iZLZ11LT CZZZC1? LTATZZZLklzr TUTSDAY, HAY 13, 1ML' TTA xiz vtmwezm:i state.un rstUabed Try Tuesday and Frvlr by lb STATESMAN K-BIOSHlSta COMfASY - J CO MUC KS. Manarer. T. T. GJtKfi, Editor. CBSCMPTIOIC KATK& Ob yew taarffaoos ........ t taoatbft, la advioce sixc ... ,- J .. JS 1 are moitM. ia advance. uor, tiaae. Tte Statesman baa been eruMUhed tor nearly 'ty-two jrars, and it baa torn aoUcrlbera who bate leoeircd It nearly thai long, aa4 many wbo bav ta4 it for generation. Borne o theee et)ec to barms tb paper dla-ootlnned l lie Uioc of ezplnttioo of tbeir abaertpiloa. for tbo tne6t of the. a4 for other reaeoae mm br eoai aled to, boon tin oe ab-cripUoM only when notified fo 4o so, A penotu paying ben Mbveribnr, or paying ta adrac, wlil fears tb benefit of the dollar rat. Bat it the? do not pay f .r at months, tbe rate will be f 1.25 a year. HereaJter we will aead tb paper to ail Mpoualbiaperaooa rbo ordc it, thooa-b tbey may not aeod tb .money, with tbe uaoerataao Ifg tbattbey are to pa S1.2S a year, iaeasa tbey let tbe jo fear rtpUon seen at run over at auoBtba. ia order tbat tbere May be ao mimm Oeratandiag. we will keep t&ia aotios stacding u wis ptaoe in toe paper. CIRCULATION (SWORN) OVER 4000 REPUBLICAN TICKET STATU J" or Justice of the Supreme Cour . P. A. MOORE. ' r State Food and Dairy Commis sioner, J. W. BAI1.EY. for Presidential Electors, ' J. N. HART. ' : JAS. A. FEE, ! GRANT B.DIMICK, I A. C. HOUGH. COKGRSSSXCHAL. For Member Congress First trict, BINGES HERMANN. i Second District, J. N. WILLIAMSON. Dis- JUDXCIAL DISTRICT. For Judges, GKO. II. BURNETT, of Marlon. B. L. EDDY, of Tillamook. For Prosecuting Attorney, JOHN H. M 'NARY, of Marion. MARION COUNTY TICKET ' County Judge John H. Scott. Sheriff W. J. Culver. Clerk John W. Roland. Assessor Fred J. Rice. Treasurer W. Y. Richardson. :'.'. Recorder John C. Siegmund. Sehool 8upt.-45. T. Moores. Commissioner I. C Needham. Surveyor B. B. Herriek. Coroner A. M. Clongh. ' Representatives J os. Calvert, nub bard; J. G. Graham and T. B. Kay, Sa lem; John Ritchie, Scoots Mills; Jesse II, Settlemier, Woodburn. COMMITTEEMEN. ' Chairman State Central Committee Frank C. Baker, Portland. Chairman Congressional Central Com mittee Walter L. Tooze, Woodburn. Member State Central Committee Hsl D. Patton, Salem. Chairman County ventral Committee Chas. Murphy, Salem. For Justice of the Peace, II. II. TURNER. For. Canstsble, ROBT. O. DONALDSON. FLOGQINO IK PRISONS AND ' SCHOOLS. . While tbere. are undoubted objections to flogging in prisons when applied to men whose infraction of rules, and re fusal to conform to discipline cannot be overlooked, on the ground of appar ent brutality, the difficulty is present ed on the other side as to what should be substituted in extreme eases of mulish stubbornness, for men of this character find their - way into prisons and must be made -by some method of punishment, to obey the rules prescrib ed for nil prisoners. Flogging seems brutal. In one sense it is. But so is any form of corporal punishment, when administered by one person upon another who is powerless to resist and this condition usually at tends eises of this character. . The parent who flogs his, little boy for an infraction of-seme rule of conduct is engaged in a brutal act, because the child is helpless and is at the mercy of -his two . hundred pound father. Many , a parent has ' administered a Hogging to his boy because he felt sure that his welfare required it, slid has afterward shed tears in private Tired Out "I was very poorly and could hardly get about tbe bouse. I was tired out all tbe time. Then 1 tried Ayet's Sarsaparilla, and it only took two bottles to make me feel perfectly well." Mrs. N . S. Swinney, Princeton, Mo. : Tired when you go to bed, tired when you get up. tired all the time. Why ? Your blood is im pure. You are living on the border line of nerve exhaustion. You need Ayer's Sarsaparilla. Aniviiraucnrvwniiuinoi tM I fraud old family medicine. Follow bia i aq ice ana we w tube satisfied. Take Avera Pill wrlrti t c pariUa. fbey act on the liver, cure i ! biliousness, beadache,coostipation. J. C A.YER CO., Lowell, Mass. over the necessity. wbieh demanded this, form of correction. And yet, we Lave all heard grown men remark, laughingly, that they needed "more lickings" than they ever got. Does som. one say that resort to per suasion should be relied upon to cor rect i children when they need eorree tioaf