6 . THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL; PORTLAND, ' MONDAY EVENING., DECEMBER 4, . 1911. ;THE JOURNAL i. c. a. 5eK8ox. . ..Publtabar fFubllHbcd ery craning (airept Similar) and Tary Sunday morning at It Journal Bul'd- v iof, rifUi and Yamhill eUta. Portland, Or. , Katerad at tba noatofftce at Portland, Or., rfnr tranamlaaJou through Ua mails a second tlia matter. ' Tl-KPHONKa Mala TJ78; Homa. A-SOM. " All dVpartmtnts reached hr tbeaa Bumbara. Tell the operator what department yog want. V0KK1GN ADVERTISING KRFKKSiCNTATIVE, irniinh a vno rv "Rraniirirk Buimina, 1 f 221 1 Fifth arenue. Sew l'ork: 1218 Peoples Has Bolldlns. Chicago. ? Subscription Torma by mull or to any addreaa in tea baited cute or Mexico. ' . ... DiTI.T. iear....V.S5.60 f One month........ .80 4 . . . fUTNDAT. -Ob year. ....... 2.50 t Ooa month.. .26 5 , .DAILY AND BUKDAt. 1r year..... ...17.50 I On month I .89 ! The fiercest agonies have short. est reign; ' And after dreams of horror, , comes again . Tlia ' welcome morning with Ita . raya of peace. . v William Cullen Bryant. l5 CONGRESS HE SESSION of congress which CDHYBnes ,ln Washington today Is one of the most Important since the war. V It la con- fronted with", graver problems of vRtate than any congress In a genera "lion. It has greater opportunity, by . Constructive statesmanship, . to do Tnorsvfor the country than usually falls toVAhe lot of an American con-Vess,r-s? ..ry-:-: ... r J vThe costofllTlng Is Very high'. 'Many pf the necessaries of life are ."higher., priced -,v than . In ; war time, jwhen - Industries ,; were paralyzed, Jwhen the working .; forces' of the American fields werodepleted by the pending of soldiers to the front, and jwhen the cost of all . products was 'lifted by the limited production and "heavy demands for supplies . In the many campaigns. y This congress has power to afford a measure of relief, and-should, a$ was done at thj extra-, : ordinary" session, endeavor td provide , remedies. "r":;itT''V:r':'.T' This; congress should. enact legis lation for the opening of Alaska In the Interest of the people. It should 'enact laws for developing Alaska ''coal fields on a basis of four-dollar coal for 4. f It should so safeguard (Jhe unlimited coal deposits of the Korth that they cannot fall a prey to private monopoly and greed. It 'la one means by which the high co6t of living can be reduced. ".This congress ; should legislate wisely and patriotically on the Pan ama canai. : It should make tolls ree for American ships tn the toast wise trade. It should provide a sane administration for the canal, and .make- the tolls for all ships an low Jas is. consistent withi the general. : good. . It should so safeguard all the appointments of the great waterway that' ft "will be -, a competitive canal, giving tower freight ; rates between United States porta on the Atlantic And Pacific. It will be another way jto reduce the high cost of II ring. , This congress should address it relf to legislation for a further con trol of ; American trusts It should legislate against the further watering from the mines In Pennsylvania, and of ; stocks. Vi By stock ; Jobbing vand tnig although the coal dealers maln overcapftallzatlon, the American , tain a free, delivery, Almost all people are forced to pay dividends on business houses claim to , deliver stocks founded partly on tangible ; goods free. But yet the gross out , property. and 1 partly on thin air, a! lay is enormous, and the residence .process - conspicuous In the Steel j dwellers In reality are each paying trust, which on a tangible property Beveral cents a day for the dlstribu pf 1700,000,000 Issued securities ag-ition of commodities, gregating 11,400,000,000 and com-1 it 9 estimated that there are pel led the American public to pay 1 40,000 wage earners In Milwaukee dividends cn the larger capltallza- wi,0 by the distances from resl llon. The process made tangible ! dences to their place of employment, property put of the $700,000,000 of I are driven into the street cars for 'thin air and doubled the regular div Idends, giving enormous wealth to the manipulators. By stopping this process of bandit finance, this con gress can enormously reduce the high cost of living. In"'-, these .'and-other fields, the reat body assembling today can be of invaluable service to the country, ' And the public will await with deep Interest the developments of the next few months at Washington. THE HORRORS OF WAR kY DAILY repetition the public sense of the essential horrors of war may get blunted. By . virtue of Hague conferences, Red Cross societies, and the declar ation fcf London protecting neutral ' commerce, . war between civilized nations is robbed of much of the brutality that formerly marked its course. But the real devilment is revealed when, as in Tripoli now and In China, one or both of the com batants lets loose every kind of hor ror that was practised by ar'mlea In the dark ages of the world, and which In savage warfare, breaks out In every quarter of the globe. - One shrinks from reading the day's telegrams, fearing their revelations. But the commission of these awful cruelties when they anywhere occur, should be made known, that every . cation may take up Its share of the burden that defiles and degrades the buman race. - Is there any connection between the arbitration , treaties now con sidered by the civilized nations and there brutalities? Yes; ln'that the treaties are Intended to prevent, the letting loose of the dogs of war. , . In all warfare, civilized or unciv ilized, are unlimited potentialities of horror rhen courage Is strained by reprisal" and ? reyenge,; and" every reckless passion gains free, course In viator and in vanquished alike, v ',- No war starts without some pre text, feeble and unreasonable though t may be, acd very quarrel settled may mean ' war forestalled. Kme argue that , the breaking forth t the Tripolltan warfare Is ''''-.''