THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL; . PORTLAND. JFRIDAY EVENING, MARCH 10, j 191L- THE JOURNAL a a i4CS0!... inrr KnndiT arafrrina- et JoOrnal BolM- , Inc. Mlth n4 VmfaiU Oret, Portland, -Or. E ntr-l lit tin pontofflc U Porttand. Or., ft trtnaitloa Uuvub t6 smu u aacwi-waa TELEPHONES Ueln TITS: Horn iM. All dpaiiit rmcoed bf thuw nnmbcra. loll tb apantar what dprtront yo want. roREiGXTinvEimsiNO bepremntatj vling contribute have made Mlnneap- fcS Hftn aMin. Ntw lort; l8 Ifeopla's BulMlnc. Chicago. SuTwrrlprton Trrw by awU or ear 4SJ la ua Lalted biates, Uwhi or TiatT.V. 0o -ea,;.J5.00 t On awota........ J BUWUAI. om jw.. tJ.50 i On mnrt.. .so .v. DAJLI IUDAI. ; , Ont Mr. ....... 8T.Be I Dm awatk........t . Bum tip th night what' thou ' bast done b day; . And In the morning what ( thoa hast to da. , ' Dress and ' tmdres thy soul, - o' Watch the decay ' -' And growth ef It , If with, thy ' ; . Swatch, that too 7 B down, - than wind both up. Sine w shall be-; v Most surely ' Judged, make thy - . account acre. ,! ' x Herbert 1 -a THE MAHf AXD ;TTIE DOLLAR - - - rw IT IS NEAR fashionable to claim that the; "agitation" ' for pure milk"' has reduced the. volume of dairy products in Oregon. (-. A .speaker or two' ar the dairy banquet last night expressed that view. Mio knows an4 what Is their au thority ' for stating that there 1 a less volume ol dairy products la Ore gon? Were former estimate used - in compar&oi authentic? At the tanauet last night. Food and Dairy Commlaaloner Bailey, whose position and duties should make his informa tion most authentic, declared j that the dairy production of the state has not. fallen vttJ He ls'lfobably' as near light about It a anybody else. To resist reform has been : the habit of the race from the beginning. A faction has, always decried "agita tion" and agitators. They sneered at Columbus, but America was dis covered. s They persecuted Gallllep; but all but lunatic and near luna tic know", now that - the earth Is round.-; They crucified Christ, but the church militant has a nuster roll of millions.-. , They dragged Wmiam Lloyd Gar rison through the streets of Boston and stoned Owen Lovejoy but no body lifts a hand In "defense of slavery now. Down fn San Francis co, i they raised the howl that; the graft prosecution ,'hurt business." But Ruef. la in San Quentln and all know that a lot more ought to be there wftb hint r A huge, faction, ,pt the colonist in 1776 resisted the war of Independence, but this country is free, and the tory 1 'without an' apol ogist, defender or; annalist. Mft. Every, step forward baa been re sisted, ,. Every move for, betterment has been opposed. Sometimes it fa based ou the cry that.'H hurt busi ness," aa in San Francisco. X Some- umes it js nypocnecatea on tne theory that it reduces the volume of dairy product as in Oregdn. - Does it pay to put the dollar above the man? ' ' '. ' v.'- . CAXADUX RAILROADS .',1 qpHE GREATEST examples', of I . railroad construction in ad- ivance of population and traf . He - ever , seen are the road now .being carried to completion across thl continent In Canada. A mala" line 8600 I miles long, from Moncton on the! Atlantic i to Prince RuperMH the Pacinc, wlth-branch-es and . feeders aggregating , ; 8500 miles in all, is to be opened from end to end In two years' time, and is ' already operating 1700 miles. Thl is the . Grand Trunk Pacific This road parallel the Canadian Northern and , the old Canadian Pa cific, though so many mile apart that ample contributing territory is open to each one. ' ' Practically the whole of the enor mous auma ot capital " reauired I provided by the British investor, whose resource seem to be uhllm ltect; vBut Canada upplle a guar antee, and the various sums voted for railroad construction are added to the annual budget Thus in 1909 the finance minister reported an In crease of orer forty-six million dol lar to the net debt of the dominion for the. previous year. .', ,1; , . - Justification for the' 'enormous railroad expenditures is' found, in a few facts. .Within ten years popula tion has grown In Canada from 6 S7116 to over 7,BOO,000, Of these, 75,000 'American1 'settler- crossed the border- in .190 There were open . for settlement as homesteads at the end Df 1909, In Manitoba 17,- sz&.ooo acres,, in Alberta 117,369, 000, In Saskatchewan 104,878,000. The Canadian -wheat-crop-for-f 9 09. reached 166,744,000 bushels, the oat crop 353,468,000' bushels. : As fast ! as the, rails reach a new station oft these railroads, now be ing ; pushed towAds the Pacific, a group of tents and '.shanties' Spring up a by magic then a little hotel and blacksmith shop, and then a heat elevator and so the infant town is born. On the line' of the Canadian. ome i of these; elevators were filled and emptied three times in one season, three year ago, T Pending the completion of the roads now building many thousand bushel of Canadian wheat f ron) the rled aooth; to : :. Minneapolis' :tobe tuillod.; The cost of transportation f ast or 'west has been prohibitive'. ;; rupb condition-will 'not Inst long when "the Grand Trunk Faclflc' is completed.' The BUmmr.ry 'of Its lip must-make Mr." Hill' mouth water. Tangent' of, 150 ;mUes, grade lieldTwlthln "One ralf of one per cent The extreme, elevation 3700 feet through th Yellowbead Pass; approached from' both sides on grades not exceeding the stand ard' 21' feet to