The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, November 20, 1911, Page 6, Image 6

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    THE OREGON DAILY jdUftriAIa, PORTLAND, MONDAY' E,VENtNQ, ? NOVEMBER ' 20, 1911.
T H K TOIJ RNAL TSSSS r t project.
AX lXWCfcT.it IIT NEWSPAPER.
C S. lACXBffVfr;.., . . 41 ..
FibUahae mr; tvwaitg w-ept Beodar) and
ewT Suaea? nornlDr at Tbe Journal Bnlld
lu. rifta aad TamhUl etretta. Portland, Or.
' Entarae at the paatofflee at Portland, Or.,
ft tnwmlwtM tttoosa tlx mall aa second
elaae latter.
TXMCFHONM Main T1T; Home, A-B061.
ail epartaaate raiehed by tbae ainbtn,
' Tull tba evarator what dapartmect yoa want
wll be shifted from th I linen mill", tobacod factories ant mi.'
- r ,v ve,a aw awr sjmsj vr lva w vaav WaaVAAasVSs' mJ ILrw
salesman, anxious to effect a. sale, to tlllerlea. Drtntln. ' works Arid mnm mnnnA i V la l .a.Antf n-l a. i....a
1 fha m. ...... v- .... lu- ...j.-. ' -a.."" Z ." -- - v vwwi,
Lh T , " 7 '"SJ1"" I wwriw, are tan moic prominent of settlors a to protect bank depositors.
V.,.B..W u.owtw, i ; .i i mo inausu-ies wnica employ, and en
VThe'seobnd resolution'; that tariff J rich the Inhabitant!. -Energy, fear
on wool legislation should be based I leeeness, power, efflcloncy are their
On SCOUred WOO! vilnaa a Inn wnni-I Btrnna' rnlntfl.w1th V trinra nl(tl
monds itself, a. iiaving a common cal mixture of UnioaismwWou
base of essential honesty a move-1 call loyalty and biarotrr. . &"Jm& opaw
mna'aA a. -...... , I . ..... ' : - 7 w.aawaiiBaooraaaoi waawww.j .
wwi- iuw eiauuaru oi .vbjuobi xaero is Tory 1IIUO Community Of
uu a, iwuuuauon oi actual ract in either interest or symDathr between
XaUctb From tLe People
f , COMMENT AND 'NEWS IN BRIEF
. . ..... . i
. , r BMALt CBAlfOB. , ; t OBZCOOX BISUUGHXl, , '
.K2VX.EEr!? in whatever markets tho men of Belfaot uod the rest pt
sis rtftb anM, Naw xai isis JTaopia a j wnoiesale ; or '"retail wool should I Ireland.
uaa Buuouta', caiaafh
mean what the word imnlios. not What am thai m.ir, .is u.
i. . k. 1,. .i i... j . - , .. . i . . : w iw
to wTuaHad SUta7 Mastoa. yu .umuuj, or woo4 pins OUT. Objection tO home mleT"
a ,4r It fears a parliament elected la
Oaa yaar...
DAILY.
.18.00 On month........! .80
. SCNDAT.
Om yau...;-....9.B0 I On atsath .. .39
. , DAILT AK O ' BCKCAT.
Ona aar........T.60 Ona month ...I M
I
-5?
Its majority by the agrr'oultaral rote
and dominated by agricultural Inter
ests. It fears an assembly prepon
derantly Catholic, It is the last
stronghold of the ascendency party
once ruled Ireland, and now
Stronr souls
Lire like flre-heartad suns,
apend their atrength
In farthest atiivlng; action.
Georfe Eliot
to
THE PRESIDENTS DtJTT
T Is claimed that with their new
device, the Wrights hare gained
a foothold in the. air. it is in-
Elated that if they can poise for .
im.lai h.t . thVcpo;.;.
.v- """ Yet Ulster will be abundantly rep-
enable them to mmnln nna hniti. nr I ... v..j
- t r:r: ' rewntea in any Irish parliament
ininra I ahn rut and nrnKttila wrll at.
p mmmtm ya wywwa TV M aWiU WaVV
balance of power. .
As it is, the British pecle do not
care to see one half of one Irish
ten hours aloft without
aeroplane.
Coincident with the Wrights' late
experiments is the claim in an art!
f HEN President Taf t wa? in
tne rapid dying out of the hot issues
of the land question, the advancing
spirit for an alMrlsb. Ireland, and
the wiping out of the obstructive
power of the house of lords all
these, elements combine to' herald
ter his personal attention on arrival tation. Thus buoyancy is added to -Wa h a .,1. i m
an object drawn to the earth by SmT
in th'e plan there involved W T'L h
Ia. naiaiA ...v. v , .yk,,w gwu
motion, aeronautics,, wireless tele
Ll? heC'!! K4JS ?d- Prince otruTt tbTdtSS
" " a . iw lui a nu'tn ah- u,f
him with reference to" recla-1 ment, but the annoancement is ehal-
mation in Oregon, particularly with letging attention. 1 .
respect to the West Umatilla project. The .invention is based on the in
The president manifested much in- tensification of Hertiian waves. By
terest, requested the governor to doing this. & parallel and eorrespond
write him a letter setting forth the ing intensification occurs with the
facts, and promised o give the mat-1 vertical force which ooptrols gravi
In Washington. A letter from the
White House assures Governor West
that his letter has been received ty
the president, and that early consid
eration will be given the subject.
-4 There are two reasons for Mr. Taft graphy and the Hertiian waves. Sven
to take action favorable to Oregon in I the elements of romance and the mys-
these reclamation mattero. The first I teries of mental telepathy color the
is, that It is merely simple justice story.?