...:t,v ''':'.'.:-' Av-vw--,, evidence that to attempt, by treaties to prevent war, even in this twentl eth century of the Christian era. Is but love's labor lost. Contrariwise the tale of lives sacrificed, tortures inflicted, homes -' b u rned and wrecked, hospitals filled, starvation and disease Invited, f civilization checked and prosperity destroyed for decades to come all this should but deepen and fix the determination of all civilized peoples to . bind them selves and to each other by en gagements too sacred to be broken, to substitute law for force, and thus to hasten the coming of the long foretold day when war shall be no more. t- ''...t. WHERE ARE OUR DEAF RICH? HERE ARE the rich people of Portland? ' Do they never hear a cry for help? The Journal and ; others are trying to raise a few dollars for the relief of Mrs. Buckbee, a vic tim of rheumatism, who for nine long years has lain on her back under the shadow of the skyscrapers and church steeples of Portland. : She Is part of a home where there are chil- dren and In which the pinch of pov erty Is always felt. It seems unthinkable, but It Is true that in the $200 so far contrib uted cot one wealthy Portland home Is represented. The money has come almost exclusively from the compar atively poor, .that great mass of hu manity that "knows the cots where poor men He, and the chores that poor men do." An example of those who contrib ute- appears in a letter received by The Journal this morning. , It Is from a lady who lives In a neighboring town, and It says: 4 '"I send you a check for $1.. ,It is for Mrs. Jennie Buckbee. I wish I could send more. It Is the .widow's mite. My means is small, and my eyesight very poor. I cannot see to read or sew, but I thank God that I can see to get around, and that my health is good." ." i But she can hear the call for aid, and her dollar goes to help Buccor the needy sufferer. Where are the owners of Portland skyscrapers? Where are the big business estab lishments? Where are those who have been made millionaires by the mere growth of Portland? Where are those who dwell In the mansions, the palaces and live on the good things of earth? Where are those whose names are everywhere familiar "as masters and captains of finance? ' ; The contribution list for Mrs. ; Buckbee Is like many that have pre ceded it It is the poor that do most to finance real charity. THE PLANNING OF A CITY A PRESH light Is thrown on the importance of the systematic and thorough planning of a city in a recent article on MI1- jwaukee In the Twentieth Century magazine. The first requirement, It is said, Is the proper laying out of manu facturing zones and residence areas in due regard to each other's con venience. It costs more to distribute -ofti in Milwaukee than to brine it from an hour to two hours a day In going and returning most of which would be saved by the' systematic planning of the city. Adding all these needless sources of expense to gether, It is conservatively estimated that in the case in question, a sum results for each family sufficient to pay interest on a $1000 Investment in a home. The business zone and residence area planning would also give the business and manufacturing element greater latitude in the location and construction of their plants, and would insure better sanitation in the residence areas. It Is represented that all business Interests are more or less handicapped by unnecessary expense for whhh tho planning of the city Is responsible. The laying out and construction of the system of new streets and roads would also have an Important bearing on the efficiency of the new proposed civic 'tenters for public recreatku and education. It is hoped in these various ways, in Milwaukee as in Portland, to cre ate eventually a beautiful city, the beauty naturally resulting from Its utility and economy In the wide sphere of public welfare. IP HEY SAY It Is not yet known whether or not Portland is to havo a Rose , Festival next summer. ' . Is Portland going to .throw away that splendid annual feature of her municipal, life? Is this city to aban don an annual event that has made Portland esthetlcally noted through out the country? ' : There is no way to tabulate the value of the Rose Festival. It is not an Issue of mathematics. , There Is no way to accurately compute its dividends. . Nobody ca"n give anybody else an exact schedule of Its profits, as a banker tells beforehand what the Interest on a $1000 note will be at six per cent. 1 ' , 1 V '' k$ The Rost Festival is not that kind of an enterprise.' It Is a huge prop osition