The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, November 12, 1911, Page 17, Image 17

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    HIE OUtCOU SUNDAY JOUKNAU K)KVLAND. 8 UN DAT UOXKXKO. NQVEliBES It. 15U.
THE JOURNAL
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fcaM4 IH 4 aiftlaa ftfttov.rd 4rfttloftft of Ihft Imt. lleory
flrrftmt4ftr, l.ft ri4a to ron4.. N.w York b4ftkr ftn4 rp-
plcftOft. l4-4 la ib4 ftfttloftftj 4.jt4tft of flftftftrft, vftyft br r fore
4. mm tow, T 407C00Q oa m Tri corporation rt pnr fti hitftr br :r4 tor b Icnoraar.
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w 0R4 or vi ft-Mftior ia bo4 oaaaa 114 ooinf a!D444 in "tioifttioo or g,,,,,- ,l)fh Uf, M h,. toTth4.
for 4ftl or wo, rftfttft ftolhorltf of Ith 8brtnfta Uar-ftBJ la an "yiilif ... ,. r.n-a in F.ni.n,t - Th rh.11.
lrChiUtlag for 1.46.oeo pooplft. If- orcaatiatltm. Thai It to aajr. It 'drii'o fhart.r "
la lift aorifti ora.r. 11 ia ioniu br trtx of lalio, and
" - nrBr fTi oor ny mnoraor.
Bl4tJ-r It4 4 lh4T4by dl-;.h, ,0T hld ri.H-d f fol
urftf44 ftiH continiHlon. Th.Hfhu , (o,muIlH); from ,4l-r -fcfh
d! hhr. .art!, t4
Cro44 tna. or rove444 oldl4r
Biakr on dlffprrtic 10 bin. And la
thl thft Itkttaa fB4al niftf ell
mk4 op thtr aalfidft,
III. J. m
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Ift
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w av aw w w 4w-w - w a - I IJ ft J "7 4 4 ft ftl flW t 4 w VJ-"
Tbft Iftftdftr ftpoftka lb tbofttjbt that tloa of lb tariff that Mr. Cart.ca-1
ta donaaiit la men. iBladt and I baa am44 ao manr bundrftda of
Iftlrbtna It lato Impalftft. Th rro-J mlllloo. that hit bfto.fartlona now
at foHowlor. And ftt one lb par I at tTftcatft more than ItOO.ooO.OOO.
'ity of le4rrblp U. ta ft ftftlf Kr- Maaotlmft flcurr-a irltoo out by th
,ninBt. ft44rntlal la uatlnaaj safety, caaaua oa th 17th of October ahow
J Other leader may b tnorft wide- that thft arerafft wict of lodoatrlal
;ly known. Others mar b tnor reg. worker ta NftwTork City la $SS.OI
alarly In tbft public . Dnt there I per year. rWretary Nagti of th d-
la not on who refWta ft parer par-1 part merit of rommerrft nd labor of-
po4 or rnoro etaltftd Ideal a than I flcUllr report that th 10.000 men
'dor Senator Got of Oklahoma. Ills) I employed la tbft Iron ftnd ateol In
;otft In th ftenatft, hit brilliant Id utry of thft Caltod BUte work -
apeerheft and Ma conaUtent public I en days a week. On fourth of them
endearor are ftloqoent ftTldtnc of work a twoltft-honr day erery dar
hl vplendld atftteamftnahlp. I In the week. Including Sunday. It
" 8nator Gore la extrftordlDftry. Hftlla the contraat In tftft conditions
Is not thft otuftl senator. !! la not nd tb ftbftorptlon of millions by
a common placft stateaman. II Is of (few men that Is contributing to th
senatorial tutor In all thing. nd growth of Socialism.
on of th bratest of th bratft. in 1894 there wer but 34.374
Socialists In thft country. Then cam
CANADA'S DAMAGED CROPS tb reign of Mark llatina in politic
and J. P. Morgan and John Rock.