To this a sufficient answer v is that persuasion will do for some chil dren but for others it would be as in effective as no attempt at government at all. " Tbere - are children and chil dren.:5 There are also prisoners and prisoners. A reliance upon kind; treat good and abundant food, a 'pleas ant greeting and morning and evening prayers, and these alone, for a satisfac tory; government ; of ; many prisoners would be like placing a four-year-old boy; in personal command of ths Rus sian army. And the observing?" man whof undertakes to manage a prison along these lines will soon discover it. While all forms of brutality in pris ons should be prohibited, yet exxtreme measures, in some form, are often as necessary as brick walla, guns and iron' bars, and while it may be that now and! then a convict i "reformed" while in prison, there are one hundred others upon whom all 'efforts in. that direction had as well never been made. The time to reform the average man who finds himself in the penitentiary was before he acquired the habits that sent him there. His Sunday school training should have been had while he was a boy and on the outside, and while it is well to continue the effort on the inside, for the sake of fhe one man ia the hundred, tbe management which concludes that these efforts at reform are a guarantee that professions of docility are genuine, will find-itself, sooner or later, ia deep trouble. f There may be a better way to en force discipline in the case of 'it man who is utterly reckless of consequences than flogging, but it is doubtful; and yet, this, like and other form of pun ishment, should be administered) with prudence and discretion. So it should be at home or at sshool. What Is call ed "spanking" is administered i in re form schools, and is a form of flogging, or corporal punishment, that could not well be dispensed with. In Chicago, at present, the necessity for adopting more radical means of enforcing dis cipline in its schools is being diseossed by tbe different boards with much ear neatness. The control of tbe schools is getting away from, tbe management, as the result of dispensing with cor poral punishment, and tbe necessity for its restoration in some form is a ques tion that has to be met. Unnecessary punishment, either in prisons or schools, is never to be commended, but, especially in prisons, no relaxation from a fixed and uniform, though just, set of rules of discipline can be indulg ed without ultimate injury to their efficiency. S i YELLOWISM.' The Chicago Chronicle raises the question as to the real sanity of the reader who habitually invests" in the daily paper, consisting largely 6t. sen sational headlines "whose purport is flatly negatived .by the text of. the ar ticle below." It is pointed, out that this phase of unreliable journalism has been emphasized since the beginning of the war between Russia and Japan, by wholly ureliable reports, accompanied by daily pictures of battles that had not occurred anad other evidences of newspaper "enterprise" that eater to what appears to be a public demand. Not long since the Statesman took ocasion to refer to the daily appearance ftf alleged pictures of naval engage ments in some of our papers not far away, fhe securing of which would be a mtttter of the utmost impossibility, 'even if fhe battle had occurred. The mechanical feature of these mythical representations is horrid and there is no possible redeeming trait, even when accompanied, as some of them are, with the explanation that they are the product of drawings from- descriptions i by j telegraph. But the serious phase of the subject (is in tbe fact tbat there is no doubt of a popular demand for this sort of dyspeptic mental pabulum. The actual facts are not so much wanted as some thing that would be highly exciting if they were facts. Tbe facts are not wild enough, and they are belated. Fiction is wanted. k The . actual happenings, are too much of a humdrum nature. If a tremendous battle has not taken place onj the banks of the Yaln, since it seems to be overdue, the reader wants to read all about the details of such a conflict as he imagines it will be when it does occur, and the publisher, know ing this, pleases the demands of the reader by a little premature account of the engagement as it doubtless! will be when it happens, and sells it "like hot cakes," and the purchaser is aatisved. He demands a battle, and if the Rus sians and Japs are too slow for him, he can appeal to the yellow publisher, who is always on time with "the goods." - j l - :'. - -!