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The new age. [volume] (Portland, Or.) 1896-1905, August 18, 1906, Image 4

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Portland New Ape
A. D. GRIFFIN. Manager
Pifice 43} Second St., cor. Ash, Rooms 1 and 2
Portiand, Oregon.
Entered st the postoffice at Portland, Oregen,
; secOond-olass matter.
One Year, payable in advance............5$ 2.00
OUR SPECIAL EDITION.
See that you get a copy of the spe-
cial edition of The New Age. Will be
issued September 15, 1906.
HON. FRED W. MULKEY,
United States Senator-elect From
Oregon.
It is often said, and with some de
gree of truth, that the best men are
seldom selected for political honors.
The cause of this is chiefly due to the
old bhoss system, which placed the
naming of candidates in the hands of
one man, who generally used such pow
er for the furtherance of his own sei
fish purposes in the bargain and sale
of offices. The result is that under con
ditions of this kind few high-minded,
clean men would aspire for political
preferment. j
Happily, however, the people of Ore
gon in their wisdom have done away
with the political boss by the direct
primary law, whose first trial has given
the people most gratifying results.
In the nomination and election of
Hon. Fred W. Mulkey for United
States senator, the Republican party of
Oregon has set an example for her sis
ter states:;'tb follow, by sending to the
highest lawmaking body in the world,
able, clean and progressive young men.
Hon. Fred W. Mulkey was born in
Portland, Ore., and is a resident of his
native city. He is a young man with
every accomplishment which should
qualify him for this high office. He is
a graduate of the State University of
Oregon, the New York Law School of
New York City, and is a lawyer of
high standing, a man who has trav
eled extensively in our own country
as well as abroad. He has studied our
institutions and compared them with
foreign countries. He is a logical
thinker, a forceful speaker and an
adept parliamentarian. He has many
friends, both rich and poor, for he is a
courteous gentleman, a congenial com
panion, a loyal friend and a charitable
and kind-hearted citizen,
Mr. Mulkey is a true, tried and life
long Republican, and has consistently
supported the party nominee at all
times. He is a high-minded, clean, cul
tured and patriotic citizen,whose entire
life has been spent in the state of Ore
gon, and to whose interests he is de
voted,
That the new Republican party of
Oregon hag started off right, and that
Mr. Mulkey will “make good” and
bring to himself and our state great
credit and lasting honor, is a foregone
conclusion.
John D. Rockefeller is a director in
only one company—the Standard Oil
trust. It is believed, though, that he
has friends in the directories of sev
eral other influential companies.
The Czar shows an inclination to
bend to the popular will, but he is
apparently not going to run any risk
of bending an inch more than he posi
tively must, y
The London specialist who is advo
cating the “silence cure” for nervous
women has earned the thanks of a
good many nervous men.
Edison says he has discovered how
to cut the price of automobiles in
two. It will soon get so that even
editors can have 'em.
Senator Whyte, being only 82, will
have to excuse Senator Pettus, as the
latter regards him as a mere boy.
Are Granted Hearings.
Washington, Aug. 14.—1 n order that
the food manufacturers of the country
may have opportunity to make sugges
tions concerning regulations for the en
forcement of the new pure food law,
hearings will be held at the department
of Agricultare from September 17 to 23,
ROLOOTHOLEOLOICEOROOOOOE ¢
® @
: . 2
® Topics of :
< s
' the Times §
POOOPRODOODOOOOOEOOOODE
fiix feet of earth or a bathtub makes
all men equal. -
When 8 woman marries a man's
troubles begin.
Please sic the muck-rakers on the
mean that rocks the boat.
Fear of being reformed keeps many
a man in the bachelor class.
Wonder where those Chicago packers
get the meat they eat at home?
The first happy fruit of Alfonso's
marriage {8 a commercial treaty.
The real object of the Douma ap
pears to be to do the Little White Pa.
Only the man who s blindly in love
fulls to see through a coat of complex
fon paint. !
Shoplifters should go Into a drug
store and take something for what's
the matter with them.
Sometimes it seems as If the less a
woman knows about anything the more
ebe llkes to talk about it.
When the average man makes a mis
take he tries to justify himself by re
ferring to his good intentions.
Some men are kept so busy criticls
ing others that they have no time to
accomplish anything themselves.
It’s the easiest thing in the world to
convince yourself that you are just a
little better than your neighbor,
It’s all right to dream of the great
things you are going to do, but don't
forget to wake up In time to begin
work.
