UitNAL J w St.FNT NKfl PAri:a. fuh'.Uher , f. -:- -,-t vr.-'1 end ;: -,!ii- r.-.rU t TUe Journal livill.l su and XnniMIl tret. Poftlnwl. Or. 1 it thu pwtf fk-e t Portlmid, Or., fof r, ttireujb tbt rag iU nil-l" u! r::o.fS Ms In 717V Home. A-6nsi. f!' i'arii:pnt re.'.chpil lr tlirse BumtwM. 1?!1 t'u oixTutor what deptrtiti-Dt Tea want. OKi:lfiN ADVERTISING RKl'RESE.NXATI VK. ra.tn A Kf-otnor Co., Nirnvriclc Pu)h1lte, I:.:..' Hf!b vetm. New lurki. 1007-OS Jiofc I'iili.ing, Chicago. .-. PiiHrrlptl,in ro br mll to ny idJresi fn tho Lulled States. Cansdi or Mexico; j, ' DAILY. . 0u rear... JS.OO I Ore month. ......I .TO scndax: ): T'r. ...... .t2M I On month........ .25 DAILY AND SUNDAY. On fMr.i.Ai..p.M I Oo month. .......I .63 5! . Revenge triumphs over death;-. Love -slights It; honour asplreth it; grter flieth to' it; fear preoc-': cupateth It.Bacon.' v 1 j ,. ........ 3 THE BOSS OF THE BOSSES . BUT ' FOR the Oregonian, there would have been no movement In Oregon for the' unlawful as . embly. The. state .was orderly. The citizenship was law abiding. The Republican party, for' the first time Jn 30 years, was in peace. Thet pub lic was "perfectly satisfied with the existing order, The ancient enemies cf the direct primary, the defeated candidates tinder It; the has-been bosses, and other malcontents dis liked the condition, but were quiet. They saw no chance of a change. They had given up hope of making business of politics and were busy at earning a , living as other folks do. The state was in the midst of an enormous growth. More railroads were building than ' in 20 years. Towns and cities were" growing .'as never before. Immigration was pour ing in. The state was everywhere admired for the purity and excellence of its government, and the orderly character.. of its citizenship. The hum of business, activity and bustle Was everywhere, and peace, contentment and good order reigned. Best of all", the law of the state was respected and supreme. " t It was iii the midst of this quie tude, peace, order and law that the Oregonian "began 'to' screamrfor'an unlawful assembly. The man who controls that paper originated . the scheme. . With, him, the plan is.-"mjr' plan.". - with him, the assembly Is "my assembly."' With him,1 the. will to hold it 13 "my will," No public meeting had resolved for an assem bly. No organized body of citizen bad requested an assembly. N newspaper had agitated for an as sembly. No condition or situation In the state BUftosted an' assembly. But "my will6 in the case of this man was enough, and the order to convene an' assembly ..was .promul gated - Itwas the hote jfor Which the defeated candidates; the political cadavers, and every other, enemy of the- direct r primary, were, listening. Every dethroned boss came out of his retirement, Every little .bosalt jumped Into the arena. , . Joseph Si mon, for 20 years bop-3 of Multnomah county under the oldconvention re gime, reentered politics. Every cor poration manager and every corpora tion lawyer flew into the game. Ev ery admirer .'of convention . rule .as ; against . direct primary rule is on the muster role, At the head of the crowd is the editor of the Oregonian, wcoplng It up for the assembly,, for with him' It is "my assembly." :,Ha' issued the call to arms. - He sum- iuujii'u me punuutu imuja 10 me war daz.ee. He directed personal govern ment outside the law to be substi tuted for government by law. He ordered th state's nominating sys 'tem changed by rubber stamp." Ho brought all this sudden rain of dis tractionopposition,' division, resist ance, disruption, bitter protest and revolution into the Republican party. He Is the boss of the bosses. . THE TEAMSTERS' SHUKE . ' A NONUNION teamster is.Jn a Portland, hospital "with but. a slender chance of recovery; He was beaten over the head with a steamplpe until a large area of his skull had to be trepanned by Bur geons. At thiB writing there is no evidence to reveal the Identity of Ills assailants. It is , unfortunate for' the union teamsters' strike that such an assault efcould have, been made. It 1$ unfor tunate for it that other attacks of the same nature , have occurred. Un til the assailants pre discovered and the contrary proven, the public, per haps unjustly, will charge these un lawful acts-to the, union teamfeterB Btrike. The union men (strenuously deny their responsibility but, un fortunately for their caso, the gen eral public will be cynical- - The effect of the attacks'. has been Immensely hurtful to the cause of the etrlkers. It has made more sen timent for the employers than , all other Influences combined. The right of any man or set of men to go on a strike Is undoubted. But the right of any man to work , for any. em ployer is equally well grounded. If, in th process, h is attdeked and beaten, the act is, not only a viola tion of. the law,' but an invasion pf the rights and privileges of tha man who attempts' to engage in sucli em ployment: This Is -the public view, iind, even if no member of the unions had a hand in the assaults, it;ha8 U't n mlfchiy harmful to the cause of scrrttarenTTefflH in work have been beaten inrcl, murfortune ha3.all along ''-.in! the mi ike. It ves appar r! 