THE OREGON DAILY - JOURNAL, PORTLAND, THURSDAY'iBVENING. JUL -20. 1911.,, i . - , ' '. 'i THEJJOURNAL 0. . MesoN......v........ ,;pbiihif (attpt Sunday), and at Th. Journal Rnllil- liif, fifth ana YamnlU etnaata, Portland. Oe. fttnltatiad 9rf terming arary Hnniuj morning ' Kntarrd at th MatofMea at Portland, fnr irtMiulMila thronga tha mail 1 data natter. Or for Oregon people to help make the market. If they will buy things made and sold In Oregon, they will not only make the market, and build up the industries, but they will en courage people In other states v to use things made In Oregon. Every added chalr every added machine, every added tool, everyj added appliance or article .of any MUCPHONM train mas noma, A-fi. i kind manufactured In Portland Is fell ,r.arT, MSte more aor employed, more families Scnjiinilft A Kent oar JO.t liniiwwirp jiqnomj, ;oPiiuaio, jjiux u iiiuuc; jiui iu uiuuiv Wo ppl-iltfrtn mnrn hnnk rJAArlnM. mnrA ouuaing permits, more realty irans fers, more postal receipts, and more of everything that gives character, strength and standing to a city. Buy things made In Oregon. .1 .80 KnboTfrMon Terma bt'mafl t any addraaa tn th UnlUd Btataa or Uailco. B4JXY. On yaar....,...8.ftn I una meat. . SCJCPAT. Om rar. SM I On loonta.. DAILY AND fltJNDAT. Ona yaar. ....... T.n6 I On month.. I .B . M SEEINO AMERICA FIRST All the beauty In the world. 'tU but skin deep. Ralph Venning. THE POTLATCII .ORTTjANDERS will go In nnm bera to attend the Seattle Pot- latch. . They ought to, Port land and Seattle are of the great Northwest- Their Interests are , mutual, and their purposes Identical. If 'Seattle grows, Portland will itow. If Portland grows, Seattle will grow. The forces that make the one. must perforce build the other. A state line. Is a nothing. It Is ; sot tangible enough to constitute a declaration of war. The fact that It puts Portland in one state and 6e- ' .attle in another instead of both m . the same commonwealth Is not a casus belli. Seattle Is seeking to accentuate 'Alaska and the great Pacific north ' 4jwest by the Potlatch. It is a twin activity to Portland's Rose Festival. Zt Is a splendid conception in city and state life. It , is a great plan working for the higher life of com- , - znunltiea and peoples. It is a pleas- - ant change from the dull routine of the busy workaday world. It is ef- fort to drag human activity for a - brief period out of the ruts and riot of existence. It is a movement to be encour aged, r The common interests of the two cities' In the struggle for trans portation rates, and in a hundred "other mutual relations, Is reason for , encouragement from Portland. The . inexorable maxim that the great - north Pacific country Is bigger than any of Its parts and that the triumph f the wholo means the triumph of all parts, . Is ' reason for encourage- - went from ; Portland. The neigh bor- - ly instinct,' which v brought Seattle people in large numbers to the Rose Festival, is the climaxed argument . for Portlanders.to go by hundreds to Seattle and help make the Potlatch a v success. . , ' ' Mankind and nations admire com V xnunlties that give example of ami cable relations. rT IS FITNESS for Oregon to throw her Influence into the see- Amerlca-first movement tlon of the i mother rather than the I Governor Deneeri, 1ave corroborated child.; , leach other as to what HInes ' said ' The hardest and the fiercest bat- and did la' and-af ter(,the campaign ties we have to fight are those for. Lorimer. HInes'; only defense is waged 'against . poverty and Ignor- that ho tells the truth, and all the ance, those twin, grlm-vlsaged spec- others He, tres that wreck so many firesides. But do they? "I didn't know: nobodv ever told me.'V-thls Is the nlalntive erv that Contemporaneously with the an invariably comes from thin-featured, nouncemeot that King George may sallow-faced women who gaze for appoint several nunarea new , peers, the first time upon the revelations comes the news that Jack Johnson of the welfare exhibits. There are 18 almost on the "point Q . becoming demonstrations that show what hap- an Englishman. Has our Jack got pens when a baby Is fed on beer, his lightning rod up for a barony or coffee and cabbage Instead of milk. Little waxen Images pf cripples strapped tp boards stare into these mother-faces as the result of inhu man diet. The mother stumbles un expected upon a reproduction of her own unclean home with it3 beer cans, bits of old bread, greasy beds and soiled clothing. By this forlorn picture stands another, a sanitary, clean and well regulated home. It an earldom? Letters From tLe People (Cnmnranlcfltlona aent to Th Journal for pub lication In thla departmant abould not exraed S00 word tn length and ronat b acompaold ! tn nam ana aaanaa or tn nar.) A Relio of Barbarism. Portland, July 19. To th Editor of The .Journal The effusions of those No stato can nrofft more from " an na We" rea,aiea no?ue- 11 who seek to justify the lash for chlld jso state can prom more rromj,a a plcture lesson