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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (April 25, 1912)
TIIC OREGON DAILY JOURNAL. PORTLAND. THURSDAY EVfNIHO. ' APRIL fi. lilt. THE JOURNAL t l e IViM f a .. 1 1 i i n 1 aa .. ir., . Br i in 1 "ill a itMnit W.e in t f) I W .4.l t. tll t' Bl I ..4 . tl4 l-r'. I. .! , ta am- Ik, viU at. a. ti tend ad.ua 14 La'ai (UU t ttun l ! ttarU U III .! do lis Ufc fafttMi lav Ika 4aly t Taft .UfeL la it f deiniag ii Lei il-ii.Tfi ft 1- rJUi 4Wie I k.i ii(4 u tiii-U f fi t fsfWu i ( wm Ta .ri.tlie W 0 fcn. !. UtU mil fc j-lu ll ! l.c-cl d ilk Wkt ! aee tl U1 oa4 1 ritii 1 Mtal.fl of It fafak imi J.. . - f i I I 1 I ! i aiitxi '.a. (ha .... IU i .4 -of aa.- 1 !icJ LrS"pf c . ! lull tbJ llul COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF t MjUX Ctt4fcU.C t Pa rtnt .-. - ' ! --. - .Br .4 llk a.fc.. tl-a. I I ' tea I t4 Ium hill -a fan at t k(M , I! ll .! ' t I vl f 1 r r f r r ! III! 1 h I IH ll 4 tilt I M li-i T I HI t I CI Ml M T m 1.1 A M.UCI la la i f)ll M ' 1 U ! 1 1 ' 1 .: -i. II'. at u .rlt !i. a 1 ! ! u l:ilvkrl In I In I ilui '' irlr III! f - :: T Hlllhi: M M.I ? f ? ( if i' i ' I a Itfrfrl; ' a, ; 1 f .1 ! a f c f In 11 . 'r ! c't rri.! ii lit I' I'fl 1 if I-. . I ! ! f !r I I ' r ".I I l '-'-l! Ii.tr : III l !' !!:! 1 1 : . r r.rtri i' r! ' f 1- !t:r . i. 1 1 : t?i-r- i t. .m e tM I ' ; fi Hi i.j I) I . Ilirl in .11 !l. l.ulJlhS (llt "if " U'tTui i r n ' '1 f "ft jiiMon inn Jilo. kit tl." ltiifurra rrrUflcl tl ! m I i r- -ilfii iitn lh lal ltahr.1 oulJ I a Iniy Mow tu 1 UhJ taflrw la f'U livcu fila Id f t ?o tii a i l (lit t r-r IblrrraMar. ul I ll n,vr II aa l4i'e i-cna on H fiiTrbi talvae ft aa iri farui I llc c aifcr Ita I luj ji u df Id a farm. -r . lr rBb. l iiirlj M It' I lal I. T: ofo luf lullll r'l I-r ' Ji-fir lha(l (fcrli al-4 "' J.i on f 1 ( r in u .1 r t a a d . (. ! oi.a Tie Wir ( iire of llwai j rt4 u" r a f (' e do ah J an II iin Biirr .n.fll (or M la lh hif f.rr ijlahinr II ( aa !- III it is (,r U.p rolltjii 1 nfreir '.1 U" a 11 it ?ir U.a utlitli l.cw a!J , M . ' uur .li!r laritia lo !fi t. I! l ! ' ! a I a ii a u Iw rr 1 f rac J I !..-n r srI iai W U ll.c flfal 1 irtllim llna riuili ot llila fa'ufn ai 1 la II rlM lo aak arij analt la lo t.rn our lamt rhaofva) hai.ita Lttcr From tit Pop! iii i mm.i tt V a4f! IM t aak I W CMvaK. iiili aa4 .a Im Ik'a h ilia a ! a. aM a4 I- .matil a ' Ui.i. ' a mm la a will al u ' aa.a a4 -II a4 1( -Taft waaiU aa iiii. i,fim llrval la min if " a a l la Mklr Pa4at U ! t.a4a f r iaa ! Ta O ,W n S raxapaar witl aaa aa ! I wriicw al a I MM- Ivm la iil all III la4 kA4aM la I nu at ! aiaaiaii.aL. Tl-a Knia uaUa af t'wialllla Ir la aMtwi alabuiala iavaiaaa fr ika aaaai krae, Ua ail M AlhMa. i-a. I '! !" ' I a a I A roauaau aaxrIUIna llaaif aa a llwaiarx I I iutii9 at 4r Ix.lll mm aaaJa ...i ... . 11 u 11.. i-wi Miw ri aeii, 9Miif 1 .nriir lowa4 la auliurllia al ' 1 lut II Ti il. rl .... - . . . .11. . . . . . . . - . ' - Jiil - uti,n H.air uuaikiMiii i u.wi Wa'a. Ii M:l..,U Mt4 K. a a ''"" aJ . 1M.ml1 ralnar 1 N.t II la .U111J ll Ifca honl.l Ti-fcr flrvlKaia. Hlrrl, who fc lt vii .iiliai. t a j- ' l'ia u.H.l b laia Ik mm fat I Jf Ika auntOtM 'Mil ,imi Cvu! I a k Xljftfi4 and ('lial I'uinl. Kaa 1 ntan.fi oiraltnna It alll r4uiia va .i.mtr4 aMl U m.iI a aa laJl- H.vilaaM la I ..1 I -r- ia if 1a 1 l'a uiJ 1 4 a j al II o j! J a a Mltta aica4le- OtUJUOSf kttifcUUUT- -11 1 of tU Titinic. . il. mt 11.. 1 .nt a... ...i i..i ' Rai i a 1. r - "r'i I iki ,,.,t1r alxMiM la 1'ri, .1. s f lKlfa lltiiiK l (iM 1llat ll.iK.lrir I .e-l 11 H rlilli V( I. t,fl ,.r ! ' llMf aaj .lli HouIiikI ulilll ''"'I'v t3 tWinttlimn uil'ii I" W ia. In tl. iifiini i ll n I I ' 1 t-mt 1 ;.a i1ilMI.fl -I 01 I..!!. !. I Ik r !!! rflil mI -f l-ll f.i ll,. t It taa 11.11 i. r f Wl tl lha I 4 i.l r -)! allii.lila a I- wl tlfi. tia iitt 1 a i t h iitui-H. fl a ! mm. 1 i I In I -m al IIKarl ira M.111) luuilri ai.lf iu la ai II K&a gl In iHm 1 olM thai 1 rati laui uniiiin !. aiwa a li.an Ian I l rt III! IT.itlKKKOt N lKMK IUT ur1nc dclrair) Tha (ooa- fr rnura effntlia la d'-airo)ln aurh tall torrf thar.a tha Tafl forfaw pUiloui Ilk IIa aa of rnoriuoua lumi tuooey la Krurln ddrcatew of It loartrll (orrra t!h Iba uaf Ihe I n I ! ! tl anJ rrf cri-lidum Iri ef enrraioua lumi of mor.rr III Ihtl It oul.1 rnatln framt 10 !-omr iT ara loM now thai tha ta- ind Jirw- tr-rril aa Hriiubllrana. notnl- Tfc Tafl (orrr drclara that court, and triiiln-d the forifr la tia1 iJiffarir Kooawrell't Biacaelnj men f!o( aua to remain unioucbpil It la no if ntut war la not found to curb 110.009 In ayndlac Out lltr-raturw tn onlcr for llif frlrnda of tho Inllia h tmliloua iractlra of thcaa In rrasrlva&U. and etarr nugo tiro and rrfvrrndura to tuuo ipr- j trisiiM-rata r'.lt.l. itrllaJ ? ikJ in III! nb. iirvt la j'a aa Imhu. ..f .Immi laoa ana Krinf aual la maf IKaa. I"l la aanl hoitia with iinI aim nalofllr f lha ratla.a T iw i h4 aaitUallan. 