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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1910)
7, THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, WEDNESDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 21, 1910. 'J - i. THE JOURNAL i! JNDKPBNDENT sewspapeh. ' C6i JACK80X PablUbrt pTJbJ4ia1 try ewntnf extpt; Sunday) ana RnnJr ornlii at Tba Joornal P J ' Inr, Fltta. and tamMl! atwta, I-erUand. Or. Kntn-wt at tbt poatofflee at Portland. r-. f trammlMJtn Uirouj Ua taalto aecond-claaa matter. ., " " ' TELEPHONES M! TITHt HolBa, , A-WM. All daiwrtroanta riehd br thaaa nnnibffra, Tll tiia operator wont department yon want. tORFIG ADTERTI8IXO REPRF.SKXTATIVB, BanJmf it Kantoor Co., Buroairlrk Building. 825 Fifth ayi-oi)., Sew Sorti WuT-OS Boyca buUdlnf. Oilcago. ! FuharrlpM.m Ternia bt mall or to any addrlNU ta tha United State, Canada, or Meiko: , .;.:.- DAILY. One year. ...... .13 00 On month. ..... . .BO SUNDAY. Oot yr. ...... .1150 I Ob montb........ .23 DAILY AND 6DNDAT. ; On yr.U... IT.60 I One month.. ......t . I don't think much of a man who la not Winer today than he was yesterdayr Abraham JAn- , coin AGAIXST rOSTrOXEMEXT c S PORTLAND business organiza tions have gone on record as opposed to a postponement of - the public docks' election. ( The action was participated In by com mittees from the Taxpayers' league, the chamber of commerce, the Fed erated Trades and the chamber of commerce trustees. It is a formid able array of business people. It comprises men and organization- of importance s in this town. It is a voice to which Mayor Simon and the city council can well, look for wise counsel. .V." y The Journal deema it, wholly In advisable to postpone the submission of the docks-amendment. The peo ple of the city want : these public docks. - Portland needs these docks. There is "literally no reliable . argu ment against the plan. The testimony of all experience, all i experts, all in vestigation and. all cities favors the plan. ; Every city that has ever tried the system or that has ever studied the system deeply la' an' exponent and advocate of public docks." The only objectors are those who want water fronts monopolized for their own selfish purposes, or those -who have hot delved into ihe merits of the Question. ' - . - Portland has learned to her Bor row how public projects may be sub jected to delay. It is more than three years now since this city first voted a bond issue for public docks, and we are now exactly where we began. The tiresome litigation, the obstructions by selfish men, the com plexity and Immensity of the under taking, the ramifications of various and conflicting interests, are among the factors in delay, and there are others. , 4 . Meantime, Portland Is growing. The value of Portland waterfront is advancing. Daily, the ultimate of the undertaking becomes more diffi cult. The real beginning should have been made before It was launched three years ago, J Postponements are always disadvantageous and always costly. Every consideration is on the side of the earliest possible action. The public bodies Insist that . the bonds, amendment should be sub mitted at the election November 8, and it 1b advice the mayor and coun cil will do well to follow. None will so welcome postponements of the matter as will the enemies of public docks. , ' .,.'-';.'''':-'. '.. "V.".'. . TEACHING IMPROVED FARMING H ARMING processes and methods are being much changed .and . greatly . improyed in many , I- parts of the country, this im provement helng due largely to the educational work of the agricultural department at Washington and the various agricultural colleges and ex periment stations. The main phase of improvement is in increased pro - duction, but In many Instances there Is improvement In Quality; as well as in quantity. This Is true not only of fruus, but even of grains. The old haphazard or. ignorant methods are passing. There are dif ferent ways of plowing and plant- 'Ing and the new wayB, as Investiga tors, experimentors . and demonstra tors have discovered, will enormous ly increase, will in many cases, 'double, present or former yields. These students and teachers have demonstratedjhese facts, and many farmers of the country ' are sitting up and Metering and learning. It, is ' being learned for one thing that the ' season is not an absolutely control ling "factor in fixing the yield of ? crops. By knowing how, a farmer j can ; raise jgood crops in spite of drouth or a surplus of rain. For years the . government h'as . maintained experiment stations, but J'1 the new educational movement takes wthe instruction to the homes of the farmers themselves. The aew work is done not on government land but on the farmers' lands, and It Is car ( rled on not by the government agents '., but under their instruction by the , T; farmers themselves. Most of this work is so far confined to the south , ft; central stateB, and in many commun- . lues a wonderful transformation has been wrought -A meeting la held perhaps in, a rural. schoolhouse and the plan Is unfolded. The farmers j become interested and accept the ,v community Instruction of the expert , 4 agriculturalist, and next ' year, and Uweafter,' greater and better crops - sro raised. "As One inBtance it is re- lated that a Texas farmer, after '.learning how, raised $4000 worth 1 of cotton and corn on 30 acres, 15 ; . of each, in spite of a long drouth. vtstod crops worth but a few hun- dred do!Urs. , The railroads are also doing px-cdU-nf work in educating the farm- ers. showing them how. And some of the schools are doing work among the children that will become very- effective after ; awhile la teaching them knowledge of agriculture and Inducing them to take an Interest in it and to like it. ;,-.'