THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN, PORTLAND, r OCTOBER, 14, 1906. ,000000000005 P0" 5o' 'oooooo FREE DISTRIBUTION OF TEXT BOOKS . . By jas. R. Forden A Vigorous Protest by One Who Is Thoroughly Familiar With the System. 36 OTmiHltUlMHIMIMmilUMIlllllllUlY'-s" llllll'"J4jnj AN article In the Sunday Oregonian for September 30 entitled "Favor Free Books" attracted my at tention. It says that educators of Multnomah County are interesting themselvts in the free text book bill being proposed by Hon. J. W. Bever idge for introduction at the next ses sion of the Legislature and adds that the general opinion seems to be favor able to such a law. I hope that not only the educators but patrons as well Twill thoroughly Investigate this ques tion before giving their support to euch an important measure. From the standpoint of ono who has been an educator I want to record my protest Bgalnst such a public dissemination of Kree filth. Free distribution of text books has fcome advantages in securing the har monious organization of the public frhools of which that mentioned by Superintendent Rigler is very pertinent GOVERNMENT ROBBED BY RAILROADS . . By SEE by The Oregonian, both as news and editorially, that the State Grange of Oregon proposes to take action to secure reform In the postal depart ment. This is well and timely. Two years ago, when the advocates of ithe present system held up the deficit In the postal department as an argument against Socialism the writer went to the trouble of looking up the causes of the xleflclt and published the chief ones In ft letter to The Oregonian. Those same fauses still exist today and I will repeat them. Furthermore, the situation Is worse today than then, for Postmaster-General Cortelyou himself recently Issued an or tfer forbidding the employes, either to gether or Individually, to act in any effort to improve their conditions. They ere prohibited from petitioning Congress or their Congressmen for better salaries or more favorable conditions of work on pain of being incontinently discharged. Railway postal employes have been both fined and suspended for criticising the management of a road following a fatal WHENCE ECCLESIASTICS are public function aries and as such are the legitimate subjects of criticism. They have no more right to expect to be exempt from It than the illuminated magnates of the Standard Ool. Both are In the business of distributing light. And to this end I elso hope to contribute in some slight degree. Preachers are commonly called pastors. Pastor is Latin for shepherd. The peo ple are undestood to be the sheep and the pastor Is supposed to feed them on admonitions, platitudes, exhortations, re proofs, rebukes and other spiritual con fections that he understands to be adapt ed to the welfare of their souls. In the Catholic churches the clergy are called priests. The word priest is a con traction of Presbyter, which is Greek for Elder or old man. Senator Is Latin for eld man. Among primitive people such as the Greeks, Romans and American In dians, the old men were supposed to be wiser and more experienced in the affairs of life than the young men or the chil dren, hence we find senators In the state and presbyters in the church. The old man was not supposed to labor in the field or shop. He was thought fit to be Adviser, director and counsellor and en titled to some respect. Now all this Is changed. Our educa tional facilities have become so effectual SOCIALISM'S ONE DISTINCT MISSION . . , By J. THE reading of the article "The Earth and Its Fullness," pub lished in your paper Septem ber 16, will prove to any unpre judiced, fair-minded reader that "Kam Brado'' is trying to show the injustice end moral wrong of owning and holding from the people the natural resources as Individual or private property and had to quote recognized authority to sup port his statements, regardless of his personal views of God, the devil or John F. Hogan. As the limitation of most minds Is to fne idea at a time I can not scatter to deal with so many scrappy quotations as he has labored to produce. Socialism is contending for economic justice. Chris tianity contends for social Justice. So cialism ag a doctrine Is fundamentally the same In' its teaching in Germany, France. Italy, Austria, Spain. Russia EARNEST IT is a surprise utterly dumbfounding to find one's self alive. That there is such a thing as being, as reality, as substance, as activity, as life, Is the su premely startling and overwhelming fact. It seems Impossible but that absolute nothingness should universally prevail. But on the contrary personal conscious ness confronts us with Its Illuminating declarations. Can any normally sane man believe that something derives its being from nothing? Then personal consciousness, which first declares reality, therefore furthermore SOCIALISM IS APPLIED CHRISTIANITY . . By C. S. Howard MULINO, Or.. Oct. 8. (To the Editor.) The article, "Socialism Denies God." in your Issue of October 4. by John F. Hogan, is so entirely wrong that I beg space to set your readers right. Your correspondent knows nothing about Socialism, or he is deliberately attempt ing to deceive them. He has quoted the Faying of a few individuals as though that was the whole Socialist principles. Let us take up his objections and analyze thm. First Socialism is not logical unless it denies the existence of God. If the Volks Zeltung made such a statement, of