! a. THE . .OREGON . DAILY jdURNAL, PORTLAND, THURSDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 16, AM. V I Or- C". JACKSON . THE JOURNAL AW-INDEPENDENT NBWSPAPKa. .Pabllaber -ary Ale texc-Dt Sunday! and t-rcry sanaay tnarnlnr at I n Journal puna Itif, nfto n Xamhlll itrmn, Fortuna, ur, Bniffrax at to poaroirica sr. rwua. vs.. far tTSBmlMloo Abroach, til null M aacond Un natter. . v If LEPH0KE8 " Mala M7; Home. A-OWl. '...All drpartmmta rcaehrd b thm numbara. Ti-U tba operator what department rm want. -.rOBEIaN ADVKBTISINa BEPBRSBNTATTVS, i Bcnjarola Kontnor Co., Brunswick Building, m Kifta .-mi, H-w Vorkj ISIS raopl1 ' Uia Bulldlof . Chicago. - ' - ence In lowering the transportation roads In the United State. ' But It sembly.' ' To 'offend that new spirit coat between Atlantic port., both by is hopedthat by the general adopTof a revived nationality by outside rail and by jtion of the "Good Roads Week not 'interference would " be, to jnake tb : The Stimaon demand for conres- less than $10,000,000 will be Invest- bitterest enemies of those who either eionai action wnn rererence to tolls -ed during that time by the various are or will be the leaders of new Sr)i1 tt A w (nlflraiai)nl tm 1 . i.i.iii ,' a a Jl.i i - a Ja -.. 1 a, m . y . .. v .t uu utuijaiDu auuu . a ibu luieui-1 Bitttw, www. uiu incus ana, aiKQWij UQiDt. routes;, mean -f new. ships, new har bors, new port facilities and dock age arrangements. . To provide all trade j boards throughout tjie union. , After all said and done good roads are the first and most necessary step towards all the improvements in the these requires .time; and yet Mr. ! farm life of the oeonle. Taft says the;anal will be finished if you seek to add tk rh tmt .-. Bobactiptloa Tarns br mill or ta any addraaa it tup unltaa antes or Mexico, . c.'-Zyi '..,'PULt.,.i;. .". ' On yMr......:SS.OO Ona month. riT y. HON DAT. Oat yaarf..i;..,S2.tW f Ona month. ' . . PAILI AJD 8CNDAI. Ona yaar. ..ST.BO 6n month. .. .SO : t .. J6 ..I .68 Christianity" la not , theory or -4 peculation, but life; not a philosophy of life, but a life and A living procesaColerldge. 1 fr---W---.-J-Wl-.-l...-.l-W..V"'Vl'-ll-"-W-1 g it r mZZY BANKING V(i HE $96,000 of funds originally In the , Seaside bank , have shrunk to a pitiful $8450.' To this may yet be added $2200 rrarslngTErreiBenrtanglble-asBets to a possible $10,650, from which must be .subtracted tho cost of the -bank receivership.' -ti:;ytX';f' ,,: It Is not a pleasing situation for the ' trusting persons ,' who placed $50,250 In check deposfts and $ 1 6,- 152 In certificate deposits In the in stltutlon for safe keeping.. r ,;' rheu the. crasa came, the books showed that - the : lumber company owed . tnq "Aanic an , tjTerarart v o $5100 It 'owed the bank In bondi ,$45,000. It owed the bank inTiotes) $37,000. .It had, la fact, absorbed nearly everything In sight ' In the bank, especially . the money of depos Itors wnicn naa . snrunK unaer the system of dlzty , finance from $66r tT6 to 44f5", of cash onThandlwhen the collapse earner : "- - :- - ; -(. .Thejpxesltientjpf .the, bankaMfi'? president of - the lumber company. As 'president of the bank j he loaned himself ".as "president of 'the lumber " company, practically all of the de r positors' money as well as. practically all of the stockholders', money. : -: It Js'in behalf of such" lawbreak Jng that the law Is suspended by the personal authority Of public off lciala In Clatsop county; ' ! ' ' ; " i ----Why "have banking ' lawst - Why have , public officials? .; Why haye : peniten!4arlesT.-'''--r'':?-iJ A NA'IOML TASK ONpRESa . will - doubtless v be called on by the president '.to .provide a - large proportion, ol the- Cost pt the national i work of bringing the methods of improved agriculture toWlarm-lttelfr: -, The . total coat la proposed to be shared between ; the nation directly, and the states, and the counties. The administration Is "tot be conjoint In some form of which the details are pot yet fully, understood.' The aim bf the whole plan Is to install one ag: ricultnral expert of the new school In every county,' for this purpose only that the traditional art of. agricul ture shall be turned Into the science . The president said "It is now pro- - posed to organise a force, of 3000. men. one to every county In the United States; who shall conduct ex- , Jjeriments within the -county for the edification ; a"nd education ; of the present farmers, and of the - embryo , ; farmers, who .are being: educated. He admitted that It Is not ordinarily wise to unite administration between 'county and state and federal gov ernments. But he claims authority . ior ine federal grant from the wel fare, clause; of the constitution. , As 5 ' to thV; wisdom, even the necessity ef it, that .rests on jthe public interest in bringing home to the farmers -what it is possible to do with the . very v soli that 'they themselves V are cultivating." 'The experf farmers are to be pro Tided by the agricultural colleges , and experiment .stations, and from the' present force of l,00b; Investi gators employed ; by the agricultural ; departmenj, - , uojecuon .,. may oe. expected on gTOundsp'f such expenditure of pub- ' He money, ; . But the public need ie great, the consequent Increase of h the entire volume of 'fdod. products yill be an , effective agency to re- . strain . tne. turtner. rise of the ost ! pf living. There are -but 150 jnil- - on acres more of unused lands to he. faraed within ' the . boundaries of Jh.e pation insufficient to fill' for " many, years" hai food1 necess'lties of the multiplying ' people. h ftK . STIMSON'S SPEECH," within jtwnty; mototha. 'H li is probable that the Stlmson speech foreshadows similar recom mendations in the presidential mes sage. ; such an attitude would le ef fort by the president to tender im portant service , to the country.:.: ROBBING THE COUNTRY F r N h'ls address at Kansas City, Sec- j. retary Humson coubtiess ' Voiced me, views or; tne -president .re specting Panama canal admlnls- tratlotf:ahl'toll- If so', Mr: Taft is .'in full harmony "rwith those who" are real. frleiids ot-.the.'canal.: :!QJ:iy A Mr, Stlmsoa' urged free' passage of 'American, y essels . plying., .between ports Of the. United States. - He in '' sisted hai . congiress' should ' at ' the earliest Jmomentv aettle the momeo , tous issue of what the rates of toll are to be ; He argued that protisloh should at once be made for the ad ministration, of the tanal, j r.. :, Each , of these recommandatlona is sound v : national policy,, ree pas sage for American ships ;ln strictly American Jrade is a1 step toward par tial compensation :" for ; .the ; ,bewhls lered navigation "policy V which has ' done so touch to destroy an Amerl . cau rnrrhant nayr.tMt'Vo'uld,. be cne con-cession to aid In, restoring a ( KirthAntf.jnarIne.'' frfwdtf2d,' at tile tteie time. exert : important ' lnfl- IFTYountles in Illinois showed a loss of population during the decade ending In, ,1910. , The actual loss,, according to the census, was 55.944. ; . , The losses ranged from 66 per sons, or three tenths of one per cent, ta'Dewitt county, to 2973, or 17.4 per cent' In Pike. During the pre ceding decade from 1890 tp 1900 i i . it . i . . . . , - vuij six counuea tosi popniauon. Fifty-two, counties show an in- crease of 72,985. The increase ranged from one tenth of one per cent in Fayette to 62.2 In William- son.'v The actual Increase 'ranged from ten added persons in Fayette to 666,498 in Cook. .The population of the state is 6,638,591, and is a gain of 817,041, or 16.9 per cent In ten years.; :; , r Jy An Almost staggering fact In the figures Is that nly 26.4 per cent of tt population lives In ' the country or in towns not incorporated. Only 134,690 people In the state live in the eountry and in towns of .less than 500 population. , . , In census- classification,' all people living in cities of 2500 and over are sped fled- as urban, andsJI-Othere as rural. By this test, the urban pop ulation of Illinois in 1890 was 44.8 per cent;' in 1900, 64.$. and In 1910, 61.7. 1 The rural population .In 1890 was 65.2. InT9innjrand lnXyron eaf- A :'';;-'. ':., .. - , ' I Of the present .28.3 $er cent, 12 per- cent is population' residing In 920 Incorporated places of less than 2500 inhabitants. ;,;; Tbe fact: that stands out Is the tremendous i drift of ; population In tha Btate from the country to the city. .The actual loss of 56,944 in habitants in 60 of the counties has its' antithesis of a gain of 486,708 in the city, of Chicago alone. In this state of splendid agricultural . pos sibilities; 61.7 per cent of the popu lation resides in cities of 2500 In habitants and over. Seventy-three and six tenths per cent lives In In corporated towns.- ' , .V It . means that there la something fandamentallywrong in the adjust ment. between..-country life and .city urep it . must mean that the Tela tlons between urban and rural - life are Incoherent, out of balance, and In some .way , discriminative, ; If It does not mean all this, why are thQ cities robbing the land bf people? If life in the country- bad better rewards, ' would there ' not be more people ;in th country?; : - Of 'your farmr mend the roads and save time and borsea If you desire the comfort of ; the '. family good roads give a sense of freedom, of ability to get in and out. of being in the world and not outside it, tbjat nothing else will, i If the-"children are to be not only educated but, sat isfied,' good roads again. If you want to raise the value of the farm. not hing acts , as quickly as good roads, LittcraFrbrnt ! LsflMBaaasasMsanssMBBBMBHSja ifECOMENX BRIEF I .Story of tlie Manenu i - ft-'filMAtlV 'CHAKGHalttt I'.'-"jf '.OIIBGOX SIDICUGnTSA. "( , - ' 'BrealcJoWlX; rt J " Blr Ohio ta to follow the lead of it. tie Oregon,- ojther big states have uuns or . win , on, i .v.s " j.,j; ' "Bclentlflo fnanutmentf mm nrnd (it n...t . -.. .' . -j iiviur ,nn rti nnr lnvearta-arnra (OomainnlratlatM tent to The Inrail for pab- ,0lVlbt a,t,1' beneficial movement; It uratioa in uia aeparunaat euooia not new 7"' "ou- i put sanerauy into prao- o-v woroa in irngm in a ratiii 09 aecoropamaii SWHY BE FOOLISH hkhjs is no use to hold a spe cial charter election with a menagerie of charters to be ' voted on. The plan was tried in Eugene, and it failed. More than a majority of the votes was cast' for commission ' government, but com mission government, was beaten. Those , In favor ,'of It divided their forces between two charters. In the meantime', government - in Portlahdf- like government In every city under the old system. Is absurd. Ex-Mayor Lane says the city is los ing, a million dollars a year. -The tax rate Is 6.8 mills, and mounting. The charge for public. Improvements is enormous;-and the cost of living high. ; : -'!-'r n--- K- - .-'V-;-- Paddy Maher . is "county deteo- tive" at $90 per, andhief scout.in the vice soner. Judge- Tazwell says Max Cohen "le an honest man.'. An acting municipal Judge has been fn dlcted T)yagrandlJtfry for offering to accept a bribe tf $150 from the keeper of a bawdy house.. It Is as- is THE JOHN tu' nLSON PIAN RESUMABLY, the Portland unamber or Commerce Is not entering into a ; thlck-and-thin alliance with ex-Senator John L. Wllsori as to-Alaska affairs. "Mr, Wilson's Seattle newspaper, the Post Intelligencer, has at all times been an able and consistentadvocfliaal 4feukttljlu M development In Alaska which would end In monopolized coal fields and high-priced fuel. It is a brand of development that has teen repudiated by Secretary Fisher. It is not the kind of devel opmen't thai the masses of people In the Pacific coast states ' desire. , Tbe popular wish is for Alaska to be developed on a basis of four- dollar coal for $4, not four-dollar coal for $10 as it would be under kjpiA-Ai , a jjiau . Auvmer ur gent and prevalent desire Is for con gress to act at the coming session bo the bedlam and lncoherency Inci dent to Alaska and Alaskan affairs may end and the region enter upon career of , constructive develon- ment. GOOD ROADS WEEK HE annual meeting of the Amer- . lean Association for Highway Improvement will be held at Richmond, Virginia, between November J20 and 23. Experts are to be brought together,' and all in terested In good roads building are InvltedV' "v, ni, y... : Governor Mann of Virginia has is sued a proclamation urging the peo- pie of that state to set, apart the week beginning November 13 1 as "Good Roads Week." Every man, woman and child is pressed to do his or her during the entire week for the wement 1 of" the roads. Those who have time, labor, horses, wag onsto .employ, .will be expected to ,dut for road work. ; Those who havev other work that must be at tended to can pay for labor: in their stead. The housewives can victual the working forces.. ; In meal or in malt every one is expected to do his or her best - to demonstrate what can be done by 'associated, general, and concentrated vork. : .-'y A movement has been Btarted hyi tne parent "American ! Association for Highway improvement' to spread this Idea throughout the union. at is expected ta make this Vir ginia week, the mpst' notable .In the history iot ; road , improvement.: in America. -The officials of the. asso ciation state that at this time over 1;000,000 a day is being pent" dri the Improvement and maintenance of t: , .'y - .'-v'-"- '.-'" ii serted In court that paving can be laid .for $1, but -the cost In' Portland $1.75 per yard and up. vT. It is positively charged that some Portland councilmen have . received one cent and as 1 high as 'two cents per yard as a side- allowance on pav ing laid, in Portland. It was but yesterday that the agents of certain interests whispered in , the ears , of councilmen on the floor of the. coun cil chamber and at- committee meet- lngS.--r -; - - - Thesenre features In ; Porttandl present government. Dismal as they are, .'. nobody " knoWs the . further depths to which municipal affairs have descended. We have a mayor who seems anxious to do his duty. but his hands are tied by division of authority among " boards; , comoiis slons and councils. . At the month's end. he must sign about a thousand warrants for 'salaries and expenses, a performance that constitutes one of his large official functions, . r There is no responsible authority anywhere. Accountability is so di vided that one official can hide be hind another. There is - no reward for the honest official, and little chance to reach the other kind. ' Amid these known conditions. there .is little. patience with a plan of -submitting a basketful1 of char ters as a means of getting riddance to the present situation. ; It is -tolly to convert the special election Into bedlam. It Is waste of time and waste of public. money to beat com mission government by division, distraction' and " demofallzatlon , be fore the election Is held, j. ,' Alter .the Eugene experience, why be foolish? . '---I. . br the name and ddrta oC the iaar.) , Harmon on State's Bights. Portland, 'Nov, 14.- To the Editor of The Journal In his argument for states right before the oongreaa of sovern ors, - Governor Harmon was upholdlns the 1omical tradition of hU state. The fact may, not be renerally known, yet It Is a matter of record that Ohio (be fore South Carolina), nullified a statute of the ; general ; soverpment, - which It claimed had, been enacted without eon tltutlonal authority. The right of the general government . to grant a charter to, the United States bank and the right of the bank to establish a branch In Maryland haul been- affirmed by the su prem court in the cas of McCollough versus the state of Maryland. Tet In tho .face of ;thla decision the general assembly of Ohio In April, 1817, ap pointed a committee to Investigate and report upon the question. Whether the right to obarter a national bank was one of the pdwers expressly delegated by the constitution. . Upon the report of this committee the Ohio ' legislature In Ills Imposed prohibitive tax on the two branches bf the United States hank which had. ' been- opened In Cincinnati and Chllllcothe. ,' The. auditor of the stats was expressly authorised to forci bly enter the banks, break open their' vaults and to take- therefrom enough money to pay the SO per oant. which had been assessad against them.. The dras tic, meaaure was known as ths crow bar law. One hundred thousand dollars In gold was taken from the vaults of the Chllllcothe bank and appropriated to the payment of the tax. Not content with tms, the general amenably passed a law making It a misdemeanor for any citizen of ths State to give assistance to these banks In defending the property of these Institutions. This hostile legislation con tinued in force until President Jackson vetoed the bill, renewing the charter of tne united States Dank. This action was taken 11 years before the South Caro lina nullification In 1831. . It Is exceedingly improbable that any state will ever again assert the princi ple of nullification. The supreme court la theveogTilsed"arbiter In questions involving state rights and federal ad ministration. Tet a -decision of a court can not, change a fact. It Is a fact that our nationality - Is one of states united. A political unit formed not only by an agreement but by a natural cohesion of part. A resolution of the congress of governors advocated by Governor Harmon was to remind the legislative ; and executive branches of our government that all political power not expressly delegated to them Is re served to the states and to the people. When tha fiindamnt' prlnoiplyr-rinT ular sovereignty was threatened, mil lions fought to uphold .the centralised power essential to Its preservation, but when a branch of the government threatens to ' uaurp authority not ex pressly delegated to it,1 then -the time1 seems to have come for a referendum and reoallt , . 3. A. K. INTERVENTION IN l CHINA "HE refusal of Yuan Shi Kal to accept the premiership of ,i China, pressed on him by a" del t egatlon from the national as sembly, was withdrawn when It had carried Its purpose by securing for him a free hahd in dealing with the Manchu government . He has not. in any serious way, antagonized the revolutionary chiefs, or their armies. There is nothing In sight to prevent his Joining hands with them In the enormous task of reorganizing the Chinese empire. His plan, announced yesterday, of auowing autonomy now for any province desiring it, with a declared purpose of hereafter attracting such provinces into the general told, is opportunism Indeed. . Dispatches-indicate that there Is fear In China of intervention by the United States, on behalf of all the powers. ; r It Is doubtful If any power would dream of Invading China, or even of occupying the treaty ports. - without an army which would make the di vision which went Into camp on the Mexican border, a mere brigade. The revolutionists have so far shown: not only, the intention "but the ability to protect the lives and the property , of, foreigners; 1 .The heads of the revolution are recruited mainly from those young Chinese who have been educated in America or Europe. : y-. -,' y:: It is true that the Chinese' make war; among ' themselves with horri fying brutality and disra.-rard of hu man life. '. But when once the new relations between Chinese and Man ehus are Bettled rWhlch will be" the first work of whatever reformed gov- ernmeat emerges from this chaos the chances are that . the national hpeacef ulnesa of .the Chinese will re assert itself .and? murders and ,onU rage .will ceases': : Nothing would better serve to con tinue the horrors, of civil fwar. - in China than;- foreign Intervention by whatever natipn, . ; The tense of na tional unity has been stimulated ,by the" ."movements1 among the v people which resulted In. tli national ac- Practical ChaAtj. " (. Portland. Or., Nov. 10. To the Editor f The Journal When Gtpsy Smith has made-; hi last Impassioned appeal for obisv what will be .the , result? u..v. . - l . . r, tlce. In minimisation of waste and enor mous saving, end must eventually be v wiraocait ana n narmrui to work lngmem . tv ...... . -.,-, ....... r.-i-1 . .1 : y !;Now If Is said that the cause of the """" revolution was Jealousy be tween two women, the emperor's moth er and the premier's wife. : VeryUikely; Chinese women are In some respects like other women, and there's always iruuoie in tne - wona since . that r1?trjan"foriT,,n event. But while the late Tsl An lived,. other way-up Chinese women, behaved themselves. , . .;-;,'. .;-,,;, . .;,. -y'' ..; .V-.S-f.-jV If inrheAr vhn mih v.i. t.tni.a vt. lot In life Is harder than tuiybody else's, let him consider . the case of . the Cars llnskl family in Plttaburg... The roan Is helDleSS With t1lhrmi1nala . Ulml. and four small children were so weak from starvation that they could not beat Off a horde Of rata, unfit hj nv: enous rodents had eaten off the hands S?.. t0 .f xh V-monthssold baby. Yet aires, made enormously wealthy through Uia UnderiMd Ufa f P11"81-. And we call ourselves t wruiMu ana vnristian people I .. ; Buy 'em turli. hn, .m m,wi - n avoid the hurlv-burlv. Oet bettor things end I d a&fnnlarllM -mhn mrm vara mortal maldlea. Walt nnf till th. H.u approaches, when -crazed crowd on crowd encroaches. Dpn't put off the Christ tnas shopping, till clerks cap scarcely keen-- from dronnlnir., rnna dia th. Christmas buying till ' . ten thousand scrambling vying,-. crowding, pushing, sweating, fretting people afso do their f""- -Kon rorget tnat many a guile; she Is human buy 'em early. - . V . ' Th tho papers in all cities. In Plain prose, if not in ditties, for a month will adjure readers but, alas, now few the heeders. . .. . v Dairy cows ar reported scarce near By Benjamin Karr, in the Cleveland feWfn-,;;,:.;;' 1 - -Loader. - , , - E M. ' Olmstsad has' purchased -the Authorities differ wldeiy regarding Stayton Mall. , ' - ,.;?..(:. r the number ofllanchu Tartars in the ; The f prohlbltlon'its ct Balem-, have CMn ampira As the Chinese govern--nominated, a municipal- tioket ' ment has never taken a complete census a mafe Xma& ,0 ' ,..rr.,..,,.,,, ,;.-,.,..-..,.;,;.;,;:a. dotaijs puch as fr covered -ia,. America A new freirht . boat, the Made, baa and Europe, there la nothlna- httai than been placed in- aervloe on the CoqulllsJ gueMWOrk 'on which to base estimates i river. - ,v , n ,v. , ' . . ..... . ij Eighty-six dors4 in Lake ' county; are People 'raise sheep ssaeaaed at 126 auwn were. - .-yy The women of Hennner raised S157.BB at a social given for the improvement of th city cemetery. i Tha Rnntliurn PanKln denot si Tall- man, which had been cloaed for several weeks, has been reopened. - A new town Is to be laid out on the new railroad,-Seven miles south of juakeview; to be v called wenaeu. ..;, if .y y: - e,.e . . i $ ?:-:':;,: 'I" In Lake county ' recentry. Jurymen traveled 125 miles In order ta attend Some , authorities think the Tartara amount to s per cent of the total popu- miion, or say s.ouo.ooo, or possibly 10.- 000,000. .Others cut the fliuru aown i I per, cent, or hot oVer 3.000.000 to 4.-- AAA A8 A,f"V., BH. . --' vvu.uuu. ( mere nas been a good deal of interrtarrylng' wth, .the; Chinese and much depend upon where the line Is drawn In classifying ' those of mixed Wood. ; '::'-.'. :? :':-- i:-,- -T- , But even if, there are.- not.. mora . 'than' .000,000 Manchu ' .of wholly i Tartar blood In China, ; that population ought to circuit court- The extreme dlatano is b b'e t0 furnish 100,000 or even 800,- jg mues. , . i uuo soiaiers. in the beginning of Man- The circuit eOurt has been busy tn " could easily have supplied Lake county-for more "than. a month, mucn- nigner; percentages lof warriors much of the -time being given to the than 800,000 would call for now, ; . trial of criminal casesiv . . - f Then all of the able bodied ; Tartars .2 'y'yiy'iyy: - . . . were soldlera.' That made.. their con- lnrwa,,aN:rBf"8a loving Chinese poSal-, J low, when a crew of profewlonartalh-l"'-:' rs 'completed the five rooms and the Chinese as 'flghtlng"mett'na ijegroe. hall ' In . four hours - and , five minutes, I which suggested, - though it - did ' ' not placing .18,000 lath. - " really approach, the difference between. 1 ji -r, ",,' a. ' r i. a ?. Itft Bntlsh soldiers who hold India and thraufo". nt,VM who.Uv. in fear ducks over tba week end. They left I " .rro woion ipiat oniy Bend Saturday, going to Burns, Buena about 78,000 men. , ' - Vista,, Th Narrows and other Harney j If tha-Manchus'had retained their old ovunijr UIIM.-W. - - x- uwi wiv. iiBimiui, they report, and several sa ducks - were . brought home.... DientllUI. I lirAma ..4 .. v.-.i . m they report, and several sacks full of :;.Ht thTJ ,7 ... I w-- - - -wmm-mtf , auinu. sa.aa aavaaj uuU ,( . teeming country they have : ruled for V SEVEN "NEW WOMEN, Abigail Adams. An excellent idea of the strong mind ana stern characteristic of - Abigail Adams, wife of one president of the United States - and the mother , of an other. Is splendidly hown In her letter to her husband who was attending the continental congress at Philadelphia: "Let the declaration- be set forth. Let us Inform the world that we are re solved to be our own masters." v At another time she wrote s 'TMd ever any state regain Its liberty without bloodshed T Fighting is. horrible, but rather than submit tOHawStery, let us fight" ' -r The last sentence of the two Just quoted is the motto of the "new wo man" of today; : Abigail lived. Just at the end of the rigid Puritanical days In New England,, and that makes It all the more wonderful that she should have been so outspoken for one of her sex. , . t When Adams went to congress bis wife did not go -with him, but by her letters sha held her husband firmly to his work. When thing reached the nolnt -where It looked like a. conflict she kept bW husband in line, if such a thing -was necessary, to fight every inch of the Way for the country's rights. When In 1778 Adams Went As Joint commissioner with Franklin to the court of Franc, it Is on record that through out his period of of flee he was greatly Though tears are shed for 'sins andKd,ed b 2B 'wlM Wgestlona- of his many eouls saved will our ' great army or men who really need attention. wife. And later, when Adams became president of the United state, it- was help, be any more comfortable of their 1 Abigail that he regulariy appealed Jo In moral standard raised In the . least T The great pity of It. Is that the condi tlons are so well knowq and the city become so accustomed and hardened to these affairs, that they are Simply tak en- jpc gran tea as a. nuisance and al lowed to exist every critical time. She "shaped" more measures than did all the members of the cabinet put together, and she made herself- felt among many lines of the publlo life. ' ; - -, " ' .. Abigail Adams was undoubtedly' th most remarkable woman-of the Revolu- Thefchean lodrln houaaa n a w.ia f tionary period. In the real and deter- ara filled with men who do the back- mlnation which John Adams urged on bending, soul-destroying labor of the th Declaration of Independence, - be city, who. live in cold; dark, miserable was stanchly supported by his brave rooms, orten witn no reading room or wire.. circumswuico wmca uea wmc hotel office to spend - an . hour or two times to be Jocosely alleged In explana- in before going to' bed. Except the 6 tion of his superiority In boldness , to cent moving cloture show or tha . John Dickinson, the women of whoso loon, where Will they spend their-eve-1 household were perpetually conjuring nings ana Sundays, The collections Qissv Smith will talc i i n.t r .. in this meeting would establish la the with which to get to Portland and centers of the poorer lodging house dls- make a new start I had papers repre- 22f - W0 three tair.ised; reading entlng the sale to me of property by a IS fE J?rSI i eat and plenty wealthy PorUander an,d though the sale v. "B" iuu VI U1HUUI ana D-In mAm tnilll-axtlv ha wa tha nwna ?St "ILf??? ftnd Snw and the cmpany authorised by him, had !n,invrrniin Jhe. mu"J? a.nd represented that this land vwoued in- v.v,, ,vi. u, ibvivbj WUU1U give oana concerts ana musical entertain ments, every week and bftener, abso lutely free to a starved people,- whose means-limit them to a, moving plc- iurs snow- ana gradually what would have been a good, reopeoUble, Intelli gent citizen is rusted into an ignorant, vIMtflila nna Ignoring thew things' only makei the f" thlr-lnJhat problem more dlffloult In the future ln to B.ell2 the company for what I when the peop e get strong ZLgZZ '27S f a ireeiy. acceni tne eiaer brother "'" -.--" crease in value in the immediate fu ture. ' Now, : listen! -1 enclosed . the papers to him, and begged him to send me the face value, explaining at the same time my urgent need ana agreeing In addition to give my note. ' Listen! He returned the papers with a terse and haughty Statement that be did not see more than 850 years. ' If they had useL their power and its opportunities Wyth thef greatest possible effect they woU 1 not now be facing a grave haac of utJy taw downfall anI fmmfnan A VaI i Ing - maseaored, everywhere- they i are up visions oV the headsman's block. ro IB ' rik',ha If Mrs. Adams had been a French aT-L-ni ' woman, or even an English woman. S?1??fc'rB?nt.na ben to P"lon her talents, aided by' her envlronmeats. f u he authority and resource of th wouia nave made her as noted as Mm. I ao. uwu wroea n, TOy iot De Stael or Lady Wortley-Montaku. I living on hard work In the land of Even a it was. har.lle-ht oould not be I extremely small pay and patient toU. put "under a bushel." and a careful I All of the men of Manchu blood have reading of her biography 1 quite suf- been either soldiers of the army, efft flclent to show her extraordinary eniall- olals or lesser employers of the govern Ues of head and heart, ; ; ; T j mnt or else pensioners Ot the Imperial - Abigail Smith was the daughter of a authorities. , v 4: '-" Weymouth. Mass- clergyman. ' Has ae-1 ' With such conditions to aid them they qualntanca with John, Adams was not! might easily have constituted the en-- siiBiactory to ner mends or 'to the lure trained military force of the Cht congregaUon of her-father. It was ob-nes empire. They might have formed w , iswyer ana aio an army at least 800,000 strongv, well iiL.."J, , "0n-of V?? faf n,ar' armed and drilled, and that force might was lordly good , enough for the mln- have been la the service of a Manchu Th" IS " '. :t f; 7 ' i!-MortnisaMon coveHn.tha entire empire ww..u iuo una uuuuiian id. innaanr . nr a, ..f . . . . , if. i iwuuuuii ana i agjwaaniw - ner father, and they were married on I r .v. . .. oSrsen wer to tne objections of his parisWon-1 V " il. - -.. II a era in , n,mh k . . . I tnelr grasp for an indefinite period. pulpit an address v from -the txt LukThy rould then have been able to hit u, : "Jror John came neither from ''""rmpi.wiui oruanmg zoroe, eating bread nor drinking wine, and ye 3u,t " the British garrisons In India say he hath, a devil." - .. hold down anothor vast mass of peace Two years before when ' the Rev. ful and unarmed natives.. Smith's daughter Mary was majrrted to lnthese day of modern repeating rl Rlchard Cranch, afterward Judge of the fie and rapid f're gunstroops which court of common pleas of Massachu- have courage and resolution- can over- setts, the father preached from the I come enormous numbers of unarmed or text, Luke X. 42: "And Mlrr fcath 1 badl-r amwil man atr-llrin. K...1. chosen that good part which Shan not against their rulrav-r Uvalkj depends Antn 2fh frm hT. J , . ' lupo Jack ef weapons en .eae-side Abigail Smith succeeded In dcklns on I an .- .,.-i.. msna ? w hLt. T'l.if'irn tbw 2 But.fh Manclms have llkedee as many good books la his library, which pensioners and dvU officials f the she -carefully read and tudleii. ; Hha ZZriZ . 7 ",cla.ls rT tna also made liberal use of tha w.m.; weu. 19 pay raucn attention to cinUaUbra.rAn" tS tJ ' roth educated and , refined people, many , of STJ J1 'ip aneestors were, whom - were ; regularly her . .father's Tne3r nave no more aptitude tor arms guesta and to whom aha iiafanaA wh than the Chines and little more train- profit and in spite of the Puritanical M" or skill. Power has done its work idea of paying little attention to the I and has broken down tbelr strength education of the trlrla , Abisrair hirwrt and sapned . their stamina. . Thev r. herself in the cultivation , of her brll-1 meeting the common fate of those who rule long In a rich land with no better klght than a conquerors grip on a sub- -. -, 1 jec nation. ., . i- .... -.- - l 1 ; , : " ''' A 1 itant intellect t Tomorrow Margaret Brent vs. Tanglefoot ' By Miles' vr :: Overholt ' do something for these people who are This man showed up today as an active not capable of doing to themselves" participant in in; conauciing,or your But It will take more than fireworks 1 ' t,, u agus and shouting to help;, it, mans money! not xault,. Bpsy. tjave you the brains and work with not Just a little '0,l,,Talte ' ';5 " reA0UJll,vth,!.?JperIJl?T in high places? ' "- ! ' May . your courage be broad en & and may your faith hold you to hit at the devil. through the veneer of the sleek rich humbug, '. Why in God's name do they persist' In f soiling and voiding a propbefs message? ... JOB) DAVID. ' Portland Needs' Manufactories. To the Editor of The Journal Port land Is fortunate In having many able bit of common sense and honeatv aMa. Wouldn't ft be "more fitting to try to save - their souls after making an ef fort to give them , comfort and make oeiier citiaens or uem7 , . , . , e. m BiNBxsnr. , Would Hear Prom Judge AicGlnn; Portland, Or, Nov. 15 To th Editor of The Journal Calif ornla has adopted we xecau tor eieouve orrioers, includ ing Judges. - Thl has ben ' described by some high official as destructive of ministers of the gospel,' especially an free government Why should th fear- evangelist like Gipsy Smith, to minister nIT3 k -Im'L - alQ l or ln to our spiritual needs, and I trkat their fluenced by, said recall measure more ' ,,, -o... than any other official! We ordinal W result in great good. But f laymen cannot see any good reason- for " seems 10 " tms out are anxious to know if sound I noua 0 """u " w" temporal' wants reasons can be produced. If such rea I of 'a great many worthy people who sons really exist where IS there a man ( are ready and willing to -work for their or Detier aDiuty ana more absolute fair-1 bread and cutter, 11 given an oppor ness to humanity to expound these rea-1 tunlty. What'la the matter with Pert- sons than Henry E. McGinn? I do not 1 land? Is it a oaa of too many people, knew anything about his views on this for a scarcity of manufacturing ftidus- auestion. I cannot Conceive. wh ,.J-h I tries ln the city? I am inclined, to think an excellent, aoi ana broad minded It la a little of TOtn, it is true there statesman as Governor Woodrow Wi jaon I ar many industries hare, but not", as protests the recall on Judges. X know I many as there should or- could , be. of many admirers of ! Judge McGinn's I This entire- coast country Is paying too record ' on the bench who would be I much to the railroads for the transpor- migniuy pieasea to see his views ex- tatlon of manufactured goods from the pounded through The Journal columns on east, a- large- per oent of which could this Important subject. Will he con- be manufactured her under improved Sent to oblige these numerous friends? conditions- - therefore 'if , we must pay A FAuu-unomio iJ-iri!iJJJT. 1 might cnarges, jet iv,ioe as largely as : Vv?t " ''-' ;';' "s-- yy I possible on the raw material. Build An Open Letter to Gipsy Smith. I more factories - and thus give employ- Portland, Nov. 15. My Dear Brother menl 10 ln many wno come here ln an. Smith At the Monday noon meeting "wr to-the glowing accounts sent east for men I stood up, as a sign to reoueat bf advertiser. I am inclined to be- your -prayer, but' not that Christ's love 1 tner suineient money .in Port ls unknown to me rather as a gran-Mnd to establish many of these enter- - lYOUhtSTOOKl .'