THE OREGON DAILY , JOURNAL, PORTLAND, T, SATURDAY t EVENING, JANUARY 28, . 1911. THE JOURNAL ' AN ' INDEPENDBKT" NHTWBPAPfcS. a SV JACKSON. .Pubtlaher PufcUahaa awry nlnf feirtpt Soaday) and arery Bandar aioralnir at The Journal Bulld Inc. Fifth and Ximhlll street, Portland, Or. Entered t tilt poatoffiea at Portland, Or., foe traaamlaaloa thnagb the maila aa aecoad-claaa matter. ,. TELEPHONES Mala 71T3; Home, A-6081. , All department! nicked by theaa numberai ' lell the operator what department yon want. FOREIGN ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVE, Benjamin & Kantnor Co.. Bronawtek Bnlldtnn, S2& Fifth annet New York; 1218 People'a Uaa Bnlldlnf, Chicago, finhacrlptloo Terms !y mall or to any addreas la Una United Gtatea. Canada or Mtueo: DAILY. Cm rear.. ......85.00 I One month f .60 StTNDAY. Om Mar.. 12.60 One month........ 1 .28 DAILY AND SUNDAY. On rear.',. 7.50 ) One mouth... f .60 Every food and commanding movement In the annala of th he ( world is tha triumph of enthu siasm. Nothing great was ever accomplished without 1L Ralph Waldo Emerson. 43 THE SESSION'S RESPONSIBILITY t iHE LEGISLATURE should not give up hope of framing a good roads system because of oppo sition that has developed In the body and elsewhere. In nearly, all cases, the opponents, confess that . they are favorable to good roads, and that their objections are' due to various features of the proposed sys tem. It Is a case where diplomacy, , compromise, mutual concession and toleration can. be employed with great profjt to alL Nobody in the '' state wants bad roads. It would be a calamity for. the leg islature to adjourn without giving the state an-effective system. If the legislators rise to the crisis, assemble , all the conflicting interests, and con vince opponents that there is no in tention to overtax the public for road making, half the battle for a solution of the problem will have . been won. . llnch of the opposition springs from a misunderstanding of the - - plans and purposes of the good roads association. There is a fear that proposed road building is to be under system of frenzied finance. There is an idea that bonds are to be issued without reserve, and that the pro posed bills compel every county to - spend huge sums regardless of the desires of taxpayers. These and other surmises are without foundation. The proposed measures compel nothing. They sim ply open the way for each county to do as it chooses. No county need built a foot or a furlong of road unless it so elects. If its taxpayers and. citizens decide among them selves to build, the state will tax , the cities to help foot the bill, and ... . Portland, will have to. pay its third of the state appropriation for each county, even though that county be in the remotest corner, of the state. ' If any county does not want to take advantage of the plan and build, it need not do so, and Portland taxpny - ers can keep their money. No fairer proposition was ever made to the rural counties, and no fairer terms ever can be made. " The plan further provides that the roads shall be main traveled thor oughfares leading to the principal market places. This means local roads for the benefit of local people. It Is no plan or part of a plan for a Pacific Highway. It is a plan for the Immediate benefit of each coun ty, and the fairest that can be de vised. What plan more profitable to residents of Benton or Malheur county was ever offered than that Portland people shall contribute practically one third of a $10,000 state tax to be spent on roads In either of those counties? On such a basis, the legislature, if it addresses Itself seriously to the subject should be able to harmonize , warring interests and give us an ad equate and satisfactory system. 'For 50 years we have worked un der old hit-and-miss plans. For 50 years we have dragged wagons huh deep In dust In summer and hub deep In mud In winter. For 50 years we have patched and repaired, over hauled and temporarily worked over our roads, and the fruit Is the same old costly haul to market, the same old wear and tear of Implements, and the same old dreary highways. What we have in roads Is little better than our grandfathers trav eled 40 or 60 years ago. Is It not time for a change? Does anybody in the state want bad roads? Does ' the legislature realize what a power " " for good, through diplomacy, com promise and constructive work, it , can be In bringing good to the state? Can the opponents of the proposed legislation not sift the true from the false and come to a realization ' that this lr. not a Portland move ment, but a greater Oregon move ment? Can we not all remember ' , that In Multnomah county the other day, because of highly Improved ' roads, 10,600 pounds of freight was hauled 56 miles In the dead of win ter at a cost of 1.3 cents per ton tnlle, or about one twenty-fifth of "the usual cost over the average Ore gon roads? During 1910 Maine fishermen , taught 19.936,542 lobsters, nearly ,2,000,000 more than in the preced ing year, and 8,000,000 more than in 1905. The fishermen received a lit tle over 10 cents apiece for these "lobsters, atotal