i ( VOL. XLYI. SO. 14,383. PORTLAND, OREGON, SATURDAY, JANUARY 19, 1907. PRICE FIVE CENTS. A TROOPS GUARD Evans Lands Marines to Aid Governor. RELIEF SHIPS ARE POURINQ IN Horrors Are Told in Delayed Dispatches. MANY DEAD ARE CREMATED Buildings Crash Down, Killing All . lwnntrs Shore Sinks Into Sea and No Wharf or Sound Building Remains. KIXCSTOX, Thnrsday, Jan. 17. The mtrrftm of thla -Hy are bow picketed wit American guard. Admiral Evan, at the request of the BrltUh authori- t l..ded m force of BiaHarn fron Ik. balflrahlp. MI.io.rl anil Indiana. six hundred bodlei have bern rrcov- ered and more are bclna: constaatly fouad. Drnamltr tm bc-lna- used to rlnr anay the debris of shattered bulldlnKg. The situation at Kingston Beemn to be improving. Order has been re-established and the work of burying the dead and caring for the. injured Is progressing on an organized basis. The work of sending- In relief to the stricken city is pro ceeding with energy. Kingston is receiving: supplies as fast as possible from, the Island of Jamaica itself. The American warship., in toe harbor have put on shore all the food stuffs and medical supplies they could spare, and the Jamaican authorities have taken . rharg. of the distribution of all provisions In' the city. In addition, Teller Is being hurried In from all outside Quar ters. The Senate yesterday FVlday) .'passed a bill authorizing relief tor the stricken Island; the people of Trinidad have eent a first Installment of relief: H. M. s. In deratlsabl. has left Port of Spain. Trini dad, with provisions, clothing and other mipplles for the stricken people; the French government has started a cruiser from the Island of Ala.rtirJ.Que with sup- piiea for Kingston; the IIan6lon House fund In London Ls growing- rapidly and the British authorities are perfecting- the de tails of relief on large scale, and In ad dition various other steamers are either on their way or about to start for King ston with 'food, clothing; and medicine aboard. The report that a tidal wave had de vastated the southern shore of Jamaica lias not been confirmed up to a very late hour Krlday night. Cable communica tion with the Wand has been partly re stored, but even 60, messages from Ja maica are coming through very slowly. The total estimates of deaths remain at about 1000. Great relief is afforded to all those who have American friends in Jamaica by a statement from the office of the cable company at Kingston that up to 7 o'clock Thursday evening no Americans had been reported killed and none was seriously injured by the earth quake. The list of known victims ls growing And the names of no less than 40 persons of more or less prominence In the Ja maican capital already have been given out a? dead. About 20 well-known men are either injured or missing. The reports make no mention of fur ther earthquake and the fires all have been put out CITY ROCKS LIKE CHOPPY SEA Not a Dozen Houses Safe Dead Still Be In)? Recovered. ' KINGSTON", Jan, 17.-The following Is a continuation of yesterday's dispatch describing the earthquake at Kingston: The devastation caused by the earth quake became more apparent as time passed. The shocks began at 3:30 o'clock Monday afternoon and lasted 96 seconds. The whole city rocked like a ship In a choppy sea. The shocks were most de structive along the harbor front, where entire streets were leveled. Crowds of frightened, shrieking people rushed north Ward, seeking safety. Those who escaped reported that large numbers were buried under the falling debris. In half an hour Are was rapidly spread ing In the business section. The fire department was unable to stay the con flagration, owing to the Inadequate sup ply of water, the earthquake having broken the mains. The fire raged until Thursday forenoon. The buildings In the upper portion of the city are uninhabitable, and the resi dents sought refuge In the hills. Thou sands are homeless and hundreds are suffering from Injuries. . .. The work of rescuing the entombed people was continued Tuesday and Wed nesday and fully corpses were re covered, but many more were cremated. Attempts at looting were made, but the military succeeded in restoring ordex. On Monday night 15 distinct shocks were felt, but they did no damage. On Tuesday there were 20 shocks and on "Wedncsday ten. Not a sound building remains In the Jty of Kingston: less than a down nuvtses can be occupied; the entire bus!