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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (April 21, 1912)
TITE SUXDAY OEEGOMAX, PORTLAND, APRIL 21, 1912. FORTLAXD. OR EGO. Knterad at Portland. Oregon. Poatotrlca Ftcon-l-c.as Matter. wcacrlpuoa ki. Invariably U Aavsae. (BT MAIL) I'f . Panda? Included. year. . ee . Iaf;w c.irH.a in:' im' ihrM months.. Z-?? 7 (upjy includ-il. ooa inOBlh.... XUi.y. without sundry, om year J-.J l il y, without Sunday, an months..... J-? I'ai.y. without Sunday, tbre month.. - Ia::y. without Sunday, ona month , W,.k!y. on. J J" fcunmy. ona r f ri kuudajr and Weekly, ono yaar Iflr CAHBIKR.) - "try. Sunday included, on year...... I, la!:y. Sunday Included, ona month. .- " How to Konlt Sand PootoUlc mo T Tl r. rxp.ess e-rdar or personal check on wr local aaak. Siampa. co.a or eurr"c',,tl; at the acndrr-a rl- Glvo poatofflca address to tu.'. mciudlng county and etate. I'"a Katea lu to 14 paca. 1 f ... to z pga. : canta; to pa. c"' I u pagea. a cams, Foreign poetags. !. rata. Easfersj Business OtTlrra V-rra I n ,n York. Hruoawie building, cago. Siaa-ar buliding- Luropvaa USh No. Regent ''- S. Vi".. London. PORTLAND. HSOAV. .rlUl. fl. t fcJSS ' TUB OREGON PRIMARY. If the Oregon primary had been held two wwks ago President Tuft might, mill probably would. have car ried the state in a three-cornered con test with Colonel Roosevelt and Sena ' tor La Kollette. If 20.000 votes or thereabouts, normally iJemm-ratlc. had bn cast In their own primary, and the content within the Republhan ranks left to Republican electors. Taft might, and probably would, have car ried the state. Not a Democrat who appeared at any polling pla.e and a-ked for a I'.opublii an ballot was for President Taft. Many of them wi-re for La Kollette; some of them for l,..opvelt. It U a condition and not a theory, which faces the Republican p-irty at every primary election. The normal Republican vote must not only bo apportioned among the repective candidates, but the Democratic contin gent which persistently and uiiscrupu. lonely invades the Republican primary' for its own purposes mutt be reckoned with. Democrat In a Republican pri mary account, for example, for the probable triumph of Lafferty. The Illinois and Pennsylvania elec tions had a disastrous influence on the T.ift campaign In Oregon: and It In likely, too. that the personal effort.- of Senator La Kollette. which vastly strengthened hf campaign. Inflicted more damage upon T;tft than upon I;ooevclt. Hut Illinois and Pennsyl vania were farts that .-ouM not be evai'ed or refuted, Candor compels the statement -that the over" helming success of Mr. Roosevelt In thes? two great Republican states and the poor showing of the President caused many Republicans to hesitate and to recon sider rhelr determination to vote for T.ft. It was clear to many that Colo rte Roosevelt was to be a factor before the National Convention though It was by no means obvious that he had more than a comparatively small minority of the delegates. But the grim and discouraging truth that stood out above everything was that the Reruhlltan party was rent and t'm by dissensions, that the Presi O'-nt had yet the unshaken allegiance of only a minority of his party, that the Republican voters in many states were in open revolt against the Ad ministration, and that ti Republi ran party with Mr. Taft as its candl late would be threatened with a dis astrous defeat If not an overwhelming rout. The deserts of President Taft the sucres-ful policies of hbt Admin istration, the admirable qualities of his great personality, the high ground upon which he pitches his every act, the indignities heaped upon him by I'olopel Roosevelt and his vindictive friends, the sound precedent against third term for any President, were all forgotten or Ignored. The Insurgents w ere in the saddle and they were going to ride to victory at any cost or through any hazard. The Oregonlan enlisted under the Tag of President Taft for the campaign 1n Oregon at a time when the contest appeared to be confined to him and Senator La Follette. Tt understood per fectly his weakness as a candidate, and the restles. and dissatisfied temper of a Urge and irreconcilable element of , the party toward him; but It greatly preferred him to La. Kollette. a It be lieved the Oregon Republicans would, upon a complete and proper presenta tion of all the circumstances surround. lrg the respective attitudes of the two candidates; and It urged Mr. Taft'a renomlnation upon the voters with what vigor and persuasiveness It pos sessed. The appearance of Sir. Roose velt as a candidate was an event not contemplated bv The Oregonlan nor by anybody, probably, outside the cir cle of his Intimate counsellors. It took liiin at his word when he said he would under no circumstances be a candidate. The Oregonlan had a high appreciation and full understanding of the great service to the country "olonel Roosevelt had rendered as President and it was drawn Into a po sition of opposition to him much against Its will. Rut It discharged nevertheless its duty to President Taft and Its obligation to Its own con science without hesitation and without fear or excuse or repining. It plowed a straight furrow: it leaves the conse quences to rare for themselves. The Oregonlan has done Its share to achieve the nomination for Senator of Mr. Selling and the defeat of Mr. urne. The retirement of Senator liourne and his elimination as a factor in Oregon politics is no small achieve ment! Indeed it Is a great achieve