lhat makes ; the ren. serve only to strengthen my con- mother think. It stimulates facul- y'cn ht corporal punishment be- iongs- to tne oarx acres, ir we couia BROTHER CHARLEY HE BEST thing Brother Charley could do would be to hibernate. The country doesn't look upon him as good society for the president. He 1b regarded as a sort of Big Business annex to the cabinet. The late pronounced bourbonlsm of .the president Is, by common consent, attributed to the millionaire brother. It 1b( the supposed connection of Brother; Charley with the incident that gives some color of authenticity . to the letter of the two "Picks." If Charles did ; not actually turn the trick, for the lesser Dick, but few are Teady , to ; believe that he wouldn't nave been willing. If little "Dick" . didn't ask him. nobody will opine that Jt was through fear that Broth er Charley would refuse. We all like to shine under the reflected light of great and near t great relatives. Brother Charley ' will never fail to believe that he Is king maker, and thereby entitled to loaf around the throne. Whether he did It or not, the country will In sist on believing that he actively ap proved the dismissal of Pinchot. the extravagant indorsement of "Dick" Balllnger, the presidential approval of the Payne-Aldrlch bill as "the best ever enacted," and Mr. Taft's earlier war on the insurgents. It was William H. Taft, not Charles P. Taft, that the country elected president. Oregon Is one of the show spots of earth. Her Willamette valley is almost without a rival. Her Colum bia gorges, her snow peaks, her rlv ers and mountain ranges, her match less forests, her Crater lake and oth er natural wonders are nature in her happiest mood. When the great seeing-Amerlca- first caravan begins to move, these are sights along the way, and a necessary part of the vast Itinerary. Other show places are Alaska, the Colorado Rockies, and abovo all Yellowstone Park, the place of rarest, mo6t picturesque and most beautiful sights on the globo. When the earth was finally r-ut In order for the coming of man, Yel lowstone with its geyrers as least of Its wonders, was mado for man, the last word In creative handiwork to marvel at. It Is a spot belde which the best show places of Europt are tawdry tinsel. And yet. the United States is spending $400,000,000 a year In seeing Europe first. Oregon's reward from a seelng- Amerlca-first movement will be the hew men and new money that sight of the state will draw into her life. It Is of record that those who come are delighted and that they are made parts of us by what they see. It Is Oregon's greatest opportunity for expansion when a seelng-America-flrst movement is inaugurated. And the nation can profit heavily by such a movement. The main gov erning forces In this land dwell be yond the Mississippi. No president has gone to Washington from west of the Mississippi. Aldrich, who was the power behind the throne at Washington for twenty years, was never west of Chicago. Horizons would be broader, visions wider, mentalities jnore expanded and con ceptions on bigger lines, if all the men of the country could look on the magnificent distances, the broad ex panses and drink deeply of the buoy ant spirit of the great west ties long dormant. You know that X .".i in f, 7h the lesson has been driven home, sources there would soon be a general for, as the woman turns away, she revolt nalnst whipping children. The shakes a shawl-covered head, and not far distant when prison gates i t . . ..... will swing open for every tyrannical cries, ir anybody had told me that buUy wno iay8 violent hands upon the before, Jimmy might have lived," or, tender flesh of a child. ' It la coming "If I had known, my boy would not ure " the 8un rie- Children now be behind prison bar. pSad&fflr .It Is to rend the miserable veil of of their God given rights to grow and Ignorance that envelops our mother- develop into manhood and womanhood hood, that the Child Welfare league without the spectre of fear gripping at la .,i,)ri r Z. their consciousness. It Is the height of Is working. It is to paw the way ab8Urdity to talk of "respect- being In for the borning of a new motherhood eulcated In children through the medium that these olctures were fashioned, of a switch or a seasoned "rawhide." It is to the creation of a magnificent " 5 1? SlT people and a glorious nation that hate, they would change their code of these films are consecrated. The parental control. Only a few short purpose of happiest inspiration, y61"8 ago every .village schoolmaster May Portland realize Its Importance nmof I tn.nic God that and lend a hand to the preservation there have been enough men and women of priceless baby lives. of brains and human attributes to break tnese rods to bits ana tnrow tnem into Qj-iy fT( I 1 e BtieciB. B.UU derive mat iney buhii fit Mlf1rn Thnsp -U'hrt thmiirht rnrnnr. NEWS DISPATCH says that a al punishment necossary were no doubt crop is expected .'rom 2000 not to blame. They were like their acres of corn this scasoi. in Predecessors who thought men and to- v titii nr it ii n mon Bhoud be burned at the stake for the Walla Walla valley. It beln, D0.sea9ed of -witoheB." a siirht is largely on lands fcrmerly summer infraction of the moral law or the stat- fallowed and Is In areas of 40 acres ut law subjected the men and women and less. The authorities at the ?' v V'".