with benefits t accruing from W uncnumeratfcd and ' innumerable sources. The best sign of Its value is the fact that under other formB this : week of annual festivities in Portland is being copied In Seattle, San Francisco and other cities. If the festival la not a good thing for Portland, why has Seattle lnaugu rated the Potlatch and San Francis co Its Portola? The stimulus of the festival Is what has made Portland a city of roses, and It la Portland's reputation as headquarters of the rose that has helped make It attractive to every visitor who has come in recent years to the city. It is tLe festival that has been the Influence that has made most of the door yards of. Portland rose gardens, and it is Portland's rose gardens that have helped make this city sought by eager thousands as a home and as & place to make Investments' of capital. , " v. The Rose . Festival , management says correspondence already Indi cates that the coming festival, if held, would attract twice the east ern attendance'of any former year. What argument more potent is there against abandonment of the.ttnnual rose show? Not to hold the festival -would al most make laughing stock of Port land. People elsewhere vould point the finger , of derision at us. It would be ample ' reason for rival cities and other cities to Jeer at us. It would be.the signal for other cities on the coast to launch rose festivals of their own and take away from Portland that which .has most graced her national repute. EXPRESS AND PARCELS POST R EPRESENTATTVE 1 DAVID J. LEWIS, of Maryland, brought out those facts In his argu ment before the house In the recent session on behalf of his bill for taking over the express ' com panies and adding their business to the postal system of the nation. Now the express companies are, he said, a positive hindrance to the business of the country. The aver age charge in Argentina for carry ing a tdn of express matter is $6.51, in the countries of Europe, $4.12. The average express company charge In the United States is $31.20. In other countries the charge for car rying a ton of express matter is five times that for ordinary freight. In the United States it is 16 times as much. Our average of express mat ter carried is less than 100 pounds in the United States, in the other countries over 200 pounds per cap ita. Yet our demands are by far the greater by reason of longer dis tance and larger business. Yet the express companies pay the railroad companies an average of three-fourths of a cent per pound. and at that rate they accumulate average profits of fifty per cent and over. To two other points Mr. Lewis drew attention. The first, that the express service now does not reach beyond the railway to the farmers' country, as does tho syste j of the postofflce through the rural freo de livery, waiting with empty vehicles to receive the express packages and take them both to the country stores' and to the farmers, and to carry back to the towns and cities the produce of the farms and. truck gardens for the people to eat at liv ing prices. Second, that If the postofflce adopts the railway transportation rate to the -express companies of three-fourths of a cent, per pcund, the charges might be reduced from two-thirds t one-half on parcolt, be tween five and fifty pounds in weight, and about 28 per cent on heavier weights. The reduction on the cost oi liv ing which troubles all of us depends, according to these figures, on the "proper articulation of our trans port system with the sources of sup- A EMIGRATION FROM BRITAIN T HE EMIGRATION returns re cently issued show that the 235,000 emigrants who left the British islands in -1907. which was tho record year to that! are complied with. No batik should be date, were exceeded duriLg the ntnmlMJni' months of the current year to Sep-1 De paid In cash when organized. Then tember 30, by 14,000 persons the it would be impossible for one man to tntnl ln 1911 t that dav rMnhtnir ' j a , the remarkable figure of 249,000. Canada received JSy far tho largest proportion, as already shown by her returns. The mother land is in some ways the loser as the eml- grants represent the youthful and I vigorous portion of her population. From another aspect she gain. y J the reduced pressure of the overplus of workers that crowd her Indus tries. ' . .": ' . r MR. COMPERS' EXPLANATION M R. GOMPERS says he did not think the McNamaras were guilty. But he should not have acted so .positively on a mere assumption 'of their inno cence. As head of a great labor or ganization, he should not have led the rank and tile Into positive declar ations of the McNamaras' Innocence without first ascertaining something about the facts. He should have remembered that bad men get Into all organizations. They get - Into fraternal societies; they get- into charitable organiza tions; they get into the churches, and even Into the pulpit itself., , It takes more than a college diplo ma, a church letter, a receipted bill for dues in the Free Masons or a labor union card to establish the merits of men. As supremo loader of ; a great; movement, Mr. Gompers should have realized thlsj and have put the McNamaras on trial on their merits. He should hare sought for evidence of their "guilt as well as for