rlE JOURNAL AN Ivrtf rV.VPENT XKWSPAPnR. .S. JAlKMlN.. 1 . lnbhher kf1 rf erMiing ttvr SumJuv) wpA r "odr Trwoln- mt The Journal Bulid-'V-i-h n1 T.n.MII atreeta, rrtli:rd. T. . . w - Kn..AfftM at Portland, ur. f-r Uinmislon througti U malla aecood ill hf'HONKS Main TITS; Home, A-V1. Til the ownt.f what dprtnwnt wint. JO HE KIN ADVKKT1S1NQ KM Kt-sr.iA 'v. rift. ..bp. New Sorki 121S PPle ; HuiMinr, Cb!pso. pjlcrlptloii Terma by mail or to any addrena In tie iBlted Sut'pjLyellc0' Oh w..:.....$JIO't" -80 One ieT....;:..2.50 ( One month........ 4 .23 M,' T PAILY AND SUNDAY. One year ...S7.5Q I One '".. All fresh Is grass, and all its glory fades Like the fair flower dishevel'd In the wind. Klchea have wings, and grandeur is a dream; The man we celebrate must find a tomb, - And we that worship him. Igno ble graves. . . . j -cowper. WHAT WOULD LINCOLN SAY ? "0? fi red, which so command- the high est rr'CPS- Another center is thus provided for on of the principal industries of Oregon another demonstration that the possibilities of fruit raisins in this state are neither limited In area nor yet In possibilities by those districts hitherto developed. 'WHY XOT HELP HER? P ,N the 4th of March next I shall tkvp served three and halt years, ana wis inree and a halt years constitute my first term. , The wise custom which limits the president to two terms regards the substance and not the form, and under no circum stances will I be a candidate for or accept another nomination."- Theo dore Roosevelt, November 8, 1904. . "I have not changed and shall not change that decision thus an nounced." - Theodore Roosevelt, December 11," 1907. . . "1 have said always that I would not be a candidate in 1912 myself, and that I had no intention of taking any part In the nomination fo or against any candidate." -Theodore Roosevelt, June, 1911; ' "I will accept the nomination" for president if it is tendered me, and I will adhere to this decision until : the convention has ' expressed its preference." -r- Theodore , Roosevelt, February 24, 1912. V : ; "I said I would not accept a nom- I nation for a third term under any circumstances, meaning, of course; a third consecutive term." Theodore- Roosevelt, February 26, 1912. What would Abraham Lincoln say? " .MAKrXQ-BAD - GOVERNMENT W HY not register? We sit back on our haunches and howl about bad government? We stay way from the primaries,' and then shriek about the nominees. We re main at home to let the politicians and "the Interests" name the offi cials, and then call down maledic tlons upon the politicians and "-the Interests." . . , ...... - If there is bad government, It Is the people themselves who are chief ly at fault. They have the ballot, They have the power. They, have every device for securing good gov eminent. :.::. .,,:;-5.:....r Butthey won't register. They don't go to the primaries. They shift the duty of getting good men into office on others. That is the reason why the politicians and "the inter esta" so often succeed in exercising power.' . ' - J-, ' Democrats in Portland are not registering. Yet there never was a time when it was more important for them to register. The result of Democratic voting In the presiden tial primaries in Oregon may deter mine what man : is to occupy the .White House the next four years, , The possibility ought to be an appeal . to every Democrat to register and bear his part in choosing the roan who can best meet the great respon sibility. The welfare of both his party, and the country may depend later, on how well and how wisely Oregon Democrats vote in this year' primaries. . .. ,' Nor is there less reason for Re publicans to register. The welfare of their party and their country may also be involved in how Oregon Re publicans vote April 19. Besides there are other great of flees to be filled in Oregon. On all these offices every citizen should ox press a choice in the primaries, no matter what party he belongs to. Failure to register is bad citizen ship, and bad citizenship makes bad government. ORTLAND women want contri butions of IIPCOOO. They are to be contributions dedicated to the needs of working girls. By whomsoever made, they will be gifts baptized with the spirit of an exalted social service. The working girl on .a slender sal ary Is one of the most appealing of social atoms. Her mere necessities frequently drive her to her wit's end to keep outgo within income. Her struggle against odds, for survival, Is one of the real, every day trag edies of life. The $100,000 is wanted for help to build a girlsV home, at which board, room and laundry can be pro vided at T3 to $5 a week. How badly it is needed Is demonstrated by the 119 unsuccessful applica tions in a month at the present girls' home of the Woman's Union at Flanders and Fifteenth, , The usual average of applicttlons at the place that have to be turned away, is 20 a week. - '".''