which Mr. Hogan will be required to furnish to the question. His argument can be met, however, under our present sys tem without resorting to free text books. Uniformity can be secured through legislative action adopting certain texts which will be the ones the booksellers will care to handle. At the opening of the school year and at such other times as is necessary, enough books can be transferred from the retailers to the several school buildings and there dispensed by some one selected to do so with no more expense and confusion than that of the distribution of books owned by the Board of Education. The other plea that It will Increase the attendance can be secured In a better compulsory education law. So far at the deserving poor are con cerned a more sympathetic and effi cient endeavor to supply their needs will take care of this matter. In East Saginaw, Mich., where free text books and in fact all the neces sary equipment of paper, pencils, etc.. wreck, and are now effectively muzzled against future complaints by being sternly reprimanded, fined $30 each and sus pended, from their runs for ten days and forbidden to make criticisms in future on pain of discipline or dismissal. We are still without parcels post or postal savings banks. When ohn WJannamaker was Postmaster-General he was asked what were the chief obstacles to the parcels post, to which he very tersely replied: "The five big express companies" Just as bankers and money sharks are between the people and postal savings banks? Now, cdnccrnlng the robbing of the gov ernment by the railroads: Railroads are run for a profit. They must earn divi dends first, last and always. Everything else is secondary, even the public serv ice. Vanderbilt once said, "The public be damned," and that Is about the senti ment of all railroad owners. How the Government Is Robbed. Senator Vilas, of Wisconsin, in a speech THE SOURCE OF AUTHORITY .. By J. L. Jones that a child when It graduates from the publio school, knows more than all Its ancestors ever heard of. And mere callow youths can now be turned out of Kie theo logical schools with diplomas to teach the antique baldheads and doddering gray beards how to walk In the fear of the Lord and keep from getting too gay. We have a right to be proud of our schools. Our children can Instruct us In anything from maneuvering a man of war to ad ministering an episcopate. But this is a digression. Let us stick to the text. Ecclesiastics are also called ministers. The word minister Is Latin for servant. The ecclesiastic Is a servant of God. He is also supposed to be a serv ant of the people. The politicians are also servants of the people that Is before election. But afterwards their function Is changed to that of pastor and they dex terously perform the work of shearing their flock, which is supposed to exist for the express purpose of yielding up Its wool In exchange for the Inestimable privilege of being exhorted or governed. Now there are differences In servants. The kinds that take orders from us in the kitchen or shop are to be carefully distinguished from those who instruct us from the . pulpit or those more exalted ministers of state before whom we come with our humble petitions, much in the same manner as we approach the far off gates of heaven and with the same uncertainty of welcome or acceptance. The whole relations of master and ser vant, pastor and flock, politician and peo England, North and South America and Japan and China. ' While there may be many different kinds of Individuals in their beliefs and ideas of what Socialism Is. scientific or modern socialism stands everywhere where It Is taught for three distinct principles: First, collective or common ownership of the means of production and dis tribution. Second, the democratic organization and administration of the same. Third, the equal opportunity to enjoy the benefits thereof. This first principle is now extant In our postoffice, our common schools, our publio libraries and public parks. It Is an old trick to inveigle or seduce Socialists into a religious discussion, so much so that once in a while a new convert with his enthusiasm is led Into a heated discussion on the subject; there SEEKING AFTER DIVINITY . By Rev. declares, as it were with the same breath, an eternally self-existent reality as the Infinite source of all finite and inflnltesl Vial forms. And what is the difference between ab solute death and nothing? There is no difference. Yet the atoms and molecules of matter when conceived of as some thing entirely separate from the forms of life which make use of them as their receptacles and clothes, are in a state of absolute death. What an absurdity then Is the supposition that life origi nated In matter! That which Is self ex proof, it would be promptly repudiated by all Socialist organizations. Second It Is our duty to root out the faith in God with all our zeal. This statement by Liebknecht, as well as the third by Sholl and the fourth by Karl Marx, have been wrested from their sur rounding passages and given a wrong construction. Beyond question these men were opposed to religion, but what kind of religion? The kind that stands for the sway of a corrupt and merciless aristocracy that Is responsible for bloody Sundays, and tells the working class (in the midst of their terrible sufferings) to be patient in this world and they will reach heaven In the next; th kind, of was tried the supplies were