. BEACOX SIGNALS IN THEIR time, the recent ballot - verdicts in Maine and Washing ton were discussed in The Jour nal. "The "result In Maine was ascribed to lack of a direct primary through which dissatisfied Republican voters could make proper expression of their own sentiments within their own party. Machine control at Washington and Augusta gave them candidates and policies they could not support, and they voted the Democratic ticket. The Incident was exploited as a reason why Republi can voters In Oregon must stand by the direct primary or be ready to ex-l pect here exactly such results as took place in Maine. On this page is an article from the Philadelphia North American; one of th.e leading Repub lican newspapers of the country.' Its interpretation of the meaning of the Maine election Is exactly the same as that given by The Journal, and It ought ; to ave large weight with those who do not realize how Import ant it la for all Republicans to op pose the assembly scheme In Oregon. Equally prophetlo was The Jour-. nal'B interpretation of the meaning of PoIndexterV landslide In Wash ington." in that state, the Republi can masses had a direct' primary through which they could express their sentiments, and they,.: went unitedly and overwhelmingly against machlnlsm and "business" oligarchy. It was precisely the same battle that anti-assembly Republicans are fight ing for In Oregon and the applause that awaits . them If they win, is seen from that bestowed on Wash ington Republicans by the Chicago Tribune, one of the foremost Re publican newspapers of the coun try, ' in an article republished on this page. : Oregon . Republicans have tad much to guide them in this conflict The result In Maine, the result in California, the result In Kansas, the result In Wisconsin, the result in Iowa, the result In Washington,; the result In New Hampshire, and the re sults almost everywhere, are as bea con signals, pointing the way, It Is a succession of victories for people's government over machine rule and Big Business domination. It IS al most as If the hand of the Almighty had interfered In the people's behalf. It i3 a succession of splendid object lessons tq Oregon people of how they ought to vote and why. THE VOICE OP liA FOLLETTB THE VOICE of Senator La Fol lette Is against the Oregon as sembly scheme. In a telegram , , to Charles J. Reed, he says: ."Every vote is vital in this great struggle to bring government back to the people. I am deeply Inter ested In your success and confident that no man will win who favors any assembly or convention device to break down the Oregon primary." No man doubts Senator La Toi lette's motive. ; No man questions his honesty. Only Big Business and boss politicians doubt his judgment. He says every vote will be vital In this great struggle to bring govern ment back to the people. In effect, he says that no man should win who favors any assembly or convention device to break down the Oregon primary.-" - ---. -- No man more than La Follette has fought the battles of the masses." No man has a deeper knowledge of the need of bringing government back to the people. No man la bo sternly convinced that it Is better worth while to give the small man a-llv ing than the big man a profit. " It is a life of devotion to such ideas that resulted recently in a Bplendld votexa-Beach are the team. Theyare of confidence with a plurality of nearly 100,000 that his .common wealth recently gave La Follette. It has been La Follette's public career that has been a beacon light to Lin coln Republicans, holding out hope and promise to them, for many years. It was through the Wisconsin di rect primary that La Follette con structed that he was able to bring Big Business and Us machine allies out of the places of special privilege and reduce them to the levol of other folks in Wisconsin. It' Is his personal knowledge of the value of direct primaries to a people that causes Senator La Follette to oppose any "assembly or convention device to break down the Oregon primary." HI3 telegram to Mr. Reed is his voice of appeal to every Lincoln Republi can In Oregon to oppose the assembly ticket next Saturday. CHURCH STATISTICS F IGURES . ON church statistics are being made by the govern ment, but as ' they were ' col lected four years ago, church suunoriues ciaim tnat about one fifth should be added to them; for these figures indicata that, contrary to quite a common belief, church membership is growing, Instead of decreasing. Froih later data than the numerical information .it ? is learned that in four cities, Boston, Louisville, Providence and Fall River, 60 per cent of the population or more are in the churches. The