-.-- it doesn't matter thai the whole thing; is flatly contradicted the next day. The reader was the beneficiary of, the excitement of the description1 while he was reading it, and was as highly entertained as if it had been tme. And upon the slightest provoea tio,n. nre rumor is usually sufficient the yellow journal. will run its black headlines aeros the entire front page, descTTptiv of a telegram that will not occupy two inches of one column, and the reader is compelled to nse praeti- eally all the time at his disposal find ing'the item that belongs to the head liae, and, even then,f it will be flatly contradicted as' a mere rumor on some other a.rt of the same page, and with no headline attachment whatever. ' It i no uncommon thing to see the headlines in one of these papers occupy more space than the article itself, and even : if the statements 4 of the two should happen to be on the. same sub ject, the mission of the one seems to be' to prove the other untrue, which it usually succeeds in doing. Perhaps tbe publishers" of such rot are not at all to blame, though there is a question whether Such contribution to a morbid desire for wholly valueless trash is to be justified by any rules of ethics; but the demand for it, growing as it appears to be, is not one of tbe good signs of be times. . MB. CLEVELAND AGAIN. It has been but a few days sinee ex President Cleveland lectured to ar im mense audience in Princeton, devoting himself to a comprehensive review of the Chicago labor troubles during his second administration, and undertak ing to make it dear that be was mere ly in the discharge of his plain duty in all he did to quell the disturbance and to insure he supremacy of the law. But upon this point, no doubt nine-tenths of the people of this country agree that Mr. Cleveland showed the right spirit at the time and did no more than the welfare of all interests demanded. To have done less would have been to have Tailed in the obligation which his position imposed. But why be should, just at this par ticular time appear in public and en gage in an elaborate endeavor to justi fy an ineiienf long ago closed, seems fo indicate a desire to be in front of the public that is not at all consistent with that reticence which has charac terized him in a marked degree during the past eight "years. For a long time it was impossible to get an expression from him upon any publie question. His persistent silence was as unbroken as that" of yJudge Parker. Mr. Cleve land had not only retired from politics but was not disposed to engage in the discussion of current topics. For this reason, his present activity and even unusual interest in the. pro gress of events is suggestive of a re turning ambition to enter public life. This is emphasized by his coming con tribution to the Saturday Evening Post in justification of the financial policy of his last administration. Of course tbe large majority . of the American people have given their full endorse ment to the principal features of this policy, but why a man who has retired from politics and would under no cir cumstances again be-a candidate for any office withib the gift of the people, should at this time come before the public in defense, on two different oc casions, of his record, gives color to the suspicion that a third term in tbe presi dential office would not be so distaste ful fo the "Sage of Princeton," after all. . ' j . ; ' It would be. impossible to suggest any one thing' less likely to come to pass, than the election of tbe Democrat ic candidate for. the presidency this fall, no matter who he may be, but cer tainly no man has been suggested for that nomination whose standard of statesmanship .equals that of Mr. Cleveland. And yet, he is very un popular with those who imagine them selves "Jeffersoniah Democrats." CAPTAIN MERIWETHER LEWIS. Next Saturday, the 14th of May, will be precisely one ; hundred yean since Lewis and Clark started on their mem orable journey of exploration from the Missouri river to the Pacific coast, a journey fraught with so much of far reaching importance not only to the United States, but which had, ulti mately, much to do with the affairs of many of the leading nations of Europe. The moving force behind this great undertaking was Thomas Jefferson, at that time President of' the United