dispensed from a central storeroom in the base ment of the High School building, which required the special services of a clerk to keep the records of transfer or exchange of supplies. Now from the standpoint of organization this sounds well, but to one who had the opportunity to see the inner work ings of the system it was exceedingly repulsive. It was the Intention to keep the old books in fair condition of repair, but a shortage of a certain text would un avoidably occur, a hurry-up call from some building would be sent in, or the clerk would be negligent about dis carding badly worn books, all of which" would Inevitably result in the use of books that ought to have been burned years before. It was Impossible to keep the stock clean and presentable. Box after box of soiled books were being constantly collected and dis carded. The best argument I could ! put forth against such a system would in the Senate February IS, 1S95. supplied the following figures, among others: The cost of building one of the railway postoffice cars averages $3600. The railroads charge the government a certain rental for the use of these cars. In addition to making the government pay for the hauling of the cars. According to the railroad figures sup plied to Senator Vilas, the following ex pense accompanies the operating of postal cars for each year: .Light, $276 a year; heating, $365 a year; repairs, $350 a year: cleaning, $365 a year; total average cost of maintaining each car In use, $1356. It Is needless to point out the extrava gance of these estimates. But let them stand for the purpose of argument. When Senator Vilas was speaking, It was proposed to appropriate $3,250,000 to be paid by the government for the renting of postoffice cars during the ensuing year. That amount was to be paid for 790 post office cars 560 cars in use, 180 cars in re serve, and B0 additional cars that might become necessary. According to the railroads' own figures, the cost of maintaining and operating these cars would be $R90,160. Take that amount from the appropriation of $3,250,000 ple, need to be adjusted anew. How can a person be master and servant at the same time? How can he serve the people If the people are expected to serve him? Can he be Julius Caesar and Uriah Heep at once? Which Is superior, the people or the politician, the flock or the pastor, the many that get sheared or the few that do the clipping, the many that serve or the few that rule? This raises the fundamental question of authority. The word clergy means chosen ones. What are the conditions of the chosen? Has the criminal a right to choose his own Judge, who will decide that he is an innocent and humble man? have the profligate and vicious a right to employ their own private priests, who will remit their sins and exalt their vices into virtues? Who can say that this 1s not the common practice of the world, as It has been in all ages that we know of. Let us go back and read a chapter of history. In the year 1066 the Duke of Normandy, at the head of an army of adventurers, invaded England, defeated and killed the Saxon king, took posses sion of the country, divided the land among his followers, and reduced the Saxon population to a state of serfdom. In which their descendants remain to this day. This Norman conquest, as It is called, is one of the great epochs, or turning points. In history. Guns and bowle knives were yet unknown, but the Norman Duke was handy with a club and long bow. fore at conventions held by Socialists they have had to declare themselves that on religion as on marriage Socialism has no special teaching. The Social-Democrats of Germany In their Gotha programme of 1875 declared! religion to be a private concern. Whether I accept the Bible version as set forth In Genesis or accept the evolu tionary theory of creation Socialism has no concern nor does it interfere with my freedom to believe In anything I want to. It Is solely concerned that I shall In common with all humanity have my industrial freedom the same as I now enjoy religious, intellectual and poli tical freedom: All I need to believe to be accepted as a Socialist is that I recognize the class struggle and that labor produces all wealth and Is entitled to the full product of its labor. There are individual Socialists who istent Is life! Matter, which, in itself. Is in a state of death. Is not the self-existent thing. To befleve so is equivalent to believing that something can come from nothing. Personal consciousness also declares the existence of an infinite variety of things.' And Is It not a fact that there is a dif ference between any two things some thing by which the one Is distinguished from the other? Are any two things in all the universe precisely the same? None but the Idiotically inclined would so af firm. And yet, to give this emphasis to religion that repudiates Its own professed doctrines (when promulgated by Social ists) and agrees with anarchists that all the sins of the world are to be laid at the door of individuals; that kind of religion that meets the honest at tempts of Socialists and others to edu cate the people to a proper understand ing of economic conditions with the end in view of making the world better, with a contemptuous shrug of the shoulders. Karl Marx had never seen any real Christianity practiced, and consequently was against the sham that passed as such, and rightly so. To prove that Socialism is not contrary pale into