ment. He has been a disturbing and demoralizing Influence in Oregon af f lira all his life. lie has degraded pol itics: he has disorganized and de bauched party: he has been the voice t.f faction and the very spirit of strife and political manslaughter. He Is In a large measure responsible for the un rest, dissatisfaction, non-restralnl. bit terness and disloyalty that we behold everywhere today. He gives fealty long to no good cause; he hss rontrlb. tited much, by ceaseless agitation and outright example to more than one bad cause. Yet w ithal It was astounding to find men In Portland who profoundly be lieved In President Taft and hi poli cies urging the renomlnation and elec tion of Senator Bourne because, they said, he was In position now to get ap propriations for Oregon. They wanted Taft to be re-elocted. and they ear nestly wished his Administration to be a success; but they manifested their entire want of political Judgment or licreMon by seeking the return to A ashincton of a Senator who would stop at nothing to embarrass: the Pres. Idem and would oppose him with all the great power of the Senatorial of tico. Moreover, those are the men who have been deeply anguished- for many years because the times were out of J"int, the public tendencies were In , opposition to all constituted authority, and the soapbox orator was abroad In the land. .Yet they would honor by conferring upon him a great and dig nified office the chief agitator of all. If the Republican party shall find a nominee at the Chicago convention who represents fully Its progressive purposes and who shall be able to rec oncile its discordant and quarreling elements. The Oregonlan will be pleased. Yet it would almost appear that the factions had reached an im passe. Perhaps a leader may be found who will wrest victory from a grave and perilous situation. AVe hope so. THE MONSTER SHIT. We have now' had the true stories of the wreck as viewed by the ap palled passengers who were lowered to life in all too few boats, and we have also had official statements from some of the officers and crew who commanded the lifeboats when cut adrift with their human freight upon an icy midnight sea. Of the Immediate cause of the dis aster these men were able to speak Intelligently and with some authority. Of its underlying cause, however. In telligent men have already somewhat freely spoken, making a presentment which tells of unnecessary haste In crossing- the ocean: of the great and wholly unnecessary strain upon ma rine architects and builders and upon the owners of great transportation lines to provide needless luxury for travelers who demand this because they can afford to pay for It. building what are fitly designated as "monster steamships." with private promenade decks, palatial suites of rooms, swim ming ians.3, triuiuf vvuiws ciw. . rrlvate dining service and the like. It is for this class that tflese things are Instituted and not for the masses that make up the large part of the passen ger list. It Is to provide room for these unnecessary adjuncts to steam ship travel that vessels carrying trans Atlantic trade have grown .Into ver itable "monsters" of the world of traffic: and it Is the great size of these vessels that render them abnormally unwieldy when danger menaces, with out as proven by the swift fate that overtook the Titanic, the largest of them all rendering them a whit more stable tn disaster. A field of Ice, marshaled In Its movements by toppling, towering, fro zen promontories from the Inhospita ble North that have been unknown years tn forming, and have finally broken loose from continents of Ice and. adrift without chart or helmsman ijpon an erratic? course. Is beset with cruel possibilities to smaller craft, but these stand a far better chance of avoiding the dangers of the ocean path when thus beset than do the un wieldy monsters of modern transpor tation that, trusting In their mighty powers of resistance, attempt to plow these fields with their mighty bows, without deviating from the charted track. A fishing smack is better able to" take care of Itself In an Ice field than la a modern monster of transportation, since, knowing her weakness, she does not tempt disas ter, while because of her size she Is able to move quickly when In danger of Impact. This Is true also In a larger sense of ships of medium size that ply in the transatlantic trade. The size of these last-named vessels is sufficient to insure the comfort of their passen gers; their speed is great enough for all practical purposes of ocean travel; well built, staunch and competently officered, they are as safe as can be any moving vehicle upon land or sea. If the calamity of shipwreck which two continents now, mourn shall In effect check this absurd Idea In ship building, the creatipn of the monster" steamship, as unnecessary and unduly dangerous. It will not be without Ita lesson, and ultimately Its blessing to mankind. DRIFTING CITYWARD. The population of the country is steadily drifting to the cities. Swiftly and surely our rural population is grow log less, our city population more. Thousands and tens of thousands of new homes are made on the lands of the West each year; but In spite of that the farms as a whole are losing and the cities are gaining every day. Thirty years ago, by the census of 1880. 