- ness section Is wiped out. Tha loss can- not fall short of S5.000.000. Tb whole of Jamaica, felt the shock. but no. serious damage was done beyond a radius of 13 miles from Kingston." Uppark camp, north of Kingston, was destroyed and 4Q ' stele soldiers were burned to death before they could be removed. The King's House, the residence of the Governor, was badly damaged and all its former occupants are now living- in tents In Trafalgar Park. The death list is constantly growing. SHORES S1NKIXB I.NTO OCKA.X Remaining: Wharves Unsafe Xldal Wave at AniioLa Bay. SANTIAGO. Cuba, Jan. 18. Admiral Evans lias notified Governor Magoon that the shores of Kingston are sin Ic ing into the sea and that there Is terror in the city.' AH the vessels coming" to Kingston are warned that the lighthouses and harbor entrances have been destroyed, and that the ap proach to the harbor ls perilous. Every wharf at Kingston not de stroyed by fire is said to have sunk: into the sea or to have been rendered worthless. Previous reports that immense tidal waves swept Into ' Annota Bay, 'on the north coast of the Island are con firmed. The ruins of Kingston are still, smoldering. A. wireless message received from the steamer Colon, at Kingston, says that a schoolhouse collapsed at the first shock, killing; many children. - JAMMED IX OPEN WINDOWS How Many Negroes Died Horses' Screams Heard Above Din. LONDON, Jan. 18. The partial restora tion of communication is bringing a num ber of belated dispatches from Kingston I wnicn give additional details of the ca lamity. Alany painful sights were witnessed as rescues were being made and When dead bodies were being: extricated from the ruinsc A number of negroes, trying to escape through open . windows.. . became jammed there by falling timbers and were either killed outright or burned to death. Rod lee. of the dead are being transport ed by lighters across the harbor to the pallsadea and buried well away from the city. Immdlately after the first shock there was a rush of refugees to the sea front and TOO persons were rescued by being taken on board vessels. Since Monday tourleets have been leaving as fu.st as they are able to secure passage. This tends to relieve the anxiety of the authorities by reducing the number of mouths to be fed. Among the killed are Dr. Savage, a prominent medical man and a Councillor of the city of Birmingham. England ; Mr. Machado, a tobacco exporter, and Isaac Brandon, a merchant. While the fire was at its height the screaming of a number of horses cor ralled In a ring? or fire Vas heard above every other scund, even the .constant ox. plosions and the crashing of falling tim- bers. Kin 150 ton was threatened with a water famine, owing to the bursting of the res ervoir fed by thW rlope River. The supply ceased for 24 hours, but there is -now a plentiful supply from the Wag water River. The negroes are quite useless. Para. lyzed with fear.-they are-unable- to help themselves and spend their time In pray ing. ... ... Rain ls threatening, which is very un usual at this time of the year. MAXY BODIES ARE CREMATED Decomposition Forbids Contact ISTc . Americans Jvi I Ieilo r Injured. WASHINGTON, Jan. 18.-The State De partment today was furnished with copies of cable reports received by the Western Union from its Havana manager regarding- the Kingston earthquake. One re port says that the latest information was that no Americans were killed or serious ly injured up to 7 o'clock Thursday, Jan uary 17. The report further states that It was estimated that the number of dead would reach 1000. These reports were furnished to the State Department by President Clowry of the Western Union Company on its request for a statement of the situation. The messages - are addressed to Mr. Clowry and follow: "Cable Ship Henry Holmes left St. Thomas for Jamaica with operators and instruments, also medical supplies. Later information from Kingston reports no Americans killed or injured up to 7 P. M.v January 17. "Impossible to" touch charred remains found In bad state of decomposition, necessitating cremating some of them. Estimated dead will reach thousand, mostly negroes. Residential section total ly destroyed. None escaped without damage. Governor Swettenham gradually relieving congestion, ordering people into country, where water supply sufficient to meet all needs and preventing outbreak of contagious diseases, which generally follows such disasters." REFUGEES TELL OF DISASTER Cigar Factory Crushes 1 1 O Workers. '"' Many Limbs Amputated. SANTIAGO. Cuba. Jan. 18. The steam er Thomas Brooks has arrived here from. (Concluded on Page 3.) Tf Ton Were a Great Demo cratic leader 1 !.": . PtifcK . ; ?mK :.. ' DEATH STRUGGLE TO KILL DISEASE Chicago Bends Efforts to Save Children. EPIDEMIC IS ON DECREASE Aim to Keep Scarlet Fever From Aiding Diphtheria. PUBLIC GATHERINGS STOP Society In Big Fashionable Suburbs Turns Hermit Till Enemy Is Beaten Council Votes More Med leal Inspectors. CHICAGO, Jan. 18. (Special.) The fight to stay the progress of the scarlet fever and diphtheria epidemic in Chicago and adjoining suburbs was systematized t$- day. Heroic efforts to save children from contagion were put forth by Ciiicago offl- clals and by the authorities in Evanston, Oak Park and all the other sections af fected, as well as by authorities in other suburbs