THE JOURNAL AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER. C. B. JACKSON , Publisher PubltAerf ,tTtT eeenlnf ex-ept Snaoaj) and Trr Sunday moraine at The Journal Build in. FifUi ind Yamhill atreet, Portland. Or. Entered at le poel office at Portland. Or., for Irammtaatoa Urou-ti to mailt aa aecoad-claw Batter. TELEPHONES MAIN T173. HOME, A -6061. All department reached or theae outnbere. Tell the operauw the department jou want. FOREIGN' ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE. Benjamin A Kent no Co.. Bruntwlrk ButMlnx. Xa Mftb aeentM. W Sort; 1007-08 Boye Bolldiec, Chirac. The Jonrsal ie on file In London. England, t the ofHce f The Joorsal'a English repre entatiee. F.. 1. Hardy Co., SO Fleet treet. where eobecrlptloiui end adfertlaemenU till he received. Solieeriptien Termt b,' mall or to any addreae '. la the United States. Canada or Mexico: I ' DAILY. . ' One rear S3.00 1 On month..... .SO 81'NDAT. One rear.........fz.50 I On month t .13 DAILY AND BDNDAT. One rear 17.50 ) On month .63 Great souls are not those which have less passion and more virtue than common souls, but only those which have greater designs. La Rochefoucauld. a EIGHT MEASURES EASILY COM-PREHENDED ONLY EIGHT of the 35 measures which are to be voted on by the people in the coming city election are submitted through the Initiative and referendum, and there is no reason why voters should not pass on them Intelligently and comprehendlngly. Unlike many of the 27 charter amendments and or dinances submitted by the council, these eight measures which emanate from the people are easily under stood, present no extraordinary prob ' lems and contemplate no sweeping changes in the city's form of govern ment. The seven initiative measures are as follows: 1. Ordinance providing for the regulation and maintenance of elec tric poles and wires, the purpose be ing to provide greater protection for linemen and other electrical work- 2. Charter amendment to erect a bridge at Market street in place of the Madison street structure, and to use for this purpose the $450,000 voted Ty the people two years ago for the reconstruction of the Madi son street bridge. 3. Charter amendment providing for bonds to -the amount of $1,500, 000 for the construction of a new bridge at Sherman street. i. Charter amendment prohibit Ing the council from calling for the exclusive use of any patented article or process in street Improvement specifications and plans. 5. Charter amendment granting to the Gothenberg association the exclusive pririlege to sell intoxicat ing liquors in Portland. 6. Charter amendment creating an excise board and regulating the sale of intoxicating liquors. 7. Ordinance providing for an Issue of bonds to the amount of $2, 000,000, the proceeds to be used in the acquisition of a municipal light and power plant. The only measure submitted to the people through the referendum is the vehicle tax ordinance, which was passed by the council in February, 1908, and which imposes a license fee upon vehicles. The provisions of these eight measures have been set forth clearly in the columns of The Journal from time to time. The full text of each of them is to be found in the pam phlet issued by the city auditor. There is no reason why any voter should vote unintelligently upon any of them. from the O. R, St. N. line Into central Oregon, bu$ year after year has passed and no motion to keep those promises has been made. Eventually, it may be hoped, Port land will have direct and the best possible rail connection with the great Klamath and Lake regions. and can then, by sufficient effort, gain a large portion of that business, but this ought to have been the case now. The blame may not rest al together on Mr. Harrlman; our own large business men and capitalists should have been more vlfillant, ac tive and enterprising. The people of Klamath and Lake counties are loyal Oregonians, and would do business in Oregon trade centers of they had a fair chance to do so, and every possible effort should still and constantly be made to give them that chance. If, by no means Mr. Harrlman can be budged in this matter, if he per sists longer In his anti-Portland, anti-Oregon policy, then some other means should be devised and put into execution to accomplish the de? sired and important result. R' THE RAILROAD TO KLAMATH T rHE COMPLETION of the rail road to Klamath Falls is an event of great Importance not only to that city but to the whole Klamath basin, and so is well deserving of the enthusiastic cele bration that will soon take place there on that account. It gives that region, with its already large and potentially Immense resources a direct outlet to San Francisco, and Will result In greatly stimulating settlement, production and all kinds of business activity. That the rail road will do a heavy and paying ' business from the start, although for long distances it traverses a semi desert and sparsely populated re gion, there is no doubt. With equal railroad facilities Port land would have a little advantage over San Francisco, or at least an even show for the trade of that coun try that will rapidly grow