Insignificance beside a con signment of these worn-out books after a year's use, to the Portland City Hall for public Inspection; covers gone or hanging; half the leaves torn loose; many missing; the remainder dog-eared: dirty. greasy, thumb marked, pencil checked. Ink be-spat-tered, questionable quotations inter lined; the whole so foul-smelling and filthy as to be a serious menace to the health and self respect of every child and teacher in the schoolroom. "Without another argument, the one of health alone ought to be sufficient. In this day of wise sanitary measures for the prevention of infectious diseases among our school children, in the use of individual drinking cups, the exchange df the slate for the sanitary pencil pad. constant oversight of the health officers and what not. It seems like the idle thoughts of an idle fellow to even sug gest the adoption of such a pernicious practice Into our far from hygienic school management. 'Tis true the teacher and and you find that the railroads were paid by the Government $2,314,840 for the use of the cars for one year.) To build those cars ontrlght cost only, $2,765,060, so that, after deducting a suffi cient amount to renew the cars and keep them in order, the railroads steal from the Government in one year practically the total cost of building the cars. In addition, the Government pays an extra vagantly high rate for hauling all these cars. Things have been getting' worse In stead of better since Vilas made his speech. For the fiscal year ended June SO, 1901, the Government paid to the railroad companies for the use of postoffice cars as rental,. Independent of too hauling of the . cars $4,G3S, 234. 03: 765 cars were used. Thus, as rental for each car. the Government paid an average of $6063.05. To build a mall car costs $3500; the outside limit as fixed by the railroads of the cost of maintaining and operat ing the car in use is $1356 a total of $4856 for building a car and keeping It In order for a year. Therefore, the Government paid the railroads for each car per year the In fact, he was an all-round bacl man, and his followers were as jovial and joyous a train of cavaliers as ever adopted the noble profession of Elitting throats or sacking towns. William himself was born outside of wedlock, but this sin was forgotten and forgiven. The whole aggregation, dukes, counts, barons and squires were all of a kind. There was not a crime on the calendar they would not commit for pleas ure or profit. Murdering their own rela tives and assassinating intimate friends were pastimes frequently Indulged In. There was not an honest man among the lot. Though some were better than others. By an honest man I mean one who earned his living honestly. None of them did that. They fought for a living as prizefighters do now. They kept the property of those they killed for there was no way for the dead to recover. A man could not earn a living honestly and be a nobleman or even a gentleman. It was a disgrace to labor with any tool but a weapon of war. Farmers were called boors, working men were villains, varlets, pigs, slaves, dogs, and were clubbed or killed with as little compunc tion as If they were dumb' animals. Yet these men who treated the slaves so cruelly were gallant knights, honor able gentlemen, noblemen, as they sup posed, and were intensely and devoutly religious in their way. Their bishops fought in the front of the battle. Cruci fixes were kept as convenient as swords, are atheists as well as Catholics, Bud dhists as well as Protestants: there are Socialists among Chinese, who are believers In Confucius, etc., etc. There Is no single doctrine outside of Christianity that has such a hetero geneous race of believers and none that is making more marvelous growth among all races of people. Now, while all evangelical churches have one com mon belief in that Christ is divine and the Son of God, I believe that Is their one and only fundamentally common belief to make them Christians. Frem this basic belief they divide them selves Into sects upon different creeds that separate them into many different churches. Now. with this Socialism has nothing whatever to do. but is solely concerned with a positive and constructive pro gramme of education, notwithstanding the antagonism and opposition of the this very simple and self-evident fact Is thoroughly justified because of the im plied 'denial of It in the religious logic of that rapidly growing number who aspire to make themselves Identical with the Infinite and divine. The primary or fundamental difference or distinction between any two forms of life is to be found in the qualities of those two lives. Every form of life Is unique because of Its unique quality of being. Is there not a difference of some kind between the eternally self-existent life and any one of the finite forms of life that has been created by it? The self existent is in itself an organized unit in to real religion or denies God "I will make some quotations. The ethics of Socialism and the ethics of Christianity are identical. Encyclo pedia Brltannlca. What the Socialist desires is that the corporation of humanity should control all production. It eliminates the motives of a selfish life: it enacts into our every day life Christ's gospel. Nothing else will do It. It Is the very marrow of Christ's gospel: it is Christianity ap plied. Frances Willard. - Socialism is simply applied Christianity; the golden rule