14a VloU fra liorlajlam rjutr1 Ota H'lai ot lha ' a a ala al ham. irti-ll.. In.lirfMiM ar.t ! 0,1, ., a,, half lha laal nixililliM i aia auii mr Hll. mm. f lni0 i.r. In lha racaiil Oval Oif u.tialli MWI la ula 1 1 rlavarlaa kJany Ihlti II anakaa Jriava ff.f Tha) auprorua court found oth , cronnda fvr rnvaralng ih wr' en a m jr. ara loia now mat 11 ' A ,,f'"ro'4" Ii'iocrata ai r, YY tllc-ntlal Sorlallala. Ik. finm.! .Wm.m. ... . .I rr.1ir a liaw lhT !! f'fl anJ a. ii,.,. ... ,,'! 41. j ,,ry w'" " . ' P"iui im fdTrrnm.nl. in. i lallal Mrfeat r. ilrniM raisrivat man r pralral vnlaa la IKa U.I aUrflnn II w.a lha MiM-lalUta iraal Iba anil do null. la Ta flt-M waa Mllar M moaf ft lhraa do rmn) ih. fkiclaltal lira. I ala, or ili.ll.ar ami Is tb varioa known to l'iUn that will put an end to U orrjou ivom dark and bloodr rorrapt o,l,r ,B"' lt Tbfriwork of thoaw ho for, narfii-a or rround Trn million of them In thla ! rharg" that Iho aunia rnt DT Hrj-tratn other frauda In dimct l t- ,ts! r(l ridlnit rouRh ahod orr tha lha rolonal force In Saw York , Wlailoo rlitlita of a aitiall band of h-lpleaa It- ' (tlf wt aofftclrnt to taaka tho t la hlatory that tha KIMa pailn i,Mi,lirana. and aurkln Into their! Ttooweralt aiipf'Ti roal 4 a tola petition In Portland toeined lth amlro mawa ihn rr llfeblood of The Rooaeelt manafr-ra reply that apurloua narrn-a It la of court rec- our rrn1 Inatltutlona. tha Taft manaslni men ara flooding ord that many forned namea were on .'.aaaarhuao'ta with epekera and the unlrcraltr iK-tltlona Nolxly with cuoaey. and thai these, ara to knoaa how id any fraudulent al'na n b oT. M-Tt irua Kix-laliala. T' flnallai la la miiIhiii ala ii..k. .. i . 1 . .. k. ' . . luajr elfiert to a 1 " " waa aa louoaa IIM l,B- I , " It ' I ' 1 1 a 1 JT lU a I- li "i Ihlnli lhara flnelallal fun Ten a In Mrav 4.)lna Varana laahail rVtaaara fVrka llrla. and fear hualand. 1 xrti Mr da ef rtmtanA, ara fnlna m a farm la ('a-.a'ta Ilia, and ah. will da h.r houaawark ( x (aalntuil! ir a for eigner with a enuMU'l. came amouola lo aumalMnf luui.lh. o ciSitaia Ilia runlrail a a .l an Trunin Naw iKal aprln la tin. ana aa elraaaora r rm avrry lawn on our alraala lal labantia al l.i.ai and Wan ua. axi lhal lli.lr r.p-fl. nil! La latuiatil. ahtB lh l-ufn lo Ih.ir bnlt ca a a t'.illaga liini ra4rr: XVIIh lha a. Ibg i.l iu.radan.Klna ef inula of lH laga Oiavaa itinrlnal eliaala thla eaev aia, lmtratuianl arllvlllaa ara aura la la f.nrral. You rani make a lawn .land attll Mi h aa lo far imiar.al aira.l lmrtvefeila a a rSl frfir.t Tribuna: K. l. Ilalaa Of tlfkall. I'olk cunlr. and "W It Olrth of halam. ara looking over Ilia Induce mania or a.ull. w r.i.rn Or agon aa a r-laca rur rtnma-ruiilara wim ramnia. Thar rama .l''n 11" am a rlar en foot from Vral Turk. Thr ara eahlallr alrurk by our beautiful lownelle and d.p harbor, and riallit poaalblllllaa whan railroad ahall have coma. SEVEN GREAT CONSPIRACIES The (injowW I'luC Tha Human Oeihollce had aipaclad a ill r-a no mora i aTraai ravnra ana iiw jiinc. ub lllwauka.f ll 1 ciealon of Jam... both aa ha waa da- aa ki i-t.alnw1 10 ua how "rlnrlallaiti ' aanja1 from Vtary, whoaa Ufa thar ba- mmm I w I 4 M VIII l 1 , A . - k . t ..ill 1 1 I KM r r-V ... Illr.ll. VI riMii n""i" nurna w1- htj h na w w ii TTiey are literally raaklnf Oreon .,, ,i,t, i,,k of ,nn,M.vlM . o..... and aa ha Mmaelf. in hla early a combination of Hodoru. (Somorrah i lh. auhirrt. you might aa w.ll talk of j youth, waa imaitnel 1 . haa ehown aoma anil IMl la tin r a- Ten million of Ihem "ring lha apad of an aula In a enara . ta rt talll r lowarda Ihem la gorplrtnenfed With a Ckn Taa of lupre have been on Other p'OtlOUa ...r-.-.t . l,,i rrldav'a kenuhll- ,r' nociallam rjnliaa IKa nr- trr "l may aiK-OTemo inair mia- i . w - ii..i vi .i i. . -v 1 v v ... 1 ' ' . ganiiadnn or I ruin a try on a nallnnal 1 lake: and ware at unci aurrneea ino can J.rlmarlca and beat Taft. turned a. .!. !ih all the hanrftia of arae!all- ' .nrag.d l find Jam.a. on all oeraalone. the itate over to ftooaerelt. ran I.a.iinn boih. aa to Indlvlduala and aa la 1 eti.r.aa bla Inl.r.tlan of etrlrtlr aiecul- Tho praCtlCO ) no fault of the F0ir,f n na h clone eecond. noml-! r","n P-,lly filled for earlaln In- lng the lawa ervaoird agalnat tham and , . , u,u1BA.i ninrlm 11 niiarn ran noi Da -men on 1 or peraaerina in ail ine riaorou meaa. nated iJlffert). kidnaped Platrlct At- ,omr i.un.1" or In aoma rlt, All that ' una of Klltabeth Caieeby. a ganlle tornev Cameron from the race and rWUIIata ran do In a rfly hamrvrad aa ' man of gio,l parta and of an ancient beat Henera Fouta. 'rc in Milwaukee by lack of rou-1 family, flrat thoucht of a rnnat eitra- T milllnn Ilamiwraf 1e I m ra of; immi i. 10 (in nun iiui ciMlmrT mrmoo or r.Tang.. ana 111 ion minion iemocratic imp or i,ffirin. .dmmi.ir.iii.1. v , ' ...,- 1..