evidence of their Innocence, and, in the name of labor; he should, If they Seemed guilty, have 'been foremost In demanding their punishment. Mr. -Gompers, as 1 the McNamara confessions show," cannot afford ' to assume that every' man in the ranks of , labor Is infallible. Nor can the masses of union labor afford to as sume that every union man Is lnfal llble. The McNamaras were traitors to and betrayers of the .cause of la bor, and so is every member of the organization who indulges in violence or lawlessness of any kind, whether it be the blowing up of a building or the assault pt a non-union man. Union labor should weed all such out of the organization. . Letters From tLe People (Oomtnnnlrittlona aant in The Innrnal far nnh llcation la tola department ebonld not xcaed 800 worda In length and muat be accompanied uy ui name ana aaareea or ma eeuaer .1 Believes In Woman Suffrage. Sams Valley. Or., Nov. 80 To the Editor of The Journal. I notice a letter rrom Mr. Nina Martin In The Journal of November 25. I am not in the least surprised at her doctrine, for we have had these same characters to fight all the way up through the long stretch of the world's history, In fact, every step of the progress of the world for good and for freedom has been marked " by blood, martyrdom and what we look upon now as horror. According to the Bible, 6000 yecrs of the world's history expired , A D. 1873. and almost all through this lone period the world has been ruled by man. Only an occasional Esther or Victoria has shed forth her light In the capacity of rulershlp, and invariably, when fhelr work haa passed into history the results have been far ahead of the ordinary male ruler. When God got through with the mud Job of making man he took the rib from him to make the woman, which In my Judg ment had a tendency to refine it and hla second experience In the creation of a woman was so far ahead of the first Job when he created man that there la hardly any eompar: .on. Now at the end of 6000 years of male rulershlp, what have we In the shape of govern mints? Even In th United States, said to be the best government in the world, we are ruled by kings of finance, barons of monopoly, dukes of damphoolism and courts of cussedness, ml under-a sys tem where poodle dogs with $10,000 col lars around their necks take the place of the baby. In the homes of the rich and where, in the homes of the poor, the hundreds of thousands of bablei aro being born Into human slavery to awful for the pens of our best writer to -describe or picture. Now I am of the opinion that we are going to re write the -constitutions of our states, and also the United States, and I fur ther venture the statement that these will be rewritten peaceably at the bal lot box or they will be written as China Is now writing hers, at the muzxle of the machine gun and with the sword. -, With what experience I have had with women, from school teacher to . representation In the legislature, I believe that the women who will help to readjust these various phases of gov ernmental Ills are thoroughly compe tent, as well as safe in the task that lies In front of them. Sister Martin sems to think that If a woman was allowed to vote that it would take away the sweet privilege" of being "bossed by her husband." I am of the opinion that in spite of a woman voting Sister Mar tin can find some man that would as sume the responsibility, providing, how ever, that she Is not getting enough of the bossing act, but If she happens to get one that is in the habit of coming home every day or two with his measly hide full of rotgut whiskey, and Insists on sitting on the front doorsteps sing ing, ;i want to be an angel," while she is doing the woodchopplng' and drudg. ery, then the tune will change darn quick. The place where the good sister and myself differ the widest Is where she states that the polls Is not the place to reform the world. Now, I am sure that there are only two ways to change present existing evil conditions, ' one of, them Is by the ballot and the other Is the shotgun route, and I am entirely In favor of the former. E. W. COOPER. For Better Banking Laws. Portland, Dec 1. To the Editor of The Journal I am a reader of the Twlce-a-Week Journal and have read your editorials on wildcat banking and think I have a plan that would stop that kind of business. Have a law passed that no stockholder or bank of ficer will be allowed to loan himself more than 90 per cent of the amount of hla paid up. stock, anl If the money Is Bot put back In the bank within one year from date of loaHVthe stock Is forfeited, and they can keep the loan. This Is on the principle of a bank not allowing a depositor to overdraw hla account Do not allow any ono stockholder -to own more than 25 per cent of the stock and do not allow any one person or comoanv to borrow .. more than 10 per cent of the capital stock. Make it tha duty '. of the bank examiner to see that these conditions hold over one nair oi tne bvock uu practlcally a capital of but $300, as this man Evars did. All loans on six months' time or over and in amounts of f 1000 or over, should be secured by first mortgage on real estate or negotiable stocks or bonds. Now with regulations something like these it would be impossible