. . - What else is needed to prove that the effort of the Woman's Union to build another such home is an ex alted philanthropy? Why look fur ther for a way in whic a rh-lanthroplc money can be ,so applied as tp ren der conspicuous service to the most worthy member of society, the working girl? The plans of the proposed home weie fully described in Sunday's Journal. The project Is not an ex periment, but a demonstrated suc cess. It la not a theory, but an in stitution. It Is not a dream, hut proved vreallty, as evidenced by 119 applications by Working girls in one month for accommodations. There are 100 millionaires In Portland. ,I!ow easy for them to spare. $1000 each and thus supply the needed $100,000 now sought by the finance committee of the Wo man's union, of which Mrs. . Elliott Corbett is the head? Where else would their .money go so far and do so much in demonstrating that millionaire is a desirable "citizen? How could millionaires more easily demonstrate that the absorption of large.wealth-by-4h accident of birth or extraordinary business ability is not a curse? -A - Many of our wealthy grew rich by community growth. Each who has a million can easily spare $1000 for working girls' home, and never miss it. ". sights anl s c 'a n c s t,!U keep perfect i time and tune. j Robert Grai'tclls-U3 in Review of Reviews that both In London and , Paris these talking pictures aro all the rage. A new word "photo-j played has been invented. Both plays and operas are being so re produced. The actors both' play and 6peak and sing their parts before these wonder-boxes, and so ono per formance will be repeated hundreds of times before ' audiences all over the country. Thomas A.-Edison has, of course, taken the new processes in hand. He colved 1.64 for three d?.rs' vcrk, and never n:aJe more than $5.10 a week. All children, ho paid, were docked an hour's pay, if they were late in arriving at the mills. His father received $9 a' week. The tariff has worked wonders for American labor at Lawrence. COMMENT AND NEWS IN DPJEF For February, the postoffice re ceipts of Portland were $83,892, and for Seattle $S2,440. Portland's ex cess over Seattle was $6452. Port land's increase over the same month last year was 12.51 per cent and Se attle's 6.94. ' Portland Is not the now has announced that the working jdead town that it is reported to be GROWERS ASSOCIATIONS THE Benton County Growers' as sociation started into existence at its organization meeting bn Saturday last. It shoujd be the precursor of many others, since the idea of cooperation Ii there harmonized with competi tlon. . The object ot incorporation is to obtain a responsible board of man agement and a legal name and cor porate control, Many are the advantages that such associations offer. Among them may be named the controlling of the predominating power of the middle man. : 'But the standard of quality . is also raised by the, ambition which forbids a grower to fall behind his fellows. By' this 'the whole neigh borhood, the wholo county, profits, Who does not recognize the Hood HIver apple and the Hood River fitrawberry as examples of perfection In fruit raising arrived at by the .exclusion of all fruit marked by de fects, however- slight? It la also true that buyers are at quantity and the quality of fruits of man, who lays down his dime, be fore the entrance to the photo-play, will enjoy in their perfection grand opera, plays, old and new, with dia logue, Bong, color, ad action, in which the greatest artists will have once taken part. So the art of musical and dra matic entertainment will be open to the multitude, in its perfection, for a trifle. - THE SCOUNDRELS T HE Ananias club has a swiftly growing , membership.' The colonel writes the editor of the Philadelphia North American, "Will you please tell McClatchy and Noyes for me that Noyes is abso lutely and completely misinformed, and that there Is not a particle of truth in the statements nlade to him and thus repeated to McClatchy." In the letter to the North Ameri can editor also appear these gentle words r ' "I made no such statement to any human being;" "The simple fact is, these stories are not misun derstandings, they are deliberate in ventions;" "Noyes is entirely in er ror in thinking that Taft thinks he has assurances of my support Taft thinks nothing- of the kind." ' Again the colonel sayB of Noyes: The story was not a- misunder standing, but was a deliberate inven tion , made out of the .whole cloth, and without a particle of basis be yond , the Imagination ot the man writing it." . ' The ranks of tho men who tell the truth are going to be declmatod be tween now and the meeting of the Chicago convention. The colonel will mow down the scoundrels with a merciless pen,' and all around us there will be a horde of Ananlases, weaklings, crooks, undoers of duty, malefactors, liars, deliberate falsi fiers, mollycoddles, nincompoops, undesirables, , muckrakers and Jack . asses-"'"-" -f : r- by editorials and news articles now running through the eastern news papers. , The temperature at Billings, Mon tana, was 26 below zero yesterday. In;Oregon, an occasional peach tree is jn bloom, and wild strawberries have appeared at Lebanon and Med ford. Eastern newspapers that have been , dynamiting Oregon with the labor circulars, will please copy. - No reduced "rates of fare are to be made for the Democratic and Re publican national conventions. The railroads will make no sacrifices to help Bave the country. Letters From tlic People TEMPERANCE IN FRANCE Is it necessary for a millionaire to be a social and economic drone? TWO INDICTMENTS A I STATE senator in New York is seeking to have a legislative investigation of the laws den lays. He has a statement from Justice Howard of the supreme court of the state of New York, who says: : ,';..'