- xtr vii . . ,, the ducking stool, the stocks, or the Washington State college urged the whiDnlnc nost. All these usaees have planting, and claim corn will be cue- been proven to be relics of barbarism. cessfully grown in the locality. JUBt as th8 whipping of children is a Diimur wperiraeius in corn grow- scribed the standard of home rule in ing are In process in some of the those days decreed that children must eastern Oregon counties, notablv in ba Punished by parents. The parents " - A 1. - 11 AT a, . COMMENT AI NEWS IN BRIEF SMALL CBANCB A One of the fooler who la worse than a criminal Is be wh starts a fire In or near a lorest ana allows it to spread. Senator La FoUette Will not help his own presidential prospects by, making unjustifiable and unreasonable attack on rresiaent uart. , t ... The story writers continue to name anout one tnira of tneir characters John or Jack. But In this they don't exaggerate, real, life very much. ' ,..f'.,.: A Chicago woman says men tire of pretty women, but hot of plain ones. This is because nretty women too often think that they need nothing but pret- tlncss. . .' . . It wis intimated In this column nnm weeks asro that the murderer of th Hills mlifht only be caught through his commission of one or more Identi cal crimes. . The new "lmnartal nntttntjtta' nt tha Mystic Shrlners is John p. Treat. Maybe nltr name leete1 him. ' Tf h' uvra up io ii, ne win go nroke. "John F. treat." a Bryan Is sometimes a humorist with. out knowing It that list of presiden tial avallables, for lnstanoe Tom Pat- 4 ... n Jt' 1 . . . n . -nmi, iw. .iji. aim a rma vvuiiama among tnem. . Delea-ate Wlekernham mvs that tti Aiaana aynaicate tne Morgan-oursen helm Interests la "an nrvanluil rim And he aeems to have plenty of proof - t A chansre In thm ehanaia! f fh Din uranae river give Texas 10.000 acres mora land. "Them a haa. wmtm " tt it nao .Deen Khode island, she would nave iqmz me lana. Those who live in Oresron in th lat ter part of the twentieth eenturv mnv iime rreqnenuy rvan an Item like this: "People of Coos Bay are Interested In a rumor that a railroad Is likely to b built to that region soon." Portland Is becoming celebrated far and wide as a fine convention city, es- fieclally In summer. It will become. If t isn't already, the favorite one. The new auditorium .will be built none too soon. ' a The Inference from Rev. Dr. Aked's statements about the rich church peo ple of New York city In that they are past hop: even he can do nothing with or tor them. They are "Joined to their Idols; let them alone." And yet . these same people give much money to con vert the ''heathen." Spoils System m Calrt From the San Francisco Bulletin. ' Through the revelation of the lncom- ORECON SIDELIGHTS Portland Dartlea are about to estab- iisn a cigar xactory at xuiamooa. Tha Samaritan hornital at Klamath Po n depravity that has long pre- . jraus. weu eaumnea. . nas jusc Deenivaiiea in iiie oonauct or mi innn- opened. i ' t J tutlon for th ilef n,l blind. California i. . -' (. W- ; A. t ,f .V I ' ' lis getting new light on the evils of ma flat wheels on streetcars. Power wire I china ruin. 'The ' mlinhln which ; until poles outside the ,eurb line are also I the first of the present year ad things oept even a school, for afflicted children from Its i custom'' giving state Jobs only to friends or friends' friends. Po-' lltlcal - Influence determined the choice Ar Uraalnss sbm4 shm mm w.ti 4 t r .aai Th opening of the public schools of I. ""Z"' Z 'XZZ jenaioton wur be postponed on wk, " " ' m - to September J8, In order to avoid con I " ooitrniina row Jong, wiey snouia , noia ineir posmnns. xnu it nanpenea.. that instruoloi'g who could never bavs. siooa tne taxi oran Intelligent merit. system lasted for years, to the areat demoraiisution of the institution, Complaints have bean frequent but Some of the stone In the new Preshv 11"' . """"ns stnoa pat. iunn mpast. terlan cHureh at Eunna la alraadv years nuiimroue errorts Wars mode to ' rtxuntKlln .) tm k.Ur. KantAa.aii TI-aha a I ll Sl ft sT Sa fM I al ttaMA' . 1a.iilatlH M. ..A v,i UflllHJH AMll tO MCIllff IPIIIVVtni. f IVfl I "e "WWHl nss BuuuiiirR wvrwj taot. VkH aaA.ll ... ms M . A a - M I . S - M a. . a i . . . . 