r nrn 'o"ego:i daily jguknal, fohtland. t;iu:::day evening, :ii i:::. JOURNAL an" i n r f. r e n p e n t newspaper. --J-v'KSOS J.:, s,.l wmlrr .t Th. Jm..l fcnti. tT.'n-l r. PrtUnrt. nr. Or T . ...j at PorUsait . f.,r "trn.mtwlOT Uirouu' tie 0l 11 sTFhoNKS Main TITS: R". Ail VPrtment rwhni "-T-li tt-e or"-" 2-: Fifth emw. N lo; 1218 fePle S iNwrlpflim Twin tr w w v la U l otted EUtrt Mesleo. m raf ...i...S i Oiw month.,. ..... .2.M I On wnn... CAILV AND KCXDAT. Oiw yr... j One awnm... 0a .$ .60 t .25 .1 .88 The man possession, th man who has satisfied his sel fishness, hi asjially . conserva tive; h fls the responsibility of possession and does not ven ture. David Gllson. hours of tendance on machines which absorb the vitality and ex haust the powers of the young ones who tend them for a penurious wage. Yet, ears the president of the New York Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, "the federal government has nothing whatever to do, directly or Indirectly, with state legislation on the subject of child welfare. And some one) or two of the eastern papers regard it as another Idstance of "government meddling!; N Yet It Is hard to. im agine a more effective stroke at the abuses, north and south, east' and west, that stunt and degrade and rob the Uttle children of their youth and of the Joy of living, than the publication, nation wide, of the findings- of the nation's investigators. Factory and field, cellar and garret, workshop and kitchen, wonld alike have ta yield up their secrets. And for the nation to know is for the nation to be responsible for curing. 3 OCR BOTTLED COMMERCE ' ' WOULD' buy foreign built l 6hlps to delfver flour toEBos I ton and New .York If I could register them under the Amer- Tatriiag.'; -: -"This was ther declaratlotrofTr B; Wilcox' at the weekly Ad club luncheon-yesterday. There could be nb more significant proof of the folly of ear navigation laws. , There Is a constant lament that few ships fly the ' American flag. Here te a ease where) ships rrould fly the American flag If foreign ships could be admitted to American reg- : Istry. v" ; - They are not o admitted, because forbidden to do so by antiquated navigation Jaws, kept by congress on the statute books at the behest of the shipbuilding trust and the rail roads..,, Nor, can 'foreign vessels en gage In American coastwise trade, a fact that Is the finishing agency In the destruction of American shipping and In preventing ocean competition with the railroads. . . . To further strengthen the position of those rho want ho ocean competi tion In our domestic trade, there Is a movement to exact tolls on coastwise traffic through the Panama eanal. Free tolls r on coastwise shipping would partly relieve the situation, but powerful interests aro against any kind of relief. ' They want the American coasts to remain bottled tip and American shipping to continue a myth :.' "'' 5rT;:"'':" ' It . Is strange . thai the American people do not see the obstructions and handicaps thrown around their commerce. It is strange that 'they do not realise how heavily these ob structions and handicaps cost them. It is strange that they do not thun der at the doors ot congress until domestic commerce shall be freed and the coastwise seas be opened to the unobstructed use of any vessel flying the American flag. t isfy'the modern "sense of Una' and color, the twentieth century sense of beauty, we still go back to those specimens that . have escaped the chances of the ages. So In clay mod eling, as well as In others of the ancient arts, there has been no ad vance since the old days when the Greek and the' Etrurian created the models for all time. AS STATESMEN , DO . IT f .TWISTING THE LION'S TAIL THE .'London suffragettes were not satisfied with mobbing min isters and fighting the police, screaming In the lobbies of the house of commons and chaining themselves to the railings of the gal lcry. ' They proceeded to window smashing exhibitions; where ordl nary and well behaved citizens lived, and so, one crime leading to another, to trying to set fife to the general postofflce, and proposing to burn up Buckingham palace. If these women were crazy some excuse might be dug up for them. But,, judged by the ordinary stand- - ards of - distinguishing right .from wrongs they are entirely sane. They plead, of course, fanaticism as their excuse for law-breaking. Since their impulses to break windows and burn buildings are self controlled and de liberate the British people are tired out with their extravagances. To the men who were not sufferers there was something at least gro tesque in their belaboring cabinet ministers over me neaa with um brellas, or pelting them with rocks through the wludows of their dining rooms. When they carried things to the length of applying these same Indignities to those who were in no . sense their antagonists they over stepped vthe line, and roused the British people. The laws,, against conspiracy to commit unlawful acts are sharp enough if invoked in .their full strength. It Is not then a mat ter of a magistrate's fine or commit tal for 30 or 40 days. Trial In the - high court, with penalties of one or two years' imprisonment and discre tional bard labor will be la ques tion. Pleas that their aim was to change one law by disobeying others will not be listened to. The Rtron? rrm methods of the suffragettes will fait as they should. DEGRADING LABOR HE names of the strikers at Lawrence are strange names. Jfltey. 