the mile; Curvature so slight as not to retard the trains. : The cheaper freights to which water transportation and cheap mill- oils and, Duluth .market betterTby about five cents a bushel- than those on the northern side of the frontier. Another, reason so "appear for the Canadian farmers' loud voice; for reciprocity, But railroad east and Twest they-must-haver WHERE'S KELLY ? W HERE . IS THE city assem 'bly? t "WTf ,oe8a't omebody JBOUQ IUO tail I If UCIQ 9 IUQ chairman of the city central committee? ; ! Where' KellyKelly of the green necktie? - The;Ity-olctlon .: la. coming on. With the wanner weather candidates are-preparing to swarm. . Many have already filed their, declarations and entered the field. Are we .not ' to have another, Baker theatre conven-. Hon; where ;!'thla" unexpected b-onor win be thrust upon us? Are we going to let the foollb. people at tempt to nominate candidates with' out - being ' "advised?" Where' Mayor Simon? , Where' : Seneca Beach?., Where's ; Max 'Cohen? Where' Nottingham ? - Where' any body? Where' Kellx? - Were we not told that the Baker theatre as sembly was a howling success? . Did it not glve.Ti Mayor Simon? Were we not told' that the -unprecedented success that : attended the Baker theatre assembly; was proof that we must hare, a "jcounty .Assembly and a state" assembly, and did we not hold both? , Wer we not told that the result of the September primaries rwere "aeither' for' nor against the assembly?! -;-;f-:: " Where are all the boy? Why do they stand Idly by, cogitating about tlght-leggei . trousers, the-' harem kaklrt and other vain .fend foolish trl- fle with the city, election at hand and no call for ; an , Where' i the Oregonian ? ' Where' Judge George?.,'. Where in blazes is Kelly? NOT THE' WAT T HREE DEPUTIES resigned their positions In 'the dairy and , food commissioner' office on tBe ground that the acta of their .chief ,were Irregular. . Are they properly to be criticized therefor? On the' contrary, are they not to be commended ' for leayln g ' public; place in which methods were irregular? Is 'there po crookedness In pub Ho office." in this country? Is pub' lie office so sacred, and the public official , so ", holy . that Irregularities must be hushed up , or spoken of, only, In whispers? vis not the deputy who has, the courage, to Quit an of fice rather than be a participant In shortcoming to be applauded? If all; deputies took such a course would there not be a Tjuick end to crookedness In public affairs? Commissioner Bailey prepared' his biennial report to the legislature be fore his deputies resigned. In that report, ; he says: 'These deputies have proved themselves to be care ful, earnest and capable workers." So they were "cdreful earnest and capable workers" a their resigna tions proved. They were and are entitled to the confidence of the state as shown by their unwilling ness to' continue longer in a public office Irregularly conducted. ThiAjeport and tlio . testimony of these "careful, earnest and capable" deputies were before the legislature. Acting on it, the house by heavy vote passed a bill to give the state an excellent dairy; and food commis sioner.'.'" - - --- .fr --.--.-- . But the senate rejected the bllL "If you wUl votelto pass the Bower man assistant secretary of state bill over the ' governor's veto, Senator Bowerman will vote to. oust Bailey," was a proposition made to an anti Bailey 'senator , The latter! refused, and Bowerman, Nottingham and the others voted to retain Bailey. ; " Such transactions and the censure of deputies who expose I public ir regularities are not the way to bet ter public service or get good gov ernment ,;. - A-;h: f. : ALASKA COAL LANDS I T SHOULD not take a long to d termlne the rights and wrongs of what are called the Alaska-Michigan company's dealings in Alas ka coal lands as has . been the fate of the . Cunningham claims. It is said that the investigations leading to the present prosecutions were begun four years ago, when Mr. Bal ;inger was commissioner of the gen eral law office. Evidently the' ex- secretary" folio ws" the .Latin advice to "make,, haste slowly." It is true that, where 200 Claimants inMIch igan, and a hundred others in New York Chicago, and other places are in question they Would take a good deal of i looking up. Still their ti tle depend on compliance with law that are pot very complicated. ;v Probably one of more test case would determine whether their al leged ; defence is well founded in law. The action taken by the MlchH gan-Alaska Coal company, Jts con stitution and its dealings with stock holders would lu all probability set- "a egai aspectr,And,;when fol towed toActuaftrosacttonrir'Aia ka, would fix its status aa honest or fraudulent. Maybethe ancient meth ods of making war prevail, namely to Tight a. little. ; and snln it rtut through the' summer months, and then go into winter quarter and u-iiole- up'-aa-soon aa snow files. meanwnne Alaska coal ilea v un mined In the beds, and both govern1 ment and private consumers on the Pacific v coast continue fo be heavy losers. -r . - 1 OUR CITY EXGIXEEB f HE CITY, ENGINEER la Out Of humor withPortland people, Citing the change of certain property owners from petition ers to remonstrators relative to city improvement," he ; ay, 'The people Ao not know theIrH)wrMninds from one month to another. r . y There are time Vhen it i well ferjeopleochJungelltteirmlnd. And