70.5 per cent of our people dwelt In the rural districts, 29.6 per cent In the cities. In 1890 these figures had been changed to S3.S and S6.1, In 1900 to 59.5 and 40.5, and by the 1910 cen sus, the complete compilations of which are Just being made available, our rural population has dwindled to. 51.7 per cent and our urban popula tion has risen from the 29.5 per cent In 1880 to 4.3 per cent. In other words In 1880 about 29 out of every 100 of our population lived In the cities and "0 lived In the country; now there are less than 54 out of each 100 in the country, while the city contains over 4. These figures are startling and par ticularly so when brought close home. It is quite true ttlat we are becoming more of a manufacturing country each year, and have within the lust SO years drawn largely on foreign coun tries for laborers In our mills and fac tories. But In analyzing the census returns we find that what we might consider the agricultural states, if there are any which can be properly o called, have built up their cities at the expense of the farms almost aa rapidly as the manufacturing states. Take the Pacific Coast States. Califor nia. Oregon and Washington. In 1880 their rural population was 6$.8 per cent: now It Is only 43.2 per cent. Broadly speaking in the last 30 years bout 20 out cf each 100 of our popu lation have deserted the country and fled to the city. In Oregon and Washington the changes have been such as to give cause for stud whether we are pursu ing proper methods of bulldng up our country. We all know that we are not developing largely as manufac turers, and that there Is nothing in the cities to depopulate the rural dis tricts with profit to those who join the city throngs. Yet In Oregon 31 out of every 100 of our population have changed from city to country In the last thirty years 13 In the last ten years. "In the State of Washington the figures are still more startling. In that state tn the same period, since 1880, more than 40 out of every' 100 of the population have fled cityward. No state In the Cnlon has fed the cities at the expense of the country' as Wash ington has. In 1880 the figures for that state were 90.5 per cent rural and 9.5 per cent urban: now they are 47 per cent and 53 per cent, being very near the ratio for the country at large, which of course includes the New "England States, where the ratio runs as low as 95 in the city to S In the country. In Oregon 85.2 per cent of our peo- pie resided in the country In 1S80, 14.8 per cent Jn the cities; the figures now are 54.4. In the country to 45.6 In the cities. That Is a better and more healthful condition than the Washington figures show, but it Is certain that we are not gaining ground as we ought to gain by populating our vacant lands. A POWER IX THE UXD. The Order of the Patrons of Hus bandry, familiarly known as the Orange, has no candidate for the Presidency. It has repeatedly spoken ror itself upon this point ana always in decided words. Its members as In- dividual, in common with other Intel ligent citizens, have their preferences, of course, and at proper times and places speak of these preferences ' and give their reasons therefor freely. But as an organization they indorse the candidacy , of no man who seeks public or political office. ' The reason for this is an obvious one. It may be tersely expressed In the words of the wise man: "A house divided" against itself cannot stand." E-er alert upon matters that pertain to the welfare of the farming commu nity, the Grange as an organization eschews personalities in politics and Is not in the booster business for candi dates for this office or for that. Speak of good roads, and this Grange or that has something to say upon the question; of the parcels post, and it speaks out decidedly; of co operative stores and public market places and It is heard; of fruit pests and tuberculin tests, and It is ready with an opinion: of rural electric 'roads, the extension of rural free de livery, of farmers' Institutes, of the value of agricultural training of any matter, in fact, that bears upon rural questions and industries, and the Grange Is ready with helpful sugges tions or plain spoken objection or in dorsements of proposed methods. To use a familiar term, indicative of the faculty of attending to one's own business, the Grange as an organiza tion "sticks to Its knitting." In ob serving the wisdom of this policy and In strict adherence thereto this organl zatlon has grown to be a power In the land. DR. MO.NTKSSOIU. Teachers and students of education all over the civilized world have be come greatly Interested in the meth ods of Dr. Maria Montegsorl. This gifted woman Is a graduate of the L'niveraity of Rome, where she studied principally experimental psychology and pedagogy. Of late she has been making wonderful Improvements and discoveries In the education of chil dren. In the first place she began some experiments In teaching defec tive children and it was the unheard of results which she obtained in this field which Induced Dr. Montessori to take up the education of those who were normal. She mentions In her book one of the circumstances which, set her mind to work on this subject. Tw'o Idiot children were committed to her charge and by her methods she taught them to read. She taught them so well. In fact, that when they came to be examined at the public school 1 with normal children of the same age they passed successfully. Dr. Montes sori ' then asked herself why It was that the idiot children h'ad overtaken the normal ones In spite of all the advantages which the latter possessed by reason of . their better mental equipment. Of course, the obvious answer was that the usual methods of education stupefied the