'are names that 'are fa miliar only In foreign lan guage's?- ; '--;. la one news dispatch appears the name of "Mlsldek," a widely differ ent cognomen, from the good old American "Smith." Another In the same story is "Rodlskl," and still ant ther "Lebdek." -7 60 far, no striker has been men tioned by the name of George Wash ington Brown, John Hancock Wil son, Patrick Henry Jones, Thomas Jefferson Wllkina or Abraham Lin coln. Johnson. Nor will such famil iar names appear In 'the. reports, of the strikers, for the mills do not pay the wage demanded by men horn and reared in the United States. ' The truth is that, while profess ing that the purpose of the protec tive tariff is to defend American la bor against the "pauper labor of Europe," the millowners ' of the United States ye largely using "the pauper labor of Europe" In their mills. Every Lawrence striker whose name has yet appeared in the dispatches is a European name, and all ot them are working for a "pau per wage" of $6 ft week for women and $ ft for men. WIth.tho toice of Jacob, the mill owners appeal for a tariff against "pauper-labor of Eu rope," and wltn the hand of Esau they . bring in "pauper labor from Europe" by the thousands, to run their machines. - . In truth, they are creating a pau per labor in the United States, and are themselves pocketing the bene fits of-the tariff. In an official re port. Secretary Nagel, of Mr, Taft's cabinet, announces that "one third of the 90,000 mep employed in the Iron and steel Industry work seven days a week.; One fourth of them work 12 hours ft day, or 8 4 hours a week' Louis D. Brand els recently proved that 6S per cent of them re ceive ft wage of . only $10.50 per week.0 1 Like the workers at Lawrence, most' of the employes in the steel and iron . industry are . foreign ers, The low wage of $10.60 per week of seven days and 12 hours a day, proves It. - In addi tion, the Pittsburg survey, after an exhaustive lnvestlgatlonestabllshed that between 60 and 70 per cent of the workers in the steel and iron mills are of either foreign birth or foreign parentage. , The mill owners are not using the tariff for the protection of labor. They v are degrading labor. They make men . old before - their time. They jflegenerate -the race physically, intellectually and morally, as shown by the article of Senator Polndexter, on this page. In nine years, by use of pauper labor from Europe," the steel trust earned profits ot $1,109,146,093. ft sum nearly three times the entire cost of the Panama canal, the great est engineering achievement of all time. HERE Is a lot , the statesmen of the states can learn from neighbors. Here Is British Co lumbia raising a revenue of $10,000,000, of which less than $2, 600,000 is derived from direct taxa tion. The effort Is to keep direct taxation as low as possible, spend as much as possible for development of the country, and obtain , as large revenue as possible from public re sources. - ? ' The sources of the ten-million 'an nual revenue are: A grant of $750, 000 from the federal government In Ilea of ortain lands taken over by the dominion from the province; rev enue from land sales, rentals, sur vey fees, $1,865,000; royalties and rentals on timber, $2,450,000, roy alties from minerals, $325,000; coal, $25 0,0 Oft lwatejrpowersv$ 9 0,00 0. The list makes a total ot more than six and three quarter millions, or over two thirds of the whole pro vincial revenue. ; . ' Factors In the remainder of the revenue are ft tax ot $500 a head on incoming Chinese, , succession $200,000, income-tax, $200,000. Improvements on land escape with a tax ot only $170,000. v ' . The government is a generous spender in the improvement of roads. ' It reasons that a taxation reduced to the minimum by laying burdens on natural resources, with the smallest possible taxation on Im provements and the construction of good roads Into the interior are an at tractive feature in getting people on the land. ;.,'; ; The government has kept the best of the land In its own hands, and is parting with It only as it is opened up and occupied Nor dothe au thorlllespermlt purchasers , to ' buy lands In large lots and then hold for indefinite periods for speculative purposes. The province imposes a tax of fou per cent on Idiejand, but only three fifths of one per cent upon land which Is under Improvement. It Is a. god way - to people the and. , V , country that Washington, Jefferson, McKinley and other presidents stood against third terms. 