the lame thing, i true of city engineers. Such a change at the psychological moment-, would have saved the city And certain property owner from the dilemma over the Hall street improvement, in which " a i aL1- ...I i. . wuin. . tuttv iua aginr eBiiinaiea would aggregate 113,000 factually cost 130,000, - A large issue before thO. city administration nowiswho is to pay the , added .: $17,000. A further Question' in the matter 1. does it fake an engineer: to guess within $17,000 of a $30,000 Job, or couldn't A j layman f do it - iulte as well? ( A further Question that is widely asked la this - city is, are property owners getting value received for the money they are . pouring into paving 7 - how about the East 2 1st street pavement which was accepted by thj city engineer but rejected by the executive board? -'.;;';' ' ',' -.; NOBODY WANTS THEM O . MAN IN OREGON has ap peared in print la Advocacy , of bad ' roads. No- farmer wants bad roads. No merchant wants . bad roads. Nobody wants bad roads. i , - ' Twelve" easterners came out . to Oregon to locate several y?ars: ago", but on account of the bad roads, all went back but one. . The one ' who remained is Representative Wester lund of, Jackson county,' who, '.tells the story: elsewhere? on this page. It was a case of ;i 1 desirable citizens a8emTflyTpatQreg lostrorrAcconnt-of-bad roads. Representative westerlund thinks this state loses $10,400,000 a year from the same cause. : r The legislature of Washington has just appropriated $2,000,000 of state money to aid road building. Two years ago. It ;. appropriated a similar sum. It has found that the plan pays. ( . :, ;' 'v. '' Incidentally : Washington, the child, has more than double the pop ulation of Oregon, the parent Ore gon once' had more than double the population of Washington. 'The more rapid growth of Washington Is due to thegreatervalertnessdf hor men. '; ; They appropriate money for building roadA Oregon ha nev er appropriated cent: for road. California at the last election, voted $17,000,000 for road build ing. Every vother coast Btate i go ing ahead in the endeavor to move products to market at the least cost Oregon is standing still. The late legislature 1 strained, twisted and gagged over a little matter of $840,- 000 in aid of roads. After 40 days df labor it produced road bUlsover whose provisions the good roads men - themselves are in deadly ' con troversy as to their efficacy or non efficacy.''1;;' ;.-"- ''' . ; Representative Westerlund sug gests a special session of the same legislature. There are many "good men among the; present legislators, but would it not be better to submit the, case to the people? ' The voters went on record at the last election tor good roads by a majority of 18, 000. Nobody" wants bad roads. A news dispatch from Spokane de scribing the city election there says: With about 20,000 votes cast, the citizen liavAeleetedrthis-method (Becond choice) four other men, not one of whom was tho real choice of more than 7000 and two or three were the real choice of not more than 6000. The confusion caused by the complicated system of voting is great. Hundreds of ballots were marked imperfectly.' . Several thou sand voted only for first choice.-. The election Judges in several precincts were befuddled when it came to counting." Second choice is . what the Oregonian say we ought to have in Oregon. For the present it is advocating second choice Instead of the assembly.' Either would be fatal to the primary law. " Probably, the hostile ' Interests at the dairy banquet last night did hot harmonize their differences. But each knows j more now about the viewpoint of the othr. All speak ers. Including the dairy commission er, agreed that a first essential is clean, milk, though Mr. Nottingham did raise , question a to death of ba blea from bad milk. A first essen tlal to unity Is h ta ti controversyto see the viewpoint of the other fellow, and much in this direction was accomplished by the banquet." ' CV- C. Chapman, who ' led the movement, Is entitled to credit It Is said that the troops Are sent to the Mexican border to preserve a Btrlcter oeutrality. Also, to be handy In ' case of, DIas' death to prevent disorders. Also, to warn other na tions that we are going to handle the situation under, the Monroe doctrine, so they will not become meddlesome. Also toT showwlth what celerity we oan mnhlllza frnnna fnr tha offAif n ers. All these reasons appear in one dispatch; and are stated to come di rect from ' jthe president It raises the question of why is.it necessary to dissemble la. suc a matter. Would a just Cause be harmed by ' taking the -country into executive ' confidence? .' ' , ': :,-'v"." , ; "- Nobodj Wants Ba4 Roads. Medford, Or. March Tft, the Edl tor of The Journal Aa a member of the Uat legislative assembly, X did my beat f or the paeae of such road laws a would enable Oreon to Improve her hlghwaya. ' But too many cohfHctlna; opinions defeated what ram sure was the wish and desire of the people 'at lare. And as tor my single sjelf I feel a responsibility! - I reeL aa a body, the legislature of ItllThas not faithfully fuUUlod Its duty. At. last November's lection the people of the atat called for adequate roa4 laws by a raajorlta or 18.000. x Tha next, four years, leadin up to and Including the fi-reat Panama exposition, will be by far the most lm portant period In the entire history