THE JOURNAL AS iyDCTKXPBKT SKWSPAPKR. C. JACKSON. ..Pabllaber ....... . . -I.. n ftnrMtav-l and fHmSMBCa ffTWu ' ' , 1 V,.., Knterad it fh fktorn if ftliii,'r.rfct rraoaraiaaios unp mw TELEPHONES MAIN 7178. BOMB. A-06t . Eaat Side otflca. B-2M: Eaat Baa. . FOREIGN ADVKKTISINO EKPBESBNTATJTH YreelaBd-BrmJamtn 6UI Arertlalng Afencr. ; feroaswtck RnlMiae. 226 Fifth awuM. hew XJrtj Tribune Bulldlnf. micajro. Snbaerlprtoa Torm r Ball to any address U lb totted State. Canada or Mexk-o. DAILY. Ob raw .18.00 Ona month.. 8 .60 . . 8CNDAT, . . 0m rear... S2.50 I One month I -23 v. DAILY AND SUNDAY. 0n pear.. IT.80 I Oua month I Still In thy right hand carry gentle peace, To silence envious tongues; be Just and fear not. i 1 . Shakespeare. A a A "LAST DITCH" PLEA. SINCE Republicans are being urged by some organs of their party to votruntyedly on June 1 for all the nominees of their party, without reflection or discrim ination, and especially for the Re publican candidate for United States senator; -and since it is insisted, though without any good reasons be ing given for such an assumption, that , Oregon would suffer greatly somehow If Governor Chamberlain should, . be - elected instead of Mr. Cake, and if any other Democratic nominees are elected, it Is In order, to ask what harm has come to Ore gon from the election of some Demo crats ,1a the paBt few' years. - Will these organs please point out to voters wherein Oregon has' suffered or been Injured by the election of Governor-Chamberlain, or Portland by the election of Mayor Lane? Or did Oregon lose anything by having Mr.'Gearin for awhile" In the senate rather than some Republican ? Did Multnomah county suffer because Tom Word was elected sheriff? ; The Journal wishes voters ttr con sider this, matter candidly and hon estly, when these partisan appeals are made to them, and see whether they were guilty ' of ' some great wrong r to 5 the common wealth-'ln electing and - reelecting Governor Chamberlain and Mayor Lane. Thou sands of Republicans voted for these men,' many thousands throughout the state, especially two years ago, for Governor Chamberlain. Are tbey sorry for it? Have they any thing to regret about it? Are they not rather glad of it, and proud of It, as of a good act, that was of great benefit to the whole people of the state?.;..-1". . . , We all -know what criminal care lessness and negligence, if nothing worse, had held sway for many years la the state house at Salem with ref erence to the school lands of the stated and how In consequence there of the state school fund is millions f -dollars less than it ought to be and than it would have been If there had been a "Chamberlain for gover nor during those dark years of Ore gon's political history. No sooner was he inaugurated as governor than he exposed the rotten, chaotic con ditlon of affairs, and "f emedfed it as far. as possible, 'stopping all frauds and protecting the people's Interests at every point, to their Incalculable benefit, and to the advantage of un born generations, Why did none of Ms predecessors do this? 3 Does, it make any difference to the people, to Republicans, what the party name or the politics is of a man who, when all others. had shamefully failed, did them this great sendee? At-an in sensate partisan yell, are they to for get all these benefits, this splendid service? ' : : -tr When the state' was apparently likely to lose nearly $300,000 of its school funds through the malfeas ance of its state treasurer, it was Governor Chamberlain, always vig ilant In the people's behalf, who stepped into the breach, and by his prompt, energetic and shrewd action insured the safety and recovery of that money. If Mr. steel were now a candidate for senator against Chamberlain, these same organs would' insist that Steel be elected be-, cause he is a Republican. Partisan ship, they argue, is the sole thing to consider. But what do the thou sands pf Republicans who voted for Chamberlain, and the thousands uiuiv "ui- uuv ate giau lie was elected, think of such an appeal? Isn't , it an Insult to their intel ligence? .Will they not rather sup port a man who has done them a great service?;-. Was this City. injured any by the electlonv and:; reelection of Mayor Lane, and the ' election four years ago of Tom Word for sheriff? Last year the people, including thousands of Republicans,: approved. Mayor Lane's policies, and even more would do so now.". Suppose for party's sake some mayor had been elected who would hav.e stood in with the ma jority of the council; suppose there 1: a d been J: no, : mayor to C protest against the wholesale gift "of city rroerty to private individuals and corporations, - and - other nefarious schemes, would not the people of this city have been worse off today by a Vide margin than they art)? So Ion as the mayor stands sqnarely nnd firmly by the people's Interests, v!?"rntly protecting them at every jh tig fur B he can, -instead of weakly and slyly approving jobs and plots to injure and rob them, ' what do the people care 'whether he' is called a Democrat of a Republican? Is it not fairly childish, nay, idiotic, for a voter to say that he will be guided by nothing, will consider nothings but a party came? who cares whether it was a Jle- publican or a' Democrat who stopped gambling and otherwise checked and restricted open vice In this city, and made it a better town to the extent cf millions, and Jn