not yet visited by the -epidemic, who are anxious to keep it from their midst. In many sections there was a decided decrease in the number of new cases re ported. The chief efforts of the Health Department were exerted to keep scarlet fever from spreading- in the southern end of the city, where diphtheria heretofore has been most prevalent. AH Public Gatherings Cease. While Commissioner of Health Whalen was appearing before the City Council finance committee to ask that he be given money to employ 100 new medical Inspec tors, one of the most Important steps in the crusade was taken In Evanston, where Dr. William R. Parkes advised residents to follow the example of Oak Park and discontinue all public gathering until the crisis 1s passed!. The proposed V Cook " County schools swimming meet, which was scheduled to be held at the fvanston Young- Men's Christian Association .tomorrow, was in definitely postponed,. Evanston, Wilmette, Wfnnetlca and Rogers Park society has shut itself up until the- danger Is passed. Dr. Parkes said the situation on the North Shore- was well in hand and that he .expected a decrease in the number of cases inside of a week. Deaths and Xew Cases. Two deaths as a result of the epidemic were reported to the Health Department today. Sixty-four cases of scarlet fever and 21 of diphtheria were reported to the Health Department. Six cases of con tagious diseases other than scarlet fever and diphtheria were recorded by Dr. Spalding and 106 cases were reported yes terday. The Health Department records show there are 15 contagious disease cases in Irving: Park and four cases of the disease in West Pullman. Five new cases of scarlet fever developed in Oak Park in the morning and were reported to the Health Department. RECEIVER FOR THEATER N. X2. .I. Price Starts Suit Against. Fred Belasco and Others. SAN FTtAICCPSOO, Jan. 38. Suit was filed In the Superior Court today to dis solve the business relations between the partners of the Alcazar Theater. The action was brought by E. ID. Price against Kred Belasco, M. E. Ryer and Adolph Ramus!), and asks for a dis solution of partnership, the appointment of a receiver, an accounting, a distribu tion of shares and a temporary injunc tion against the disposal of any property belonging to the firm. The most serious charge made ls that the defendants have misapplied and misappropriated 912,000 be longing to the concern. Noted Engineer Kills Himself. CHICAGO. Jan. 18. A. F Eldrldge of New York killed himself last night with a revolver. The shooting is be lieved by the police to have been acci dental. Mr. Kldridge was assistant chief engineer of thw.Burllngrton road, and was regarded hhly by President WHEN And Were Invited by the Faith ful to Come to Oregon Where, After thnsiastlcally Harris of the Burlington and President fciiiott of the Nortliern Pacific; with whom he had been asoclated for etg-ht years. . Mr. 'XCIdride'e 'waa born at Americus. Georgria, was graduate of the Renssclar Institute of '.Troy, New York, Club, dren. and a member of the University Ue left a widow and two chll- SHIP LETIA IN DISTRSS Vessel In Danger of Going Ashore on Humboldt Coast. EVREKA. Cal.. Jan. 18. The schooner Tjottie- Carson.- arriving -here- tonight, re ports speaking to the schooner Lettie. 4 i'i John . K. Walnb. TCx-Fresident of ChiraKo National Bank, Indicted . for- fraud. bound from San Francisco to this port, in distress off the Humboldt coast. Her sails and booms -were carried away and the vessel was in danger of going ashore should a storm arise. CONTENTS TODAY'S PAPER The Weather. TESTER DAY'S Maximum temperature. 40 degrees; minrmum, 23. TODAY'S Occasional light rains; westerly winds. Kingston Earthquake. American marines land to guard city. Pace 1. Marvy negroes killed by being jammed tn windows, Page 1, ' Every man in large cig-ar factory killed. Page 1 I-lTt of notable dead. Paere 4- Rellef bin passes Senate and- President signs It. Page 3. ; 1 . Foreign. -a.. Frenrh yndlfate given tola; concesalon la Kussla. ( Page 4. Japanese . training fleet encounter! severe storm. Page 4. National. House vote to Increu. salaries and Sen ate will concur. Page 2. Split among Republican Senators on Brownsville riot resolution. Pas. 5. HallliiB'-r appointed Land Commissioner.' Page 3. President Jordan enrages School Board by attack on Japanese policy. Page 4. Politic. Baljer scores victory In Texas Sous.. Page Domestic. ' Hasklns' article on diversity of state laws. Pag. 1. Dyer acquitted of embezzlement. Page S. John R. Walsh Indicted for defrauding balk. Page 3. Chlca'go gathers forces to -light epidemic. Page 1. Terrible floods in Western Pennsylvania, Ohio. Kentucky and Arizona. Page 4. Chancellor Day denounces- labor unions. Page 1. Sport. Dugdale announces he will fight Coast league in Seattle. Page T. Six-team league has been completed for Northwestern circuit. Page 