of uregon. , . . i Washington, to the north of, us. and Calltornia, our neighbor on the south, fully , appreciate, the Importance of the great western movement, and ars spend. ing , millions on their: highways. . Call fornla t voted a road appropriation at her last election of $17,0(W,000. r Wash Ington Is not only using hor orison labor. but at the present session: of the legis lature appropriated over $1,600,000 In cash. for the building of her roads, and yet neither Washington nor California are In anywhere- near the need of ade quate. raadS" that Oregon la. i owing to the, nature of . our soil, together with the fact.that west of the Cascade moun tains we have no f roxen ground to help out during a rpart of tha year. As it now stands, unless something Is done In the way of a special session, we must wait two whole years before even start can be made, and all this time every other section west of the Rocky mountains Is getting " ready . , for the greatestrush-of emigratlonr that this continent has ever seen. Between now and the close of IMS there will be more people visit Oregon than they sum of her present, entire, population. I came, to Oregon the first time in March. 1903. We were is homeseekera In the party. We stopped first at Ba ker City, and then at every -town or city of importance, until we reached Portland. From - Portland wm rUltnrt the principal towns through ths Wil lamette valley . and all tha way down to Ashlandr Or. Ws were 40 days mak ing tha trip. We were pretty, well dls couraged when we struck the Willam ette valley, where ws stuck In the mud, looking over the country at nearly every pqlnt where we stopped. The entire party was very favorably im pressed with Oregon and Us possibili ties and agreed that It was a state with a great future, hut said "Who wants to wujyryllkAjtM people don t appreciate the value of good roads?" - "' -:'- - The result of this homeseekera party was that I am the only one out of tha iz wno aeolded to locate In the state and make it my future home. The rest returned east disgusted, and they are still writing me, saying: , "Oregon Is au ngm ana wm be ths best state In tha "Union whenever tha taxpayers real- ire What good roads mean to them. When you people wake-up to this faot wa ar coming back and will brlna- io. ens pt our friends and relatives with It is a fact that fully 75 tier cent of tha ' homeseekera from eastern states who are looking for homes on the coast coma west between ths months of Oc- tooer and April, or during ths- winter months, because at that v time they ar at leisure and want to get away from ths cold .winters which ar so severe m ths eastern . and . middle western states. During ' thl tims t Oregon ; has her rainy season and when our eastern visitors discover the frightful condition of our public highways, they return home disgusted.' You will find that any on ,who visits Oregon between the month of April and October decide to stay or come back,, as he gets a favor able Impression of the state, because of th. fact that during this part of th year w enjoy fairly 'good roads. In my humble opinion th state of Oregon Is losing over 110,000,000 annually from thesa investors on account of the bad condition that our highways ar in at the present time. i ? ,', The transcontinental railroads are ac tive la building up all parts of thl state, isvery community and every in terest west of the Rocky mountains are trimming their sales for the coming flood of emigration, and yet the Ore gon assembly, chosen by th people fo pass a few laws, has adjourned without passing the most Important.; act that came before .it practical good roads laWB..;W: -t . : v,; M-jr:,'..: ,'i..-: -Now, speaking as an Individual mem her of the house. I am frank to, say thatlf that tiody" cannot get together in special v session, called , by . the gov ernor, and, pass without quibble the proper road - laws, ' which will be satis factory to the governor, the Good Roads association,1 the farmer and all . other taxpayers; enabling all parts of the state to go-abeid and construct scien tific and passable highways, then, , I say,, any member or set of members who undertake to; play1 politic ' and block the work for , which the ' session would be called, would deserve not only the . contempt of the districts, which sent them, but of the state at large. Let us be honest and loyal, not. only to ourselves, but to our several communi ties and the grand old stata of and get together in special session and vmu uwi ivuu ruo.ua laws as win an able Oregon, to keep pace with her sis ter states, l am sure the governor will be in full sympathy with any 'honest move looking to the betterment of tha state of which he 1 chief- exeeutlva. ' Very respectfully, ? k. v J. A WESTKRLUND, " '. . Representative from Jackson County. ': Barbarous Mexico i Portland. Or. March 8. To tha Edi tor of Thes Journal Being a constant reader of your dally paper, I hope you Will publish the following: I under stand the United States Is rushing troops across the country into Mexico. Twenty thousand are on the way. Th United States has no hand In. this" and If she wants to . keep . the neutrality laws, why does she Interfere? I have spent some time in Mexico and know what I am talking about The Taquls atrocities and the peonage ay stenvare a weir aear ones. driven : hundrada of miles over ; the desert beaten, starved and even killed. That