m mini sissHli iii --fllTjyasjs 7 : .tif ""'" -"l 1-3 -A A Hb-aM - 1" I ! is A t !HE JOURNAL AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER. 8. JACKSON. .PvMUber 'l'utillhed erf etml!i lexeept .00,1rL? t-erjr Sunday morning. t Th Joaraal Bolld- liiK. Fins a us xaaiiiiu anweta. r-t k.Md at th. mMtnmrm mt Portland. Or., S trail-minion through tl mail aa xcood-cUM lKU:i'H0NESMi!t f ITS. BOMB, i a-0Sl. Ail fk-Dxrtmenu reached fcy h- samba. T11 tb operator tb department yo wsat. Bun Side office. B-UU: tt S3& ,-.- 1 IJliKlG Ji AUVEETISINO REPBESSNTATIVI Vwhtad Buijuniln Special Adwtlalog Agency. Urundirli-k Bulldlnc. S Fifth tuu. Nw York; Tribune BuUdlDR. Cbtraso. Subucrlptliw Term 67 mall, to tar address Id Iba Lulled Suiea. Canada or Muioo. .. DAI LI. . One rear. fg.no I One BMntB. ....... .60 Bt'NDAT. . One- rear $2.fW I One month....... -2f DAILY AND SUNDAY,, i One fear... ... .(T.M I One snt.......l .61 I see not but that my road to heaven Ileth through this very valley .rr-Bunyan. TlfK REPrniJCAN' TLATFORM., NATURALLY, the first resolution "pointed with pardonable pride" to the record of the Re publican party during the past 50 years. There is much in that rec ord to be proud of, and some things not to be approved. We night men tion the giving away of the public lands unstintedly to railroads, and adherence to a trust-fostering tariff. But a party convention is expected to look only at the cood side of Its own party and the bad side of the other party. A party platform tells only half the truth, or less, for its purpose, partly, is to1 fool the people. . The administration of President Roosevelt Is commended, and the - party Is "pledged to a continuance of the great work Inaugurated and car rled forward by him."' Again im- ' portant - truths are ignored; that many of the national party leaders are opposing Roosevelt and obstruct ing his policies; that his roost cordial support comes now from Democrats, and that as Boon as Roosevelt is out of office" it Js probable that "the great work inaugurated by him" will be suspended, or at least w ill be car ried on with even greater difficulty than now, unless there is a general change of Republican leadership In congress. A party's record must,e made and its policy must be carried out mostly by congress of which the Oregonian, with which paper. The Journal sometimes agrees, Bays: ' " Congress has , boma largely a fu tility. , It can no' longer ' accomplish much. It Is fettered by divers Influ ences,' bound down by Idle traditions. It has tied Its own hands with rules, precedents, forma - and ceremonies. It has ceased to respond to the will of ' the people. It . does- not even try to a 1 tend to the needs of the country. k- It only acts-when it is driven either by the orders of its bosses or by. an ener getic executive, like Mr. Roosevelt, In the former case If acts with docility, as if It loved the lash. In the latter It whines-; like !, a ' whipped " cur, but . it usually , obeys. - Still, now that f Mr. Roosevelt must soon go- out of office, congress snaps , its teeth at him and growls as it -would never , have dared to do a year or two ago. r . t; That congress "'usually obeys' erroneous; at least It Is not obeying Roosevelt now.- - It refuses to pass more than one or two out of nearly a score of measures that be has re peatedly and urgently recommended 60 that an indorsement of Roosevelt Is virtually a disapproval of congress. The convention demanded tariff revision," with an Intimation that the demand was not very strong or ear- rest, and a usual phrase about the "American workingman,, who, how ever, is not benefited a particle by high duties. .The plank on, American shipping" squints at free registry for foreign-built ships; but doesn't say what it, means,;, and may, be con strued to mean a ship subsidy. Reg istration frauds are denounced, but nothing is said about the count in 1896 or the - record ' of T, Cader Powell... , The convention was evidently not In favor of the Initiative and referen dum, and viewed with alarm, not to say with horror,! proportional repre rent at ion and the recall. : Retention of the Philippine elephant is 'ap proved, also a greater navy, and the university appropriation ia indorsed. ' Nothing -was said about open rlv erB, inland waterways, the , Oregon City locks,, the. etate school lands, increased railroad rates, the building of railroads In Oregon, the Southern Pacific land grant the taxation of corporate franchises, an Income tax, Iostal savings banks, a parcels post, regulation of railways, or the elec-j tion of senators by. the .vote of the people. ' Whether the convention forgot these subjects; or did not wish to commit itself upon them, we do not know. But the people are think ing about them, all the same. 1 . As '" 'L"v'"'i:';'--'"" ' .sss '. V i IIIXJIXXIXG OF A GREAT MOVE MEXT. !T IS proposed by the convention of governors at Washington to have state commissions whose business it shall be to consider the best means of the conservation ! of the state's resources. These com-! missions, in connection with the gov ernors, would probably, after they pet fairly to work, hold a national convention every year or two,-and otild thereby act somewhat In con cert, .along the same . lines. ; Mean-v.