Tim OREGON DAILY JOUKIIAL, FOIITLAND, THURSDAY EVENING. 1::: THE JOURNAL TTt IMrr.CENPKNT JiEWSPArER. J At I, i IN'. el rrery TTt!r (rl'rpt Snn.1iJ- nd t.tt t"rT irornlr tt The JrtMl Bul. -t 'rt'"t n1 Yumh'.'l wt.f Port-ami, it. km., .c h. p.tni. J." I j t-r rsnmlsloo through tb Built m trTtt. lH.Kt'HONKS Mitn T173; Hon. AH d.-prtmrt r.otil t'T ,h, eomlwm. - Tlil 'h operator w-H.t tWwrtnwnt y wtu. To HE HJN AnVKKTISIXU-BBPRKSKNT ATI V B. Bnjm!n A Kntnor Co., Brnnswirlt BnlMlnS. Ii"S Mf-h .Tnne Ne York; 121S feople f?s PnU'Hrn. Oh1co. Sibscrlptlnn Trmi hjr I1 "iir :n me lotted Bttr or Mexira. . niifv One Tr ....5 0rt i Ow month-. I JO SCSIUY. , . Ont rmr 1.50 t Ore moot) - DAH.V AND grXPAY, , fir,, yn'r., $7.50 I On mnnth.. . .W We think our father fool so wise tre grow; Our wiser sons no doubt, will thins us so. - ; Pop. IX rORTLAXD TODAY A CONFERENCE of th ; state, county and municipal health officers of Oregon is in prog - ress in Portland today. Who'would stay the hand of pub- lia health regulation! Who -would deny tho ; municipality the right to demand pure milk for its children? Who would withhold from the state ing Its people against poisonous foods ; A Greek steamer recently arrived in New York, infected with spinal meningitis? Sir died from the dis ease during the passage. But New York was prepared to combat the disease with specific curative serum. . ... Five years ago, New York would hare been poorly prepared to offer a check. Within that time a cure has been developed. The death of four-year-old John Rockefeller McCor uiick led to the discovery through the action, of the child's grandfather, who endowed the Rockefeller instil tute for the study of the disease. The incident of the child's death yielded another marvel or preventive medicine. : T r-TijT'.'- ln a surprisingly short time yel low fever has been wiped "out in Havana and Panama, and the Canal Zone has become a health resort. Vaccination In Manila has banished smallpox in five years, so that hos pitals that sheltered hundreds of pa tients in Spanish times had not one last summer. ; . . In 1890, 27.815 persons died of diphtheria. The proportional num ber in 1909 would have been 40, 000. The actual number of deaths In the latter year was 10,258. The lessened number is due to the dis covery of diphtheria antitoxin. It has saved 30.0,00. lives' In a single year, ' . An equal number of deaths from consumption are being prevented,. as compared with 1890, by precautions Against contagion and by. the open air cure. Every conference, every move ment for research, every reasonable effort at health Inspection and reg ulation, is an endeavor to conserve human life. It Is a struggle to put the man above the dollar. It is first aid to poverty, for it is poverty that Is most often the helpless victim of disease. . ' ;- - - THE COAL STRIKE w w yITH the passage of the minl- hl ' mum law introduced . Yy in parliament by the go vern , ment the great coal strike rnters a new phase. . The men-have ?ocured the principle for which they struck. If they refuse still to go to work for want of a definite declara tion in the law of the figure of the minimum wage although the pro visions for the commissions in the various coal fields to establish the figures are immediate and go Into operation forthwith the miners place themselves in a most respon sible and unenviable plight before .ihe country. -;- -. :. - Chancellor Lloyd-George quoted from -the question submitted to the .miners prior to the strike, and on , which their strike action was based. "Are you in favor of ceasing work for the1 principle of a minimum wage?" This "principle" is distinct ly stated in the new law. : It appears that the coal operators have unanimously agreed to open their mines, and that the conserva tive leaders of the men, headed by Ramsey MacDosald, M. P., have ,. urged. Jn.. fact. demanded, ..that -the men return to work. " , ' So. the great, strike, will,: it is' to oe hoped soon pass into, history. , : The suffering and poverty of the trikers and. of those dependent on thenf 'will be but, a bitter memory, is wages, all the' higher for: he re flux from the closing of the mines, resume their flow among the fami lies of two million workers, But the relations of capital and labor In Britain will enter a new phase-wlth the enactment of the minimum wage law as a new force in economic re lations in the old country. EXPLAINED PRESIDENT TAFT has frequent ly demanded a reform of our p court practice and procedure on the ground that our Judica ture favors the rich litigant. i The aggregate wealth of the beef ,iacker defendants acquitted at Chi Jago Tuesday is nearly $200,000,' (too. - . .. ... Charles II. Carey, a lawyer, re- tently said to an assembly of law -vrrs in-Portlatrd : " TngcycifrtesT n elaboratesystem of technical rulos of . pleading has- .grown up. ii!fh time is wastled upon demurrers .:.tl Motions wMih are filed in near ly every suit. . Technical rulrs which ; ground. Tor this the f.Kricultural confine parties to definite