-,- . .... I - ....... ... . t. . ri ir-irj i : i niK-iiiiuii 1 ' ' i-iii-mii-a in-iiHi irim or niaiinn.aty anil ac-nrtan t of lha lllualrlmia houaa or many roncr.le their ifflrlini-T In a N'urthuinbrrlan J. "In aln." anl.l Terry. tha atate by the prraldent hlmaelf. ! by which lawa iaTe bH-n paaneil and ll tha rrealJency on tha auction rt ferenduma applied. block? Who la fiirnlihinn H thla money principle. It la a merf matter of In for tho Taft rampalxn? rldental machinery, but It la of anch Who ll furntahlnn al! thla money ' moment that all frlenda of direct for tho RooeTeIt campaUn? ; IcictalatJon ahould be convinced of Tho row between Colonel Walter- the Importance of applytna; remodlea -on and Gorernor Wllaon ai rauaod Nothlnn ahould bo allowed to ry tho refuial of Governor Wllaon harm tha Initiative and n-ferendum 10 ffept Campaign contrlbutlot a 'Ttio way to earo them from harm from Tbomaa P. Hyan. New York la to ao aafearuard tho proccsnea that traction magnate and captain of nix crooka raunot uao them aa toola. Builneaa. iad aubrerted the lawa. aet j w,ln1',h,, clreulaled by ih, anMHoeUI- -a uld you ful an end to the klnre Ufa ... .. . .. a .w 1,1 ,or"- w" the admlnelon that thai ha haa children" the fonitltutlon. defied the Poel.Il.t admlnlrtratlon -hM gly.n IM. -? --el anr wwl nurnn.. mua riiT in. irmpnnry oenent or a mora fl.atroy at one blow the king tha royal Arw other traction matrnatea and Other Mptalna of Dlx Boaliieaa con tributing the huge auma now uaed la oiling up the machinery of the Taft and Ilooeevelt rampalnaT Who elae could afford to apend ao jmich . ttonay orjthe prenldency? TUB CYttirKOMISK , A IJUXDEIl R S EMONSTRANCK la ralaod against th0 widening of a auc tion of north Seventh atreet. rctltlona are !n eirrulatlon. i and aome property owner on that thoroughfare are alKtilng. I It la a ahort-alghtod movement. A 'part of Ha length, Seventh l one ICNATL'RES are being aoP(?ht;of tho broadest and flnoat business , outt r darknepa aajid conaplracy, fly lng the black flag of piracy and pll lage. h aside nkaaea of the Oregonlan, robbed the Ipaupcra of their savings, condemned Jflve million Oregon children to aer iTltude and alavery. drunk nearly all 'the fighting whlakey and snowed Jonathan Hotirne under, all by reg istering aa Republlcana. Im't It awful? , OETT1XO INTO JAIL T HE Saturday .Post telle the world, from the census figures, that In proportion to popular linn tharn ara naarlv flva ttmaa ' r1"" ...... - j - "-.Taft waa naturnl. for the initiative petitions for avenues In the city. In Its northern . 1. - A 1.111. Tl.. ' - . i i . t. I .... me ruau ouia. i 41 j l" ciirnsion u is in urn ue-roweu. a iaci . 4.11 .mn,iim.ni. in n.n.n. . . . . t v. niiiiiiiiii 11m iu uiibuii . .. 09 ireeiy aignoa. 1 uere ouKm mat wm enormously miutiie against R8 ,n Ml-alMlppl. The paragraph lo be enthusiasm In circulating them. . the great development that would Rlgo (pIl8 U9 that judf.ed br the The bills represent more consld-1 otherwise accrue to business and Barn, BrftIe there 'are twenty-fonr ctatlon, care and sttrdy in their pre- j building along the whole street. UmP8 ns manv cornmtrnerjtiI )n Ar). paratlon than any bills ever offered Property owners along the broad Iona a8 ,n North Carolina three the Oregon electorate. It Is doubt- portion can rendor themselves no tlmefi BB rnanv ,n NVada as In South ful if a legislative measure was ever ; higher sen-Ice than by Insisting that ; CarolInft and more than twlc8 aubjected to such painstaking scrut-jthe strt-et be widened to the bridge. : mAny , Montana as in Georgia. 'iny. The present bills are the prod-! The money they may have to pay in! The80 compar,8on8 would be very uct of an original state-wide commit-1 assessments will return to them, 0(1i0,ls )f the roBt dtd not proceed to tee, and a revision by a second state-'many times multiplied, in the vastly, ghow fhftt thfl eaBt,rrii and nearby wide committee, a revision in which ; greater Importance that will be given : ndioinlne stutra an a-roatlv in effort was made, as far as possible the thoroughfare by the widening the niimhpr of Jatl commitments as ernnirnt aovarnrntnl than haa reeenlly been enjoyed M After th. neit eleellon In klllwaukea lha chief political atrug gle will ba to determlnn who f.ta the Hoelaliat nomination. Kor an arllcla deajlna: "mora fully with tha Mllwaukaa altuatlnn. aea tha CTirrrnt number "of "Tha Coming Na tion." - v M. A Change of Heart. Portland, April II To tha Editor of Tha Journal For weeka tha Oregonlan haa about evenly divided apaoe In Its newa and editorial column between Taft and Ftoonevrlt. Heine; eVer reactionary Ita mrtoet of Cpon ITrnident Taft It heaped lauda tion urvatlntlna;Iy: upon Colonel Tlooae- family, lha lorde. lha rommona and bury all our enemlee In ana common ruin. Happily, lhay ara all aaaembled