In every-day life. Pro fessor Ely. Some may hold that only science every one connected with the school is expected to look out for the unclean books, the careless pupil, the dirty hands and the diseased child, but with the greatest watchfulness some and often all of these dangerous elements continually manifest themselves unobserved. Who will confidently declare that, with free books, none of them will enter homes infected with germs of contagious dis ease, or that the probability of Infection will be materially lessened? Will such a system diminish the spread of the "white plague"? Until our oversight of the health and dally habits of the home life of our school children is much more stringent and effective, no one can intel ligently answer In the affirmative. As well talk of a public wash cloth and face towel, a public wardrobe for the thinly clad, as to put into law the require ment, or even permission, that clean, healthy , children accept on the opening day of the school year several books whose condition and former ownership may cast a shadow on their whole lives. Charles Pye total cost of building the car, the cost of maintaining it, and $1207.05 addi tional. Every year the railroads get back from the Government the entire cost of every car, the entire cost of main taining and operating them, $1207.05 besides, and the regular scale for car rying the malls, as the law provides an extravagantly high rate over and above all the rest. Individual railroads fare better than others. Take, for example, the New York Central Railroad, which owned one of New York State's Representatives in the United States Senate, Mr. Depew, ind controlled the other, Mr. Piatt, through his express company. The New York Central carries the Goveramcnt mails on the routes from New York to Buffalo. In 1901 the Government paid the New York Cen tral $230,038.60" for the use of 22 cars. Therefore the Government paid to the New York Central for one year $10, 456.07 for each car. That Is . to say, each year it pays the original cost of building the car, and the total cost of maintaining the car twice over. and. if their sins were duly shriven by a priest these pious soldiers of fortune would dance as gaily to their death as to their dinner. t Now these cavaliers, or cutthroats, whichever you please to call them, were the ancestors and founders of present European ancestry and royalty. Most of the land In England belongs to their de scendants to this day. Their titles were written in blood a,nd have been perpetu ated by frequent applications of the same Indelible ink. Yet this was all done in the name o'l religion. The Pope of Rome sanctioned William's expedition and congratulated him on his success In bringing England Into the true fold. The Saxons were cleared out of church and state; Norman bishops and priests were appointed. Saxony were not allowed to officiate un less they apostatized, turned against their own people and acknowledged the divine right of Norman supremacy. Thus the whole transaction was con summated in the name of God and for his especial glory. The churches were compelled to teach that the whole opera tion was divinely ordained and also to pray for the King and the orders of no bility under him. The King thus became the source of authority, the origin of law and the fountain-head of religion. For the Saxons to try to recover their own was not only treason against the state, but heresy H. Fairbrook Catholic Church. the Protestant churches, many newspapers, and also many so-called economic and political organizations. It is a well-known fact that Robert Ingersoll was a great Republican ora tor and a pronounced and open atheist, but this did not cause the Catholic archbishop, the Methodist bishop, the Episcopalian bishop, the presbyter, etc.. of Republican princi ples and beliefs to denounce Ingersoll or Republicanism, and why? Well, that would be another subject which cannot be exploited here, but is pertinent, in view of the continuous and at" times violent denunciation of Socialism by the church and not de nunciation of the church by Socialism. "But you Socialists would Introduce community of women." screams the whole bourgeois in chorus. The bourgeois sees in his wife a Mr. Vrooman the sense that a man Is an organized unit notwithstanding there is within him In numerable cells. The infinite one abides In Ms own unique state of being and therefore has his own distinctive quality of love. The word divine represents God's own distinctive and absolutely unique quality of love. It is an adjective which designates primarily a distinction. It helps us to think definitely of the infinite one. ' Persons who are claiming divinity for themselves, and who are ambitious to become infinite, are seeing confused out lines of things as in a fog. There is a strange kind of an entanglement In their teaches Socialism, but I am free to be lieve that both science and the Bible teach it. Rev. George W. Woodby. To us Socialism Is the political and economic prbgramme of Jesus. Rev. Carl D. Thompson. Atheism is no more a part of Socialism than It is of radicalism or liberalism. Christ's teachings are often said to be Socialistic. It Is not Socialistic, but it is Communistic, and Communism 1? the most advanced form of the policy known as Socialism. Robert Blatchford. The law of economic determinism, discovered and analyzed by Karl Marx, Is. stated as follows: "The economic con dition of a people