Issues Brecollega hr.s to be thanked. . obstructions - to ultimate Justice.) Courts and lawyers now make jus-.the American Linseed company and tice a secondary consideration. They 'of their Western Linen -mills of Du proceed on the theory that the rules ! lnth as contractors with Oregon must he ndhrred to. even thoueh the I farmers, to grow flax under con- result is to bring victory to the party J wno ougnt not to win, ana mey nave built, up fine theories of the law nnder which precedent must be fol-; lowed, to absurd conclusions." , , .. a NOT GUILTY A FTER nine years, ten months and seventeen days of legal proceedings the beef packers are declared not guilty., v Testimony at the trial., reached af ter nearly fen" years of legal moves showed that the packers secretly wet every week under v the name of. "Postofflce Box.: 24 3.". on 'the sixth floor .of a Chicago office building; that the object of the weekly meet ing was to fix. the sale prices of meat and the buying prices to the growers; that the United States was divided into districts and designated by letters of the alphabet, and that one of the purposes ofc the secret weekly meeting as "Postofflce Box 243" was ra determine- how much meat was to CTrshlpped by each pack ing concern into the different dis tricts.. ' ' ' ' The Sherman law declares it un lawful to" engage in conspiracies in restraint of trade, provides fines and Jail sentences for violations, and it has been in existence since 1890 Livestock is a product ' Of the farm. The annual' products for which' the farmers receive about J6, 000.000, 000, cost the consumers $13,000,000,000. Who1- gets the huge difference between what the farmer receives and what the ,con- sumer paysi , By reports made under the re quirements of the New York stock exchange, the annual business of the sit great packers Is $945,000,000 a year. The profits, exclusive of the) National ' Packing company, accord ing to these reports, were $2 3,3 79,- 644 in 1911. With the profits of the National Packing company, add ed, the yearly .earnings of the trust are $25,000,000. The detailed figures are Impres sive. Swift & Co. grew in sixteen years from a ten million to an eighty million company. After paying heavy dividends, regularly, Armour & Co. have piled, up a surplus of $73,000,000,' ' : ' : " ; The net profits of Armours In 1911 were $9,808,305; Swift & Co., $8,000,000; Morris & Co., $2,171, 339; Sulzberger. $1,600,000; Cud- ahys, $ 1.7 0 0,000. , ; : : These 'huge figures of earnings, and ' the evidence at the . trial as to how the profits were made, explain why the Sherman law was passed more than twenty years ago. That law was endeavor to Bave the great system or aistriDution rrom oecom-! ing unjust to some men and over generous to other men. ' - The United States possesses one fourth of the world's visible supply of gold and silver. Our bank de posits aggregate sixteen, billions of dollars. Our bank assets exceed twenty-three billions.;' No other na tion approaches these' figures. But nearly one half the individual depoeits-and bank assets of the na tion is In only three states -New York, Pennsylvania and Massachu setts. Forty-eight states create the wealth, but only three, states have almost half the money. The verdict in the packers' case at Chicago partly explains why. Other explanations are the rich picking of the land rents,' the extortions by trusts, the cpeclal favors of the tariff, free gifts of franchises, a car nival of stocks, bonds, charters and coupons, and f laallyr the unpardon able wickedness of over capitaliza tion. T r The verdict in the packers case Is a challenge to the best statesman ship of the nation.- FLAX AT LAST F OR about thirty years it has been known to a small inner circle that flax for fiber could be grown successfully in west Oregon. To popularize that em knowledge, and , to extend , the growth and use of the plant from the specimens erf the garden or plot to Its place In the rotation of the farm, and to the regular production of the factory, has . met one obstruction after another. .. But efforts have never, ceaaed, . and it seems that at last they are to he successful, - . They should be, ' since ."not only soil and climate have to concur, but the flax plaht mst be accepted as a regular crop in the rotation of Jthe modern scientific fanner before It takes its place as one of the best profit earners from the land. These conditions can be found In western Oregon today. , ' ' It is but -recently that the culti vation and handling of the f la plant has been remodeled.. . Where in this scantily peopled Oregon could be found the hands of women and chil dren that In' other- countries pluck by, the .roots, the flax and, in bun dles, steep Jt in the retting ponds near by the growing fields? The lack of them forbade the culturel here until bold Innovators learned to grow and ripen the plant, to mow it with the recognized machine, aild then to pass ' it through new ma chinery on the field to clean and bind the fiber ready for its transfer to