other ways be yond measurement in money?. Isn't It a paltry, pitiful plea to make, to voters that they should not consider these things at all, but only the party tag of the candidates? This is the t"last ditch'of the peo ple and organs who are fighting for the old political regime 'In Oregon Mr. Cake, once nominated, has aban doned the Statement "No, 1 principle; he stands for It no longer; and be who Is not for it is against it. Cham berlain not only stands for it, but: he stands forth with "a record of good accomplished for the people of his state during his service as governor such as" no present governor in the union can show. The only man who in many years has made a better or an equal record was La Follette while governor .of. Wisconsin. . And the good work Chamberlain has done was done for Republicans as much as for Democrats. Most of them won't forget that. They .owe it to him to send him to the senate, not only on account of this splendid record, but because he Is incomparably the abler, fitter man to do work for Oregon in the senate. DOES PROHIBITION PAY? WHETHER rKUHIBITION I throughout . a rural county, like .Benton or Linn or Polk or aiurrvw ur uiuuiiua. pays, from a purely economic or commercial point of view, is a ques tion now being much discussed, and on which there is naturally a wide divergence of opinion. Some appar ently weighty arguments are ad vanced by the anti-prohlbltlonlsts, yet the counties and small cities that have had prohibition for two years or more seem to be thriving quite as well if not better than their "wet" neighbors. Perhaps it may bt said that prohibition is a good thing for an agricultural county, and not so good for a county whose resources run more to timber, mines, mills and manufacturing; or it may be only that it la easier to maintain prohibi tion in the former class of com munities. The prohibition question Is up for determination at the approaching election in Morrow, among other counties, and Sheriff Shutt, who is a candidate for the fourth succes sive term, is zealously in favor of it. He received recently a letter from L. J. Gates of Kent, Sherman county, manager of the Kent Commercial company and for Balfour, Guthrie & Co., which in part says: "We cannot understand how any good, live, sensible business man can for a moment stand for the saloon, the thing qf all things that draws money from legitimate channels of business, and directly injures the business of every merchant In the county, to say nothing about the moral injury to the community. Not withstanding we had the tail end of two crop failures to contend with here In Sherman county, our busi ness for the year ending February 15 last was just $10,000 heavier than It was two years ago when we had the saloons., The year after the saloons were put out of business, though our crops were a complete failure, our cash sales were 26 per cent bet ter than the year before and our secured time sales 10 per cent heavier. It seems very ridiculous for a business man to favor the sa loons. Our taxes haye bepo lower each year since the saloons went out of commission. It is safe to say that Sherman county is saved at least $25,000 a year by the sa loons being put "out, pf business saved to "he farmer! the stockman and laborer, the taxpayers. They are the fellows who foot the' bills." This seems to be testimony worth considering. It is not the vapid harangue of a professional reformer, but the careful, cool-headed state ment of a business man who must know what he is talking about. Is there any argument.or testimony to overcome Buch evidence as this? TJ. P. TO BORROW $100,000,000. THE TJnloniPacifie railroad direc tors, at their meeting in Salt Lake City, voted to issue bonds to the extent of $100,000,000, half of which, more or less, will be devoted to the building of extensions and new roads. That the Union Pa cific can now sell bonds on advan tageous terms is certain. There is a great deal of idle money for invest ment, and good . railroad securities are a favorite investment. The Pennsylvania . railroad recently had bid for several times the $40,000, 000 Of bonds' which ' it put on the market, and while the Union Pacific, with Mr. Harriman still at its head, may not., be so attractive a proposi tion, it will doubtless have no trouble in, floating at$10Q,000,000 bond is- SUe,'.-.'f' - .;i5X What roads Mr, k Harrlman will build when he gets this money is not announced; if it were, nobody would know any more about it on that ac count Possibly, however, the new roads spoken, of would . Include the road to" Coos bay the road to Til lamook and.: the road across soutn- central Oregon, or one or two of these, but there is no. certainty of this. We ehall : believe that Har rlman is going td build these roads Just when he has actually built them and not a day sooner or a rod far ther.