for the bank officers to finance wildcat TtZru'Z: AT sTockhotder or bank officer disregarding these laws should be punished by a line or not less than $1000 or mora than 16000 and imprisonment for not less than three years or puire than 10 years. ' Capital Punishment. Troutlake, Wash.;' Dec 1. To the Ed itor of The Journal But seldom do I disagree with the principles enunciated in your paper; and havo never troubled you with a criticism be fore. Often I feel like saying hurrah to tha stand you take for truth and re form. But your View as well as that of Governor Weat in tha matter of capital punishment, I positively cannot aocept You claim that-hanging a man Is not a deterrent Of murder. Pray, can you tell' us What would.be, while hu manity Is what It is, an4 conditions what they are? You seem tb extend a kind Of palliating sympathy toward that mis erable wretch lately electrocuted back In Richmond, who, according to his own statements,' was a dangerous parasite Ob society, ' who deliberately killed v his young wife, denying it under oath, and maintaining' hla unblushing defiance .to tha world till , tho last hope of being permitted to live was gone. You quote from the commandments, "Thou shalt not kill' Now, you know that was not all of the MORatd law. The same law. giver-whOi said "Thou shalt not kill' when laying down to. sacred duty; of man also, when stating the consequence of a violation of that, most sacred part of a divine law, says, "Whosoever shed deth man's blood, by .man shall his blood !. .-.'' ' -:t. !"!! '-J.:-A'-;.-h 'V -a. i I COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF j-x- - SMALL CHANGE. It's always somebody else that should be punished for all his faults. - . ....". .'W,'-' It Was quit time that Inter-high school football was suppressed. Too; many would-be small farmers want iana ngnt close to Portland. The Situation In the Clawarv TUmntra i m asuuu uwu , ui av oiaese . puszte, - ' - -. ...'... .... ..,.. remans we Shouldn't blnma inmi peopie lor noi ceing very manniui. Now congress will berln to do a. little ouaiaesw uu gooa Qteu 01 politics. ; .'-.. ... .v, , ' ;-.. . ".(. ';,r'.". '. . .';.f.,f'i ;: It is a good season to aro to tha sea- coast Jf one doesn't like summer girls. Tea. oubllo markets, rlarhtlv mShaared. may decrease tha coat of living for many, , i . - Few people need enlightenment bv a campaign committee on, President rl. art's record. Being- sneaker. Ohamri Clark ' la a speaker, a talker; he talks rather too much sometimes. Aren't th McNamaras and McMa.nl- gal lucky? Good food and shelter for life and no work to do. There doesn't seem to br an-r 'reallv good, stronar reason whv Polonal Rnnaa velt should get mad about it. Are the women Christians real ansa who wouldn't help a woman with six starving little children, because she had erred T . v There ax rumors of aelf-effaeina Roosevelt letters but he hasn't yet plainly told the publlo that he wouldn't accept a nomination under any circum stances. - ; " . ,. - The proposed Pacific Coast Lumbar trust failed to obtain the rovernment'a sanction In advance: its organisers seemed to suspect that they were going to do something Illegal. . - m The arm v Of Idle ajid nennileaa man. here and. elsewhere. Is larger than ever before at this season -of the year, what Is society going to do about it? rfUst keen on bulidlnsr mora and lars-er tnltat " SEVEN GREAT PHILANTHROPISTS George George Peabody waa one of the most liberal philanthropists of ancient or modern Umes. In the words of Mr. Gladstone, ha taught the world how a man may be tho master of his fortune and not its slave. It was Mr. Peabody' s own testimony, and that of those most Intimately acquainted with him, that hla great benefactions ara really a tri umph over a disposition naturally par Bimonlour and It was from a sense of benefits conferred on him by divine providence that he overcame the nat ural tendencies of hla strong will in giving, till It became a delight to him to give. In the greatness of his benevo lence George Peabody stands alone In history. ,. When George Peabody died In London on November 4, 1869, for the first time in history tha gates of Westminster abbey were opened for - the burial of a private , cltlsen of another country, and, although the historic building waa not Mr. Peabody'a final resting place, it waa only owing to -his desire to sleep by the- aide of his mother's grave in hla native land. Where Tth funeral service of tha Engliah church waa read over him, tha great American philanthropist might have ' reposed forever with the universal consent and approbation of the British nation. The swiftest and finest frigate in the English navy waa selected to- bear his body across the broad Atlantic and It waa received from the ship, of war Monarch by an American squadron commanded by Ad miral Farragut Great wealth did not come to George Peabody until the time of the Civil war. He had already amassed a respectable fortune and had already devoted a large part of It to the foundation and endowment of Institutions where poor boys might receive a good education. But his Investment during tho Civil war left him one of the richest men 'at Its close In tha world, and ha Im mediately Bet to work to do as much good aa possible