .jreeord ke made relating to the questionS or by the" manifesta tions of admiration shown him wherev er he went among the rank and fAt" of his own state. Wherever he appeared in a procession along1 the streets prior to political ii meeting people were shouting constantly tor? Uncle Mark,? as he was popularly known everywhere In his own state.': T':f J ' ' , ' ' TSTe rise of Senator ' Hanna in the political world, nnknown aa he was at the age of fifty-five to a position of prominence and influence within ten years not . 'surpassed by J any .other pnblie man, is an evidence or tnat equality of privileges and opportunity of which we so frequently speak in this country. "; Under the most terrifie fire, of i abuse ' and misrepresentation from the first, ho battled against ' the unfair and discouraging conditions md finally triumphed by the sheer foree of his" persisteneyi ability and independ enee. . '"; 7 - : v As a helpful force in his own party, whose advice was sought by even his . .... . .- , rivals in important matter. u wu , judgment never iauea , in emergencie. requiring a decision on the spur of the moment, Senator Hanna w ill be missed in the councils of his party though not for long. I The progress of the world does not depend upon any one man in the least. No man was ever be loved by a greater number of his fel low citizens than was Henry Clay, and when, after fifty years of active pnblie service, J be died practically, in tbe harness, some one said, "the world will seem lonesome without Henry Clay." ; But Clay was missed for a day only, and the government went on as before. The death of Blaine had quite the same effect oa the public mind and it eansed ' a profound realization of the barrenness' of all strife for political preferment where it is permitted to sour the' better qualities of human, nat ure. Blaine was a successful man in politics away beyond the average was Secretary of State under, two adminis trations, was Speaker of the House of Representatives for three terms and , was in the United States Senates as often as he liked, yet he died a most (miserably disappointed man because his ambition was to be President. Shortly before he died Blaine said t 1 1 " . 1 1 1 a - 1 bis failure in life, that "the happiest 1 i - Ll 1 . f TT . I ' 'man js vue unjtnowo mau. xiis career. lhad - "tormy one, though always.-. intended with success, save in the one U 1 .1 : : - .; 11.' 1 i "tvu" Residency. Ambition without judg-,. ment tempered with philosophy, is an - insufferable temperament 1 oena"-or w"Ba PP eraw-, I porter of President Eooserelt as ' the; . 1 - F"" nominee xor me rrrawency. ( a J- s-sia nnrainn rw nrwui suanan nnTirmtr & ft 6 in- l,,af t a n wimV rw mt r a n am m wmA m rm 1 :of the want of the country, especially ,ortune" of anv man AS TO INDISCRIMINATE BATHING. . While the W. C T U. organization t has done and is doing mueh good in this wicked world, some of its members have carried their caution beyond the ; bounds of good judgment by declaring : that surf bathing by. both sexes at the same time is highly immoral in its effects and " should be discontinued. This declaration of opposition to one of the most healthful and pleasant of physical pastimes is as unwise stimes is as unwise as it;WMainzton didn't tell a lie because he will prove ineffectual. The Snterming-' ling of he sexes at the 'beaches as they joyously and vigorously partake of the salt air, salt water and "ozone," which is as free as the winds, is one 6f the most invigorating exercises that comes within reaeh of thousands of city peo ple during the year, r Of course, though, the protesting wo men admit all this, but they rest their objection upon tbe assumption that men and women thus engaged, garbed with their scant i bathing suits, only, are liable to indulge in immoral thoughts, to the ultimate: injury of tbe people so participating.; But the prurient do not have to go to tbe sea coast, to be thus overcome by immodest , suggestions, while the innocent can . .bathe . by, the hour with no thoughts of such lasciv ious : nature as those imputed by - the good women of the W. C. T. U. -The fact j. is, " these - strained : rules whose object is to insure morality will always be more or less ineffectual. The prevention of opportunity is a poor and unsafe reliance.' ' Opportunities for wrong doing are to be met with or cre ated , every? hour ;ia the day and this condition will always prevail. The guarantee is found in better teaching along moral lines that will abstain from wrong-doing for the sake ; of the Listing benefits which always - come from right doing. The man or woman who has never dona wrong merely , be cause' no opportunity has ever pre sented ; itself, has not yet : given any proof of a fixed morality. If the aver- age of morality in- tbe large -cities, (where full suits are usually, worn),, ; ghgon iii lseo. : (From the Statesman.) - Don't Let Up. We trust that no anti-Lane Democrat in any part of the state will relax! his effort to defeat the Lane society ia Oregon, on account of the probable nomin- ation at Charleston, of Dpnglaa. The defeat of Joseph become more the power of Lane will be broken utterly. V Then let the eneonraging news from the east be the signal for renewed effort in Oregon to put an end' to; the tyranny, corruption aad imbeeUity of the Lane ayna-; ty.