the mill. So only could low, class and 'slow labor be dispensed with. ana machinery end skillo 'Lhel let at work. The farmer, too, has been con verted to, the adoption of flax as a rotation cron that, proper'y farmed, helps, not hurts the fertility of his Bat It Is the appearance tere or i tract with them. It Is the manufac- . . turer, ins Dusmesa mnu, accepuug 'the opportunity of. the beautiful and high-standard flax of Oregon for ! factory use, that Insures the devel- opment of flax culture here. The j opportunity Is unquestionable, since i the market is here and is expectant !we shall appreciate the new move- ment the more that it involves breaking down of walls heretofore surrounding a trust-controlled In dustry of great profit. TnE"TARIFt,nREAKDOWN T HE world is to' have example it the minimum wage law In act ual application, and on" a large scale. It is a new policy in. government, brought into life by that transcendent commoner,, Lloy d George.. -; . ' ' '.' Lawrence proved the breakdown of the tariff as a -wage protector. Even under the highest tariff in. all time, Lawrence gae us European pauper labor on United States soil. For more' than 100 years we have insisted., through, the tariff, that It is a function of government to, pro- tect the wags of .woTkers. With the tariff myth exposed, It Is now, the duty of government either to aban don' the wage, earner of to adopt a I 1 A VA ft t A A, ' M V protection mai win jroiecx, ana sucn & Protection is tne minimum wage. uioya-ueorge nas poinrea me way In this, as in other great human problems. : -. . " ' . ... The states should grapple the problem of a minimum wage. They should try to do for all the workers what the unions are trying to do for a few of the workers. THE TOOL OF . DEATH T HE ' Portland pistol - ordinance became operative January 29, and Chief Slover says that in this short time,' "it has proved its worth." :; -:- ::--v:'V He says policemen are under Iron clad orders to enforce It strictly. They otight to . be active in Us' en forcement, for whenever they dis arm a crook thev remove one menace ;t0 themselves.: . ' They know the thugs. , They know the criminals. They know the men who make a living1 with a , cocked revolver. . If they apply . the pistol law relentlessly, they will make Port land an inhospitable and an unprof itable field for gun men. There should be a similar law for the state. .There should be an anti revolver law la the nation. It Is the estimate of Observers that con cealed weapons are responsible for half the killings. How can a criminal nlr his trade without a revolver? KEIfPIXQ UP THE FIGHT A FTER exhaustive i. Inquiry, the Milwaukee Bureau of Econo-i . my and Efficiency reported that almost half the bad qual ities of milk as it is finally con sumed, are due to bad care by the housewife. That, however, was in a city and a state where dairy In spection and regulation have passed to high efficiency. ; - ' ; There Is endeavor in Portland to educate consumers as well as dairy men. Both are at fault. It is of lit tle use to provide for clean dairies if the housewife leaves a pan; of milk open for files to poison it, or leaves it in close proximity to de caying vegetation that will contam inate it. ' It Is likewise useless for housewiyes to be particular In the care of milk if the milk has already been contaminated In a dirty dairy. A lecture last night at the Young Men's Christian Association was In structive to dairymen. Another net Saturday night at the same place will be instructive; to consumers. Each is part of a series of similar lectures 1 to be ' given , at the same place in the same behalf. 'S The' lectures are by Chemist Cal laway of the city -health department, who has shown great ef f iclenycy In the campaign for pure milk, There will, also be other speakers. Portland is still far behind in the character of her milk:1: More than 1000 dairies supply milk to this city. More than 120 deliver from their own wagons. The revolution - of transforming all - these sources of supply Into the perfectly clean estab lishments, that they ought to be, rpquires time and enormous effort, But the education is goina-op. The processes of administration In1 the city are cumbersome and inef ficient, but the officials are all ex ponents of pure milk, and working for it. . ,r-iV It is a fight that must not be given up until complete efficiency is final ly reached. ' " A Los Angeles woman sued for divorce because her husband licked her every time the home team lost: After a careful scrutiny of the pros pects, she determined not to risk the season of 1912. . r., Why don't some of his friends jaigue in behalf of Senator Stephen son In the senate - debate over hits ease, that like Carnegie, he is rich and was only trying to get rid of his money? ,; - r. ' By a vote of 40 to 34 the senate voted yesterday for Stephenson of Wsso,iLBini,iit,oi MOJjjeat-, UJMl action to serve as a precedent lor the retention of Lorlmer? The lat- Lter voted for Stephenson's retention, and the gallary