7. Abe Attell knock, out Harry Baker in eight round. Page -T-. ..... ; Paclflo. Coast. Thousands of sheep peristilng from severe cold in Eastern - Washington. Page 6. Store clerk graos bcuc of dynamite caps from stove and . saves six lives. Page 6. : . Committee appointments are made by Wash ington Legislature. Page 6. Commercial and SKarine. Growers -responsible . for firmness of hop market. Page IS. Heavy selling weakens wheat at Chicago. Page 15. Spring trad, opens well. . Page 15.' Bear raid on New Tork stock market. Page 15. , . . Steamer Columbia still fast in the ice. Pag 14. Advance In freight rates between Portland and San Francisco. Tort land and Vicinity. Ten men, Including two suspected of com plicity in Sell wood robbery, captured in raid by police. Page l. Coal shortage brings railroad freight traf fic in Pacific Northwest to a standstill. Page 50. - - HlRh license ordinance strikes' an aft In Ini tiative one Hundred; F. J. McKenna re elected president. Page 11. Fight for presidency of Commercial '01 ub va.ei warm. Page 14. Jury called upon to assess value of lost toes; news of courts. Page 10. Organized labor will parade tonight to show sympathy for carmen's strike. Pag 9. BRYAN COMES TO OREGON Haying Been En- Received 1 , J I . v . to I y : I t l"i j 1 3 And .Welcomed ij a Democrat lo . Mayor and a Democratic Gov- .'-..' SUSPECTS CAUGHT IUD POLICE Ten Men Arrested in Lodging-House. ALL ARE FOUND IN ONE R00! Two Thought to Be Concerned in Sellwood Robbery. CARRIED HEAVY REVOLVERS letectives Believ trie Place AVas Vset as Headquarters for Gang Guilty of a Series of Daring Crimes. TWO HELD WITHOUT HAIL, The police believe they have In custody at least two of the bandits who - shot Patrolmen Eoreaion at Bcllwood early yesterday morning. In a raid on a room In a lodging- liouse at 2284 Front street late yr.l.rday afternoon. a crowd of tough-looking characters were taken into custody. Among the crowd " were F. S. Ranking, aged 21, and Charles An derson, aged 24. who were carrying; revolvers which they tried to hide when the police entered. These two are held at the City Jail without bail. Patrolman Sorenson la confined to Tiia home, where he will have to remain for perhaps six weeks. He was shot through the left foot. Me will not lose the member, as was feared. The robbers secured a small ' amount of money and stamps from the poetolTlce. A posse bunted them all day. In a raid on a room In a lodging--house at 228 Mi Front street, at 3 o'clock yester day afternoon,, the police arrested ; ten men, two of whom tried to hide blue barreled revolvers of large caliber when the officers rushed in, and it is telleved that among -the gang are the three who robbed the post office at Sellwood early yesterday morning, during the progress of which Patrolman Sorensen and the bandits fought a pistol duel, resulting in the officer being wounded in the left foot. The police believe that the ten men taken Into custody at the lodging-house are responsible for a large number of daring crimes in Portland in the past few weeks, and that two of them, at least, were concerned in the Sellwood robbery and the shooting of Patrolman Sorensen. F. S. Ran kins and Charles Anderson are the men believed by the police to have figured In the postoffiee robbery and the shooting of Patrolman Sorensen, as they are the pair who tried to hide revolvers. when the detectives rushed Into the room and placed them under arrest. They re fused to talk, and assumed an ugly atti tude when questioned at headquarters. Gang Is a Large One. Investigation 'by the police showed that as many as 16 men had been working from the room in the lodging-house at 22R, Front street for several weeks, and all evidently had been taking their meals there. The place was equipped for cook ing, and it looked as though they all ate there; and the police believe that they used the room to plan crimes. Information to the effect that sus- piclous characters were Inhabiting the room where the men were found was conveyed to the police yesterday, and de tective Sergeant Baty, with Acting De- tectives Burke and Klenlen, raided the, place. At the first entrance of the of ficers, Hankins and Anderson were not in the room, but they were found later. P.anklns and Anderson represent the proverbial "tall and short" men. who have been creating; a reign of terror In Portland for several weeks, and It ls the- firm belief of the police that they are the leaders of as desperate a rang as ever operated In this city. They were completely surprised when confronted by the police, and tried to throw away their weapons. "TKey-could not do so. and the large revolvers, fully loaded, were held at headquarters as evidence. ' Among the gang taken from the room Ion Made a Spwch That Wa Tremendous Success ' was Tim Jones, aged 23 years, who was recently arrested on suspicion of being the man