sum of $2,145,204. ' Uut then the lobnter begins to rise . in value. ,The wholesaler doubles " and the retatlcr trebles the price, so inai oy t.ne time the succulent crus- n- reaeeehq-'ultiuiat(r"conT sumer, at least if he consumes it in certain, places,.. his Jnbster may cost much as $1.50. But this to. creased cost of living is nothing for most of us to worry much about; a lobster Is not 'one , of the absolute necessaries of life. 1 THE. CASE OF FRED WARREN T' HE JOURNAL ;wlll publish to morrow the account written by Frederick Upham Adams of the case of Fred Warren, editor and publisher of the "Appeal to Reason.' printed at Glrard, Kansas. Unless pardoned by President Taf t, Mr. War ren will go to Jail at the federal pris on at Fort ScOtt on the coming Jan uary 31, for six months, also having haen flnoA ilKflA tnr tha nffonaa against the federal postal law for .Moll ho h.a hn AarfnmA a-ntH Th nhHnitT trnrfV ivpn tn ihiJ case renders needless any detailed statement here of the facts. The ac count written by Mr. Adams Is so dramatically interesting that who ever begins to read will surely finish It regardless of its length. The technical - crime that carried this punishment lay in printing on several thousand envelopes mailed by the "Appeal to Reason," from its head office at Girard, Kansas, an of fer of a reward of $1000 to any one who should kidnap and return to the state officials of Kentucky, Ex-Governor Taylor, then under indictment for the Goebel murder, and for whose apprehension a reward of $100,000 had been freely advertised by the state of Kentucky. Fred Warren was tried in the fed eral court, not for advertising the reward In his paper, but for using the malls for its distribution; for this was the only semblance of of fense against the law of which he could be found guilty. In the editorial explaining the offer of reward Mr. Warren stated that the "Appeal to Reason" had "absolutely no Interest in the Tay- lor-Goebel feud of Kentucky." The paper desired to " test the question whether kidnaping would be "sus tained by the supreme court of the United States where the victim is a Republican politician and a personal friend of the president of the United States. . So far it seems that that issue is very far frpm decision by the su preme court, but that the doors of the federal jail stand open for the bold experimenter. The appeal is made by Mr. Adams on his behalf to the public conscience of the peopleat large. The people will consider; it that ia sure. ASTOUNDING "ARGUMENTS" T HE OREGON Hardware alid Im plement Dealers' association was addressed Wednesday in opposition to the parcels post by Mr. &. R. Miles of Mason City, Iowa. Mr. Miles Is not only violent ly opposed to the proposed parcels post, but one gathers from his re marks that he is also Opposed to rural mail delivery; he groans about Its cost, and mentions no good that he sees in It. Perhaps if most other Iowa people are of his opinion, that partly explains why Iowa Is the only state in the union that actually de creased In population between 1900 and 1910. Mr. Miles said that foreign coun tries, that have the parcels post and would not do without it, "do not have our splendid express service." Probably they do not, at least as to the "splendid" rates charged. No ! other country would endure such ex tortionate rates. "Finally," Mr. Miles sdys, "there Is absolutely no demand for parcels post In this country." This state ment should negative whatever in fluence his other remarks may have had. One so Ignorant or careless of the truth as this cannot be a wise adviser. Vice President Sherman, Congressman Dalzell, and a few oth ers said two or three years ago that there was no demand for tariff re vision. Mr. Miles seems to be of their sort, one who either can't or won't see plain facta. As astonishingly, Mr." Miles says that "the seeming demand for par cels post cornea from the railroad companies, the mail order combine, and newspapers depending on mail order advertising." This Is ludl- crous audacity. Tha same people ' who own the railroads own the ex - press companies. The two classes of corporations are most closely as sociated, and divide the enormous profits. The mail order 1 houses stand to lose rather than gain by the parcels post. The reference to newspapers Is as ridiculous as the rest. Country merchants would do well to look carefully into the other side of this subject before opposing the parcels post. When fully informed concerning It, they will readily per ceive that such tirades as this of the Iowa man are unworthy of their attention. STRINGS ON THE JUDICIARY w HAT SPECTACLE Is it the people of . Portland have in this controversy between the mayor and the municipal Judge? The mayor asserts that when appointed Judge Tazwell prom ised to resign the office February 1. As a sequel to the promise, Major Kennedy has resigned his position in one of the departments to accept the municipal Judgeship by appointment from the mayor when Tazwell re signs. J udge Tazwell how , declares that he made no pledge, and that he is not going to resign. The municipal judgeship is a