With hla money. To relieve distress and promote education in tho south he gave about $2,600,000. "Never," said tho late Dr. J. I M. Curry, general agent of tha fund, was a. Klf t more timely. It came, a whit bo shad." Haa a law any force without It may V may not ba a Bible ques tion, but, one who quotes it should quote It fair. To talk about hanging a man who haa taken the life of another as being the case of another murder by the state trite and fallaolous. The law waa maas Deiore mo done. A' man ; Who Wlliuuy lanes intiuwimi m uioa mey cannot en a u re life of another in the face of the law's seeing a brother or sister that is shab niatniv stated penalty etgrta away his by. So long as one Is wsll dressed he own life in the act. When the state fines a man $5 for stealing one dollar's e-oods is the state stealing from the thief? Why, then, la it murder when it takes the lire oi a man one lifewho has taken the life of another, or several others, and aent misery to the innocent hearts of a dosen friends and loved ones? Governor West's announced nnHnv beforehand that a man sen tenced to hang will not hang during his term of office la a dangerous abuse of his power, a brazen flying in the face of tho law, and an unwarranted insun to the 12;slncere men and the intelli gent Judge who sentences a man to a deserved .death; What Will you do with the murderer? Imprison him for HfeT Many think that It la a worse fate than hanging, .except the fact they always hope that, by soma means, they will get free.' ' The Journal had better cease Its risky sentimental talk and confine Its argu ments to real reforms, on which It is both eloquent and logical. JAMES GREENSLADB. ';; '' .-. ii . . Condemns West's Policy. Independence,' On, Nov. 27. To the Editor of Tha Journal. I ' aea by the paper Governor West ' ia . determined .to Increase crime by his actions. Webb, tha man that was to ba hung, killed Johnson, put hla body in a trunk. West commuted hla sentence to life Impris onment All over the world it is life for life. Now Mr. Weat 1a trying to spring something new. So many men don't cars for life in the pen for es cape or pardon la aura. - Now, what la Mr. West going to do about the second degree murdereraT " ; ; Mr. West doesn't realize that he is increasing crime, which he surely is. Also, the convicts are building roads when man with families ought to have It r SUBSCRIBER. ; Plsgah Home and the Mob. . Portland. Or., Deo. 2. To tha .Editor of Tho Journal A mob in 4 auburb of Portland la a dark spot on its fair name. True, tea inmates or Pisgah Home are a set of undesirables;?: They are down and out No one likes the aight of a drunk and there is no re. spectabla plaoa In society for him. His money, ia gone ana be is not wanted. even by- tha saloon. -Pisgah Home of fers food and ahelter at a. time when OREGON SIDELIGHTS. Forest Orove a streets are j now cleaned by a machine Identical with those used In Portland. The women of Newport ara planning an entertainment to raise tunas lor a board walk to the city cemetery, , The Merrill Record claims that Klam. with nva 9A nsi i.w.iitnu.d "J. H. Murr, a foundryman of North Bend, has askd the Florence people to assist htm In establishing a foundry a i f iorenoe, Marshfield News: Farmers . In the vicinity of Bridge, .in the upper Ooqulle country, have organized a stock, com pany and will operate a creamery there, Allen Jones, .whose farm 'la near Burns is tha first man Id Harney coun ty to plow by - steam. He has a 14 horsepower -engine, which draws four la-Inch plows. . . , . a location that la ideal for a railroad terminus, and from current rumors it looks Ilka railroad officials are, begin ning to realise It tv-w-'i -' N.' A. Davia cashier of tha First Na tional bank of Milton, haa realsmed. after 2 years' service.. George A. Price, reoenurirom uavia uity, insdh nas beert elected, to succeed him, . -. PBeanstaJk." will be given at Hillsboro by local talent unaer tn airection oi E. J. Jones of Portland on the evening of December IS. The production -will be ' under tha auspices of tha Coffee Club. . i, -; ,:u : . .... . ... ; . . m v m .i- . , v x The Fossil Journal. reoroduolmr items from-its files of 25 years ago, Includes the exploit of William Stllson, who, in 25 , dava' hunting, killed five large bears, 13 deer, two panthers,- four foxes, two martens. .' one fisher, two beaver, one otter, one lynx and two ooyotest ; . - ' .;s s ' v ' Fossil Journal: Sam Cobb's father re linquished his homestead out BuckHorn way recently and Mrs. Nebraska Keeney's mother, who is only 83 years younav filed on It and confidently ex pects to make a five year proof. HoWs mat tor optimism r. Peabody. winged messenger of peace and fra ternity, in the hour of gloom, poverty and despondency." The fund was given "to destitute and neglected masses, where others bestowed their money upon colleges and scientific Institu tions." , To found decent lodging houses in London for the respectable) poor Mr. Peabody gave a like amount and at the present time upward of 20,000 per sons occupy these tenements. - These were the two most humane of the charities of George Peabody. For negotiating- the sale of 13.000,000 worth of bonds In 183i In London when others had failed by which he sustained the credit of Maryland, and giving to tha atate his commission ot 200,000, this was his first largo charitable gift- This was followed by his financing of the Grlnnell expedition In search of Sir John , Franklin; the founding of the Peabody Institute In Baltimore: large bequests to colleges; the establishing of an art school in Rome, Italy and many other similar bequests, all of wnich were practical and workable.' ' . Mr. Peabody never married, and ' at the time of his death he atlll retained J5.000.000, which was bequeathed to rel tives. , For his .philanthropy-, to. the English, Queen. 