?' -h- -, c',-' V "There are too many laws, too many courts, too many appeals, too "many technicalities. Nobody knows the , law, - nobody h ; can know the law, "In these days a law library would fill a barn. Thou sands of thick volumes constitute the written law. A dozen volumes should suffice. . "The law should be firm and pos itive; it has come to be like quick sand. In a large proportion cf the cases, it costs the public more to foot the bills of the litigation that it would to pay the claim in dispute. The citizens . cannot know the law, the lawyers cannot comprehend the law, the Judges cannot Interpret the law. Such conditions have arisen before, in Greece, in Rome and in England. But they were cured there. They should be here." These are not the utterances of one-unskilled in the law. They are not , the words of a mere layman They are the declarations of a. Justice of the supreme court ot the state of New York. .. They are In language so strong, that they recall the remarks of C. H. Carey,' a lawyer, of Portland Speaking' before an assemblage of lawyers recently, be said : j; Under our codes, an elaborate system of technical rules of plead ing has grown up. Much time Is wasted upon demurrers and motions which are Hied in nearly every suit. Technical rules which confine "par ties to definite issues are obstrue tlons to ultimate Justice. Courts and lawyers now make justice a sec ondary consideration. They proceed on the theory that the rules must be adhered to, even though the result Is to bring victory to the party who ought not to win, and they have built up fine theories of the law un der -wbich precedent must be '"'fol lowed to absurd conclusions." TEACHING EYES AND EARi A NFrance drunkenness 'Is . so sel dom in evidence that the very recent debate in the . French chamber" comes as a surprise. . The bill before the house was for the limitation ot wine shops. It was stated - that there were 3 0,000 In Paris alone. One deputy disputed that the cutting oft a number of wine shops would cure the evil, and pro posed, instead, by additional heavy taxation, to strike at the distillers. who had doubled in number in thirty years. In the end the cham ber defeated the bill by 360 votes against 156. The controlling argument was that the French wine shop, especial ly in the provinces, was the club house and meeting ground of both middle and the poorer classes There the poor go to chat with the men of their class, there public af fairs are debated, and there public opinion is created. Thus to sup press the wine Bhop would be a very undemocratic proposition. The object with which- the wine shop in France is resorted to dif fers very widely from that which at tracts to the American saloon. . The drink is not the inducement to the Frenchman. He sips very slowly, and, being economical in his habits spends very little money In the wine shop. But French doctors are of opinion that the slow absorption of his liquor by the Frenchman is of Infinite harm to him. AT LAWRENCE A . ' 4' FEW days ago It was proposed to teach in the schools by mov ing pictures, whereby the o scenes , ana turroundines of great events may be" brought hefore the eyes, and bo impressed on the memories of the pupils. All well and good." But it we wait but a lit tle longer we may nave the. living Voices Of the- ictors also "canned" and timed to correspond with the pictures. 19 By Joining the hands of the cine matograph and the phonograph, and lfa:lepqjhn . rilsf rlrfr by hoth.thai tvteiiKmtteiy-t operate-ftntTf THIRTEEN -YEAR -OLD girl from a striking family at Law rence was removed to New York, where she ; told : the World of conditions among the tex tile workers. Though only 13, she kept the house and did the cooking while her father and mother worked in the mills. The mother received $5 a week and the father $8. The parents left home for the mills at 6:30 and returned ot 6 in the even ing. They were not aDte to earn more than "enough to provide the bare necessaries or lire, ana were fast exhausting the little bank ac count , brought with them , from France two years before. Berore tno house committee on rules at Washington yesterday, chil dren from the families of strikers testified that they had to pay five cents a week each for water. Some of them told of seeing women beaten by police and children knocked down and hurled Into wagons like "bun dies of rags,", the day attempt was made to remove