'V " ubstitution.lt. now nocciBttry, - - ; MkeJ to tukt tha InUittlv Aid noth.i i onri Taa Tif "U tsY-,w.U -a.U aAk - aw au vuuivu w i am sivia nun i . nignt aunng the weea to get tne base-1 tmrmom m i,ir-;. mani or me new cnurcn in snaps to noid I rma up oi -unneccpaary trouKi, ' wmcn . regular Sunday services there In the might cmbsraas the state admlnlstra rutUre, ' . , I tlon. " Tt ramalnawf tnm nnvarani. Jnhn. Hlllsbore Argus: It Is said th. Oon. T"a" w"'nou.a navs neen aon. gregational churoh block at Forest woerea an invesiigauoni . Orove will have to nay about IJ000 for n order to get at the truth. . That was and mis makes me property tne' only way to assure the nshtlnsr of. A number ef farmers near Klamath Valla have combined ' to Durchas a drill rig. It will . soon be on the grpuna. ... - fllct of dates with the, Roundup, The numnlng apparatus, ordered by the city of Klamath, Falls to pump the sewage from the sump to th septlo ianK, nas arrived ana oeen insiaiiaa. paving. more or there Is leas of no income . from rentals.. ,.Pn' M wrongs. If such existed, and now that he is getting the truth be promises the . AMWlU that tK. Www.Ma will V. . .1 W . Eugene Register: The Oregon Power r.J v. Z , IT. 'Z. " ' company haa eha listed its, stock of r " "Z " ,"1 "-" . J" elecfrlo fans for sick people and has Governor Johnson has no delusion as . sent for an additional supply. A dbien to the eause of the evil which he lsv or more of these coolers are making called unon to combat. He lavs thaw chambers of many sufferers blame where tt h.inn. .t tW. i- f a Vicious system. "He 'etofore," he says, the bed more comfortable. Port Orfbrd Tribune: Leon D. Con-1 "the state instltiitltjs have been madei over of Minneapolis and C. Keller of Pa" 01 n "ie ponueal machine. I-,. Ohio are touring the coast In a one am going to stop this sort of thine I horse wagon and fins camping outfit am not at all sui prised at this testl . for their health. They propose to Win ter In San Diego, and then go on to lexas before returning home. The Dalles Chronicle: When im provements now being made at the head waters or Mill creek shall have been completed, the water-supply of The Dalles will be Increased 100 tier cent. according to the engineer In charge, who estimates the work will be finished beptember 16. SEVEN FAMOUS QUEENS Anne Jloleyn. were to be punished -after death by b- 1 n ff" .ntt Intn . hurnlna' fltm if flin watching tho process are enthusias-l -forever and ever." Those who didn't Gilliam and Morrow. Some who are tic in the belief that the sure to be profitable on areas. jrop Is present AH IMPORTANT RULING W THINGS HADK IX OREGON A r u COMPARISON OF the recent census with the figures of the last state census places the in crease In Portland's manufac- ', turing Interests for the five year per- I , ' lod at 93 per cent. ' j It should have been more. It was . In the power of the people of Port land and Oregon to have made it a f?v4retit deal more. The way to have Jne it was by scrupulous practice ;,t by Oregonians of buying Oregon- ; made articles. ' . If Oregon doesn't buy things mado ' In Oregon, who will? if Portland- , ers do not buy things made In Port j ' land,, who will? j v It Is notorious that manv fine ILLAMETTE valley lumber men are to have a rate on ' rough lumber and lath of 3.50 per ton to San Fran cisco, except on the Wendling branch from which the figure is to be $3.75. The new rate is the result of a decision by the interstate commerce commission. Its former order for a similar rate was voided by a court decision. The present ruling has for Its authority the new rate law passed by congress in June, 1910, and It will remain effective. The commission found the South ern Pacific a heavy earner of divi dends in Oregon, and declared that at the lower rate the company would profit handsomely from the lumber business. An Interesting phase of the com mission's finding is that the South ern Pacific In Oregon has net earn ings of $6196 per mile, while the net earnings of the Milwaukee are $2670 per mile, of the Northwestern sys tem, $2886; of the Burlington, $2755, and of the Illinois Central, $3299. The earnings of the South ern Pacific In Oregon are nearly dou ble the figures of the Illinois Cen tral, one of the hest paying roadB in the country. The Intervention by the commis sion will have large factorship in promoting the lumber industry of the Willamette valley. It was Im possible to ship the rougli lumber on a $5 basis. This 'pronouncement is made by the commission Itself. Transportation rates are the life or death of any Industry, and pecul iarly so In the case of lumber. The Willamette lumbermen are now as sured a ctahle rate that is fair alike to them and the railroad, and can go ahead and make contracts for de liveries that will stand unchanged from month to month and year to year so far as freight rates are con cerned. It is better for the millmen and better for the rallroaJ. get hell here would get It hereafter. I know people who will almost have a fit over the punishment of some "dumb brute." yet they will punish a If the inland country can grow I child without compunction. These peo- corn successfully, it wllUfttfome an pl8 rbably oppose the punishment of , . . 