TIIK ll.I.K.K WOJ1AXH VIKW
"A
T
Tor (1rt44a4a fba-r4V.
ranliM. I T4 k4 r4Hr 44
TKa Jou.aal I m W4 at4aa44 wtlft
rtr tli.i eaareralBft "A Haaa Cbi1(
mti " ha 4 tvr ta jr4r ftVtaraft
Ik4 ftrarrralio 4f lh 44r (44 II la) br
j mi.f fr nillef I Hair effr4 with lh
HE terle. of arilrle ftnent Ihelh' 4a4 fn"T t ihaa. wh4 44441
AXCTKXT tIL"
aotlftl etll. beglftalng In the
current number of McClurVa
magatlna, from tb4 pen of that
remarkabla philanthropic and oron
omltt, Jan Addama of Hull llou.
come at ft timely moment. It ta
timely because "such writing la Ilk
the roll of th drum which announce
th approach of the troops ready for
action." It la timely becau. our
people re "no longer ner bewil
dered apectator of a given aoclal
wrong, but conaclont of their own
hypocrisy In regard to It, partici
pators In a hidden horror which had
corns to aeem normal."
Miss Addama' Initial article la the
nOUT thft 1st i of Septftmber, fe,Ier'n buBjneM. ror four 7ehn
isst, in arsjn cropft or weau flotations of watered aecurltles, and
era Canada Indicated y14 th incroaslng operatlona of nig Bua
approxltnkUng 175 million ... ft ., in 190o. the num.
bntbela of wtjaat, 10 tnllllona of ber of .ociaints had 'Increased to
oats, 35 millions of barley, and aev- 27 663
n million bushels of flat-. Then A'fter'that came the presidential
continued wet weather, hall fttorma, term extending to 1004 during which
and rust damaged the crop Teryaerl- RooieTeit was three yecra in the
;ously. Now It Is reported from Win- WM, iiAnM. nut thev were rears
.alpeg that between 30 and 40 mil- during which the teel trust, the
lion bushels of wheat lies burled karrester trust and other titanic bus-
Ana wortniess unaer a root or now ,neM organilAtion were in a riotous
in the prairie provinces of western
Canada.
The old proverb said "Call no
man fortunate until he is dead
This may be modified now into "Call
, no wheat farmer fortunate until his
. crop 1 in the elevator,". I JThe . sh
eerest sympathy must b felt for
these Canadian prairie farmers, who
nave seen their hopes blasted by vl
cissitudes of climate which wrought
destruction . on their wheat when
they believed themselves sure of re
turns Justifying; their enterprise and
I industry. To many of them this
.'calamity means worse than loss, it
pells ruin for their all was staked
on this bumper crop that smiled on
them through the long month of
summer in rain promise.
- There are no other resources on
these wheat farms no dairy her4,
no cattle, hogs' or orchards that
-eerte to keep hopes alive till next
year's crops shall ripen. This catas
trophe ia a text which will carry
home the lesson of diversified crops
and stock resources for the pros
perity of the farmer.
WOMJEX AS JURORS
P
kERHAPS It was merely the
Los Angeles spirit. Perhaps it
was a,n off day.
Anyway, 12 sovereign wo-
men acting as Jurors saw troublous
:: itlmes In a Justice court at Los An
geles. So did the Justice.
V The .defendant was charged with
speeding. Signs of disagreement
first appeared when it was time to
go to lunch. Each of ten sovereign
cltlzenesses insisted on going: to dif
ferent eating places, and the remaining-
two refused to go at all. ' The
. , hungry justice tendered his good of
'flces a mediator on where to lunch
but the breach was beyond com-
, promise. ; . The cltlzenessea were as
unmanageable as bunch grass horses,
and at 1:30 p. m., In despair and
minus hi lunch, his honor locked
them, up for further deliberation and
awaited development. . ' -
Until five o'clock the discussion
' awetit on and thft. fur flew In the jury
mom. Twelve enfranchised .women
prated and - fulminated, over the
jA.criu ajsd demerits of tbft speeder.
extension of their monopolistic oper
ations, and In 1904 the country was
startled by the count of 426,376 So
cialist ballots. . ' -
During the next four years came
the awakening of the public con
aclencft. Roosevelt assumed a. lead
ership in restraint of gigantic com
binations. It was four years of the
birth and growth of restrictive reg
ulations, equitable liability in in
dustrial accidents, arbitration of la
bor disputes and conservation of the
national resources. It was an era of
seeming reaction against Mark Han
nalam, Morganlsm and Rockefeller-
ism, and though the Socialists count
ed on more than a million votes at
the succeeding election, their total
vote was only 448,463. It was a
growth from 1904 to 1908 of but lit
tle more than 20,000 in th. Social
ist vote.