- That done, and we roll p 2500 majority for the candidates of the- Charleston eonvention. LATEST! DOUGLAS' NOMIN A J . j ' TION BEPOBTED1 I j TCer Denver : of California, re-eeiv-4 ,a dispateh saying that Dou?bu was nominated that af- I iWllIMt HO IIVIU.. temoon. The Alta says Gen. Den . . ver has lived on the Missouri front tier and has friends there j. who would send him the very latest ad vices. The San Francisco Herald . says editorially- referring to . Den- ver's dispatch: !; "We learn from authority which r we' deem thoroughly reliable, that , Stephen A. Douglas, of Illinois, has been Wminated for.' President of the United; States by the Charles- IC convention." ' i Bible Meeting The-12th Annual Meeting of the Oregon Bible Socie- "ty -will meet; in the M. E. church in 8alem, on Wednesday,fcMay 9, 1860, at 10 o'clock n. m. Sermon f by Ber. T.?IL Pearnet 730 p. m. WJL ROBERTS, See'y. ' Died. At McMinnville, on the 5th inst.i : John Quin'cy, infant son of S. C. and M. E. Adams, aged six months. . . NOTICE. Margaret 1 .Whereas, Tayloir, ad- ministratrix of the estate of James Tavlnt i1-aa.rl hl filed in the COunty court 'of Polk eounty, her - vouchers upon said estate, and ask- ed'for final settlement of said es tate,, therefore, the Tth ; of j Jnne, i860, will be), the day said petition win be heard. Those interested .... . . . - wil please take notice. B. Hayden, Co. Judge. The states' mail arrived just as we. were going to press, .Mt tne Tracv Got failed to send it to - t bis place. . ' T 111 1. Assessor. 1 wm candidate - for assessor of Marion county at the" next election. Wm. SYPHERT. May, 1th, 1860. Independent Candidate far Sher- iff. The undersigned offers him- self as an independent candidate for Sheriff of Marion county at the ensuing June election. j t GEO. A. EDE?. Salem, April 15th, 1860. We omit the market report this week in order to make room for the States' news by Express. There are, no material changes from our T last quotations. o 4- eould be brought up to that prevailing at the beaches where men and women bathe promiscuously, the improvement would be almost beyond computation. Mark Twain dnee ' said, 1- am a greater man than Washington was. ouldB j ean ije but I won't." The man or woman who has the tendency and opportunity to do wrong but re sists them both, is much safer and is on more enduring ground than the one who has never been subjected to tbe temptations of either. That which we call "moral suasion": is the! best safe guard against,; "yielding to tempta tion" yet invented by " mankind. : Jeff Myers is said to have remarked that if-Oregon bad 5000 more Demo crats than it has, Congress would have long ago passed .that 'Lewis and Clark appropriation bill. No doubt if we had that additional number of Democrats Jeff wonld look differently upon that offer to make him the Democratic nom inee for Congress in this district.' Jeff tried it Once in .1896 with most dis astrous results. This recalls the fact that when at' the beginning of 'the last Republican administration, the Govern or was required to appointa new Board of Immigration, he desired to secure the services of some Democrat whose resi dence" would be in Southern Oregon. He, theref ore" wrote to Hon. William M. ColvigHof Jac1rtonville, -to I the effect that. the. posxtifear- was, tlreby offered him, with the hope that he would exert himself in , the matter of securing a large immigration to Oregon. The re turn' mail brought the reply that he would ; gladly accept tbe appointment and that be would "do his utmost to see that before the next election fully 5000 Missouri Democrats were persuad ed to make their homes in the state, e.l to make -their homes in the state,) that it:mighvbe redeemed from Se '5: From:''; t! r - ?l Window J -ivrfH i, A Utah paper -recently stated thata Mormon had just frozen ; to death be- i. ir- i- . I . .t.tamnt ihll IWren bi two mt quite naturally created a feeling of consternation among those wbo so. well know that one wife can make things so hot for "her husband that freezing to death is a matter, of the utmost impoa- sibility. An explanation comes, bow- ever, in the later statement mat one wife lives in Salt Lake while the oth er's home was -eighty miles away ' in -r:u. . , TV. hnaKenif waa m Ilia ffoiiguaiu