1 tiumu amjsieuB uvuuubv uiey are ue- corn neipea nrv. niMtra r kirir,. ,rr to build Chicago and was the Chief cry. Children cry, and thus furnish factor in the enrichment of the mid- them some little diversion and amuse dle west states. ' '"tl11- . . . ' every man ana woman wno nas stood Ir Columbus had crossed tho At- up boldly for the alleviation of human lantlc a century later it is believed suffering, especially the sufferings of he would have found a high state of th " "aligned and mis. ,, ..,. . a . .. understood. A few years ago, boys of Indian civilization here, and the tander age were arrested for the slight- cause Of It would have been com. est misdemeanors and thrown into prls Production of Corn was already on w,tn calloused Jail blrda and excon transforming some of the leading JZu'ZZl wTSS tribes from nomad hunters to crude should have been removed to proper sur agriculturalists when Columbus ar- roundings and given a chance, a great rived. Many had considerable hU6 and cry went up whMl Judg Lind flelds. nnd with their tnn mrt,r s!y'. f ew 8 .ago, dragged boys out ' or jau, paroieu tnem and gave them a relied on maize as a staple article chance to become useful citizens. This of food. The great Influence of a was , only a species of punishment in focd product in promoting clvillza- n" wljh U8 the rod- Boy" t.n . - , . 0 . 'Z, who had stolen a chicken were arrested ' wumR,ai uiajiiu, auu mis and thrown into Jail With confirmed agency, It IS declarer! would have criminals and vermin covered tramps built up an Indian civilization here JUlK8 i-mdsey fought the battle al if vessels had never crossed the At mo8t alon unt" n's good work was u vessels naa never crossed tne At- rec0(fnlzed Bnd after he hftd Baved the 1UI1ML. lives of mnnv hnvt jin1 trrln ' lLr Until recently, we have made but Judge Lindsey if he ever used a stick little imnrovement over the corn T rawhide- on any of his boys or grown by the aborigines. They de- g r "arr.e with the advnrM ftf rnr. veloped It from a grass In southern poral punishment that not every man Mexico, and migrating tribes brought ana woman exercising parental author tt northward onH lmr,rvod tt tn lty can manage children. Why? Be 1 ,a 1 7j r 1 ' cause they don't know how. They are the yield approximated the twenty- mcomnetent in the same wav that thev six nusneis per acre mat is now our would be incompetent to manage a flow national average er Rirdon. Children are going to obey Our annual corn vlold In thr hll and resPect tho whom they love and uur annual corn yield is tnree bll- know t0 be thelP frlends. There must ikhi uuHiveis, put Biuuems or tne be a bond of human sympathy between crop say that on the same acreage them and-their superiors and that bond It should develnn into iv hllllnna can never b created with a stick or ,. .... iv, iii,.uttn nt mttnt, T I..... . . .ii. 1 . n n v" 1 ' . w o.vn.. a. uava BBrn or even iweive Dimons. !x mnnth. m hhv .hrinir person and hold out Its arms to an- HIS WARLIKE VOICE other. Why? Because the baby's in stinct led it to understand that the first n A TV TT-TB! onHm.a person naa no sympathy for it. Child t- uL. . ., . . ren juace wun unerring accuracy the from Idaho has Hevburned. im.ix.- . '1 For the forty-eleventh time he will not trust themselves with those "First, then, a woman will, or won't-- depend on't; If she will do t. she will; and there's an end on'-t." Aaron' Hill. A IMAGKS OP IGNORANCE A POIGNANT AND searching criticism of child Hfo Is to bo laid bare in Portland next week. At the Star theatre. moving pictures of palpitating living Interest are to. be revealed. It Is t""UOT 1U rvrimua are largely mr- nnt tn hr. a .noMnnnlo. V,lkitnn. t niahed with furniture bought In dls- is to d-.al with every-day nroblems Importations iniln an every rfav wnv. ThA fllma i tant states. The these and other lines are well known to the trade. It Is a splendid way to hinder -the growth of Portland's manufacturing "' interests and to handicap the expansion of Portland town;,":i.jf; -'i,.' J: y.r:. Portland artisans ere as deft and skilled a any that, live." Portland fspltal can buy as effective machines and topis as are mada. ; Oregon wa ter powers can tarn the wheels of 9 many Industries a those An any vther. state. 1 Vi'.''1 to reproduce In all fidelity the won der scenes at those great child wel fare exhibits in New York and Chi cago. ' U vi. There are a vast number of moth ers in need of enllgh,tenment. Every" year countless'. baby; lives are eaori ficcd to Ignorance. It Is to reach such mothers that the welfare move ment has boon launched., . It r is to focus upon humanity's mind; In graphic detail the fact that the en- i who are by nature tyrannical and un kind. I once saw a parent beat a child with a hickory switch because the child could not grasp a problem In arlth metio. After the beating the child was so nervous and panic stricken that it COUld not linriprntftnri ihm mnat altimin. dered to Grant at Appomattox, he tary principle of the subject taught The remains the implacable and warlike teacher was a criminal and should have fn nf thA T.rt rn,,Do Deen ""eaiea as one. 1 Knew of a woman . ...... ... who threw a stick at a little boy