children of strikers from Lawrence to Philadelphia. , - A Philadelphia salesman who was at the Lawrence depot at the time the removal was attempted," Bald soldier tried to keep him In the sta tion Dy guaramg me aoor witn a ,bayonet. "I saw the soldiers pick the children up by the legs as if they were rags, he said, "arid I saw one woman choke by a soldier. I was beaten by the policemen and still have wounds on my back where they struck me." Others gavo similar testimony. lastrumtnts i: complete accord. SMALL CHANGE. OomnraDlritlotx seat to The Journal for. pub lication la tola department abonld sot xed 300 worda in tenctb and moat be accompanied by tba name and addreaa of tho acodei.) Defends Labor Conncil's Action t Portland, Or., March J. To the Edi tor of Tha Journal Your criticism of the methods employed by the Central Labor Council In trying; to stem the tide of laborers being lured to this city, calls for protest from those who' have already suffered through the effects of misleading advertisements by commer cial organizations, relative to oppor tunities In the northwest country. I believe that all unprejudiced peo ple will agree with me when I aay that conditions here are decidedly detriment al to the welfare of the immigrant class who have , to work for a day's wages. At present there are hundreds If not thousands of men out of employment here in Portland, myself being one. You seem to forget that every ' disgruntled Immigrant who returns east does some publicity wbrk also; anl that it Is not to the credit ot the commercial organ izations, clippings from the eastern pt pers will testify.- v - Naturally the, real estate element op poses any move which will retard im migration. The period covered oy tno colonist rates is generally sheep shear ing time with them, wherein they han dle the shears and operate on the Im migrant sheep. ' Another factor -which I might mention Is the chance to strike back by the working class. . I refer you to a news Item In the -account of the examining of witnesses at Washington, DTC 'Sa'iTTAwrencerilfuation, stat ing that While Llpson was telling of bis substituting molasses for butter that "a woman In a picture hat" and "a man In furllned overooat snickered audibly. " There it Is, as it is everywhere. Wealth and affluence ridiculing poverty and destitution. Now does "act that : su preme contempt so often manifest In those above labor merit the most ex treme measures on the cart -of those scorned? Those whom, by his industry the worklngman has raised to the plane of independence, should accord at least common courtesy to him. Buf Instead he receives contempt and vituperation. In view of treatment so accorded is it any wonder that Socialism is growing In leaps and bounds? Three years ago while soliciting in this city I had a chance to interview a great many peo ple who had immigrated from the east. Invariably they claimed that . the . "al luring literature" had so appealed to their trusting nature that they looked upon Oregon as being almost a paradise. I've seen women weep with the telling of their Btorles. Some tell of selling their little homes and spending the money to come here. Others of their husbands giving up good positions' In a special line and coming here, then hav ing to resort to the pick and shovel to make a living. . I've seen misery and destitution" In many homes, all caused by people being unacquainted with the actual conditions to be found here. Undoubtedly the Central-Labor coun cil has been apprised of many, similar cases directly attributable to untruthful advertising, so all fair minded people who don't sanction that special brand of cruelty should join with mo in pro testing against tneir condemnation. A. F. ACORN.. . The hen that cackles fhe loudest end longest hasn't always laid the biggest ... Docs anybody know whether Roon velt knows anything about' the tariff Question, and If so, what?. tVho will eay that Bryan can learn nothing? He says that there are other pood Democrats who can get more votes than he. La Follette, like Bryan, Is too radical a reformer to win the presidency, but he has done a great work, that will bear fruit forever. Tet Roosevelt doesn't explain Just what is wrong with Taft, whom three years ago he declared the ideal man for president. : - . . ' Probably Bryan has really done more In the - cause, of political reform than bo.th Roosevelt and Taft and he wasn't president, either. .... . If people could believe that Roosevelt were sincere, they might but how can they no believe? Some of his own acts have destroyed faith in him. Washington and Jefferson were wise, far-seeing and truly , pajrlotio men; they were no quibblers; they said what they meant and meant what they said. .... ...V .:,.; The reactionary press is doing the best It can, not intending It, to renomi nate and reelect Roosevelt It attacks him principally where he is least vul nerable. 1 . . .- r v .