The figures are history and carry
their own conclusions. Men are striv
ing blindly to resist the processes by
which one man earns $160,000,000
over night and another working 12
hours a day and seven days a week
receives a total of 1556.02 in a year,
It Ib the Carnegies, the Morgans, the
Garys, the Perkinses, the Fricks, and
the party . leaders who Berve them
that are making more and more So
cialists.
The. one way to again check the
spread of Socialism is for a prdgres
slve Republicanism and a progressive
Democracy to gain ascendency and
send lawbreaking trust magnates to
Jail.
rrrM in t-44 (I 40 Urt4hlv. Maajr ra
lmpll4 10 4p4J all lhar kr la ft
rr lth th4lr rl-Hr ftl444 44 4lsb
Her Tt4 a loon Dfl dMral4 444 o
hrll.h tli.lr 4a4rlBs lha rlll4n
ha maf t4 4441114 lhl war. (Th
V (hat 144 li lha "al 4 af h4ft)
br Ihrlr airalnt of entitle "4 tllllvrtnf
l!f hi C P. a.
HIRTY year ago women
were asking for wider col
lege opportunities and tbftt
tbn opport unities should
b Identical with ihoae offered to
men," comment The Outlook edi
torially. "Today they are urging a
rhanicw In th roller. curriculum bo
that women may bar the benefit of
courses hearing directly upon their
especial work In life aa women.
They are in a position to accept tbft
advice, that President Eliot gav to
thft Aaaoclatlon of Collerlat Alnm-
nae flv veara a so when It celebrated 'nP ttement of trutba by a mil
ita quarter-centennial In Boston. ,Uot Intelligence. Sh. likens tbft
You have nroved that rou ran do "white slavery" that menaces the
what men do.' he said In substance. n,t,on of tMl,T to ,n,t other black
now lend your atrength to securing menace that was uprooted by the
for women opportunltle for study of WBr- ma "l ineT
what affecta them vitally uch sub- r" em&lded In man's earliest hls-
JecU as hygiene, biology, aanltatlon. ""7 ntT "e11 nown to sway oe-
and the home ftnd the family in their fore an enlightened publlo opinion
historic and economic aspects.'" D(1 ,n ln end to give way to a
It waa at the annual meeting of growing conscience, which regards
thft Association of Collegiate Alum- inm M n ner impossinuity,
nae In New York recently that this rltft Miss AddAms. "Thus the gen
chansre of attitude ahowed Itself, nation before us, our own fathers.
Three rears atro the association b. uprooted the enormous upas of
gan an investigation Into the social 'ery, 'the tree that waa literally
and economic standards by which the as old as tne race or man,' aitbough
college woman must be measured "lavery doubtless had Ita beginnings
when she enters active life. It re- In the captives of man's earliest
suited In provision being made for warfare, even as this existing evil
courses of study in law relating to thus originated. Certainly
contracts, property, banking, social all of the national societies have be
and domestic relations. And, now, fore them a task only less gigantic
we have the association throwing its than that faced by those' earlier aa-
Influence toward those "courses sociations in America ror tne sup-
bearing directly upon their especial I presslon of slavery. The put in objection to city council and it
wrir 1 iifa women." - lone strncrele 'ahead of these newer wi omila. wsyr K. B. T,
This step on the part of the as- associations may also claim its mar-
-..- 1- -..'-I.- T I. Ul.kl.. I.. an1 4a horn. IT1 A IS .larM.nn.
aociauon ib reau..i.t,. i uu., p,.- m , . LenrerlOR, Net. ITO th Kdlt.r f
sane. It lends hope to the future, causes have escaped baptism with -n,, jouriurt 1 ish to teU you of the
For, if there is one problem that is blood, and, 11 one may parapnrase experience of my son, 17 years of r.
in nrcrnt need of the nroressive Lincoln's speech, if blood were ei- Tuesday h went to th Portland
. ."" . " .:" l v. a Employment, Office and paid them
Dram 01 me irainea cuiregu eiperi auiou uioy uj- u.uy in mc.u. lu dollar for ft poaltlon. They sent him
it is that of domestic science. It is the tears of anguished mothers and t0 , P4rty named Botoh, who excavates
oiih miMect "as hvelene. bloloev. enslaved eirls. the nation would still batemente. shoveling the dirt Into
sanitation, and the home and the be obliged to go into the struggle." ni. They told Bh
family in tneir nisionc ana oconom- otisb Aauamn bibicb mo wiu.uun BB day After he had worked half a
le asnects." that are In urgent need with regard to tne- gtri importeq day he got dollar and was dla-
of elevation. from abroad and traces her course
If woman would show heri super!- through the sordid and revolting
or mentality to man, if she would maze of demoralization without ret
fulfill bfer destiny to the better- icence. She makes plain the diffl
ment of the entire world, let her cultles presented in the control of
commercialized vice' ; by political
bosses. "Were this Instinct (the in
stlnct for protecting youth and In
nocence which every kindly man on
the police force doubtless possess
es) freed from all political and ex
rralara Patio Rierll.