-fcild congressif lis personnel and characler ran be improved will act in harmony with stale laws, and the fulers! government and the state jHivernrnontt will work together, 'as Tj ctary Ropt augsf steJ the" other SENATOR OR SOUVENIR? 1 S THERE a scarcity of reasons for electing Mr. Cake senator Else why do his friends advance ''only that ' bewhiskered and Question able one, to-wit: ; That he would be an Indorsement . of the, adminlstra tion? Do his friends mean that he Is to go, not as a statesman, but as a souvenir? Is there no other rea son for hla going save that he would be a good bargain-counter tag to Din cn the coat of the administration to be looked at by the passing crowd. 5 Do they mean to corifesa that1 his powers as a statesman are confined to the fact that as a special sales window card he would be a howling success? ir this is all that is wanted in a senator, why not label a tobacco sign, "Cake," and elect it to the sen ate? Doe,' their confession mean that the' senatorship, with 4ts oppor tunity for . doing great things . for Oregon, should be sacrificed on. the silly sham that all there Is in, this election is to show that Oregon la in b armony with. Rooseveltlsm-r-some-thlng that Roosevelt, all the country, and .all the world already knows? What else does their plan of sending Mr. Cake back as a" souvenir, rather than as a senator; mean? ' . rDoes It not occur to Mr. Cake and his friends that this old bewhiskered 1 day, for the conservation and J best utilization, and the due preservation for the people's benefit, of the coun try's resources as to lands, forests, streams; as to Irrigation, water pow ers, coal" fields; as to improvement In agriculture, horticulture and stock raising; perhaps as to transportation and distribution, and even as to edu cation and morals. ; j . An incalculable amount of good may come of such a movement. It will necessarily be non-partisan, and .beside' such a great object and pur pose how : petty and puerile mere party talk sounds. The president gave the impulse to this movement; the governors, and other. prominent men are taking It up, and once in fair swing It wiil we believe, work a veritable revolution in this country. For one thing, and one of Immense Importance,-when such a movement gets" a fair headway the railroads will no longer autocratically; dictate terms to 85,000,000, soon to be more than 100,000,000 people, as they do now. . The railroads may control a majority , of congress a little while longer, but they will never get con frol of nearly half a hundred gover nors v and 4 state ; commissions, ..., de termined upon serving the people of this and succeeding generations, and these bodies will wield a powerful Influence over tongress. ROOSEVELT INDORSED. THE administration has been In dorsed, i Oregon has sent Mr. Roosevelt greetings," and; em , phatic approval. A souvenir state convention in ringing resolu tions 'has officially notified Mr. Roosevelt, and the country that the great Republican party of the state stands by and approves the admin istration and its policies. Two con gressional conventions have accen tuated the act, by sending similar tidings to the president and the sis terhood of states. It is a notable ex pression by notable gatherings, and In Its completeness will remove every doubt throughout the country,.as to bow Oregon Republicanism regards Mr. Roosevelt and his policies. , But Oregon Republicanism ' has done- more. . It Y has gone V to;even greater lengths to assure the admin istration of Us loyalty. In the greet ings it sends to Mr. Roosevelt and his administration, it announces to him that., so far as Oregon Republicans are concerned, Mr. Roosevelt Is not only indorsed, but - he Is given - the great privilege of naming the "Repub lican who shall be the candidate to succeed him in office. It Is the most notable honor that Oregon . Repub licans could lay at the feet of Mr. Roosevelt. It is a distinction so great that It has been conferred on a retiring president but once or twice in the whole history of the nation. It Is the extreme limit to which - a party could go in extending not only approval, but the highest praise. It is a triumph for Mr. '.Roosevelt, to which nothing could be added, or be desired.'; After so splendid a tribute, what a colossal joke for Mr. Cake to claim that the only, way to Indorse Roosevelt Is to "elect me." ; AN OPEN WILLAMETTE. A' LL things come to those who wait.' provided they work for it. For 30 years, a toll taker has been standing at the door of every home in the Willamette re gion, exacting tribute, It is, because of the lockage . charge at Oregon City, a tribute of 60 cents per ton on every pound of freight shipped In or shipped out of the section. If the lockage charge were removed a re duction of &a cents per ton In steam boat rates would result, and the raiU roads would, have to, meet It. It would mean 1 cents added to the price of every bushel of wheat, , 5 cents to every bale of hay, every bale of hops, and a corresponding reduc tion on every- sack of sugar, every saok of salt, every keg of nails and every other article of necessity. ,' In the case of many a farmer and many a business man, the toll taking on the Willamette costs him more each year than all his cbunty, state and school taxes.Jl It costs so much, and means so much tor the development gag of ! "indorsing the administra tion" has done overtime? Do they not remember that It was worked in behalf of Bitoger