at any given period I Chairman Beach is right in his feai that children would use free bonks reck lessly. It fosters wasteful, careless hab its in the children. It is an Important part of the child's education that he own and care for his own books. Mr. Wltten-. berg hit the nail on the head. We are not seeking paternalism, but a harmoni ous unity out of Individual self-dependence and pride In one's own honest effort toward self-eupport. Nothing develops self-respect and a high moral regard for the belongings of others as the realization by a boy or girl that he Is responsible for his small betbngings. What a proud child on the first morning to school when It takes Its own books In hand and real izes that they are all Its own How Jeal ous the children become of their own books, pencil pads, etc.! With what ex treme nicety they care for them when encouraged In their ambition to own something of their own. One of the strongest arguments for the manual arts In the school curriculum is the cultiva tion of this worthy ambition to secure Excessive Pay for Carrying the Mails Explains the Deficit in the Postal Department. And at the end of the year the rail road still owns the car. In addition the railroad company re ceived from the Government $1.2SS. 080 for transporting the malls, under the regular weight schedule, between New York and Buffalo. Poor's Manual gives the PennsyN vanla Railroad's own figures for 1900 as to Its earnings." On passengers the railroad earns a small fraction over. 2 cents per mile per passenger. " On freight It earns a little less than a third of a cent a mile per ton. The Government, however, pays all the railroads, including the Pennsyl vania, an average of $12.13 per mile. In Oilier Lands. The United States Government pays every year to the railroads $38,000,000 for carrying the malls and for the use of cars. In France the railroads carry the malls free. In return for their grants of right of way. In Switzerland all railroads are government property. In Germany and Austria all rail roads must carry one mall car free. Criticism of Ecclesiastics and Public Functionaries; No Change in the Shepherds or Sheep. against the church and rebellion against God. Now I am not setting this forth as an attack upon the church by any means. It was Just as if one Indian had killed another and carried off his squaw. The church stands in the same relation to the state that the wife does to the hushand. The Church of England was compelled to transfer her loyalty and love from a Saxon savage to a Norman tyrant. She had a new lord and master thrust forcibly upon her outraged affections. What could she do? Now let us get back home and trace the correspondence. Names have changed and words are spelled differently, but the Normans still possess the stolen prop erty and the Saxons still plod round In heavy cowhide boots. Farmers are not now called boom, but they are called clodhoppers. A working man Is -called by all the old names and a lot of new ones. The laziness of the wqrklngman Is still one of the perennial themes of the pulpit and one of the great est troubles of the rich. If the man won't work at all they call him a hobo and put him on the chain-gang. If he Is too anxious to work and steals his neigh bor's Job he is called a scab and is likely to be murdered. If he quits work all the names In the dictionary, besides injunc tions and bullets, are fired at him. But there's not so much In the mattpr of a man's calling as in the manner of This Is Economic Justice, and Religion Has No Place in the New World-Wide Movement. mere instrument of production. He hears that the Instruments of produc tion are to be exploited In common, and, naturally, can come to no other conclusion than that the lot of being common to all will likewise fall to women. He has not even a Husplclon that the real point aimed at Is to do away with the status of women as mere In struments of production. For the rest, nothing is more ridic ulous than the virtuous Indignation of our bourgeois at the community of women, which, they pretend, is to be openly and officially established by the Socialists. The Socialists have no need to In troduce community of women; it has existed almost from time immemorial. I quote from New York Independent, August 30. 1906:- This extraordinary editorial note ap Personal Consciousness Declarers an Eternal Reality As the Infinite Source of All Finite Forms. thoughts. If It were not for a partially redeeming Innocence, that usually accom panies It, this assertion of a man's being able to become clivlne and infinite would be blasphemous presumption. It Is vital to the logic of our thoughts in this connection to observe that the difference that exists between two things does not necessarily cause the two things to be separated. Two things are dif ferent even when they are connected. The reader will observe a difference between himself and his right arm but the two are not separated. There Is the con nection of relationship even between the two most distantly separated molecules of Clackamas County's Socialist Secretary Quotes Un prejudiced Writers and Reformers on Subject. dominates all other conditions." Now, If religion Is a product of the economics, or the way In which the people get their material necessities, for Socialists to at tack it would be to repudiate their own law, or to say that it could be changed without changing the economics. Now in conclusion I will say