-' A STUPENDOUS BLUNDER, D' ISPATCHES from Washington state that through some agree ment or understanding the railroads have with the inter state cpmmerce commission and the president, the proposed advance in rates throughout the country Is to be sustained. Ever since last January a rumor to this effect has been per sistently circulated, and it now seems to be confirmed. The news of this agreement or un dcrstanding will cause a distinct shock to the entire country. No body of men enjoyed to a greater de gree the confidence of the people than has the interstate commerce commission and it will' be nothing short ota public calamity if this con-J fidenee is disturbed. Even the presi dent's popularity could not but be shaken by the Just Indignation that such action will arouse. If the only body having Jurisdiction to pass on rates Is to agree1 in advance to in creases, where is the forum to which the shippers can appeal? No better method could be devised by the rail roads to destroy the efficiency of this commission than the plan adopt ed. With confidence In It once shaken, It would be the work of years to restore It, even If this could be done at all. For some time railroad stocks have been slowly but steadily ad vancing. Is it possible the "Wall street magnates" have been working on Inside knowledge, and the people of the entire country are, to be plucked in order that watered stock and inflated bonds may be given a value based upon charges exacted for a necessity? The railroad presidents have been calling for "peace," for "rest," for 'quiet." If peace Is to be based on any such dishonorable terms as a complete surrender of our rights, as is proposed, it will only be at the end of a war compelling peace not otherwise. The absurdity of trying to restore prosperity or trade by in creasing the cost of doing business, and the cost of the distribution of products, ought to be apparent to anyone. If advancing the cost line oil around will automatically restore business, create confidence and start the mills, then It cannot be advanced high enough or quick enough. We apprehend it will be rather hard to convince the thousands of Idle mill men and timber hands that advanc ing freight rates will raise their wages. - We c onfess we cannot see how in creasing the cost of handling the products of the country will tend to make business for the Idle cars or start one locomotive. From every standpoint it seems a stupendous blunder. Those people who in consequence of bad and in some cases no doubt swindling advice paid out money for the purpose of filing claims on Southern Pacific lands, are awaken ing to a realization of the fact that they are "out and Injured." 8uch of them as read The Journal at the time when this filing fever was on may remember that this paper warned them that their efforts would probably result In failure. "Services of Statement No. 1 are no longer needed in this campaign. Its noble work has been done," says the La Grande Observer. This In formation must have come from some political boBs or other opponent of Statement No. 1. The fight for this principle will not be won until the next legislature elects the man chosen senator by the people, and this result Is not jet assured. ' It seems to The Journal that news paper discussion of Martin's guilt or innocence is premature. The state may not have disclosed all its evi dence, and on the other hand the de fendant may successfully refute what seems convincing. As soon as can reasonably be done, the man, if there is sufficient evidence against him, should be brought to trial, and let a Jury pass on his case. Next Sunday, May 10, the N York World, it announces, will p nsn its twenty-fifth anniversary edi tion, a "Jumbo" newspaper, whic: will be the biggest issue of a news paper ever published in the world. It will contain about 200 pages, and its printing and distribution alone will cost about 1100,000. The World is certainly a great success as a newspaper. "The Statement No. 1 Jssue has gone a-glimmerlng," remarks the Vale Oriano. Oo the contrary,, it is a bigger and more vital Issue than ever." Because Mr. Cake abandoned It is no reason for the people giving it up. - , , "There never was a better time to show our attachment to the Repub lican party," says the Pendleton Tribune. For the snlendld work of raSngress during the past fire months. perhaps..1' ::.t -; ''"'"-;.' hN-jiV- J liter v all, t does not . make so much difference it the big, battleships do not come to Portland, so long as the number of big produce carriers keeps oa increasing. t Small Clianges After all, the crops ar really mors important man in games. Panama la - 1bo welcoming- a larg There will be a high time at Denver o,2J9 I eel fcDove sea level. : Th Taft boom aeems to have become proportionate to him in slie. Governor Hughes seems to be as much out or it as secretary Hoot, - Some oeople worry because they can't remember what it is that they want to worry about. w The mornlntr caner sneaks of "the trained aatutenesa of Juries." This la an orlglal discovery. Johk D. Rockefeller has Droved that ne la in ravor or war; - tie gave zuv to Keep a cnurcn etioir irora cusDana The several-sided Republican meneu vera in regard to delegates to the na tional convention have reached the farce comedy atag. -r-w Not & dolearatat ta to" bat obtained from Panama, but then while' he la gon& Beo retary Taft will not have to make any speeches or answer any questions. That Verbose resolution of the council on the capture of Martin la probably the aillleat emanation from such a source on record In the world's history. A Washington woman's club teaches that marriage la sinful. No doubt it would be sinful or at leaat very foolish for a maa to marry one of the members. We hasten to make nubile our new and original view of what should be done with President Roosevelt when hla term expires: Make him a baseball um pire. mm Congressman Cushman of Waahlnar- ton declines to be a delegate to the atlonal Republican