Portland. Or, Nov. . T4 th Bdtler
nt Th Journal I want lo I hank row
fr clvliif rxr r44r rhanr ta raad
lh arfiion4 ef I"4t or C T. Rua4lL
fr ihr4 v4r4 I har ba rwadlaar ft4
lud)lns hi wrlllns and ihourh wffli
of lhm r Vontrary to what lb
rhurrh4 nd th world sorrUt hr
lausht. I 4m comp4ll44 to ball lba
he la eorract 4nd I th4 arttt Btbl
tcbolar I h4V4 vr 144
On4 thins for which I hJl alwara
fl arrateful ta blm la that h he ra-
tti4V4d from 44 many mind th night
mat of eternal torment. Ho ha not
knocked halt out of lb Btbl,- b4 h
hat knock44 h4ll out of boll. ad anni
hilated the moil horrtbi and drillb
doctrln4 v4r laveated by man.
WIIUAM IKIaV
tr Pipe Com Illgh.
fr N. lTn (h Mltn.
of Th Journal I wlh you could n-
Ilsht4n our poor bewlldtfad bra In a. our
homo ttandt on two lot on a oomr.
Klfteen yrar to wat4T pipe were laid
on a aide atreet aao in eraer 10 nave
water w had connection put In on that
aide. Recently the street In front wet
ptvad. 40 father had a plumber put In
water conneotlont for lntldt lot on that
atreet. for which ha paid 17.40. Did
not put one In on corner lot, aa It waa
connected on aide ttreeL The water
department, or whoever bad chars, put
on In aratnet our wlah and tbft tame
thine; that father paid 17.10 It put In
with street Improvement ataeaament and
anaeaaed 114.80. Why th extra prlcftT
Why doea one 50x100 lot need twowa-
er connection ana tne lot ib way out
In th auburba and realdence dlatrlct?
444 ft e44 4fnr4 rr4 ftWlh44
444 Ik4 rHoa tuab4t wh .
4Bt AI44I4C lata tft 4iahU I
Ki r era t hit m.
"Iteadr. ." 4 144 ea-nraand.
At lha Bovnd r Aiw4ira 4i tb
a f lb yll.v bUake pHck44 up
hi 4 r a
1lor4i In I In 4." anm444d Atal4.
nil r44l4 ftlUBS 4B4Ui 14
A44l4. 44 r HIU ft 4t44 44 I f.r-
ai4k n.4 4 lrt4.
TK rtr 44l44i r C4a44'ft fttwly
)- 4 trlft 44rU4nl will 4ftft
V4'44aar Tft prarwadtaaTft Ml b4
flrel fter will ft parvlr farn4l 44 4f
a resile rh4rrr. Ta aareaaotilal
arlas by hi rrl hlthnaaa. lha dak4
f foaaattahl. will Ik4 tlr Thuraft-.
4M ftmoiia to ft a ! f op-
lloaal hflllUarr Th fturalle ftf th I throw Ih4 r allow blnkt fram hi. krk
r4rtlamaiarr a44lo a4 lb iiinl an ( lh old nae Ib4 ferward. A )re
rhr4ri4r af th b a. 1 444 I ft Iran-1 aklnnr f r-oocoliloa and lh a brow a
4cl4 ar larcalf aroftUatalleat laoa to" up and dowa Alaatar
Atnoa Ih4 Importaat fatharlac erlaleava The aiartlad Hrt.l taoh an
Ih4 44li will h lh aaaual eaBntlo I look 44 wllh a U.4 rr ihrw . . .
of t4 Anvrtc44 r4rait4 4f Laear 4t4uad lha 4ld f4lloW aaeh.
aiiaaia; in annual con wmoa or thai - 1nnr.tin'.hlitw. a. .n .k..-.