at tha meeting of parliament, and afford ua tha opportunity of glorious and uaaful revenge. Oreat preparations will not be required. A few of ua combining may run a mine below the hall In which thny meet, and ehooetng tha very mo ment when tha king liaranquea ootn houara, cunalgn oer to deatruetlon theaa determined foes to all piety and religion." Percy waa ehnrraed with thla pro ject of Cntcaby'e; and they agreed to communicate tha matter lo a few mora and among tha reat to Tbomaa Winter, whom they aent over to Flanders tn auent of Fawkea, an officer In tha SDanlah service, with whose leal and to harmonize differences by com promising on provisions to which there was objection. No road bill will ever be proposed that will suit process. to make It clear that, not on the Portland haa not stopped growing, enormity of the offence but partly North Seventh is the strate3lc test on (he dlver8e lawB and partIy on of what all Seventh will be. The tr, llornm nt nneh .into ui tha veil If poured libations of nbuae and 1 fh.v were all thuroiivhlv fa- cnlumny. Taffa motive, and actlona 1 miliar were purity peraonlfled. Rooaevelt a I AIj thla paaaed In were nae ana vile. Thin wna Ita ante-primary "bark Now Union to Its "whine." win present limitations tor tne, it 1 observable also that these southern seftn, because there is ronipari90nB ara baBCdi not on the a limit to the traffic a narrow street j nurili,er of offenses, but on the pun will accommodate. Ushments awarded. So. we of the The remonstrance la a blunder. It!weBtern states may comfort ourselves is a movement to prevent Seventh w,th the t)CIef that we thJnk B0 Ber,. street from becoming the great thor-jouslv of vf0latiOn of law that of- oughfare that otherwise a greater Portland Is sure to make It. fenders aro sent relentlessly to Jail. HIGH PRICED LAND FRANCE AND MOROCCO T I all. No road bill will ever be pre- narrowness of the northerly section I nuniler of offenders lalled pareo to wnicn nououy win una od Jectlon. The present bills have the virtue of offering a fairly advanced step for road building, and at the V same time presenting as nearly as pos8iDie, a careruuy compromised jilan in which concessions have been made to every conflicting view. , After such preparation, the bills ., should be brought to a vote. They are probably the best bills that can be presented. They more nearly em body a general and evenly balanced system than haw ever been offered, . and are a fair plan upon which to put the people on trial as to whether they want, or do not want, better roads. In some sections of the state there is objection because the issue of bonds, both for counties and the state, Is limited to two jxr cent of Il.n no (-A .,... T--r..Af-. tinli.nl -- T 111c poo-ddiu iiuiJn iniuai lull. Ill - other Instances there are objections HE aftermath of the Moroccan controversy appears In the news of tho massacre of the French soldiers and officials at HAT high priced farm land is and why Is a hard problem. There is no denying the ; F fh MoQrlah canltal. Snain and fact that the price of Oregon farms I rjerilgany, Italy and England might nas risen ana m rising. i ne present j K,ve hft Krench a free hand to open unr8 ueuy inm me ,,r:o i tuu;and t6 clvI1I-e Morocco but the high, the buyers declare that the tribesmen, and the townspeople of lann is not-worm u. ana.- as Mr. Fez llnused to any re8traint. had to Dooley says, "there y'are!' hi reckoned wlth. If the owner can .point, to fully pnSK)ons had been rfslne hlrh. nnd because a bond jssue Is proposed deve,opf'd returns on completely de-the temptatlon of a solitary French veiopea .ana, lae quesuon is easj . 1 raptaln arnong thenli a8 they Simply how many years' purchase omerR(,d from the 8ultan'a palace, does the buyer think he caif afford , was t0Q gpeat a temptation to the to give as a basis for present price, .,.,-...,.,. flvnrfi lflvIps of at all. Is It not better, and is it not the only practical way, for each extreme lo make concession to tho other and for the general welfare, and try to meet on such ground as i presented in the compromise bills? ASSASSINATED and does he believe that In his hands the Moors. When the unfortunate the value of the land will go on ris-loffJcer had. Deen done to death the ing. But In nineteen cases out of; way was opened to the indiscrimi- THE life of the salaried newspa per man is not attended with enormous rewards. He is In daily and deadly competition to btj first to the public with the news, iwemy u ithjiuul a..... 01 our uru- te murdpr of every Frenchman In gon farms today that the full an- Fez and the Noting 0f their dwell nual value is being got from them. j,np8 Qf courae R heavy retribution will be exacted Just as soon as the This because the full area of the; f 1 a a .1 il . 