't. i i:pnn with llf.tld'chnnre . It was piojLCted, htt so much, upon a natter of wo. cos as the question of mi open or c!.v- .! ehop. In the selection of their battle 1 :ie, the organization erred. The public Is quick' to sympathize with strikers when underpaid labor is the issue, it Is far less inclined to sympathy when the abstract question .of an open or closed "shop Is the subject of con tention: To the public, as a general "thing, one man is the same as an other. If he is underpaid the public is ready to listen to-.Elm regardless of whether he1 is a union, man, a Methodist or a Populist. It is for this reason that the teamsters h 'e made llttle'. or ; no progress in their fight for a closed shop. In entering upon it, they listened to bad advice, for the cofftiitfons in Tortlahd are not, fa vorable to what they demand.' LET rOKTLAXD REALIZE I T WILL BB strange if Portland permits the ' Portland , Fair and Livestock show to pass out of ex istence. , The one city west of the Rocky mountains in which it is logic for such an exposition to be hold is Portland. Portland is clearing bouse for one of the largest agricultural areas Jn the world. The stakes are set and the plants installed to make Portland the. headquarters for one of the largest livestock industries in the country. Topography,-geography, soil and climate are all Jn "harmony for enormous achievement' In both the agricultural and livestock lines, buf development of either 1b but frac tionally begun. We are not even producing the' livestock for our owh consumption. We import hog3 by the trainload from Nebraska. We buy cattle in California and actually "re ship them into' the heart , of eastern Oregon, almost the original home of the cattle industry. The state of Ore gon is at this moment In the midst of a scarcity of livestock with a pre diction that high prices will rule for at least another year, : We: have the setting and the assets for an ' Im mense' industry, but we havn't .the Industry .We have the place to grow the livestock, the plants to pack and distribute it, but do not produce- It. ' Portland can be a' great factor in contriving, deliverance from this hu miliating situation. For the pitiful carloads of fat cattle, hogs arid sheep, there should he trainioads, and by a proper leadership, Tort-land-as the clearing house" for It. all can speed the transformation. Fairs and livestock shows -ere the recog nized means of prpmot!ngindustry. Those" shows are rot,, held, as an. $n tertainment, but: to give stlmulusLto the activity., , Sight of the better types qubkens Impulse for growing the ' best j. breeds, and. the- most, of them.' ClvlUiatlon Itsulf is founded On.the-fect tliat whatever man sees that, is excellent tsets his mind to working to produce ' a - better- one.' Every mn'n Is" a copyist-and' most, of them add' to It the spirit ctf., rivalry, and, that; Is why. the fine ' types! of animals at a stock show spread wide desire to reproduce them and beat them. -All this is reason for every Portland Interest and every Portland citizen to grasp what the annual fair and-livestock show means to this city and. this region. Rcmemberlrg what the " exposition means," it Is .a- crime that the two former events were financially unprofitable. It will be treason to Portland and the state, if by the nonsupport of Portlanders a similar financial.' experience Is In waiting for the coming show.." . , PUBLIC SERVICE THAT SERVES A" NEW RECORD In the adminis tration of a -public office has -been set by John." M. Lewis of . Portland. His example is one that all public servants- might study and emulate with profit to their em ployer. "As treasurer of Multnomah county he has, during seven years of incumbency, handled $15,376, 051. 8J. Ho has, according to the report of an expert, made In the receipt and disbursement of this vast sum, but a single error, and that was for only 20 cents, and in favor of the county. He has, contrary to the old time cus tom," collected Interest from the banks on his cash balances and, in stead of pocketing the profit, turned It over to the county. In these days when public funds are so often, di verted from their true channels, spec ulated upon and misused, Mr. Lewis' conduct of his office is a revelation. Jt. marks the difference between the ancient time server and the up-to-date, modernized public servant It sets up &g hope that more and more will those we chose for public- serv ice approximate the' Lewis standard. Y Nor is this all. As a candidate for reelection Mr. Lewis' appeal Is - on his record and to the people. -lie Is not trying to sneak Into the office through the sharp practice and cun ning tricks of managing men 'In a manipulated assembly, but ts stand ing on his merits, and laying his claims before that great and honest assembly, as" ordained by the laws of Oregon the people of Multnomah county. He , refused when "asked, to contribute; money to the assembly, and his ref usal, Is another token of his fidelity to the law and the citizen tody.. ', '-", ' . ADMITTED AT LAST E VEN AS a canary ' flits ' from flower to flower, Chairman George Inhis new ukase, flits from thought to thought. In one -flit he said: "The - assembly doesn't nominate, It recommends." In his next, he said: '"A man who is indorsed at a public meeting should have preference over a man who has i :And there you are. "The assembly, doeo rot nominate,' but the man rec ommended by it "should have pir.fp!VTire ever a man who has-been priviii'.'jy indorsed."" That hi to say, the open primary fhould be n u 11 1 f i i 1 and tl.e wh'!e powrr of the bly organization will bo Invoked to nullify it, , The, whole