is the sort: of government Dies ; runs . with an irnn hand. The Mexican people are natural ly patriotic and have gone to tremen dous lengths to overthrow, the bloody monster who crushes their very lives out Over 80 per cent of the Mexican people cannot read or write. They want me opporiunuy 10 wont out their own destiny. ' Hot only da th Mitin ,m. ployers beat kill and kidnap them, but r Americans oo so as well, f The Mexi cans hate American.' xt is the greed of bloodsucking American capitalists that controls Mexico. They look upon the United State us a great octopus about to aelte them and bend them to Its will. And they are right. Mexico Is doomed on account of .American - capital. That ie-the 1 res sen ef -this trerniTierit's in terference. ,How long, would the Amar- lean people stajtd for such horrible con. dltions here? Is it , any ' wonder they want to gain control of the eoverft- mentT What man with red blood wouldn't fight? The United States fought once to abolish chattel slavery. . t -' Letter From the I rnxf vf T7X7TA "km ivTUiirc TXT un THE I h rn xt ti ! ! 1 i ! I - ' VlVyi'li'liilil A XAAJL ilU T W AX JUXVXlwX , ' I ' L 1C ACW AVaiirOaU : ? ' . . ''r V ' " " ' ' i - - .. - ' v -'?' 8MALL CHANGS I ' OREGON SIDELIGHTS -..v . Era . t m . Barley Is better than bullets, . Greatest fruit prospects ever. , Who and what Is, or are, the party"? O well, ttls Is Ma'rcb; It will be June soon. ,, - - , 'il - v 1 ' . .' . , e e . V Good for Trc Cook. He ha paid bis -COOk.- -r-v- -7 -";:-: -; e: '.:'.''.:-.:. War Isn't so faahionable a It used to be. - ,v-? - e ''.v,.'.! x Grant rknew; hs Said, "iLet "u have peace." - - , ,' ".t'.;;'i :,;-Z.-':: Sy.'-i:" (:y. ; :v ' The country will survive, with Bal llnger out.' tJ . '..'. .!... . y , v Looks like the Democrat could carry the country. .. . . ; i The only person who succeeds Is the one who.is happy. ,v . ia - The rose bushe'ar getting ready for those glorious June days, ',. , j : Thi Is the best day that there will ever be to get a patch of land, ; ;v'v.'-'li,-.irLL ::i' .?!.:iii-;i; Another dav has arrived without the terrible Japs taking the country, . r- Who said Db. Oook was a. falliir He gets Into ths newspapers yet . Some neools hare -so littia to da thmt they are studying already how to cele brate the Fourth -Of July. ' It would be safe to offar a. mllllnn dollars for s true and complete defini tion of -a Democrat or , a Republican. What is education ? A lam n uaatfnn. not- easily answered: but an adiicatlnn Isn't necessarily gained at a university. SEVEN LITERARY WOMEN .... y"-;.c.;-4- George 'A foot more - light- a step more true. Ne'er from, tha heath flower dashed tha dew.". .; i Ah, the will be fortunate, since she was born among the roses and to the sound of music, was the reply made to the informant who told Lieutenant Dupln that a daughter was born to him at a dance at which he was an attend ant with mi wife, Sophie, who was the daughter of Delabordo. a Paris bird fancier. This was on July 5, 1804,-the last year of the French Republic, and the first of the Empire. - The daughtar was christened Aurore, '' Whan ' A It iV A , m nAMfal C AHa''' ua t " i; nut wi wwwm VHI J y iUUf aVSil AM - haw flthu mrmm VI11.J k. . . ua ner rathe was killed by a her grandmother at her country home near, wananu wunin . the , walls of the chateau , she pused unhappy hours, until she wa fourteen. . Her mother was poor, Iter grandmother was rich. They were not pn, friendly term a and as the little girt was fond of her mother, naturally. . her grandmother's servants ; used frequently s v, taunt hor witn wishing to go to her mother and eat beans In a garret rather than stay at tne chateau and learn to be a lady. , While . her I grandmother ' and , her friends were trying to teach her accom plishments, Aurora waa dabbling . In Latin; history, literature and classio mythology. , In the course of time ah Invented for herself a being, half hero, halKdlety, whom she named Corambe, a Greek, god possessed of Christian vir tues, to whom sha erected shrine In the woods before which, a an accept able aacrif lee, , sh would lay; flower and set free the bird and butterflies that she had taken captive. 1 , v: In the revelations of th peasant life She found the keenest delight When she was 14 she wa placed In a convent Here she remained for some time, dur ing which her grandmother died, leaving her hor entire fortune. She left the convent to marry M. Caslmlr Dudevant when ahe was II. They lived happily for a time, but the husband became dis sipated, and after eight year she found that the situation had become. intolerH ante. , -. r :-;,; .:; --. ... For some time she had been conscious of her literary talent and decided to go to Paris. She made an agreement with, her husband that she was to be allowed $600 per annum from her own Will she fight now to perpetuate pe onage? Let ua look at some of the American capital invested In .'; Mexico. The Morgan-Ouggenhelms own and have absolute control of the' oopper output of Mexico. M. Guggenheim Bons own all the smelter as well as vast min ing property there. The Standard Oil under the name .Waters i Pierce com pany, .with - many subsidy Toorporatlons controls most of the crude oil of Mex ico. American sugar-trust is another la oontroL 1 Also the Continental Rubber company,, another - Rockefeller Institu tion controls 16 per cent of th world's production of raw rubber,-ha mUIions of-aere ot valaable land therarWella- Fargo Express company) holds absolute monopoly on the express business. The Southern Pacific railroad and the al lied Harriman interests control by th virtue qf near ownership three fourths of the main lines of railroad mileage. Space, forbids mention of the many oth er moneyed American Interests in Mex ico. It-tr: estimated that over $900 000,000: of American capital is Invested In Mexico and for every dollar made m profit' it 'Is safe to say a human life has been, sacrificed to make that profit, Mexico will, continue to be barbarous Just so long Ae Bias keep the throne. . . JAMU.S WIIiSON. ;;;'Fannert andV Good Boads.k : . ThomaaOr., March 1.