who heldup and robbed Mrs. Thomas Roberts of a Canadian 25-ccnt piece in front of the First Congregational Church last Saturday night, as she was going home. When called upon to identify him, she waa unable to do so. and he was released, but the police believe him to have been guilty of the crime, and when he was found in company with the others taken from the room yesterday afternoon, their belief was strengthen!. The names of the gang as given the police at headquarters were as follows: W. J. RodRors, James Roland. Charles -Winters, William Clark, Nick Miller, VI1- llam Sweeney, Tim Jones, Frank Kelley, K. S. Rankjns, Oharles Anderson. Two Guns Used by Whole Gang. The police believe that the members of this gang have been using the re volvers found on nankins and Anderson, and that they have been alternating at crimes, one pair going out one night and another pair the next. It ls the theory of the officers that the system was worked in that manner so as to baffle the police In descriptions, and to make It appear that different men were perpe trating the crimes each night. In each case reported to headquarters the de scriptions of the robbers have varied slightly, but in each Instance blue-barreled revolvers have been used. . That members of this gang have com mitted every crime here in the past few weeks, with the exception of three safe robberies. Is the belief of the police. The latter will set about to gather evidence against the prisoners, who are at pres ent booked on vagrancy charges. Among the more desperate and daring of the crimes ascribed to the members of the gang are the binding, gagging and robbing of W. W. Beardsley, wife and servant in their home last week; the brutal assault and robbery of Non Tung, a Chinese, at Mount Tabor, and the post office' robbery at Sellwood yesterday morning. PISTOL BATTtE IV THE SNOW Policeman shot During Duel That Pollows Discovery of Robbers. Patrolman Andrew O. Sorenson. who was shot twice in the left foot during a pitched battle with a trio of burglars, at Sellwood early yesterday morning, is rest ing easy at his home. Second and Market streets. He will probably be about in six Weeks. Sorenson found the burglars loot ing the postoffiee. and the fight followed. The brave officer, single-handed, made every effort to capture the robbers. After making his 3 o'clock report from the engine-house at Rast Thirteenth and Ten.lno streets. Sorenson stepped to the door and looked up and down the street. A heavy snow was falling and objects NX) yards away were dimly visible, although the arc lights were burning brightly. Sorenson stepped to the sidewalk and started walk ing toward ; ITmatillu- i'ieet. ane block south from where he had reported to headquarters. J-I had proceeded only a few yards when he noticed a short man. Wearing a light overcoat extending about to his knees, standing In front of the postoffiee. .At first the officer thought the man was a laborer waiting for the early morning car which passes that Intersec tion, but suddenly remembering that the expected car was not due for one hour. the officer quickened his pace and soon reached the corner. As Patrolman Sorenson n eared the scene he noticed two lights flrfshlng- inside the Postoffiee and at the same time the short man on the sidewalk caught sight of the officer and dodged inside the fence at the rear of the postomce. After warning his companions, the robber peeped from be hind the corner at the south end of the building and seeing the officer approach ing, shouted: "Stop where you are or 111 shoot." Sorenson refused to heed the warning, whereupon he was greeted by a shot from the robber's revolver. Pistol Duel in the Snow. Sorenson lost no time In replying to the shot,, taking: refuge behind a telegraph pole. Evidence of his good marksmanship was afterwards found by an examination of the corner of the building behind which the highwayman was sheltered. A. regu lar fusillade followed, and as Sorenson stepped from behind the telephone pole a bullet struck him In the ankle, prevent ing him from advancing. The officer emptied his sixshooter, but with what success has not yet been determined. Blood spots were said to have been found where the robber sought refuge at the approach of the officer, but these were not in evidence at the time Patrolmen Wen- dorf and Gruber and an Oregonian re porter searched the rear yard of the postoffiee. The shooting was reported to Captain of Police Bailey, of whose relief the wounded officer is a member, and the patrol wagon -with Patrolmen Wendorf and Gruber waa quickly on the way to the scene. Gruber drove from Second and Oak to East Thirteenth and Umatilla through the heavy snow and rough streets in 40 min utes, and' after ascertaining that Sorenson was not seriously wounded, the Two offi cers commenced a preliminary search. As (Concluded on Page 11.) a If Some One Reminded T 1'ou of I Major- . Orerons Overwhelming MaJ ity Wouldn't It Jar Voo GREAT DIVERSITY OF STATE LIS Reach All Extremes on Every Subject. MANY EFFORTS AT UNIFORMITY Freaks, Fads and Fanaticism Rule Legislators. WHEM WAR THREATENED Different Quarantine Lavs Km- broiled Two States State ConstN tutionn Also Vary Greatly and Are Hard to Amend. BT FREDERIC J. HASKIK. Washington, Jan. l2.