Herman? ; DoJnot many of them who were entrapped by' the snare to vote -for Mr. Her mann, remember the nausea that came to them afterward? Subsequent events proved that, instead of "In dorslng" the administration In elect tng Hermann,: Oregon .actually slapped Mr. Roosevelt in the face, Strangely enough, , however, Her mann was sent to Washington, and a beautiful souvenir he was for Ore gon to present to Mr, Roosevelt, Oregon wants and,, needs to send something , more than- a souvenir, to Washington: ' What is wanted there is a man of brains, profundity and force, and if Mr. Cake measures up to i the requirement, 1 his friends should make it known and stop ad vocating him as a tag for Big Bill Taffe'a shlrtfront t They should tell us of some of his broad statesman ship and forceful personality no cb sehtial .Inv the dignified office of United States senator. They might. for Instance, show us In what way the elastic quality of being for State ment No. 1 long enough to beat Mr, Fulton and abandoning it when nom inated, would be of value to Oregon at Washington. '';;':;-. .''.'W';. and enrichment of the region that the wonder is that the exaction has been . uncomplainingly tolerated so long. , ,V.Vi:'.,' Happily, the plan for an open Wil lamette has, ' from an ' unexpected quarter, received enormous impetus. The late decision by the Oregon su preme court, holding that' the state has not lost Its rights for Bharlng in the net re venuer of the locks and that all arrearages must be paid, Is of great consequence as an Influence In shaping negotiations for public acquirement ., of the property. It means 10 per cent of the income taken from " the corporation and transferred to the coffers ' of the state, which In turn means that the state is, in -effect, a Id per cent owner in the property, ty- y -r ', It means that the $aerty is 10 per cent less valuable t(f te,corpora tlon whose Illegal claims 4soIe pro prietorship have been dissipated by the decision. The effect ds to place the people of the state In position of extreme advantage for proceeding with the plan of public acquirement and control of the locks with its con sequent abolishment of the .Inordin ate and untimely lockage charge. It is a favorable turn in the condition of affairs to give great pleasure and hope to those who .have -watted so long, and labored so earnestly tor an open river and Its v lower . freight rates, i It '. is a condition for which they are Indebted solely and only to Governor Chamberlain, to whose deep Insight and broad comprehen sion of public affairs Is due the fact that the suit was brought, and the victory for the people won. . Under the circumstances, is it. not the logic of events that he should be sent to the senate, there to bring to a fru ition the plan for an open Willam ette, he has thus so well begun? The Democratic party of Minne sota "adheres to the principles of Jefferson and Jackson.' That's the dodge; Btick to the two big' J's and overlook everything that has hap pened since. , What the country wants these days la not so much clap trap about adherence to dead men's principles, as legislation and admin istration in the interest of the com mon people, who are becoming weary of being fllmflammed by phrases and false pretenses. -: . ,. y : .A great uproar Is made by a few congressmen about sending an army officer named Stewart out: to ' Ari zona where he has nothing to do but to draw his ' pay. It seems be is "temperamentally impossible,' that is, nobody can get along with him; and . the president- seems to have treated him very nicely in giving him an army post all to himself. Prob ably this is what hurts him, that he has nobody to quarrel wlth. ' X ; ; It was not exactly a machine con vention of the old sort, but was a pretty close Imitation of it. v,It might be called a near-machine convention. It suggested ' clearly ; enough what will happen as soon as the politicians can get. rid of the primary - law,' if they ever can and they are going to try their best to do so, 'If they can beat Statement No. 1 now, that will be a good beginning.' v k DemocraticT?aper says "the peo ple do not'like a quitter of a prin ciple." But suppose it was a bad principle, then wouldn't It be better to quit? Pendleton Tribune. ; Yes, but The Journal asserts and maintains- that ; the election of United States senators by direct vote ot the people is a .good principle. Of course mo ahuumo - r - as a Daa princiyie. The question of electing .senators by the people instead of by the leg islature Is to the fore over in Wash ington also, and the candidate who dodges or equivocates is going to get knocked out. . This reform move ment is spreading. "Ask 'em what the 'party will do for you;" -Portland Journals And ask 'em what Governor Chamberlain will .