v- j . v way from one city to the other when he froze to death between , nis wives." There is a certain ehill about a paragraph of this character that gets right into", the marrow of one's bo pea. 1 ' ' ..o .' o. An Incident la Salem's Early History. ! If " Chemeketa " Prairie " had been left entirely alone, by the early settlers and the later ones all . that portion of Salem now adorned by Commercial street and the intervening country be tween it and the river would today be eovered by, a neavy growth of fir trees similar to those which constitute Ma rion Square. -. "The writer easily reealls when Front street was little" more than an uncertain . wagon road, with an oc casional dwelling rear the river' bank among tne scattering trees. The first agricultural fair held in ' Oregon was 'pulled . off V on Front street w.here Marion Square now is, and the horses, tattle and sheep on exhibition were tied to the trees 'arid shrubs while the pio neer judges- critically, examined and passed upon their "points." An ac count of this fair' was re-published in the Statesman a few weeks ago, and a prominent citizen of Modesto Califor nia, reading the same, wites that he well remembers that Fair and how he undertook to "make fun', of the scrub stock as it .stood tied to the young trees as they served the purpose of the mod ern stock; pens. But even so far back as 1853, efforts were beginning to make a showing for a town on Front street, though the start was 'made on the corner of Front and Trade, opposite 'where the Salem Flouring Mills' warehouse now stands, In 1851 a small building was erected on that corner .by Dr. Willson, who donat- ed Willson 's Avenue; to Salem, and "it Was used by him as a prog Store. At j riolic j tongue that - was a trifle more one: time,; T. B. Bicker, a well-known than Lasa ter could endure and he re citizen - of 8aleni for:' many years af- f sponded with the .statement ' that . he ter wards and :whd served as its Post- master in the TO 's, was his partner. The upper . portion of this house was Used by Joseph G. Willson as a law of- fice in ehe early days, when he was a truggiing young lawyer. In about I860, having been used in the meantime by W. K. Smith as a Drug Store, this building was removed to ijs present site In the rear of the lot where Theodore Barr now: resides, on the alley in the block on tlie corner of which stands the residence of Dr. Richardson. It stands there today, a two story barn, of no prtiensioua woatever, i r.i 11.11 or nia- torie interest as it crnmbles away aej the pioneers who wrought in and around it in the earl v davs of the Ore gon trntory. In 1853, Hon. J. W. Nesmith, having made his fortune, as he thought, in the milling business over on tbe Bickreal, sold all bis possessions in Polk county and moved to 1 Salem, which -had just been finally .and permanently, it-was thought, selected- as tbe Territorial capital. Jfesmith". even then, had some publican "misrule.' The interesting fea ture of all this, however, is in fact that before the next election, the question of Expansion had become of national im portance, and, not being able to endorse tbe position of Mr. Bryan in relation to it, Col vig announced his intention to support McKinley, and before election day had arrived : he had taken the stump for the Republican ticket. " The fart is, that he made a better Republi can orafor than he tltd an immigration commissionerbetter material being at hand. , . - - The .woman who would not put on her sun . bonnet or other headgear, such a day as yesterday was, get the rake and hoe and invite her husband out in the yard j to delve towards the bowels of theearth isn't worth the sum: in vested in the original marriage license. But there is no such woman in, Salem. Every husband was in demand yester day as a substitute for a real gardener and the array of sun bonnets and dis carded bats was beautiful to behold. And " the young women -' without hus bands were as busy as their "mothers among" the ' daffodils, hyacinths and lilies. '. It was an' Ideal spring day and the Salem ladies made the most of it. There is nothing prettier than a woman with a sun bonnet or her husband's hat on her head unless it is when she is without it. :'' -' The Booth' Tucker entertainment was a clean, helpful, instructive and alto gether novel portrayal of the great work being done ' by the Salvation Army. As he. described the homes for women: and other homes for men, agen- cies ia all the cities of the country for Editorial Sidelight?, tvnd Obaervft.tIcn on Varloue' IfeopU tvnd TKlrtfs. Picked Up and ScrtbUd 'Down I" mi Odd Times. political ambition, having already served a term in the' l'erritorial Legis lature in Oregon CUy in 1849. ' ;' A friend of Nesmith's, Informs the writer that at thaC iime he had proper ty worth in the