1 1 larm is noi uuproveu, aim .ue lanu , flrgt m0vable column of French cav may be graded an value from brush .,.. and artiilerv can reach Fez. and land rough pasture, to orchard land ffh. -it ., og vestiee of ln- i or dairy land fit for dairy Pow'.iie,.j-,.j..., ftet In serving a vast clientele of and cultivation and condition may be ,t took the Frcnch twenty year8 readers 1 with intelligence of the day's , open to great Improvement. In bar- and more t0 tearh the Algerlan happenings, and first in giving to his gaining for land in such plight wide ltrih )n ,,.. .., Bnd ohpv th. paper-the effort that will make it difference between owner and buyer ; ,aW8 ThpVVill have the same work P k wfD' . w, , will appear. to do in Morocco but It wjll be He has his worries, his duties, his Now conies in the valne of expert ! rirm, lernncea, n rample of whlefi can bt found In Ita leading editorial todav. Why thin change of front? If Taft waa ao rortaln of renomlnatlon and election before the primary In Oregon, why does the Oregonlan desert him nowT Surely the uregon vote la not ao Important a factor. Let ua look In another direction. T'p to the time of his candidacy for tha t'nlted Htntra eenatorHhlp, Ben BelllnR wna enalrmnn of the committee In chui-KO of Tnffa campaign In Oregon. The principal owner of the Oregonlan wnn also n member of that committee. Belnjc then hopeful of Taffn renoirilnn tlon anil elrrllon, this element Induced Mr. Selling to aeek the nomination for the nenntornhlp. This nccesaltated hla wlthdrawnl from the Taft committee. but It did not change his nlleRlance. Thus he was In reality the Taft candi date, and while the Oregonlan was too' adroit to tout him as auch, yet It did riKht Senator Bourne largely because he In opposed to Taft. Whllo the Oregonlan delegates much credit to Itself for Bourne's defeat, as 11 matter of fact it is less responsible for Bournes defeat than it Is for Tuft's (Its Influence, if anything, being nega tive). Pupport and approval of the Payne-Aldrich tariff law lowered Ore gon s confidence in Taft and Bourne alike. Their "toast" to that law was drunk in a cup of hemlock. But I am digressing. My conclusion Is this: Mr. Selling was and Is the Tnft-Oregonlan candidate for United States senator. a "Hobson" choice he won the nomination In spit of the Orr-ronian's support and his own Taft affiliations. But Taft was snowed un der. To stay with the ehlD "Taft." 1 All thla passed In the eprlng and j summer of the yenr 104: when the con , anlratora hired a house In Percy's name. Without j adjoining to that In which parliament was that year they began their operations. They Boon pierced the wall, three quinine rerer 10 its post-mortem ut- 1 , ....mbla. Towarda tha end of yards In thltkorea. but on approach ing the other ald lhay ware eomewhat elartterf at hearing a nolaa which lhay knew n"l how to account for. Cpo" Inquiry thry fmind that II rama from lha vault below tha houaa of Ionia, lhal a magailne of coals had been kept thara. and that, as th roal a were eelllng off. I .e vault would ba left 10 lha hlghrat bidder The opportunlt y aa Immediate ly eelied. tha place waa hlral by Percy; it barrela of powder waa lodrfed In It. the bole covered up with fagaote and Mlleta: lha doora of the cellar boldly flung open, and everybody admitted. Ba If It contained nothing dangeroua. Tha day (November 8. 1 SOS . ao long wished for, now approached, on whlc lha parliament waa appointed to aa aemble. Tha dreadful aeeret. though communicated lo about I peraona, h been rellirloualy kept, during the apeo of nearly a year and a half No re morse, no t'lty. no fear of puntshmen no hope of reward had aa yet Induce, any conspirator, elthar to abandon th enterprise or make a discovery of It. But tho betrayal waa unwittingly made after all by one In tha plot, who trie to deter I -ord Monteagla from attendtn the opening aeaalnn of parliament, by sending him a myaterioua meaaage o warning. Lord Monteagla showed th letter to Lord Ballshury, secretary o lata, who attaehed little Importance t It. but who laid It before the king. The Scotch Solomon read It with mora anxiety and waa ahre-wd enough, by some expreaslona In the missive, to or der an lnveatlgtitlon of the vaults un derneath the parliamentary houses. Th gunpowder waa dlaoovered and Fawkes was found lir th place, with matches for the firing of It on hla peraon. Being put to the rack, be disclosed the namea of his accomplices. They were seised, tried and 'executed, or killed while re sisting arrest. Among those executed liesldes Fawkea. were Slra Kdward Dig by, Bockwood, Winter and Garnet, Jesuit- Tomorrow Theft Jewels. of the Crown haa established certain fixed lawa (laws of nature) that If man breaks he suf fers the consequences and Qod Is not at all responsible (.orl made tho law but It Is not bis will that man should break them. The state of Oregon hna lawa which If trans gressed entail punishment, but the state would rather that all