-doi forX- -youJ-ForeBt Grove News. Yes, ask 'em, and they will tell you that judglrig by the many good things he ha.3 done for them that ino governor ever did before they expect he will do some good things for them as senator. v; Newspapers are receiving a sketch of the life of Speaker Cannon, 'to be held for obituary use," ; 'i While perhaps-few -editors are-inxlousr to use the stuff soonf-it would be good thing for the country if Uncle Joe a political obituary could be pub lished right away. . Evidently the Republican poli ticians of Oregon are not in favor of the-election of senators by the peo ple. But we think that most of the Republican voters are. . The poli ticians seldom really represent , the voters..; ''. ". -,'V ;: t ,r i y A Demand for Roosevelt. Frank A. Munsey in . Munaey's Mag- ... sine. ' Mr; 'Roosevelt better interprets tho thoughts, and .wishes, of all the peopio than any other mati we have had in public life in 100 year. , And In the fight ha has mada far humanity and for honesty and ' tha square, deal .for! all for. rich and poor . alike he has ad vanced the country . In whatever makes for better government and better Ideals and greater safety to capital and to in vestors has advanced it - half s cen turv. .... ... " II Decauaa m icopa 01 me law tans short of reaching them. In high fi nance every move - of the chessboard has been made under - the guidance of -men most (killed in the law. And since all punishment rmmi come through the law tnta ame iaw oi wnicn ine manip ulators haVe made use to protect them selves what cnanee la mere oi appre hending and convicting them? But. after all. a., doaen conviction a. mora or less, are of little' importance aa compared with the far-reaching af reet or rocusing pudiio auenuon at white heat on honeet methods, rigiit methods. In this Mr. Roosevelt has done -. Ma Kreatest "-work has" done, a work that no one of less courage, leea impetuosity and lea fighting qualities could have done. v' '.; M A ; mild-mannered ; gentleman ,r would have suited the grand dukes of finance and of politics, but he would not hav fitted the times, Mr. - Roosevelt haH fitted the times. He is the best ' liv ina examnle of the new idea in politics a president of the people and for th people a man or rmer ana gru ana arrlatle and nerve nd. Withal, a man of intellect and breadth of vision and rock-ribbed honesty to match well the fight there Is in him. . ? If Mr. Roosevelt la au this and nas done all these things, and If my analrsla of the financial rash is sound. wouldn't- we do wen to now mi m him . until he has finished the job he has undertaken until he has concreted Into the laws of tha land the princi ples for which he stands so strenu ously? Complete these reforms, and our railroads and other corporation will be in a stronger and safer position than ever before.. Their stocks and bonds will be the soundest and best In the world. ' Has any other man the courage and the firmness and the ability- to carry out this work? Possibly, but why talcs chances, why experiment, wnen we nave leader wno leaas. t , man . woo ooes things? ' r The Proposed Raise of Rates, From tha Bioux City. Iowa, Journal. If ths desire to - promote -a general Increase in freight rates has been al lowed to leak, out a "feeler," it is safe to say that the ' public reception of the - proposition will not . encourage the roads to go ahead with their plans. There will be hardly a discordant note in tha chorus , of resentful disapproval arising rom the business community. Business is lagging.' In spite of in dustrial depression the cost of living continues nign. ine general need la to reduce prices to stimulate consump- cion. uusinesa must De -coaxeo. An increase in the cost of 'transportation would amount to a new tax on all lines of . business. It would increase tha cost or living ana aiscourage consump tion. rrooaDiy mere is .no single oe- veioomeni mac wouia nave a mora dampening effect upon the general run of business. It is not sumrlslnr that Dusineas men everywnere proiess alarm at the erosDect. r. . If.lt be true that the railroads must raise their rates or go into bankruptcy, the increase of rates would be chosen as the lesser of tha two evils.- But the mbllo Is far from convinced that, the ncrease is necessary. Prior to the panic the roads had ' been doing the Diggesc Dusiness and maicing tne heav iest earnings .In ' their history. Their complaint was that more business was offered than they- could handle. Dur ing the period of increasing Drosnerlcv. covering a period of 10 years, the roads mane gooa prorits ana . increased their dividends accordingly. At the close of Such a period they ought to be in shape' to withstand a little period of reduced revenues without going into Dan nr up toy. mere is not a big busi ness in the country that is ma kin if as much money as before the panic. Some uuninesii concerns - are maKing no money at -all. : Others are" running' be hind, and borrowing ; money - to keep puma; unui uuainmi can pica up. There is general commence cnat ine recovery will come next winter, if tha n,nt bright crop prospects are not spoiled. j Biwum , nui am rauroaas econo mise rigidly, nut un with a earnings, and reduce dividend. iinHn. int, piuv-ew ui reaajusiment, as other Dusmess is compelled to do? why, should . not railway stockholders stand their share of the cost of 'depression! This Date in History. 1284 London rithmnanr' .nmnanv founded. ?"," 1643 Royalists victorious st battle of Stratton. - - lUi Fort Sandusky. Ohio, taken by Indians. . . 1801 William H. Seward. President Lincoln's secretary ' f state, born in Florida, New York. - Died in Auburn, New Tork, October 18. 1872. 1824 Levi P. Morton, twenty-second vice-president of ; the ; United States, bora. - - f., 5 ? . 1841 Twentv-flva lives Inst tw a fall of rock from Cape Diamond, Quebec. ibds aai aay in . Richmond, Vir ginia. . 