her 1 wtrHUiecfire Toledo, Memphis, Omaha and St Jo seph, only 20 per cent of the people of the latter city being church mem bers. No explanation for such a dt vergence is available. Cities having over 50 per cent of their population in churches are Pittsburg,' Detroit, Buffalo, New, Haven. .St. Paul, Syra cuse, Scranton and Worcester; in all other cities, the proportion Is less than half. The. proportion of peo ple who attend church Is about one third. Of the 24,000,000 young peo ple who attend school, 15,000,000 go to Sunday school. , The money Invested In churches is rapidly increasing and has dou bled in 16 years. The investment is $1,700,000,000 and about $80,000, 000 a far goes into new churches, fhese sums do- not Include church schoolhouses, . hospitals or . parson ages.' It costs about $300,000,000 a year to maintain the churches,' in cluding mission and charitable do nations. Nearly $10,000,000 goes to foreign missions, $40,000,000 ; to home missions, and $100,000,000 is given to a variety of objects. . The salaries of preachers averaged In 1 908 $663 a year, and they aggre gated . $70,000,000. Unitarian min isters are paid the most, $1653; Episcopal clergymen next, $1517, and so on down to $227, paid to col ored Baptist preachers in the south, Many ministers In large cities are paid all the way from $000 to $15,-000.- The churches of the, country comprise a big institution.' ' . COUNT 'EM T WENTY-FIVE, persons, , count 'em, 25, attended : the assem bly meeting In South Portland last night At Hunter's hall, Sunnyside, an anti-assembly meeting addressed by George W, Joseph' and Henry McGinn, was packed to the doors. .The aisles .; were . filled, the corridors were . crammed ,andthe overflow of the throng extended out into the open entrance. Two other anti-assembly meetings were crowded .with, big audiences. The growing opposition to the as sembly scheme is expressed eloquent ly in the outpourings of people to hear the gospel, of good' government The .voters resent the assembly In sinuation, that . they haven't sense enough to select fit candidates for office,: and; that they don't know enough to choose United States sen ator. They resist the -assembly claim that government ought to be .by a few high brows and that all others are low brows and ought to be governed." - , While the regular or old guard of the New York Republicans antag onistic to Roosevelt and his policies, may control the forthcoming state convention, as their leaders claim, they will do so if at all by a narrow margin, and It Is safe to assert that the rank and file of voters would be disappointed and displeased at such a result, and will resent It at the polls. A significant Incident of the primaries yesterday was the defeat of Vice President Sherman as a can didate for delegate In his own assem bly district and even In his own pre- clnct When a vice president of the United States cannot be elected a deleeate to a state convention by hts home people, the voters are certain ly becoming insurgent The period of time prescribed by the interstate commerce commission during which the Southern Pacific might not raise the rates on lumber from Willamette valley points to Cal ifornia having about expired, that corporation issues another raised tariff just as high as the one set aside by the commission two years ago. The rates are just as unreason able now as they were then, as the commission will doubtless declare. But to get another decision will take much time . and some money and meantime the mills may have to run at a loss or close up, as some of them did before. Trust the S.P. to charge 11 the traffic will bear. But It may charge more than it will bear. Boone Cason, who poses as an anti-assembly candidate for senator, believes in team work. , He, C. N. McArthur, the Oregonlan and Bene- the "little assembly." Cason is run ning for senator on the anti-assem bly ticket, and McArthur for the same 'Office on the assembly ticket. Cason's "stunt" la to draw votes from George W Joseph, the real anti-assembly candidate for senator, and thereby help McArthur. And the Oregonlan and Seneca Beach are helping - Cason get anti-assembly votes. .There's your, team. : ; Still down they go. Present indi cations are that Representative Taw- ney of Minnesota, long in congress, chairman of the very important com mi tee on appropriations, and one of Cannon's leading and stuanchest supporters, has been defeated for re nOmlnatlon. Everywhere it is the same. ' The same story of defeat for Cannoolsm and high protection and representation of the interests In stead of the people comes from every state from Maine to Washington. , Big Business and the People. From the World's Work. The regulation of railroads and the restraint of corporations these are the eubjects of more legislation ftnd or more (Jiscussion, and the cause of more hopes and of more fears and of more business disturbances, than all other subjects combined.; We have had much legisla tion, national and state, more agitation, endless discussion, a financial panic sensational trials and decisions,' and vio lent fluctuations- in values; and there are cases pending, In the supreme court whose decisions are awaited by the in dustrial