court of justice. It ii not a personal per quisite of the mayor's office. The public is heavily concerned In the I!i;a?XMWgOyerJnit(4 manner and means or. jus, selection. Human; rights are constantly in the balance at the bar of the munic ipal court. It is the Judicial tribun- al from which the dignity- arid au thority of the city Is reflected. Men go there to answer for their conduct, to be the objects on, which justice ia administered and to be prosecuted and defended tor their acts. What extraordinary spectacle : is it when1 the head of. this court. is charged with breaking his promise to re sign, and when he In turn accuses the mayor of misrepresenting he racts? When Mayor Simon was filling this vacancy on the municipal bench, he should not have exacted a pledge of Judge Tazwell to resign. When Judge Tazwell sought and accepted Re appointment, he should not have Iven promise to TCSlgn. , The mayor should not have regarded this4 position as a personal perquisite to be handed over to "his friend and ally on February 1, or at any other time. It was all a close approach to government by intrigue, vastly compromising to all concerned and to the municipal bench. Nd judicial appointment should be made with a string to It No Judic ial appointment should be accepted with a string to it. The whole theory of our governmental system is that the Judiciary shall be untrammeled and that It be exalted above the pos sibility of such humiliating contro versies as that now raging around Judge Taawell's position. The Inci dent ought to be the last of Its kind in Portland or elsewhere. Appoint ments to the- judiciary should be in the open daylight at the city, hall, and not' by stealth with secret un derstandings and silent agreements as to tenure of office. to PERSONAL INJURI DAMAGES T HERE ARE lately increasing and significant signs and evi dences of gratifying progress toward Industrial peace and amity, particularly toward such a system of adjustment of claims for damages for Injuries to workmen as will be equitable, and satisfactory to both employers and employes. Most employers have abandoned the ground they formerly 'occupied, wherein they seldom if ever con ceded that they were under any ob ligation to an injured employe, and are now willing to consent that they bear such an obligation. The com mon, almost the invariable de fenses, a few years ago, of the fel low 'servant theory and contributory negligence, are -not often sufficient any more In the eyes of court and Jury to prevent an Injured man, or the family of a man who has been killed, from recovering damages. , There has been a vast amount of this kind of litigation. It occu pies a large portion of the time oft the courts. It is, expensive and ha rassing to employers, and in many cases the employe, if he wins his case, gets but a moiety or less of the judgment. Hence some mutual ly satisfactory basis of adjustment of such claims, without going to law, Is one of the most Importantly 'desir able .results imaginable. . A prominent Portland man who visited Germany last year was sur prised to learn that there was not a personal injury damage action pend ing In that country. In other Eu ropean countries such cases have be come rare, in Germany tne govern ment Interested itself in bringing about an agreement between employ era and emnloves In this regard Tbe government there Is careful of the welfare of its worklngmen, and Its children, as ours has not been, perhaps cannot be. But it aided in bringing about this agreement. In case of an Injury each party should bear part of the burden the accident imposed. One plan is for the em ployesto pay one per cent of their Income, the employers two per cent, for this purpose. Some advocate payment of a portion of the fund by the state. But whatever , the details of the j solution, the noticeably pleasing thing Is the manifest disposition of leading men on both sides to come to some solution of the problem, and to be fair to each other, it will cer tainly "he a great gain to society If these numberless damage actions can mostly he avoided in future, and ad- justment of workingmen's Injuries made Jn accordance with a settled and mutually satisfactory scheme. THE NEW JERSEY BHD? SENATOR- A' LL RECOGNIZE that Governor Woodrow Wilson, rather than Senator Martlne, has won this fight Two principles have been sustained, the first that selec tion by the direct primary carries with it the necessary votes when the election follows, the second, that no big Interests, however well en trenched by organization and by cus tom, can prevail against It. Cer tainly there is needed also powerful and courageous advocacy before the people. All this has aided Senator Martlne In full measure, since Wood row Wilson was the advocate. So another product of the Oregon sys tem will enter the senate of the United States in due time. The Btars in their courses are fighting for It. Mr. James J. Hill's epigram, that the high cost of Jiving should be rather stated as the "cost of high living," makes a text for many a sermon. By way of one Illustration of the subject one may note that over $200,000,000 