1871 Vendome Column, erected by Napoleon I to commemorate his vic tories, pulled down by the Communists in Parla. -1886 Rrltlah evacuatlnh of Rnalrln completed. 1889 Great loss of property by lire In Quebec; ,..:. Levi P. Morton's Birthday. Levi P. Morton, the eldest of the three ; living - vice-presidents' of the United. States, was born In Shoreham. Vermont. May 1, 1824. At the. age of n n9 became a clerk in a country store. capital 10 siari a mooeii estatilisnment Of his own. At the age of 25 he be came a partner in a dry goods house in Boston and live years later he -entered a similar establishment In New York. He failed few years before the out break of ths civil war, but in a few years he had accumulated another-fortune In the banking business. His first essay in politics was in 1878, when he was elected to con gressf President Garfield made him minister to Franc in 1881. ' In 1888 he was elected vice president on the ticket with President Harrison. From 1894 to 1896 he was governor of flew York. Since his retire ment from the governorship Mr. Morton has spent much of his time . abroad, though retaining an active interest in many large financial and industrial cor porations in New York. , . : i A TOURISTS PARADISE BY FREDERIC J. HASKIX. ' . (Copyright, 1908. by Frederic Ji Haskfn.) Honolulu, T. II., May 2. Great literary lights, from Mark Twain and Robert Louis .Stevenson to tion committee, have made much the land Tjf-neyer-endlng sprinjr ia longed-for land, after at least six days on the ocean. For this reason one always beholds It. In both Joy and gratitude even the best tourist Bailor welcomes the port bf call.- Hawaii, lying just within the border of the, tropics,' is yet so fortunately situated that ityls ' blest with all the f beauties of tropic lands while escaping the curses of the torrid zone. "The ; beneficent, trade-winds sweep over the Islands for nearly the wnole year, melting all the seasons Into one, and that one spring.; ; ; , r-?. Here.'' then, la tha charm of tronlca.1 seas, the wealth of tropical fruits, 'Toe delight of tropical flowers; In short, the land that has never known and never will- know the sere ' and yellow leaf. Here, too, is that mysterious rugged- ness or volcanic plies which tells that Hawaii, most favored of lands, is also the youngest of the isles of the sea. ng is gray the barest and ruir- fredest of volcano sides is never neutral n color, ' A cloud floating over the val ley, or clinging to the mountain side, may suggest shadows of gray, : but there is more in it of ashes of roses or the heart of the turquoise. The modern globe trotter demands that the beauties of nature be served to him on a golden salver with all the latest conveniences. Hawaii meets this demand. Honolulu's hotels are of the best and varied to suit the taste. In one of? them, a great pile of stone and mortar, one might think himself living in a jsroaoway nosieirr, in another, framed in a setting of exotic flowers. one tlnda still lingering the atmosphere of the old Hawaiian royalty. Yet an other spreads Its quiet verandas where tne Burr or the llnest bathlnir beach in the world threatens to break over the breakfast table.. . " .- Aa Inspiring Sight. One is whisked In a rapid automobile over a perfect .road of asphalt and macadam to the matrnlflcent nreclnioa of the Pali, the trystlng place of the winds and the grandstand before whlrh Hawaii proudly displays one of the most inspiring views In the world." One takes a Pullman car on the tov railroad for a Journey to the other side of th island, v In Hawaii, and Hawaii only, can one , have his dinner -on -.' hotel veranda overlooking a v lake of living fire in the crater of the greatest Active volcano on the globe. This great sight Is onlyfour days and $40 dollars from Honolulu. , To Hawaii's natural beau ties, and to' its nerfect climate. . have been added all the conveniences which Modern American civilisation can sug- gest for the car and entertainment the. visitor, be he sightseer, commercial traveler or prospector,. ;, To most American visitors arrant those who live- along th Pacific coast, It is thfe up-to-dateness of Hawaii which is its most striking feature. . A news paper in an Ohio city a, few weeks ago caused much amusement in Honolulu by its astonished comment upon a copy of the Honolulu Pacific Commerclal-Adver-tiBer, -which by chance had fallen Into the . hands of a Buckeye editor. The Ohio man thought it worth comment in his columns, and In an amased tone In formed the publlo of the fact that Hono lulu was a place where people not only conformed to the conventions ot 'life, but had a newspaper. - . From letters that constantly coma to Honolulu it Is to be seen that the Ohio editors ignorance upon. the subject of actual conditions in this really progres sive pari oi tne unuea states is wide spread. . In th Paclflo coast states, to which. Honolulu - is as near as New Tork. the people know better., but east of the Rocky mountains, Hawallans complain - that- the prevailing ideas of these Islands, are .obtained from pic tures of the death of Captain Cook In i the old-fashioned geography. , . ' Th Sandwich Zsladl, - The Sandwich islands were savage, a century ago but the modern circum navigator of th globe - who stops in Honolulu ' will have no ned to look at the Stars and Stripes to tell him that he is in an American town, with all the American attributes. The Merry Widow hat, the Diabolo