world as of possible revolution ary importance. Tet few men, even tef the greatest in dustrial grasp, seem to see ' the real meaning of thlr eveMncreaslng aglta- ulea nor with decisions of the courts nor with potitlpal programs; and few political leaders seem to have a clear notion of It. . . . . . " irditftrlnl magnates will tdlyov that business. conditions wpuld be jbuuiiJ " ') - ' ' k .. f and satisfactory if our' lawmakers wouU' b qulot for a tlmo. : "We have toe many laws already.. Etop for a while. Give , business ; chance." Tet t amendments that congress so laborious ly made to the railroad laws have little practical meaning. No railroad manager and no citizen seems to know of any very great change that these amend ments brought or seem likely to bring AU tula agitation and law making ana amending, then." and tha lawsuits brought by f the government, and the court decisions are all these mere pid dling ana meadimg and demagogy? or la there some large, .clear principle toward which the agitation la tending, even In Its ilgzajr ways? There Is suuh a prin ciple,, slowly-and awkwardly as we get at It : kT-;. .:';;.,,. .' , ,.;.;,, ,- Favors J. II. Lewis. . Portland, Or., Sept 21. To the Edi tor of !,The Journal 1 wish to second nymt heartily the. suggestion of Mr. John T. Whistler, made In yesterday's Evening Journal, that the name of John H. "Lewis for the office of state engi neer be written on the ballot at the primary election for, that office by all Democrats. Te Democrats, as I un derstand, have 60 nominee, but outside of this fact Mr. Lewis Is not only en tirely competent, has given satisfaction in the past, but Mn the administration of his office has not Only exerolsed good judgment and eernmon sense," but has always evidenced the highest' sense of duty toward ttie publto and the pub lic Interests. He : Is Just the. type of man the people should be glad to have serve them. I sincerely hope that all Democrats will take pleasure !n follow ing Mr. Whistler's suggestion, who. hlm self has always exhibited 'the; same high devotion to duty, and Whose ad vice Is perfectly safe to follow. in JOSEPH N. TEAL, Esperanto. , ' r -Chicago, Sept. II. -To the Editor of The Journal Doubtless you have long ago formed your opinion as to .the mer its of Esperanto, the international lan guage. X hope that it is favorable; but as there la much irresponsible criticism of Keperanto, especially on occasion of the recent international convention In Washington, I want to offer an oppor tunity for every thinker to Judge for himself, t have had prepared 140,000 .brief grammars of the language In pamphlet form, and will send one free to any person, who la sufficiently In terested to ask for It, enclosing stamp for reply. I think it really due to this great ? movement for an international auxiliary language, whlcn now embraces 60 nations In Us scope, that you . pub lish this letter, so that your readers may have the opportunity of Judging for themselves. ' ARTHUR BAKER. Editor Amerika Esperantlsto;' . 700 E. Fortieth st, Chicago. The Meaning of "Washington. From Chicago Tribune, Republican. ... The growth of progressive Republic anism Is proved strikingly once more by the primary elections In the state of Washington. The campaign for the senatorshlp nomination was made by and on behalf of one of the most rad ical of the Republican congressmen, and the issue of Balunger was con spicuous In the fight. . The situation in Washington Is pro foundly significant A state hitherto under the control of the same type 6f politics as California and Oregon' were for many years, and as the pocket bor oughs of the mountain, states still are, Washington has been filling up with a population which is of too high a level of intelligence and character to be long dominated In that way. Like ! Kansas, or its neighbor Oregon, it Is developing ah efficient democracy, The orchardist and small landowner, the well paid workman, and other Ameri cans of the reading, working, thrifty, independent type have been settling up what was the wilderness. This Is not a cbmmunlty to-be ruled by a railroad corporation, a mining magnate or a lumber trust. It is a community capable of self-defense and self-government of - far-seeing self- interest and of wise political policy. In such communities progressive Re publicanism, which Is merely the prac tical will of the American people to make our democratlo Ideals and prin ciples effective in fact, has Its source. Poindexter's radicalism does not fright en the people of Washington. They prefer It to government by Balllnger and his associates. It is the choice between democratlo self-government and a business oligarchy. , Dark Rooms of the Tenements. Bailey Millard In Technical .World Magazine. "Let in the light'." Is the slogan of the men. and women engaged in tene ment house reform in- New York, It is hard to believe, but It Is nevertheless a fact that on February 13, 1908, there were in that city 101.277 absolutely win dowless rooms, most of them bedrooms Inhabited by , the -poorer classes, those who pay rent of S3 to (18 a month. Be. eaae- otlte strenuous efforts of "the tenement -house committee of the Char ity Organization society In securing and