men were law abiding. If one ahould Jump or fall from the third or fourth etory of a building the law of gravitation pulls him to tho jrround and an Injury or even deth may be tho result, but the law maker did not plan that one should Jump or fall. No more than the givers of the laws of Oregon planned that one should break the law. But on the other hand If we suffer for violation of law we should profit thereby. AVe would not know that fire would burn If we bad nover been burnt, and by having been burnt we become more careful so that which seems to be for our Injury Is for our Rood and sometimes a few suffer for inn good or the many. If a man steals he Is put In prison for the good of the community. If he was allowed to go without punish ment rail probabilities are that he would continue to steal and teach others to do the same, but by being punished he Is taught a lesson and others get a lesson also. H. I AHLSON. Al ways in Good H umor HEAL TIP-TOPPERS. From the Detroit Free Press. Senator Brown, apropos of the mari tal adventures of a young multimillion aire, said at a dinner In Washington: "They are In truth aa foolish tn thla respect as the maidservant who said "I'v got a place among tha tip-toppers for sure this time. They're hang up aristocrats 1 live wltn now. " 'What do you mean by bang-up aristocrats? a friend asked. " "Oh," she replied 'I mean places where they have three kinds of wlna and the ladles smoke and the met swear' " Spraying Rose Bushes. Lebanon, Or., April 23. (To the Editor of the Journal) Will you please tell ni What til USA for 4 unrlv fnr- would now mean death, for that craft is rose bushes? There is a little green fast sinking; so these political Jsmays bug that is working on all of the buds BREAD ON THE WATERS. From the St Joseph Herald. "Just one word of advice, son before you go out Into the world," "Yes, dad!" "Always be kind to Demoerats. They have their turn onpe In awhile." aro climbing Into the lifeboat Roose velt. C M. WARD WELL, rpon6ibilitles-and his long list of trials. He has to meet emergencies that call for judgment, is under a constant tension that demands alert ness, and U as constantly in action s a trusted scout or a skirmisher when battle-Is impelling. No ser vant of th .treat erecting public is more devotedly, at his post of duty. Such" a man toiled yesterday at his post In the office of th Chronicle at Spokane.. HI friends in the city 1 I T I 1 . 1 t I opinion. Suppose it to be a question of determining the value of a pres Sinks to the Bottom. Sellwood. April 23. To the Editor of The Journal I note that the Titanic went down two miles deep. It haa al ways been written that nothing will sink farther than air can penetrate in the water and divers say that they have round trie, bodies of a vessel s drowned floating around them when . thev were at the wrecks, and a diver can only go so many feet below on account of the Kreat pressure of the water. Now. then, how can a vessel sink two miles, and If the dead float at the depth of the divers, then the Titanlc's dead are at that depth, too, and might be recov ered. Does the air penetrate tha ocean to a depth bf two miles? SUBSCRIBER. (The depth of water where the Ti tanic met her death Is about two miles and sinks to a etill greater depth to the south towards which the currents tend which carry the lee fields and icebergs and also on the cabbage. ELTON RAMSAY. 'If the bushes are .healthy the bugs should drop off. They can bo mashed With the fingers, brushed off with a soft brush or washed off with a spray of water, sprinkled with bucai-h. a Per sian insect powder, or sprayed with the following -wash: Botf "4 ounces of quassia chips In a gallon of water for 10 minutes or let it simmer for an "hour. With a syringe spray the bushes twice. The first time should kill the aphis and the second time will kill the eggs as may natcnj THE PREPONDERANCE OF EVI DENCE. From Harper' Weekly. "Sorry," said the constable, "but I'll have to arrest ye you been drlvln' along at the rate of 60 miles an hour." "You are wrong, my friend," said the driver. I say I wasn't and here's a $10 bill that says I wasn't." "All right," returned the constable, pocketing the money. "With 11 to 1 against me I ain't gain' to subject the county to th' expense of a trial." THE WAY OF MODERN FATHERS From the Cleveland Plain Dealer. "Yea, before papa would consent to my marrying George h8 Insisted on looKing up n,s past lire. ' . "Mercy, that was risky." . x-ui ne amn 1 go very far. He stopped just as be-round that George was the only nephew of three rich uncles." Krn U Naar Tw Wrld. I.a. ked al Ik. fmi i vf Uie4 4 Walff U tvalfaal. Jr.UiU m Mar tl. lat. la ll.a t-ra af J f - Hm 4 I Urvc leua, mt Ike taljltM. Uafvanllia Mafib fwti . IKa flliau waa fiaal.r y ! Ika Ik. tlu,ir, ltr e'.awr aiiwrg k a.at MMilm at IKa aa la aiSwwaba w.a III, fcl -falr l.taa Ika tlM f lha alliaititea lvv ll kiM waa IW f.l aad K. dci-lfc M fel, wMi. ffum l.ar kl l- Ik. Iue of Let Iwwr alack waa Hi lul Milk a . lit .!,. lane, her til;ereianl a.e Literally. It.a g't.t lin.f a a tltl te waa Ii aturi.a la l. :;.!. rJainunl- rllui ItIukh l.a l.ln. IiMmi tnual of- lliea l-aln l.y ikiiIimi Wide aal balualrwd.d la.f)ere In. icaaed Ik r- acmblaare, wtila Ih. luiurtuua lane a bit n.laur.hl. a immature Ikaali ikluaih aad Irnnia murlt. nlmmlai f-iill aad Tuiklah l-alha. raid rui. and Wuilr iiuiih and a mlhl.lni gait link, on the ii.mi.