1 Interesting accounts of marrying on $14 a week have been frequently given by contributors on the wo man's page of The Journal recently. And the beauty of it is that they are remaining married on $14 ft week. COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF SMALL CHANG! A Missouri Judge sentenced a man to obey his wife for six months. Still, we have an outcry against the inhumanity of the death penalty. Gaess w don't want a Theodora I Roosevelt tgsinst Taft; Harvard ag-ainst Val. e In a yar a, new presidential term will have begun. Bet Bryan woald rallr like to run falnat Roosevelt. .. , ONE CLAY B" LIGHT ON THE CHILDREN T iHE.bill that Senator Borah has ; been so industriously piloting through the senate recently is illustrated by the, types of the Lawrence children presented to the committee as samples of the child product of the ' woolen and cotton mills' of Massachusetts. V r The bureau that the bill proposes to establish Is named the children's bureau, bilk , The object , of the bll Is "Investigation, Information, inter pretation:! facts. ; :' y K -( rrjvate .philanthropy and private charity have lavished their resources ou the children of the nation in late years." But private means may give out, private charity be diverted, and private interest fall: "The govqrn- m?r'l. meat. light shall shine with steady beams , into the dark- places where ETWEEN the 7th and the 12th of this month of March a Clay Products Exposition will be held in Chicago. President Taft is to smile on it. James R. Oar field, the ex-secretary of the in terior, will be the principal speaker at a banquet where 2000 clay work ers are to feast The exposition" Is" appropriately held - In- Illinois, since that great state is rich in clays and shales, and in factories of all description for carrying on one of the chief and the most ancient Industries of the hu man race. It Is' said that the still more wide spread use of clay products In build Ings of all descriptions will go far to diminish the half a billion dol lar annual fire-loss in the United States. These permanent materials cover so very wide a range both in nature and in value. The expos! tlon will show brick, tile, fire proof ing, clay building block, terra cotta clay roofing,' and besides the struc tural forms the ornamental forms In which clay Is used today. Do we stop to think, when clay of good quality is suitably handled and properly burned how Imperishable are the vases and statuettes, the tiles and tablets co created? When thou sands of years have passed they are excavated from the ruins ot Babylon and dug up from the well nigh as ancient. lomDS or Btruria, Greeee and fcgypt. Ana, neither in deeira. in fhlldri lead laborious lives," of f ( !y food, thin clothing, and long aim "texture has the twentieth century after Christ improved on tire', workman ship of the tenth before. On th contrary for models that shall sat ODDS AND ENDS OP A CTTT NE of the toughest enemies that the modern city must defeat waste. It ranks behind. but- not1tar behind, graft in the mischief that it does. And the American city Is the most wasteful ot all by consent of all observers'. In a city of the size of Portland we are told by experts that the gar bage and refuse accumulates at the rate of not less than one third of ton daily for each 1000 people. In Cleveland, Ohio, the municipality has Installed and has kept working since 1905 a plant for the utiliza tion of the garbage of the city. - It deals with about 40,000 tons of garbage yearly. The products are two and one half million pounds of grease - and - glyceriner more than twelve million pounds of fertilizer. The market value of all approxi mates $130,000. Cost of reclama tion Is a little over $2 ft ton, exclu sive of interest on cost of plant. In Columbus.'Ohio, a similar plant Is said to be operating with equally good results." "; In Los Angeles this question Is be ing debated. At a meeting there a few days ago the figures of analysis of garbage made by Professor G. W. Groch, a chemist of that city, were quoted. He gave the reclaimable products under such a system as that in use at Cleveland as 4 ter cent grease and glycerine, 4 to 5 gal lons of . denatured alcohol, 3.16 per -cent nitrogen, ammonia 3.84 per cent, phosphoric acid 1.25 per cent, actual potash 1.22 per cent, and, in addition from 2 to 2.50 per cent of bone phosphate from each ton of green garbage. The professor ended by saying that from , 2000 tT3T)00 pounds of actual potash were thrown away dally in the garbage of Los Angeles. Our practical friends, the German, save this waste. In Berlin the house owners are compelled to provide for the removal of waste, garbage, ash es, and so, on from their buildings Most of the owners have Joined in an association 'which has contracted with a ; stock company, formed- "for the purpose, to remove and treat the garbage. In treating it, .first, the metal, rags, and, bones are removed, then the ., remainder is treated , in somewhat the way described above, to the great profit of all