was paid last year in the United States for silk, and 'yet many wives wenjt without their suit dresses in this same year. The Iron Trade Review says: "In ihesa-daya . of ,. lnfilslant-and proper demand for. square dealing,- William Ellis Corey has been giving the square deal to ' all with whom he has come in contact"- Possibly, "to all with whom he. has come in con tact." He does not come in aontact! with the masses, who'havo to pay. And to his everlasting; shame be lt said that he did not give a "square deal" a few years ago to a good, faithful woman, his wife and help meet, whom he treated, worse than any decent man . would treat a friendly dog. A 'Dramatic Climax. Oregon City, Or., Jan. 25, 191L To the Editor of The Journal In your ac count of the Burna anniversary In this city last evening, appearing In today's Journal, a curious error, has crept in. Dr. Schultze is credited with giving- "an interesting talk, using as his subject the poem by Will Carleton entitled 'Joy Bridge.' a somewhat startllna- . narodv on the true caption,- "The Death Bridge of the Tay." , .. ; . ;- . , Under that heading , will Carleton records In imperishable verse the most overwhelming calamity, to be found In the annals of railroad travel. The bridge across the Firth of Tay. an in let of the North aoa, at that nofnt two miles wide, la one of the longest iron structures In the world. . On the nla-ht of December 29, 1879. an exourslon train from Edinborough loaded, with merry passengers expecting to reach Dundee wunin rive minutes, commenced the passage, of the bridge. It was a wild night outside. A terrible gale from the North ea swept up the bay. No" one knows what happened, but half way across 250 feet of the bridge collapsed, and dropped ' the entire train Into 40 feet of water. Not a soul escaped. The doctor .quoted ia full the most pathetic portions of the poem and as there seemed to be no particular relevancy to the occasion, advised his audience that the application would appear present ly. After repeating the lines, -Down," down through the dark the . train plunges," and how "The news like the ahock of an earthquake has thrilled through the town of Dundee." he quot ed in full the follQwing paragraph; "Out, out creep two brave, sturdy fel lows, o'er danger-strewn buttress and piers; They can climb 'gainst that blast for they carry the blood of old Scotch mountaineers, But they leave it along as they clamber; they mark all their hand-path with red; Till they come where the torrent leaps bridgeless a grave dancing over Its dead. A moment they gase down In horror; then creep from the death-laden tide. With the news: There's nae help for our loved ones, save God's mercy . for them who have died." At this point the speaker paWd and moii ciecimiea nis audience . by an nouncingr "One of these men Is among us tonight." Turning suddenly and pointing to the chairman. Major Charles 8. Noble, ho exclaimed, "There is the man." It was a dramatlo climax, thrilled the audience, and recalling the memory of that fearful night so vividly and so unexpectedly, almost overcame the chairman. Dr. Schulse had accidentally learned a few hours before that Major Noble's father was engineer in charge pf the bridge at that time, that he him self was assistant and that they were the two men who crept out on their hands and knees at the peril of their lives, to ascertain. If possible, the extent or the disaster. , The chairman had called upon the doctor as a native-born son of "Auld Reekie" (Edinborough) to make a few remarks, without the faintest suspicion of what the subject might be. SUBSCRIBER. F. M. Olds on Bridge Controversy. Portland, Or., Jan. 27. To the Editor of The Journal I saw In The Journal yesterday an article by Dr. Llftlefield at Newberg, replying to a letter front Will Purdy relating to the Buttevllle bridge. Now, I know Dr. Llttlefleld was right There Is not travel enough at Buttevllle to Justify the counties of Yamhill, Clackamas and Marldn' In building a bridge there. Mr. Purdy says Buttevllle Is on a direct line from catem to Portland, but this Is not so. The "old Graham ferry crossed 'the Wil lamette rivr two mill's below the pro- pubcq sue or tne bridge, and "Pap" Vaughn, as he usually was called, had to give up the ferry because It did not pay him. Now to go up the river from Gra ham's on the west side and cross at Buttevllle, you would have to go-over three or four large canyons. Clacka mas and yamhlll taxpayers do not want to be taxed to keep up a bridge to benefit Mr. Purdy and one doien others. Now If the state of Oregon wants a ouiie roaa rrom Portland to Salem It should follow the old Taylor ferry road i rum troriianu. DSSS tliroiirh Ttarnrri ville, Middleton and Chohalem gap to Letter From tne Pcopla ..u-" "tf winamett rlverproved worthy of her. Roger left the Wivxa Laid) (J un 10 Salem ud the Mat side. After that a branch mnM built from Newberg to McMinnvllle and proceed up the west side. Then one bridge would do Newberg and the state road and the farmers of Yamhill would conio to Portland, as they used to do 40 years ngo. F. M. OLDS. Fighting Forest