States. The conception and prosecu tion of this gigantic enterprise to a successful termination, was the crown ing feature of Jefferson's publie ca reer.'' He had many associates in the Revolutionary period who were as ac tive ia opposition to the tyrannical methods of the English government as he was, and who would doubtless have formulated the Declaration of Indepen dence and fought the war of the Revo lution to victory had Jefferson .been an obscure private titizen, but, strange as It may appear, there seemed to be no publie man of his time who understood the immense value to the future of the United States of the vast region be yond the Mississippi, Including the unknown territory . reaching to the Pacific ocean, as did Jefferson. . During the interim between the close of the War of the Revolution and the adoption of Jthe- Constitution of the United States, Jefferson was minister to France, and while there met John Ledyard, a citizen of Connecticut, who was desirous of exploring the Pacifie coast and in whose proposals Jefferson became much interested. Jefferson proposition to Ledyard was to go. to the eastern coast of "Kamseaafka,' cross m some Russian vessel to Nootka Sound,1 "fall "down " to . the "latitude of the Missouri." and eross the ., continent ' "to the I'nited States." j ' The plan" did not succeed la ils in- eJpienev and was givea up. was givea up. ni serrfs to show that Jefferson was, even then alone, ofall his contemporaries, alive to the necessity of doing something- toward exploring the great un known epun try to the west, with the view, certainly, of finally adding t to the territory of the United States, I tnougn wua conclusion i with bisUposition to accepting, the K V. its ! purchase though k- " J- T-T-T ' ,.T-T :.v booking, and these combined qualities had been accomplished without hsl 00,&l", - .-.i , ' .v w. would be guarantee of undoubted . ... . ' no constitutional right to aeqmre more territory Jin that manner. - The opportunity for . exploring the country jwestfof the Slissouri came to Jefferson when, in lSOSj thVaet estab lishing trade houses with the western Indian tribes was about to expire and, to use kis own language, " some modi fications of it were recommended to Congress by a confidential message of January 18th, and an extension of its views to the Indians on the Missouri river. In order to prepare the way, the message " proposed the sending an exploring party to trace the Missouri to its source, to erosa the Highlands, and follow the best water communica tion which offered itself from thence to the Paeifie ocean. , Congress ap proved the proposition and voted a sum of money for carrying it into execu tion." Captain Lewis, who had at that time been for two years Jefferson's private secretary," made an urgent application to be selected for the journey and his importunities were successful. Il was born on the 18th of August, 1774, near the town of Charlottesville. Virginia. in Albemarle county, of one of the most distinguished families of the state. -One of his father's uncles married la sister mankind eonld en. lure and yet live, of General Washington. . Iewis at once J , 'One of. the noblest women who ever applied himself to vigorous study of. came to." Dregonfand one of the : most astronomy and botany, etc., under dis-1 usf u, ras Mrs. Tahitha Brown, the tingufshed professors, that he. might be real and 4-oncede.l founder of the Pa better qualified for the great task eific Unitersity, at Forest Grove. At about to be intrusted to his charge. He ( the beginning of . the year 1S46," Mrs. chose as his associate in the hazardous Brown was living , in Missouri. She undertaking, William Clark, brother of tbe noted George Rogers Clark. The beginning -of tbe famous Lewis and Clark expedition was made on the 14th of May, 1804, the exact spot being 'at the mouth of Wood river, a small ' ginia, and finally went to Missouri! to stream which empties into the Missis- j improve Jier situation and help her sippi river opposite to the entrance to boys, of whom she had two, as well as the Missouri."