concerned. Letters From trie People (Onmnwnlenttoii ant to The JoiumI f mb. Uritioa ta ttt (VoartJMnt boulil not eXMrd SOU words in lvnstb ud must be. accompanied by the name and eddreu ( tbe Moder.) Colonel Greene Stirs 'Em Up. j Stevenson. Waalu March S. To the Editor of The Journal A most re markable boosters' meeting was held In Stevenson Monday nlsht meeting without parallel in tha annals of Skam ania county. Possibly It will result in mora genuine boosting, however, than most of these gatherings. , Now. a booster's customary fault is the distri bution of "hot air." At this meeting the air becama red hot so hot it scorched holes In th hides ox a number of those who appeared. At soma previous time, an effort had been mad to sell te the school board a small tract of land back of th school house, to be used aa . an agricultural experiment' farm. "At the special elec tion, tbe proposition was defeated by vote or about to .. Tha local paper had supported the. DroDosltlon vigorously,: and had unkindly stated that 92 fools had voted against it. Colonel A. K. Greene, who hu been a strong booster for the county and town la the past, was in attendance at the gathering Monday night, and was chosen secretary of the assembly. Be fore the meeting was fairly under way, ho. rose and desired to rpake soma re marks. . , ..,,...,: ...... Before the unsuspecting cooulace was fully prepared, the colonel: swooped down upon them and began to select victims for the altar, to slaughter them, to remove their skins snd to rut salt with both hands. Ho paid his respects. which were most disrespectful, to the minister, tne superintendent or tn pub lic schools, the editor of the paper, the officers and the prominent citliens gen. orally. Ho called them- by name: he leveled the finger of scorn at them: he ripped them up the back; he unraveled them and held them up to view. Be an nounced their shortcomings, and de nounced them. After ha was fairly launched on the ttdo of oratory, all but tho victim grinned and enjoyed tt; but the colonel is thorough, fair and painstaking. As soon as ha had thoroughly-torn one to fragments, he began on another. Some of them turned pale! somo of them turned red; a few turned purple But the' colonel wasn't Interested in color schemes. He kept right on. He charged them with disloyalty to tha city, with working private scheme for their own benefit at tho expense of the public The tract of land proposed for an experiment farm he referred to feelingly as "a patch of rock and clay." and openly declared that he would have made the 93 fools S3 If he had been on hand at tho election. He' paused a moment not to take breath, but to decide ' that ho had omitted no fellow citizen from th roster of tho offenders. 'There was a dead silence, but It was full of eleotrlclty, But Colonel Green is th original Ajax he isn't . afraid , of lightning tn th least He defied all the bolts of the roasiees, ana, declaring that h was don with th boosters of Stevenson, with a very injurious accent on th word "boosters," he walked out of the meeting. One of th lambs brought to the slaughter endeavored to defend bis own position, but somebody els shouted that If he had anything to say he should bav said it while th doughty colonel was present , The butchered ones sub sided Into Inaudible "buzzing, and th meeting proceeded. -- The rest of it was tarn, however Th fireworks wer over, and th ex citement had gone with Colonel Greene Really, ther wasn't anything else to say unless th colonel was answered. and it seemod to be th sentiment that nobody oould properly scor the colonel while he was absent - Colonel Greene is a booster, only he does th boosting with th to of his cavalry- boots. He eeras to disapprov of boosting Indi viduals at tha expense of th public H opines that a boosters' organisation should boost for th welfare of the community and not b an Instrument for promoting th welfare of a few, Th meeting was a sucoess in one re spect It marks th inception of the colonel's new organization, th Self In terest oiub. lis has already named th charter members, and appears to be ready to nomlnat others for full mem bership honors at any time. This or ganization bids fair to grow rapidly, and become as .famous as Roosevelt's Ananias club. Anyone desirous ot Join ing may sigmry his intentions by prov ing that he ha endeavored to us city or county organization for the our pose of enriching himself at thd expense of the people, and make application to Colonel Greene. . W. T. BICHMONIX Manager Dixon's initial statement Is at least two thirds "rot" ' Wasn't "oensecutive" in th dic tionary a few years agoT ' , . Tim for realsterinr is renm1n short Don't you want to vote? Th near-frostv ntehta are also road -lavoraoie lor in iruit grower. Of course. Murderer SseeA could not be convicted, he had too much money. Taft says ho is for a 5rottIv, tr. iff. That policy has got to o down. The country mav be witnonain an x. hi bi Lion of ambition overleaping Itself. Oct