scheme is to make the assembly supersede and set aside the. open primary, and make the holy assembly exercise tne ex act and only function the 'open pri mary was created by law , to exer cise. By a chance slip of his tongue we have the frank admission from Chairman George that the assembly nominee hall be voted for and any other candidate, voted against, in whieh event, what Is the use of hav ing an open primary?; What Is the use of the citizen coming out to vote in the open primary if only tho assembly nominee is to, be sup ported? ,What is the use of taking the time to vote oil something that the , assembly Has already settled? With just one victory ior an assem bly governor and an assembly legis lature, there will never be another open primary in Oregon except after a period of cfnventlon abuses and another ballot revolution. In his im pulsive flits from thought to thought, sipping wisdom here and distributing It there, otrr impulsive chairman has admitted everything opponents of "my high-browed as sembly", have ever contended. Its success will be a skull and cross bones for the direct primary. It is up to the voters now. VALUE AND TAXATION OF FARM LANDS IT IS OF exceeding importance to this country that the agricultural land, as, far as. possible, should I be owned by the men who till, it. and that they shall ti'ir it well, shall be intelligent, progressive farmers. It will , not be long unless there 6hall be great increase in agricultural products, until they will practically all be consumed by our own people It is possible to Increase products as fast as population increases or fast jr, but this wIH not, be done until the necessity for It arises, Until we reach and pass the serd point; Farming Is becoming better every yeaT, and its profitability will increase with Its betterment." But Tafm lands will Nbg in value even faster than the profits of good-farming. And as farm lands rise in value, they will be brought in large areas for speculation, resulting in an increase of absentee ownership, a thing to be deplored. . There have been slight movements or rather much talk, to keep people ontthe .farms or induce town people to go -out Into ; the country, but the great hindrance to thiB desideratum ft more people"!fi the country and less. In .proportion, In the city, is large tracts of land not tilled by their owners. If at all.- The World's Work, after some remarks along this line,' says: " ' - - ' . -VTha, land that is held In large tracts or that Is hold for , speculation Is, almost everywhere, assessed at lower values and taxed less than the land held in small tracts and worked by the men who own them. The cur rent, traditional method of assess ment and taxation almost Inevitably throws the , burden on the small farmer-owrieT' -and' encourages " the absentee landlord and the speculator or thejmere holder for an; increased value. The mere investor has this silent advantage over the worker." . This, if true, and we presume Jt Is several pieces of evidence are giv en is an exceedingly important fact and it is a fact that Is a great wrong and a great evil. If there Is to he discrimination, the very reverse onght to be the case; the little land owner who has improved and is cul tivating well should be taxed least, the largest speculative landholder most: How is it in Oregon? . THE BIGGER BRITISH DOLLAR SN ARTICLE in - the current , World's Work makes state ments under the caption. "The 'Englishman's .Bigger Dollar." which the tariff commission that is going abroad might do well to verify and consider. Comparing the wages and cost of living of a family of cot ton" weavers in New Bedford, Mass., with those bf a like family" in Burn ley England, the; writer finds" that the following wages are paid' in the American city: .Weekly wages of man, $9.72, girl of 20, $7.78; boy of 1'7, $5.5S; girl of' 14, $2.03; total for the four, $25.08. The actual cost of living for this family was $21.15.' Protection enabled this family of four workers, barring sickness, to save the. magnificent sum 'of $3.93 per- weeki------i-. r-r In ' Burnley, England, the - wages were lower--no protection for., labor there." The wages were: Man. $6.86; girl, $5.04; boy, $3.92;' girl, $1.47; total, $17.89. Hurrah for the pro tection. The American family earned $7.99 more than tho English family. But there Is another side to the story.. , While, as stated, the actual necessary .expenses of the American family were $21.15,- allowing a sav ing of $3.93, the expenses of the British family ' were- only $12.05. leaving it a surplua for the week of $5.84. , It seems that If protection gives' a littb better wages, It more than evens Up the score by charging the. family more for , everything It buys. - , Each item In the total cost of living 'in both, .cities is given. Here are a few instances: American flour that sold in Burnley for 49 cents cost 70 cents In New Bedford. Amer ican sugar In New Bedford, 16 pounds for $1; In ; Burnley, 25 pounds. -American rice In America, 10 cents a pounds; In England, 6 iDj-f- ' Sodathfit costsi S ents here can be bought There for' a half pen ny, 1 cent. Gas there 13 S4 cents per 1000 feetji carfare is 2 ' cents and so on. , . .' Protection 13 doing great things for us, no doubt; it Is making the ccvt of living ?a 1 ' 'i that one foe's iMi if lie lias money tnoush to pay the bill. Governor Hughes, the New, York Evening Post relates, wrote in a let ter to a friend that he desired to do something before he left public life to "Improve government by parties." He did try, but apparently without success. ' It might bo well for the governor to study. less about "goVr erument by parties," and more about government of, for and by the peo ple. - ..;' Galloway Visits Joaquin Miller. Fresno. Cal..- July S. To the Editor of The Journal The good steamship Bear left Ainsworth dock at 9 a, in. Juna 25 with a full complement of pas- .fir ITAr. all V. , , -t.nn.v . m 1 1 ). Letters From tne People reaching San Franclsc'o Just 44 hour4lSIi?ney out of rortland. . This beinj our first trip to this Golden State, I could hot help but bet attracted by the great '-difference between Oregon and her sister state on the south, and especially .be tween ' the cities of Portland and San Francisco. . ' ,:fw',:V :'--. - i Passing lown the beautiful Willam ette and along the majestic .Columbia, as also, the Western seacoast, of Oregon, one beholds every where the finest body Of commercial, tlmhej' In the world, while on , the Calif o.rnia , seacoast and . around Ban Francisco the landscape is almost barren of timber of' any kind, except where the hand of man has caused H to grow by- planting and Irrigation. I realize as never" before that nature has been overpartial to Portland and the Willamette valley, - Portland is growing with rapid strides from the natural flow of "wealth from tributary country.' the people -of which take life more easily, as they are not required to exert them selves as they do here, owing to the arid condition, and the much greater area proportionately of unproductive soil and the almost total absence of timber other than that planted as orchard, only more densely. We have visited Santa Clara and Ban Joaquin valleys, considered the finest in California, and while the former might be lost In almost any one of our Oregon counties, neither possesses the natural resources a,nd productiveness of the Wil lamette or the Rogoe River valley. Cul tivation and Irrigation have beei car ried on in these California Valleys to a very high stare of perfection, hence we find vast orchards of olives, peaches, apricots an J prunes, all tylelding this year good props expecting prunes, which are very light. Around Fresno one travels through' miles and miles of great vineyards, for this Is the home of the best raisin and wine grapes of Cal ifornia. There are also large orchards of figs and peached, which are all 'heav ily loaded with fruit. - One noticeable advantage here is the means of transportation The country roads are the finest X have ever, seen. The electrto car has penetrated to every section. One may travel hundreds of miles In visiting every section of these populous valleys at small outlay, hence is it any wsnder that Sah Jose, thVcoun ty seat of Santa Clara county, has a popiilatlotf'bf lSlJ.flOO," while this city, the commercial center of this part of the Ban Joaquin valley; has a like num ber? I shall never forget the nutgntfieent view aa we entered Oolden Gate harbor Monday. morning Just as the-sun was as cending above, the horijton , looking, like a great ball of gold rising above, the mists and casting a golden path across the , waters of the bay to our vessel. Steaming past, the fortifications on our right and left we felt'that Golden Gate harbor, with these and Us submarine mines, Is certainly impregnable to any Invading foo. . ' . i:'.".- ;tr.r-'. San Francisco Is rapidly, building up. but one frequently notices evidences of the fiery holocausttcaused. by the earth quake four years ago., We must forego a description of the old Spanish missions and the magnificent !-Bcenic , places we have vlBlted, as well as the great uni versities of Stanford and Berkeley, hoi to mention the memorial square at Stan ford with Its statue commemorative of tne senator and his wife and thelr'lament ed son, Leland Stanford' Jr. Nor can wA give a description 'of the great educa tional Institution across ' the bay at Berkeley further than to say that we attended a performance at the Greek theatre .connected with th university when anout 110,000 were taken In as the receipts of one performance. 1": ' However, silence as to the happiest event o our sojourn ln'the southern me. tropolis would be unparilenable In an Oregonian were 1 not ""to "jfiention our visit to the home of J'oaquTn -MilWr, ; the Oregon pioneer, Indian war. Veteran, and poet, whose name and fame are known and honored by all' civilized peoples. The poet's ranch (as he calls it), of 100 or more acres, Is two njles up the moun tain's side from the nearest streetcar line In Oakland, and Is -reached by a winding road which must be seea. ttf be fully enjoyed. The poet nurchaseoTthls land some 30 years agoi it being theV-a- barren and- steep hillside, Interspersed with canyons and ravines, worth - little at that time, but now of great value, as he,has transformed H into one great mountain park, covered with a magnifi cent forest of Oregon fir, cypress and pine trees, many of which he has plant ed with his own hands. He Is now plant ing 1T)0,000 eucalyptus trees, all from his own -nursery. , He has miles of pipe conveying spring water - to every part of his ranch. The most lovely flowers are on every side, the terraced hillsides being .. outlined, with-the-, magnificent scarlet geraniums which bloom so pro fusely in thla California climate. , The- poej has several lodges, and has surrounded 'himself with educated men and women, men and women who think and act. Many who visit : the - ranch merely for curiosity do not see the poet, but whan we were announced as Orei gonlans be welcomed us' with out. stretched' hands, "saying, welcome, wel come, dear friends!" This remarkable personage la "truly e young old man. He works out doors each day.- His eye is bright, diffusing the light of -intelligence' and' sleep thought of the soul within." During the short time we were with him ho; talked of j Oregon pioneer men and women. Tears filled his eyes when he spoke of the departed, and he asked us to con vey, messages of love to many whom he named, and said he wished that he had another life to spend in Oregon with the friends of his early days. Ha said: "I have traveled in many lands, bufr the best and noblest men and women 1 ever knew' were the pioneers of Orogon.' When departing, In answer to a ques tion from Mrs. .Galloway, who had walked two miles up- the mountainside to pay homage to the author of "The Bravest of Battles;" he said: "I live and labor- hAe in this solitude for a purpose; ;. I strive to. impress iipon the young not, to depend too much upon beokni1 fr-eiHakteqok,"-twt"PoB' alone do not make men." i i,7lf i- , , He. gets inspiration , from the great book of nature with which he holds a) most constant communion. - His writ ings teem with boautiful thoughts conned from this Influences pn the hu man soul lr r-ona which bear upon life COMMENT AMD SMALL CHANG 32 Roofspvelt thinks Boverldga is bully. Oregon is also cherries. a world beater as to No man is entirely friendless if he has a dog. Hay about all harvested, drop of rain on It. and not a - Finest weather on earth, either for vacationing or laboring. . ...- " Some people can never be convinced that they don't know it all. Man near Plttsbure lived for Vears ion 65 cents a,wee.k. ,Yef he died, i 1 "''.. ., ' .''.- ' .", ... ', - . '.... , . Party Insurgents are nothing new; the Hemocratlc party has always had 'em. It seems that Jeff knew he couldn't fight a little bit, but be wanted the Now we, suppose about 1700 young darkies' wlll bvgln training to become future champions. - ..'..." ....... A - O yes, . Johnson will retire when Some pug serves him the way he served effrles. They all do. - - - .Pugilist 'Johnson would at least make as respectable a Chicago slderqian as Hinky. JDink or Bathhouse John. . Probably the cost of living has also inorensed in whatever place one goes to take a vacation, as well as at home,. Roosevelt will make a speech in be half of Beveridge, . eminent. Insurgent, Also, perhaps, for j Burrows or some otner regular. . .... . . .... . - The' annual' problem of what to. do with the cat during vacation recurs. It Isn't solved in the least by leaving father at home. . . - , . . ""Senator Carter , says that Roosevelt wltt have a "soothing influence1' To think of Roosevelt acting as a soothing syrup is comical. Manifestly Porter Charlton was crafcy when he married the woman, whether he was so when he killed he) or not. And she 'was equally Insane in marrying him. . , . - " A Pittsburg paper urges the appoint ment of Congressman Dalzell as chief Justice of the United States supreme court Now wouldn't that be fine for the trusts? A 14-year-old girl spelled down every bouv in an Oklahoma state spelling bee, which may be a i more - admirable feat than winning a championship at tennis or basketball, ... . , v.-; ' i, ' i. V .' i :: "The Gervais fitar-. admits that its statement - that- "the assembly move ment was spreading like wtldnre" was "extravagant language," but still con tends that the movement Is Btrong, and the editor, W. J. Clarke, candidly adds: "If we could only get Hie same move ment on our candidaVy for state printer we would be more than pleased." ; '-, Today is the date of the defeat of General "Edward Braddock the British commander of the king's forces In this country in 1755. At i the time the French possessed the valley of the Ohio, and, with tha anslstanca of their Indian allies, they devastated the English frontier. Finally the English govern ment awoke; to the necessity of vigor ous measures to fescue the endangered section, A canyiaiga , was, planned to expel the French from Ohio,- and wrest from them some portion of their Ca nadian territory. The execution of this great -design was intrusted to General Braddock, with a force which it waa deemed would overbear all resistance. - Braddock was, a brave' and experi enced soldier. ' He had learned the rules of war, but had no capacity to compre-: hend its principles, v. In the pathless forests of America he could do nothing better than strive to give literal effect to those maxims, which he had found applicable in the well trodden battle grounds of Europe. . The English general had heard such accounts of Washington as a. soldier that he invited him to Join his staff. The latter, eager to efface the memory of a recent defeat, accepted the offer. Tha army finally began Its march west ward from Alexandria. Braddock's ob ject was to reach Fort Dequesne, the great -center of Frencn Influence on the Ohio. This fort had been built by the English and taken from them by the French. It stood at the confluence of the Allegheny and Monongahela, which form the Ohio river at this point. 