'Victoria-offered him- a baronetcy, or the grand cross of the Order of the Bath, but he declined both. In answer to a question as to what gift ha would accept he said: "A. letter from the Queen of England which I may carry across tha Atlantlo and de posit it as a memorial of one of her roost faithful sons." Tho queen com plied -with this request, writing Mr. Peabody a graceful letter acknowledging his "more than princely munificence." Peabody was described aa of a pleas ing address, a good public speaker and an able writer. He was descended from a good English family of which the first American representative settled in New England In 1635. George Pea body was born In Dan vera, Mass., on February 18, 1796, and as a Baltimore merchant he laid tha foundation of hla fortune In this country. Tomorrow Thomas Guy. , the world Is against the man who haa no place to go. The Jails aro crowded and he can't find a place there. So that Institution for men comes to their help with a place to 11a down, a crust to eat and words of comfort But to an vll hour Satan got hts agents busy .to demolish the windows of tha home. It la a disgrace to the state. Soma poor is noticed, but let misfortune come, and friends desert I believe in a re ligion that does good deeds today.. Now Is the time to help, and today cornea but once. MRS. J. A. STEPHENS. Marriage License Law. ' Kahuna, Wash., Nov. JO. To the Editor of. The Journal. Will you please be kind enough to print in the pages of your paper what "red tapo" a person has to go through to get a license and bo married in Oregon T Can a person of another state be married at Van couver or Portland and. get the license there and do they have to have any witnesses T f CONSTANT READER. Ans. It ia -necessary to produce ona witness to swear that he knows the applicants -to be of legal age and that no legal impediment; to the marriage exists. This witness must also make oath that tha woman Is a resident of the county in which tha license is asked. Tha law here given is the law of Oregon. Consult your county clerk as to what ia necessary in Washington. '. y'fV'. Condemns"- the' Iteatthcn'VV-: Portland,- Dec. 1. To the Editor of Tha JournaL What kind of a school board have they la Portland that will allow a teacher to beat a child with anything, much less a piece of hose, ba it aver so small f How long would such a brutal minded teacher last la the publlo schools of Chicago T I am a newcomer in Portland and cannot find language strong enough . . V n P. ... a.I.Ia. mm a a .. . . . or such an act Away with such an ancient person i; i ji . ., .. .MRS.' EDWARD MILLS. . Umatilla Project. -. 'f;' :f From the Hermlston lleraid. Aa for tha west slda tha arm- hn.rrl praised it highly and considered it feas ible in ' every respect Further, every reclamation" engineer who has ever matte an" examination of the territory is en thuslastlo over it The water 'rights must and will ba adjudicated regardless of what the government does. Anyway the water it Is proposed to use on the west side is not the natural flow of the Umatilla , but ha flood waters which now go to waste unless tha government, with millions behind It, undertakes tha work. - f For La toilette 1 From the San Francisco Chronicle Lincoln-Roosevelt Republicans of Cal ifornia to tha number of about tj00a! in w. ... v.. suuiea, aauemuieu in the ballroom of the Palace hotel yes- y terdav afternoon 'tn th r I - . r . . ... yu.wvv forming an organisation to promote Sen ator I Robert m; : La Folletta' of Wisconsin aa a candidate for president of : thefXJnltad State v v-w.'. ;;; yi Several . speeches were made,'' all ana themlzng the present alleged conditions in the Republican party of the nation and .couched In terms to Indicate that tha country will go to tha demnition bowwows if La' Folletta la not nominat ed and elected. . A Charlea H. Detrlpk, secretary to tho railroad commission and also secretary of 'tha Republican county committee, called tha meeting to order In a care fully prepared speech that lauded La Folletta as the -one man in America whose progresalveness was of a suffi ciently powerful brand to lead the Re publican party to victory in the election of next November. . - . . Chester H. Rowell of Fresno, on tak. ing the chair as temporary president. Bald many of. the things Detrlck bad said, and added soma of his own for good measure. Sam Poorman Dredlct- ed the election of a Democratic presi dent If La Folletta failed of the nom ination in the Republican convention! J. J. Dwyer, president of tha atate board of harbor commissioners,!' Ingeniously explained how he got baok Into tha Re publican party, ending hla speeoh