- To the Editor of The Journal. -An - article - In Th Journal of March 1 was headed, "Roads Men Survey reclcWttft A C Smith 'say, '.'Farmer Did It" If they did.::,!'. AM': glad of lt-L.tAm;'' glad Governor .West had', tha eourag to veto all these road . measures, along with o many other, useless ones ' that re ceived his axe of disapproval, - - It woud bea hard matter to get aa many brainless farmers together In on body as was assembled In Baleip, pos ing a law makers, In this last session of the legislature. - Dr. , Smith says, "The representation of the farmera: defeated- the good-roads campaign. Hereafter we shall not ask the assistance of ' farmers. We shall depend upon the people who really pay the taxes, the people of . the towns, the business Interests.", What a' "stunner" thl last part of his statement X won der if Dr. Smith knows that the farm ers of Linn county pay 78 ft per cent of the taxes Of the county? I wonder if Dr. Smith does not know that th farmer, the laborer, the producer, pays all taxes? ' , , All wealth come from th soil in some way. .What the farmer fall to produce from, the toll t dug out of the bowels of the Arth.l;V':V;.vi,;vit,h': Dr. Smith lives off what th farmer produce In a great measure, all our cities ar kept up and maintained large ly by the f araer.!; CUy taxes, docfor bills,, water and light bills,, state, coun-ty.end.,school-itaxesrre. largely paid out -of, what is. exploited from the farmer and hi products. X irould like to kiow how muoh wealth Dr. Smith haa created or produced In the last year. I wonder If he has paid his pro rata of tax from the money received from his patients, that some one ha eread or East Oregonian: Indications point to a wonderful development In the west end of the county this summer and to a healthy Increase In population for that , Dallas- Observer; -' The ' McMInnville Telephone-Heglster office Is to be equipped for fcaperanto printing. andthe poor man Who nnnratea Krnthfr Martin's linotype Is duo to k)e-what little-hops oi neaven jie ever nau. - Correspondence of Albany Democrat: HalseywhlchIs known as one of the best shipping places south of Portland for a city of Its size for stock and poultry, has the promise ' of electric iignts within 80 days, for which her peo pie are rejoicing, ' - Athena Press: The mercurial tern. perature haa been flirting around the night this week. With the ground well covered with snow, every indication of winter Is with us. Brilliant sunshine is orp inurn in mis vie nitv. ntuiriv cvnrv me oraer or the day, andnerry sleigh Ing parties the order of tho night . y''v'W;iv;v-.;..,;-,ii(j ,.e ft .',;;.rV:'' Tillamook Herald; ' The a-overnor haa vetoed tne Tillamook County t'alr bill, which fact will bo a dJasapointment to many of our citizens. Wa believe that Tillamook county should hava been recognised In this matter. However, we wuuia noi 1 censure tne ' governor so severely for his action. Ha had a lot of appropriation bills piled upon him' that had been passed for political reasons, and ly. consequently had to . do some slashing. Other localities have been dls- appolntad:ar.we.lLA4.:.purselve8cr.'.The governor has had a hard Job handling the lata legislature, which spent about all its time between playing peanut f olltlcs and making - appropriations. It akes a nan to say "No1' and Governor West has apparently been equal to ths occasion.- . i ' Sand. fortune, on condition that .she never exceeded that sum, and the rest ef her property was to remain Jo the hands of M.,, Dudevant. She carried Introduc tion to two literary people. ' A novelist to- whom she first applied told her that women ought not to write at Alt An other took her to the Figaro, and they paid her at the rate of 1 1.1 5 a column She soon made friends among the lit erary bohamians of Paris, and many of her. earlier and briefer works were writ ten In collaboration with one of them, M. Jules Bandeau, afterward th author of several successful novels and plays.' Aurora's first, novel fell flat-Then she .produced another novel, - under the hew immortal pseudonym of i f George San4",aiidr0EtuaewasBjie- "George Sand," George (Band, who Is Gearge Sandf, was an i Interrogatory that made Paris fairly bubble with ex citement - This book appeared in April, 1832. and was entitled "Indiana." Other novel followed thick and fast ' After th novel cam the pastorals, the sto ries of village life, which,-have served to place their author among the great literary.' artist., of 'all time. 5 No year! passed unmarked by the issuer of new ; works under her ' pen name. The strange compromise which She had 'made ' with her husband- was evidently on which could not be con tinued, . so In .1835 ahe applied . for divorce, which, after some . difficulty regarding the children, was granted her. She also later obtain ' possession of the children, and was ever a devoted mother. Their affection and their hap piness fully rewarded herf and; as both, on atUlning maturity, made fortunate marriages, she wa enabled to show herself an 'excellent grandmother also. George 'Sand died In 1878. nearly; 72 years or age, Having neglected an HI nesa which she deemed unimportant un til too- lata- "It Is death," she said to those about her, - '1 did not ask for it. but v- neither, do I regret .; It" . : At her funeral at Nahant the country folk flocked in from 1 miles around. There were also men of letters, scientists, and artists, for sh had rharty friends and kept' them la all. ranks .of Ufa. Her bier was borne by six peasants, and She was laid away with the flowers about her aa beautiful as those In the midst of which she was born. Tomorrow Harriet Beecher Stow. produced, other than his own produc tive labor? rlf Dr. Smith does not think farmers anow now to ; nuiid road, if he. -will come -up Into Linn county and visit the rums x me tsanium, we tnmit we can show "him some as good and substantial roaaa as ar in Oregon,-built by farm, era, under the supervision of a farmer. - We went to work byJ donation and subscription of : our own money .- and time and raised about 8353. The county pot up doUar for dollar against this amount and we graded and graveled about one mil of road, and It speaks forjtseli Dr. Smith, whether farmers can build roads of not And don't for get, doctor, that the amount the county gave Included about '78 per cent of the . farmers' money ' already collected in tne general countyand state tax, . . GEO. L, SUTHERLAND. What Is the Matter With the Dairy inaustiy? . .. : ... i To the Editor of The Journal A state men; Just published" read as? follows! TThe dairy Industry of Oregon vis lan qulshihg, the consumer are complain ing of quality and price. ; It Is charged by each Interest that the other Interests are working at crosa purppses; jthat co operation is lacking." t ; v - v -This seem a startling1 announcement of the present condition ef the dairy In dustry in the very best Paotflo coast state for the expansion and prosperity ox tnat essential Industryi The Oregon dairy Interest ViU" do well to tudyy that little Kingdom of Denmark; which 1s ac renownsd for. Its dairy and egg Industry. , That country has an area of only 9,375,403 acres, of which one third is arable, and one third In dairy pasture. . . 1 . . ' The population is about J.500,000, of whom over 50 per cent are the culti vator and suppliers of food from th oil. 1 V ,'i-v ,-!,'. The Danish ' farmers, besides sup plying , the -nationalfood,exportod- to England lrt 1908 butter valued at 145, ,000,000, bacon ; at $2J,00(K0OO, eggs : at $7X100,000,, making a grand total of $75, 000,000. Thl outcome from the Industry is solely due to., the united movement started by tha Danish farmers' coopera tive banking, marketing, distributing and exporting associations in 1894, ; U ' Surely Oregon' dairy, baco arid poul try Industries scan and ? Will, adopt the same uccoful cooperative methods, , The use of the rural .-telephone throughout Denmark ha don much for the economic development of these in dustries. For a complete servlee within each district, the cost Is only, $15 per annum, and trunk or Jong distance calls ar on aa equally low cale. 1 t,.;v-yi;. i R. M. BREkeTON. ..v ,',,'4iT,. ..wna .111,111,., in an,,,.,i,j, , , h , I,- u 1 ii'iiii ,,.';j:"5i;j.'Vi,:! The drummer are- eomlnglnte Lake view . thick ; and . fast these days,' get ting orders for Spring good, say 4he Examiner. AUare optlmlstlo as to the business outlook for the coming year, ana tmuev that we nave bright pros pect" for landing a railroad before many months have pasdjjy,- - . . -" 7 ' ' period Of public hostility toward rail- ' roads was committed by -the railroads, a mi a trip nromiaa tnnr ir win ravor , There Is a rainbow In the railroad sky, promising peace and fair weather, says the well known writer on railroad topics, C. M. Koys, In the March World's Work. It is nothing more nor less thaa . a frank and open avowal on the part r of the-heads --of -many : systems ,-; that the cardinal error .which underlay the happen again " v .' ' ' A statement recently promulgated by' , . Judife Love tt. . head of the Iiarrlman lines,'. caps " the. gehcral confession of many other heads of , system. The1" very promulgation .of such, a belief marks the, new: era. Always the rail- , uau 1 141 a incv : yuuiiu , vpiiuaittusi nua : defiance. The usual rerilv has been : a '4"' rhallenirfl anmethlns- Ilka this: "'-.,''.' "nnnnu .111 ..attnuif 11a .--nr ltff.iaa us, and we shaH-etop our extensions, ; withdraw our builders, cut down our ' .UIIII,U, VIUl,l. f IVVPITil LU, IllltlUIVI .... worst!"' ny"t:f'f-:.irk ; In on form or another the country has. heard that v challenge a - hundred timea 4n 4ha last.faw vr .'. .' Judge Lovett and Otto Kahn one a ' Harriman lawyer and officer,, the other, promises, ana it remains to be seen how . tar mrtm will fit! 'nrlnofnlaa fT,f ' tk.1' veryTtnriouncement of the Tinnclpler 1 -77 - -. yiviiHDfl iiibi av iiua uw iiaiiru wivu vu- t?- thnalnatPn.' ' . "' . "l'v ' A nMn'liMi vallrnad k,,'. I llo ' speeches, in maaaslne articles. In ' S iniHrv ipw . ari vsat rnn aniar wn vrtaa - aasaa . conviction.