-(Speclal Correspondence.)-! the signs of the t'mcs fail not. the American people will soon devotes much thought to considering- the difference between the laws of the sev eral states and of the Federal Govern ment. This subject has already formed the text for & message from the American President and a . notable speech by the American Premier. Our complex system of state laws includes within its rang, the chicken-stealing- felony of Kentucky. the blue laws of New England, which all but provide punishment for frivolous thinking- on Sunday. the dlvorce-made-easy mill of South Dakota. and. the trusts-bullt-while-you-walt factory of New Jersey. With all the talk of "centralisation" and of "wiping out state laws," there Is, of course, no intention upon anybody's part of Interfering with what the sov ereign State of New York shall say to her barbers about the plans and specifi cations of the powder pulls which It shall be lawful for them to use upon the faces of ' the sovereign citizens of that state. Hut whether eome one state, for Its own reasons, shall by the enactment and en forcement 6f bad. la ws or the 'neglect and . non-enforcement of srood laws be per mitted to do thlngrs which work to the in Jury of other states or the country at large ifi another question. Leaving it settlement to the members of Congress andt the dry-goods-box statesmen of the various communities, it Is interesting to look for a moment at the difference in our state laws. Important ones and pecu liar ones aa well. Law Against Honey Bees. A. Missouri legislator. Riley Self, of the Ozark region, once walked down a. street in Jefferson City into a rear-end collision with a honey-bee. Riley was' so ex asperated at the audacity - of the little bee In attacking his person without rea son or provocation that he rushed to the legislative hall and added a special chap ter to the state law - which made It a misdemeanor to keep honey-bees within 200 yards of a public highway. This statute ls still in effect. One may break into a house in many states and get off with a year in prison. , but in South Carolina one may be hanged for the same offense. In most of the states there ls a sum of money fixed as a limit between petit larceny and, grand larceny, usually about o0; but fn Kentucky If one steals even an old, debilitated, domlnecker rooster, long since, past his day of usefulness and not wortti 60 cents, It ls a penitentiary offense. While Kentuckians are not especially strong for the tariff, they Insist upon protection for their hen-roosts. Civil War About Quarantine. The diversity In the quarantine laws In the states which fear the yellow fever plague was so great that for a few days recently actual war existed between Louisiana and Mississippi. The result was a conference of Governors of the Southern states at Chattanooga, whera it was resolved to turn over the quaran tine work to the Federal Government. Congress has si need passed a law to , make the agreement effective. . Once in a while, on a dull day. some enterprising Justice of the peace digs, into forgotten laws and makes things happen. Recently when the Governor of Ken tucky attempted to "put the lid on" tn Ioulsvllle. a magistrate found an old law that made working for profit on Sunday a misdemeanor and which Incidentally provided for a good fee for the magistrate who brought the offender to Justice. This vigilant upholder of the majesty of the law swore in some extra constables and arrested cooks, choir singers, hackdrivers. streetcar motormen In fact everybody he found working . on Sunday and hauled them Into court. Before public opinion forced him to shut down a few week, later he had collected enough fees' to pay his house rent for a year. California makes the "heathen Chinee" pay such a high license for the exquisite privilege of working in gold mines that the Celestial cannot compete at all with white labor. In this Kind of work. There are many patient husbands ... New York Oity who would be glad to see the Em pire State follow the example of Ten- nessee and put such a heavy tax on trad ing stamps as to drive them out of busi ness. Tennessee prohibits flirt In gr with sirls attending: boarding schools by a statute called the "Johnny-law," but the enactment' Is silent about all other types and forms of flirtation. Tn Indiana one may be arrested and fined for the crime- of having In his possession a cigarette or the "makln's thereof." To paraphrase Holy "Writ, "of making (Concluded cn fags 2.)