1 Fort ' Ducpiesne ' ws a rude -piece of fortification. The English commander had no doubt that the fort woud yield to him directly he showed. himself be fore it. Benjamin Franklin looked at the project with his Shrewd, cynical eye. He told Braddock he would assuredly take the fort if he Could only jeach it, but that the long, slender line . which bis army must form in Its march, "would.be cut like thread into several pieces" by the hostile Indians. Brad dock Is said to have - ''smiled at his ignorance." .' '.' 'V- r-" ' - " Franklin was engaged to collect horses and. carriages for the use of the expedition, and he did what was re in all its moods, for our poet of the hills is also a student of human life, having mingled much with the world in earlier days. Tie has traveled in many lands, and how in his declining years finds pleasure and inspiration in the iulet of, Bis:hlllsid8 home,, surrounded by a few congenlar friends, where .his work-is done in the light of day, as he burns no midnight oil, but rettres with the' birds and Is .up with their first morning songs.; :. S: ' r ' ,': i ',:'. ": , .With a warm handshake and an ear nest "Qod bless you" "from the lips of this remarkable man and poet of na ture we wended our way down the moun tain side into the, bustling, thrivirux city of Oakland where , resides another of Oregon's noted pioneers, W Lair Hill, I thought a few of the debts due Oregon from the. Golden State were her, sys tem of Jurisprudence, her first gover nor, Peter II. Burnett, her leading law yer and Jurist, W, Lair Hill, and last, though not least, Joaquin Miller, h the poet and author, whose name and fame is the pride of all Oregonrans. WILLIAM GALLOWAY Shall Charlton Escape? ; From the Los -Angeles Times. ' Isn't it about time that one of these "gilded youths" with nicotine stained, murderous fingers, was compulsorily made to yield-up the ghost In an eleotrlo chair or at the business end of a stout hempen ropef i, Four years ago Harry Thaw killed Stanford White., yet - he sees the sun rise every morning. And now wa learn that Porter Charlton, who murdered his wife and threw her body, still warm, into Lake Como, in Italy, -"is safe." He need not fear tho gallows; alienists say. he is Insane, like Thaw. . . i Who will say that both these i well connected murderers are not as sane as thousands of free men who never have been and never will bft suspected 6t I jiiiiuiiussf . J.IUS young 1'orier cuartion gave those on board the ship in which ha returned to AmPri n .nn t h. returned to America no reason to be lieve that he was not in-his right mind. Ha acted ss an ordinary criminal in en deavoring to throw the officers of the law off bis trail. He showed no signs of the etraordinary curmlng which. -some July 9 in History---Brad(!oclc8 Defeat" NEWS IN BRIEF or.ixoN sii)i:iJGin:s Increase in telephone rates in : Pen dleton is unreBsonable declares the council of that city. From one trp a Corvallls man plckerl 100 gallons of Koyal Anns cherries, and thero are hot less than 15 gallons lctt on -the tree. . A general Improvement of conditions in Coquille has been begun on a large scale by the marshal with the .sanction and under the Instructions of the city council, says the Sentinel.' ' - . ' - ;;; - The general opinion of those wtjo" have made the trip to Nehalem from Tillamook over the countv road is that it is the best In the state from every stnndpoint, .'Bays the Ncbalom lCntei prise. Echo is to have another alfalfa meal factory. In the Echo country there is enough alfalfa raised to supply many meal ( factories with the raw product. Furthermore alfalfa is a profitable crop to raise. ; ,....., ..). .... '- . -'; , ' Very fine apples, pears, peaches, plums, prunes, cherries, : loganberries, raspberries, .both red and white, and blackberries, were all grown without ir rigation on a dry hill 800 feet higher than the city of The Dalles.. . . . ' . ':. ' ,.' V.' i'.'That the farmers of Klamath cbunty are prosperous and have a good bank account-is shown by the .fact, that al most $121,600 has been paid by them Into the reclamation fund from the Klamath project for the current year.' 'Old man Grant Of the Big Elk coun try, had magnificent black bear, hide on exhibition in Corvallls. It measured more than six feet from tip to tip, nnd when open measures a -like distance across. The animal had to be shot three times. ' . Malheur county has begun a systematic- improvement of her county roads and from reports the result ia very ; satisfactory. The county court Tias Invested in some modern road build ing machinery and finds the investment a good one. i - r Grain crops in Lane county will bo superb, says the Eugene Reeister. Yield of oats and other gralnfl this year Is something great. A ride "through the county shows the oats-aa high as the fences and having well filled heads, some of which are 18 Inches long. A prominent Denver cspltallst, tonr insr in an auto, tells the Klamath Fal!s Chronicle) ''I believe you people have the natural . resources here that are bound to make this one of the grandest sought after places of the world when all of the goods thjngs to be found are generally known." . . , . , . '- While little noise is being made about it, the present fishing season is proving.