." The' party returned tola daughter. St. Louis on the 23d of September,! We haVe before us a letter written 1806, having been gone two years and j by Mrs. Brown in August, 1S54, front four months! ","""' "' ! Forest dro've to her brother and sister After their return Captain Lewis ( in the east, -from whom she had not was appointed Governor of Louisiana, ( heard for several years and whom she For a number of years he had shown ' had lonjj supposed to be dead.' In the symptoms of mental depression, which grew upon him after bis location in St. Louis. Jefferson intimates that on ac count of this, his-affairs made it neces sary for him to go to Washington, and while stopping over-night at the house of a Mr. Grinder ' ia the interior of Tennessee, at 3 o'clock in the morning, October 11, 1809, he took his own life. But, notwithstanding his unfortunate end, he leaves a name which will al- ways be prominent in the history of assuring fjis that he had found a new the United States ;for his intrepid dar-j cut-off, 1iat if wo would follow him ing and ambition to make a journey) we would he iu the settlement long filled with dangers and hardships, . that ! before those Who ha'i one down the a great, unknown land, equal to an em- J Columbia. This was in .August. The pire in extent of territory, might be idea of shortening the journey caused explored and placed in a position where 'us to I yield to his advice, j Our suffer its acquirement by the United States ! ings from that time no tongue can tell. would be not only possible but alto gether probable. Even so long ago as a full century, "there was something doing" in the ' ath. no doubt), and Rogue River In United States, and statesmen were dians, hst nearly all our cattle, and carrying into execution colossal plans 'passed the Unipquaw Mountain, nearly tor tne future, atTceting the destiny r.f many nations and the trend of the human family. The Portland Journal, commenting upon the institution of a suit in sup port of the' claims of the Warner Val ley settlers by Governor Chamberlain, said "it is regretted that the other members of the state land board, pre sumably because the Governor differs with them politically, would not join with him in this effort to have justice done, notwithstanding the nnjnst de cision of the department." But .the Journal shows ia this statement that it has no acquaintance, whatever, with the characteristics of "the other members of the board." That waa about as unjust a remark as a paper of assumed standing could make. No lower motive conld.be ascribed to publie of ficers. Treasurer Moore and Secretary Dunbar had wrestled with this ques-, tion officially -over and over again long before Governor Chamberlain was seri ously thought of for the position he now holds. It would be equally true and proper to say that Governor Cham berlain has instituted this suit because the other members of the board viewed the matter differently from him, but which, probably, no paper ia the state will say. The sympathy of the publie is generally with the settlers in this ease, but there are. two sides to it, as may well be-assumed, since the deeist ions of the land department at Wash ington have generally held . in favor of the original claimants. It is just as well to be fair. If anybody should sav a J that Governor Chamberlain was moved S'ia this matter by the desire to make a From ; the , . Office; Window V7 f it is tf porteV upB what appears to be goo.1 'authority, that Cicero Idlcman, Oregon's; ex-Attorney General, is in line for the appointment to the Gov- I tlV. A better man . . -; j . . 1.- - jf? J j 2ood capatde, honest, affable and good TIHUISUlf -: v- ' 'aneeesa in; his new field. We shoukt r- gret to loie. him,, even temporarily, but if he besfns with the Governorship he may lasd! the United States Senator ship wlwni Alaska becomes a future state -and that may be the only future state thejGeneral will ever be permit ted to reilly enjoy. We advise him to accept the "position by all means, if it should be offered him. o o I i A Pioneer Mother . The romantic and useful lves of the noble pioher mothers of "Oregon can not be top often recalled nor too much be said ia praise of t-e part they bore in laying the foundations of that civ ilization which preceded by many years thej first , movement toward a state government. In the busy lives we are leading, surrounded by all the comforts and conveniences of the pres ent, we seldom take the time to reflect that the)in:e was when Oregon in the 4T's, was as much of a" wilderness as any country on earth with the bare ex- eeptionr that occasionally was a family that had ventured here and God alone , knows whylunder the circumstances which directed some of them that was undergoing all the vicissitudes that h;i- was tUfn 6 years of age, and had been a widow; for many years. She was a native of Massachusetts, but' after be coming at 'widow she taught school for several years in -Maryland land Vir- spring of "1546, Mrs. Brown provided herself ?fith a good ox team and what she 'supposed, was a sufficient supply for the trip, and in company with ber daughteH and one son, besides Captain John Brown, a brother of her deceased husbimd,! started for Oregon. At Fort Hall, to use her own lan guage, ;thrco or four trains were de coyed off ry a rascally fellow who eaine out from; .the' settlements in Oregon, ;We were carried hundreds of . miles south of Oregon into Utah and Califor nia, fell i in with the Clamotte (Riant- twelve miles through. I rode through in three days at the risk of my life, oa horseback, having lost my wagon and all that I had but the horse I was on. Our; families were the first to start through the - canyon, so that we got through the, mud and rocks much bet ter than those who followed." This Canyon which Mrs. Brown re fers to,; Was the present famous Cow Creek canyon which ' within the past few yeafs has been such a terror te the section hands and train crews '. of the Southern Pacific railroad, Mrs. Brown proceeds to say thaf "out of' the, hundreds of wagons only grand -stand play, tbe Statesman would feel disposed . to rebuke him quite severely, as it is so disposed to ward the Joarnal for its fling at "the other members of the boarL" The row in - the "camp of the Iowa Democrats over whether they should be for oj against Hearst,. reminds one of the contest among the Peeryites and Sweekitea in Multnomah county. Of course the Iowa Democrats will have something to say as to the national nominee; but they will cut as small a figure in thestate election there as will the! Democrats fa. Multnomah ; Strangs what enthusiasm some people can arouse 'over the possession of a vacrrum. The Boise News, the leading Demo cratic paper of Idaho, aaya ' "if the jpartr eojilda't get together on a man s clean and able as Towne, it is eer- tain to remain split." This is no doubt true. But how does he stand on the l -wA Editorial SideUghto saim! Obswrvntl&Tiw on Varloue Peoplo a.nd Things. Picked Up and Scr I bled Down t OtSd Times. Lne came throi'gu wiihont breaking. i i -ih jlead CAt- , n .i ii . ii t. ...... - - - . tie, broken wagons, !' ever tiling lint provisions, oi ! latter we -r. : neanv all J dtitBto.lar. All tle fwl gone, prartiral- .--l c. iw .' 'l v. and Mr, Pringle set off on ; hore- tbrev weeks before Knin iiel from fat while others ate the fleii f cattle that rdea.l by the wevside. . lall sive one. She had panned through. ' , i ntany trials, u. Merit to convure hrr struggling, through "Vitha ters woutt avail nothing n were lying "After water up to pur hore" w.Ies nuicn j0ur extremities. Through all mv nuf tbe war in crossinflr this twelve mile .ferings in crossing the plains, li nm mountain, we onencl into the beautiful once sought relief 1-y fhe shedding of Umpqua vallcti inhabited, only by In dians and wild beasts. We had still another mountain to cross, the. Cali- ose, (no doubt the .Calipooia), leside Louse of a Mcthwdifit rainiiit.r ju : Sji manv miles to travel in the mud, .snow, lem, "the Cm house 1 had 4t ,y hail and rain, y i . " Winter had set in. Mr. Priagle and Pherne 'insisted upon my going ahead with Uncle John to try and, save ourj lives. They vere obliged' to stay behind a few days to recruit their cat tle. They divided the last bacBn, of which I had three slices. I had also, a full cup of teai No bread. We saddled on r horses and set off, .- not knowing whether we would ever see ach other again. Captain Brown was too old and feeble to be of any assistance to me. Near sunset we came up with the wa gops that Mil "mI that nioruing. Tliey had nothing to eat and their cat tle, had given out. In the morning I divided my last morsel with them and left them to take care of themselves. I hurried Captain Brown so as to o-er-take the three w;sgons ahead. We pass ed Wautiful mountains and valleys.and saw but two Indians in the distance. In the afternoon Captain Brown com plainer of dizziness and .could only want ins uorse ueninu. in mo or hours he became delirious and fdl from his horse. I was afraid to jump down from my horse- to assist hnn as ik was one a woman ha.t never ridden -before. He triel to risw to his feet, but could not. I rKle close to him and set 0the ml nf lia Mna whih I Mrrinl in ill V ...'