-l ,lwk. (all lo l.ir allrai-llm,. lhal frw b.lrla ran Im-.iI Tt uaah rouil waa a giod aa any aahora. II w. I by : farl In aia ai.d ail.njad p through tha m 1.1 11. of derka ll and K a Mgh aa lha main or K dark A reach waa aboard lo lae-h Ihoia whs rould not play. XMrt UrUve raalwraa. Rack alal.room had Ma uwa luh wild all klada of water Tb.ra aaa a a.i vanta' hall for lha alai. malda aa I other aarianla . Wh.n lhay war aui ai-tually engaged about Iba rona of their employ' eervanl w.ia aiparlal o remain Id thla hall, ihouih lhay wei Iravellng firal rla.a. By this arrang ment the dirflctillliai lhal have nio. Ilin.a arlarn a la rd ahlp when a val.l mlaiaken for hla mailer wai lu In avoided Another frature waa an old Rr.gilah rhop mi0 wllh high barked alalia of black oak The arhure tn lha palm gar den aer another roelly They wai. artificially mr I rived with vlnra amid tnka of real flowera Tha Billing rooma In aoma of tha eultea were aa large a ltxlk feet Tha reetaurant waa larger than that In th. OImplc and had a novelty In lha ahape of a private promenade d"rk on th. alarbimrd aid It led to a reception ' room, where doata and hoalraara -tj I I meet thrlr gursta befor going Into tlio reataurartt ... Two aultea nn lha Titanic were 14 37-0 each for the elngl trip TI.eae apert- Oienla. which were railed the Kegal aultea, were Juat abaft the grand cotn panlonway on the 11 deck They con sisted of alttlnir rooma. Bleeping rham bara. hatha and wnnlrobea, with a "front garden." a wide private prome nade evtirdlng the whole length of thi suite and having It own ana rail. The occupant of one of theaa aulte. could smoke, read, loll, ex.rrlse or d- aa h elm., on hla own deck with al! the privacy he could enjoy on hla own plana at home. Co b tractor's Drprlac. The construction of Ibe Titanic carried out under the supervlelon uf Alexander M. Oarllnle. general manng-r of Harlan X- Wolff, the Belfa.t nt'lp bulldrra, whose distinction In the ship building craft Is auch that he haa been made a privy councillor of the British monarch. Mr. Carlisle has bad mure than 40 year' experience aa a Tunal conatroctor. Soma Idea of tha Immensity of the vesaal can be gained from the fact that tn her double bottom alone there were 800.000 rlveta. 1. Inchea In diameter. and the weight of them amounted to 74 ton. The platea In the bottom weighed 4 "4 tons each and were S6 feet long. The stern frame welKheCt 70 tons, me rudder 10" tons, and the boss arm 73 tona aft and, 45 tons forward. Tho largest beam In her waa 92 feet lonu and weighed more than 4 tone. Three million steel rivets were used In bind ing her massive plates, and the total weight of them was 1200 ton. The Titanic had nine steel decKS. i ne hull nil divided Into 30 watertight com partments, the doors of which could ba simultaneously closed by throwing over a lever on the bridge. With officers and crew numbering 80. the Tltnnlc was capable or carry- ng 3000 to 3500 passengers cabin tan-l steerage. She was built to ue me las. word in slo, speed, power and sea luxury. When he was In this city on a nriec visit in July, 1.10, Mr. Caiilslo was en thiiBlastlo for big ships. There was, ho said, practically no limit to the size a bin could be built, but ne. couia not do all thnt he wished in that direction, beeausehe had to consider channels nil docks. In designing size he was limited in the matter of speed by tho willingness of the traveling public to pay the cost of It. The problems nf andllng and safeguarding tn8 monsters had been solved, he said. I.lke Apples and Apple Pies. From London Chronicle. It is a good thing to find tho world onestlv praising apple pie. Wemow call it apple tart, but we English like well under any name. Apple any thing Is good for man, and more than 11 else tho apple as it is. That is hv one grudges the disproportionate laim upon the apple made by cider. Tho traveler In the vast and not. beautiful continent of America, Bpeodtng through something like a thousand miles rf maize fields, thinks with a primitive bu-' man Joy of human food grown on this enormous scale. "The" hungry genera tions" con bo fed from this land for some ages to come, at any rate, thinks the wayfarer; and soon he hears that most of this "corn" Is to make whiskey. And in Somersetshire, when the branches with their polished apples ara