convention. Cush man is a humorist, and may be needed in the convention to help-frame tariff and reciprocity- planks. ' An exchange un the vallev navs: When you vota for a Statement No. 1 ticket you are voting tn uttnil n Tlonin. crat to congress," and also: "It is not a question or Statement No. 1. hut a question whether Oregon will send a Democrat to congress or not." But not many Republican papers will so frank ly acknowledge that Chamberlain la cer tain to oeat eake. which these atate- ments imply. But if the majority of all me voters want unamnerialn, why shouldn't they hava him, eh? Mrs. Lenonla W. Brown. aRuftu i. yeress. Is reported aa saying that """" unouia d meea ana numble in her home," and that she "should Buffer in silence the many lndlgnltlea which her husband, through his brutality, may heap upon her." The easiest explana tion of a woman lawyer saying these things la that she didn't; quite the con trary, and that somebody reported the opposite of what she said. Otherwise, she must have considered that this was the only way ahe could think of to gain Oregon Sidelights Prairie City has a population of 750. Bandon had a holiday when the new steamer Daisy was launched. Four dances in eight days are prom ised, says the Prineville Review. a Jacksonville la growing; several busi ness enterprises have been started. Fossil had two golden weddings this week, Mr. and Mrs. David Hamilton and Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Henderson. - a Powell Butte'a stage station. 18 miles east-northeast of La Id law, Is exultant over finding an ample supply of ex cellent artesian water at a depth of 600 feet. The strike was made about a week' ago. a m Work Is going forward with a rush, and before long; Salem will have a mil more of paved streets, on Commercial and State, says the Statesman. There should be time this year for another mile on Court and other streets. a Bandon Recorder: Everybody here uses buttermilk these drtts since the new creamery started up; housekeepers use It to bake with; saloons dispense It to the thirsty; hotels serve It at meals and the whole town revela In a reign of buttermilk. a. A bonus of $25,000 has been offered at Lakevtew for establishment of a beet sugar factory. After a thorough test la made on growing sugar beets In Lane county this season we will be In position to talk business along the line of establishing a similar Industry here, says the Eugene Register. a Huntington Herald: ' Three grading outfits arrived here Wednesday ani went down the river to resume con struction work on the Northwest road, work on which was suspended last fall when the panic came. Three hundred and fifty head of horses and mules left here the same day for the scene of operations. a The Incoming of strangers seeking homes and men with capital looking for profitable investmenta In Bandon is on the Increase, says the Bandon Re corder. The hotels are full and old timers are so crowded that they virtual ly find themselves strangers In their own home town. In one week 122 strangers arrived. a Alluding to John Day strawberries, now beginning to ripen, the Condon Times says: John Day fruit ranches aro held in the back ground for want of transportation but aome day they will come to the front and astonish thi world. We have traveled a fair slice of this old globe but we have never seen the John Day peach Beaten in any country. According to a South Bend (Washing ton) paper, the following advertise ment recently appeared tn the Pacific Christian Advocate: "Wanted Appli cation for teachers in public school of Ilwaco, Washington. Must be active members of the M. E. church. Good po sitions and good salaries to tight par ties. Address Rev. D. Leppert." The South Bend paper, published In the same county In which Ilwaco la situated, properly criticised this advertisement severely, but The Journal is- Informed that the school directors of Ilwaco were not at all responsible for It. and have called down 'Rev. D. Jjeppert" aa he deserved. The public schools hava not yet become denominational. - . William M. Davidsoa's Birthday. , William M. Davidson, superintendent of public schools of Omaha and one of . the most prominent educators tn, the weat, was , born May t, Ittt, at. ' Jamestown, Pennsylvania. lie received hla early education In the public schools of Kansas and later graduated from the Kansas State Nor mal school at Emporia. Since 188) he haa been continuously engaged In ed ucational work, with the exception vf two years h spent aa editor of a news paper at Emporia. Ha waa superintend ent of publlo schoola at Topeka from 189! to 1904, when he accepted bis present appointment as superintendent of publlo schools at Omaha. Mr. Da vidson ia the author of several school text books that "are widely used and haa attained prominence a an Institute worker and a -lecturer on) educational subjects. - He Is member of the lead ing educational and scientific societies of iUt I'nlted Statea and has been honored ;with the presidency the Na tional educational association. I THE T APANESE IN HAWAII H " ' ; - f 1 ' , ' BY FREDERIC J. HASKIX. . (Copyright, 1908. by Fredrlo J. Haakin.) ' Honolulu. April 20. Hawaii is not an "insular possession,"; like the Phillppines-or-Porto Rico.