laughedXOf courfie, Stephenson jll vote for Lorlmer to remain on the Job. The country waits to eee how much furlher the senate will go In voting that election by purchase gives a fit title to a sen atorshlp. Colorado gave its delegation to Taft yesterday, by a vote of nearly three to one. His hat. which the colonel cast into the ring, la being shot to a frazzle. There are charges of diabolical po litical conspiracy in the New York primaries, and for -once Tammany seems not to have participated. (Ommnnlctkn nt to Tb Joonitl for pah. ttratlon la tilt department ibould not oired too wordi In length intt mast b arcoApiinled br th nam od ddm of th rnder. . Assessments In Multnomah. , Portland, Or.. March 25. To th Edi tor of Tho Journal On March 17, you published tho" text of my letter to tho board of state tax commissioners. In regard to certain assessment methods In Multnomah county, and on March 24, you published the substance of the com mission's answer to me. I will thank you for a little additional space, that the matter may be more clearly understood. construing-. tne assessment law. upon my request, the fx commission held that land In acreage on March 1, btSt platted by the owner after that date and before the completion of the assessment rou or . mat , year, mar be lerallr as sessed according to the description from me recorded plat In support of this conclusion, the commission quoted from Cooley on Taxation (page 715, footnote), to the effect that "where land has been regularly platted Into city lota, an as sessment by the, acre as before Is bad." The case being as stated by the tax commission, tt would logically follow that. If assessment of land la to be equal and uniform, the recorded plat, tf used in any' one Instance 'relating to land platted after March 1. should be used In all Instances. This has not been done In Multnomah county; hence, my corre spondence with the tax commission for the purpose Of securing an official con struction of the assessment law. In fact. It has been the exception rather than the rule In Multnomah county to follow the recorded plat In the manner which the tax commission says Is legal. Reference to the 1911 tax roll will more fuly explain what I have In mind. Between March 1, Iflll, and the delivery of the assessment roll to the board of equalisation on October 18, the follow ing additions were among those whose plata Tera filed for - record with the county clerk. I give in each case the date of filing, taken from the plat books: Addition Plat Filed. 111. Jonesmore (blocks 83 to 67) March 24 Oregon Heights ...March 29 Mallory April 1 Oberlln April IT Verona Park ., .........Sept 21 Ventura Park ...Sept. 22 The only one of the foregoing addi tions assessed according to Its recorded plat on the 1911 assessment roll Is Mal- lory addition, why wa Mallory addi tion made the exoeptlonT During , all the time from . JIarch 1, 1911. to October 18, following, the assessor, according to the ruling of the tax commission on my request. , was "at liberty to take into consideration end to use any publlo and offlalal recorda that may give a correct and definite description of any parcel of real property that he la required by law to assess." If It was legal to assess Mallory addition according to It' re corded plat filed after March 1, was It not legal, also, to assess Jonesmore Oregon Heights, Oberlln, Verona Park and Ventura Park according to their re corded plats, filed after March 1? ' The lot owner , in, Mauory aaamon was able to go to tne snonrrs oiiico this year and get a tax statement cover ing the Identical lot which he bought. Could the lot owners In the other addi tions named do th same? -. HENRT JO. REED. Grievances of Common Laborers. Portland. Or March 21. To the Ed itor of The Journal Th violent utter ances given forth by the L w. -w. ana Socialist street orators are what we may term an effect To eliminate effect. It is necessary to remove oause. The I. W. W.- "agitators" are largely recruited from the floating element of common labor. ; When they labor it i largely in the construction camp of railroads. . Such mp!oyment is pro cured through the employment office, the biggest fake lnce th day of P. T. Barnum, and the treatment of laborers In these large construction camp would put Simon Legree to sham.. I offer thi Information not from hearsay, but from absolute Experience. I have been to at least 50 of these camps and never saw a place to wash one's clothe or take a bath. The grub, for which the men pay 25 cents a meal. 1 abso lutely and positively rotten, but as there are always plenty of men to ante $1 or 12 for a Job, it is to the employers' ad vantage to keep the men on th "hike" at all times. : If there ever was a cause for agitation, these fcellow have one, radical as they mayseem to be, and turning out' the fire ; department to squirt water on them will not eliminate the cause. . ." t', .