to vast proportions. But uuder present con , dttions most of that trade will follow the line, of least resistance, one Jar more so now than before, to the Cal . lfornia metropolis and to Sacra mento, a city of considerable whole sal and manufacturing Importance. It Is perhaps idle and useless to heap reproaches upon Mr. Harrlman, for always. In hit railroad building, giving Portland the worst of It, for choosing to divert trade to the rivals of this city, bat severe and repeated censura Is certainly due for his fail tire, as It seems his Insolent and en mltous neglect, to keep his repeated and positive promises to the people of Portland and of -the rest of Ora fon. The road to Natron to connect with his Oregon-California line, was Jorr ago promised, as was the road ' , , V '.. - ' " - - ' v '. :":'. THE CRVOF "RUIX'V UIN, NOTHING less, Is the con stant cry of the protected in terests, If any reduction of monopolistic duties is proposed. The steel trust, the tobacco trust, the smelter trust, the glass trust all of them, will be "ruined" by any reduction as . tariff taxes so they say. The lumber manufacturers are to be ruined. The wool growers, get ting 22 cents a pound for unscoured wool and $6 a head for stock sheep, are to be "ruined." Manufacturers of clothes and all protected persons or interests are to be "ruined," Aldrlch and his followers say, if the tariff is revised downward. We have the greatest natural re sources and supplies of material of all kinds of any nation on earth; and besides, the most competent, intelli gent, effective labor. This is not mere assertion, but proven fact. Why, then, should we be afraid that people thousands of miles away will "ruin" us? The protectionists are afraid of England, Germany, France, Canada; of Italy, Mexico, Abyssinia, Patagonia and the South Sea islands these countries are going to "ruin" our industries! Rockefeller, Guggenheim, Mor gan and their like need protec tion. They will get it, of course, since we send Aldrlches and Cannons to congress; but the masses of people ought to wake up to the fact that the "ruin" is all in the predatory politicians' minds. The laboring people in particular should learn and know that the protected inter ests never paid to them a cent ex tra on account of protection. American industries can stand alone. Where not, If not here, in this greatest and best country on earth? We have no reason to be afraid of either Brobdignaglans or Lilliputians In the world's Industrial field. probably have happened. The men who have revolvers, in a multitude of eases,: make use of them to com mit homicide, in consequence of trivial quarrels. There are dead and wounded men and widowed women and "orphaned children, daily, throughout the coun try, because of these seldomly use ful and very often murderous in Btruments. They should be. except In some clearly specified cases, Out lawed. The senate, as was to have' been expected, will not consent to free lumber, nor, probably, to any appre ciable reduction of the duties under the DInglevrtlaw. High protection is more strongly intrenched in the senate tnan in tne house, whose members are more recently from the people, but in all probability the house will yeild and the free pr re-, duced lumber provision of the Payne bill will be sacrificed. Indeed, it is supposed that many house members voted for the provision with the ap prehension that the senate would undo their work. But there is this to be said in favor of or in excuse for protected lumber; that com modity is as much entitled to pro tection as ores, coal and many other protected commodities. It would not be fair to the lumber manufac turers to turn them out of the great association of protected and privi leged interests. By a vote of 299 to 96 the Brit ish house of commons has passed a bill increasing Income taxes to 5.8 per cent on unearned incomes and upon all incomes above $15,000. A supertax makes the total rate, above $25,000, 8.3 per cent. Incomes of 00 are tax free and there is an exemption of $50 for every child un der 16. This tax is less than that of Germany, but is a substantial rec ognition of the principle that it is wealth and not poverty that should be taxed. As the New York World suggests: "Britain lacks, for poor men, the American advantages of a new, vast, rapidly expanding coun try. But a land where legislators, most of whom are wealthy, vote by four to one to tax wealth, not pov erty, turning a deaf ear to the clamor of the rich and of idle in heritors, is at least a real democracy." INFLATED SALARIES T HE CLERK and bailiff of the Chicago municipal court receive a salary of $5000 a year, and a bill pending in the legisla ture, which will probably pass, in creases these salaries to $10,000 a year each. What legalized plunder of taxpayers 6uch salaries are. Chi cago is a big town, and these of ficials, or at least the clerk, are en titled to fairly liberal compensation, but $5000 a year was certainly ample, and probably double what Is really reasonable. There are plenty of assistants and clerks, of course, and a bailiff's responsibility is neg ligible. The post Is pretty nearly a