and The comrades of the blue and the crippled him for life. We ail know of the soldiers of the gray stand with hands woman who killed her stepdaughter a Clasped all over the country, and. as rew weeks ngo because she could not flaunted the bloody shirt in the senate Tuesday. He never smelled gunpowder In wartime, but is always a frantic echo of 1861 in 1911. As though be had never heard that Lee surren- the breezes blow, tho palmetto and the pine nod to each other the i.oet lnga of twin districts In a united country, but the uncompromising warrior still Heyburns. Sometime, when a warlike spell conquer her. If there Is 'a hell hereafter It would seem that some of these rhlld beaters were a sort of fuel which Satin is having seasoned for future use, but such U not nature's plnn. These people should not be punished hereafter for their cruelty to children; they should Is on the senator, somebody should be ",ven a chftnc to grow and in the take him to a slaughter house and f af "" "Tip them"lv"- feed him on raw liver and swine's blood. Let him Heyburn at an abattoir. GEORGE W. DIXON. HIS DEFENSE A The Composite Citizen. Portland, Or.. July 19. To the Editor of The Journal. With great satisfaction the Oregonian quotes some remarks of C.n.in. a,i.1.AM1r.n tUm . Itl . ., TDDDrxWI'trf n ttj . . t wuiiiuniu, uin iuaiuz?a poll- SPRINGFIELD, Hines boast- ttclan of .Utah, in regard to the "com ea tnat we put Lorimer over." posit citizen." The Utah senator would At Washington, he testified raak " aPPar the-word "com- . - J TlalSaltaV1 1SI riAtallrQl ' AhIu - that he never said It. . STIi 11 r.rj:'"Z i' , . ..... fiw.w.isi W UB01WJ Lit 11 U Kill In Illinois, he openly declared to edition of Webster Is expurgated, for several persons that It renulred $100,000 to. elect Lorimer. In Washington, he testified that he never skid It, Webster gives first the ordinary, com mon meaning of "Composite," which Is 'made up of distinct parts or elements. compounded."1-" The second Is the ar chitectural definition, -.and the botanical All . that remains - is In Chicago, he solicited $10,000 definition, used by Benator Sutherland, ip tiiw nut u. r u ' contributions from big . Interests to elect Lorimer. At Washington, he testified that he did not do It Rathei queer. Isn't it, that the word "composite" is not understood by a man from Utah, where the "composite" fam- At Springfield, he used without i1 l Jsaraea religious rather nthnrltif th . nroal.nt'- " -...uuD -raannesiauonT ' v -vv-v The Mormon church,, while not a botan- urglng Lorimer election. At W&shA leal : exhibit, is a1 "composite" institu ington, he testified that he. did not tlon' Its parts or elements Debar erooke do It v. - i ' ' (ht- ' f politics, conscienceless commercialism, .vi" ' ' ' '''.'''.'."'.. '' aensuallty and-"' hagiocracy. ; . Senator 'i.IK,rfon,.llcl,Ml?, Sutherland.;" Indebted to Anne Boleyn was the second queen of the oft-n.arried Henry VIII, one of the most plsturesque figures in English history. At the time when he fell In love with his second wife the English court had become extremely dull and senate. Henry himself was not especial ly endowed with brilliant talents, and his elderly wife, Queen Katherine, was severely plain and unusually de vout. It was somewhere between 162S and 1527 that this lovely woman, the daugh ter of an English nobleman, burst upon the placid and stupid atmosphere. Anne had spent her early life at the French court, which was as eay and wicked as England's was stupid. In France she had acquired the dash and clever ness of that court, and naturally, upon her return hoi.-j to become maid of honor to the queen, she took the English court By storm.. Almost Immediately she set herself to work to win King Henry. This was no difficult task with such a fickle. nature. She aimed for the throne, and It was but a short time until she had hit the mark. Soon as Henry came to admire her. he made her a marchioness and heaped rich gifts upon her. She feigned lnfiifference, which was. part of her garre, but she gave, the king to understand that she was willing to become the queen of England. Henry promptly decided to divorce Katharine. He claimed that as she had been his brother's wife, he professed to have qualms of conscience as to the legality of such a marriage. , lie called on the pope to sanction a divorce, but his holiness refused. Henry thereupon tore England away from the church of Rome, altered the form of the country's religion and declared himself sole head of the English church. They were married in 1583, and Anne was crowned queep on May 19. They had been wedded but a short time when Henry began to show weariness for his new"' wife. , There has always been, and probably always will be, a mystery in the fact that Anne Boleyn so soon lost the affection of the king. She did i Tanglefoot By Mflea Overholt AND FISH. not lose her heautv anil hor vnntti mnA accomplishments, together with her wl" om P-"1 benefit to the people pleasant disposition. It has developed ,0J "iT "nu" " onf " . , pie keep their state government out of Z " V . "'"lry. the control of pelltto.il maohlnes. ...... " d,ij,,,v p4iu Bin 4x1 nor ivve of pleasure and gossip, and had the most foolish habit of constantly laugh ing. Anne had neither dignity nor self poise in her relations with her maids of honor- or of her conduct with the entire court. She allowed herself to be on terms of intimate gossip with ner laaies-in-waiting, and the young guiiams or tne court could make Jokes wun ner. in seeing her about Katherine of Aragon, Henry had thought her a merry girl with an unusual sense of humor. But when he saw her as wife and quean take delight la simple tattle. T"ea "i, . 