Fires. Sclo, Or.. Jan. 18. To the Editor of The Journal! nave seen various Items in different newspapers In re gard to fire laws, and being Interested in cloarlng land that is adjacent to valuable timber I believe that my experience, and observations during the past 30 years give me the moral right to make a few suggestions. First Abolish the giving of permits to set fires. Second Make It flneable if any per son sets fire in Ihe daytime. Third Require all slashings, log heaps and brush heaps to be burned after 6 o'clock In the evening and then only on quiet nights. . Fourth Hold the person who sets the fire responsible for damages. Fifth Compel the lumber companies to help the settlers burn their slashings at such times as the said settler may doom it safe, but always on quiet nights. I desire to add further, that givfng the average fire warden the authority to issue permit is dangecous. A per mit in effect is a Wcense to burn a neighbor's property. ' Many men care nothing about the consequences if they can secure, a permit. , I can alone burnv at night, almost any slashing on my own. place "safely. So can any neighbor that has lived on a ranch ,any length of time. On quiet nights there Is a perceptible movement of air down every main valley, also down each lateral valley. If one makes a study of the air currents in his own Immediate vicinity he is the only per son who can set fire with safety on" his own premises. It Is not sate to burn in ths daytime, j due to' the changes that are llablatd take place, but at night the movement of air Is in one direction. Thers need not be any friction be-1 tween the settlers and the lumber com panies if said companies will send one -wore meir m lnrtp-amringia"for ! part of the night The companies'! wardens ought not to have any author-' Ity off their own land, if the settler has to be subject to control let a war- ucn ce appointed ID a" COMMENT AND SMALL CHAJfGE Dr. Owens-Adair still has a mission How would It do to have an all-woman legislature? , I ' . Surely, If possible, Klernanlsm should do injunciea. : .". a ' Half the session gone, and nothing mucn uuiie yet. T. R. Is saying things again, and is uun going to say mucn more. ' . . o .' : . . But the hardware men are not harder headed or harder-hearted than others. It UB'uallv does a husband wha la an Insurgent at heart no good to protest against ins nouse ru,ies. The Guggenhelms have not given up Alaska yet. Its coal and copper are puwcriu lures to mem. a . . - -i. wireless and wireless operators at sea gain new triumphs over disaster and ueaia nearly every weeK. v - a '' a ' ; But an. aviator, unless ha faiia intn r.ne water, never drops out of sight, as Some bank cashiers do. Something good comes out of Nevada --besides gold at last. Its legislature una Duuawaa me cigarette. ' - Congress and legislatures never do anything much until it Is so late- in the session that they cannot do It well. Dr. Cook is lecturing again, and has again concluded that he got to the Pole. His "gall" must have "come back," . " The decision of the United States court of customs that a hen1 Is not a bird will seem to many a fowl ruling. A prediction: Portland will get not only Its Broadway bridge. buV sorrfe day observe, no time specified an ad equate garbage crematory. a High school girls of today seem to be showing that tfiey will be fit voters later. Pendleton girls are the latest to abjure rats, puffs, paint and other pate nonsense.. . How fortunate it Is that everybody Isn't most Interested in the same things. w ninn, iuuiii iJKuyiu. ior exam dim. iiuiuing on eartn is so important as basketball, a a An aviator at Paris carried five pas sengers! for a space of 13 minutes, beat ing all former passenger records. But even this number of air passengers may be Increased soon. a a A building or otheV improvement to be paid for by the state usually costs a large percentage more than if built by a private Individual or corporation. It seems impossible ever to change this a The Oregon National Guard requires 1600 "housewives," to be furnished by the government but not women house wives; ir lacking In these, trie militia men will attend to supplying that want themselves. a a Some San Francisco grocers have been arrested for selling cold storage eggs several month or years old as "fresh ranch eggs." Is it possible that any grocery man ever does this? -Possibly In wicked San Francisco. Never In Port land, surely. a a Roslyn . man took a can of powder home and smoked a cigarette over It; result, five dead or dying young child ren, and a badly if not fatally Injured wife. It Is difficult to feel unadulter ated pity for such an egregious- fool. a Portraits of former Acting Governors Benson and Bowerman will be ordered to hang with the preceding governors In the eapltol at Salem. But Isn't Senator Selling entitled to this hontfr also? Pe was acting governor for a few hours. SEVEN HISTORICAL MYSTERIES The Tichborne Case. One of the most Interesting of the many mysteries of history Is the Tichborne case, for the reason that it is well within the memory of many people living, for It is hardly 35 