... . . . . - hand,; harI in the ground, to . help him up. I then urged him to walk a little. He tottered alonga few yard and then gave out. I then saw a little sunken spot a few yarn's ahead and b-d his horse into it and with much difficulty got him raised to the saddle. Two milis ahead was another mountain to climb, and ns we reached the foot of ' it Captain Brown was able to hold the bridle in his own hand and we passed, over safely into a lr-rge valley, a wide solitary place, but uo wous in sight." While it, is not possible to certainly locate this place which Mrs. Brown decrile it ninst have Wen the "Von cal!a. a Iteautiful little mountain val ley, with which many modern Oregoni ans are familiar, . , The following paragraph from Mrs. Brown's letter. rads like a romance and illustrates one of the saddest ex periences among .all the hardships which so many of the Oregon pioneers were compelled to endure. "The sun was now setting, the wind was blowing bard ami the rain was I drifting uix.n the side of the distant mountain. I'oor- mel l erosseo tbe plain to where two Mountain spurs met. Here the shades of night were gathering fast and 1 could see the wagon track ; no further; Alighting from my horse I flung bfl the s.-idlle and sadille pack and- tied the horse fast to a tree.: with "a tasso roiic. The Captain asked me' what I was going to do! My answer was "I am going no ccmp for the night." He gave a groan and fell to the ground. 1 gathered my wagon sheet, which I had put under my saddle, flung it over the projecting limb of a tree and made me a fine tent. 1 tuen stripped the Captain s horse and tied him, placed saddle,, bridle and blankets under the tent, and then help ed the bewildered old gentleman snd "sketch of '.-Mrs. Brown is but a varie.l introduced him to his new Kxlgingnpon ' version ofmnnv other heroic aiid noble the bare ground. His senses were gone. worMen who unconmlaininglv lM1re their Covering him up as well as I could , . .. : 1 . - , with the blankets, I seated myself, the interests of their bus upon my feet behind him, expecting; ."ands and children and, having done e wuuiii w a corpne wiore morning, -. mnr uuiy wen, passed to to tne wait- "Pause ?or;a moment, and consider ing future. As to them, the half bn my situation. Worse than alone, in a i . ... savage wilderness, without food,' with- nr7 oUf nor ever w.ll be. out fire, coTd t and shivering; wolves Mr- Tabitha Brown died inrth later i i i i . . - fighting and howling all aroun.1 me. 1 fifties, aged eighty years, mournol by Dark clouds Aid the stars. All as soli-1 hundreIs of personal friends who hai tary as death. But that same kind i. , . . . . ," , Providence that I had alwavs known '"f love ber, and by. thousan.ls was watching over me still. " As soon wuo 'VP- her many admirabje. as. light dawned, I polled down iny qualities that had done so miicn for the tent, saddled the horses and found the cause of education in this budding Captain able to stand upon his feet. rommonw,alth the r&eiRr const. Just at this moment one of the emi-, ... grants whom I was trying to overtake ' I heme, frequently referred t came up. He Was ia search of venison. ly Mrs. Brown, was Mrs. Pringlc, her Half a mile ahead were the wagons I daughter, who for forty-five years wan had hoped to overtake and we were rMnLllM r tu cim . . , , ... , . . respecten citizen of the South ralcm soon there and ate plentifully of fresh . ... , , . meat." f . jns and who was the mother of 'Mrs. This small party travelled on and at ,John 1,"8l1,. of this city. Mrs. Prin the foot of Calipoota mountain the Rl died in 1892. Jefferaonian ideal IL he is a stand patter in favor of Jefferson no other man can question his Democracy. Cleveland and Bryan are Loth follow ers of Jefferson, . and, what is more both admit it. , ' , Since Governor Jeff Davis, of Arkan sas, punched the face of oe of the Supreme Judges of . that ' state and caved in the stomach' of another one, he has -announced himself a candidate for the United States Senate and the Republicans have rimultaneonsly de clared against: any joint canvass -of the slate.