-, Through the fluctuation in the de mand for labor in varlou communities, these men are never in a position to register, nor; to be jiaturallred' if they be foreigners, and so have no vote to east and have no representation in tho government whatsoever;, so the only way they have of getting their grlevr ance before, th public Is through soap box oratory. Let a committee of Port land citizens b. appointed to Investi gate their grievances and they will find they are all human beings, with hearts, soula and sympathies the same a the rest Of US. -"- . a ,-lf ft few 4t the following law were passed and enforced the working people would have more respect for the gov ernment,"! feet aured:; Minimum wsg bill In all work. " Stem the tide of. Immigration until such Immigration as we have 1 properly cared for. Tax. heavily, all unused ' land; make owners sell out to the government and let the government help" the people to occupy th land. Remember how Bis marck ' obtained the railroad of Ger many for the peoplo? ' ' ' " Shorten the hours of labor so that every willing worker may be abl to work, as there seems to bo an over production of labor. Reduce the "protectiv" tariff, or see that labor has protection by such tariff. And remember that the-time for W. n. Taft and his pall of whitewash Is past. JOHN A. MAC DONALD. Walter Evans for District Attorney. . Portland, March 25. To the Editor of The Journal In looking- oyer the long list of candidates -for the various po sitions of trust In the city and county, let us pause and scan the record of the candidates for the high and important position of district attorney. There are good men In the field, -and there ,8 re men who are not so good. But there is one man who stands out above all other candidates who should be remem bered In the coming election. TM man Is Walter IL Evans, candidate for dlsf 'trtcT-Httorney Hi vigorous"1 prosecution of the men who have been In the white slave traf 11c stamps him as a man who has force and the courage 'of his conviction. His remarkable. record Of convictions shown him to be a prosecutor of the highest Letters From trie People COMMENT AND SJIALL CIIANG! ' Lawlng coats about ten times too much, A model may not be a model youni woman. . e e Looks like La FoHette had recovered from that illness. Now we get a view ef water power monopolisation close by, . , - . Better be without an automobile than bave on that you can't afford. Moral: Don't believe the promises of suppliants for publlo utility franchise . . A elty like Portland needs th services of a high salaried corporation counsel. The case aeems to be that Portland wants a commission government but can't get It At least there could ' scarcely be a oh an re for the worse In one office, probably two. . e ; ' - v Isn't there any way to squeese th vast amount of water out of th P. R. X& A P. company? .. Any one of the many recent' day would have made, a to weathes, a glor ious Easter Sunday. ., e ' e : When people become fully .fit for self government there will be no mor costly, wasteful, cruel strikes. Monopoly always pseirrtSeite be rood, until It gets lis clutches firmly gripped on the body politic. Many working people deserve higher wages and better treatment, but they are foolish to accept advice of . the I. W. W.'a. . - - , Portland started to provide Itself with a system of municipal docks none too soon, rather late, -' In . fact, but better late than never. .' . : v . . e j. i . ' . Testimony .desired by one'attorney Is always considered '.'Incompetent, im material and irrelevant'' always - all three by th other attorney. ...''.::,-' v. , There Is left only a mere shadow of an excuse for partisanship In voting for members of the legislature or almost any other candidates. . ..- . -..:,;" -''..' Each presidential candidate or their campaign managers charge that - the others are spending an Immense cam paign fund and perhapa they all tell the truth. -r' .. , " - SEVEN ROMANTIC MARRIAGES ' Charles Few of the biographer of Charles Dicken dwell to any extent uponhls romantlo love affairs. They eeem'o have been a much a part of the many sided eharactetof the great English novelist as aer'other. Dicken' great acoompllshnrents In literature seem Jo absorb all th attention and yet a lit tle glance into hi Inner heart Is most Interesting. There was a sentimental side to the oharacter of - Charles - Dlcken,7--whlch seem to hav developed very early In life.: Th Frenoh writer, Hervler, re calls an Incident of Dickens' ohlldhooi as follows; ?When h novelist was 8 years" old h had a ,playmate named Lucy, a beautiful gtrV with magnificent hair which hung down her back In golden cUrla. The little boy, glftod with an open and tender heart at once felt for- Lucy such an lmpuls of affec tion that he never forgot her. In fact she i found later with her blonde hair In at' least five Dicken novels. But Dickens' first real love came when he was a young man not very far advanced la his teens. Among his ac quaintances was a young bank clerk who was In love with the daughter of a banker by the name of Bead n el L His young friend took Dickens to call at the Beadnell