years since it was the chief theme of con versation everywhere. In spite of all the efforts that were put forth, the mystery remains still uncleared. In the early '50s of the past cen tury there was sn English baronet by the name of Sir Edward Tichborne. He had an estate worth about $100,000 a year. He had-no son, and consequently his nephew, James Tichborne, was his heir. The latter had two sons, Roger and Alfred. The former was wild Jand entered the British, army in 1819. He was in love with his great-uncle's daughter Kate. Sir Edward was op posed to the match and gave Roger two years to reform, and held out .hopes that ho might marry his daughter If he army and sailed to South America. There he wandered, restless and un happy, from place to place; Meanwhile Sir Edward dled-and James Tichborne inherited the baronetcy. . Roger, as James' elder son, was now direct heir to the estates ard tlWea. He decided to return home. He started from Rio Janeiro for England by way of New York, but tha ship was no doubt wrecked and no survivor could be traced. The Tlchbornes mourned Roger as dead, all but the mother. Meantime James Tichborne died and Alfred suc ceeded to trie title. His mother still be lieved Roger was living and began to advertise for him. In response to her efforts an Australian detective agenoy In 1866 produced a man known as Thomas Castro as the missing heic He claimed to have been picked up with eight others from the shlpvccked ves sel and landed in Australia, where he was living under an assumed name. Castro went td England, where he who Is a long time resident of the com munity and has some fire sense. I do not believe that settlers mali ciously set fires during the past sum mer. There may have oeen one or more" such incidents, but not so numerous as charged. . - , . I have never known of a fire getting away from a rancher in ' the forks of the Santiam. ; . I wish to say ln conclusion that I have always received courteous treaU ment from the wardens and have no "kick coming" against them personally.. J. R. GEDDES. Exemption of Homesteads. ' Portland.: Jan.' 21. To ths Edli tor of The Journal "Will you, kindly answer through the columns of your paper, the following: Can a . working man's home, consisting of a cheap house and lot bought on Installments, be at tached for any kind of debtf " - i r. .." ' SUBSCRIBER. ..I the great majority of Cases, whero a house and lot are bought on the in stallment plan, title does not pass until full payment Is made, and when, title has . not " passed there is no absolute ownership. Tho man docs "mot own the horoewTuaOasuojLJsj is not owned. An act passed m 1905 provides:' "The homestead of any family shall be ex empt from Judicial sale for the satis faction of any Judgment hereafter ob- .ad must b tha NEWS IN BRIEF OREGON SIDELIGHTS During 1910' Jackson $103,777 on roads. county spent .: ...',. a . Nearly every town In Oregon of much sice wants an armory. . " a Many farmers consider Jackrabblte a greater pest than coyotes. a Electrio railway for-Ths Dalles and vicinity U considered sura, V a O yes, 4' few other besides Johnsons live, in Corval : , -. a a .. .;,.... An Athletlo association has been or ganized at Athena. Triple A. Cool weather with a little frost IS Just right for the fruit trees. , ' , a ' Which Oregon county ' will do the most good road, building this year? . v'.a a .-. . , w Rogue River valley fruit raisers are buying frost protecting smudge pots. ' " 'i -: -. .. a . i . i- A. Pendleton butcher purchased 90 hogs, costing $3000, in Union oounty. ' ' th-,: r-,--,:.. r .'.-. Farmer drove his team of roadsters to Pendleton, six miles, in 17 minutes. -, a r, ,v Every farmer should be a good roads man, truly remarks the Albany Demo crat. . - a , . . a a .-: , . Salem must wake uo on water, save the Capital Journal. And all the people say Amen. :. . .- m,, - Contiguous farms amounting to 1600 acres on Fernrldge, Lane county, will do suDuiviaea ana eoia in small tracts. Of the few cities in Oregon with over 5000 Inhabitants, two are In Jack son county, Ashland and Medford, only n to nes apari.- .-, ' A Washington county man named Smith, who Is tha father of 11 young children has become insane, wonder 'twasn't the woman, - Practically everr business man of The Dalles has so much faith in the country that he owns a piece of land wuicn ne is improving. ' Mrs. Bertha Shannon, llvlnar near Central Point, going into her yard saw an animal In the' brush, and shot and killed It, a big buck, it a distance of l yards. Tract of 680 acres above Buxton. Washington county, has been sold and will be cut up into small parcels and sold for orchard lands. Buxton raises fine apples, prunes and pears and somo day will be the center of a great fruit raising district. , w .WW During ,1910 a farmer near Dallas sold S835.91 worth of cream from nine cows, four of which were 2-year-old heifers. During the year he paid out $242. for mill feed, leaving him a net return of $593.91 for his labor, besides the value of fertilizing elements which were returned to the soil a . Negotiations are afloat in Astoria, says the