sinecure, everywhere. This is a vice of government, es pecially municipal government, throughout the country. Thousands of men equally capable would jump at the chance to get these offices at $1200 or $1500 a year; but some fellows have a political pull, get in, and immediately begin working to get their already greatly inflated salaries doubled. This, in fact, is the hardest work they do. There are modified or less notable examples of this in this city, as in every city. It is such cases as this, in addition to others, that justify the referendum. If the Illinois legis lature passes this bill and it is only a sample of others the Chi cago taxpayers ought to have the power to nullify the law. Has anybody except the statis ticians noticed that fatal railroad ac cidents have been less numerous lately than previously? It Is so, for a recent report shows that during the past year the number of pas sengers killed was only 292, as against 570 for the preceding year, and the number of employes who lost their lives was reduced from 4300 to 2535. Whether this is due to better management and more care or is merely a fortuitous circum stance, is not known, but it is rea sonable to suppose that the former reason is in large measure to be as signed. If so, it is a very gratify ing circumstance, and one for which the railroads should be given due credit. Letters From tne People Letter . to The Journal ahoald be written on on aid of the paper only and ebould be ac companied by the name and addre of the writer. The name will not he need If the writer aaka that It he withheld. The Journal la not to be nnderatood aa lndoratnf the Tlewa or . atementa of correepondent. Letter abonld Be made aa brief aa Doaalble. Thoae who wlab ineir lettera returned waen not naea snouiu in- Close poatage. Correspondent are notified that letter ex ceedlng Son words la length may, at tb dis cretion of the editor, be out down to that limit Christian Science, Portlanfl, May 2J. To, the Editor of The journal In a communication ap pearing; In your Issue of the 22th, critlo makes some statements about Christian Scientists and their attitude toward ministers and phystclana, which are unjust, and follows with a criticism of the philosophy of Christian Science, while yet commending- its moral ethics. Christian Scientists recognize the value of all endeavor to help humanity, whether on the part of the church or or the physician, and no one can right fully charge .them with belittling the efforts of those professions. They know full well that the race needs to be saved from the bondage of sin and dis ease, and appreciate the labor of the two classes of workers referred to, at the same time believing that a greater degree of relief will come, and a more continuous experience In good be main tained through a scientific system of Christian teaching wherein the word of God is a complete saviour from all evil. that of sickness as well as sin. The critic need not fear that Mrs. Eddy might be offended at his observa tion that she would not have amounted to much bad it not been for the ignore ance of the people. The attitude of the world's thought for or against her, has not and will not determine that. Possessed with a great love for Ood and humanity she has labored and still con tinues, that this love may have prac tical effect in alleviating the burdens of mankind, and this motive whether ap preciated or not by mortals, indicates her worth In the sight of God. One wonders how an Individual can assume the infinity of wisdom whereby to be able to say as this critic does. that "there never was and never will be a woman that understands logic or philosophy." Thanks to the work of many grand women, Mrs. Eddy included. that sex is coming somewhat Into de served recognition In fields heretofore supposed to be Impossible of attainment to them. As to the lack of a minor premise. which the gentleman declares consti tutes the fallacy of the teaching of Christian 'Science, the following is sub mitted for his edification: Major premise God is spirit, mind. Minor premise Man is his image and likeness. Conclusion Therefore, man is not material; he is spiritual. (Science and Health, with Key to the Scriptures, page 68.) HOWAHD C. VAN METER, Committee on Publication for Oregon. A farm of the late Tilmon Ford of Salem, consisting of 23 0 acres of beaverdam land at Lake Labish, bought recently for $23,000, will be subdivided into one, five or ten acre tracts, the majority of them, per haps, only one acre each. This is only one of numerous such pieces or instances of like development that are taking place in Oregon, due to some extent, we may reasonably pre sume, to The Journal's persistent advocacy of such a movement. This is a mighty practical and important phase of true development. AGAIX THE REVOLVER U P IN Umatilla county a farm laborer, with a wife and six children, the eldest child only 8 years old, was killed, and another man dangerously if not fa tally wounded, by another man, with a revolver for the murderous weapon. The quarrel between the neighboring farmers was a trivial matter, the old one over disputed fence or roadway, and