enforcing the tenement house law the number of wlndcrwless rooms was re duced to about 90,000. Think of it, you dwellers in spacious, sunny suburban villas, 80.000 rooms without any sun light whatsoever save that which en ters by the door that admits the person who goes into It to eat deep, to work,' or to sit about and enjoy himself s best he can! Some- of these 90,000 rooms are In cellars, some in attic, and others are distributed about on intermediate floors acoordlng to the fearful and wonderful designs of that most hopeless of all human habitations, the dumb-bell or double-deck tenement house. Most hopeless? Yes. because the man who lives in a cave can at least enjoy privacy and silence and air that Is not contaminated by the exhalations and nuisances' of his fellows; the man who lives In a tent can pull back the. flap and get air, and the man who lives la an Igloo can cut as many vents in Its walls a he chooses and have as much light and air as he wants and at any time he wants it We are wont to think of London as a city where nflserable millions are orowd- ed into uncouth and unsanitary ouar ters, but London's greatest density of population is less than 600 to the acre, while in New York there are blocks and blocks waere the density is 1000 to 1500 human beings In that spaoe. In Chicago the population of the polish quarter, ac cording to Robert Hunter's report; is three tunes that or the most crowded portions of Tokio, Calcutta or ther Aslatio cities, ana yet the density rarely reaches 500 to the acre, or only one third to one half that of New , York's packea-in population. Both New York and Chicago have far worse tenement bouse conditions than London, the worst, congested city in Europe, while ach of hese 'American cities still permits the building of the deadly double-decker, which In New York is more often the sextunle-dekAr allowing a density of 1300 people to the . , U .. r. a M11 - . acta, Kim, ,uvii4,n miia, mm IBSVeu 1 Dy b teei ae4e. n "When groping my way In the pas sages," says a frequent visitor to the tenements, "I usually imitate the-steam craft in a. thick fog and give a danger signal when I hear some one approach ing; anu even more when all is silent Letters From tke People COMMENT AND . SMALL CHANGE This haan't tinon T rid Inn summer, but just summer. - - . v a Prntnrtlon tit,, tha nnor much more than the rich. Albert Abraham will have a hlrh place on the ballot Looks like the Democratlo party was coming to Ufa again. We think the reonle will vote for the dock bonds, all right Holdinr uo automobiles Is a new phase of an old industry. -. . - - a Many people would not care If all the motorcycles were destroyed. , . ' " " " Now the work of bulldlnar the great Broadway bridge will be begun. ,-.'.. ' . There's something from or about the Irrepressible Roosevelt every day, . Several thousand Multnomah voters did not, register foi the primaries. No. Roosevelt will not run for gov ernor of New York. He is no fool. 'Ruhnlnr for office is a hard Jot), but a 'good many men, seem to like It Evidently a lot- of old hlah tariff Interest serving Republicans "can't come back" V''; : ' -' - ' . ,:. . .. e i ? , ... Yet being rich and a senator. Lorlmer still has many friends, and won't have to eat alone. s .v V;. , ,; . 'The tariff lair annears to be aulte a success." savs tha Los Antreles Times. Yes, for the trusts. - , It seems to neonle who stick to the ground that those aviators and balloon lsts are nervy fellows. . A man who tried to ret an assembly nomination and failed doesn't deserve any anti-assembly votes. - , ' This Is a flht for decency tn noil- tics as against bosslsm," says the colonel. May decency triumph. The hats of the fall are to be in two classes, "little and hlgh"iand "low and big." But as to price, they will all be "high.- . William J. Bryan Is keeotnr very quiet, these days. . Perhaps lie thinks Roosevelt is doing enough talking for both. -. - A Michle-an 'woman 80 years old has just registered as a student in the Ohio university, tme is never too ota to learn. , - . . v. n , .viol iiau vm ..v. prohibition, Maine may become wet, It always has been so In fact though not legally. ' - Both England and the United States claim to have won a victory In the fisheries decision; ao both countries are satisnea. . The trouble with "Sheriff Bob" Chan. ler was that he was "madly" In love with a very beautiful woman, but one without any "heart." ' . Seattle either has a much larger popu latlon .than Portland, or its voters are better registered. The registration there Is 47,493; here It is 89,270. The first proposal to elect United States senators by a vote of the people was made in 1787 while the constltu tion was In process of making. : It has taken 123 years for the idea to become partially operative. 