-'" ... " At the nice Uttle Gary - dinners the business to be discussed was plunder ing millions of people of millions of money. The game has - long worked very smoothly. . , ' ''. . Even In he city one can occasionally meet a man who thinks more of gard ening than of baseball; there Is once In awhile a woman,-too, "wtio la more ln tereBted In gardening than in a mil linery shop. . Governor Dlx, wWTrtgh official vir tue, says Brandt did or wrote something unsoclety like reapecing a mullmillon alre's wife; therefore Brandt should serve a 30-year prison sentence for al leged, but probably falsified burglary. At any rate, Dlx won't become president. CKEGOX SIDELIGHTS Woodbtirn's annual horse fair will be held April 6. J ... Junction City will probably be laying down street paving within 60 days. Corvallls property owners are moving for concrete paving for alleys, laid in the form of blocks over sewer and water pipes. The new nharmaev-commerclal publl-; cation to be Issued at Oregon Agricul tural college will be known as the C-P.Journal. ' i One hundred accessions to the church, it Is estimated, will result from the recent labors -of Evangelist Van Warter at the Methodist Episcopal church in Klamath Falls. Redmond Hub; One of the things Redmond should attend to .Js the plac ing of a representative at Portland for the purpose of guiding those In search of reasonable priced Irrigated lands to central Oregon. . , Rehearsals for three separate amateur performances are under way simultane ously at Condon. One will be given by high school students, one ny tne atnieuc club and one for the benefit of St. Thomas Aquinas academy. . . - . . . . Articles of Incorporation have been filed for the Paclf lo State bank, to be located at Seaside and to open for busi ness about April 1; incorporators, Wil liam B. Dresser. Patrick Lawler and Hugh J. Pye; capital stock, $25,000. Creswell Chronicle: Bchmltt Bros, have received their concrete block ma chine. Two men can make 145 blocks eight Inches wide, eight inches high and 16 inches lone per day, and one man can make 1250 concrete bricks per day. Eugene Guard: Big land sales are so common about Eugene now that they cause little comment And best of all, big tracts are being BOld to thosftj.who will cut them into many email farms, which will provide good homes for the ever increasing throng of Immigrants. I ' Condon Globe : The Wheat City con cert band will begin regular practice to get In shape for the threshermen s con vention Decoration day. Fourth of July, the big tri-county fair in the fall, presi dential election and the many other po casions that are bound to arise with the approaching election. , Bc:tc: The Rev. Thomas Gregory SEVEW MEN OF PERSEVERANCE Michael Faraday.. Any man who give up his life to discovery or research work must have a large share of perseverance. But Michael Faraday possessed it to such a remarkable degree thatyla life may well be taken as an eminent example of this noble Quality . , When a young lad Faraday became apprenticed to a bookbinder, but , his mind soon turned to the experimental study of nature. He had to rely en tirely on himself to obtain what learn ing he was to have as his father was a blacksmith. So he still kept consci entiously to his TjOokblndlng. and such was his '"stea"afastaetermlnatlon't'j06r-' low the course he wished to devote his" life to, that he evolved a system of elf -education by which he-soon be came -well read. His first opportunity to get in close touch with the work of chemical re search came in 1813. Through the in fluence of Sir Humphrey Davy, some of whose lectures he had attended, he Obtained a position as assistant In the laboratory of the Royal Institute of Great Britain. He became director of the laboratory in 1825,. and in 1838 was made Fullerlan professor of chemistry for life. , It was in his research and discovery that Faraday's perseverance accom pllshed such wonderful results. Having formed a theory, Or surmised a chem ical phenomenon, he knew no rest or slacking In his labors until he had either proven it or found it falsa To this steadfastness we owe many discoveries which have since been of inestimable value to the race. - - Faraday's chemical work he pursued exhaustively for some time. Among his greater work In this field were the first experiments showing the diffusion of gases and turning them Into a liquid state; the Investigation of the alloys of steel; and the production of several new kinds of glaes valuable for optical purposes. His chemical work, however, was soon overshadowed by his great elec trical discoveries. His first experiment was the -construction of a voltaic bat tery with seven half pence, seven sheets of sine, and six pieces ot paper moist ened with salt water. , , ' . . , From this time forward he selected Compulsory Vaccination, " Portland, Or., March 8.