7 7a?M Anna 1 1 d0 not mind the weather much, really had. Anna Boleyn had a maid T hv mt nn mnil wlahr of honor, Jane Seymour, equally young I'm used to rain, heat, wind and such, , Him aiiracuve as nerseir, yet with more I 1 oniy wane 10 nsn. dignity. AS queen No. 2 had craftHy supplanted quoen No. 1, so Jane now proceeded to supplant Anns. So suc cessful was the maid of honor that Anne's many enemies at court found the king a willing listener when they brought him stories false- or true of his wife's unfaithfulness. Anne was tried for her life, sentenoed and condemned to death. The day be fore ner execution, which took place on I care not for the dust or mud, I do not mind the snow, I only want to chew ray end ; And fish for shad Bnd roe.. And mountain trout, and bass and pike; I love the bamboo's swish. Ah. that's the kind of sport I like- To fish ana risn and nsn. THE NATURAL BORN FOOL. They were selling the suicide's per-' sonal effects at auction. The people ... VJJJI.. 1...HJ1. .V. May 19, 1536, she asked the governor ..ln( ..r. ,,.'.,, z,-., . f th. tn.r it .,. ,.. roundings were extremely gruesome. "That oertalnly la a more-bid crowd," of the tower If she was to die before noon, for she wished to be dead and past her pain. The governor assured her that her sufferings would be brief. To this she replied that she had heard It said the executioner was kind, and her neck was a very little one. Then she laughed heartily. The day after Anne's head fell from the block. Henry married Jane Sey mour, wnen Anne was m prison await ing execution she sent her husband this remarkable message: "From a private gentlewoman you have made me first a marchioness, then ' a queen. And, as you can raise me no higher in the world, you are now sending me to be a saint in heaven. Tomorrow Catherine de MedleL men church for his seat in the senate, should know what "composite" means. Does the Oregonian? The Oregonlan's approval of Senator Sutherland's revision of- the dictionary may, perhaps, be 'regarded merely as its attempt to maintain the balance of ab surdity. W. 0. EQGLESTON. Water Problem Becoming Grave. Arleta, Or., July 18. STo the Editor of The Journal Can nothing be done to mitigate the water famine now staring us In the face here in the Reservoir Park section of Mount Scott .district 7 The old Well and pumping plant that bas been supplying water to the, resi dents since they purchased their lots from Herman Metzger is about worn out and wholly inadequate to the de mands of a rapidly growing population. we can stand seeing our lawns bum up and our gardens destroyed for want of water, but when tt 'comes to leaving our homes and families absolutely with out protection against fire after 9:20 o'clock p. m., at which hour the water supply is usually shut off for the night. it seems as though the limit of endur ance haa been reached. Some day The Journal , and other Portland "papers will chronicle a fearful holocaust with great loss of life In this section of Portland unless something Is don very soon.: One good, fire at night and thlar whole neighborhood stands a good chance of being wiped out ' ... -, " . . ' Now that the city has swallowed the elephant - by purchasing the Woodmere and Fleck water systems for ; a good big sum, why should It strain at a gnat and refuse to' purchase the little Mets ger plant for the trifling sum for which It may be bought? K.- ''(.: The only reason J can see why Mr. Simon did not give us neoded relief is because he felt hurt at the big vote Our district , gave A Mr. Rushlight. Since then tha newly elected mayor ha de clined to purchase any smay private water plant Are we to be punished for giving: our -loyal support- to Mr. RushllgrhtT ;'' ..