neighborhood of $40,000, ant' he I invested .'a- Ipart of it'r in Salem realtyi Having been selected s the capital, and being- without public buildings of any kino", Kesmitb conclud ed to construct a suitable building for Legislative purposes and erected it on Trade street with a space of about forty between it and the Willson Drug store. It was a low two story structure, about twenty ; by forty feet, and the lower story was used by the af ritonal g islature, a part of which, small aai. rit was, being partitioned off on the north end for the 4 'executive office" of Gov ernor Davis. The; upper story of this building was occupied by the Statesman, which had followed the capital Jfrom Oregon City, and was used as a press room, type set ting department and editorial office". A thin partition "fenced" off even ; a part of this into a bed room which , the editor called li is home. CoL John Me Cracken, yet a prominent citizen of Portland, was Clerk of the House and, accommodations being very limited, the Statesman V elitjr, having a. "two horse", bed, shared it with the Colonel during the legislative session. ' ForJ a number, of years th house of representatives met; in the Nesmith building and the senate in the "Beetor Building," which was immediately ad joining the brick now. standing on the eornerj of Commercial : and Ferry on the south. In i860 the second story of the Holman brick (now the Turner Building) was rented by the state for legislative purposes, and tbe election of Nesmith and Baker occurred in4he hall of the house, the exact room where the job office of Ross Moores is now located. In the session of 1858, Judge B. F. Bonham was a member of the bouse from Marion county and the sessions were j j still held in the Xesmith building. . One of his . colleagues wai Hon. J. II. Lasater, a young Tennesseean' with the hot . temper of many of the Southerp" people. T. J. Dryer 'was s member from Multnomah, and for several days had been attack ing Lasater in debates in a manner cal culated to arouse : hi .-resentment, but the patience with which he bore it all was a surprise to those who knew him best, ij One day .just before noon, how ever, Dryer made a thrust with bis vit- j was a liar.' Dryer intmediately. threw ' his inkstand at Lasater which struck him on the shoulder, Spattering ink all ever his face. Lasater jumped across three fdesks and litt in. -Dry trsi' vicinity but intervening members prevented a personal "scrap'' for the time. principally because of episode, the House adjourned at once and Dryer without delav left ih room. Hon ham came away with Lasater, who declared his fT intention of . thrashing Dry?r as 8009 - .as , he copld find him. As they rwere - coming down Commercial where the lllihee Club building now is, they saw Dryer on the opposite side of the street and Lasater, without going to a crossing, plunged into the mud and made a direct line' for his- Multnomah colleague. Bonham fol lowed, but before he could enter the room; where Dryer had gone, Lasater had him sprawling on the floor and was proceeding to 'administer that punish ment! which many sail he certainly de served. Tne bystanders refused to in- ' terf ere until they considered the pun helping the ' downfallen, .encouraging th! unfortunate, aiding the destitute aid finding. farm homes for those will ing to come west and lead liferent lives certainly moss pf his hearers were sur prised at the a mating extent of their operations. .Ridiculed by some people, but j prosecuting' a line of endeavor remarkably similar, after all, to the methods of the Savior himself while on earth, the Salvation Army should be respectfully treated wherever its mem bers carry help and comfort to the discouraged, the wayward and other despairing pilgrims along life's uncer tain! pathway. . ; Breeze Gibson's example as to his historic oak tree has taken root.' On Thursday evening President Roosevelt and j 'Secretary Hitchcock planted small oak tree in the eastern side of the White House yard that had. been grown from an oak tree that stands in tbe grounds of the Peterhoff Palace in Russia. This Russian oak was grown from an acorn picked up under, the fam ous I oak that 4 shelters . Washington tomb, at MCVeraen. This is- a nice little story, blending : sentiment wit h fact", but will not equal that of tBe Gib son boys, of Polk county, unless Roose velt and Hitchcock return in, fifty years and. perform some sort of appropriate ceremony under its spreading limbs ia honor of the romantic event. An eastern writer while discussing the vertical system of writing says that 'whatever system of wrjting is follow ed in copy books in school serves only to train the band. The adult acquires individuality in writing and soon de parts from copy book forms.'' ' This is ishment had reached that point com mensurate with the provocation. Dryer was so badly disfigured that he did not return to the House durin tbe remaining few days of the sewM,, They had some hot times ia tho days and the pioneer fathers were mca with decided minds of their ewn. The Xesmith building was moved i9 1860 to the site of the D'Arrj bri.k on State' street and was a few -yrar afterwards burned. It was built bj Jonathan O 'Donald, who still lives in Salem, and J. Cary .Geer, who rpi,-, in Modesto, California, at the age 0f eighty years. 0 0 Tbe war in the east ror,j. apace," in the newpa rn. Manv 1 1 them, notably the Portland Jour;j print from day , to day bIHd-eurILr pictures. of intensely destrut-tive rj,. acter, usually descriptive of an vngzgt. ment at sea, always at night, sppiirfot. Iy that is the pictures are as be a, ink will make them and while a tr rifle thunder storm is at its height of soul-stirring fierceness. Sbaftf of lightning interspersel - with BtnrBj war vessels, broken maxts, evt'in-j steam from tEe most unexpertej quar ters, floating and disabled seamen Iwing blown to atoms by exploding hel!, rain falling in torrents while the Li), lows are rolling sky high s 11 thes contribute to the awful scene of ran. age and death in all these "accurate" portrayals of the -last." battle." Aftr studying oae of these illustration of the fact that "war is h-f," you tun to the dispatches to read about the ex tent of the awful fatalities and you art rewarded with the statement that tbe report of tbe engagement was not con firmed but that the fleets are aotnewlirrt in the "far east" and a most awfnllr destructive battle ; will certainly bt pulled off in tbe near future. But the illustrations, being due, are alwari oi hand. On such engagement as is pic tared in the average daily paper jrita metropolitan pretentions, , would blow both Bussia and Japan off the map per manently. It is sincerely to be bopi that when such battle does roaterializr, if ever, the" artist " who is engaged ii illustrating: them by .discounting tbe future, may be a jKisscnger on the first vesel that ;ocs swiftly to the bottom of the sea. :.!..: O O . Wbie delving in the very lowr-d depths of an analytical examinatinn of the remote possible causes of tbe phe nomena of bacteria anil its origin, sdI when, why and how, a Boston phyiriu discovered that the blues are the dim-t product' of splanchnic neurasthenia, -w to intra-abdominal venous ongcaUi&. Of course this discovery, made-, in tbe purely accidental process of an-absorbing investigation along altogether dif ferent lines, will be of interest to ici ence, only, since the annnuncemnt of it to a disconsolate unfortunate alrradr suffering with the blues, would only ald to the hyperplastic tendency toward zymogenic ; turbellaria.- But the experi ments should go on. :...:;.'; o o The Stokesmnn-RevIew has a very readable editorial on the deasures snd beauties of fishing, and, in tho course of it grows quitesentimental, remark ing that 'recreation in the shape of fishing does man good because it f fords neenled exercise and calls for physical and mental activities thst are a welcome change." There can be b doubt of this, especially as to tbe ten dency to buoy up the mental faculties, which, as a rule, in the case of the up- to-date fishermen, are stimulated to the very' point of intoxication that reacbei into the realm of irresponsibility. precisely what the Statesman said . ot this subject a few weeks ago. Any one of the so-called systems is as good'ai another, and for tbe reason given above. Of any dozen men who studied the Spencer ia a system forty years s two of them write any more alike to day than if they had studied a -I"" different systems.' Men can no more be taught to write the same "ban!" thoa they ean be made to turn out aimil' photographs from the same tarter. Individuality will assert itself in pt of " y stems." Well, gentlemen of the city council, tbe people are waiting quietly to what you are going to do about amend ing that defective ordinance! Tbe 1 was thought to be sound, you wanted 1 enforeed and so did the people, now your duty is plain. Nobody H f' ing to be cranky aoout it but the defect was plainly pointed out and tbe rem edy is in your hands. The find- reft--' meeting will be tbe best time to ameol the ordinance as it was intended to be- Ex-Senator Wilson, of Washington has abandoned bis intention of becoming a candidate for the Sena's and is going to undertaks the burdm of carrying the King county man rJ' Sinee Wilson has had about TerJrlhl else under the sun since he entered p" ities this latest affliction , is not cal " lated t excite any wonder. While the great J majority ' Eastern papers appear to care n 'tl. about it, all the Kentucky editors outrsged because the battleship after IhVir state has t-ccn placed la - .' dock.