Aatorian. and now approaching conclusion covering a solid farming ter ritory up in tne ciatskanie region, oz 8000 acres, and a very handsome sum of consideration, practically the great est known hereabout for many a day. . . - The First National bank building to be erected In The Dalles will be by far the" finest structure in Oregon east of Portland, and -equal to any west of the mountains; says the Optimist, It will be, a strictly class A building,, five stories high, 146 feet, modern In every respect. It will cost well on to $100,000 Man and woman were driving Into Eugene before daylight; in passing through a driveway guarded with red lights horse became frightened, reared and -backed and fell Into a gas main ditch; its plunging broke tha main and it was asphyxiated. A man came along and lighted a match to see , what? was the-matter when the whole vicinity burst into flame, providing roast horse. spent considerable time In gathering all the Information ha could about Roger's early life. Being now fully prepared, he went to Paris, where he met Lady Tich borne, who thought she recognized in him her long lost son. Then followed a period of preparation the details of which still puzzle many legal minds. Ma.ny people who knew Roger in early life claimed they recognized in Castro the missing man. In 1871 he brought formal suit for his rights,. Lady Tich borne having died in 18.68. The estate fought the case fiercely. The claimant went so far as to bring forward sailors who swore they had taken him from the wrecked vessel. He proved he had a wound on the head and a brown mark on the side, both of which Roger had had. In spite of this he lost his suit, was arrested and placed on trial for perjury. This trial proved to be the longest In English legal history, lasting 188 days. Th claimant being poor. Wealthy and poor men all over England sub scribed thousands of dollars toward his defense. At last the verdict was pro nounced. The claimant was legally proven to be Arthur Orton, he was found guilty and was sentenced to 14 years' imprisonment. He was set free after 10 years, came to America and later wont back to Eng land, and In 1895 published a "confes sion" acknowledging his claims to be fraudulent His two trials cost about $1,000,000. The claimant Orton, or Castro, or Ttchborne died on April 1, 1898. In spite of his confession, his coffin plate bore the nam "Sir Roger Tichborne," and under that name his death was entered In the official regis trar's office. Tho mystery has never been and probably never will be cleared up, although as recent as 1907 there died in Brooklyn a man who claimed that he was tho missing heir. - Next week Seven Noble Women. actual abode of and owned by such family or Borne' member thereof." , The Lure of Lures. From the L Angeles Times. In-the next chief city of California it being always understood that Los Angeles is the first city- of the jrtate In importance there is a shrewd and naturally ingenlou. man engaged In the business of conducting sightseeing trips by means of carry-all autos. He Is coining money, and this is the way he does" it. " - ' ... While the auto is waiting for a load of passengers alongside the curb of tho street an exceedingly pretty girl la hired to sit on th front seat as though she were a sightseer impatiently wait ing for the trip to begin. v '.' A man comes along with no intention whatever of participating in the ride, He probably has aeen the town, any way. But the pretty girl with her smile of glory catches his eye. ; He In stantly discovers that he has nothing else to do, and he boards the caravan, first eagerly tfapafating himself from the price. The girl holds on to the end seat ana smiles and 'smiles. flans of a lamb's tall ail '.'.., . lamns tan an the aeats are Pe"Vwave. the passengers 1 Tilled... T, from her bon voyage, and takes her, place in the next auto. . ... Can you beat it? You certainly can not. The ure of all lures Is a pretty flrlT.;.;;,;, Stupendous Task of Assessing J. P; Morgan . Albert I. Nock, writing in the Feb ruary American Magazine urges' th abolishment of the - personal property tax, law. ; The United" States, is tha only remaining great nation where such taxation still obtains. ; Mr. Nock among other absurdities df these archaic laws, points out that the literal application of them is . Impossible. - The matter of assessment alone Ir an insurmount able difficulty; either the person who ' is taxed Bends in a report of what he thinks he , is worth or the ' public assessor guesses ; at It: ; The former method is unfair because people ar not honest, and the latter Is impractical.