Am.firaa Road ItulldarW 44oclalWa U I rood!" aboulxt ha
Roeh44i4r; lha 44ltns ef th4 Trana-1 And Dunaar.and.hlii. it ...
tt44l4lpp renm4ft-lJ Con are at Kbr-Ij, atlah and whlnnrt of th old
aa mr; na cver.nuon or th. Am4rt-Inar told ihla (iii.. .......... ....
ran A4-tlln for lh. tadf and Pr4- I wondarlna; nffleera wanted to know who
r-ailoa of lafant Mortality at Chleatro, waa Dunner und-blltaan. Atwater told
and lh eofivaotlo Bad ahrbltlon ftf the ihero-told lham. tmng man thmi.h ha
A.m.iioftj. Applft Cona-T tn lT.r. It.. wUh ft rhok. In hi vole. 4d Tom
tiaer rnfa or tnor 4r 1444 later! 1 1.1-. ..-i... ...h :
an Imaorf.ne .III ... ...... I . I ..." " " " ' "
4U4t of ih4 Canadian Hub of Nw York.
Ilda
Munnar.ond-bltli
a waa one the
w" '""ini or in au.icMMii tnt horat tn th Now Tork pollc da
mnum4nt. oa P..r4bUr b4ttlef!ld partment II. .lood II h.d. h KWi
nd t Vallr Forte, tb l'nll4 Rtat th tloa of hit allkea eoal J... hlnT
I-nd and Irrlft.tlo E p-.lt. on I. Chi. po!t laivart wrk" .r.h!
:.,Bbtt;iaTu'u,ft4.d,h,rr :k'i
1 .... . ... nivrmni rmnisr. iniri
Mtohlstft and rannarlvaala, and Wtcon-
m nq iinD4ol4 ualveriltl.
Tanrlcfoot
By MUe
Orerbol
FATHER OANDER'8 MCLODtES..
fftiMMi A
I
Th pit; once waa (and Is no doubt)
A product of the pen;
Tt'a hlajh-er ret than moun-taln trout,
Ita act-lona like tome men.
In Tfiri aaonft poor folk Ilk you ,
We're wont to book their clothe.
And sell their llt-tle chll-dren, too.
And buy pig's hock and toes.
as aplrlt Jn hi aln. fir In hi ...
and the way he held hla head waa th
bo l of all who knew him. Hi waa ral.
brl4d. too, 44 ft catcher of runaway.
i.nc wnen ma naer. deaa and gon
the many year, waa buay with tn
offender In tide etreet. down th
boulevard ram 4 mtddaned truek
bore, a Ilttl4 child In It path. Not
Wftlttng for hit rider nor a I tit from
htm, Dunner-und-bliuen daahed out Into
tno rotdwty. riantlng hlmtnlf with
four feet.tet firmly on the ground, ha
waited for tha ruth. When it cam a ha
fell beck a oerond. then turned, and.
catching the bridle of the runaway tn
hla teeth, he raced a block beelda th
truck hfraa tutting with all . th
ttrenarth of hla ttout heart until ht htd
brought It back upon Itt baunchee. v
erat feet thla aide of the HttU child. .
T at act made Dunner-und-blltien
famou- In the police department, and
Atwater, hie voire a-trftmbla, recalled It
to the Liberty avenue fore whll pom
old Dunner-und-blltten atoodf by, toll
worn, half ttirved and marked with
many blowa the forlorn object of a
mighty comedown.
Where Dunner-und-blltten earn fmm
nobody knowe. All that It known It fc
A
that two years ago he becametoo old
for further uae In th police depart-
mwi,na wun mat xmaiy return which
tha big, rich city of New York, makea
to the hortea that hare served it in..
Bome-tlme with ftereft ex-trar-a-gmnea, I od ffttthfully la. police or fire depart
If cropt were good that year. I ment. It nut runnr-iind.Hm... C.
While rich folkt looked up-on aa-kanoft, thft block for tale to th. hirh..,
Th.ey d buy a chunk of ateer. Plainly, th. highest bidder had not
And than again a elm-pie guy, DCf,n ama to mm. Maybe it waa tha
n-rai.aa tha nrln ara nhain. ' I dally grind Of ft Junk waa-on that tr.a.
Some-ttmea, aay once a year, would buy I formed him from the pride of Prosoect
In niinfl A a. 4 av r 0 adaan I Da .1. taaftaa 4L. . M . . "
An ounce or two of theep.
But that was long ago, my child.
So let's for-get the peat;
We'll feaat to-day on cab-bagt mild,
Ana ieaa a lire inat't ratt.
raise housekeeping and its attend
ant features to the standard of other
twentieth; century institutions.