intelligence of the pupils while her own enlivened It. Dr. Montessori teaches boys and girls to read, write and cipher by the time they are 5 years old and she does it without restraining their wills or subjecting them to any kind of re pressive discipline. On the contrary her whole system Is based on the per fect freedom of the pupil. Her schoolroom is provided with a garden into which the little boys and girls go whenever they like and stay as long as they wish. At their lessons the children laugh and talk freely. They learn without knowing that they are doing a task. It Is all play tq them. Naturally, such a method of education does not fit children for the public school machine. We shall hear worse complaints of it than we do of the kindergarten on this account. It is said that the kindergarten, with all its class and group work, so develops the child's individuality that ordinary les sons and recitations are extremely un congenial to him and for this reason a great many public school teachers condemn Froebel's Ideas. As they see It. a child Is mere food for the school stomach so that nothing Is desirable which makes him difficult to digest. Too much individuality is the worst qualification a pupil can possess in the ordinary public or private school. Dr. Montessori proceeds upon thai principle that the more Individuality a child has the better for him and for the world. She thinks that the deep est of all Injuries to the growing hu man being is to infringe in any way upon the natural development of his faculties. She will not even undertake to guide them. Her view is that they ought to be observed, studied, followed. Nature knows how to make a human being better than any teacher does. All that the true teacher can do Is to give nature a clear track and provide the materials which will further her purpose. Nothing must be done for the child which he can do for himself. She cites an Instance where a little boy 2 i years old was trying to think j out a plan for looking over the heads of some larger pupils who had sur rounded an Interesting group of toys. While the little fellow was busy with his devices a teacher seized him in her arms and lifted him up so that there was nothing more for him to do but look. Dr. Montessori calls this "brutal." - It was an unjustifiable at tack on the buy's Individuality. This Is typical of her entire attitude. The pupils are taught at the age of 2 years to button their own clothes, tie ribbons, keep their' persons and surroundings clean and maintain order. The great limitation of the ordinary school is that It appeals to but a single sense, that of. hearing. If the eyes are used at all It Is only in reading. The senses of sight and touch and the muscular sense are Just about totally overlooked. For instance, the pupil is taught the definition of a cube as an object having six equal square faces. This is admirable as a definition, but the child gets nothing from It. When he ha committed the words to mem ory tie knows no more than Tie did before how a cube looks and feels. That Is to say, he does not yet know what a cube really- Is. Dr. Montessori makes the pupil close his eyes and run his fingers along the edges of the solid. He weighs it In his hand, thus bringing his muscular sense to bear upon It. He builds It into various structures with other blocks, thus, as it were, apperceiving it through the handtf. In this way the pupil learns what part a cube actually plays in the scheme, of the universe. He studies It not only as an object In it self, but In its relations to other ob jects and he receives It Into his mind through every possible avenue. Dr. Mrfntetsorl has three require ments for lessons. They must be brief, simple and objective. Repetitions must not be pushed far enough to weary the child and no attempt should be made to Instruct him when he Is not inter ested. She hammers nothing into his ' ,ead According to her Idea a teacher i wno cannot interest a child has no j place in a school. The value of Dr. children can get the mechanical pro cesses of reading, writing and arith metic out of the way by the time they are 5 years old. several years will be gained for teaching them handicraft, the sciences and literature. We shall cease to hear the wail that "there Is no time" for music, drawing and man ual arts in school. There will be nine or ten clear years to attend to these subjects in and- our young people can leave school at 14 or 15 with a good store of genuine knowledge In their l heads. As things go now they get nothing but the form of knowledg and precious little even of that. For knowledge Itself they are obliged to leave the school and ta"fce to the street and workshop. IS AMERICA A rAILl'RK? "A mother" in the Woman's Com panlon discourses upon the childless life, the one-child life and apartment- house life in connection with these In a rational human way. It Is as It were the "heart of Rachel for her chil dren crying" and refusing to be com forted. This woman, though ardently desirlnar to be the mother of six, is raising one child a son. There is every indication, in what she says, that she is a good mother and will strive to be a judicious mother. But not only experience, but observation con vince us that It is easier to be a Ju dicious mother of six than of one, es peclally. perhaps. If that one Is a son As it is, she says that her husband wouid work no harder and sacrifice no more for the half dozen for which she longs than for the one that they have. It Is the old story that the hen that can