It may be better for a foollsh man to
acquire dollars by marrying an heiress
than to remain without cents all his
days.
There 14 a growing feeling In the
country that the center of the meat in
dustry in the United States should be
“Spotiess Town.”
The insurance magnates will prob
ably regard it as an Impertinence for
the grand jury to indict them for a
little thing like perjury.
A man in New York was arrested
for being In a certain restaurant with
out a full-dress suit. When fashlons
may be enforced by a policeman liberty
seems to be on the wane.
A man who introduced an anti-kissing
biil in the Virginia Legislature last win
ter has been deserted by his wife.
Wateh out for an avalanche of anti
kissing bills In the Virginia Legislature
at the next session,
Bearch for evidence as to the charac
ter of the people who lived In western
Nebraska and eastern Wyoming in pre
historic times is to be made by an ex
pedition from the University of Nebras
ka. One does not need to send out ex
reditions to learn what kind of people
live there now. They are the salt of
the earth.
“Music,” said Josh Billings, *“has
charms to soothe a savage, to rend a
rock or split a cabbage.” It is, accord-
Ing to the veracious reports from the
fsthmus, now doing two of them down
on the canal, where one foreman has
distinguished himself by getting double
the work out of his gang of West In
dians by resorting to the inspiration of
song. Under the influence of his chanty
“Down, Men, Down,” his diggers threat
en to excavate their way to China.
Russla’s douma may labor under cer
tain disadvantages, but repression of
parliamentary critigism is not one of
them. KEven In the most untrammeled
legislative assemblies #he practice of
calling the members of the ministry
murderers, thieves and assassing to
their faces would be deemed to be
stretching parliamentary privilege
jomewhat. In the douma, however, we
hear of littie else. It may be that when
the douma adjourns and the members
lcse their privilege the Siberlan colony
may receive considerable accessions, but
in the meantime we cannot doubt that
parliamentary free speech, at least, is
not curtailed In Russia.
In many families the education of the
children is committed almost exclusive
ly to the schools, and this sufficiently
accounts for the atrocious errors of
speech often noted In circles where we
might expect better things. It matters
not how falthful the teacher may be,
the child will inevitably imitate the
language heard at home and forget the
instruction of the school. When the
,child hears Incorrect language in the
‘famlly and ‘mbibes it freely from vi
!cious books he Is probably going to
gpeak ungrammatically as long as he
lives, A writer on the educational pro
~cess says that the years from 8 to 12
_constittue the habit-forming perlod.
i“Thls is the time to break the human
;colt. in some sense the wildest of all
animals.” Errors In the use of the
mother tongue adopted during this time
ire difficult to correct.
Mr. Marcon! used a ten-inch induc
tion coll giving a spark three-quarters
of an inch long in bis early attempts
to communicate across the English
Channe] by wireless telegraphy. His
masts were one hundred and fifty feet
high, To provide for commercial com
munication across the Pacifie Ocean be
tween San Francisco and Honolulu, &
gigantic Induction-coll fifteen feet long
Is being built which will give a spark
fifteen feet long and as thick as a
man’s body. Two thousand miles of
fine, silk-insulated copper wire are used
In the coll, with more than a ton of
beeswax and paper for additional insu
lating. Its potential will be about five
million volts. The masts from which
the Impulses will be sent out are twin
towers, each three hundred feet high.
on the very apex of Mount Tamalpais,
across the Golden Gate from San Fran
cleco. The antennse—three thouwsand
pounds of heavy copper wire—will thus
be nearly three thousand feet above
the waves which wash the foot of the
mountain, ‘
Questions concerning naturalization
have been of more Importance to the
United States than to any other coun:
try In the world owing to the fact that
the whole trend of our history has
been In the direction of an invitation
to the discontented and oppressed for
more than a century. The ‘discussion
began long before Washington entered
upon hls presidency, the declaration of
Independence, Indeed, furnishing the
starting point. In a volume just pub
lished by Prof. Frank G. .Franklin of
the University of the Pacific, under the
title, “The Legislative History of Nat
uralizatlon in the United States,” the
progress of the discussion is followed
in the varlous governmenta] acts, and
at the same time It is made apparent
that right at the start there was diffi
culty connected with the lack of unl
formity in the naturalization laws of
the several States, a difficulty which ls
perhaps most responsible for the meas
ure which has now passed Congress and
13 to go Into operation ninety days after
its approval by the President. Mr,
Franklin’s account Indicates that there
Is nothing speclally new in naturaliza
tlon questions as now discussed, since
tlie matter has been debated and rede
bated again and again ever since the
first law on the subject in 1790, unless
It be connected with the tremendous
tides of immigration which have flowed
in the direction of America during re
cent years. Two features deserve spe
cial mention when the present measure
is examined, one the barring of an
erchists and the other the requirement
of a knowledge of the Bnglish language
on the part of the would-be citizen. The
bill provides that no person who dis
belleves In or is opposed to organized
government should be naturalized. Few
w'll quitestion the wisdom of this (‘lauoe,tl
for while the utmost freedom of
thought, expression and action is popu
lar with every American, the wide lati
tude permitted should not Include the
admission to citizenship of those whose
avowed purpose is to destroy the gov
ernment offering them such' freedom.