WHERE
CROSS AND
CLASH
CRESCENT
SEVEN "NEW" WOMEN
Aspaslo,'
T
CHILD WELFARE
HE effect on every community
where such, an exhibit has been
made as was shown In the Port
land Armory last week has been
to et people thinking on what their
own duty is to the children of this
nation. ";.
i In -Chicago particularly the sight
of the various child workers, spend
ing their Immature strength in in
dustries to which they were driven
through the pressure of grinding
poverty, was as a spur to the dor
mant conscience of all classes of the
people. ' 1 ' .
. For rcmedleft we tavo to go fax i
F
ROM the days of tj Prophet
Mohammedanism has been a
fighting faith. Born in Ara
bia it; has carried through
thirteen centuries the impress of the
burning rocks, the arid deserts, the
infrequent wells, the palm covered
oases sdand, last, but not least, the
fierce fanaticism of Its first Arab
converts. With the Koran in one
hand and the sword in the other the
early . armies of the Moslems swept
from Arabia 'north, south, east and
west, crushing all opposition either
from Christian or s heathen races.
until they, recoiled from the bloody
field of Tours in France, and from
the very walls of Vienna.
'". Through the centuries they have
known and tried no other means of
proselytism.' Death- on the battle
field has no terrors for ; them, einee
it ha the promise of a heaven where
sensual Joys and physical pleasures
are everlasting attraction.
The" most remarkable feature of
Islamlsm ia its unchangeableness. In
the great Mohammedan university of
Cairo the Koran, in the original
wording of Mohammed, Is today the
text book, and .its teaching continue
to Inspire with reckless courage and!
The ao-called "new1 women" of today
oan look back- through mUny centurlea
of history and find that they are mar
ly emulating the examples of many wo
men, who were great and noble, aa wen
aelf.aesertlve, even long before the
tra-legal control, it would in and of I Christian era. They have an excellent
Itself be a tremendous force against example,, to which they can. point at
successful along their own ldeaa, In
wu44, ..-- Asnatla. whom hlttory credit with be
penaent upon me - exploitation. 01 1.- tl..' fi,at "new woman" of which
voune jtlrls. Yet the rortunes or the I an? account can be found.
nnllxo nro an" tied nn to those who AtDaala did not ttk for the prlvl
-(,. thla tradn Atid tn thelrl18 or vouna;, una uuv u. w in
profit by. thur traae ana to tneir hearfl ,n tl)a han of Mtata. Bhe made
menas, ine poiiuciana, inai ine no reouisitlon that the be accounted
moat well meaning man on tne force the equal of men. ah these the as
Is constantly handicapped," says the turned without a rnt, and ahe put
writer, - . .... ka, ..,.ril. mlrit that, if aha waa
It is recited that -tne DUIK or tnei not abU to convince, ahe waa able to
"white slave", traffic ia drawn from! compel others to subscribe to her re-
the youth of the community, that the ,.",rE
cadets enlist the assistance of lmma- before Christian era. In thoee day
ture boys to trap their victims', and I Athenian women lived tn timott abao
that the boys are scarcely less the lute . seclusion. Doin aiier aa, weu at
, J.f.m than ar vv. I Deiorft marrs:o. x-uoiia uie wii a
th.uuh.ui B,r.v .... " .ii.. .Vl.h MniurnM them llttl. hut
girls themselves. ' In 1908 when J they depended on their mala relatives
Clifford ROe conducted successful or guardian for everything whloh con
cerned their nappinesa ana tneir ngntt.
prosecutions against 150 cadets In
Chicago, nearly all of them were lo
cal boys who had used their person
al acqnalntanee for the hideous bus
iness of obtaining recruits. Many of
these lads begin their vicious careers
at the ages of 15 and 18 years.
Following articles In the series
wiu ueai uuwu wiw u. oule"or make her ldeaa productlvft of good In
uon 01 wuuuaiw euuuiMuiii, uiurai 1 i,er day and generation. It waa -quite
education, philanthropic rescue and i an innovation in- the publlo lift of
prevention, and increased soc al con-1 A,n'n" 10 ri"a womBB1 a
.' . ,. . .... ifcL. I termlned to be a Pertoa rather, than a
trol.,It IS a series that throw the I Th'"g, ISaturaily-har-paU wa sot
.: . , .- ' v .