scratch for one can scratch for ten. Of course no one supposes that the ten will be as full fed as the one, but that each will have all that Is necessary' for subsistence. Is llkely whlle all must agree that the rustle apparent In the brood proves con clusively that industry and the spirit of getting Jill that Is possible out of life is Induced by this enforced activ ity. As against the old-fashioned idea of working and sacrificing to bring up a family of from four to six or ten chil dren, and the life of empty endeavor compassed In bringing Dp one and hav ing a good time during the process, this woman says: "My husband spends more in one year than his father (with six) spent in two. She adds: He ta home-loving, hard-working, optimil tlc. child-loving-. He is not ao exceptional father. Among our acqualntancaa ara a dozen younr married - people whose caaes Imllar. We so to the theater about rvery other month: we entertain a friend dinner, and are entertained in return; w take trolley ridea and so on top of the 'bua auch la the extent of our mad frlvot- llv. The taxl-rldlna-. reataurant-rreouantlns. butterfly wife undoubtedly exlsta: I have met her; but aha la only tha froth on tho deadly dullneaa or tne lira lea Dy me ma jority or New loraere. This Is apartment life: this is hotel life; this is childless or practically childless life in a great city. By con trast with life half a century ago, how frivolous! "Yet it is the demand of American life to which thousands of American men and women yield borne along, with the current, aa It were, and not knowing how to row outside of It. "We hate these things," says this woman, "but we can't es cape." We are too proud to ask for pity, but please don't blame us. Don't ask if our husbands are failures nor censure us poor penny-pinching wives. Why not ask: "Is America a failure? Why not ask, further, is modern life a failure and wonder if it will not. when It reaches a certain point seem ingly but a little way beyond recoil upon Itself and begin to repeat the history of the old-fashioned homer BtTLMiiO AN ANTI-TRC8T BILL. The Senate commerce committee has progressed so far in drafting anti-trust legislation as to decide in favor of the principle embodied In both the Cum mins bill and the Williams bill defin ing what acts and practices are for bidden to Interstate corporations, but it has decided against the creation of a commission to supervise and regulate such a commission. Both these bills contemplate that corporations a. hall continue to engage In Interstate commerce under state char ters, provided -they observe certain Federal Inhibitions against intercor porate holdings. Interlocking directors and officers, holding companies, Btock watering, unfair competition. They differ in their provisions for making these inhibitions effective. The Cum mins bill creates a trade commission with power to investigate and. to begin legal proceedings against offenders already engaged in commerce, either directly or through the Department of Justice. The Williams bill requires that the restrictions created by Fed eral law shall be written In the char ters which the corporations obtain from the states and thus prevents from even beginning to engage In commerce such corporations as have power under state law to violate the proposed Federal law. This, bill cre ates no supervisory commission, but leaves its enforcement to the Depart ment of Justice. That department could secure Injunction to prevent any corporation from engaging in com merce under a charter which did not contain the required restrictions or to drive out of commerce any corpora tion which, having a charter that con formed with Federal law, violated those restrictions. Robert R. Reed, of New York, is the father of the bill, which Williams has Introduced. Both these bills recognize as true the statement of B. H. Farrar, of New Orleans, ex-presldent of the American Bar Association, that the states can dispose of the trusts by so amending their corporation laws aa to refuse charters to corporations having power or purpose to restrain trade or become monopolies. The states have the power to do this, but Its exercise by forty seven states would be useless so long as the one remaining state continued to grant "wide-open" charters. If Congress excludes from commerce cor. porations having "wide-open", char ters there would be no excuse'for the states to grant or for corporations to seek such charters, except for purely Intra-state business. . Whether the states amend their Jaws or not would then be immaterial The great objection to Federal in- j corporation has been that it would cut off a large source of state revenue, to obtain which New Jersey charters a corporation to do practically anything it pleases. To overcome this objection. President Taft proposes that Federal incorporation be permissive, not com pulsory, and that Federal companies be subject to reasonable taxation and to control by the states with respect to purely local business. An alternative to Taft's plan has been proposed which would more closely guard state rights. It would give a Federal commission power to license state corporations to engage in interstate commerce. If the opposition of the states should be so powerful as to threaten defeat of a Federal Incorporation law, even though it be only permissive and state revenues are fully protected, the li cense system might prove a good sub stitute, much as the corporations might themselves prefer Federal charters. The argument for a. supervisory commission