- to he -one . of the bent : which the Columbia river district has seen for several vears, says the Astoria Budget: Every class of gear has done well and what Is of especial Interest to the com munity at large, the glllnetters have as a rule made unusually good, catches. -J. quired of him in silence. The expedition crept slowly forward, never achieving mor than three cr four miles a day, stopping, as Washington said, "tojevel every, .molehill,-to erect a brldge'over evpry-brnok.",- ' r' - " ' ' The expedition had ? left. 'Alexandria on April 20, and It was not, until July 9 that Braddock,, with half his army, was near the fort ; There was yet no evidence, that resistance was Intended. The army: marched-: along: a roadr 13 feet wide. In a ravine, with high ground in front and on both aides. Suddenly the Indlap,t war whoop burst from tha woods. A'murderous, fire emote-down the troops. The provincials, not un used to this warfare, sheltered -themselves, behind trees, and - fought With steady courage. Braddock, clinging to his old rules, .strove to maintain his order of battle on- the Open ground. A carnage, most grim and lamentable, was the result. His undefended soldiers were shot down by an unseen foe. For three hours the. struggle lasted; then the men broke and fled in utter rout and panic. ... Braddock, vainly fighting, fell mor tally wounded, and was carried off the l.eld by some of his soldiers. ) The poor pedantic man-never got oyer his aston ishment at a defeat so inconsistent with the established rules of war.- "Who would hive thought it?" be murmured, as they bore htm from the field. He scarcely spoke again, and died on July 13. .Nearly 00 men, kiMed and wounded, were" lost in this disastrous encounter about one half of the entire force en gaged. -'--'" :.... July 9, 1686, is the date of the form ing of the League of Augsburg, and the day on which the articles of Confedera tion were signed in 1778. It Is the birthday of Thomas West,' Lord Dela ware (1577); Ellas Howe,' the Inventor (1819); Philip V. Bliss, the .composer (1S38): John D. Rockefeller, the mer chant 1839), and William F. Vilas, secretary nf the 'Interior 'and post master geneaal under Cleveland (1840.. It is the date of the death of Zachary Taylor, twelftfi president of the United States (1850). ,'. ' -'' .. doctors - assert accompanies madness. He was merely an. ordinary man among ordinary people. Those on shipboard were astonished to learn, after his ar rest, "that he was accused of murder; and In fact, confessed the crime. 'Now, however. New Tork reporters'! vividly describe him as sitting in his cell, "Jabbering, shrieking and laughing," This Insanity seems to have come very suddenly upon the young man. Of course it is gravely argued that he must have been , insane at the time of tha murder. But would a madman have taken such pains to get rid of the body "of his mur dered Wife?. ; Would be not rather have stayed by' the corpse and "Jlbbered, and shrieked, and laughed," careless of what became of himselft ,..,.;;'i: i But, it will be earnestly explained, as In the ease of Thaw, that insanity quick, ly passed. Charlton was' miraculously restored to his right mind. Perchance the evil spirit left him and entered Unto' a nearby herd of pigs, if there happen to be any pigs in Italy, This madman spent several days in Europe, coming in contact, with numerous people who saw no evidence of an Ophelian state of mind. ' -' "" - . Now be is back in America, within the shadow pf the grim electrio chair, and again tbat awful Insanity seizes him. How exceedingly apropos! How' very kind of ' madness to, be Johnny on the spot, so that Charlton may never occu py1; that awful "seat into which the blighting current flows! - If it, were right that Charlton should escape the death that is his due, we should gladly hold up thumbs to Bave a young man. no matter that depravity oozes from his finger ends. But the safety of the publio demands that Jus tice b not overburdened with,, mercy. The taking of life by private people to satisfy private quarrelshas become al together too common. To use a truism, an example should be made of one of these young men who are too free with revolvers, hammers, or the fit-st weapon they find' conven GrantSi Pass Outlook: Th& sight of plump, healthy "apples of the vintage of 1909 smiling across the grocer's able at a collection of new crop fruit iajust another instance of how wa make both ti)ida meet in Oregon., f T ' 'oi ' rri By Miles Ovn-1-.ok "In your reference to tha foundering of that ehip loadod with returning con victs who were drowned you- say: 'The breakers were dashed to pieces in the frothing waters.' During 'my long ex perience I, have never seen breakers in the middle of the ocean, nor did I ever hear of them being dashed to pieces on -themselves," said the city edi tor to the new reporter. -.' ' "That's all light," said the cub, . "I referred to the law-breakers." But Just the same he "was transferred to the business office the next day. ANCIENT RUINS AND OTHERS. , The cliff dwellers did their ..reigning several years ago. ... They were more or . tess few and in order to reign Success fully they were necessitated to get It over with before foreigners began tp populate the -country. Their" houses, were whittled out of " the rocks with mallets, and it took a" dozen years, or more to build a hen house. Before a young man could get married he had to build a house with -two" rooms and a bath and it required ' a good deal of physical exercise. I fre- . quently get up in the middle of flie night and shake hands with myself he cause I am not a cliff