home where he was re ceived with kindness, and fell In love almost at sight with a third daughter, Mary. - - Many writers are of the Impression that "David Copperfleld." one of Dick ens' greatest novel, 1 really an auto biography of Dickens, and the "Dora Spenlow" of the novel Is none other than Mary, the banker's daughter. It Is also claimed that she Inspired "Flora Pinching" In "Llttl Dorrltf Dickens and Mary became engaged when the novelist was 18, 4i The par ents seriously opposed this match, hav ing grown anxious at the thought of giving their daughter to a man without an established position In the world. Dickens was made to feel that his com pany was not desired at the home of th banker, and Mary was sent to Paris order. Walter H. Evan has th ability to prosecute and let u us this ability of his by putting him Into th office of district attorney. " A a uulet man who has in no way identified himself with any, clique or faction, but whose so aim has been to Aerve-the people of this district as federal prosecutor, wa ought to feel that it la a pleasure and a duty to give Walter 11. Evans our earnest support HORACE M'QUINN. Roosevelt, the Egomaniac." : Portland. Or., March 23. To the Edi tor of The Journal "When went there by an age when Rome encompassed but one only man?" Without the modifying expressions ' of Washington, ' Jefferson and Lincoln or the prpmtses of Roose velt, th question resolves Itself Into this Immediate proposition: "Shall the form of government be changed?" X hold that the third term does change the form of .government If any man deny th's.. then he stands accused oil one of three charges: He Is altogether Ig norant he ,a altogether - Indifferent' or he Is a monarchist. If he Is ignorant, he should be Instructed In the facta of history: if be is indifferent, he should be stimulated with patriotism; if he is a monarchist he shduld be driven from the country as a traitor. Why spend so much breath, waste so much energy or weave so much argument, about a man's promises, or the meaning of a word? - Hit the bullseye; hurl the lance into the heart of the Issue. Every hon est and fair man knows that Roosevelt Is a self made lngrate. Retributive Jus tice Is sure, and pursues him now in cartoons, parodies, pasquinades holding the mirror up to nature. His disposi tion to change the form of government is treasonable, and his treatment of his friend Taft 1 traitorous. Thes -ought to, afld will, consign him to obloquy. No Democrat no Republican no Socialist, no man is a patriot who. would change the form of our greet government A third term means a life term then In heritance. The country has had enough of this egomaniac Roosevelt. ., . F. FAUNT LH ROT. Diagnosis of Discontent. Portland, Or., March 24. -To the Edi tor of The Journal In view Of the sen timents expressed-by your paper and those expressed by such organizations as the real estate" board, the Rotary club and others relative to the L "W. W; unlonTTrniiTtpeltBdto-HJiswer. ' There Is not a word written thus far except Dr. Brower's article in today's paper, that has treated this subject In modera tion and reason,. Why 'not endeavor to ascertain the cause of th "disease"? Do doctors' and health officers run peo- NEWS IN DPJEF CKLGOX M DC LI GUTS Monday, April 1, will be a ro plant ing day at Ontario. . The Grand, a moving picture show house at Marshflcltl, has been enlarjjed with a fireproof addition. B. TV. Bates, who until recently pub lished the Roseburg ' News, has estab lished himself with a Job printing out fit at Koeeburg. . Monroe Leader: Johnny Flechter re cently received 800 Early Crawford Feach trees and will plant them on his arm In the Irish Bend. . Banks Herald: " There Is a movement at Koy. to establish a store there on the cooperative farmers' plan, and an organization has. been made with some auch scheme In view. Rev. J. R. N. Bell, formerly of Baker, but now of Corvallls, will deliver the Easter address April 7 to the Baker commandery and visiting brothers from Pendleton and La Grande. - S. O. Ledford of Wamlo, "asco coun ty, has drawn down $10 bounty on the scalp of a large cougar, the first on which bounty has been paid In Waaco, according to The Dalle Chronicle. . The Redmond Spokesman proposes a plan wherefcy an electrlo light and power plant may be established at Red mond depending for fuel upon Juniper cleared from the new lands . nearby. The benefits, the Spokesman claims, would thus work In all dfrectlon at once. . - . t- -'. Baker Heratd: The Rosemary num ber of the High School Nugget will be put out this year about April 1 and is planned to be the biggest' one-ever turned out This number of the Nug get is the one annually edited entirely under the supervision of, the Junior class. . - Silver Lake Leader: In addition to caring for his general merchandise busi ness and managing the Lake postoffice, F. A. Remington has found time to Flant 40 acres of fall rye, 10 acres of all wheat and prepare ground for 80 acres of spring rye and 10 acres of black