should have been settled by neighborly arbitra tion or by the , courts. But each man thought he was right, and one if not both of them resorted to the foolish, wicked' arbitrament of the revolver. Daniel Ryan, the handler of the murderous weapon, an elderly bachelor, "got his gun," and tried to kill his neighbor and nearly suc ceeded, and did .kill an, innocent workingman, and made a widow and six young orphans. Except for the revolver no such tragedy would For the second consecutive spring the season has been unusually back ward, cold and dry, one consequence of which is, that roses are again be lated. But there is a great and splendid crop of them that will be out very soon now, not in profusion on Decoration day, but plentifully, probably, for the Rose Festival. Most voters' seemed to have a cor rect idea as to what to do when that O. A. C. referendum petition was presented to them. After awhile- It will become less easy to get signa tures to any old petition. The peo ple are learning, improving. -' Another victim of the revolver was a Bonner's Ferry boy, killed by his adult sister while Ehe was shoot ing at a target. The revolver is of ten not only an expensive but a ter ribly sorrotv producing means of sport. Most of the Democrats in congress are voting for this, that or the other high duty, many members for all the high duties. So the question, "What Is a Democrat?" has become a greater conundrum than ever. Evidently the new bridge will be built on the old site, from Madison street to Hawthorne avenue, so that much discussed matter might as well be considered settled. The Kind He Is. From the Weston Leader. Joe Bimon typifies the Oregon pollr ttcian of the old school. He is the kind that believes and practices the precept, "To the victors belong the spoils." During the) years that he -held the Ore gon legislature in the hollow of his hand he Invariably rewarded. his friends and knifed his enemies, and the. Inter ests of the people , were subordinated to the Interests of his machine. Now that Oregon has adopted new political methods, and places men above party when selecting Its public servants. It remains to be seen whether or not the state's chief city will want an old time politician tot its mayof, , The Irvington Paving Controversy. Portland, Or., May 24. To the Editor f The Journal In your Issue of yes- erday appeared the following relating to the Irvington paving controversy: Mayor Lane, taking the public view point, reaches a far different conclu- lon as to the duty ol himseii ana tne executive board. "This is not a matter in which the property owners are alone concerned," he says, "because they seek to take ad vantage of the bonding act, whereby the city is bound to maintain the streets, and we are Interested In securing the best quality of work at the lowest price. "They are asking us to act In violation of the city charter and give the work to the highest bidder. Why? I have al ways understood that property owners wanted work done at the lowest figures. and there must be some other explana tion for this attitude. "My Information Is that the contractor Is a figurehead and that the money is being supplied by the two big property owners interested. In other words, they are doing their own work, taking ad vantage of the bonding act to have the work given to the highest bidder and Imposing upon the city the burden of maintaining the street In repair. My In formation is that they then cut back on the contract price, so they get the bene fit of the higher cost." Let us consider these statements as made, keeping In mind, that the sole question- is of letting the contract to the highest or lowest bidder. The first statement is that aa the property owners seek to have the work done under the bonding act, the city Is interested in having it done at the low est price. Under the law the limit Is fixed at which the property may be bonded. No matter what the cost of the work and without regard to the added value which the Improvement gives, and every cent or tne cost or the work, including pay to me city or its cost of advertising. engineering and superintending must be paid out or tne property, as the city will have to maintain the street whether the work Is done by the highest or low est bidder, will the honorable gentle man who makes these statements or any one or more of his friends, explain In what way the city Is Interested in the price to be paid for the work, as against the property owner who pays all the bills? The second statement Is that the prop erty owners, In asking that the contract be let to the highest bidder, are asking mat tne cnarter be violated. This Is not so in the opinion of the city attor ney, nor as a matter of fact or law. The law Is not such an ass as to prevent the man who has the bill to pay, from fixing the price In the first Instance. As to exactly what the third state ment means, I confess my Inability to understand. If Intended as a claim that we Intend to borrow of the city under the bonding act more than we put on the streets, as the difference between the lowest and highest bids. In very near 1200.000 worth of work as