- : si- .' . - '- -Parker's' boom is admittedly on the wane, and Bryan's little speech did it. This must be discouraging to the brethren, many of whom had hoped the vexed question was settled. Tbe States man would suggest that the only way out of the Democratic dilemma is to nominate the blessed memory : of Thomas Jefferson, taking a non-com children and. grandrhildten. . ut SUn. ru with ieat cat- - - ... - , , , . j w.hoy da vs crowing the'4i!irt. muun--,1s, elothiii. n;t lftillf whi,.b was eovere.1 with sn..w, a. risions, of whia ni,! go ahejul but a mile orisu earh V all detitBte.lar. All the 'wmI wn gone, prartiral- Jfown 'ovrrtuoa,. rm. we.re couj4 ort aavon front' two trt'l.V. ami Air. rmgi- se, on on nnrc . . s.V..Vu" "1 1-sw-st for the settlements, not kaoaing they got trogli.!wtM,th(ip woM ever get r.n,k, (igne and starvation -ye wertl again in a state of starvation, n fleu of cattle that 'lanv tears wereiLed during tbelav hv 'Many tears weresLed during tbeday hy tears, nor thought wc should nt live to reach the settlements." j Ob Christina's day, at 2 oVlrk .in the afternoon. Mrs. Brown ente- ths reel in ior nine mnv". tor two or thrce weeks of. my journey down-'. t!i Willamette I had felt something in the end of my glove finger which I hnd Up. loosed to be a button. On exanjlnation at ray new home in Salfrn I founl It io be a'six and a quarter cent piece. TW was ray whole cash capital to r..m. mence business with in Oregon. With it I purchased three needles. I trn.U.j off some of my old clothes to tbe squaws for buck skins, worked thoin into gloves for the Oregon la. lien anil gentlemen," which cleared me up.wnrii of thirty dollars." Later Mrs. Brown accepted an' invi tation from Mr. and .Mrs. Clark . to spend the winter with them on Tualitan Plains, where Forest drove ihw is. Arriving there, she naw the newxsitr for some sort of sehool for tle manV poor children yi the i-oniinuuity aul at once proposed to -use the log ihen-ing house" for sehool piirj.nses. She inffcr ed to jrToriu the work without hIk-Li1 ,comjensatioii for herself, only th' ex penses were to I met by tbe pafrons. Parents who were able paid one dollar jier week; hoard, tuition, wsMhinvf jib.I j voar for nothing. all. Airs. Hrowu ureeil to l:il...r i.Th. i,mp flX(.,i rnr i.,,,,;--;,.- ,vM -hool was the Cm of March. hiX wJu.n ,i fUUI,d everything pr. pared for ,n to go into nie old meeting l.nnse amj --Huek to mv chickens. The tieih- lt0tft . had .-eolleeted what broken kirives ,, frkv tin .... an1 ;yh ih,v i, . . . . . . - , rpiiiu pan wmi ir ti.e iiregon pio ieer . , . . , . . . to fmmenee hnsekeeP,ng with. I jhad a weH "'lucated lady from the eant, a missionary 's wife, to af-nint tne, and; mv family grew : rapidly. In the mi miner they put me up a boar.ling hono I now had thirty boarders, of both sexes and all ages, from four to twenty-one. I managed theni and did nil rny work except washing. That wan done ,,y the scholars.1 That was the beginning of Pacific: University, which today is in runny respects equal to any educational insti tution in the state, and is ahead of them ail in tbe matter of a pe'ruiaieftf financial endowment. There iifno nxirn beautiful story than that of jtlie Urn ism and stnrdw character of thin gram! pioneer woman, who, at the! nilvamV.l age of sixty-iix yrars, ndurf.lj the ; hardships related in the forgoing let ter written when nl,e had reachd bcr seveaty-Hixtit year. Her name is rev ered in all i Washington-county where, her deeds live after her and 'where, many people yet liiere remember Trom p'rsonal . acquaintance the spleiiiil characteristics which dmin:itc. licr every lay life. K Tltere were thousands of 'such ! nien who jrame to Oregon in the rtrlv - " .- f days" under similar circtimstanf'es, who, though less, prominent in their work, discharged their duties conHcien tiously and well in their hiimiler spheres, but who bravely contribute"! their filia rr toward the lieginnings of. this greatr-eommonwealth. This short i . , mittal but glittering generality, as a compromise platform without waiting for tbe consent of any other nation en earth.-V' - Hearst will probably carry ' the con ventions of Iowa and Washington,. two of the strongest Republican states in the Union. It seems that the weaker the -Democracy is in numbers and , re sources tbe easier it is to inaugurate a successful stampede into the camp where waves tbe helpful lannor of tlm Yellow Peril. ! AnTlrcw Carnegie has donated $50,000 to the Berea College, in Ken tucky,, the only, mixed school id the Soif h. it is to be hoped he didn't em ploy W. J. Bryan to draw up the con tract. 1 There are only five more days in which to register. This duty of aU voters should not be neglected. " :