by leaving the -audience up-in the air as to whether ha thought La Folletta or Johnson the greater, man. . Former Governor George . C Pardee. one of the organizers of tha Lincoln- Roosevelt league, likened t tba presen condition of Insurgency to that which, was responsible for the creation of San Francisco's vigilance committee in 1868. and Judge Isadore Golden Of San Fran cisco said La Folletta was preaching tha same doctrine now that Moaea preached to the Pharaohs whan tho chil dren of Ik ael were in the bondage of Egypt. , , . Lieutenant Governor Wallace made a facetious address, beginning with tha almost whispered announcement: . "I am from Loa Angeles and wa aro not doing much talking down our way Just now.' Wa ara humble, chastened In spirit and not at all in the speech-, making mood.v Sometlmea modesty is a fitting garment in a political gather ing and this is ona of the times 1 feel I should wear it After December 5, perhaps I will be glad to make a speech, but Just now I do not believe I could make the kind you would like to hear." . The lieutenant-governor's allusion to tha almost-Socialist victory Jn Los An geles, when Job Harrlman received a majority vote In the primary, caught the fancy of tha audience and was re ceived with gales of laughter In which Wallace,' solemn vlsaged, refused to Join. . After the - speech making waa over Rowell announced the serious business Of the meeting to be the formation ofx an organisation that would promote tha presidential fortunea of La Follette In California, but made frequent refer ences to tils lack of knowledge of what "our friends, tho programers,. have tn store for me." ' On motion of Governor Pardee, Row ell was authorized to name two com-: mltteea, each of five members, on per manent organisation and resolutions. Tho committee on organization report ed in favor of maintaining tha organisa tion, as temporarily affected, and the re port waa . unanimously adopted. The committee consisted of Frank R. Dev lin of Fresno, chairman; Charlea R. De trlck. Ralph Bull. Milton T. U'Ren and Frank S. Wallace of Pasadena, Pardee, as chairman of the commit tee on resolutions, of which Thomas E. Haven, R. Ia Green, Isadore Golden and Mrs. Charles D. Blaney of San Jos were the other members, reported a short resolution announcing It as tho firm belief of the committee that tho control of tha government "should ba taken from those who have misused and misappropriated It, and returned to tha control of tha people, where it be longs." Tha resolution recited tha com mittee opinion that La Follette tha proper man- to do tha taking and the conference agreed with tho comml tea by unanimously adopting Its report. Tanglefoot By Mllea Overholt THE RAINY DAY. Last June I bought a set of furs, and twmitv tons of eoaL A' heavy coat, some woolen goods which somewhat thinned my roll. And then I had my plumbing dona, and bougnt my unristmas imnn, Soma overshoes snd heavy socka and extra fiddle strings. I said, "I've got 'em. going . bow; trusts may yaip ana nowi; Just let 'em stand upon one leg and bark ' and snarl and howl." I said, "Let chilly zephyrs Bcreech; let winter magnates now, said those words . about June first; I've changed my meter now. , July was hot, I bought soma lea and other cool delights, -. ..... I often spent a nappy hour with hear and boys o nights. Tho prices ralstd quite haughtily on little things to eat; I found I had to sell my furs to buy a - chunk of meat Whan August came I sold my coal by cutting down the price, I traded off my heavy clothes and bought a lm of Ice. I borrowed from tho, plumberman and sold my Christmas goods And managed nrar successfully to buy some summer foods. - No wet day stuff for me again; tomor row never comes, . ril plod alon from day to day, while others pick tha plums; , - I'll lay no harvest by nor place no fu ture on the shelf, ........ The distant day will have to quit or ... . hustle for itself. - Andrew 'Carnegie says his reading of Shakesoeare helped him to . make hisi fortunes. Very likely; - Shakespeare was inclined to stand m with the big- respectable bandlta and pirates or nis time...., '...r'' i.",;-v ' -.' . (Oontrlboti'd ta Tna Journal b Walt Haaon, tba famoua Kanaaa poet Hli proaa-pwnn ara a regular faature of tbls ' column In Tha Pally Journal.) ...;!, r.'' ,, .. ; ' ' ; In times now vanished, when my frau desired to fry some basic slag, aha put It In a pant but now she puts.Lt . . mk m r. . . in a paper bag. Tha hausfrau tells me. with a whoop, the new style cooking Is no Joke, and she proceeds to make soma soup and bolls it In a paper poke. Suoh changea all around , I see; from ancient ways our country swerves; this blamed old world's too awlf t for me, I can't keep casea on ita curves. Tha world has got too awlf t for we, I make acknowledgment- with grief; I'm only waiting here to see the Ice box used for roasting beef; I only wait, on trembling legs, to see tha bushes bear ing cheese, to see the hens lay scrambled eggs,' and 1 roasted turkeys in the trees. And when King Death la tibmber tones shall summon this back number rube, they'll shoot ma to tha place of bones by way of a pneu matic tubs. " Saoraa MatUiew Adams. KQUXj JvMNk0 ' -MarclrSf P roress I filtlon ri was J and n tnlty 1