--TO the Editor of The Journal. If vaccination Is as aure a protection against smallpox, as Its adherents claim, then all that any. man need do. In order to be perfectly safe, Is to submit his own body to this measure. But he has then no grounds on which he tan demand that other peo ple be compelled by law to follow his example for, no matter how many others may be afflicted with smallpox, their state of health can have no effect on him to whom this disease has been ren dered non-lnfectlous. If it cannot be demonstrated that vaccination is an absolute safeguard, it It cannot be shown that vaccination la harmless to the body. If it cannot be proven that Infection, with the germs of cowpox is less dangerous than Infec tion with the germs of other diseases, then to suffer vaccination voluntarily would be folly and under compulsion it would be Injustice. If compulsory vaccination is intended for a humane measure, to protect the urtlnstructed against their ' own Ignor ance, then It Is a huge mistake. - The apace devoted to this subject by the dally press If used Instead for a clear enunciation of the cause of smallpox and an occasional article on how to live correctly, some of the time and money expended - by "medical scientists in bacteriological research If employed in stead In teaching people what not to eat so as to keep clean internally, would certainly do more good than compulsory vaccination.' . ' .To say that 'smallpox must be and that there is no other prevention than vaccination would be the height of ignor ance. I .,."'( , .' ,.. .' . ':. Then, as long as every one is at lib erty to employ this artificial protection, what reason is there left for compulsory vaccination? .-- ' . I. KOPF. certain electrical phenomenon as his study and to these applied the full force of his mind, keeping them per sistently before him . year after year until his attempts to solve them had been accomplished. First- came his great discovery, the production ot the rotation of magnets and of wires conducting electric currents round each other. From this discovery have come all our great electric motors of today, Then came his crowning triumph, the obtaining of an electrlo current from a magnet, which has respited in the modern dynamo. The success of this d.iscoxery..cftm9 jQnly:after.xepeatedj:all. ures. But nothing could turn him aside and at length he triumphed. Faraday's perseverance was all the more remarkable in that he could nevefbe' Sure l thaChlalyears of effort would be crowned with any success. At one lime ne. wrote: : i am nusy just now on eleotro-magnetlsnv and. think I have got hold of a good thing. But it may be a weed Instead of a fish that after all my labor, I may at last pull up." And ' although the persletance with which he pursued his work caused him . to give it up for four years at one time on penalty of ruining his health, he again went back to it as soon as he was. able, Faraday was one of the most bril liant, experimentalists the world has ever known, and to him credit must be given for much that electricity has ac complished. His Intellectual power cannot be traced to definite antecedents; and it is still more difficult to account by inheritance, for the extraordinary delicacy of his character. On a mem orable occasion, a friend who knew him well described him thus: "Nature, not education, made Fara day strong and refined. A favorite experiment of his own was represen tative of himself. He loved to show that water, In crystallising, excluded all foreign ingredients, however intl mately they might be mixed with it put or acids, alkali or saline solu turns, the crystal came sweet and Dure. By -some such natural process In the formation of this man, beauty and no Dieneas coalesced to the exclusion ot anything vulgar and low." -This day, 142 years ago, witnessed the affair, known in American history as the "Boston Massacre." the real begin ning of the Revolution. Not for five years. It la true, were the "embattled farmers" to fire the shots that were to be "heard around the world; but on that March day when British soldiers shot down the Ameri cans the blood was set rebelling which was not to be cooled, but was to surge hot and hotter-through- the-people's veins, until the redcoats were driven from our shores, and the despotism they represented no longer had a place upon American soil. The "Massacre;' was in a sense, hardly deserving of the name. Nine British soldiers fired into a crowd of some 60 or 60 citizens, killing four and wound ing; seven not a very murderous af fall It must be confessed. ' i,. . Nor la- this all. The facts show that the citizens were more to blame for thi affair than were the soldiers. On the afternoon of the day of the massacr the patience of the soldiers was sorely tried, but still they refrained from vio lence. Men and boys pelted them with stones, threw, snow In their faces,, ridi culed and cursed them, and still they held themselves in check. About I o'clock in the evening a sentinel, on duty - in front of the custom house, knocked a hoy who was annoying him, whereupon a crowd 'gathered and began UUUWlIjf, IVU1 1UUI XwlU UlUli ' I The commotion called out eight othttr soldiers, who soon took their places beside the sentinel. The crowd, now thoroughly angered, threw some snow, stones and sticks at the soldiers and .. dared them to fire. The redcoats took them at their word and fired, with the results as given above.