oats. .. . ; Stayton Mail: The Mall has Just completed the printing of a telephone directory for Stayton and vicinity. It Is a book of 88 pages and contains close to 1200 names, all patrons in Ptayton, Sublimity, Aumsvtlle, Turner, Mill City, Mehama, Scio, Jordan, Lyons, Marlon, Shetlburn, Kingston and West Stayton teing Included. Dickens. to continue her studies, and the ,epara- tion waa complete.' . ; Whoa Dickens realised that hi pro ject was without hope, he waa Very much aggrieved and sought around for companionship of a like character, which he found In Kate Hogarth, whom ' he married in 1838. Nine years later Mary married Henry Loul Winter. A year later, when she was 44. she wrote to the novelist, then famous, and Dicken confessed, on receiving this - letter, "Never did I hear th name Mary with out being Impressed." And he recom mended her to read "David Copperfleld," wherein she would recognise herself In the person of Dora, . When Dickens married Kat Hogarth, the daughter of the editor of "Th Eve ning Chronicle." the young ooupl led a modest life, but when "Pickwick Pa pers" appeared, it had an Incredible uc cess, and their financial condition Im proved at once. In, the meantime the writer had received Into hi horn on of his sisters-in-law, Mary Hogarth, a very young girl whose character har monized with his own. Mary died unex pectedly a year later, when only 17, and her death completely prostrated the novelist Later Dickens Immortalized her as "Uttl Nell" In "Old Curiosity ShOp." , -..,.. . The loss of his first love and the death of his young adoption, both of the nam of Mary, rendered sullen the disposition of the author, and although Dicken and his wife had a number of children of their own, they separated in May, 1858, andvhls biographer say that an absolute incompatibility existed between-them, - - -.-.--,-- - Dickens desired to transfer his resi dence to Gad' Hill, but Mrs. Dickens opposed It saying that she was ' too much attached to London to establish herself In the country. Dickens carried out his desire and the disagreement pre vailing between the novelist and his wife became more and more serious, and was never-fully adjusted even to his death, .. Tomorrow Mozart . . -. pi out of a community, or shoot or hang them, - when afflicted? And when an epidemic attacks a community, do the doctors and authorities do nothing what ever except treat the afflicted as fast as they are stricken? .Don't they hunt the cause and, if found, remove it or try to? And is there ever an effect with out a callse? To say that "there is al ways a certain number of discontented men (agitators), who never hav worked and won't ' work refuse "work When Offered them," 4 an outrage on human intelligence and "brands the au thor as a' fool, comparatively speaking, or a knave. A vast majority of man kind, prefer work when It brings even a decent living, to say nothing of a right eous recompense. "There is a storm a-brewing and 'tl neither hall nor rain." I am on record, as far back as 1892, as predicting a civil war a repetition of the French revolution should industrial condition not ohang for the better In America in from 25 to BO years. I wa rated a rich man in 1892, and have been so rated until recently; when long years of elok nees absorbed my' wealth.- Every-real (student of human affairs knows what's coming, if no relief la found,,' and found soon, and shivers In apprehension. Great Goal Why won't the rich men and the heads of great man-employing Institutions see "the andwritlng on the wall"? J am not a member of any Union or organization of any kind, and yet all my sympathies are with the working, producing classes In America yes, and everywhere on earth. F. GEORGE FLOWER. , " Goes Jlim One Better. , - Hood River, Or., March 20. To the Editor Of Th Journal I saw by The Journal last night that a man at Dal las has a knife 60 years old. I can beat that I have one 75 year old. My father had It given to him in 1837 and I don't know how4ong my grandfather had it before he gave it to him. So Mr. Dallas will have to come again if he wants to beat this neck of the woods. v WALTER WALTERS. Another Old Knife.. Portland. Or., March 25. To the Ed! tor of The Journal: I have a knife which my father traded to ms; grand mother along in 1836. I donot know how long he had It before he traded it to her, but at : any rate It Is at least 16 years older than those, mentioned in r-., today' Taut Jjcitner's Address Wanted. Ellverton, Or., March 28. To the Edi tor of The Journal Does any one know the address of Paul Leltner? - JACOB SI KGFIUED. History of tts B.-cf Packers Cass From the New York World. 1902 May io: Injunction asked against the becf trust May 20, tempo rary Injunction granted. September 20, beef trust demurred. 1903 May 27, injunction made per manent; packers appealed to the su preme court ' . 