it appears at present will be less than $5000, Uie proposition Is absurd on its face. As the city takes care to make its security ample and we would have principal and Interest to pay, what of it if true? The only other thing which can be In tended Is that we are seeking to steal something. As the city pays no part of the bills, we as contractors could only steal from the property owners and as we are the property owners that would leave us In the position of stealing from ourselves. I have heard of Insane per sons who stole or thought they did, from themselves.. But I have never heard of a sane man who tried to do ao himself, or for one moment supposed any one else would or could do so. ELLIS O. HUGHES COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF SMALL CHANGE The rose's ars coming; out, of course. e The ever possible big June Columbia flood seldom comes. . , The afternoon imitator and Its old dad are Jealous, of course. Apparently Governor Johnson ' will still be like Barkis in 1912. Of course there could not bs a exposition without several rows. big Roses can do wonders of blooming de velopment In the next two weeks. A constitution bestowed bv the shab of Persia probably Isn't Worth much. If Miss Portland accepts Mr. Simon, it will be in the nature of a Miss Hob- son s choice. .Mav. has only another week in which It can make up all or some of that, big rain oetiotr, ., The city election ballot will be some thing like an editorial pane of the Seat- tie rjunaay Times. WW. No more free hotel buses of the big hotels; another evidence that Portland Is ho longer a village. e Hurrah for- the Crater lake railroad: It will be a great developer and worth far mora than Us large cost. a Big guns of finance and Industry pre dict and assert prosperity. Yes, Aldrlch wiu rix some oi tnem, aa. rigni. After all. nature may be kind In riv ing most people corn beef and cabbage rather than angel cake and Ice cream. e To strike a match In the presence of flowlnar gas mixed wltn the not bream of a domestic row Is evidently not safe. w e That bill of Aldrlch's Is an expensive one for the American consumers,, but they will have to stand It. for the pres ent e Unless the Seattle exposition people will agree to call It Mount Tacoma to visitors, maybe Tacomana won't go to the fair. e A New Tork woman physician says that piano music will cure bad boys. But many people would prefer the dis ease to the remedy. e e The sooner the tariff revision farce is over the better It will be for the country. Everybody can see already Just about what it will be. The sweet girl graduate but we have sworn off from making pert paragraphs about her. She will be on old woman and a grandmother ere long. e e Senator Bailey says the Republican party Is sleeping on a volcano. The trouble seems to De tnat it is very mucn awake. By the, way, didn't the big Texas Babe nest on a volcano awnneT e A news Item says the Wisconsin leg islature has passed a bill to prevent mule drivers from swearing. A supple mental and complementary law should be one preventing mules .from braying or kicking. 'Midst gold and green, 'midst shower and sheen, unfolds soon of flowers the unrivaled queen. In a class of her own, she mounts her sweet throne, and reigns In June grandeur and glory alone. Na ture bows to salute, no rivals dispute, and in her aweet presence all Flora blooms mute. I OREGON SIDELIGHTS i-.i.v. v.in.. hwk with Anotner uut. will large and commodious opera house, wiu h. rrted within the next few months in MUton. - , . v- . l- - Tv., .. w vtAlo-feHnrhnruf JaDS OWU 6000 acres of land and are planting 25, 000 fruit trees. They have several hun dred acres in peas, potatoes and other eatables. 80 or tneir own i"w employed. A Pendleton man caught a fay?0"" miiin that measured 28 Inches r tn inn Tt reoulred 45 mln utes to land the flsn, and then a boy and a garden raka had to, te called into piay. , a Did you ever stop to think how the large tracts are being dissected by the hand of progress? asas tne Statesman. And every one means scores of families where there was a single family Defore, QAhvniu nmnll introduced In this valley some years ago e-e getting to be quite numerous until trus spring. when their scarci' 18 very uaw, r... h Rimim ouard. Whether they have been hunted too industriously or have voluntarily emtsratea s a uuc tioa for discussion. What a wonderful oportunlfy there is around Albany, says the. Democrat, Land which can now be secured at a ftv nriM in a few vears will command a price that will make the present one loo if liae a nicKei. . mo " tfansformatlon going on through the valley, a striking change, not in one place, but everywhere. a Mew Vnrk man Is In correspond ence with the Astoria chamber of com merce, and indeed. negotiations are units wav for the erection and estab lishment in this city of a factory for the making and marketing of clothes- tns, bucket balls and small wooden uckets of all sorts, says the Astorlan. . Arthur Van da Vert, a 12-year-old boy living 20 miles from Bend, killed a big cinnamon bear that had frightened sev eral people., The Van de Vert family has quite a record