-" The deed was done; American blood had been shed: and the drama that was to attract the attention of the world was begun. . r .. ft . It was not a Question of who waa to blame for the soldiers' action. That, was neither here nor there. The great '' question was, "What were the soldiers doing on American soil against the will and wishes of the people?" The Amer icans were thoroughly loyal and it was time of peace.. They had offered no 'resistance to the crown, except in tho perfectly legitimate way of petition and protest; and yet there were the soldiers threatening them with the vengeance rf a despotic king 8000 miles Sway, a king who would not listen to reason, but was trying to carry his point by a display of force. ..-). And the king's armed men had shed the blood of the citizens! It Is true, they mar have bean nrovoked to do this. fbut they had no business, being there. Their presence Invited provocation. That was the way the Americans felt And they were right " s And so the firs was lighted which was eventually Jo consume the last bit of monarchical red tape in this country and result In the establishment of American independence. Tomorrow Benjamin Franklin. restraint, both for the good of society and for their own good. I hold that a criminal has not forfeited the right to humane consideration at the hands ot a Christian people, no matter how heinous his acta Prisoners need not be an ex pense to the state. . That our peniten tiaries now are an expense only goes to show that economical management is unknown to our public Institutions, and that those who are responsible for their management need reforming as well as the prisoners committed to their care. This includes the entire governing body, the whole voting population. "Two wrongs never made one right" Is a saying as true as It is homely, At the present time, in progressive Oregon, with a governor V mercifully humane, there should be a rally of all humane people to the support of policies already in operation,: and there should be no such backward step as is contemplated In the legislation proposed, for the un sexlng of the vicious and defective. - . - LORA C LITTLE. Would Restrain, Not Punish. " Portland, March 4. To the Editor of The JournalThe communication ' ap pearing In your columns February 2,3, with my signature appended thereto, was not framed nor Intended for nub- J licRtion, and for that reason no argu ments wtra uucrcu, mm me language Was scarcoly- "parliamentary." - There fore C. F. B.'s complaint of it as an offering to the public is Just However, there was no suggestion In it, as he seems tc4h&rge, that, criminals should be allowed to go at large. On the other hand, I am not alone In the contention that I now "make, that they should not than May 10, and see If you don't start girrrnpt-TTmffniflfl ' brrnd S R " la'aWIT Tm puntelied (whU-li Is retaliatory" rrea.tTf off TIie TbrtTand-Alat.kan line, with a . .. . v ment- f mat as wages in tne nuns , no and .calculated to rousa alL. ihe re-1 devil in their natures) but placed under Likes The Journal. Lebanon, Or., . Feb. 28.To the Editor of The Journal I have" been reading your paper for several years and like it best of all my papers for news. I am an out and .out Bryan-La Follette-Wilson-Johnson progressive, in order, as I have written the names of .my ideal. I am an old timer in Oregon, 60 years September next I came to Portland in 1850 and to Linn county In 1862. - I have seen Oregon grow from a small beginning to a wonderfully changed con dition.: At one time I knew nearly every business man in Portland. It is dif ferent now.. : J. B. ROBERTS. l ' , .' ' - -r ' ' An Opportunity. Lents, Or., March 8. To the Editor of The Journal. In the Sunday Journal appears one Item of news from Seattle that should Interest all Portland busi ness houses that are interested in gain ing the Alaskan trade. It Is In refer ence to the "famous old steamer Cor wln. built In Portland In 1878," and which, for a dozen years, has been ply ing between Seattle , and Nome. This vessel, it seems, has been the first to leave for Nome in the Spring by about 26. days, and has been withdrawn by her owners-and offered for sale. This means that Nome will have to wait near ly a month longer this spring for her first supplies than usual,-.' .... ; , Now let Portland grasp this opportune lty and advertise at onoe to have a craft leave this harbor for Nome not later boom. . Nearly a month in advance . of other crafts means, much to lcerlocked Alaska and her business men will ap preciate this effort In a substantial manner..: " ; ' ine proouring of a craft to make this trip will undoubtedly mean some trouble and expense, but let the Com mercial olub forego a few of their thousand dollar ; "smokers" and apply this money and a little surplus energy and do something that wilj bring busi ness to Portland, and forget the dis cussion of where we will get our im migrants to populate our city