- Mr.? Nock demonstrates the im possibility of ascertaining the . truo wealth of a rich . man by describing in detail what would be required to learn the .exact value of the personal property of a man like J. Pierpont Mor gan. He nays: ""Suppose, for Instance, that the New j York office wanted to make a Just nd valorem personalty assessment on Mr. J. Pierpont Morgan and that Mr. Mor gan . desired above all things that it should be done. Mr. ; Morgan would ' meet tha assessors and start the- ball ' rolling with a candid declaration that as far as his tangible personalty was concerned, with the best will. In the world, he could help them very little. "And It .would be true. Mr. Morgan Is the great financial genius of his time, perhaps of all time. I believe' he can tell to a day when the next panlo Is due and I wish he would. I believe he can analysa accurately off-hand every tendency and cause leading up to any nnanciai pnenomenon that the near future will disclose; but J would wager anything In reason that he Cannot guess within f 200,000 of what his own per sonal property would bring at a foroed sale.. -! 1 "Then Mr. Morgan would tie his , yacht to the wharf, turn over the keys of bis several houses, museums, stables, etc., leave a memorandum of his debts and Intangible holdings (which would be assessing himself, of course, but how else could they be gotten at?) and go to live at the club. Meanwhile the as sessors would move in and take pos session with about the following force: An art expert, a jewelry expert, an ex- pert each In carpets; linenwork, antique- and modern furniture, sculpture and statuary, books and manuscripts, : horses and machinery and a financial expert to wrestle with the memoran dum of Intangibles. - "This is not extravagance; please do not take It so. It Is a perfectly serious picture of the Implications of the gen eral property tax as applied to personal property universally in the United States. There are not experts enough in the world to go round the single borough Of Manhattan: the whole, tax bill of New York would not begin to be enough to pay them'lf there were; and the city would be bankrupt before they had gotten their work advanced ten blocks through the Murray Hill dls- . triet." - TANGLEFOOT By M3e Overnolt SOME WOEFUL THOUGHTS. " There is no sun; the clouds are black, The trees are gaunt with barren boughs; ,,. , , i "lis then that mem'ry takes' me back To days when I must milk the cows. wt- I like to write a verse like that and, then laugh in my sleeve; then folks will grin because I'm sad and emlla " because I grieve. They'll think the winter worrls me, and that will be a Joke, and they will say urto themselves: "Ain't he a funny bloke?" It makes no difference how I feel or how I write or talk, folks think I'm only Joshing and they laugh whene'er I squawk. ' Sometimes I need a dime or two to buy a bowl of soup and when I try to borrow it the fellows yell snd whoop and poke each other in the ribs ami mumble, "What a shame; he says hln' backbone's, rubbing through, which makes his stomach lame." And th?ii they laugh hoarse, hairy laughs with splinters on the edge, which makes mo want to maul them with a pointed Iron wedge. And when I tell them earnestly that I must have my feed, they simply have convulsions and tell me what I need is some good man to write, my jokes, end other stuff like that; they say my bump of humor isn't underneath my hat And when at times I want to ask a question that my mean about a dol lar's worth to me, they say, "Do we look green? O, no, my son, go chase yourself; go climb a cactus plant; we'd like to- tell you everything, but hon estly, we. can't." And that's the way It always govs; I'm serloua and sad, but people think 3 filing aim tnat s just what makes glad. I've often tried to tell the bom that I can use more pay, but he, too, thinks It Is a joke and shoos me off that way. And I suppose that later on when I am called to croak, the coroner will sit on me, then swear it's all a Jokel. Cannon and the Corn. From Humttn Life, Speaker Cannon Is a great lover of green corn. He boards at tha Arllngto-1 and one day tank One of his Illinois farmer constituents to dinner with him. Cannon made his dinner on green corn, eating seven ears. The farmer asked him how much he paid for board at the Arlington and Cannon replied: "Six dollars a day." "Well," said the farmer constituent, "Joe, don't you think it would be cheaper for you to board at a livery stabler Back Biting OontrlbulJ to Tba Journal by Walt afaann, tha fmnoua Kanaaa pott. Hia proae-poema ara a regular feature of tola column In Tha Dally Journal). - L backssuVely fdo ftgree wltn you ,hat BUCh a trlck wlll Vn,. ,..11 .I A ,1. n. -nr . never do; but Mr, Wax is out of town, and you, who roast him up and down are guilty of th meanness that you' say he keeps beneath his hat. 1 think it is " a vicious plan to score and vilify a man as you ara doing here today and Mr, t Wax so far away! I think It best' to try to find the goodness in a neighbor's mind, to. note the virtues of his heart, -u and not be tearing him apart, and gloat' Ing o'er his little sins with fiendish and exultant grins. I hold It wlso to seek the best that lies in every human breast, arid when that habit's gained in time, all . i human nature seems sublime. To look for blemishes and, v faults in those whs on life's high way waltz, to alwavs Rneah I the carping word is foolish, wicked and " noes it narrow llt J Lk ,T.,tl J overlooks the ores that shine, the gem's that: might: be all. his own. to eathet quarts and worthless stone. - owrrtent, 1910, Georra .Matthew A da ma.