that the statement that free lovs and the abolishing of mar riage Is a part of the Socialist programme Is a fabrication pure and simple, as no Socialist document ever advocated such a thing. In the light of the above 1 think your readers will agree that It would be as foolish for Socialists to waste their time and energy In attempt ing to prove the nonexistence of God as possession through Individual effort. With free textbooks, the child thinks: "It's not mine: what's the use?" And this tendency reflects Itself in his wasteful habits and disregard for property rights in after-life. Never In our National history has there ben gmater need for an education that fhould teach Its prospective citizens that public property Is not for spoliation in the hands of those fortunate enough to lay melr hands upon It. We learn to ap preciate the value of a friendship, the pleasures of ownership, the exultation In victory, through the realization of hav ing done something that requires the giv ing of self In their attainment. Free books to school children will develop no such traits, but. on the other hand, will stultify any ambition in this direction. Let there be a law providing uniform textbooks, but keep the vicious practice of depending upon the publio treasury to supply our every need out of It. Portland, Oct. 4. The British Parliament, like our own National Congress, consists largely of men owned by the railroads. But they have, some shame over there, and, al though the British mail service In cludes the parcels post, and does the work of our express companies, the government pays to the railroads for all of Its carrying, including thi3 enormous parcel express business, only one-ninth of the amount which our Government pays the railroads for carrying of pure mail matter. The railroads overcharge the Gov ernment for carrying the mails. The postal department knows it; Congress knows it: the Senators know it; the Cabinet knows it; the President knows It. Then why Is It not stopped? Echo answers in capital letters Why? Go ask the lobby 1 nthe hire of the cor porations. And the principal aid to effective work by the Grange can be obtained by a knowledge of the work of thl.i lobby. Under socialism these things, and all the fraud and most of the crime with which the papers teem could not and would not happen. Woodstock, Oct. 4. it. The ecclesiastic who Is called of God takes breakfast leisurely at 8 o'clock and does not do much between meals but study and converse and visit with the brethren and sisters. But the modern villain is called fiercely and Imperatively by a mill whistle and he has to hike out at 5 o'clock In the morn ing and get a hump on htm. He is not hired for his conversational ability nor his good looks. He has to grunt and sweat and strain his muscles, disable his back and dislocate his kidneys, and yet come up in time smiling and cheerful and ask. "Is there anything more I can do for you?" And the ecclesiastics preach the tame gospel as in the days of the Norman In vader. They teach the villain to be con tented with his lot and admonish him against covetousness because God In his inscrutable wisdom has blessed him with poverty and his superiors with wealth. They perform their double part with skill. They are ministers to the rich and serve them. They know their owner'3 crib and they absolutely must earn their wages. But they are pastors to the poor. They assist in shearing them. They throw theological chaff In their eyes. They feed them on husks and cons, glit tering generalities and wormy apples. Verily they have their reward, and their works do follow them. Corvallls, Oct. 6. pears In one of the most Independent pa pers of Its class, the Catholic Citizen, of Milwaukee: "At Milwaukee the past week there came before the Board of Aldermen a question of granting licenses to 11 noto rious saloons, most of which are virtual ly temples of 'free love.' "Singular to relate, all of the 12 Social ist Aldermen vot(d against licensing these places; and. sad to say, all the Catholic Aldermen.- except one. voted to license these temples of free love. Evidently It is a condition and not a theory that con fronts us." We offer no comment except to say that It concerns those whom it concerns. I might cite that every transient rooming-house in every large city Is a rendezvous for the exercise of "free love." and In view of the action taken In Milwaukee and other places you can readi'.y know that John F. Hogan needs to come again. Portland, Oct. 4. matter In the universe. There is no such thing as absolute separation of two objects but there Is invariably some dif ference between them. Hence, although there is so great a difference between a finite man and God that the highest flights of .our Imagination can bring us relative ly not so near to comprehending It as the flights of a bird bring it close to the sun. yet. nevertheless we are not sep arateel from God but on the contrary, closely and vitally and Intimately con nected with him by the various ties of tender relationship revealed In his writ ten word. Portland. October 6. It would be to attempt to prove that dragons live on Mars or Jupiter. CLAUDE S. HOWARD, Secretary1 of the Clackamas County Socialists. Then He Left. Puck. Miss Gaysett (.after every other means has failed) I've named my new saddle horse after you. Mr. Ankerd. Mr. Ankerd Hah Ah deuced flat tered really Miss Gaysett Yes: It's so dreadfully hard to make him go.