with Its ovwti unemployed. - J I G. TOWNSEND. Good Roads. Prlnevllle, Or, March 2. To the Edi tor, of The Journal I don't believe in bonding for anything. Pay as you go is my motto. Good roads leading to the cities and railroad are what would bene fit the farmer most . I would like to see a trunk road if we eould pay for it What we need most is a law govern ing the width of tires Of waa-nn.. an. cording to load they carry nothing less than threeMnch tires except buggies and carriages, and up to six Inch. There is no use to build good roads unless you piuicci uiera. .: , j. uj, Opportunity for Work. Suver, Or., March 8. To the Editor of The Journal The' man signed "One of Many" in The Journal of March 1 should get away from the city, go to a small town or out into the valley, where fie will find work and there is always car pentering to do. Farmers will need help now, and after getting acquainted he can get plenty of work at his trade, Come to Monmouth, Airlle or Indenpendence. ' Look for work at these places or near them and find it O. A. PETERSON. .What He Prcfenjed. From Llpplncott's Magaine. , A Cincinnati lawyer recently re marked that the Juryman who toward the end of a very long trial wished to know what the terms "plaintiff and "Idefehdant" signified Is not alone in his ignorance. The lawyer mentioned tells of a man whose coat had . been stolen. He - has charged a suspicious looking person with-too theft. , . "You say that this man stole your coat?" asked the magistrate. "Do I un derstand that i you prefer charges against him?' ' ,:,"' ' ' ' " ' ' "WelTTno, youTThonor," responded, the plaintiff, " prefer the coat,-if it's all the same to you." Overholt PITT THE POOR. ! stood upon a city street, And neoole hurried by: I lamped 'em from .the head to fe From watch and chain to eye. I saw the rich, the poor, the mild. The shabby woman with a child, Tne Dusmess man, tne waiter, cierx. Each, trudging on his way to work. It's tough," I said, "that some must slave '....;'.. - nnn. tkAu ..... , ii umi vwiiri m uuif tuuir on on j .... That some must ever work and save And wear old clothes and freeze," And then I bought aTat clgar, ..' And sent some flowers to a star. Then took a Joy ride down the line Ana orove. too last ana paid a line. I watched a one legged, helpless guy Sell pagers with bis voice; "A wooden leg," I said, said L "Would make the man rejoice." And then I took a crowd to dine Where we absorbed expensive wine. And after that we saw a show; The seats were Just two bucks a throw. Tf people o'er this sun kissed land Had hearts as big as mine, -No suffering could they withstand;. For all the sun would shine." I often say that o'er and o'er And then go in a wet goods store And soak my nerves in glasses deep, Go home and sob myself to sleep. I like the Job hunter With hand clasp so warm. And If I vote for him He'll do me no harm. - - Pointed Paragraphs - Even a man in Jail is past finding QUt- i - - , . ':.' e .''.'. ....... ... - : " .'. Don't attempt to feed a starving man with advice. '..; '..' ' ' ..: Nobody can tell the man anything who has a bad liver. - :'-'' : "'' " . It doesn't take a very large trouble to worry a small mind, - .'",.".-,'.:.....'.:. , ', "'..".:' . f Borne candidates look around for an issue in order to dodge it ' Th self -made man has an abundant supply of reverence for his maker. Many a man who calls a spade a spade applies other names to a snow shovel. ;,': e ".'.".... A man realizes how foolish he Is when he Is sober, but when drunk he forgets it : '"'T " " " ;- . -". Si -.'.' ' " It's easier to forget what yonj ought to know than to know what you; ought to forget ' ...,: .,.',;. .:--::'V:. :; '.;'rti:'".v;..::.. A wpman never thinks her husband so, unreasosable as when he expects her to be reasonable, , - v - When a conceited man meets a pretty', girl he feels that she Is to be congratu-. lated because of their meeting. - Timely Advertising (Contributed to The Journal by Walt Maaon. the famoua Kanaaa poet,' His prose-poema are a regular featur of this - eoluma in Tat Pali ' Journal.) "There Is no good in printers' ink," with emphasis says Jabes Dink. "I tried : that graft, for many years; It brought me bitterness' and tears. Last summer I blew scads in droves announcing low ' priced heating- stoves; such bargains aa I offered then were, never known by mortal men, and not a , customer arrov I didn't sell a doggone stover This winter I have tried once more to brlns theijjeople to my store; I advertised , some useful wares porch furniture and garden chairs,, and didn't- sell enough to pay the ad expenses for a. day! To one great truth I'll put you wise it doesit't pay to advertise!" But Gaffer Spink, across tin stfeetreays advertising can't " be beat. "I. think of what the people heed, and then write ads that they will read," says Gaffer Spink,' who gets the dough, while rivals wring their hands in woe '! don't cry Tansl' when. wjiiii-i b Jiisii, vi m it, unaa trees in miQ-juiy;--iVipjfMgirt, 1H. by " tfeoigt llatuiew Adama.-