It was j conventional period of the
hardeat and fastest character, and wo
men had , no Intellectual or legal reo
oa-nltlon. . -- v;
But when Atpaeia, arrived at Athena
from 'her provincial home, It waa not
long before ah threw the atone that
gave- things" a decided ripple. She
brought with her the detlre to take a
hand In publlo affalra, ftnd wlthed to
eirewn with rotet tnd tome harsh
ininga were eald about her. But thl
was to te expeoted for It la hard
find an original man or woman agalnat
wnom in arrow or eruicltm are not
taruic . . -' j .,
In the firtt plaoa,' Aspaeta was
iurnu.r iuu ia 1 note oayt of nar
jow tympatnies and deep prejudices
(jhls meant a great deal. Beside that
en was a TeetninKer not In religion,
but at disbeliever In tha mvthia.i
storlea whloh were prevalent In her
uay. iNaiurauy, uuon being the eaae,
the wat looked Upon aa an oht.nttnn.
able person 4. being t for treat on.
Kinaiiy Atpaala went aa-atnat i&A .....
torn and ettabllehed usaga, and in do-
uift- mat anooK4a tn "feel in ft" which
were sure to glvft vent to" tbemtelves
u language not tha moat careful and
correct. Thl wonderful woman ha.
came at one tne intellectual attraction
She wa net onlv attratt.
U BUU-
ally, but poasetted mora than th4 utual
accomplishments, not merelv of ennv.r.
aauon, dui even or oratory and criti
cism,-wmcn accounts for the faot that
tne arew aoout Her tha moat rtl.tin.
gnlthed Athenian of all area and ohar-
actere. .Among those who regularly
uaiencu 10 uer was in. great Socrates.
. fifi wAn K .A .... 1 . . -.
J . . V. "i " .aiuij (Oil
when Pericles dlvoreed hi wlf ha mar.
rled Atpatia, with whom h lived upon
lerma i muium respect ana tore.
j.ne -Age or rericiet.- the moat won.
derful In ejvery respect that the world
aa ever seen, owes much of Ita nre.
ttgto the wife of thlt man who lnaug
uraUd Ut glories, and. while th world
stands, tha Influence that Aaoajila ex
erted In the line of the great human !
Park Into ,the old nag of th. T.ihart
avenue police atatlon; or maybe It waa
Juat tha starvlngi and the beatlnga that
did It If horses have hearta. th.t
Dunner-Und-blltten muat have broken
under the fata to which a thankleat
city turned him over. Who knowt but
wiiat n may nave, ror aayt and weeks
and months, planned to run away from
It planned to get away and return to
old friends and scenes? Mayb it waa
tome hope of finding hit way back to
these that spurred him on when he set
out from the highest bidder, on. day
latt week. Anyhow. aomething-ka
chance, perhapt, brought htm past the
Liberty avenue police atatlon and Into
the friendly care of the officers.
How they fed him. and nihhi
down, and .gave him a stall,, and mad '
their own -of himl There wo prefer
to leave him. k 1, too hard to think of
him given back to tha hih. mm..
who has not bfJen kind to him.
Yrv -;- The Lajst of the Elk. . i '
' From Marshfield New a.
Membera of the party who ha v.
the summer In the woods with th
tr timber cruiser, Dennis McCarthy, In-
iu.il. ua 4ua4 a conservative estimate of
the elk in Coos county would nine th
number at about 86.. Thev sawl n tn
one band, which waa the largest num
ber seen at one time. The elk range
on the headwatera of both fn,v. A
of any hunters having killed anv e VI
them. r It it hard for one Who hunted in
early days, 'i and who haa seen . sr...
band of elk on the Coqutlle and along
the coast country, to believe that tha
whole number now In the county totals
only 85. Tho e4rly settlers never
slaughtered the game they only killed
for meat; but the" hide hunter, who
came Into the coast country In the '70'
from th Dralri states, wt... h.,e.i
were getting scarce are responsible for
tha almost total annihilation af tha fin.
est game animals that ever roamed, tha
forests of North America. Of couraa. '
ftt a new, oountry settles op, game will
disappear, but had It not been for th
hid hunter th elk would hv iat.
ed a good deal longer than ta h.
done. It la to ba booed that th i.e.
dvanee - will be duly appreciated by I will . not b molested, tnd-If the law
all the wlae of the earth.
Tomorrow Hypatla.
iiirviKuu. men. im airiciiy enrorced, a
few yeara wlU aea th numbr conald
rably Increased.. . , .... ,,. .
, t'
4