1901 July 25, Roosevelt ordered de partment of Justice to push case. 190B January 4. briefs filed. January 16, case argued. January 31, supreme COUrt deolild In fuvrtr rf th crnvorn. menu tebruary 21, subpeuas issued for 185 witnesses. March 20. special jcrand jury met to hear evidence against the beef trust March 29. Armour's super intendent lmtlcted for tampering with a witness.' ' July 1, seven corporation and 33 individuals in beef trust indict ed. September 19. pleas in abatement filed by the packers. October 23, claim made for famous immunity bath. 1806 March 21, Immunity 'granted. by Judge Humphrey. 1907 September 18, new grand Jury called; no indictments. - 1908 December 7, still another grand Jury; no indictments. 1909 February 19, fourth grand Jury. 1910 September 12. Armour, Swift Morris, and several others indicted; civil suit brought at same time, September it, oerenaants gave bail;-i30,oug each. November 17, defendant pleaded that Judge Landl wa biased. Deoember 24, defendants demanded that civil suits be tried before th criminal suits. Decem ber 37, civil suit dismissed entirely la order to expedite the criminal ultav- 1911 March 22, packer filed a de murrer asking that the famous lmmu- . ntty bath .of 1906 be made permanent uay it, pacxer petitioner mat inaioi ments.be quashed. July 6, the packer pleaded not guilty; -trial set for Novem ber 20. : ,- 4 . -? 1912 March 16, verdict of not guilty. Tanglefoot By Miles Overholt THE JACK OF ALL TRADES, clerked In a store in Baa Anton, In Utah I herded sheep. . -.-- drove an auto in Abalona, And I've fished in waters deep. I drove a hack In Kalamazoo, , - I've warbled in cheap saloon. I braked awhile on the scenlo boa, - , And l'v piloted Dauoon. .,, I sold cheat) ranches In Mexico, I naddled clcrars In Kent And 1 megaphoned on a tallyho. I've been reader or paims in a tent. I've ridden at night with a Ku-Klux Klan, I have deoutv marshaled, too. I've posed an a regular fighting man, : , Ana I vo-Dossea a piraucat crew. I hav cooked at plght In a cheap cafe, And I deaooned In church awhile, l T wo laaAtnfr man In a naurntv maY. And I sailed on tne tuver mia. I've shoveled sand In a placer mine. And I worked In a livery barn. In Colorado 1 herded klne, ' . In winter l'v knitted yam, Now I want Job of a different kino, For I V got to earn sum naie: ,. Though the .work is hard. I will not mma, -- - Though I've applied for a thousand Jobs, I get but a verbal wat; . The bosses tell me the wis ld sloba To stay with tn n i ve guw r Pointed Paragraph ton are vowel that hare caused many a man' downfall. - Always remember to be a gentleman unless you' are a woman. . . .. r ( - . . . . . What the world needs la lees good ad- rice and mor good example. AmMtloB Is a good thing, bat don't fly higher than you can roost - An thlnrs are for th beet and rrexy on of us Imagine h' th best M.n man Im dlssatlafld With his lot becaus It 1 too near hi neighbor's. l tji nlirhfa sleaD U OB Of th few things people Ilk that Is good for them. rrw.M. tin, m. nl MiM.nAu n fOT hiS right! h 1 apt to traad on som thr fellow toe. After yniDathiiinf wlta popI wn ar in troubl many a maa begin t feel Ilk nypocrii ; a. min widow has on Important advantag over th Inexperienced maid eh can act a her own chaperon. - It doesn't Mem right that a woman should have two ears for hearing gos sip and only on tongu for repeating . If no essy task for a leap year girl to pick out a first class husband. About th best she can hope for I a chanc to pick over what remain on th bar gain counter. ' :-'. ' -. W Hobson's Choice. '"rTom Drooklyn Lif. Modest Suitor I am going U marry your sister, Willi, but I know I am not good enough for her. - Candid Llttl Brofhsr-Tliat's what Sla ay. but ma's bien telling her h can't do any better. . - Wasted. From the Cincinnati Enqulrr. " stated Colonel Bourbon "th people of ' thi city waste mor than a million., gallon of water every m""shthat a factr rejoined Majah Sour mash. "Po you rekon they drink ltr Travelers -Hhnti.il to The Jonrnnl br Wilt Uteon, thi frnnoiw Kensas poet. Hie proae-pojma ar a regulur feiture of thl columo in Tbe Dally Juuranl.) , Down this little world - we travel, headed for the land of Dawn, sawing wood and scratching gravel, her to day, tomorrow gone! Down our path of doubts and dangers, w ar toddling, mil on mile, transient and Inquiring, strangers, dumped Jnto , this world a while. Let u makethe Journey pleas ant for the littlo time we stay; all w have is Just the Present all w need Is just Today.. Let's encourage one an other as we push along, the road, say ing to a juded brother: "Here, I'll help you with your load!": Banish scorn and vain reviling, banish useless tear and woe" let us do the Journey smiling, all our 'hearts with love aglow: Let us never search for .sorrow, since the Jour ney is o brief;. here today and gone to morrow; whafhavt we todo with grief? Down this llttl world we wander, atrnn?ers from some unknown spheres, h,a.i,.,i for the country yonder where they have no eitsun w .ui.,i u therefore Cease complaining, let us be no Kinger glum; let us all go Into train ing for the Joyful life to cornel (VrirricM. ion. iv Gvorga MuUin-iv Ail sun.