for bear killing, more than a dozen having been killed by different members of the family during the past yeaf. Miss Grace Van de. Vert, a girl of 17, killed a large one last fall. While figuring out a few facts for hla diversion yesterday afternoon. County Treasurer Frawley found that during the 10 years he has been In the office he has paid out J2,039,77.65, says the La Grande Star. During that time also his books have been experted three times without a single mistake being discovered. e We have reached the development period In Lane county where the coun try Is being heard from In a substantial manner, remarks the Register. There was- never before such a general move ment of farming and fruit lands, all of which means more for the general prog ress than merely the building up of our cities. Gervals Btar: Every now and then' some smart elleck tries to find fault with the local Weekly paper for printing news that he had read before In a dally paper, and tries to argue that for this reason It Is "stale" news. The stupid Ignoramus has not sense enough to real ise" that about nine tenths of the read ers of a weekly paper have not had a chance tb read the dally papers and therefore have no other means of get ting ths; news-excepting what is given j In the weekly paper. j FAMOUS GEMS OF PROSE "Four Harvard Men" By Charles Sumner REALM FEMININE, W1 (From an oration before the Phi Bets Kappa society of Harvard, August 27, 184.) In proud recollection of Jier departed children, alma mater might well ex claim, In those touching words of pater nal grief, that she would not give her dead sons for any living sons In Chris tendom. Pickering, Story, Allston, Chan nlng! A grand quaternion! Each, In his peculiar sphere, was foremost In his country. Each might have said, what the modesty of Demosthenes did not forbid him to boast that through him, his country had been crowned abroad. Their labors were wide as the commonwealth- of letters, laws, art, hu manity, and, have found acceptance wherever these have found dominion. Their lives, which overflow with In struction, teach one persuasive lesson, which speaks alike to all of every call ing and pursuit not to live for our selves alone. They lived for knowledge, Justice, beauty, humanity. Withdraw ing from the strifes of the world, from the allurements of office, and the rage for gain, they consecrated themselves to the pursuit of excellence, and each, In his own vocation, to beneflclent labor. They were all philanthropists; for the labors of all promoted the welfare and happiness of mankind. , What ws do for ourselves perishes with this mortal dust; what we do for others lives In the grateful hearts of, all who feel or know the benefaction. The selfish struggles of the crowd, the clamors of a false patriotism, the sug gestions of a sordid ambition, cannot j obscure that great commanding duty which enjoins perpetual labor, without distinction of country, of color, or of raca, for the welfare of the whole human family. In this mighty Christian cause. knowledge, Jurisprudence, art, philan thropy, all are blessed ministers. More puissant than the sword, they shall lead mankind from the bondage of error Into that service which Is perfect free dom. Our departed brothers Join In summoning you to this gladsome obe dience. Their examples speak for them. Go forth Into the many mansions of the house of life, scholars! store them with learning. Jurists! build them with Jus tice, artists! adorn them with beauty, philanthropists! let them resound with love. The servants of truth, each in his vocation; doers of the word and not hearers only. Be sincere, pure in heart earnest, enthusiastic. Like Pickering, blend humanity with learning. 'Like Story, ascend above the present In place and time. Like Allston, regard fame only as the eternal shadow of excellence. Like Channtng, bend In adoration before the right Cultivate alike the wisdom of experience and the wisdom of hope. Mindful of the future, do not neglect the past; awed by the majesty of anti quity, turn not with Indifference from the future. True wisdom looks to the ages before us, as well as behind u Like the Janus of the capltol, one front thoughtfully regards the past rich with zperlence, with memories, with price less traditions of virtue; the other Is earnestly directed to the all hall here after, richer still with Its transcendent hopes and unfulfilled prophecies. the city government a .power for evil which they both profess to abhor and to be anxious to prevent. If Mr. Kellaher and Mr. Albee are ruled in their candidacy by a supreme desire to serve the public, rather than by personal motives, they will not be candidates at the coming election. They can serve the city best by staying out of the contest They are both young men and can afford to wait At an other tlms and when circumstances favor, the city will be glad to honor them. But they can gain no strength by running now. What honor or strength could they gain by defeat and by dragging down with them the best Interests of the city? It would be loss to them and not gain. And furthermore both of them now hold at the hands of the public high and responsible offices, that of state senator, and this fact should -aatsify their personal ambition, for the pres ent and causa them to assume a mod esty that would be becoming to them, or to any other cltlxen, under like cir cumstances. It Is supreme simplicity and childishness In politics for three candidates to divide, on personal around s. tb undoubted large majority agalpst the ascendency of Mr. Simon 1 tn nnwer In th rltv. lust at this time Suggestions to Albee and Kellaher. ' Just when new and wide policies of Portland. May 24. To the Editor of The Journal A very large proportion of the more thoughtful people of Portland hope that Mr. Albee and Mr. Kellaher will have the generosity and public spirit' to Withdraw from the mayoralty contest before the day of election. They owe it to the public to do this. Not but that either of them would make a good mayor. They are both able and competent men and could, no doubt, ad minister the affairs of ths trlty In a creditable manner. But if (hey. both run,! both will be defeated, and in that defeat they will cause the defeat of the city's , best Interests, and at the same tlms they will cause to bef nthroned in management must be inaugurated If Its highest and best Interests are to b served, in ths light of Its' future growth. To go back to old policies and methods and Ideas, at this time, and in this way, would be little Jes than, disaster. Therefore hundreds 'of ths most thoughtful citizens of Portland appeal to Mr. Albee, and to Mr.' Kellaher, to withdraw ffom the -field and, let tht contest ,be fairly waged between prog ress and reaction, between the rotten ness of ths past and better and cleaner things for i the future. If they peri slst In running and Mr. Simon Is elected, which he will be, the responsibility will be upon them, and his record may oome up to plague them hereafter. COMMON SENSE. This Date In History. 1743 American Philosophical society rounded by Benjamin Franklin. 1717 A national constitutional con ventlon met in Philadelphia. 1790 Tennessee territory estab lished. 1829-BIr Humphrey Davy, Inventor of the safety lamp, died. Born De cember 17, 1778. 1S48 General Wlnfleld Scott pub licly welcomed In New York. 1862 The Federals, under General Banks, repulsed at Winchester, Va. U63 Confederate navy yard at Ta oo City destroyed. 184" Battle of New Hope Church station, Georgia. - 1887 Tale-college became a univer sity. 188 The president called for 75,000 additional volunteers for the war with Spain. 1901 Norwegian parliament con ferred tha franchise on women tax pay era. , 1904 C. C. Magoon Inaugurated gov ernor of Panama canal sone. What Are Victual Prices Predicting? From the St Louis Republic. What's the matter with, the prices of all sorts of victuals? Do 'they keep on climbing because ths middlemen are working tha market or does It simply mean that tha tlms. Is coming fast when tha erstwhile hornyhanded farm er and tha woman with a hen will be tha only real aristocrats In this coun try? - - Eliminating the Friction. HEN wa consider some of the most common sources of frin. ilon In the home, we cannot avoid the subject of monev f. and . , When a . young woman t y U 5 botn ' impression able age and of llttlo experience In life. they not Infrequently fight shy of the ?! 2!!Wk 0t lU an1 QUlte naturally. i Jl i t poor Pr0BPct for happi ness n the home if the wife were to appraise her husband as a money getter only, and equally unfortunate if the husband were to think of his wife as a money spender only; forgettrn- that her part of the home making. If she Is honestly dolo It is quite as Important as his. And there is a very natural reticence on the subject of; income and outgo W.T1 !l!e newly ,narr,eI. both feel ing that these details will adjust them selves without conscious effort, and nfiii1W0Uld "eem t0 a shade J3L?. thl other to the contract to be too keen on money matters. This U 1L VSry. natural n blameless, and Hiu? act-remains that the newly es tablished home must be run as other business combinations are run, on busi Pr'"1" a" by means of that same sordid, common medium that other people use. Love will not buy beef steak and sympathy will not supply firewood and- caresses will not pay rent. So the world old question of money presently Intrudes itself into the bliss of the honeymoon and thereafter al ways remains, a constant attendant at tha family hearth. And there Is no more potent cause of rrictlon than mnnev nntinn. KA,rAn husband and wife, and It Is easy to see wJ,y-. ev5ry family there is some adaptation of the scale of living to the amount of Income. The husband grows up In one atmosphere, the wife in another. Each naturally assimilates the ideas of his or her own family and commonly has very little Idea of those cherished In other families. , w,hat, called extravagance In ons family Is accepted as nerfeotlv and moderate in another. Economics praotlced In one family seem like stingi ness to those accustomed to economize differently. And so the two, husband and wife, come to the founding of their home with many unformed or half formed or strongly formed Ideas as to what 1b wise expenditure and what is not. i Perhaps ths husband in the beslnnln arranges a scale of expenditure. He figures out bow much rent, how much fuel, how much table nrnvislnn mav ha allowed out of his salary, and makes hi wife an allowance out of what remains. But little by little family expenses In crease, and probably the Income does not There are more people to feed, there Is the necessity for hiring help, with the Incidentals of breakage and waste. There is more sewing required, then as the children s-rnw nWlnr Ihorn Is the educational demand. Meantime, while the burdens mount,- the husband's salary does not begin to advance in "ronortlon and presently the wife is spending all her allowance In addition to the other apportionment, and either frolng shabby herself or running bills n the vaue hope that they will be met somehow. Then inovltablv comes a season of Illness, doctor's bills, loss of position, flood or fire, and an Immense can occurs In the famllv lncnme thnr could not possibly be Imagined bythe honevmooners. So the necessity of founding the fam ily finances upon a reasonable and sta ble foundation. So the necessity on the part of each for a reasonable, senslbln understanding as to what may be and what may not be attempted with the salary, and the adjustment of life to meet these demands with comfort. It would materially help matters fi nancially if every marriod couple would after apportioning to the other Imperative demands their due share, establish a sinking fund, as would be done In any business, to meet the extra ordinary demands which are Inevitable. And If there is necessity for rigid econ omy In starting the new home and the expenses are so heavy as to leave no l residue. It would be a very wls and provident thing to add some one moncv making enterprise In addition to the regular occupation, letting the proceeds go toward such a Binklng fund. What folly for a young couple to es tablish themselves In an expensive flat In town, put all their ready money Into furniture, endeavor to dress as well as when each was single, to live as ex travagantly and to entertain their friends with expensive dinners and the atre parties, thus living uo to th very edge of the husband's salary, when they could so easily have a small home In a, suburb, tend their own garden, mine chickens and sell eggs, cultivate small fruits, put up preserves for market, or engage in any one of a score of other small enterprises, which would not onlv add pennies to the family Income, but keep mind and heart sweet with mutual Interests, while accumulating a fund which could be called upon when any sudden change should come. But these things young people seldom consider. An Insufficient income Is apt to be a sore point of friction, hut the question of Its Insufficiency depends largely upon the scale of living. How much ' wiser to adapt oneself before It be comes a sore point, than afterward! H s Two Sensible Dishes. LIMA BEANS With Tomato Sauce Pick over one-half pint of dried Lima beans, cover with cold water and let jitand over night; drain, cook until tender In boiling salted water, drain again and dry In a napkin. Cook two teaspoons of finely chopped orilon In Tnn taMesnnnna of butter, blend in one and one half tablespoons of flour, add slowly one cup of well seasoned cooked and strained tomatoes and cook and stir until smooth and thick. Melt on; quarter cup of butter, add the beans and stir occasionally until delicately browned, turn Into a hot dish and cover with the sauce. Brussels Sprouts With Chess Cook the sprouts till perfectly tender In wa ter with salt, pepper and a, little lemon inicA In It. When tender drain and toss about over the fire In a frying pan with a little butter to get quite hot. but in no attempt to brown them. Take out Into dish, sprinkle freely with grated parmesan cheese and send to table. - - 1 After tlie Game Red Pralrla corrpon1enc of Sheri dan Sun: A person would think by the way they are fixing roads on the prai rie tnat every rarmer in ins neignoor bnod Intended to get an automobile next winter. ,i vT ...'... (Contributed to Tb Journal by Walt Maaoa. th fanKMia Kanaae poet. His proee-poero will be a renlar featur of tula column in Th Dolly Journal.) When I cash in, and this poor race is run, my chores performed, and all my errands done, I know that folks who mock my efforts here, will weeping bend above my lowly bier, and bring large garlands, worth three bucks a throw. and paw the ground In ecstasy of woe. And friends will wear crape bowknots on their tiles, while I look down (or up) a million miles, and wonder why these people never knew how smooth I was until my spirit flew. When I cash In I will not care a yen! for all the praise that's heaped upon me then; serene and silent-In my handsome box, 1 shall not heed the laudatory talks, and all the pomp and all the vain display, will just be pomp and feathers thrown away. So tell me noia, while I am on tha earth, your estimate) of my surpris ing worth; Q tell me what a looloo bird I am,, and fill me full of taffy and of Jam!- . 1 -'V : . , fCoDTrtenr. 1009. be . A TW George kUUbtw AdaiM.)Mt$vf ' W