What the practical value of the clause
will be remains to be seen. It will be
easy for one who seeks citizenship to
conceal his real sentiments, to perjure
bimself, perhaps, thus gaining privi
leges to which he would not be entitled
if his anarchistic sentiments were
known. It may serve a useful purpese
in excluding notorious enemles of law
and order. As for the requirement from
the Intending citizen of a knowledge of
the English language, that Is a wise
provision which will work little hard
ghip, but which will hasten the efforts
of many an Immigrant to learn the com
monly used speech of the country, and
there is much gained in a way when a
foreigner shows his Intention to give up
ihe old tie of language for the new one
of his adopted home. In practical work
ing it {s unlikely that the language test
will be so severe a 8 to prove a serious
barrier to any worthy applicant. There
probably will be a great rush now to
get In under the old law, and much op
portunity will be afforded judges for
the exercise of care in admission. There
need be no hurry about letting in to eltl
zonship a lot of undesirable persons
who have not yet fully proved thelr
worthiness. The laws have been pret
ty easy in the past, and there are not
many who would be injured by delay
in thelr admisslon.
Milk Fed Kid.
“This Is milk fed kid,” sald the leath
er merchant. “It Is very soft and fine
and pliable, isn't it?”
He smoothed the delicate white skin
and went on:
“All first rate kid is milk fed. It
comes to us from the French mountain
eers. These men are superb goatherds.
Thelr immense flocks supply the world’s
kid gloves. The goatherds of France
are careful to keep their kids on an ex
clusive milk diet. They pen the little
animals with their mothers in rocky
inclosures, where there {s no grass. At
that the kids often escape, often man
age to eat solid food, for, with almost
human perversity, kids that shouldn’t
be weaned wean themselves early,
whereas calves that should be weaned
cling like grim death to milk. One
meal of grass will spoil a kid's skia,
will rob It of its softness and pliability,
will harden and coarsen and stiffen it;
hence, when you buy kid gloves always
choose the milk fed kind.”—Cincinnati
Enquirer.
Unwelcome.
“A delegation from Finland, sir,” an
nounced the chamberlain. The czar
strove to conceal his agitation.
“Of course I cannot see my Finnish!”
he answered, with characteristic Ro
manoff obstinacy.—Puck.
In the marriage service when the
man says, “With all I have I thee en
dow,” 1t does not include his kin. The
bride would not stand for that
HALL PHARMACY CO.
Telephone East 873
Union Avenue and Tillamook Street
PORTLAND
SCHWIND & BAUER
Shoe Repairing
Machine and Hand. Only Goodyear Machine
in Our City. Shoes made to Order.
Shoes Called for and Delivered.
Telephone Pacific 2228,
269 Yamhill Street PORTLAND, OREGON
Rometsch Exchange
JOHN ROMETSCH, Prop.
Fine Wines,
Liquors and Cigars
Telephone Main 1200
253 Morrison St., Portland, Ore.
«The Judge Demands the Best”
LA TOCO
Key West Cigar
EL PATERNO
Ten-Cent Leader
SIGHT DRAFT
King of Five-Cent Cigars
W. S. Conrad
Minneapolis
St. Pau?o
STAR BREWERY
NORTHERN BREWERY (0.
HOP GOLD
PORTLAND OFFICE:
Corner East Third and Burnside Streets
COVELL'S »rsze
The Place to Buy Your
FURNITURE
Phone Main 1234
184 and 186 First Street
PORTLAND OREGON
THE
Burnside Dry Goods St
SAMUEL K.\F}\'.\, Propriomr
Ladies’ and Gents’ Furnish
ings, Shoes, Notions, Hats and
Caps, Up-to-date Haberdashery.