DEMONSTRATED
to the state, and it is always right
for a president to be just
The econd reason is that it la I
Already demonstrated that -reclamation
In Umatilla is a, complete suc
cess, which means that a further ex
penditure there will be constructive
T
HH thousands who trlod to gain
, entrance to the Gipsy Smith
meeting last night and failed.
had j visualised evidence that
The device with which Farrow
I I " . ...w-Mwii W.UUUUOT
alalnia ha Am an.... J at... ' . ..
, v..u. Uo vuu u.(reuu me iuido ui i jrunmaa is a out citv. Tnev hart nn
gravity is .what he terms a eondens- mlstakable testimony that the city
u8 uju.mo, u aescnpuon oi wmcn nas not Blundered in detarrBinln tA
is not given out, pending .expriments erect a grbat structure capable of
by government engineers. seating many thousands in times of
arrow is well remembared In gnnmiil nnMla ntaM-
"endeavor to be later Justified by re- Pendleton, according to the Pendle- It Is estimated that 25.000 teonle
turns from the land. - ton East Oregonian. Ha organised attempted to gain entrance to the
The West Umatilla project will af- the 'famous Indian eoouts of 1878, temporary auditorium last night. The
ford land for some of the, landless, and with them played, an important estimate may be high, though many
and, homes for some of the homeless, part in the conquering of "Chief Jo- who were on the ground insist that
It will make a profusion of products seph. He is a brother of Mot Far- It Is conservative. Not much more
grow .where nothing grows now. It row, who resided at Pendleton twen- than a third -were able to enter the
will make fertile and.productive land ty years agft," Among the incidents auditorium, while the others-packed
which is now barren and unproduo- of the Inventor experiences bf Pen- churches eleven blocks diRtatit with
,tive. ?. 'jr-i s v - j ,r ?. 5:. idletoH was "an ovation feiven'i hlni overflow uteetiiisa. and
? v- o t vm-w wwaa.axTf
when be returned with his scouts service was held in the open air on
from a battle in which Caief Joseph the grotind.
was Subdued. ( The present- meetings are, o;
Farrow was also known to oldtim- course, extraordinary. But there
era in. Portland, having been la this will be other times and other actlvi-
clfy : during nis career ,m a young ties of local character fn which, a
lieutenant. He was at bno time pro- great meeting place, capable of seat-
feosor of military tactics at West ing many thousands will be needed.
Point He has been Jor yetrs the There is, in addition, the demand for
personal -mend of Colonel C. S8. such a place for great conventions
, s What further argument 1 needed
to convince the president that he
, should act, and act at once on the
West Umatilla project? . ,
TELEGRAPH , AND TELEPHONE
XWO years ago the- Western
. I . Union Telegraph and the Bell
Telephone ... company Joined
hands in management and. in
terests. It is - now alleged by the
"Postal .Telegraph," the official or-
gaa, of the Postal Telegraph com
pany, that its two rivals' have amal
gamated and have combined to con
centrate their management, reduce
: their . running expenses, and atop
natural competition.- -'J ,.t
The public announcement
Toons; Man Get Blarried. Cv i
Portland, Or., Nov. l-To ths -Bdltor
of The Journal A. Saattla masiatrata
last WMk. aooordlna to prose report
had a bursrlary obam baforo him and
advised ta his reprimand that the young
man so out and .; got - Jnarrlad, or,
tnat vm impoaaibia. to sat a oat or
Canary bird o as to have somothing
to work rori In default of -the Xormar,
1 heueve, th: penitentiary awaited bin.
How the Judsa expeoted the young man
to nt married durin- the allotted time
before the prison 'door should oloae
upon him I am unable to ear- Tbe re
mark,! teelf may have ' the appearance
or, levity, But ne doubt it was made in
all aeiiousnaea, and carried a weight of
sound auvloe. v-, -,v -, .....
Take any young man living alone In
tne city; we will aay hla position war
rants living in raaeonably comfort.
able room; Ha takes his dinner down
town and reaches home with . the lntett-
uon of staying- In for the evenlnc, but
what is there to hold him Mt may be
aid the place le neatly- furnished, read
ing material is there. But the averare
human being wants real, animated com
panionship, eomooae he can soe, someone
to tauc tev: Asaia it mar be arrued
there le religious work to take up,
chttTOh meetlnra and aervloee to attend.
but why try to-eneourate sueh hypoc
risy ae hruiginff the person only into
rellgioua ' satheringra, leaving- the mind
heart and sour out on the street' Btlll
we cannot contradict he has a good
Christian eplrlt, albeit the fact he Is
not an active worker. Of courts, we
have the theatre, but the Indulgence
In : thte amusement cannot be always
eontlnued. , ;
Now then, what is the result f Unless
he is exceptionally strong willed he
goes down the atreet in search of
pleasure, drifting along ra a slow but
sure downward oourse, not nebeaaarlly
inking to the depths of a criminal, but
Indulging in revels and riotous living.
And all because he bed nothing to
work for, no one to look up 'to, no one
to care for,, no sweet Inspiration for a
higher plane of living, no animated '
objeot of love and comfort to soothe
the God-siren paeelons of mankind:
-' The wrought , up thoughts and in
a pi rati on of ja reform period are leering
only In a very limited number of minds,
so what Is needed ie an ever cherished
spot of comfort, a place where "ill the
love and sentiment of dear Old "home,
sweet borne," dwells. ?
A WATTARKR.;
Better be non-reUgloM than nypooAta-
oal
e e
Ie !t earUln that bag polios force
rr" . a e
Bhoourage people who do the best
' e e
- X larger fraotlon of the world's sor
row ie aue 10 guns,
. a a
Nobodreava aeeuse Qlpsy Smith of
uucjvag dim Dig laient.
Wonder what millionaires, and where.
" " . wn, v ayym
- O proeperttl How many false ap-
a aiaHM aa-iny nasae.
t- -
: Maybe ejuleker and surer yustloe"
needed more than more Judges. .
-i .... e ... a ,,..., ..... k
" ; avjr, Binmng girt.;
be eon
for Big
-H-."".!" H P?ty. the aP-
mil u 1 uu vi om ueapisea.
.; ' ;v,.. ;
The - eovernmapt - mi 'tn
Btruotlna a mournerr bench
Business, ; y. ., . .
, . .e e . .
Transient aitnotlnna 'Hai- v .
Uiat oovnts" lmvu w
jaaa-a -------- -vva a u AIIWVII UrV
China may serve the good purpose of
wvrivirun peace.
I 'Tain and ta-aaa aa.anui alu la
. . if mm
L-' "'J .Tr every year, how
ever much the aaeeeement is Increased.
Frotnmant amaa n a .
w ju FBiuienanee iar more than
many who are there, are several bank
wrecaers.
.v P who robe hundreda, perhaps
thaweanda, through a bank, Is about the
last Oliminal to whan, Ml-mM
be shown. .
. e
If the Baw'iaaii nt mr frin.
tains a good record, It will be an object
leaaon for the whole oountry to con
template With annroval anil a.HM.
uom ., " - . :
a a
It was his lifelona- fria
nails man accidentally' killed
sun wnue nunnng.
d that a Che-
With
Political , Rcmihiflccnce
V Vom M.lD&uiete''0a.):: tar.:":'
Sole wilt have ita firet election under
Its new city charter on December e.-'
' . ' ' i '.' e, , '
AH but ((too of Lane oountr's 1680,.'
00 of 1910 taxes ha been collected.
: .,, ."''-..(', , e .0 ,. 'J ' I-,?:-
A 'rattleanake Was killed a' few days
ago at Irrigoa by Deputy Oama Warden
Avertll.. - .vf'i'rVW'
AS entirely saw and" UTwto-data tain.
phone system is protniaed Klamath falls
as one of its 1011 benefit. .
The tin lake oountrv la now oon.
neoted with Klamath FalU - and tha
rest of the world by telephone. - .. .
1 I- : ' :.,; a O. I
Paator Hovan of .tha Churnh of Chriat
at Tillamook hae accepted a call from
the ohuroh of that denomination at Cot
tage Oreve. -.,... ?!..-...-;
The Dalles Chronicle! " Two families
In able, recently: publlsbed volume of"
reminleoenoes Senator Shelby M. Cul-'
lorn Idlaeourees at some length on!'- the
relations of President Harrison and Mr,
Blaine, if r, - CuUom " frankly acknowl
edge that he did not, like President v
Harrison, ascribing this feeling to the
letter's oold ''.and distant temperament -that
made' oloe ;: friendship ' with him
difficult Nor does the jriinols senator
seem to have had 1 an eSDeolallv hiirh
presonal regard for Blaine, as he rea
lates .certain ' incident ' that show the
Maine man In a rather unpleasant light. '
L taylttog Blaln to his cabinet
Mr. Harrison followed an old oustom
that of a president 1 conferring honor
oh a chief competitor. - It Wei a course
ot!L ' Um r Blaine's friend.
arrived in The Dallaa thia mornln from 11
England, , bound for Redmond, where 'These friends, some jof them,, doubtleas
.uyjtirtii i& ttoto:t in fomenting discord
k 1 1 ja . PPintment was made, but
famUles bad five children.
i ...... .e ....'-..; ... v. .-.' -,r
Contractors are larlxur : 400 'to boa
linear feet of macadam a daV an tha
Central Point Boad, aeoordlng to the
Mall Tribune. It la expected that the
road will be completed this year,
IJnn county's various Jilsh echoole
report attendance as . follows: Albany
vUle It, Harrtsbvrg 3 J, Boio SO, Crabtree
17. Haleey 1, Oakvllle 17. Total fill.
iA companr ha been formed to son.
Struct aa Inia-etlon avatcm to oovaa
a large tract of land on tbe Whit lake
side of the valley range of htlle, weet
of Merrill, tying In California and Ore
gon. wy-.,l ,
Oreaoo Clrv r!nnr1ari . Tha aM II
resldenoea under oonatruetlon in tha
city, some juet starting and some Just
being completed. The city Is having a
steady, substantial growth and the
many improved streets have had muoh
to do with this growing.
, e-, e
cevlei
creek
bad it not been made there would have
SUSS A' "lTm "tfeiam,( and Blaine '
outside of the cabinet might have been
air great a source of annoyance and
irritation to the president aa ht At all
lI!!h,,, tooK t tnt- wlr. nn'
doubtedly seemed to him the most
Judicious course and probably was so
in fact, notwithstanding Uter. develop,
nlents.. Benator CuUom sets forth the
situation thus: . T .
1 Harrison did ant t-i. . tn.t.l aa. .
that degree of oemfldenoe 'andxmrteey
one would expect from the chief axeo-
l me premier of . hi cabinet:
Hal Jf? th otBw. nd Blaln hated,
iI?at!!ad WM PlotUE aoe or lea
against him while he wak a member
ohj cabinet. . The president talked
very freely about Mr. Blaine (in eon-
nh0ak,'?tVCuUom- H declsred
t5! Ji!lh2 bn doing the work of
tne , state department Mmaai m - -
yw-or more.- that he had prepared
every important official dormant and
T -. . Hm i ... I..J .l. . . 1 uwuuioxil. UQ
r. v....' a" f r .. . m us own nandwn
loeated on tha Hervfonf landa 'alonar h- ... D.eore him. ' And y
the lake shore, The railroad grade I -IT -lt. .secretary
Borders the lake, and the atatlon wHl 7 J' out account of what
pe located o. feet south of the state """a "ons n tne etate department.
aw v.,.H UVl.fVWU IV, I v. VW, L IU III TIB BJ T M T
-tin till- V. t. . ( . rrrt. . ,MT .." 7 ir.7., . ---" . - . am X
h- r """t'"a- a am wiuow, 11 not i piamng- a townsite at tne station, and 1 preea nimself- ae belne- narfantiv in
mTlli&JSP. Profofd. la , ft la poMlble -that there will be ew in,, to u.e m tiHZl"?
sorrier than the fool.
I and aa "old" town.
Wood., ' '
.
No Cause to Intervene.
Portland. Or.. Nov, 16. To the Editor
of The Journal. Tonight's Journal
State,-in a dispatch from Washington.
D. C. that Taft and his cabinet toda-r
discussed ,the Hdviaablllty Of calling on
the power (other nation of earth) to
intervene In China "because of a fear
of another Boxer uprising." Juet the
thought of Interventlou by thl or any
other nation Is enough to cause the hair
of any and e-rerv rood American to
etand on end In righteous Indignation.
There Is not now and has never been
during the present revolution Is China
any oauee whatsoever for Intervention.
Not a single United States official nor
a single missionary ha sent out word
that they were In any danger nor that
faridrn nronavlv tni.i . J
of national character, the lnteraat In . Rer. The revolutionist and also the
SEVEN LITERARY WITS
Dr. Parhuel Johnson.
It ts a a wit that Dr. Bamnel John
son is most appreciated today.' His
satire and his Witty saying are re
peated more often than those of any
one English writer. At one time his
EAR1 GREY ON ANNEXATION
which will require an auditorium of
vast capacity.
' Portland must meet the fact that
it is no longer in swaddling clothes.
The throngs who surrounded the
last ' night.
it
PEW days ago Earl Orey, the
late; gbvernor! general of Can
ada, made an informing speech temnorarv audttorinm
In London, before ... the Roval forco Portion d t r,.
Colonial, institute on Canada's decis- must meet tha vlirannlAa .nil
I . .. -UU uo-
waaii"" o reciprocity. , mands of a lan Mt a a-Mt
In O a I. .... . ., , I :tT- ..IJ .u . . . .... . . " Mai
auauo iu ocpivtuutsr uwl ana airesayi wjere was nsraiv sucn vention hall. nrnnarW nti.a.
nA.1 1 AA a... -.t--- hln...'.. I I .. ... . .. ' . :
uv.,., aw vuttuo m x-us'inu i " -"-"a u- aiuBiiuBB anuexaxion- scienuiicaiiy aonointed and xrith
Sinn. t.l. '. ,t. v- I let" In V Jll . .. ...... I . . . . ' . "Hiuiuicu, auu Wim
juvus.iuin iuuuu vuuiuBuuoa ue " uuuimiuu. II ne 18 riE-ni rnmrnrrah a annnmmn-inn a
many tnousands is a public need
and Portland's decision to supply it
13 wisaom.
G
AIDING OREGON
OVERNOR WEST insists thgt
the interests of settlors cn ir
rigation projects under the
Carey act shall be fully pro-
tween telegraph and telephone ab61- Champ Clark will have to build sen
iahed. It is stated that four classes timent from the ground un. Con-
of offices have been instituted. In sidering the independence of the av-
No. 1 telegraph and telephone tousi- erage Canadian both in theory and
ness are done by one operator. In practice he has his life's work ahead
No, 1 all business is by telephone, of. Kim.
Class S Includes , toll stations, and Earl Orey -said farther that the
Class A public pay stations. I Canadians disliked the idea of lnter-
The Postal points out that the re- fering in the local affairs of the old
suit II that there Is, in all these lo- country. Just as much as they obJect-
caiiues, but one office and one ser- ed to interference In their own, and tected. He insists that tie financial
vice, where formerly two offices and would not have their vote on reel- arrangements of those who nrnmnt
I fl ..Mfl... .A .. , . . 1 II. i . I . . . . I L. . . . . ...
aww Kiiwm tuuiyei.au iur puunc i wwiij cuuiuuuudu wnn any aesire Lu projects euaii oe sound, so that
business. - . for tariff reform. setlers shall not
. . -. . .. . . I . . . . . " "
a acre is a naraiy veuea tnreat in i -vonaas naa rejected reciprocity Py n installments on lands He in.
uvcauee ngnuy or wrone v. she sists - mat - It-is . imnnrtent tnm v.
w w i f vhu v va a- f1?
sniffed" in it danger to the lmneri- lands to go to the settler a eheanlv
. 1 , . ... . .
ii. cunnecuon, t sne would .not possiDie m order that landless
accept any form of imperialism that men can be helped to srot a holdln
J 1. J . . I . . ... I . . . T
iwuiiBu auy Buojecuon. to an ontsine auu a nome.
slon of the human voice by wire to parliament in which she was not It is an excellent policy. It i
be in competition with the transmis- represented. They claim the right policy that should "be acceptable to
eiuu oi me signals oi tne teiegrapn. i to tax Hrnisn imports, should their an nonest Carey act promoters
auu, imvuu, u me uujeci oi me itiua unu uaiionai requirements I it uovernr west and the desert
uuion oi inieresis oi tne western J renoer. sucn taxation desirable, and 'ana board do less thev will noi. t nl,
Union and the Bell Telephone com- j do not propose to interfere with the "11 the obligation placed on them by
pany was monopoly of methods of, people of the United Kingdom in tho federal government. If tho des-
communication. probably the an- raising their revenue In anv wav Oiat ert land board h -
. .... I , l . ' . u .v nwu ab
the article that the Sherman anti
trust act will be Invoked by the
Postal people to lestrain and punish.
It will be interesting to observe If
the courts will hold the transmis-
awer to the first question will
No, and to the second Yes. '
be
PURE WOOL
choose
There is recent history and future
policy in a condensed form,
T
i HE first of two main points dis
cussed by the Oregon wool-
growers at the Baker con
vention, and which took eharie
in .resolutions, will be received with
general satisfaction by the consum
er. The same nrlncinlp that nnr.
ULSTER
T the opening of the session of
the British parliament the
premier addressed himself to
his followers, and laid down
the purpose with which the ministry
intended to deal with Irish hnmn
A'
ii., iv, , - , - , . "v- "u iiiBu uome
lies tne PUre lOOd law should im-nn nil. and Wo. ah laD,KiiT . .
the r.t i-i.i-.i. .7. . " -r"""."uwu, tne
ia , 6inun requiring one a political and the other an ec
d t. v their cleBlastical survival from pant gen-
proaucts so as to show the content
both In pure wool and In shoddy
arinltarflnta
. In view of the enormouB disparity
between the value of the wool In a
suit of 'clothes and the store price
for the finished article, the purchas
er la at least entitled to know that
.ha geta.the pure raw. material which
Insures the durability of the suit
The question of simple honesty is
Involved the correspondence be
tween name and reality,
? If once ) the new system be In
stalled, which means an enforce. le
guarantee of the purity of the ma
terial, two results will follow. . The
first, that the magic ''Imported from
England," -or "imported from
France" will lose its power for the
enhanced Vflue ,in the eyea of the
buyer now depends much less on the
appearance of the goods than on
faith that wool means wool and
nothing else. 1 The secoai that re-
ersuons. "Bo Just," said he. "be
not only Just, but generous In your
handling of it. In the case of Irish
self-government, be careful, scrupu
lously careful, of the rig.atB and priv
ileges of the minority. That is the
spirit in which we - shall approach
both tasks." ', ...
The Ulster men defeated home
rule in 1886, and- 1893,; and "many
of them will do their best to defeat
it next year. But in the province of
Uloter there are nine 'counties
three . n which j the Catholics' have
an overwhelming majority, three in
which prottetante are. much the
more numerous; and ! three wherein
Protestants and .Catholics, are -about
equally;, divided,;; : There r political
contests are .yphemently4 fought out,
with. the inspiration of roligiOuo bit-ternoss.-
.- . - . . , , . , u
The citadel t)f anti-home , rule is
la BoUast. Nowher in the world is
more wealth produced by u city of
all, that function Is to protect the
interests of the settlers. If that Is
not their duty, there is no exense
for. their existence so far as Carey
act reclamation is concerned.
Too many of the Carey act pro
jects m Oregon are on a shoestring
basis. It la a serious thing to draw
men by advertising to an Irrigation
project on a promise that water will
be supplied, and then, - after they
wan tor montne or even years, no
water comes. It Is a dreary outlook
for a man after struggling with his
family to' build a home in a desert.
depending on the arrival of water, to
get no water.
It is of the utmost conseaaence
that every promise made on. the ir
rigation projecta shall be kept. The
federal government gave each state
1,000,000 acres of land for Carey
projects, and the state is in honor'
bound to see that every ". develop
ment company fulfills every contract
to the letter. :. ,
There is something more than the
mere relations of settler and promot
er involved. The larger Question
of the inocess of irrigation In Oregon
Is at stake, and it Is a, matter of
state-wide , consequence. . that ? the
reclamation projecta lUall all beauo
cessful. Upon the. good faith with
whlph the,- prtjects are carried out
depends future settlement and devel
opment. - .-,,...,
Aa an issue of broad state toller.
Governor West Is entirely Justifiable
la his attitude. It is aa essentia
Imperialist m have' rellaioualr eruardad
against any and eTery act toward for
eigners which cotild by any possible
stretch of the Imagination be Construed
into even a menace, in fact they have
carefully protected evert foreiraar on
Chinese soil. .
To Interfere In China todav would
be the greatest outrage and most un-
rorgivaoie crime . of all history. The
other powers could have "Interfered" in
the United States during the Civil war
with Just as much reason aa 'w and
the other powers can' now 1nterfe'
ln China. To me, Mr. Editor, this plan
of Taft and his cabinet Is horrifying,
outrageous and damnable. - Every olti
cen peaheesed of a single droo of mod
red American blood In his vein ought
to send a protest to the president I
sincerely hope that he will receive no
less than 20,000,000 telegram and let
ter of protest within the next a hon.
I shall write him an earnest and strong
ly worded protest
The Commercial and Other elnha of
the city should (and I earnestly urge
them to do so) eend protests to tha
president T. QEXJ. p.
writing were muoh read, but they, have
fallen greatly Into neglect In our day.
He 1 an extremely good example of
character outlasting performance. His
dictionary ha lone been out of la
the moral essays of the "Rambler," once
s-o widely read and imitated, are un
known even to the moat general reader.
A few of hi. "Uvea of the Poeta" have
been edited and praised, but Only for
a desire to resoue at least something
of the great man's work from ohiivion
and vindicate his place In the world of J
i-u-re. luven "KasSela," a plea Of
allegorical fiction once thought au
premely good. 1 unread. But hi per
sonality, hi actual sayings and. doing,
remain as freah as everr a well on
account of the personality ltaelf aa of
the vivid biography by Boewell which
describe It .
i.fhn'' ' unuemaL In
later llf he said- to Boewell: "Sir,
in my early year I read very hard;
It 1 a sad reflection tmt . . '
that I knew almost aa RllUlfi at at - aa
" spite of the fact
that during hi college life he was "Ja.
pressed by poverty and Irritated by
a 'ZT. .. z "r . a D1 "How atu
a.;- " ""m"a lo ne to one of the
h I k r rrouoeom follow."
"v.Vt T""1"' on mis statement
a-.viwjjj ijs tne troth: '"Ah. sir
:?Lm'in1 Voltnt u w bltternees
".v. innjr miBioox rorjfrollo. I was
miserably poor, and I thouarht fan ,
J " "leraiure ana wit: so I
,d,1;,tU,.Dwr -Jl uthor
a!yi. S h tutof Oxford, who
..o aoeence rrom school:
sir, you have sconced me two pence
for non-attendance., at a lecture not
worth a penny."
When Johnson had fmlehed his dic
tionary, Lord Chesterfield expected that
the work would be dedloated to him
and published some fine compliments to
the author. These overture were re
ceived with scarcely veiled contempt
"I have SMled." Said Johhann In n.
rlok, "a long and painful voyage round
the world .of the English language; and
Lord, one who looks with unconcern on
a man etruggllug for life in the waters
ana wnen he ha reached the ground,
enoumoera mm witn help?" Not con
tent witn this sturdy rebuff, Johnson
made his celebrated epigram i "This
man I thought had been a Lord among
wits; but I find he Is only a wit among
Prom 172. when George m granted
to him a pension. : the mat rii
became a great talker, and by a happy
a eM.41 k.- , - -1 v ay
- - aiiaiwui wnen the soldier
h. -f.nra fV00 "d tlrd'' nd U ht
mL7!S It 1x1 etu" wa acknowledg
h? i1" 0 ftad "how PPrecla
BiatnaThM b- Ped of Mr.
Bleanex: He ajjj, in dosing the coawer
satioa, that he Intended some tayto
fiuon tt oondltl of th"r rl!
Always in Good H
umor
-TWO KINDS.
Prom the Chicago Record-Herald.
"There are Just two kinds of liars In
this world."
, "Two kinds r . ' ' .
Tee. The ones who lie to help thorn-
Stroke of fortune! h W tecTdto tT" ". who 11. to Injure
n...ii " . . .7! - vura
" auu inufiKrarw tne Keenest
ooaerver, the moot attentive listener,
and the most devoted .admirer who ever
penned a biography. From their first
meeting Boswell record-, several of
Johnson' sayings; for example: "Der
rick may do very well a long aa he
can outrun his character; but the mo
ment his character gets up with him. It
is all over." ,
When the king desired to meet Dr.
Johnson, after ho had received a degree
from two universities. It was nuirktv
rrangea. . i n monarch's compliment
. SPEEDY. ,"',
MProm the--Philadelphia Record.
Firat Typewriter Girl she' a .pretty
quick operator, isn't sheT
second. Typewriter Girl Quick? I
Should say she was. She hadn't been
in her Job two weeks before she was
engaged to the boss.
Storing the Flood Waters.
Cecil. Or., Nov.-lO. To the Editor jof does he now send me- two oook boats
1"Vk M. . Taa.aaaaaa.aa ta. . ... iA A. a. . - . . . .
iu iui m mio narDorr- To the earl
himself he wrote: "I not a patron, my
The Journal. I have been thinking for
some time or laying before the publlo
through your Journal a plan for tha
conservation of the bountiful supply
of water given to us bv our Creator
Beginning on the head watara of
streams that flow throurh drv dta-
trlots, I would put small dams on all
the Unlets, forming a rriany lakes aa
possible. Coming down the stream I
would form larger lakes wherever prac
ticable and in thl way hold back tha
eany rush or, water that goes to waste.
In Willow creek there is water enough
going to waste in lees than a week to
water live tunes aa much around a la
now being watered, and I find that one
good soaking in the spring will make
tnree- good crops of alfalfa on the flats
of Willow creek. This surplus water,
mm neiu Dacn, oouia oe turned oat on
to tne nine ana higher valleys at con
Venient place and thereby water lm
mense bodies of land. It would also, by
holding back the early rush of water.
lesson tne danger or sucn disasters aa
tne noppner nood.
the Heppner flood. . J. M. REED.
A Disgusted Depositor.
Blind Slough, Or., .Nov." 14. To the
Editor of The Journal In. my memory
there has been money enough stolen by
iiiiaviuK uaiiuara j py tor tne Panama
canai, ana most ii Working people's
hard earned money, and there has never
oeen one or this cuss punished except
as a matter of form. The Philomath
incident show that neither brains or
capital is required te go into the bank
ing business, The, old game goes
merrily-on. Tne state banking depart
ment of Washington la a total failure,
so iar aa responsiDinty or security is
conoerned. - It looks to me Ilk an an
cient gold : brick, factory and there is
omy one remay. n tn working neo.
pie would withdraw their money front
the state tfarvks the services of men like
J. 1j. Monunaro, oovernor Hay's chief
or starr, wouia oe out or a job. . - -
;::. - '-n-S- SPENCER. "(
'y Thinks the Punishment . Harsh.
! To the- Mothers of Portland Hdw
Would you feel If your dear little daugha
ter returned f com sohool with her deli
cate body, covered with waits from her
waist to her knees Tf Welt " that had
been made; by a piece of Karden hose lit
the - hands, of a vigorous, teacher and
which did not disappear from the-chlld's
body for nine days. - This is what hap
pened to little Gall Shadlnger for whis
pering and laughing. What is there left
for lying and. vlcloueness if this brutal
punlahment Is used for light offenses t
No teaoher should have -the moulding
of UUl soul whe ha not fcUength and
' PROCEDURE,
Prom Puck.
Foreign Bnemy-w-Then you think it i
and Johnson's comment on it are well u"1," - to attack the oountry by
.. . :. I WaV AT Til r Ta.VI
anuwn. wonnson aia ne nan air en at i ' ----- -v
aon ni part a a writer." "I should
have ' thought so, tbo.r said the king,
"If roil had nnl arlltn u 11 " T.h.
soa remarked to his friend that this
was "decisive" and needed no reply.
''When the king had said It It was to
be o. , It was not for me to bandy
elvllitle with my sovereign."
Johnson died on November 16,1714.
The bicentenary of his birth was cele
brated cn September 18, 1800, and as
liora juscauiay mignt have said, no
human being who ha been In his arrave
for a century, and a Quarter 1 o well
known ae Samuel Johnson, who repu
tation Sheridan noted ha been "Flx'd
by the hand thai, bid our language
live."
But rather than as a literary man
Johnson live among us In those sen
tentious sayings which
w Tor
Assistant Celtalnlv. Our Inu-.ai-..
Uon tell us that it I Impossible. Flret
we would have to paas a trained army
of customs Inspectors, then a squad of
quarantine officials, and what was left
a , WDUia wVl way by a picked
delegation of reporter asking u hew
w llkd the country. ,
IN THE MEADOW.
Prom the New York Sun. -Mr.
KniekerAren't you fond of
oouatry UfeT S 1
h IV & W&rTmm, I jnart love to
hear th farmer page the cows.
The Old Philadelphia
Prom the Philadelphia Record.
m removing the foundation. av-ir
in uiuie bob- i mi.,.. k..ii. . - ------ m,v
Bi.hop Percy ZZT "Z,'"' 0 ?m,Bt
.rM--.-T " 7 frl Quaint specimens of old tim. 7ZZZ
w V". "V ooMtructlon. lnolndina- a.-. -.;r;"'
"'' wviupr an antique Biauie I w-lilta -..waa
where every win and muaole la dl. -v.l a Z?r. ,,ICOT,r,'t Th In
tlnct and bold. In these days we alad- v"- v""il" were, wa reached by
ly turn to each sayings of the great
age: "Sir, yon may have reasons why
twice two are five, but they are four
nevertheless!" "Sir. I have found you
an argument but I am not obliged to
find you an understanding."
Tomorrow John' Phllpot Curran.
beauty of character enough to oontrol
by other means than brutal force. Why
were her parents who -could have been
of great assistance to. th teacher not
notified T Why wasnl Gail sent home
for discipline? The whipping was
brutal and premeditated, for Gall was
told that she had acted like a boy and
should be treated like one. If it was th
teacher's lat day In Oregon. This mat
ter was not taken before the court be-
xore we appealed to Mr. Stanley, the
principal of the traildlnx: he rebuked
and threatened u. We are law abiding
viiiKtus asKing no lavontwm but simple
Justice, and hoping that no other' dear
child will reoelve at the hands of a
teacher such brutal treatment If w
can't get Justloe in the courts, where
are We going to get KT At the trial.th
Judge asked Gall "If she knew what an
oath wasr' She replied that she thought
she did; it wa to swear th truth and
nothing but the truth. Asked if ah
always told the truth she said sh did.
Asked If She ever told fibs, "Oh, yes, I
sometimes tell mamma fibs but tell her
the truth afterwarda." Th parent
were then mdvised "by the Judge to send
the cnild back to th same sohool and
teacher, thus , upholding her in her
treatment , It seems to me the court
has made a heroine of the strong and
vigorous wieiuer or garden hose on
Child.' , - ' !' . ,.V''
I also wlah to Stat that th oleo of
hoaa dtanlavad In tha patirt a- nna ik.
same aa the oh Used on Gall, Novem-
Dr S, .-'i,vj.'- f :(. ,'.vi,. .'.av ;;v.
Mothers of young innocent rrowine
gins, neip m in mis struggle against
nrultallty. ,v MRS. SliADINGER.
haa .. "--ivr. r-rt
stone arches, a methdd handed down
from mediaeval time, no, nt v.
in which bullion was stored oonalated of
within a vault and wa de-i
i ..,1 ln "mm 01 "no war
of 1812 to conceal material which owld
not.be readily transported to ether hid
ing places,
Several small window la the cellar
were protected by heavy hand wrought
Iron bar. These hare bean
and will be added, alona- with aha
with South America In spit of blow
after Mow, we bar clung to th hop
that the president would lmnrova auffi-
clently to hav a general balance of relic, auoh a locks and hinge, to th
1ST. ", L cntryV. F?r "hr "otlou 1 Independence haain dig"
imbecile lack of backbon thl last out- ging out an old well In the yard a num,
rage la the wort v ber of copper coin a bearina- the 4iata
of 181 and 181 Were founds as well
'-v IncMdible. . ! , .
' Prom Colller'a Weekly.
President Taft' indorsement of Boss
Cox's ticket is the final horros, To sup
port It at all (on the ura-anea an'd m.
surano of a Cox politician!) was terri
ble epougn; cut to support It sgalnst
so fitting and courageous 'a candidate
as Hunt-i-eally, words fall, and we are
driven to punctuation and italic, v
what 1 the- president doming tot
After such an exhibition can he be even
nominated T . If there were an election
tomorrow, would not . Woodrow WlUon
carry Ohio against him overwhelmingly?
We .have been patient-with Mr. Taft
The a-ayne-Aldrlch tariff, the Bellinger
iniquities, the uee Of patronage against
Innurgents, the "wool veto, the retention
of Seoretary Wilson and Solicitor Me
Cabe, the turning of tbe poatoffioe de
partment Into a still more rigid politi
cal naaujhine, the ruiu of our relatione
More Blessed to Give, ' , '
Prom the Chicago Post'
Aooordlng to the Chronicle published
by th Anglican missionaries in Nv-
asaland, the dlooesan cathedral at Ll
koma. Lake Nyaea, takes up, probably
me moat exiraorainary collections on
Sundays of any cathedral in the World.
During March, for example, the offer
ings embraced: -:
on hundred and ; sixty-seven
us wora uokets, i pieces
bracelets, 7 necklaces, (t corncob.
pumpkins. I basket of cassava-root. 2
papal s (whatever1 they may be), I mel
on. 1 gourd, Jl eggs, X chickens and
1 duck. ' . . ,
It must .be something of a problem to
utilise , suoh a variety; but there are
plenty of country editors, as a writer
in th New Tork Evening Post ob
serve; who have made hlft with mater
ial almost as varied. . We are so used to
a definite, "medium of exohanee" that
to be thrown back Into' regime of bar-
as a Quantity of eerap copper from
wiur.n me coin naa Deen out
Prom old paper relating to a lawsuit
found by Prank H. ' Stewart, president
of the company" which owns the prop
erty, It was ascertained that five build
ings were, originally Included la the old
mint, all of them grouped around the
coinage building. It Is a hlstorie fact
that this old structure, which was the.
laal nt IX... I.11I l,t. ... a k. .
ven coins, the first building of any description
Of soep.s erected by th United States. ;
mcobe; 110 r , .
Chicago Letting Down.
Fronv Chicago Reoord-Herald.
.'Now that ? the guests have gdne,"
said ths eminent pianist, "let's have a
little ragtime and enjoy ourselves. .
Spasmodic Piety
11111 I . M I i I V I
(Oontrtbuti'd te Th Joernal h'Wlt Wa.i. I
tha (moiM'Kdnaaa Boat. Hl rrtma-Dorlna ara a M
ta- u . ia, 'mA.i .Ali. ii . . i ruaular faatura at thta ailumu I.. 11- ,..ii
" nwuu- I1UL lUr iDOIl . , . Mmtif
small boys, somewhat-confusing. - . I ... . ' ' t-.-v -.i
' So many In this vale of woe are shin
ing lights on Sunday," and then they lot
religion, go, while chasing ; scads on
MondayL on Sunday some are So v
vout, you hear, their.; pinions Qulvek !
-.- ,-.;t: ' : -v" '
Liberal : and ;'Astnte.45,;v:;:; ;
Prom the Cleveland Plain Dealer. K."
"You'; fellows who want to ba known
as successful dramatists hav got the
.. , v. V. 1 ... . . . . .a.
wng dope," the tall, efrioient-looklng from, kiver unto klver; and iwhen tha
strana-er aaaiicad 11 a. : m. 1 fiahhath rni tram id.. ....... .A.
young chap you have a bully idea for bonee and, laurels, and do not care a'
a musical comedy. Let me make you ari tinker' cuss for any set of morals,
offer.'- Take that' Idea of yours: nut Six days on sinful games tha nt
it in tn acts, and I'll put bp' the money land onoe; a week arv pious; the books
to produoe it at my theatra ' . In wbloh the Word Is writ that eort
"Ten acta." gasped tn budding lihret- of graft deny us. ' Rellsioh' aood tha
t14: "your theatreT Do nu ma.n it I whole week through, to n,tnr,i.. -nm
Would the publlo Bit through, ten aoUT Monday; and w should, then refuse to
DO youv own this theatre? ; Would N 00 things we'd abhor n, Sunday. I
"Stop before , you get "any . more a, am not strong on slnxln naaima m
cited, 1 young V man." prooeeded th hoar and oreaky.- from eat-
stranger, "and I will answer your que- lag . prunes . and. .boneUae ham and
tions. iNo, th public that goes to mu- "lth- foodffrom Topekyj J am not,1"
sloal comedy would not alt through tr0n on texts because the sooreboard
ien aotsinat is, it wouldn't Sit still. numpingj one can't stock up
Secondly, no. t do not own this theatre.
But I own the bar nat . opens out of
the lobby. Do you Set mef Brimr on
your play," -.. '.. m-,-...
we are waMlnjr for it It is a-oino- tn
make n. great bit wath that tall strana-er
and ua. . ,
with moral saws when'footbali teams
are Jumping. , But , 1,'ve a simple creed, '
a plan that may hav oome from
heaven; I U e aa ploue as I can. not ' '
Just on day,, but seven. .
OopyMght."- 1011, by
Oeurge alutUitw Adama.
' '.rv"''1'
,,i ... ,k'.