dweller. .. - ' The ruins of the dwellings of the cliff dwellei-s are a good deal inaccess ible, except those near Manitou, Col., which were built at great expense and labor a few. years ago. " t . ... .,, Two or three gentlemen and I paid a man 60 cents apiece for the privilege of, walking up a hill upon which wa had to travel on all fours to keep from fall ing off. At the top were the "ruins." i The ruins were a great sight and were almost as good as new, I like to gaze In wonder on old relics of bygone his-' tory and feel glad tnat times have changed. . : " : As soon as I had acquired enough t breath to operate my tongue I inquired . of the one eyed guide bow long it took -them to haul the rocks to the top of the hill, and ha got mad and went over ; to where some ladies were standing and -pointed - out the awe inspiring barb- -wire fencr around the ruins, which was ; built by the dwellers to keep the chil dren from falling out the window. I f didn't think : I was unreasonable about the matter. I paid 6ft cents'and I thought I was entitled to ask ques tions. Once I saw., a baby incubator which contained two beautiful infants that looked almost as natural as life and . when J asked the man what , they were made of he gave me my IB cents back and told ine not to slam, the door when I Went out. But to return to the ruins. The guide i, showed us several show cases full of pottery and slMge -. hammers- and. 'the -like... I picked up a red and yellow fn- . ger boWl, or something, when the-guide wasn't looking and looked at some cabal, iatlo letters -on the bottom of it with a magnifying glass. It was quite Interest ing: It j-ead-m &JVl 001898.?-: I asked the guide what It meant, and he took the howl away frotn me without uttering word. I think now that I must hava offended, nlm Injpnujiiaii. ner. . '.,.-' r v. , :. After thSt I went away and sat down. I wanted to ponder of the ruins awhile. I didn't stay Jong, however. -; I am a pretty fair portderer when I am' lying ; on the sofa, but sitting on a cactus that is not expecting, company is not at at all1 conducive to pondering. : I re member that 1 got up impulsive like and kicked, that cactus in the ribs ; oouple of times before I noticed that it was resenting it by showing its teeth. After that I left it alone, I have some of its teth now. When lunch time arrived I was asked ' to sit down and have, something, but, I said I -would rather stand up and to let some of the ladies have my place. " . The guids talked to ms a good deal , after that - He wanted to know what I-thought- of the cactus as an ancient ruin, He, said for a ruin-tha cactus plant was about as successful as any thing be knew of. And then ha would wink the only eye he had and chuckle In, a low, -vulgar manner. . The Progress of Insurgency. ' From the Public A high note In Republican politic wa struck last week by Glfford rtnehot and James A, Garfield at St PauL The . insurgency which La Follette began and ... has fought for steadily, and toward , which Cummins, Dolliver, Murdock and a handful of other Republican leaders ; In western states have turned, is vital ized as a national movement by - those ; speeches. They hold aloft the-old Re publican hanner of moral ideals, under ' which the' Republican- party -originally won in American politics the place It' has long since Justly ' forfeited and is , now beginning visibly to lose. Whether -purposely, or not, Mr. Pinchot'a speech sketches in broad wtline, and Mr. Gar- . fields' acentuatcH, the .. issues ; in - our politics which having; torn the Demo cratic party hopelessly asunder ars at last pulling tho Republican party apart. , The development of those Issues lis ap parently leading on toa complete na- C tional realignment of parties, with privi leged interests on one side and a genu ine democracy, alive with moral Ideals, ou the ether. What, the attempted ex- '. tension -of - slawry-"" was to- American -politics In tha fiftios, the obstruction of -trade by tariffs and of original produc- . tion by land monopoly, promise to be to American politics now; and la that con- -nection the - Plnchot and Garfield speeches . bave 'much the sound of "a t clarion call. , , , , ' (Contributed to The Journal by Walt Mon. the famous Hnusni poet. Hli prose-pocax n reftulsr tur of till columo la lb Dull Journal.) ... : ; i : m - . ,. She worked so . hard, the long, long day, at putting, mislaid things awayi at" sweeping all the floors and stairs, and shaking tugs, and dusting chairs and cleaning grease marks from the doors,, and forty thousand other chores. And when her. husband came' at night, his cottage was a cheering sight'- But. he like many -of his kind, though' having two good ' eyes, . was blind; he never gave a glance or thought - to all the things his ' wife had wrought ' He stretched .himself upon two chairs, and talked about hi8 selfish -cares..-She want-, e.d just a word of praise,; and he dis cusaed his' evil days; she wanted Just a little smile, and ho observed that times were vile. She wanted bread, and got a stone, and bowed her head to weep alone. A man ,may lug a lot of gems, and vel- brighten, up her. life one-half JU much n he might- do if he would give, at tlmtSj a lew ; kind words that do not -cost a yen, but make hex heart grow young a gain.,-v.- ' -.- y . -v - . Copvrl;-ht; HHO, by ' ' ftS JJf . rXrAV Taw ( ; , ' 1 . ' - . --.y ' . - ' , '. - .... TKe Housewife