such as the President rec ommends remains as strong as ever. The one valid cause of complaint is that It often cannot whether a trust Is be known legal or illegal until the question has been fought through the courts, a process occupying several years. All the objections could be met- by the adoption of Williams' plan for em bodying . the Federal inhibitions in state charters with Cummins' defini tion of those Inhibitions and with his trade commission; by giving that com mission power to issue licenses to such state corporations as had the required form of charter or to grant Federal charters in the same form, at the op tion of the corporation. Either the Cummins or the Williams bill without provision for a commission would continue the present agonizingly slow method of procedure through ' the courts to determine a corporation's le gal status. With a commission they both have many merits, and the action of the Senate committee in rejecting that feature of the Cummins bill is to be regretted. Commissioner of Cor porations Smith, truly says In his an nual report: t'nder present conditions, aa well na In whatever future courae may hereafter be followed, a permanent administrative office will be absolutely necessary. The vast complexity of corporate buaineas and Ita constantly changing conditions make It wholly Impossible to enforce effectively any real system of restraint through the courts alone. A FEW WORDS TO A "KNOCKER." Among the thousands who seek homes In Oregon, It Is Inevitable that a certain proportion should fall, either through bad Judgment In choosing a location, neglect of business caution in buying land or unwillingness to work when they have bought it. The last cause is the most frequent, for such men on reading of the large crops yielded by Oregon land, too frequently imagine that such land can be bought for a song and can be made to yield with little or no work. When these men awaken to the truth that in. Ore gon as elsewhere, money cannot be made without work, they become "knockers" and write to the "folks back home" warning against coming to Oregon. One of these men is John G.- Hanley, of 415 Hancock street, Portland, who has written a mixture of fact, and fiction to the Lafayette (Ind.) Journal. Hanley says that, as a result of an influx of 20,000 Eastern people to Portland last year, there were "more than 10,000 moneyless, jobless men with families In the city" last Winter. He tells of the provision made by the city to furnish work for the unem ployed heads of families and then says: The single men were bunched together In hundreds and marched acrosa the county line by the police. This treatment waa accorded them for no greater crime than being broke in Portland and seeking honest work. If there had been "10,000 money less, jobless men with families" in the city, the city would havo been swamped with applications when it offered them work. ,-A great clamor for work arose and th w city and coun ty offered work to all men of family who were found deserving and in need. The county gave work only to men of family, but the city employed many single men also. The total num. ber of men thus employed by the city was 2500 and by the county 300, a total of 2800, which is a slight dis count from Mr. Hanley's 10,000. Much light was thrown on the facts In regard to the unemployed when the I. W. W. marched' to the city employ ment office and demanded work. Of fers of work for 150 to 200 men in clearing land and like occupations in the country around Portland were submitted to these "moneyless, job less" men and were rejected. These men did not wish to go out onto the farms or Into the woods and do real work: they wished to be employed by the city eight hours a day on Jobs where they could "soldier." They wished to work only enough days in the week to. pay room-rent and buy cheap meals In the city. They would not go outside the city, where real work is abundant. The particular object of Mr. Han ley's wrath Is the real estate men. He says that, when he came to Oregon 30 months ago, "good land could be purchased for from $100 to $125 an acre." but that it nas oeen Dought up by big speculators or land syndicates and sells for $300 an acre and up." He further says: You can still buy land In Oregon for $12 to 123 an acre, but auch land la altuated re. mot from any highway and ona will ba compelled to cut hta way through a dense forast to get to hla land. On account of the ramoteneae from market his timber la an incumbrance. He must need enough money to carry him through at least two yeara before any crops can ba grown, logged off land nearer to civilisation costs irom -- to 170 an acre. It costs rrom w to ssu an acre to clear stump itwi anywnera in Oregon. If Mr. Hanley had bought some of that good land at $100 to $125 an acre and worked on it for those 30 months he could probably have made it worth somewhere near $300 an acre and sold it at that figure. If he had been willing to do what the pioneers of Oregon did, he would 'have gone Into the dense forest, bought some of that land at $12 to $25 an acre, cleared and cultivated it and made a home on it. He would soon have had other settlers for neighbors, who would have Joined him in widening the trail Into a road, then in improv ing the road until they gained easy access to market and the value of their land increased to the $100 or $125 an acre which he would have paid for the good land he mentions. Or he might have bought logged-off land in the immediate vicinity of Portland, near the macadamized road, at $30 to $60 an acre, cleared it by charplttlng at $50 to $100 an acre and thereby made It worth at least 250 an acre. ' But all these things require work hard work. The present value of Oregon land represents many years' work, hardship and often privation. The men who are now selling land at J 100 to $125 an acre and often more are reaping the reward of Industry and patience. If Mr. Hanley will prac tice the same virtues, ne win reap ms reward. If he wishes to escape the hard work and privation of clearing land in the forest, he must buy an im proved farm. He will then have to pay for the hard work done by others, just as he would In Indiana. . If Mr. Hanley wishes to learn how to succeed in Oregon he might apply to another Mr. Haniey, familiarly known as "Bill," who has acquired a modest competence by beginning as we have suggested. His Postofflce address is Burns. Harney County. He might give his discontented namesake a few pointers on Jiow to begin. Mr. Hanley pays his respects1 to the Portland Commercial Club, which he accuses of eating a tlOOO monthly luncheon.- The club has no $1000 luncheon, no $500 luncheon nor any other luncheon with the dollar-mark on it. He is also aggrieved because th I club does not give one dollar nor an i acre of ground to aid any factory com ing to Portland. The charge is well founded, for experience has proved that factories which come to a town In the guise of mendicants are not worth having. The club aids manufacturers who wish to hnv sltea In findinir them I fit reasonable nrlces. and the wisdom and success of its policy is proved by the great industrial districts which have grown up on the Peninsula an in North Portland. Mr. Hanley does not neglect to place on the middleman a large share of responsibility for the high cost living. The Oregonlan has already ex pressed the opinion that the middle man would be a more useful member of society if he went to the country and became a producer. Mr. Hanley also would be a more useful member to society if he would cultivate th soil .instead of writing "knocking" letters full of misrepresentation and exaggeration. AN I NJI STiriABI.E ARRAIGNMENT. If prayers are a comfort to the sur vivors of the awful shipwreck that ha carried mourning into hundreds of homes and horror to the civilized world, by all means let public prayers be offered. It may be submitted, how ever, that It Is an unjustifiable arraign ment of. God. as a kind and loving father, to assume that he ordered or wantonly permitted the wreck of the Titanic or in the stated words used that, "in his wisdom he has seen flt to visit these afflicted ones with trouble and to bring distress upon them." Hu man intellect scouts the idea that It was in accordance with "his blessed will that fatherly correction was thus visited upon these stricken peo pie, stopping not until over sixteen hundred of them went to a shudder ing death, while the rescue of a few hundred under circumstances of un told suffering was permitted. Resignation is a beautiful thing if It stops short of actual stolidity. It is "hard to kick against the pricks.1 But when, to induce resignation, tho reasoning mind is asked to believe and truthful lips to acknowledge that this great calamity was ordered by God himself in a spirit of "fatherly correction," and at the same time that "he does not willingly afflict or grieve the children of men," human intelli gence which we are fain to believe is itself from God, the great center, source and sum of things staggers for a moment at the irreverent assump tion then rises up in revolt against it. This is said with reverence not irreverence. As expressed by Whit- tier: Nothing can be good in him That evil la In me. For anybody to" intimate that disaster following the disregard of vital elements of safety is in the na ture of or comes as "Fatherly correc tion" straight from God la, in the light of human intelligence, absurd. More than that, it Is Irreverent, or would be but for the fact that It follows the beaten path of assumption which has grown into a custom, the age of which commands respect and the shelter of which appeals in the sense of easy If undeflnable refuge to those beset. But against the belief, the hope, whatever it-may be, that God, the great source of life and power, does not wantonly afflict the children of men, the as sumption that the loss of life by this shipwreck and the terrible suffering incident thereto were visited in his wisdom is a mockery that reason will be slow to make. Obviously Mr. Evans would not have been nominated for District Attorney except for the withdrawal of Mr. Carter and Mr. Davis. Fouts would have been successful. The county owes Messrs. Carter and Davis a real debt, whiclOt , will doubtless pay in gratitude or otherwise as may appear seemly. What a contrast to the sense less and perverse course of the mis guided Shepherd. George Hyland will not be State Sen. a tor, but he will continue always to be George Hyland, the public's friend. Mr. Hyland made no campaign and the vote he got was a real testimonial of his fine position in the community. Meanwhile Mr. Hyland will continue to do his share, and more, in every worthy cause for the general uplift. Shepherd, too, got something out of the fight. The Big Business that put up for him accomplished Its main pur. pose the defeat of Gantenbein and the nomination of Lafferty. What a wretched office Is that of puppet and catspaw! If Italy should ally herself with Russia against Turkey, the triple al liance would bo in danger of becom ing onlv a dual alliance and the isola- tion of Germany, would be appreciably nearer. ' Dispatches from Oregon yesterday doubtless caused a crafty resident of Washington, D.' C, and Massachusetts to regret ever having been Bourne. It was only to be expected that a great tragedy which developed scores of self-sacrificing heroes should pro duce at least one monumental coward. Frank M. Warren's sacrifice of his life that women might escape from the Titanic is subject for mournful pride to every Oregonlan. It were worth while to die as "Archie" Butt died if we could all win such praises as are showered on him. The people of Oregon being on trial -"not I" rendered their own verdict. Better be Captain Smith dead than Ismay alive. Scraps and Jingles Leone Cass Baer. I know a fat lady whose front name is Evelena. a a a Definition of musical term, 'Tower of sound in A Minor" Wails of tho baby at 2 A. M. v a a a Man named William Spivens knocks down a woman' named Mrs. William Splvens. Curiously enough, she was not his wife, and It is not known why it was done. a a a Read Vhere a lecturer says If the pioneers came back to earth they would at sight of the modern automobiles wish to go back to their graves. Well, those same modern autos would oblige and help them in their wishes. "As sure as fete" an In the society columns. account of It Oculist claims to cure alcoholism by properly fitted glasses. Double vision, as It were. mm Besides, I thought alcoholism w-as brought on by glasses. ' a Man gets a divorce from his wife be cause she hit him in his eye with an apple. Evidently she is not the ap ple of his eye. m m m Woman in Paris has killed a man for crushing her hat in an elevator. I think murder Is a little too severe; penal servitude should have been his punishment. "Should actresses wed?" wails a magazine article. By all means, else how can they get divorces. . a Remarkable confirmation of the say ing "Boys will be boys" is contained in the news that Portland's oldest messenger Is 76 years of age. Motto for collection as you'd be dunned by." agency; "Dun I notice women keep screeching for absolute equality of sexes and yet not one of 'em has suggested means for raising men to our standard. Clara writes to ask what will keen the gnats from bothering her. Try bathing the face twice daily with liquid glue, Clara. a Politician t'other evening protesting against selling a certain piece of pub lic ground, reminded his hearers that "donkeys once, grazed there," and went on to beg them to attempt to recover the rights they had lost. a a Sign at local moving-picture house says, "We positively prohibit whistling or cheering with the feet." m m m Portland Mrs. Malaprop thinks that railroads must be quite ancient as she has Just been reading about the great Norman line immediately after the Conquest. a a a ' Here's three about ministers. Local preacher has been talking so convinc ingly on the reasons for empty pews that a great number of heretofore reg ular attendants are now seen to be wavering. a a a Just before the election a lot ol ministers were preaching what they called Early Closing Sermons. It should be -kept right up. All sermons are too long, anyway. a a See where minister i-vites women to come without hats to church so they can worship In comfort. Without her newest lid? It can't be done. a Plaint of Kleanor. Aged One. Life at best is cruel and hard, All my Joys have turned to gall. No one cares one thing for me. All they speak of is baseball. Father's voice is hoarse from yelling, Mother's hands are tired and sore. For the baseball season's with us Which my parents both adore. I remember all my little life. Ah, how the cruel mem'ry mocks. When papa read aloud to ma, While she sat and darned his socks But now I am an orphaned babe, I never see them any more. Dad and ma spend all their days In talking of the baseball ecore. But I'll try and bear my sorrow. And keep down my thoughts so sad; I'll not talk of old-time mother, Or regret old-fashioned dad. But I'll never know what peace is. Till we land on Canaan's shore. Where the fathers cease from "fanning" And the mothers "root" no more, a m . Miss Calamity Step-and-Fetch-It, the clever and cultured, etc., lady poet from Kansas, writes that she .is writ ing a rival play to Faversham's "The World and His Wife." She says she calls her'n "The Hub of the Universe." Nitts on Judge Bourne By Dean Collins. Nesclus Nitts, sage of Punkindorf Sta tion. Looked up from his paper with loud cachlnnation. Adorned the plank walk with an ample libation Of nicotine paint; then he made specu lation Upon him who wanted renewed nomina tion. I see by the paper, the latest report Ain't glvln' Bourne much; tnougn ne brung us to court And iows that the people's on trial and sits A fervid indictment drawed up 'gainst our wits; But if them reports has it right all his wishln' Don't-'pear to be gettln' J. Bourne trie decision. You all are on trial, sezee fore election. And cites from Bourne's code- sech a Dase; sech a section Ho sets as the Jury; he sets as attor ney; He sets as the jedge, and he tells us; 1 11 learn ye The way how to vote. But when all is rehearsed. It 'pears like the jedge jest got sorter reversed. Of course, sence he's Jedge and the Jury and all. It's hard now to Agger out what may befall; 'm fldgitin' "round like a bat In a steede. To see what Jedge Bourne's goin' to do to us Deoole. Who knows, when he gits the election reDOrt. He may line the bunch fer contempt of the court? Tortland, April 20. Cf