- It is-as much a part of the United States as New Mexico or Arixona. Kothwlhstanding its purely Amerlcanvpollt- ical status, the question of the hour in Hawaii is the Americanization of the islands. Why? Because Hawaii, an American , territory, has a population of 160,000, of which 100,900 is oriental. Of this number 76,000 are Japanese. The most spoken language In the territory is Jap anese. The most widespread religion is Buddhism. Apart from the small communities in the towns rather than 'occidental. Those persona who believe that the opposition to oriental immigration mani festing ltaelf among many white peo ples In various quarters of the globe la the result of a mere bugaboo would do well . to consider the ease of Hawaii. brightest of Neptune's Insular Jewels. Every white man in Honolulu will agree that the Japanese have driven the white artisan from the islands, that the Japa nese have made It more difficult to per suade small farmers to take up home steads, and that the Japanese are now slowly "but surely crowding out the white man from retail business. They hate already made a beginning In the wnowsaie Duameaa, and nave an eye on the immense trade of the big Import ing; Jiousea.The Chinese cam a to Hi wail before the Japanese. They were atopped by the annexation of the lalanda to the United States, but there are still zo.ouq or tuem mere, rney nave had their - share of retail merchandising, but they have ventured upon nothing Ilka the general campaign of competi tion which has been puraued by the Jap anese. '.'. wnen Hawaii was annexed to tne United Statea in 1898 there were tnany people here who were anneftatlonista merely for fear of Japan. The Toklo government had picked a quarrel with Honolulu and there waa not the allaht- eat doubt amouar the Japanese in Ma- wall that the rising aun flag' would float over Honolulu harbor and advance the cower of Jatan a Ions: aten toward the rich Occident. The raising of the American flag put an end to those dreams for awhile, but the Japanese oontlnued - to reach out In a bueinesa way. After awhile the government-Inspired Immigration companies made Ha waii merely - a stepping-stone to the ricner oDDoriuniuea on ma. mainiana. Thousands of Japanese came to Hawaii under paaaporta permitting them to go no farther. They stopped a few months. made enougn money ror a suit or Amer ican clothes and the steerage passage to San Francisco. Then Hawaii saw them no mora. Xgioraat Goollea. The Boor. Iranmnt Jananeae cooliea who toll with their wives in Hawaiian cane fields must not be made to bear the whole burden of the blunder of permitting the Hawaiian Islands to be come orientalized. At first they came under contract as contract laborers: in other words, with little more freedom than slaves. They were brought here In the good old days of the monarchy to work on the sugar plantations the same plantations which owed their very being to the reciprocity treaty with the United States. Chinese. Japanese, South Sea Islanders, Porto Rlcans, Spaniards, Por tuguese and many other nationalities have been brought here to work In tha cane fields. . The oriental labor waa found to be more to tha liking of the ?lanters. because It was cheap and easy o obtain, and because the coolie is con tent to remain a coolie. ' But after awhile the (fooltes were fol lowed uy Japanese of other classes whe came to sell them goods, teach them les sons and guide their religion. Artisans and mechanics poured in from Japan and the white mecnanlo took a ship and sailed away. It 4s not only that the Japanese will work for less money than a white man that he drives his western competitor from the field. The superior ability of the white man might make up for the difference tn ages. But the Japa nese lower the dignity of labor, and white men become ashamed to earn their bread by the sweat of their brow. This has been the case in all history w'ner every a cheaper and inferior labor has Interfered with natural conditions. A white boy in Honolulu would scorn to be seen pushing a lawn mower, because that ia a "Jap's work." So it still ia In the southern states to some extent, where certain employments are beyond the pale as "niggers' Jobs." What Hawaii needs more than any thing else Is a solid middle class of white people of European or American extraction. All lta public men recog nize that imperative need and are work ing to that end, although careful to say nothing against the Japanese who have caused all the trouble. There are rea sons for their conciliatory attitude. In the first place it is not well co rouse the ire of half the population by intro ducing a rt.ee question into a community where there is room for a dozen auch Is sues. And then. "too. the Japanese who were born on the Islands are citizens. When they reach 21 they will have the right to vote. Whether they will gain control of affairs or not is not a ques tion for the Immediate future, but It CArtalnlv will nnt ha Inna until thev are a potent factor in politics. Awe of Sugar King, But more potent--even than this po litical force fa the awe of King Sugar, from which no Hawaiian may declare Need of Democratic State Universities From the Eugene Guard. - Da we want universities that will teach plutocracy or democracy? Private universities hava to b main tained by gifts of wealthy ; patrons. Their teachers must cut their teachings to fit the opinions of tha men who foot the bills. The weak-kneed professors submit. Tha bold and truthful onca r turned nut. Thli haa been ahown nn the Atlantic aeaboard. in tha Mis slssippt valley and on tne racirio coast. Benjamin Andrews, president of Brown university, waa turned out by the rich men who control that university because he stood by the people In 1898. Pro fessors Ely anI Veblen, of Chicago, were daring enough to speak for the neonle's riahts. and to criticise some of the encroachmenta of - corporate wealth. John D, Rockefeller inquired of President Harper what he thought he was auDDortinsr tne university ior. and Ely and Veblen were Invited to go furtber ana ao it in a nurry. jvl omn ford, too, E. A. Ross told some truths about corporation metfeode, and Mrs. Stanford insisted on having, his head. Professor- Howard stood by Ross and his head came off, too. Mark what became of these .men. Turned -out of private institutions for their courage and honesty, these men were promptly reappointed to better Sositlons in state univeraltles. An rews la tha head of tha University of Nebraska. Ely and Rosa are pro fessors of the University of Wiscon sin, of which LaFollette la a product Howard Is in the University of Kansas. These universities are pafd for by the people, and the cause of the people may ba preached tn them when Ha voice ia smothered In the universities tha millionaires own. The men who pay for the universities control them. Or do you think Standard Oil main tains Chicago and Syracuse and Brown and other universities out of pure love, of mankind? The one man who speaks loudest for Standard Oil " and against tha Roosevelt pollclea and the often est Is Chancellor Day, of the trust- owned 8yracuee university. ' The ma jority or our presidents, senators, con gressmen, governors, judgea and prose cuting attorneys are trained In the uni versities. It is worth the while of the trusts to control, the universities, and to trald tha men .who are- going to make, interpret and Inforce the laws to see thlnga as tha trusts aea them? Rockefeller thinks so. It la worth mil lions to him to control ' the univar iate. What la It worth to the' people T Now the University oi Oregon, like all state unlverp!tten. In nn lh .ih. of .the people. The . university Trofes- eora are tor government not only wf tha peopla and for the people, but, by the social life of the Islands is oriental himself free. ' Tha islanda live by sugar. they have aacrlfloed many things for augar, the augar barona are lta busi ness giants, and augar needs cheap labor. Kven yet tha augar planters, or aome of them, have hopes that tha unitea states win remove me restric tions from Chinese labor and will ad mi them to the Islanda. Some of them chafe at tha recently imposed restriction of Japanese labor, but even the sugar barons aa a whole aeem to sea that the Japanese were becoming too numerous. Tha threatened buying up of augar stocks by Japaneaa capital ma hava had something to do with their atti tude. Among tha - more - progreaaiva pianiera are men wno realize mat iar wall ought not to bring In any mora oriental, even if It could, and these are looking to the south of Europe, for lief. I Although thev came to Hawaii at the invitation of the augar planters and the nawauan government, tna Japanese hava became the maatarr of -thai social and Industrial life of the territory. More man m.ouu were Drougnt in under iron clad contracts in tha yeara between 1885 and 1890. The tide waa swelled each succeeding; year, until the Tecent re striction Where each month used to bring from 600 ro 860. the number com lng In. now la not above 160 a month. These are, under tha agreement, rela tives of Japanese already residing in Hawaii. The gi eat .majority go to the cane fields, where tney "'work for 1 $18 a month, the month consisting of 26 daya of 10 hours each. The old contract system, which would be peonage, Is abolished under American rule, but the laborers are still very -much bound to the soil. Nevertheless their condition la vastly Improved over what It was in Japan. A year's wages for a farm hand in Japan Is less than lit. Of course living costs more in Hawaii, but the average Japanese laborer Uvea on 810 or u a montn ana saves is or is. in a short time he is. a wealthy man ac cording to his standards. Before the law prevented, a large portion of theae savings went to steamships ror traew portatton to tha Pacific coast. Now many go back to Japan, but since the immigration restriction there la lesa ml gratlon and the Japanese declare they are in Hawaii to stay. The cane field laborers have found ou that they could make more money by working tn the sugar mills, with the result that semi-skilled labor of the mills has been taken away from white men and given to Japanese. The same plrlt of progress which formerly car ried them on to the mainland of the union will now keeD them in Hawaii. for they see thftt the chance to improve tneir condition is Detter now tnat immi gratlon has been curtailed and the door of greater hope on the mainland haa seen cioseo. XTot Slow to Boast.' Servile he may ba now. but tha Ha wailan Japanese will not ba content to remain so. When the Toklo government used some rough language to Washing ton at the time of the San Francisco school question. Hawaii knew all about it and tho cocky Japanese were bold enough to boast that the Japanese flag, instead of tha Stars and Stripes, would Boon fly over the inlands. Events have cooled their patriotism to the point of Keeping ineir moutns snut. Dut it is safo to say that nine out of every ten Japanese in the islands think that Japan could take Hawaii whenever It pleased, and that it Is likely to Please. Several thousand veterans of the war with Russia are now working in Ha waii. They have been made the nucleus ror many wild rumors t military or sanitations and uprisings, most of which were made of whole cloth. But It is true, nevertheless, that these veterans keep up organizations, just aa veterans of wars of every nation do. They may be seen on Sunday marching about the country In military formation, hut they declare that their only -urpose Is a social reunion. So much alarm waa caused by this sort or thing that the territorial legisla ture last year pasted a law requiring an owners oi rirearms to register them with the county clerks. The result waa that the Japanese were shown to dos- seas fewer firearms than tha neonle of any oiner nationality. But even in Ma- wall there are those who doubt these returns. It Is known that tho United States war department took a serloua interest in this registration and examl nation. An officer of the Ruaslan gen eral staff also came to Honolulu to In quire Into the results of the registration ana to examine tna Japanese veteran organization. The Jananeae ara slv and cleve. but their -reputation for trickery has become so general that tney are ocing closely watched In every quarter. the peoplaY too, and not by the trusts. Let no one forget that Allen H Katun. who Introduced the university appro- iiisuun Diu in tne last legislature, ana who speaks for tho university, signed, Statement No 1. when tha other friend J of government by the will of tha people were scared to tha woods. Why, then, are Palmer and Walker and the Linn county men so hot to gin tne atate university? Do they want to turn the control of education in Oregon over to the meat packers' trust as soon as lta Portland plant la com pleted? Their motto is: "No higher vuuvbuuo except . ior inose wno can pay for it." Let the rich have a mo nopoly of college education, and the poor man do without. Let the rich furnish all the luda-ea anlnaiari iiul legislators, and leave the lntereats of me peopie in tneir nanas. Shall we stand for It, or will the people of Oregon aupport a university where the eona of the plain people can Set an education lust as good as young rockefeller got at Brown? Thla coun try haa turned lta recourses and bus iness opportunities over to the few with hardly a murmur. Will it turn Its education over to them, toot Will It adopt tha theory that all a poor man needs is education enough to read what the, trusts think best to print for him? - ; This Date in History. 1429 Siege of Orleans abandoned. 1868 La Sage, author of "Oil Bias," born. -Died November 17, 1747. 1780 Battle of Sulllvans Island, South Carolina -174 United States postof flee de partment established' by congress. 1799 Bonaparte defeated at St Jean D'Acra. r 1806 Robert Morris, the financier of tha American revolution, died In Phila delphia. , Bora in Liverpool, January. 20, 178. , s. 1818 Americans evacuated York, Can ada, after setting fire to the city. 1854 Sullon of Turkey gave a ban quet in honor of tha Emperor Na poleon. - ! ' . , 1878 John Stuart Mill - died. Born May 20, 1806. -.3 1900 Peary discovered tha northern coast of Greenland. 1906 -The dominion gcrvemment took over the defenses at Esquimau. Getting Even With Fra Elbertus. v From Sucdesa Magazine. ; " Elbert Hubbard says he was nearlng the end of a "lecture before one thou sand attentive inmates of a state In sane asylum, when an old woman cams screaming down tha aisle: -'My UOfll i cant atanu iuin uuiicmo any longer. . - i -. ; . . ' . Tht,T' said the- superintendent to Mr. Hubbard, 1 tha flrst.slgn aha haa shown of returning aanlty. ' REALM FEMININE e Does Motherhood Pay? - "D QbS-ft pay, after all, 'to be , a mother?" la tha curious ques tion asked by a recent writer. The argument on which shu basea ' this Iconoclastic query Is that of all tha mothers she knows, none but mourns the loss .of a child dearer to her than life; or ? meetf a deeper pain In the fact that her children ' hava not turned mi mm ah it.nt to, nor are Inclined to the things to which she wlahtfd to direct tbem. She thinks theae women will admit that-tha perils and the labors which motherhood en tails, are far in excess of the rewards; "m tiuiiness woman naa leisure to keep herself attractive, not only to ner friends but to her -husband; that the fact - of their utter dependence upon each other draws' them closer together; that leisure i from baby tending means culture, reading, travel, and tha culti vation of tha arts which widen her in terest and keep her the same sort of Woman that the husband knew and loved in his youth. Very few mothers, it is certain, will Igrea wltk thia dark picture of the re yards and troubles of motherhood. Very few would exchange tha situation, even though life haa brought soma disap pointments, for tha care free state of the childless woman, whose thoughts Inward jurnwi b largely For ithls Is the crown of a mother's joy -tbat aelf-forgetting which spelU tha Inner meaning of motherhood.' - - naa laiaaaBa- - t : - i - It has often seemed to ma that ths mothers who ara ao disappointed In what their children hava become, hava ootjii Biung tneir nearta on tne child's becoming what they wanted him to ba InitAA M wr ) m UA ... kl..t 1 . 1 - . for. Tho hardware merchant and his wife have agreed that the boy ehould Inherit the business and they want htm to begin at tho bottom and learn tha price of nails and trundla goods, around in wheelbarrow. They ara naturally disappointed when the boy refusea ut terly to take their view, and takea to illustrated hose, long hair and dabbling In painta. They make their deductions too soon. The boy must find himself, and it is by no means so easy for him as It was for his grandfather, whose education waa simpler, less complicated and bent to a particular end. Our mod ern education keeps children In the nur sery stage muoh longer, diatruata their judgment aurrounds them with Ideals, gives them an insight into all branches of Scientific thought and literary achievement and then expects' them to start in at selling nails with the same 2est and Interest that would appeal ta them at years of age. Of all animals, man haa bv far tha longest Infancy. An Infant turtle. they tell us, knows aa much as It will ever know, as soon aa it Is born. It has no mentality exceDt Instinct. Tha young horse or cow Is very much of a baby for a few months, but by the time it m two yearn old is supposed to bo through with its coltish ways. We edu cate our children for 20 years. Is it un reasonable men, to asic ror tnem a lit tle time to discover themselves? When It comes to settlna- down In cold print the thoughts of a mother whose little one haa been taken from her, or those who see a young man. the pride and Joy of their life snatched from them by dfath, the hand and heart falter. There are no words to tell It. and no one fully enters Into the anguish who hna not passed through the same dark vay. But It la only a cold ob server who believes that a mother whar has gone through that terrible experi ence would renounce It and be content never to know motherhood. Carping critic, can you measure the depths of that mother's heartache? Never. And by that same lack shall you stand ut terly outbids and apart from the depths of her peace and her joy, when that comes back to her. to know her little one sheltered and guarded aa earthly love could never shelter it and waiting in tho eternal home. One of our Port land ministers in conducting a funeral ceremony for a child does not fall to say to the sorrowing, broken-hearted parents, "You are now tha parents of an angel." Doej motherhood nay? Not In coin. If one is looking for that, or at least not always. The sons go forth to a struggle with the world, where a mother cannot follow; they marry and settle in another town and their letters grow infrequent. But In the hearts of those asms sons, stalwart men aa they are, tho thought of tha mother who guarded their infancy is one of tha sweet sacred places. The daughters marry and become ab sorbed in their own household duties and their children, but in their lives there is a place which no one but mother can rill. Aa nearly as may be! they' try to make their homes conform to the ways that "mother used to have." Motherhood nays In something better than money. It Days In love lova given and love receiving, and In th growth of the spirit and In the larger sympathy and in the tribute that aga has from youth. Money can not buy these things, and they ara not to be bartered for ease and leisure and ac complishments. I at at For the Garden. A MONO the most easily cultivated and satisfactory vegetables to grow is tha kohlrabi and on this account It stands near the head of the list. The plant la comparatively little known In America and is generally quite profit able to tha market gardener who grows It partakes cf tha nature of the cab bage and the turnip and la often used as a substitute for the latter. Tha plant Is very hardy, often enduring se vere frosts and also restating drouth. The upper part of the stem swells Into a large, fleshy head above the ground resembling the turnip. Tha edible part range from th slss of an orange to the slea of a man's head. Its flavor resembiea ootn tne turnip ana cab bage. It can be stored away In win ter like turnips. Kohlrabi Is beat for the table when about the size of a cocoanut. It is then' tender and of fine-flavor, but when It, becomes larger it Is tough and stringy. In cooking the vegetable It la sliced and boiled until It becomes soft,, when it may ba served like turnips. The pi nnt grows best in deep rich soil and for early use tha seed should be sown as early as permissible out doors. When the plants are three or four Inches high they, are transplanted Intn rnara two fot nnflrt. a font apart in the row. 'For a late crop seed should be sown early In May. and another sowing made a month later. The most commonly grown varieties are eariy white" and "early purple." , ,st The Daily Menu. T . BREAKFAST. . Coddled eggs, v Broiled bacon. Hot biscuit. Coffee. LUNCHEON. . fnrn fritters, v T.nmh currv and rlca. Apple butter. Oraham wafers. Tea. DINNER. Scotch broth, Chinook . salmon, egg . sauce. , : Spaghetti and cheese. Green peas. Spinach. ' Baked custards. Sponge cake. : Oof fee. - x - Resigned to It, : ; . From the Atlanta Constitution, a 077, WWU V1IV VIU ibuji iua I 0 M , lot o talk 'bout "woman's rights'. In the papers now. What does' It all mean?" ' 'Hit means, Maria," said the old man, " that women air a-takln the places wnm utfii .vu:utiFU. I tii 11 una mi plow .right whar I left It,- an' when yoa sharpen the "ax you kin sail Into a dosen cords o wood; ' in' I'll have . aupper a-bllln' when you" git home!'' ' 1h