the children Interested in garden ing small farming. Now is th time to oegin. . ! . p. Rooserelt sava the majority of vot. ers are for him. Many men know a lot that probably Isn't so. , Better elect a DemocraMa presidents th-ehance-ar-te-couldnt Tret "a" sec ond, to say nothing of a third term. Think of th absurdity of riving wom en th right to vote and oensurlng them for changing their minds between regis tration and election. .. Napoleon mad the terrible and irr etrievable mistake of his winter cam paign to Moscow. Roosevelt but it Is too-early to draw a parallel. . : ' . ' The way people treat Bryan all over tho country, and he is an almost con tinuous traveler, it is no wonder he can't understand why ho has not been elected president ' , A case of mistaken identity, including the mistaken, opinion ot a handwriting expert, cam near sending an innocent young married woman to Jail last week or at least leaving her under perman ent suspicion or Deing a tnier. Many innocent people have suffered terribly and wrongfully through similar mis takes of identity and handwriting expert vldenc. The proposal has been made to have in California a "revolver day," which w'puld be a day on which the police would stop every person on the Btreet and search for firearms. A better It lnd of "revolver, day" is that in vogue in New York, where on every day the police can search the dives and suspects and take away their weapons.; With 200 acres .in bearing, Laks Labish Is already the largest Logan berry enter In tha world How completely it will be beyond rivalry when its acreage, as Is planned, ; is Increased to 2000 ftcres this year ""TcTIu'Kann-iieink'Bays she ' would ilke 0 see Mr, Roosevelt president all the time. But this Is a SiVferent kind or a country, itgwas to pre serve it as a nirrerent Kind of a OREGON SIDELIGHTS The pur-are building; to be erected st Lebanon wiU occupy a ground space of MxltSO feet, tha largest in the business district ! , The Nehalem Enterprise calls on the city council to impose a license fee upon agents and peddlers, and thereby protect th home merchant - , . .. . . e ' County fair promoters who met re cently at Myrtle Point took steps toward acquiring a sit and raising ion as xor developing th enterprise, - e ; ' Paisley Press; The air Is full of land talk and everyone is studying land plats ot the townships hereabouts. Hurry up and file, or ther will be no land left T. A. Taylor, according--to th Madras Pioneer, has a - caterpillar engine and iplow outfit that wll turn over SO acre laay. xnfngtn is 01 norsepower. Hrmlston Herald: Hermiston's new water system is being rapidly complet ed and every citizen is glad to se it. It will mean lower insurance rates and th best of protection against sickness, .... , Baker Democrat: Cooperation on th part of those who can well afford it will promote th building of a new nata torlum in Baker, an enterprise that .will do a much as anything els to add to the upbuilding of th city. - e .. " F. L. Evans of Salem, in a letter to tha Salem Statesman, tells of th find ing of a gold nugget worth IIS, by J. CheweketSTtwtTTtnd-TjropouTidSth tneory mat ricti placer oeposus may exist beneath the capital city. Silver Lake Leader! Bringing their household goods, horses, cattle, hogs, bees, chickens, ducks and dogs, a colony of seven landseekers filed on homestead and desert olalms in th Christmas lake oountry, They obtained J20 acre each, a total of 2240 acres of choice land. e . , - Pendleton East Oregon Ian: From far away Cavite, in th Philippine islands, come an inquiry about diversified farm ing land to Umatilla county. 6ecretary Keef e has received a letter from S. Annheuser. of -that place asking for in formation relative to land -adapted to intensive methods. - - ; i , , . " . ;,. Astorlani ' Property owners who put up 12100 for k block" of oil macadam on Duano street between Tenth and Eleventh ar expressing their satisfac tion over th lob, which was done by E. A. Oerdlng, a local contractor. The city refused to approve this Job, but it is said to be one of the best pieces of pav ing ever laid in Astoria. v j - Senator Poindextcr zt j ; Lawrence SEVEN MEN OF PERSEVERANCE Admiral Farragut. David Glasgow Farm gut was a man who never gar up anything that he undertook until 4 Its completion. From the tlm he entered th navy as mid shipman, befor th age of 10, through out his 60 years of service to bis ooun try ovary task which he took up was finished through his lndomitabl perse verance, " .' ..'