Agency New Idea Patterns, R. &
G. Corsets, Webster School
Shoes. Tel. East 1445.
16 Grand Avenue, Cor. E. Burnside, PORTLAND, OREGON
THETOKE POINT OVSTER CO.
8 S S, P,
Sols Growers of the Celebrated
Toke Point Oysters
An Eastern Oyster Transplanted
and grown on our beds at
TOKELAND, WASHINGTON
“UNEQUALED IN FLAVOR
AND FRESHNESS”
Cannery at South Bend, Wash.
Wholesale Dealers in All Varieties
of Native Oysters.
Phone East 3873
Elgin Gream Go.
Manufacturers and Dealers in
Butter, Eggs
~ Cheese
Sweet Cream
Ice Cream
Milk and :
Buttermilk
A Specialty of Fancy Ice Cream
for Churches and Parties
ROBERT A. PRESTON
PRESCRIPTION DRUGGIST
Cor. 23d and Thurman Sts.
Phone Main 1610 PORTLAND, OREGON
G. E. WATKINS
Parrish, Watkins & Go.
Established 1872
Real Estate
Insurance, Rental
and Loan Agents
250 Alder St., Portland, Oregon
A Western Cracker Made
for Western People
Ask your Grocer for -
Western Crackersand Cakes
Take no other kind if you want the best
Distributor
“Oldest Bank in the State of Washington.”
DEXTER, HORTON & CO.
Capital $200,000 2 Surplus and undivided
Deposits $7,530,000 BANKER& profits, $425,000
Accounts of Northwest Pacific Banks solicited upon terms which will grant to them the
most liberal accommodations consistent with their talances and responsibilities. Wm. M.
Ladd, President; N. H. Latimer, Manager; M. W. Pe erson, Cashier. Seartle, Washiugton.
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF PORT TOWNSEND
KEstablished 1882. Collections promptly made and remitted.
DAVID H. BEECHER, SIDNEY CLARK,
President. Cashier.
Union National Bank
CAPITAL $lOO,OOO
Pays Interest on Time Deposits
THE OLD BANK CORNER
Grand Forks,
NORTH DAKOTA
HENRY WEINHARD’S BREWERY
Manufacturers and Bottlers of the
Well Known Brands of Lager Beer
“EXPORT ”
“ KAISERBLUME ”’
“COLUMBIA”
IN KEGS AND BOTTLES
Trade and Families Supplied -
Brewery and Office BURNSIDE & 13th STS.
- -
Alhers Bros. Milling Co.
f CEREAL MILLERS
‘ Manufacturers of
High Grade Cereals
Wholesale Dealers in
Grain, Hay, Flour and Feed
Our Leading Brands in Packages
Viclet Oats Violet Wheat Violet Fearl Barley Violet Pearis of Whent
Violet Buckwheat Oolumblia Oats Columbia Wheat Lucky Oats Crsam Oats
Ali First-C!ass Dealers Handle Our Brands of Goods
(. 0. PICK TRANSFER & STORAGE COMPANY.
Safes, Pianos, Furniture moved, stored or packed for shipping. Com.
go:r.g;sal:‘réc% awgg;cgh:m l\:;fh separate iron rooms, Front and Clay.
Office Phone, 596; Stable, Black 1972 PORTLAND, OREGON
Incorporated 1890
The Union Meat Co.
All Dining Cars and First Class Hotels
Rentaurams buy the e
UNION MEAT COMPANY’S
FRESH AND CURED MEATS
“The Best in the Market. Patronize Home In
dustry. PORTLAND, OREGON
John’s Meat Market
J. D. MERGENS, Prop.
Fresh Meats, Beef, Pork, Mutton, Bacon
and Hams
Corned Beef and Pickled Pork a Specialty
Phone Main 1954
4314 N. Sixth Street PORTLAND, OREGON
FOR
’ Medicinal
Purposes
! We recommend our
Black Buffalo
Pure
Rye Whiskey
Unexcelled in qualiiy
and excellence
The Pederson
Mercantile Co.
Wholesale
Li%uor Importers
and Wholesale
Liquor Dealers
Moorechead, Minn.
Northwestern Agents
Anheuser-Busch
Brewing Association’s
Celebrated
“Budweiser’’ Beer

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