. ' ' if 0?C-iv YOU WIFE ".TUB DBTJMMEB'S MASH .Washington Fruit in Anutralasla, Prom the Spokane Spokesman-Review. The securing . of ' new . markets, with the , expansion of old markets, has for years been 'recognised by ; the pro ducers of the Pacifio northwest as a necessity that grows, more and more 1 iuii.kiiv. n iiror lis iruua,' espp- rolally ths apple, hav gone thev hav. created , a ; demand . beyond the . uddIV. I mis is peculiarly tne case in Austral asia, where the opposlteness of the seasons, f It being winter there i when summer here, creates ; a particular on- portunlty for marketing our apples dur ing tne winter ana spring or -Australia and Kew Zealand. " ; r- , .. . The steamship servtoe . between San Francisco and New Zealand and. that between .Vanoouver and New Zealand offers openings j to merchants, man ufacturers and fruit growers In the I Inland-.Empire of which they may sjell'' 1 avail itiBHiaei yea. , j. no Vancouver way gives the fruits and v farm products of Washington a fair chance for favorable shipments to- New Zealand by a direct inf . at your kindly invitation, due to the general wretchedness of my clrcuntf stance, for you will recall that you ar , ,lliiuuuil ' m6n S condition of trouble or indebtedness to their own fault, and bewildered and momentarily lh doubt, I stood up to find If possible a relief through prayer. - Let in tell you a true storv very . cently enacted hers In our city. -Two monns ago 4 was in a nearby town Just out of work (the wage received had been barely sufficient to keep my prises,-and they ought -to be successful. Personally, were 'I in a position to do so, I Would, rather try my luck on the farm or fruit ranch and leave the city attractions td those who Ilk the city life., i " ' A SUBSCRIBER. .,i:::;'g ' -j :yy::. s - , . , SmaU Light. - ' From the Washington star. - "De man that tries td hide his light under a bushel," said Uncle Eben, 'gen erally ain got light enough to . take chances on In a jiwdlnary draft." ra.-h.ltIdrfh.S-r YTjZT ITr jjor we car was more than crowded: and I ... ), . pears ana 1 the maiden, unafraid, plums from abroad la one oent a pound Moved along and murmured sweetlyi from July 14 to December 81, ; and 8 :' "Tnn'rfl entitlail tn a a.a .v. v,. ..... t. . naai?-! o V,TT,n au"P'. lngly would be more advantageous to "Look T2a.a1lo;dumh;,prdtd!;;i wp va y "Win Vou hV. h- Jf!p-.TS during our autumn, when the. produots rNo. she aald. ftit' fin AatJ of tha orchard of that colony are out j a . Then sh found her drinking cupl I of the. native market Apples, according And be chased a drink of water from 1 to the United' States consular report. ' tthead Twa 111 Tiwhirf nfr-and hU cenU Pound . round, figures, and "She's a Dinnin." th.n Rt, .a . Jpeache and pears could not even be Miiwcu aiuJIK mfl aialR. ' 1 ... .... ,-. . 1 ---a- ' 'Tm a bear on this here mah stuff- . guess I'll iolly her aWhiia " With the cup of drinking water he re. cd And be told her lies a-Menty how ha I we must part with your services at the. got three hundred per; - , -1 end of the year. -v . '. ' : . .r ; a - 1 2.8-Jw?;"n,ma.r,?dulnyf but John (after 40 years ln the firm's em- o her, -Plenty- Not Steady. Master John, I'm '-sorry,', but I find How h day -he hoped to bet fThoiirh ha had a iif. in btA,,.i. t.; P"y; weu, guv-nor,-ji 1 a Known 11 ""f, dfdn?t get to k "m w"n,t to a steady Job I d never 1 tnan twice or three tlmaa 1 nave lauen in iUll he most forgot her face.) . he told' the charming woman nona J Waiting in 1 .rj." - in.w.imr wm n ina case., W"0 at home Just wOre old clothing: fancy toga and-hair a-comb a . r" . 'v? "n7 -Pleasure; She pre- (Contributed to The Journal- b W.lt M. But the woman sat and listened, and she regular feature f tlil column In Tha Daily 1" 1 WAflf Ta It n Film WA 4 1 as av j- I 1 ... " rV WAflt With sS.TT. trt rlina Where h bought x pen wive viand.' fin: ava.aa tk.nuff Win, Journal.) It Btemn to m I'm always waiting, a. J '""v 0 . vians winq, n wow tne 1 arummer-s name wa .Bummer, for something. In this world of woe! in For 'herUnam.lhe begged 2nd In ?utM rm WIiS Vi'sa'-" nd ' mft , h.m.t. nr.v u. la l lot of wholesome .sleet and snow.- Finally she said sheM tell him at a aiiar- In winter I am sadly Waiting until the ,ter after ninej s . ' summer comes once more, and wintry Then she -flirted fast and fiercely, but weather I'm berating until my trusty" - he laid It. to 'tha wine. . 1 1- un , i.,.:u. k..7.i. , V . v. ' V . . I iwiiBuo in av.-w, tv licit urmftiMVI uunr AyUkAh-d$ ?I P or dinner, and think that I'll be ..: - ' - . - - vwMii, .. ., I n ,k,,. an . V. a , rt V . I . -VV3 na.u .lint ..tea. V , . YVWLl ie tinner,- to put my stomach right Soon 'twas time for her to tell, him' her I again. When I was young my youth - - address and trlven nam. . It hatod. and lona-pd to ha a full rrnwn And she bowed her head demurely as man; T have' the years for -which Z "After aU Wnot sHemfn .ffi I'vl walt8d' and B,a1,y 1 the "'"would can. - " had is i Talk wTin you- 6 v And so we wait till death Immures us It maybe Muldooiv tomorfow or Black. In long and sllver-tpounted crates. "II Brown or Green' or Blue. also serves.'Mhe bard assures us, "who Though I took a name one winter which only hangs around and waits." . was guaranterd for life, ,".., , X have found it ia'nt wash goods John Copyright, 1B11. by - ' VA A'"',-, v .. IX. Summers, I'm your wife!?, Oeorga Mhttbaw Adam. IJUQJtXJI Uwef ' S