. '-. When less than II years of age, his superior officers had already noted this sterling eharaceristio in th boy. At tms age n was wiin captain x-urier on his long oruise to th Paclflo, and was intrusted with .tho command of th prize ship to b taken into Valparaiso. "This was aa important event in my Uf," he afterward wrote. "When it was decided I was to take th ship to Val paraiso, I felt no little pride in finding myself In command at 12 years or age," But Captain Porter .knew that no ob stacle could keep the boy from th completion of his task. That he was right In his Judgment is shown by an incident which happened as th ship was on th way. Tha former captain of th vessel, Olddeon Randall, had been left on her as a navigator, determined to escape, and started to sail the vessel in the wrong direction. Farragvt gav orders to th contrary. Randall re plied he would shoot any man who dis obeyed him, and. went below tor his pis- tola The boy Farragut kept him ther, and from that time on ther was no doubt as to who was in command of th vssL.. : - - On of thgreatest events in th life of Farragut was his capture of New Or leans. The city was one of th great strongholds of th confederacy, and by gaining possession of it the north would strike a vital blow. Farragut was or dered to tak It Th difficulties seemed, insurmountable, but by th per severance of th great captain, then over 10 years of ago, theywar ovr- aom. Th fleet was gotten ready below th mouth of th iivr. Then th first obstacle arose. Th larger boats would scaroely clear th bar at th rivers en- By Miles Los Angeles trance. After patient and untiring ef forts, the fleet was at last gotten across, and was ready for th attack. , Ther new difficulties appeared. Th enemy had strung chains aoross th river, on old hulls, and flreboats wer ready to b floated down upon them. Nothing daunted, Farragut sent small boats up by night and had 'the chains removed. Then he took bis fleet by them, and ran tho gauntlet of th two forts beyond, Then cam th terrible encounter with th southern -fleet or fifteen ships. For a time it appeared that th battl was lost, but Farragut, who bad been tied among the rigging of his flagship, tn Hartford, so that he could tak in tha entire conflict, would not admit defeat and urging his men en, he turned it into victory. Th perseveranc and bravery of the commander was rewarded when In list h received th thanks Of th nation through congress, and was given - th rank of vice-admiral, a position created expressly for htm. n was later com missioned admiral, which placed him In command of th entire navy. , ' Admiral Farragut was on of tha few great heroes of - th world whose character has never been clouded by th slightest suspicion ot a want of honesty and personal purity. Many entertaining anecdotes ar told Of him. When we consider th novel and complicated prob lems that confronted him in naval war faro, and th providential manner in which h seemed to have been schooled for then through a long life when w remember how other commanders merely fought line against lint in simple though courageous fashion, while he contended with easemated forts, fir rafts, fleets and hidden torpedoes, all at once, and oonqur4 them all, St would b unfair for anyone to refuse to pronounce him th greatest naval commander th world has ever sean. And all the glory that has come to Farragut must b attrib uted to his great perseverance, his un tiring energy, his disposition never to stop until sueoess crowned his efforts. Polndexter in Examiner. Washington, Feb. 2 7. Th situation among the striking textile workers in Lawreuoe, Mass., is most remarkable. They present in concrete form probably the clearest illustration of the. fallacy of an excessive tariff that the United States has ever known.' - Under the plea that th standard of living in th United States is higher than in any other country in th world, that th class of labor itself is better and that therefore- greater wages must ce paid, th' manufacturers of textile products hav succeeded for many years in buttressing themselves about with a tariff that is not only protective but exorbitant They hav held th threat over the country that should th tariff b made lower, th present high standard of liv ing road possible by th lucrative wages now being paid must be lowered also. Quite a reverse picture is revealed by the situation, at Lawrence W find upon investigation that th textiln manufacturers have at these mills as squalid labor as can be found in tho four corners of the arth. y They cared down the -ware of these people, not to meet th standard of liv ing, in the-United States, but to the barest possible margin of exlsteno. In one miserable tenement building 1 found 54 -persona llvlng-Twentvwo of them worked in the mills at an aver age pay of .7 per week. This Is I2.7S per week with which to buy fooiT clothing, light and fuel and! pay rent lor eacn on or th 6. These ar luxu ries which th mill laborers noy under th rich pickings ot a high pro. tectiv tariff. Aided by th autocratlo commander of th stat militia, manufacturers have decreed that th striking workmen shall not d permitted to send their children away from Lawrno whr thy can uuiain iooa ana a piac to Sleep, Women and children hav been vio lently seized and dragged to th police station for no offense but th mothers were attempting to send thir children out of thotown. I saw on child who had a black y and who was in a per petual stat of nervous fright from th attack made upon th women and chil dren by the pollc. Without provoca- tlon she had been seised and thrown Into a patrol wagon. I saw a young woman who was at th Station with th other members of her family. Without reason she had been cursed, dragged to a patrol wagon and forcibly taken to JalL Her arm was in jured by the policeman. Families are concentrate in Law renc by " sheer force. If they ar . starved Into subjection and forced to go back to work at such wages as th manufacturers choose to pay ther Is little substantial difference between their oondltlon and abject slavery.