top, and all the little fads and lanciea of our' national , life have their, run In Honolulu just . as promptly as they do In Qulncy, Illinois, or oangor, Maine. - It is interesting to know that . wire less telegraphy was first used In prac tical 'commercial affairs in Hawaii. The first commercial ' system Installed by Marconi was that .connecting the islands of th Hawaiian group, and this pre ceded by some time the connection of the islands with the rest of the world by submarine cable. Ths question of lnterlsland . communication had always been a perplexing one. -Honolulu was the kapltal, both politically and finan cially, and the people were put to great Still Dodging tLe Issue T.' T. Qeer of-Pendleton, In a com munlcatlon to.Th Journal, seeks to de fend his statement that ''Statement No, 1 is s dead issue,'' but, as usual, claims to hav .been misrepresented to some extent, saying. In part: .; ' "What I said was that Mr. Cake mad his . fight , during th primary contest squarely on th Issue embodied - In SUtement N& I f that Whatever degree of unpopularity sttended , that '.. state ment among th peopl Tis willingly shouldered, and as between himself and Mr iTultnn ha won on that issue; that, after having won as a Statement No. 1 man, the contest had been finished as to that statement, his position fully es tablished, and ,to continue the discus sion of the question after It had been won, to the exclusion of a discussion of -national and political topics, was not only s wast of time, but really un necessarily playing into th Democratic tar, ueer repeats mat oiawmnii n t was "threshed out in ths primary contest, and says that the only ques tion now is th politiosof th two can didates: nothinar else whatever is to be considered but that Cake is a Repub lican and Chamberlain s democrat, ana he concludes: . ' ' " ..' '-' "Having won his fight on the ques tion of Statement No. 1, Mr.- Cake is exactly right in declining to discuss It further to the exclusion of national questions at the-behest or the party which Is in s minority oi zo.vuo in tne state. Mr. Cake should receive every Republican vot in the state. His loy altv to Statement No. 1 cannot be Justly questioned in any quarter. The claim made by Governor Chamberlain that he la entitled to be elected senator in a Republican stato because h espoused Statement-No. 1 before Mr. Cake did is of too gausy a texture to successfully appeal to any reasonable man, for if it la true. It snouia d ranramrea mat length of service is not always a cer tain proof 'of loyalty." - . - ' The Journal does not desire to use much space in answering Mr.-deer's sophistries. The one ultimate thing to be accomplished, the goal of the whole effort and movement is the election ef a senator by the) people. To effect this a majority or not n nouses oi me legis lature must De statement xmo. i men. To elect less than a majority of such men means defeat for th very thing that th people are fighting -for. Hence a man who is not now carrying on the fight for Statement - No.' 1 candidates for the legislature is not-a supporter of Statement No. V nor of the election of senators by the people. Mr. -Cake stood for Statement No. 1 until , he, through H, rot the nomination; then he abandoned ft, because he thought his personal object could thus , best be served.- The primaries were only the first battle and an indecisive one. The victory not for Chamberlain.' nor for Cake nor any man, but for th princi ple, th thing sought for. and long de sired, election by the people Is yet to be won on June 1. and the fruit thereof '. V ' v . -.. . ; Jack Loudon and the Honolulu promo of . the. beauties of Hawaii. In truth a paradise for "touuLsts. It la land, lnconvenience bv the necessity of wait ing upon communication " by slow and irregular 'steamers from island to island. KxDerimenta were made toward an lnterlsland cable, but as the channels are so very deep the ' shore ends were cut orr on the sharp coral reers aimosi before the cable was laid. Once the people turned - to carrier pigeons as their saviors. Pigeona were boueht. ootes erected and arrangements made to forward messages and letter from one Island to another by means of the homing birds. But the . pigeons failed to become a commercial success Then came Marconi's discovery of the wireless. Hawaii was first to see th practicability ; of the discovery. Mar coni was induced to set tip stations on the various islands, but as his system was then In an experimental stage the service waa inadequate and not reliable. The tectorial legislature had faith enough to grant the wireless company a Bubsldy, and it struggled on -with Its experiments. Financial success finally crowned the eirorts or inose interested, although not until tha original com pnny had failed. Now one walks into s telegraph office In Honolulu and sends a telegram to any point in the islands in Just as matter-of-fact- fashion as he would send a wire from New York to any other city of the Union. , Cable Beaches Honolulu. : j In 190? when .. the Pacific , cab,S reached Honolulu there was a day of great rejoicing. ' - The newspapers Is sued special cable editions and for the first time In its history Honolulu knew what was going on in the world on the same day that it happened, r But the same newspapers which made so much of the cable- news had been using press specials