-h:)-.M. RICKERT. ,, The lleason. ,, 'From the Michigan - Gargoyle. Georare Didn't you notice that1 I pressed your foot at the dinner tonight T Maxii wny, it wasn't my root you pressed. Oh, George," 1 wondered why mamma was smiling so sweetly' at the Marse Henry Advises Mr. Taft.' From the Baltimore Sta Dlsnatnh Washington, July 12. "Marse Henry" Watterson has spared President Taft ths sting of an editorial attack by sug gesting to him in a personal letter that it might be wisei for him to postpone his contemplated visit to Kentucky until after the elections which will be held in the Blue Gress state next November. Mr, Taft had made an engagement to aiiena tne dedication of the Lincoln Farm, at Hodglnsvllle, Ky., on October 28. In November the Republicans of tnat state will make a desperate effort to place Judge O'Rear irl the guberna torlal chair. Marse Henry told the pres ident that the Democrats of Kentuoky mignt see in his visit anl effort to aid the Republican candidate, and this might cause considerable resentment mere. c ,1he president has accepted Marse Henry's suggestion in good faith, and to aay wrote to Governor Wlllson of Ken tuoky asking that the dedication exer cises be postponed until soma tlma in November,- after the election. 1 He said that he could visit Kentucky between November 15 and 26, If that time were agreeac-ie 10 tne Kentucklans. ; , . The Kentucky campaign, it is stated. win nave consiaeraoie national import ance In showing the trend of political sentiment. -- ' v - - ,; A Pious Town, . From the Los Angeles Times! Religion reigns at Baldwin, Kan. The hotel will not keep cigars. . The banks are opened with prayer,- . Texts of scrip ture addrn the walls of ths barber shops, saloons exist not, sad no unregeneratod man can hire a livery team. All cro- Jectod public improvements are referred to a civlo society called the Methodist brotherhood, and not a sewer Or a side walk can be laid without first securing their approval... Baldwin Is the home of superannuated preaohers. . Not a euss word haa .been spoken In Its streets since last winter, when a stray tourist was fined for mentioning that he had visited the .'Roosevelt i.mii'yjt ?w ?'?" ... . ' . - - ;" ."."".'" f'-' 1 ' ' - . Discomfort. . v s . From the 'Washington Star. - f ;,' " "Is a fat man necessarllr uncomfort able in- warm weather r?": 2' Si'. : - ? '. V-r "He la" if be listens to - all the re- marks his -friends make about him." remarked the natural born fool, and th 5 o clock whistles whistled, a streetcar crashed noisily into a plate glass win dow, a policeman walked down ths street with a dull, sickening thud, then aU was still. FROM THE NUT FACTORY. The fellow was erasy and bugs as could be; ( I know it's a fact for hs whispered te me: "Did you ever," said he, "sea a big bull ' doar flee LFrom a big bull dog fleat Glory bar A cyclone rased a Kansas town, But none were killed that day, aur I say, the folk were all unhurt It was a safety racer 1 Ha was a bravevbaIIoonlst and a gentle man of class, He flew from cloud to cloud like any skeeter. His girl was full of rushness, ths bal- loon was full of gas . And that is why, of course, he went : to meterl His Substitute, w From Llpplncotfs. A well-known revivalist, whose worl has been principally among the ne groes of a certain section of the south, remembers one service conducted by him that was not entirely successful. , He had had very poor attendance, and ' spent much time In questioning the darkles as to their reason for not at tending. "Why were you not at our revival T" ' he asked one old man whom hs en s countered on the road. "Oh, I dunno," said the backward one. . ; . "Don't you ever pray?" demanded ths preacher. ' . - The old man shook his head. "Ne." said he, "I carries a. rabbit's foot - -. A Little Hotly (Contributed to The Journal ht.Wilt v.. i tba famoua Kanaas poet.; Hla proaa-potma are a' recular featur of tbla column. in Th. Ti.n Juurnal.) - . " " I have a little hobby, arid ride it averv day, and it is fine and nobby, and swell and reshershay. If people would' but heed it, this world would brighter be, for all tH nations need it as much as liberty; But when I would expound It, the people all . disperse; ' I hear them say, , "Confound It!" Sometimes they even curse. And when a friend I vli. he whispers, at the door: ''Here comes . tne great wnat is it the champion village bore!". ; NO matter where I travel, toe same old tale is told: I sum f men scratching gravel when they my form behold. They raise their m. brellers, these timid, nervous souls-' th- crawl into the cellars, they shin up lofty poles, v Old women .always dodge me. '; likewise the village , beiioa.: ta uw they'd like toV lodge me. in Jails or padded colls. ; Ths road a( rough and " rutty on which my trllbys tread; e'en children say I'm nutty, and - throw things at my head. And so I'm sad and sobby, ; my voles to sorrow t pitched! I 4 Copyright, 1011, hy - Vr, mony. it Is a. system that has grows. I up, and I mean to tear it down: ForA I merly, when the Southern Paclflo oon-l trolled the state Institutions, ths system 5 flourished, and 5 suppose that if every f institution in the state were lnvesti gaed as this one is now ths same con ditions would be found to have existed in them. But It will not be so here after." Wrong breeds wrong. Under the spoils, system the conditions in some state institutions were, of course, worse than in others, but all suf fered and none attained the efficiency that might easily have been attained under the merit ayste-n. Now there la to be a change, and through that chansre wp aiaivaew Aaama. At: