THE OREGON DAILY t JOURNAL, PORTLAND, , FRIDAY EVENING, DECEMBER - 1, ' 1911, THE JOURNAL AS INDEPENDENT KKW8PAP8R. S, JACKSON . ...Publlbr r?"Pbllbd imi Tnlr.f ept Snd7) nd ulld lu. Flfta nod ynUfil tru, Portland. Of. ... .. -. . . . Portland. Or. tor trMMnlwIan lirouu U walls. eoi. riaa matw. - - i- ' trtfnuuri f4 T1TH. f - Homo. A-60nI AH department rrhd . brb Tell th iirtr what dprtmnt yon want. midviiv invvu'Tifliva pwPUKSSNTATI VH. rVnJimln Kentnor Co., Brnmwlck Building, 828 Fifth nu, New Xotk; Ull Fupl 0 Hulldlnf, Chicago. Subcrtpttoa Twin by mall or to any addrww IB 14 HIM Of BUi. DAILY. On r. ....... 88.00 I Om month ...I J SUNDAY. On ntr.... $2.50 I On month I .28 DAILY AND 8CNDAY. .... ST.RO I On month . All nature la bit art unknown to thee. All chance, direction, which thou canst not see. Pope. -a A COUNT WANTED T' iHE west extension of the Uma tilla project would put 60.000 to 60,000 acres of arid land Into productivity. Its entire cost Is estimated at $4,000,000. The ultl mate cost of the land to th'e settler Is placed at $80 per acre. Once re claimed, It would provide homes for the homeless, lands for the landless ' and Jobs for the jobless. Forty per cent of the area Is owned by the government. Twenty per cent Is the , property of , the Northern Pacific railroad, and that company offers to allow the govern . ment to fix its own price and its own terms In conveying It to actual set- tiers, an offer very creditable to that corporation.-.Trenty-eight per cent . is !nhufcAtsof the Oregon Land ft Water company, and there Is a statement that the Oregon Land & Water company ia willing to cooper ate with the government fn further ing the extension of the project. The remaining 12 per cent Is under pri vate ownership.' r- Here is a splendid opportunity by a broad policy to make new homes, new settlers, and new production in eastern Oregon. Fifty to sixty thou sand acres of barren land made pro ductive Is a consequential issue. It Is an issue worth pressing, because It is feasible. It la within the regu latlons of the public reclamation sys- . tem. It has the approvalof the re clamation authorities and only awaits the approval of President. Taft to become effective. ' For months past denunciation has been thundered at the Oregon sen ' a tors -ecause this extension has not ' been made. It was' charged that . they .were responsible for the -delay, - Mr Bowerman voiced It. ( The Ore ' gonlan proclaimed it. ; Lesser lights , cuckooed It. ..But, at last, the colored gentleman - has emerged from the woodpile. The real opposition is out in the open, " Settlers on a private project are voic ing it in resolutions adopted at pub- tic meetings. ... We have, in fact, the - unexpected spectacle of an open cam paign -against extension, of the, Uma tilla project - It is a campaign in 1 which protests have been sent to the Oregon delegation, to the secretary of the interior, and to the president, i Oregon ought to have this big area of , barren land under irrigation. As a matter of, state-wide policy, it should be pressed to an issue, and at once. Those who are ? against It should stand up to be counted. Those who are for It should stand ' Up to be counted; If representations are to be -made to the president they should be made In open dryllght. The public would like to have an open statement of his views on the subject by.W. J. Furnish of the pri vate project It would like to have an open statement by ex-Congressman Ellis,' who was on the house committee when congress cut out thaj part of section nine which re quired all reclamation money raised In Oregon to be spent In Oregon, it would like an open statement from Dr. Henry Waldo Coe, former fac tor in the private project, and for- merly much in evidence at the na tional capital. SIX DECADES AGO THEt Rutland Messenger tells of the pay of teachers in Vermont 68 years ago. It says $18 for a whole term of three months was often the pay of men teachers, and $11 the teaching wage of women. Of course, the teachers of the time had free board in the homes of pupils, usually taking turns of a week each with the various families. But even with board added it is difficult to fancy a grown man on a wage of 25 cents a day, or a woman teacher on a dally wage of 15 cents. That was six decades ago. It was half way from the birth of the Amer ican republic to the present. It was In the time of reading, writing, arith metic and the hazel switch. It was before football, college yells end trat ' houses. It was an era of three months school in a year, when to read, write and cipher was a fair education. But 'from such training came splendid presidents, wise gov ernors," able r administrators and a patriotic people. ' ; ; J . .' However, education is fast becom ing a ; large 'actors ; In , successful careers. "The number of the unedu cated who climb to distinction is on th'e wane, vTbe percentage : of col lege graduates listed-In "Who's Who In America" 1b steadily "mounting. '-In the 19111 volume seventy-pne. per cent of those about whom educa tioual facta are gitenj. have had col lege training. Fifty eight per cent are graduates of colleges or schools of college or university trades, :.. Only sixteen. per cent ended their educa- the "laws of humanity and there tlon In high scbols. academies, nor- quirements of the public conscience" ratals' or seminaries. Only nine per shall prevail,' ' ' j ; cent who received a common school education found a place in the book, If the boys and girls are to have a fair start, there must be better schools than those reflected by the $18 a term for men'and $11 for wo- men leathers lh Vermont six' decades ago. A GHASTLY RECORD Y ESTfiRDAY , The Journal print ed a list of homicides that oc curred recently In the United States in a single day. The dead totaled 37. Thip did not Include six negroes described as having been killed "In the last six days." It did not include other pos- slble killings that may have escaped the eye of the press clippings bureau that made up the list. ' It was a day to think about. It is the more Impressive becauso it was "tones and other still more danger not much more of a murderer's day OU8 stones shatter the windows of than la every day. ; We have killed as high as 30 people every 24 hours the whole vear throueh. The av- erage for 1910, according to the best statistics, was 24 murders for each day in the year. x , . It la a staEreerlns: record. It Is an average of 115 to the million of pop- ulatlon, while Italy' Is only 105. Great -Britain's is 27: France kills an average of only 19, and Germany but 13. - " It yesterday's list as printed, 24 1 of the victims - were . shot. In some or Britain rioatsT or, la It that they cases the weapon used was not spec- have faith in such a policy of com- lfied, but it is probable that the pulsion as is the worat and most fu number actually shot was larger. method of influencing Anglo- Twenty-four out of 37 shot down in Saxon men? r ; one day, with a possibility that there were others, throws some Hsht on 1 why w have ; become a notorious man-killing nation. We arm every thug, every murderer, every assassin I Bon no .to force, is the only satis and every crazy man, supply them factory method of conversion. Up with ammunition and give them leave to go out and shoot, slaughter and Slav. It Is one Influence that helped to write the ghastly record printed in yesterday's Journal, There Is another and an even deadller Influence. It is the failure cent election by only 1500 votes of the courts and Juries to convict, when a clear majority of the entire France, with its record of killing voting population of the state cast only 18 per million, convicts 70 per their ballots. cent of its criminals brought to trial. In the English campaign the ten Germany,' with its record of only 13 tatlve and weakly bill proposed for per million, convicts 95 per cent, the last session has been abandoned We, with our record of 115 per mil- by both friends and opponents. Hon, convict only 1.3 per cent. That bill would have , enfranchised Is it not an appalling circum- stance? German courts convict 95 out of every 100 murderers; our courts convlct'lS out of every 1000 murderers. Is It any wonder that the list of our killings In one day numbered 37? Is it any; wonder that we killed 10,500 persons In 1895, and 10.662 in 1896? It talli as exactly with what Charles H. Carey, a lawyer, said to an as sembly of lawyers, which was: Under our codes, an elaborate system" pf technical rules of pleading has grown up. ' Much time As wasted upon demurrers and motions which are filed in nearly every suit. Tech nlcal rules that confine parties to Sheridan, Wyoming, marked Its en definlte iraes are obstructions to ul- trance Into three new states. The tlmate iustice. Courts and lawyers total population of commission gov- now make Justice a secondary qcn- ernment 'cities then reached 3,500, sideration. They proceed on the 000. theory that the rules must be ad- Tne National Short Ballot assocl hered to, even though the result is ation a6ked the mayors of these 158 to bring Victory to the party who ought not to win; and they' have built up fine theories of the law under which precedent must be fol- lowed to absurd conclusions. INVADED TRIPOLI DRIOU to 1874 the Idea was gen- erally accepted that once any portion 01 a roreign country was invaded the Inhabitants be- came subjects of the invader, and had no rights of patriotic reslstence. But, chiefly among the smaller states of Europe questions of the privileges dally balances in- bank." In Cherry of an Invader arose. vale. Kansas, again. "Our floating The Russltn government proposed In 1874 a conference on. the rules of military warfare, which met in Brus- Bels in July of 1874. The precise questions were raised that have sprung from the alleged Italian ex- cesses in Tripoli. Russia and Germany proposed to authorize the general levy of lnhab- ltants outside the limits of occupied territory, but within thoso limits they Insisted on the old rule, The emaller states refused to agree, and were supported by France, Great Britain and Italy." A dead lock resulted and tho Russo-German proposal was dropped. Lord Derby, then the British min ister, summarized the British policy. "Above all, hor majesty's govern ment," said he, "refuses to bo a par ty to any agreement the effect of which would be to facilitate regres sive wars, and to paralyze the patri otic resistance of an Invaded people." At The Hague conference of 1899 the question was again raised by Great Britain in a proposal based on Lord perby'B ctatement. Again it was frustrated by the opposition of Russia and Germany. ' A compro mise proposal was ultimately accept ed, containing these expressions, "The cases not provided for (includ ing the right of the Invaded popula tion to take up arms), should. not be left to the arbitrary Judgment of the military commanders. .' pop ulations and . belligerents remain under the protection and mplre 6f the principles of international law, as they result from the usages estab lished .- between civilized nations," from the' laws, of humanity,-and the requirements -of 'the 'publiOj con science." r The .: Italian " representa tives supported the British .proposal. ; The 1 awl. as set forth still stands, admllUng tie legitimacy of popular uprisings in occupied territory, and 1 requiring that in their suppression Reprisals, as distinct from Judic- flat punishment are forbidden. "The! violation of the laws of war by one of the parties cannot 'release the other from Its , obligation to ob- serve them," was laid down as a gov- ernlng principle by the Italian (rep resentative at the conference of, 1874. SPREAD OF WOMAN SUFFRAGE T WO opposite systems for theniclpal costsno standard basis for extension of equal suffrage are In vogue Jn England and In the United States In, the older country, strange to say, the method is by violence, Doubtless Biblical sanction is relied on in the text "The Kingdom of Heaven suffereth violence, and the violent taketh it by force." The Lpubllc peace is broken, the right of Petition to parliament is abused, Pudiic onices and piricial residences, tn police forces are defied, the king's ministers are refused a hear- la In public meetings. Yet a bill tor extended suffrage for men is promised for earfy introduction In parliament It Is so drawn as to admit of amendment to include votes for, women. Is it that; the feminine leaders in this campaign fear the decision of that representative body which Is entrusted with legislation for the millions over which the flag opposite methods are pursued In mesa united btatcs. The-old Quaker formula runs "let them comei in by convmcement, and an appeal to rea- to this date 5,163,473 American cit- izens are living under the rule of equal surrrage in six states. In the modern state of Oklahoma the con- stltutionai amendment for woman surrrage railed to carry in the re- about one million women Who were taxpayers and property holders. The new bill, If It passes, will con- fer the privilege of voting on the adult females In a population of over forty millions. The suffragettes are working under the watchword of all or nothing. The next three months will doubtless tell the talel COMMISSION CITIES REPORT U' P to October 1, 158 cities in the United States had adopted commission government. In the previous two months Oma ha, Nebraska; Gardiner, Maine, and clue9 10 report on tneir experience, Tne tone of nearly all was optlmis- tic. But, very naturally there Is diversity in this unity. One feature stands out. The people get what they desire and want. Tw0 reports are quoted. In Bur lington, Iowa, the mayor says; "In the first three months the city was placed upon a cash basis, taxation was equalized and more work ac- compllshed at less exponse. Mayor and councllmen devote their entire time to the city affairs. All bills discounted and interest received on debt was $49,000 and warrants were selling at C9 cents on the dollar and the city running behind $6000 a year. After three months under the commission plan our paper is at par we have met all expenses and have a nice balance in the general fund." And these are typical re ports. The example of Des Moldes, a city of 86,388 people, is fresh in mind. There are exceptions to the rule that commission government 'had lowered the tax rate and reduced expenses.. But the root of the matter In all the reports is that the cities are now getting the kind of govern ment they wanted, and show ia pew kind of personal interest in the re sults. Another indication is that the scope and sphere of "municipal gov ernment Is enlarging. It la out of the old rut, with the prospect of stricter honesty and mora thorough efficiency drawing nearer. MUNICIPAL ACCOUNT KEEPING A' T the International Municipal congress, held in Chicago In September, last, the subject of municipal accounting to pro mote efficiency was handled by Her bert R. Sands of Chicago, director of -the bureau of 'public efficiency. , American cities of oyer ' 80.000 population pay out annually more than a: billion dollars. The bonded debt of the city of New York close ly approaches , the sum of our na tional debt.5-That city has on her payrolls twice as' many employes as are in ,the -national f service in the city of Washington.-' The city of Chicago - disburses b annually .' eight times as much jiswe paidRussia for Alaska, ------ .The facts are that so much is a standard of cost for municipal ex- pendltures ;, needed .that one .city pays, ; in .some .. instances,' twice as much, per yard for a certain kind of pavement as another.; One city may pay7 twice as, much for street clean- ing as another and twice as much for flushing and cleaning sewers, The main reason seems to be that neither city officials nor the public have adequate information as to act ual' results and costs, nor can de termine what the costs should be. There has been, said this expert, little or no standardization of mu- comparison. Thus the mere compar ison of costs between' cities of the j same, size, may be, and often Is, mis leading, In the absence of. evidence of how the costs in either city were determined. - . By way of remedy this suggestion was made. Let the mayors of the various cities have ledger accounts opened at the beginning of the year with each department ' Let the may or be debited on each account with the amount, of the department ap propriation for the year, and be cred lted at the end of the year with the results produced by the several de partments from the money allowed them.. If such accounts were set forth in charts such charts, to be not only published, but to bo placed on permanent exhlb!tionat each city hall then a competition for best re sults, would be speedily developed. Just such information is intended to be secured In the city of San Francisco by the modern system of accounting proposed by the commit tee of accountants appointed by the Merchants' association. The plan In question could be readily adopted In the commission form of city government now under discussion nere. Letters From the People (Commuulrfttlona aent to 7b Journal for nob llratlon In thU drpirtnMnt ihould not axeeed (00 word In lrngth nnd mtt b ejmpanid or in nam na naarea 01 u nur. Oregon Man In Nevada. Ploohe. Nev Nov. J7. To tha Editor of The Journal Although I seem to bo far away from tha territory o' tha Ore gon newspapers, I find a great lntereat and Inquiry concerning Oregon. Aa your readers may know, thta la one of the oldest and licheat stiver campa In Ne vada. The ore bodies originally dis covered- by Raymond and Ely ware of uch fabulous values that the ore waa carried on the backs of donkeys over S00 mllea to the smelter at Salt Lake. Ore under an aaaay of 1200 r ton could not be transported to profit and yet so valuable and high trade were the ores that mora than $30,000,000 were transported In this primitive way to tha smelters. The dumps of lower grade orea are still piled mountain high around the shafts of these early work lngs, and where I alt writing thla letter, I can count mora than a soore of such treasure heaps. Lying Juat In front of my vision Is dump No. 1 of the Ray mond & Ely mine; Its assay value la $8,000,000. One of the peculiar features of this camp Is the variety of ore de posits (the. camp, by the way. Is tha county seat of Lincoln oounty, Ne vada) gold, stiver, copper, lead, sine, manganese-umet " I mention man- ?anae and lima because of their value o the smelters as flux. A few yeara ago the Salt Lake & Los Angeles rail road ran a spur from Calient, on their main line, and while this was a great advantage of eld Ploche, It failed to serve the new discoveries across the mountain, three mllea away, where, without any question, now can be seen the.richust developed mine In any camp In Nevada, but it costs $360 to transport thla ore by teams to the depot from the shaft of this mine (the Prlnoe Con solidated). Bo $7,000,000 of ore values are now ready ,for shipment when the railroad Is extended to this mine, which Is now assured- In the early months of next year, Thla railroad will not only serve the Prince Consolidated, but the Prince Extension, largely owned by Portland people. Then scratching along the gentle slopes of the Ploche bills are the Eastern Prince, the Golden Prince, the Gold and Silver Prlnoe, the Califor nia PiocheVthe Centennial and many more whose names I have forgotten, but nearly all in position to ship valu ables manganese ore. One thing impressing a traveler fa vorably lB fln 1 meats aerved on the tables of the hotels. The cattle are direct off the ranges around Pl oche, and the meat ia peculiarly sweet and tender. Ploche has for 26 years had all her eggs in one basket (mines) while at her very doors thousands of acres of the finest valleys of farming lands have been lying uncultivated. Not unlll the Ploche ' Commercial club took up the question of dry ; farming and irrigation by mountain ' reservoirs had many thought it profitable to attempt farming on a largo scale. A company of business .and professional men has had set aside 6000 acres, and they have already several hundred acres plowed ready for next spring sowing. They are spending $16,000 in improving and fencing the tract They are acting on tha advice of the government experts, who have gone over the land carefully. This valley, stretches north without a 4reak to Ely, 100 miles sway, and in my opinion will soon become one of the garden spots of Nevada. No finer cli mate can "be found anywhere than at Ploche, which has an elevation of 6000 feet, never very col in the winter and never hot In the summer. The soil In this valley is practically the same as our eastern Oregon wheat lands, large ly voloanlo ash, but abundant water much nearer the surface than in east ern Oregon, making dry farming much more certain as. to favorable results. J. J. WALTER. . Aid for Indian War Veterans. Albany, Or., Nov. 80. To the ' Editor of The Journal. Feeling sure that you will be willing to devote some of your valuable space to the cause of the In dian War veterans of the North Paciflo coast, I would make an earnest plea In their behalf. For several yeara I have contended and still contend that they are Justly entitled (and also the widows of veterans) to the same "nge pensions as are given to Civil War veterans, of whom I am one, and am a grateful pen sioner. But from my knowledge of our Paciflo coast Indian wars, I know the veterans of those wars endured much greater hardships tham did I and are more deserving, and personally, I would rather have their pensions Increased than that of my own,, aa seems prob able In the near future. ; i II y service as "a volunteer from In 1865 to. In 1866 was mostly rendered as first lieutenant, serving with a de tachment of Company B, First Oregon Infantry guarding the immigrant road from hostile Indians, . n .the wilds -of Idaho at Fort v Hall and vicinity. ' This service, and knowledge of Indian wavs, prompted , the members of tje Grand Camp Indian War Veterans at the meet ing In Portland last June, to elect me COMMENT AND :V' v , . . B.MALL, CHANGE. . ' Maybe the big railroad financiers are "bearing" the Portland dock bond. ' Think what nleasura many neonle miss by having no physical ailments to ten auuuh. . ' .. Portland doesn't need to rely on the postal savings banks to accept Its im provemeni oonas as security. President Mohler of tha W P. &va Portland Is a wonderful city. Bet he wishes he was back here to live. In their story of a hi Wthherv. the Merrltt brothers, Minnesota pioneers, tell how pious John X. Rockefeller got soma of his money. If Revolutionist Reves should win he would have revolution on his- hands at once, same aa Madero. Revolutlng has become the principal Industry In Mexico. Some luda-ea and lawyers are advocat ing more court t, more Judges, more chances of appeal. England gets along with a small f traction of the courts. judges and litigation that encumber tSis country. , , v , V 9 Now nerhaDS little Pu' Tl will be brought up to be an actor, which If not entirely desirable Is a lot better than trying to be emperor over 400,000,000 people, mostly rebels. . It anneara that some ateamboat men are Inclined to Infringe upon or partly nuuiry tne oioaea bridge draws regula tions to the delay and disadvantage of jrreat numbers of people. This cannot be arrowed ; stearrboat ' men haven't ex clusive rights in this matter. President Benton, of the University of Vermont, says: "We have now a pyramid which nan heightened Itself by 16 years sines the beginning or tne iasx century. The apex, instead of marking the age of efficiency at 60 years, now reaches up ana records it at t years. - This la not the aare of the young man, It la the age of tha prepared man.' . SEVEN FAMOUS ROMANCES Waverley. sir Walter Bcott wrote Waverly be cause he could not do otherwise. It was not from- choice that the great Scotch poet and novelist forsook poetry for fiction, for during the last 10 years of the eighteenth century the art of po etry was at a remarkably low ebb in Britain, and Scott needed money to re trieve the considerable sums he lost in unfortunate commercial adventures. The publishing business In which Scott had Invested all of his money was badly managed by hi" partner, John Ballantyne. and in May, 1811, he re- nivaA to dissolve the concern. Then It was tnat his good friend Constable came to his rescue, furnishing mm aunioieai money to continue. But turned his at tention to literary work along a differ ent line. From tha preface to Booirs -wsver-ly," the first of his marvelously bril liant Waverly series, we learn, that about 1805 he wrote the opening chapt ers. "Having proceeded," hs says, "aa far as, I think, the seventh chapter, I showed my work to a critical friend, whose onlnlon was unfavorable; and having then some poetical reputation, I was unwilling to risk tne aoss oi i uj attempting a new style of composition. , therefore, then tnrew asiae iu wr had commenced, wunout eimer reluct ance or remonstrance. When Constable pointed out to Beott that poetry was unprofitable and that there was a great demand for fiction, mu riir while looking Into an eld cab inet In searob, of some fishing tackle, his eye chanced to light once mors on the fragment of "Waverjy." He read over those Introductory chapters, though they had been undervalued, ana aeterm- lned to finish the story. Early in July. 1814. "Waverly" was first published In three volumes. The manuscript was copied by John Ballan- in r1r that tha printers might be kept in ignorance of the author. Con stable offered Scott seven hundred pounds for- the copywright, but this sum not being considered quits satis factory. It was agreed that there should be an equal division of profits between Constable and the author. Immediately after publication doom commander. ' I am doing au I can to fulfill their expectations. Mr. W. M. Ward and othef Indian War veterans living at Alameda, Cal. have enlisted the aid Of Honorable Joseph H. Know land, M. C., seven years In congress from Alameda, CaL - . - . He has prltten me hs will do all he can to securs increased pensions for Indian Waft veterans. We have f ur niRh.ri him official documents bearing Upon ths Cayuse, Yakima and Bogus River Indian wars. These out. own rtoiAP-.ttnn can consult In Washington. He desires to cooperate with the dele gations in congress from Oregon, Ida ho nT Washington In particular. We riasfra every Indian War veteran should write a personal letter to one or more members of above delegations eo i back up their efforts end thus quite surely win out with the help of a favor ing Providence. CTRUS H. WALKER, Grand Commander Indian War Veterans, Shower Bath Serves as a Policeman From the Popular Mechanics Magazine. An innnlous method of utilising a fchower bath to prevent bathers from stealing suits : and towels has ' recently been put Into effect at the Lincoln Park publlo bathing . beach, on Chicago's noria lake shore,. "When ws first opened the beach, said President Francis T, Simmons, of the Lincoln Park board, "many of the bathers attempted to steal ths suits and towels provided for them. "They would skip by the small shower then used, dress, and then duck out past the shower with one of our suits and our towels under their arms. Ws also had trouble with persons who tried to enter the lockers by way of the bathers' gate. That ia the reason for the new shower. NO one goes through this gat without getting thoroughly drenched- There Is only one other way of leaving the bath house and that requires you' to turn In your suit and towel. The shower also requires each bather and every "sand fly", to wash ths suit before returning It. J The American Family. . By William 8. Rosslter, In, ths Decem ber Atlantic. The American people, almost Instlnot Ively, have turned away from the old domestic policy. A large family, implies a home In ths old fashioned sense, but the urban life of America necessitates a departure from the boms as thus de fined. The cramped apartment. , with those ministering angels, ths Tdtohen ette. ithe Waker, the laundry man and delicatessen shop, are not adapted to numerous children. Children often are not wanted. , In fact, a' man with a large family finds It difficult even to securs living aocomtnodatlona In many pities. Thus, in great numbers ef com munities, ths social order has passed beyond,, theojonvlctlon : thftttJiJare. family is a normal, and necessary con dition, and has adapted itself to a scale of living based n small families, or on nona at aU.- NEWS IN . BRIEF OREGON 8 ID l LIGHTS. ' Hertford 4s installing cluster lights st a rapid rata, . . ,. PlnifnrA , fcv ' home talent, waa treat recently enjoyed by Pallas people. The Eugene -Register adds a paper mill to the list of factories that jsugene should, go after.' ;'r'f? - "I ' The county court of Douglas eounty proposes to build 'three steel bridges in that win cost idu.uuu. A1 21-room hotel is to be built at ones at Pilot Boole, by J. H. Royer. A fire repentiy atstroyea tne amy uuioi in tne town. Ths"project to be undertaken by the Horsefly irrigation . aisinci, rmjeimy formed " In Klamath ooun ty, will , cost about $700,009, or izs an acre. . m . ; T?wimnnl Hnokesman: A fall fair and potato show, for Redmopd la about the ngni tning-, ana mo prujom im with favor' among the , farmers and ranchers, - ' ; ; " wimth Horald! With the Increase in the First National, the four banks in Klamath Falls have a combined cap- i.-it . , . n eiAAA with AnvirilnAfl deposits of approximately suu.uuu. ; Watervllle correspondence Eugene Reglater: Mr. Hoselth has his drier full of popcorn.1 which Is a part of thepop oom raised by Morrow & Son. They will have some zoo ousneis 01 a co, Henry Bmlfh, a Polk county farmer, has on exhibition at Dallas a tomato weighing 14 pounds and measurrng; 17 inches in circumference, and a head of cabbage that measures SI Inches across the leaves. -' Woodburn Tribune: What has become of the Woodburn Commercial club? If the members of that organlatlon were half as Industrious as tnose or me Bachelors' club, what a good. thing It would be for woodburn. wrote to Mr. Morritt: "Waverly was s very old attempt of mine to embody some traits of those characters and manners peculiar to Scotland, the last remnants of which vanished during; my early youth, so that few: r no traces now remain. I had written a great part of the first volume, and sketched other passages, when I mislaid the manu script, and only found It by merest ac cident as I was rummaging the draw ers of an old cabinet, and I took the fancy of finishing It, which I 'did so rast that the last two volumes - were written In three weeks. I had a great deal of fun In the accomplishing of the task, though I do not expect It will be popular in the south, as much of the humor. If there be any. Is local and some of It even professional. It has mads a tery strong impression here and the good people of Edinburgh are busied in tracing the author and In finding out originals for the portraits it contains. In the first place, they will probably, find it difficult to con viot the guilty author, although he Is far from escaping suspicion.' When Morritt requested Beott to con fess the authorship In ths lecond edi tion he replied: "I Shall nit acknowl edge 'Waverly;' my thief reason is that it would prevent me of the pleasure of writing again." Edition after edition had to be pub lished In rapid succession, and the prof Its amounted to $10,000 within IS months of tsSue. Before ths book was published 8cott questioned Ballantyne as to his hopes ef him as a novelist; and on ths letter's stating they were not very high, Scott said. "Well, I do not see why I should not succeed as well as other people. At all events, faint heart never won fair lady 'tis only trying." The Waverly series and his other books followed in rapid suc cession between 1814 and . 182(1, and fie worked so hard to pay his creditors that he undermined his health, to. the extent that he became a hopeless paralytic) un til his death, which occurred at half past one o'clock on the list of Septem ber, 1832. Tomorrow-Ben Hur. Extra Judicial Punishment. From the Pittsburgh Dispatch, Speaking of unwritten law, there will be few who will find more than techni cal fault with the prosecuting officer of Camden, N. J., In his administration sf extra judicial punishment in a thorough ly -deserved case. It seems that a hus band and father had been three times befors the prosecutor for neglecting his family. The prosecutor has won some local fame as an adjuster of domestlo discord and a healer of family woes. Twice he grave the offender another chance on . ths promise of seeing that his wife and little ones . were properly provided for. The third time he was thrown into jail In the hope that a term behind the bars would be more persua sive than ths eloquence of the prose cutor. But though the prosecutor's patience had been exhausted, that of the wife and mother (as la generally the case even in the most hopeless. Instances) was Inexhaustible. Bhs pleaded for another ohanoe, and ths man waa brought out. He came sullen and de fiant, and when one of the children ran to greet him hs pushed It roughly aside. Ths prosecutor thereupon forgot that he was an offloer of ths court and remem bered that hs was a man. " He hustled the fellow Into an Inner offlos and gave him ths beating of his Ufa Fists proved . mors convincing than words or Jail, and the cowed and submissive sub ject eagerly promised to make good this time. Ths prosecutor, combining mercy with rigor, found him a Job, and the incident closed with everyone hoping the lesson would be the last. - A Neolithic Village. . From the London Times ' What is thought to be a neollthlo walled village has been discovered near the main road between Harrogate and Bolton abbey,' at a spot a few miles from Otley, by W. s!orey of Fewston, member of ths Royal Archaeological so ciety of Great Britain and Ireland. ., Ths discovery may be divided Intotwo parts. In a dell behblnd a hill art twenty-four stone circles, varying in dia meter from twenty feet to three feet, the whole being surrounded by evidences of a, stone" wall. One of the stone circles was a well and the two others are in disputably, iron smelting furnaces. A number of stone implements, which ex pert ascribe , to the neollthlo period, havs been found. , 1 .j - , 1( On a site above ths village IS a twenty foot stone circle,- commanding a mag nlfloent view for mjles down the valley, and ' evidently at one time used as s lookout On the other side of the hill are two stons circles filled with smaller oircles sbout eighteen Inches In diameter and two feet deep, containing charcoal, and two large circular erections sup posed to hsvs beqn used as a place of worship and- a crematorium. v r- . . IB ' Aberdeen ' the I .Won't Work-ers are opposed by a big organization of business men which might b Called the T. S. T.-era Tou Bha'n't Talk. Tke Newspaper s Part Front the Detroit' News Theodore Dreiser, an. American noj ellst, whose .work Is a protest again! the conventionalities of fiction on thl continent, and who would hold ' t it If mirror up to life, but bad 'his book, "Sister Carrie,". Suppressed his pains. though indeed It was a a a? oere and worthy performance, has - tb to say or American notion and of Ami: lean newspapers; .,-. ' "Great American novels can't he wrl ten while we refuse to hear of , wrl bubs ra m mi ciues loaay exoept reading in the newspapers and.ths iaa aslnea. And' let me say for real- wori ln literature the newspapers and Due sines are so far ahead or all ths novrf tnat have been published that thene no comparison. . For they are . Mfli drsmatio, true presentations of ths if tnat is feeing lived today Why'rl that life be put into our novels T"i - .remaps Mr. Dreiser's question do answered by ths simple fact lurmea Dy tne periodicals need no rt Ai,nlt..n..a V. U - . 1 i . the need is not so urgent Ameir life writes Itself across tha vital (i pressionaDis page oz the press, tnat l with nil tta atrlvlrm Ita dvnpn1n. iciuiuimi6, iim liruKllingl, IIS rej01 ". iTiua,' hi cursings ana i blessings. What novelist can write story to equal those written In the Bui tie, ths Mary Chamberlain, the Kelloi trials? What work of fiction Saa ptl tray tne career or a carsegie, a MoT (mat win not even let ths Idas f finance trip over ths altar cushion w1?m out etching the detail), of i Rockefellf of Lorimer, of La Follette or of Room vslt, as It Is written across the Uvli page of that real Flying Roll, the m'i ern newspaper ? ; '::( Ths newspaper columns are Instlri with fh drama of ths day, written j the wfth the nervous fingers ef tratnld oj servers, attuned to the little cllm&jJ ana to tne grand climacterics of vv lifs. Falling as newspaper writers, tb sometimes talcs to writing ths con. . tionai six best sellers. No novelist , J nope to compare in dramatic - combi 1 with ths gamut consummately pu i by the obscure writers who writ t the daily page wfth their pens i ' '! In ths warm red current of life, whi it neaia ecstatically in ths heart ! drips from wounds, and who put ln H shadows of ths vibrant ploturs wttbA 'J Hers a heart- beats In thla aoltmi there a woman's cry rises from page. In this corner Is ths Bagrso of a man's, Joy and another's sorl 1 Hers a man . stands In ths shades tha gallows a there a woman's cup o' flows with reunion, or marriage, it rs be. The river of life la full and J tlds Is Irresistible. The reader car ( ntr laugn, ns I cry, hs gnsr, smile with ntiin. pleasure tat ns cannot step out of current How cheap and stale in ot part son, how Idle and filled with a is the oonveatlohal novel Tanglefoot By Miles Overho',' THE HAIR APPARENT i ve got a nairy nat ana s rsxiy si or domes, My overcoat Is somewhat haJrr. tn i ve goi some ruzzy wniskerettes th stand in ruzzv rown. But the hair upon my head Is gettii lew. I find hairs upon my shoulders In tl early morning iisnt. I And I find 'em in the buttsr and tli hrftv1 S 1 And the comb Is overcrowded, black an brown and aray and white They are everywhere except upon nt ntaa. IT ALL DEPENDS When you'vs a grouch of monst-O sue. i And motes and beams fill up your eye And you despise the folk you meet As they trip gaily down the street fTou find most every other block tie crowded close with builders' stoc Tou seek another way about , To find they've torn the pavement r A, blockade adds unto your woes; And that's the way It always goes - wnen you've got a groucn. When you're feeling good ths way ciear, w Upon your face broad smiles appear. Aunougn tna streets are mierea nuu You amble through with scarce a sC. Blockades may be botn But walking's good on The torn-up streets are And really little time Ths folk you meet seem You have. another point of view- wnen you re reeling gooo. ' - '"" "t The Christinas Spirit. From ths Metropolitan Magazine. Like thoso who concentrate their re! Ugion Into 45 passive minutes on Burj day, there exist some, in a sllgstl imperfect world, who squeess their be! nevolence Into being human only rf the Joyous, In a manner of speakuiif Tuletlde season. Without going teg deeply into ths metaphyslos of tii question, might It not be aa well spread ths Christmas honey a bit thirl ner, so as to have a little left for th rest of the ysarT Ths Christmas spir is an exoellent tonlo, and guarantee! under the purs food and drugs act rl long, long ago, but occasionally it over-saccbarireroua sweet spirits rt Christmas should be diluted so as 1 have U months' supply around th house for emergencies, which, by t way, occur dally. Hign Cost of Living' rnnntrlfoitiMl to Th Journal br Walt LT th famoui Kns poU 111 proM-poem ar regular tattur ot uu eoiuma u m uuu Journal.) , . . . , A stately squash grew on a vine thai hung upon a fence and It was large ari smooth and fine, and sold for sev(c cents. The buyer put W In a crate aril shipped It oft to town; ths rallwai) CliaraVU IDtt vwiw aw, &iaiilb Aim 17 the money down. Then divers kinds o middlemen passed that old squasi alon:, and each one got a rake-off than in which, they saw no wrong. . The Jol Der TO (fuuei buiu uil iquiia r. autumn day, and It was scarred bruised ana oia. ana tending to aers,. The farmer man who raised that sqr.f. to town oams on his wheel; at dKl . time he said: "B'gosh, I'll havs air.-i' ..... 1,M a. - square mii du iu v romurnii. , v sped and ate some squash on tcel , then he stood upon his head whA'-' was told tha .price. "Tour prlc squashes,' makes me hot!" bs cfty "your gams is bunlcl I'd sell a wtg-S load for what you charged ms for . n..m1.fll. fill. AT,.. . with. . tuMlMM l.. tj awashr-we're; rlewlng-wlthalarmp-when ws g,o to, buy a squash, ws hek'tftf" buy a farm, ' , long and wi- the other tiL-V merely-crlV I Is lost. I friendly, wli -i I M ixr wifiii, lift, ui ' m lm 1 IV " ii avrg JUatuiiw Aiiatss. - XJUS&lJiy'