-Jf a man 1av patience to - ww. ,I'J.Y . lyuujt,, 1 V .... . ; rallMil1 haart Via aHII la thM all - a fervid deslra for publicity not tha oin BTannznn Dra.no. nut raai nuinant publicity. H will note also more or ' less veiled admissions of rati ma A fault 111 ui, vub ami au, HI will HOI that in the mind of the railroad men, th railroad has amln become a oublla : servant a publio utility. ' r ',; ; It rimUnl nnlv. in n fnfa fh.i ' railroad of th West - ween wa the K vnia naw anirir Ar MnnmtiMi T.a a - vbub'vu w uw iii7 uff woven, ior ineir own enas. snout tn state aanltola. - Let railroad lobbyists become exttnot - aiuuui, iiaiw ui tt naninBWll. ' Jjei, a, ... few of the big system look . to It and ae whether or not the men who rua them are men who care a little about v the publio and Ua rights and powerA , There is a school of rati mad efflnara that must b swept from the house be :' fore it can be considered garnished for . r theawning day.-rTh-railroadrrwhos-?n head Is a reactionary will deserve all . t that it get from th naw damooraey ef y commerca - , ' Iteltgfon I UnirersaL Rev. Newell Dwlght Hlllis in th Cot ' ';:'".umblan' Magaxln. -:. ;'" v1 . Religions are not rellaloa -RellaloB J universal. , Th : man who la not ra-? llgiou 1 not normal, and by this .use of th word "religion," 1 do not mean ' saying your prayer and reading your Bible and going to church, or profess ing any of th rights and ceremonies of ' any or the cults in any of th lands. By religion I mean that force in humau, ,. nature which has Inspired man's belief in something for him beyond th grave, and 'In something for him In this world greater and mora triumphant than he could expeotifrofn his apparent .weak-" ? ness and from' hi ttiany limitations. ltmiU' -: Rells-lnn ' mnita fha Rlhla T?all4nn. V lexactlyj the same force, made Moham- ' medanlsm. Buddhism and Confucianism; " exactly the same produced ' the witch- . doctor and drives the African pagan ''I into the Jungle to hide from 'evil spirits. v Religion causes the Hindu mother ,to , f throw 1 her child to the crocodiles, and , ' the Christian mother to teach her boy the, Lord's prayer, :' "Side issues ; and 4 :' formalities" are defects in human r,u- . ture, but the best thing about Mr. Kdl aon, or any other human being, is, lit th words of Paul Sabatier, that he is Incurably religious." ' ' Religion Is th capacity for h high est relationship, oonsolentloUsly chosen as such. Whatever a man puts at the . top is his religion. When he renche",," his supreme possibilities religiously, he becomes unselfish, or, as in the case of Jefcus, he lose himself for the sake of others. -. ;-,,. -r."; 't., , , , ,,-,.1,,,. ,A , Tile World Move. ' .From .Comment ,, -, . It is often charged that the courts are slow In acknowledging conditions which ar well known to every one. It is there fore matter of peculiar pleasure to take note of Instances showing- that Judge r. really do see thing othr than prece dent announcing general principle. For , example, In the case of Commonwealth ? v. Buxton, the Massachusetts euprem J udlclal court recognize the usef - th photo speed recorder for registering , speed of automobilerand declares its j records admissible lif evidences and la ;? Bludworth v. Bray, the Florida supreme ; ! court announce the startling doctrine';' that there Is no. presumption that the condition' of . a crop remain the same Vi. from year to year: Shade of Blackstone and Kentf Hath it not been for such tlm that , th memory of tnan runneth not to the contrary a presumption that condition once shown to exist continue . , thus until tha contrary be proven? When -It has been shown that In th month of July corn ear ar ;- Just beginning , to i hoot", must It not be presumed that T a year from the next winter they ar ' till doing th amathmg? v But th " court say, "No,", and thua doth Mr. : General Principle receive a body blow. Some day, perhaps, It may even be pre sumed possible that1 lorn who safely washed the corn begin to hoot may be "half hot"-. by : It" later W :v ? - (OontrlbutCvl (U Th Journal by Walt-Matoa, tba hmons Kaou noct. His DroM-txH-m. ar. a kt resuUr feature of this eolma k Xbt Dally n'- How sweet " it "i ' to take P your'Aeat" A when hungry, at a groaning board, and 5 i loosen up 'yori';3id'Tatla:'laan'l thu gifted , can- afford to - grin at Ml v life' little Ills, at fortune's frowns, however grim, at druggists and at doc- -tor bflls this world is Just A snap to ' hlml Dyspeptic pebpi,' driven daft by J foolish fads, look on -and sav: ,"H '. ought to try the .Fletcher, graft! nd; it cnew hi rood a naif a day. To-swallow I f em6king food Jike that. Is nothing beta s ter than a .IA; yet he seejns strong and t aaiiy mi, .ana we ere DlllOUS, weak , i-i d . thin!'', ; Another wsrank i. lftoks. on :g aghast and eries:. "Great ginger! What-? a shame! That man should try a three ( weeksfast if be Would strengthen up! hi frame! , To, eat so fiercely , violates the rules-that modern science sDrtnrs; yet he seems welk while fasting skates 4 are;slowly drying up, by Jings And other faddists ,wag .the Jaw, - and keep t lo eat his Victuals raw. or take thenv down In capsule form. He loves to hear ' the dlrtner horn lnvlt him to Increase' 5 nis wib ne laugns tne idle fad to- r scorn,.and eats as Father Adam at. - ootrrth. lBio, br Geortt Mittliew Adatns, ;; ;s , .; . .' ;;,;;.,, ., , t.