- What can th government dot It can reduce th tariff to a reasonable rata so that these manufacturers wlR not be able to goug tho working man on the on hand, and th consumer on the other. . It can institute habeas corpus pro ceedings in th federal courts to release from Jail th strike prisoners who have committed no crime. It can institute proceedings to secure to th Topl who live there th njoymnt of their con-' stltutlonal right of traveling from state to stat and so avoid a oondltlon whloh so far as I can see differs but little from slavery, BLOTTING OUT THE PAST. Th seven wonders of, th world ar decayed but nn. Tomorrow Robert Fulton, Mr. Scott's Plan Endorsed. Albany, Or., March I. To th Editor of The Journal Th article on roads in The Journal Of February 11, by 0. Chil- son, cieany states tho tacts. All over Oregon taxes hav trebled In the last few years, and road work which; was don under low taxes Is not even "kept up; " under " th " present "systent v 3rh overseer, Who is appointed by th eoun ty Judge, with his relation, or a favored few, does all th work, which is Uttle enough Th money is spent, and in stead of th road being improved it Is actually getting worse. W .have in our district stretches of gravel on the road that never Is traveled over because It was dumped on any old way and left, so I would say with Mr, Chllson that If th interest money on th proposed bonds would be paid to the farmers out of their present tax bill, I venture to say that they would' give ' an , equal amount in work on th roads and the roads would b speedily improved. As it now is, ther are few farmers who get a ohahG to do anythlng on the road unless they do it all gratis, and conse quently Uttl is done. . . What W want is a law that gives us a chanc to elect our overseer from among us, thereby getting th man w want, and to designate a certain amount of our tax money as . a road tax, with tho privilege Of working it out en the road at or near our own premises, there by creating an Interest in us to have th best piece of road possible ,, , In conclusion, I will say that the arti cle of WlUUm J. Bcotcfor a plan for road work certainly is a good one, as tho interest on money raised, by .bonds would be lost ' to th community, , In lMrficoU'S plan, th .whola amount,. t- terest and principal, so to speak, would become available. The plan certainly come from a. master mind, no matter If it is from a farmer. W farmers are only too often too slow to make known what Is needod. Mr. Scout's plan should be taken up and agitated all over Ore gon, as it certainly is ahead of th present bond plan. -." 3. RBE8ER. Woman's Bights. Portland. March 6. TO th Editor Of Th Journal Arguments against woman's rights ar good demonstra tions of th fore of habit" It is a slow and laborious process to ovorcom a habit ot any kind, and those of which w ar unconscious ar seldom over come. , . ' Bo few peopl realiz that they ar tho possible vlotlmg ot certain habits Of thought that with many th habits ar here to stay. When I read an artlol setting forth "th audacity of woman" in pMsumlna to an quality with man at th ballot box, I know it is Only an other case of th thought habit For th tendency is to do only -what has been don and think as jur latners nav thousht ' That all mankind has certain" common rlo-hta is1 self vidnt Not that they ought to have, but that they hav thos rights. Bight' Is not a thing to b changed by law or stat dictum, but rtht lstd nrlor to government or law, as principle. Th question to ,be dtnnined by law is simply this: Are those rights- to - longer be ignored and tramnied UDon by th powers ma di Just at present the powers that be ri renrosented bV man. Will W Con- tinu to deprive woman oi nnr risuv-w Or will w b fair and acknowledge her as an equal representative of th race with man? . n.it rvoliitlonarr roreratnors, oi whom w so often boast said, "Taxa tion without representation is tyranny. But it Is mor than that it is down- rlcrhtSrllllanv. . To contend that woman has not the TtB-ht to a ballot is virtually to say that hav no statutory, law, wnico woman Is bound to respect For by What nrlnclplo can she b held subSer- Vint tn laws which In no manner con cern hert Th rraming .or our laws is of vital importance to us all, and the antt-suffrasettoIs a moral awarr. Th man who' trusts his horn and children to th oar Vof a woman, yet contends that hr innueno