by . wireless for many months. In fact, Honolulu had tho first paper in the world to employ the wireless tele graph as a news gathering agency. Of course the cable did much for Ha waii. . Until five years ago , when a steamer came into Honolulu irom nan FranclMro almost the entire town would be down at the aoor veiling to ine pa ofisengera on board ship: "What's the newer' and the passengers would take delight in surprising me isianaera wun their six-day-old SaS Francisco infor mation. Now there are few Hawallans to meet the boats, and the passengers are anxiously inquiring:- "What has happened In the. world during -the six davs we have been at sear The traveler who comes from the orient finds Honolulu the- beginning of the Occident. A party or 60 Japanese, merchants and bankers, who had never been away from their country before, recently started on a trip around the world. ine nrw rartun ion iney touched was the American port of Hon olulu. .Tne Alexander xoung noiei was an eve-ooening crash which snowed them the difference between th Occi dent and the, orient This is th larg est building in Honolulu. It is six stories : high, and has large, electric levators manned by thoroughly reck less, young Americans. . - ''-.' ' Wo Blevstors la Japan. The empire Of the rising sun does not boast or an elevator in its entire do main. About 15 Japanese crowded into the elecator and asked to go to th roof garden. Theyt . never ' had been in , an e!evator; before and th elevator boy knew -it. -They Went to th roof garden at express schedule, screaming and yell ing and holding onto the iron work on the inside of the cage. When they got to th top they declined to get out and asked to co to ine basement. .For prac tically half the-afternoon th Japanese around-the-world party, SO . leading mer chants, ana manufacturers, were cnas Ing up nnd 'down in the elevator with all the delight of an American boy on bis first roller coaster party, Ther is an old Egyptian saying' to thl effect that he who once tastes Nile water longs ' for It vrmore, . and the same principle is true of Hawaii. Th traveler -who follows ths trail until it leads him' to this enchanted land of eternalvsprlr.g, finds Its influenc well nigh Irresistible when , he takes his leave of it. ' No matter to what cum he owes auegiance n must pieaa antly remember the deep-slashed, cloud capped mountains, the laughing break era. the crimson flewers and tha pleas ure-lovtng people who ajways feast and aing in nappy nwu. reaped at Salem next winter. All the partisan sophistry that can be uttered cannot blind the peopl to this fact The party question has nothing to do with it; th candidates have nothing to do-with It; the people -want to elect their senators and In, this effort Mr. Cake now stands In at least negative opposition, while Mr. Oeer Is a voluble mouthpiece or the remnants of the old machines that seek to continue to de lude and humbug the people. Ed. Jour nal. ; y . - . '. SprlngLPoem, The horses chirping cock their heads, The summer sausage sprouts, . The 'little pigs in garden beds , Push up their , tender snouts. . ' The turning worm hag left the still, Ecstatic hop-vines hop, . - The butcher stiffens Up his bill, ; The chicken rears his . crop! f . The" pussy cats from willow trees : Are sprawling on the ground, And in the field the new-born cheese , A-skipping goes, all round. " The buttercups with butter fill. Th bees waxed big go ambling; ' The redbreast shoat Is never still, The woolly tramps are gambling. The turtle's voice is heard once mora ' As creeps he o'er the lard; The tame grass runs up to the door, ' ; The fly; feeds from your' hand. . - -f The cow is warbling from her nest - ' In elm no longer bare, ; - Then skimmingly with creamy crest " The cowslips through-tha air. . Soon wlll the corn prick up Its ear. The arrowroot will shoot. The trees their dlxzy heads will rear Tet keep their feet, o boot. . Oh, some will freeze to winter time,', Of summer some are fain. With fall some fall In love, but I'm - Glad spring's .unwound again! . 3 . Hasper's Weekly,. House of Lithographic Stone. ' , ; ; From the Kansas City Star. ' 1 A plain, plastered stone house about 60 yards f rom - the ancient city hall of Nuremberg, Germany, has nothing - to distinguish it from tha other old houses of the neighborhood, except that it is built of lithographic stone, worth from S to 11 cents a pound. So lithographers who- go to Nuremberg wander from the worn tourist trails to see the wonder. The hofise was built about 1880. nearly- 100 years before Alois Senefelder. the discoverer of 'UthogTaphy, - was born. Andreas Liechtenstein, who built it, 'took the stone easiest to get and secured it for the trouble of carrying it away. Now - the material In the building is worth about 14.000. - The present Andreas Xlchtensteinv a descendant of the man who built the Douse, lias said, ivem about once a month for the last 80 years to specula tors who want to buy his home and tear it down for th stone. It is his home and was that of his forefathers and he refuses to part with It, ; Small Ch Hurrah for. the blessed rain. . -.- - - Surer every day Taf t and Bryan. ;..., j - " Machine remnants worn munh In vl. dence. " Being broke, La Rose is probably not Insane.'