1 September 21 in History r On September 21, 1485, Hernando Cortes : was. born at Medallln, Spain. The jOharacter of this explorer, whose adventures In Mexico are still related as a vital part of its history, was rather complex. He seems to have been not only grasping and avaricious, but also singularly liberal. , Like so, many per sons of high-class families whose for tunes dwindled, Hernando was destined for the study of law, but disliked the profession and turned adventurer. His first Journey into the great world took him to Santo Domingo, when he was 19, and here he remained for seven years, . When Velasquez was sent to conquer Cuba, Cortes went with him and did such good service that he was rewarded With a large estate and was made the Alcalde of Santiago. ' One of Velasquez lieutenants had discovered Mexico, but had made no at tempt to occupy It. This enraged the governor of Cuba and he placed under Cortez a fleet of 10 vessels, with 700 men and a supply of cannon and horses, for" the conquest of the newly discov ered territory. It was on the site of Vera ,Cru that Cortez landed, and that city was found ed by him. He found that he had pene trated Into an empire where wealth and honor awaited these who could grasp the situation of conquest. So he deter mined to win all this for Spain. Marching to the capital, which is the city of Mexico of today, Cortez was received with hospitality by Montezuma. But suddenly the head of one of his soldiers ha had left 8 1 JTera Cruzw&8 brought to the capital, with the news of a successful attack upon that place. The people had found that these were not gods, .but men. v Cortez loaded Montezuma with chains In his own palace, burned alive before the palace gates those men who had attacked Vera . Cruz and only spared Montezuma when he swore to be only a subject and a faithful one. to Charles V of Spain, and after paying Cortez an enormous sum in gold and precious stones. ', : '".'--'.' '.-' - Time as It - passes has shown that, with all his cruelty and oppression, Cor tez was mild In his methods when they are compared with what the Azteo trlbea inflicted on each other-. - - There is one standing monument to Cortez In the City of Mexico, and that is the Hospital of Jesus, which he founded In 1527. It stands on the street that was the road over which he marched when he first entered the cap ital of Montezuma. ' , t proceed with caution, for mors than once 1 have stumbled against a baby that was quietly sitting In the dark hall or on the syUrsV '-. Voters Should Inform Themselves- From th Sheridan Sun. Some of the state papers have given the advice to their readers that when not familiar with the measures to be voted upon to vote "no." Other papers have gone still further and advised a "no" , vote on very measure creating a new county. , This may be good counsel but the Suit' doubts It' " It Is always assumed in a criminal action that a man is innocent until proven guilty, and the rule should also hold good that a voter la ; intelligent until he proves himself otherwise. Very few. If any, of the 33 initiative and referendum, measures Can not be understood after a full exercise of the God given -faculties donated to man. .Every votershould know his own desires, and while men honestly differ In opinions, that Is no reason for a fail ure to decide Intelligently upon ques- twnrarrs-TOtieapetrtrTlec me for the benefit or .detriment of the peo ple generally. It is likely if a man has no Interest in a question to Vote no, but even then he would do better to. refrain from 'toting and let the matter be eeU tied by those who are interested.. No NEWS IN BRIEF . OREGON SIDELIGHTS ; : An apple near Weston weighed two pounds. ' Cottage Grove fruit drier is doing a large business on prunes. Perfectly matured and well developed strawberries are being sold. - t ,- a a ' " ' Over 4000 visitors have registered at the Yaquina Heads light station, t ' - .' ";r " : ' ' v Wheat yielded 50 bushels and oats 60 bushel-an acre In the Nehalem val ley. a Several Lane county apple growers; will get $500 an acre from .their or chard. . . . . 1 - . A 4-year-old girl lit a match In a barn near Ruckles and house and barn with much hay, grain and other stuff were burned. -;.";'. :-;.';...4."-:.'.,.; An' apple weighing 80 ounces and measuring 17 inches In circumference is the product of a 6-year-old .tree near Sherwood, . . s- Horse stealing Is strongly condemned by everyone in this community,' and the actions of suspicious persona will be closely Watched, a. a. -.. . A-tract of 375 acres two-miles east of Cottage Grove' will bo placed on the market In five and 10 acre pieces. Every tract will be irrigated. . , j ; The Llvesly bffj'sof Polk county bad last week a cijew of 850 picking hops and were scouring the whole country to find at least 100 more. ' Bear are' reported to be more numer ous than for many years in the moun tain breaks and canyons tributary to the head waters of the Umatilla river. .. In Yamhill the political pot botleth not and the voter treadeth his silent way unprejudiced by the persuasive pol itician, remarks the Sheridan Sun. The Increase of 'deposits In Yamhill county banks the past year has been 3476,944.94, and for the two and a half months preceding September 1, the in crease has been $75,075.62. On 20 acres' a man near Milton has picked 6000 crates of prunes, has mar keted 800 boxes 'of peaches, and will have 2000 more boxes of fruit, y He picked four tons of peas and three tons of beans. :' . ;;. : ' , ; Apple growers report one of the best crops for. years both for quality and quantity. All along the railway .lines are found trees which are propped up to keep the limbs from breaking, so heavy are their loads. , ' - v A Glendala woman who' raises many chickens has a couple of posts up In her yards with a Steel trap on each, and when. Mr. Hawk swoops down to take a seat till he can pounce upon a chicken to his liking he stays there. ; ' . '. , . - '!.: . " ' A Washington county farmer says that Irrigation has proven a success and that he has now used water long enough to profit by experience. His pump has thrown 600.000 gallons of water every , day H was working, and tills means a great deal of water. A fine crop has been the result a A Chehalem farmer went to work and made a threshing machine of his own with a 12-lnch wood cylinder and fan attachment for cleaning the- grain. The motive power was furnished by a gaso line motor which he already bad. and Khls crop was taken care of in good snape. ----- . - -- -r - - Tlie Mexican Conqueror v He endowed the hospital with a hacienda In Cuernavaca, and the de scendants of Cortes till have a voice In 'its control. '';,,;. . -. -.,. It Is well Xo remember that the first schools, colleges, museums and hos pitals on the American, continent were founded by the Spaniards. The first printing office on this continent was in Mexico, in 1536. Tha first university was founded by the Spanish Crown in 1651,. In the City of Mexico, and Is now the national conservatory of music. On the site of the first school on this continent, founded by Spain in 1524 for me inaiana. stands today the National Academy of Art. The national prepar atory school, with perhaps 1000 pupils, was tne, towage ot Ban . Eldenfonse, erected by RDanlarrtn in 1719 Th. tional library occupies the splendid old cnurcn jma convent or St Augustln. There are mors than 200,000 books In this Institution. In 1824 the rreat TTnmhnM , v hp city of the new continent, not ex cepting those of the United States, had such scientific Institutions as those of the City of Mexico. After years of service for Spain Cor tez suffered from the InirmMtiia princes Invariably show, One day, after a long penoa or neglect ana refusals of audience with Charles V. Cortez Jumped on the steo of tha emnnrnr'a mrplm n demand a word with him. "Who is i this audacious manr ex claimed he. . ' . . "I am the man-JSTio-has given you more provinces than your ancestors left you cities," said Cortez. After that In cident he never tried to claim recogni tion from Spain, but spent the rest of his life in almost enttre seclusion. On September 21. 1638, was signed the treaty of peace with the Narragansett Indians; Wesleyan . university was opened at: Middletown, Conn., In 1831. The battle of Monterey, Mexico, was be gun In 1846. : Today Is the birthday of Francis Hopklftson, the lawyer and au thor (1737); James Jackson, Georgia statesman . (1767) ; ; Louis Bonaparte, king of Holland . (1778); . Douglass Houghton, physician r and naturalist (1809);NAbraham H. Cassel, the antlqua rlan (1820),' and Brigadier General Michael Corcoran (1827), and Dr, Ed ward KDalton, originator of the ambu lance system (1834). It is the date of death of Edward U of England U327U Emperor Charles V of Spain (1558), and Sir Walter Scott, novelist (1832). , voter should shirk the responsibility of assisttng in maintaining our Institutions of government, and when questions of moment arise, as some of the 82 are, none should be turned down for want of understanding of their import , Will Be Snowed Under. ' From the Stayton Mall. . J If the sentiment In and about Stayton Is any Indication of the feeling: over the state, the assembly ticket will be snowed under at the primaries to be held on the twentyfourth. There Is. no mistaking tne reeling or tne people or this sectior against the assembly movement. .While the plan may have some merit and might be acceptable were It a part of the primary law, the voters apparently do not propose to see it established without the formal sanction of law. There Is no, question that among the people generally there is a conviction that the assembly Is the first move In a plan to overthrow tha. primary law and undo much of the direct legislation that has been enacted in thlaata.tfll uniosa mere is a remarxaoie cftanne in sentiment the assembly ticket will be knifed all along the line, notwithstand ing tho fact that in many cases the as sembly nominees' are better fitted by training tna native ability to serve the people than their' opponer- TANGLEFOOT By Miles Overholt HUCKLEBERRY PIE. Sometimes I sit and ponder, as the days go swlftlv b. . X wonder if again m tests a huovie- .' t berry pie . ' It seems so long between the tastes. .When autumn csmes at last. I wait in mild expectancy; for twenty . oays I rait In preparation for the treat the lus cious, dripping; Die- Of huckleberrios, bitter sweet; in. ec- stacy I cry .,- . .' For more and more and moro and more. I think of childhood days ' - When we dispensed fool poetry, for Suoh are childhood ways. I 'member how we used to say, our faces Till awry: H-U-huck1,! :-' ' B-U-buckle. - Huckleberry pier ADVENTURES OF IKE CANOPENER. , En Tour, ' Dear sir: Fellow here gave me tt to kill a frayed remnant of an obsolete ca nine (meaning a yaller dorg). I took said dorg to the suburbs and gave him to a man who was hurrylnr away from tne snerin. The dog oame back. But I had the five. So the guy told me to go kill the dog, and do tt blamed quick. Took said dog to the woods, tied -him to a tree, shot at him, bullet out rope, dog vamoosed. , Guy said to kill the dor or he'd out little Greek remarks in my person. I'd spent the f lye, you see. So X took ths dog to the woods again. Was 'going to chop his head off. Just as I raised the ax the poor old hound looked at me in an all dog gone - manner and ths axik. vui iu rop jlob; ion. ' After dark I meandered baolc Guy was sorely tried. You see, I'd spent the five. Guy said It was the" last straw and he guessed he'd have to kill me and reed oit to the hogs. Well, believe me. I went after tn An. Led him up a trail to where some min ers were blowing up rock, Tied dog to. eight sticks of dynamite. There was a c-r-r-a-s-h! in about half an hour the dog dropped, lit a-runnlng and went nome. v r . . . ,;' I've always matched eight men against one thirst. That night eight men couldn't have led me to town, but ths tnirsi aia. - r Guy met me at the city limits. : -"I forgive you," he says. "Any time," he says, "a dorg of mine can took both you and death In the face four times," he says. "I'm willing, to call a halt Come on and have something." IKE CANOPENER. The Meaning of Maine. From the Philadelphia North American. (Rep.) ' Th message of the voters of Mains to the nation is the same as the mes sage of California nd New Hampshire, Kansas and the Plymouth Rock district of Massachusetts. It lathe message of revolt 'against bosslsm, agalnt , special privilege, against the corrupt and op pressive control of party organizations by Big Business, -Maine's message Is' the message of Insurgency, Maine overturns a Republican guber natorial plurality of 7900 and gives a' Democratlo plurality of 8500 the first In SO years. Maine kicks out two hide bound Cannonltea and sends Democrats to congress .from the old rock-ribbed strongholds df Dtngley and Blaine. Thomas Bracket Reed's Gibraltar dls- trlct will be represented by a Republican -by grace of & few hundred votes. And, for, the first time since 1863, a Demo cratic legislature will choose a United States senator from Maine. Yet there are Just as many honest Republican voters In Maine today as when the normal Republican majority ran over 20,000. Maine Is not Demo cratic, Maine Is insurgent , The sentiment "down east Is funds-' mentally . identical with fthat of Iowa, Kansas, Wisconsin and California,' The only difference In Maine was that the the "silent voters" the plain people, who have been reading and thinking and consequently have become progressive ; could find no leaders In their own party, no Republican candidates to vote for1 except stool pigeons of privilege and servants 9 the discredited bosses. Just as "he Insurgents of, New Hamp- ' " ' " .... . j".Wg Iff anire,. wiinin party lines, Drone tnj- - trans-la h flirt tit tha tvrant Aftrnin. tlonlst railroad vupon New Hampshire's government and commerce, so ths Maine Insurgents broke party lines as their sole possible - effective protest against -l their state continuing to be the vested property of a - party organisation that la a Wall street asset , . From Maine to California there) Is not a "safe" standpat stronghold of spe cial privilege. The people are tired of being plucked and plundered And de ceived by the political tools of Big Busi ness using tbelr threadbare phrase of 'loyalty" and "regularity." i Everywhere they will vote for pro gressive Republicans when they can. But when suoh leadership Is lacking they will express tha same principle By accepting the administration's order, Is sued from ths lips of Mr. Wlckereham, -to ..leave tb .-party, 'z-,:, ... ... ... i- Silverton and vicinity had a very fine fruit dlRplay, especially applea, at the Btate fair. " , 1 Justice Is Blind (Contrlboted to The Journal by Walt Maaoo. ' tha famom Kanaua poet. Hla prot-pomi ar, regular teatura of thla columa li The Dill Journal) -,f. . , 1 spend my weary days in Jail, and O. the hours seem sad and long: I lean -against the bars and wall, and gaae upon the passing throng. Why are these fetters on my "legs? Why "do I sleep on mouldy straw I sold a man two dozen eggs that would not pass the pure food law. - The peelers cams then to my store and smote me roundly . with their staves, and cast me on: this dungeon floor, and no one succors, .no'.", one saves. I look out . through ;the prison bars, and watoh the flood of hu mankind, and see men pass in motor -cara, who tried to rob the city blind. Across the street a statesman stands, ;" hla pockets full of ten plunk notes; he oftea uses both his hands distributing ' the price of Votes. The grafting alder man drives by, big diamonds glowing onY his shirt; he sees me, and he winks an eye, and leaves me to the gloom and dirt The filutocmtn in nn nnrn 1,.. fore mv dark and ifmn if tViei. . VrTTlse(r5w'muchUney've made. l aouDi me mucn n tney could tell. ; They break some laws most every day; they all hire lawyers by the year; and yet they blithely go their way, while L alasl am weeping here! - Prrlght. 1910, by IS "W Georga Uattbew aflame. l4Jt