as a com mon voter would b bad with what h knows te be wi e the west corrupt governments on earth, has -little -regard for his offspring and home, or else his thoueht habit has reached th auto matic state,' and Ilka the parr,, ht 'lust talks." ; . i 1 lit. Human Parrot, if ybux talking qualities wer on the same basis ot quality with your mind, you . would soon be lost In a world of silence, so intens that you could hear th stars creak, as thoy rovolv upon their theral axis. You'd better start your think machine going while you are still within call ing distance to th rear guards of prog. rss. WARREN M'CULLOCH. Chance for Would-Bo Fanner. Thomas, Or., March 4. To th Editor of Th Journal---To th "would bo far mer," th "man that wants a chanc," whoa Utter was in The Journal of Maroh L I might give a chance If he can do th work, it will be mostly celery and truck farming. I hav 34 aores, with SO acres cleared. Of course Z . will want som grain and hay. t would llk-to- correspond, and would Ilk to know how large a family h has. how old the children ar ana their sex. We have the finest schoolhouso In Linn county in sight about a half mil away, two teachers and 10 grade;, a fine school. - . If this man will let us hear from him right away w will see if h will suit us. , ; J. N. JONES. ! - W. O. T. U. Expresses Thanks. Woodstock, Or., March 1. To tho Editor Ot Tb Journal Th Woman's Christian Temperance Union of Wood- stoca unanimuuai vunoa iiiuiuuuu of thanks for the space granted them in th columns of Th Journal for their publicity work. Thy also expressed their appreciation of the many , articles you publish for tho uplift of humanity. Clara c Ingham. Corresponding Secretary . Iyet Some Bold Man Answer. McCoy, Or, Maroh 4 To the Editor of Th Journal (1) Pleas glv th di mensions "ot the largest sea serpent ever seen or killed. (I) Hav thy ever been known to destroy shlpsT . . . ... . ' " . ; v '"' LEE LOSET. Tanglefoot By Miles - Overholt decayed but nn. - ' The men who mad th oountry great ' are now hut nnalia nf In.f . ! . And though th same old world is her, '". " ui amne oia snining sun, ' Th great and good ar has-beens nd thlr works have turned to ' , , rust. .'. , - What matters it if Pharaoh once ruled a mignty racer What matters It if David put Goliath to tha matt It buys us no persimmons nor brings gray nairs o in lace Th question now befor us 1st Whloh ' man is at ths batT Perhaps ther was a panle Just a few short years agoj Mayhap the hops brought prioas that created oulta a tuna: What - matters it if people fros In forty feet of snow 7 The question of th moment: Who Is pitching now for ust Th past is gone, the futur looms, the ' present, tnougn, is nre; The dopester's day's approaching and he's there with m&nv a nlnn: So let's forget the sorious things; let's ciiiib rn io in rear; The boys are en th training ground; v the baseball season's ripel" Pointed Paragraphs A sermon Is either based on a text or a pretext . , , 1 It's easier to get loft than to b either right or president Bad luck is often but another name for poor management - But It takes a woman to keep a se cret she doesn't know. . l '.',..-:---.!, .!'.'"":-, Some men glv a dollar with en hand and grab two with th othr. , ' ! ",..'.'T--. '"-.""--' There ' isn't f much hope for a man when bis wif loses faith In him. If 7yourar poorer , than your rla- tlons It is easy for you to dodge themr .vruvj . For vry lawyer who fights for ths right ther is on who .flghU for the wrong. ,.' . , -s::'rrj--'-X ''ft"'"' Bom men get busy, snd tell their troubles for th purpos of getting Into the gam ahead of others who want to tell theirs. : 1 ; Testing Illm, ..- ' - From Judg. Wlfl 0org, befor w married, you told me that you would go through Hubby And so I would, dearie, will ingly. i - Wlfl Then go and discharg th cook, r ' ' While, he Is about it tho self mad man should mak himself, a greeabi. Jarring tKe M7elkia (Oontritmtd to The Journal by Wilt Miten, the famous Knn poet. His pnxc-prwmi sr regular feature et tills eoluma in Tbe Dilly JoarniL) . ., ., . ' . . , - Th candidat for president, when I was younger, never went cavorting up and down th land a babbling words to beat the band. His captains mad what ever noise was needful to arous the boys, and he, from all the clamor f re, -preserved a decent dignity. But now the bustling - candlflat for office of chief magistrate rants up and down end paws the air Ilk som cheap faker at a fair; like charlatan dispensing pills to cur7the nation's grievous ilia I'v heard him ranting, many a time.; I've seen MM, hoarse and gray with grime stand at a railway coach's door and ftli th air with squawk and roar, imploring people for their votes a spectacl for gods and goats. Our presidential oandl- aates snuuia oo iim . otnnr rAn skaUand"laTie som siashowfraks along to play th bones or sing a son in mon when all the noisy show is dona. Alas, aiaa t The good old .days, th sober 2 " t quiet ways t - j , 'OoryrigW, mi. br A v" ii 'i