- . - . See 'em rush now for tha Taf t band wagon. , "Let US alone" im tha nlatfnrm mt all criminals. -. . Senator Bourne is somewhat of a standpatter, - , - 'What is slnn TtAatA I m Ami baseball weather. " " California Is still In thai vrin r.t tt... riman and Herrln. . . - - The convention neglected to "de nounce'' Chamberlain.- - - Mrs. Ounness seems to- have been S real Merry Widow. , Th Oregon 'Renuhllcan nnlltlclnnai sr evidently for Taf u .,, Statement No. 1 is not .to he tnaawil aside and tramped on, yet. ,. ' There's also thst arlorlnus rtuvtrd of Ellis to point to with pride. Th opposition to Bryan amons- dem ocrats has about petered out. . Now, Mr. Weatherman, soma warm weather forth roses, please. As a nrivate eemeterv 'filler ' Hfra. Gunness was certainly a success..' Will - the various Renuhltcan atata conventions indorse this congress? Think how the crops would be mined if it were not for the Olngley tariff. ; '. ' ";i ;v ''" i,: - ' y it. " '' : The convention didn't have the nerve to point with pride to this congress. ' For a sight of Harmony In violent is. tion, visit the politicians' convention. .. a at - - . Bui-there never will be a hat that will entirely conceal th girl's face. Th' rain. if general throughout tha inland empire, win be worth millions. In Oregon, 'contrary to : California. farmers do not hope In vain for needed rain. t , ' t It is a little enrlvfor a convention to praise the pinglcy tariff for good crops. . " - , .- T .... Whv shouldn't ' Oregon's Orand - Old Man be made chairman of the national Republical convention T. , .:--,;,... v--,v-t4 -IrS.'-t-J'i--'- -' The machine politicians - could ' not turn Bourne out of the senate, though they wished they could. j . ' ' ' Take a run down to 'Astoria or New port and go out and sea th fleet. It will be an enjoyable trip. - ; . . ; - -".-V ; v.e ,:-.; , v'V--, j .. .'" ' " A magazine writer says six hours a day is long enough to work. Six hours too long, for soma people, v h:.i::;:.: . i ' Fairbanks must be getting desperate; it is said that he drank several glasses of buttermilk in one evening. V - ' Ths gaaplpe thug's name, Tj Rose, proves again that there la nothing; to indicate character in a name. A San Francisco barber charged a sailor 14 for a hair cut. Th Jackie are likely to give him a floss shave, , . Th man. if one did. who rented rooms to Hetty Green for ISO a day may b expected to become a billionaire. Now will ' the farmers be good and vote ,'er straight? See how th Repub lican convention brought needed rain. A news - item says Mrs." Lonrworth will., arrnmruuiv Nick-on a stumnlng tour, but won't, talk. O, Sh won't,, eht . . : '..-, " - " ; - ; : '. - ' . ' ' Geer's argument that Statement No. 1 , . ... , ... . n.u... . v I . defense of . his school land .admin istration. , " . i, It ls said that a woman was respon sible, for getting the fleet to stop off Newport. ' That Is proper; aren't ships all feminine f . - On June 1 a lot of people will ntak nuisances of ' themselves swearing In their , votes; - . They should : b given no more privileges than the law allows. : A cat that was th leal owner of : 140,000 was killed "to end its pain." More likely to end the pain of thos who wanted the money and they wer not klttena . Oregon Sidelignts Bronwsvllls has a new vehicle f so Dallas "may also, soon have - soma paved streets...-- . - x '-Li' " - . 1 r i-T- -.- ---r-r- . r- An Albany man will set out a wal nut orchard of 820 acres in Lincoln county. , 'it. Is reported that ths famous Par kins fruit farm, near Medford, has been ' ' (, w i j. i- The 'Albany Democrat alludes to-Mrs. Abigail ' Scott Punlwsy as , "a former - Albany milliner.- - j Mora ducks and sees are hatchins en th Klamath marshes this year than for several years ,..; Seventy blocks of streets have been graded in Corvallls the past few weeks and are now 'being graveled. Ths Dalles, from June 80 to Julr t. will hold a cherry carnival and show the finest cherries In th world, f ' It has been estimated that the total value of the trees and small fruit plants fiurchased ror setting out new orchards n th vicinity of Dallas sine last fall amounts to fully $7,000..' . --. . A En itene Plymouth hen hatched last summer has Just commenced to lay and the eggs are record breakers. - She has In Id si . ee-ars in the same number .of days last past and each of 'them meas ures six tncnes in circumrerenre one way and seven and a half the other.. '. '. i, .-- J- Th Dufur Commercial club Is pre paring to purchase 20 acres near the cltv to devote to a public park and , amusement grounds. Besides providing oaseball ground ana masmg provls- , Ions for Planting trees, shrubs and . making an attractive place for recrea tion it is the intention of the Commer- " cialtclub to' grade a half mile circular race course for convenience in holding , -- : . " - 1 ' : ? Difficult for Them to arn. t 5 From th Woodburn Independent. Wonder if some of our ld Repub lican friends-in Marlon county will not ' now recognise that" there was soma advice worthy ' of consideration in an editorial In these columns two months ago in which w warned them and oth ers' in the .state to "Go slow, gentlav . men."-Harney County News. ' ;"w They heard, assuredly, from ' mora than one source, but didn't Tecngiiljs. They seldom recognise. To do w uhA ' act on the recognition, they woiiM tti to drop back In the ranks of thi uZZ pie Tj hat would not suit th Vl leadership nature of soms SalomlU, 'A-