so loaded thjit they have to be propped, the crushing of those generous globus for the fuddling of the ruatlc Is a pity: Could Administer the Oath. Talent, Or., April 23 (To the Edi tor of The Journal) If a man la a candidate for office and at the same time he Is a notary public has he the right to register and swear In voter at the polls on election dayT SUBSCRIBER. (The circumstance that the notary is also candidate for office would not along the Dath ileadlv rn tho ,.i-1 debar him from administering the oath The real question before the sen-lhiPs. The hull of a ship, or any other to a .votr wh0 desires to awear in bla ent or prospective dairy farm. How !ate committee j8 not what jsn-aT object, sinks in water because the j vote-) can a man expect to earn good divi- did but how and whv did so manv 6p"cl..ic fravlty 4 r ",e thin ln ! .,r ia. oul now ana wiiy aia so many question is greater than the specific dends in dairying on ?lo0 an acre lve8 happen to be sacrificed, and i gravity of a corresponding bulk or vol- F land? The professor may know very well that there is a little country called Denmark, on the shores of fhe Baltic, that haa an area of 15,300 square: miles and no more;, but sup ports ln comfort a population of 2.385,000 and morei Not only does what are the safeguards to prevent ! of water. The floor of the ocean other disasters. 1 I .!:.. . u l.L oredge, were legion. His hopes and his as-.this old country raise enough but ptratlons -were like those ot other Iter for' her own people -but exports men.' There was a wife at home, and 196,000.000 ponndij of butter annu- mother. JTterti wasat a reason in I ally. The Danish fend is not nearlr i oo.se, he product of matters animal and Not all, but a good niany of those mineral, which, have sunk er been car. who are hammering Ismay would J"' frJm tft surface to the grey depths V, -. ,! ! ... V. .... !..!.. l.nA ' . I 1 forded the chancre. Congressional Eloquence. From the Philadelphia Record. In tin patriotic outburst ln the house is found to be covered with the ocean soldier.1 isaya the Washington eorre- The attorney general of Oregon holds that, since Roosevelt did not receive a "majorftjr' of the vota in Laws and Penalties. Sellwood, or., April 23. To the Kdlt or of The Journal This question will naturajly'arjse In tb minds of aome. whether or not Ood spondent of th NewYork .World, Hie other day, .vepresentative Cyrus A. Sul loway, former chairman of the house corhmlttee on invalid pensions and au thor of. the fiulloway pension bill, ran amuck with eioquencev Towering above his colleague, Sulloway walked up and down the. aisle and wived hla hand over th leads of hla: kearera. - . "Yea." He declared, "we'll all get to Pointed Paragraphs The will of a widow may mean a wed ding. a a Even a barber can't always Judge a man by hi mug. a The open season for hunting flats will be with us soon. Most women would rather alped about than Ignored. be goa- Spring Poetry (Contributed to The Jonrnat by Walt Maaon,' rtba fatuoua Kanaan poet. Ilia pron.poema are a ' regular feature of this ctiluma la Tba fatly, Journal.) i waa reaDonsihu I lor th wreck of th liner Titanic. Ca tha grara. WU get there Uf w live. By kicking' yourself R..I possible to aei oaca at your best friend a Money raalae the, mare go In order to avoid getting the horse raugh. Even when a bill collector finds a man in he Is apt to find him out The airship- chauffeur looks down nn the chap who runs an automobile. a "il A aympathetle wan usually avmna. thlre with hlmaelf more than with others. a Pearl Indicate tea ra especially If your better half has aet her mind oa diamonds. . It la , indeed, a blessed thing that lota of words will rhyme with Spring; there" wing and king and sing and bring, and fifty-seven more, by Jlng! And when we've written "sunlit leaa," we have our choice of trees and be-is, and breeze and 6neer.fi and fleas and cheese, and sundry other words like these. And when we speak of "aiure skies," we- have a stock of flies and pies, and stye and sighs and maiden , eyes oh, watch the sweet a f fat us rise! There are so many words that rhyme.-'V the poet has an easy time; there's clime and thyme and crime and prime, "and : now and then perhaps a dime! Of course we have to ring ln babbling streams, which brings us round to' twl-' light dreams; and then, aa Inspiration1 steams, we reach for themes and scheme and beams. We must refer to sighing woods If we deliver' would the goods, and this leads up to noble pine,;- . suggesting vines and twine and shltii. Oh. thunder! Any healthy bard could loaf around In. his back yard and writ spring poems by th mile along tha old accuatemed Style. The same old verd-4 . ant woodland looks, the ram a old bug. hous babbling brook! Th sam old' bird on joyous .wing, the ama oM . harp, th aam old string. ' Cepyrtrfct. tail. Iiy A ij fiaora UitUew Adam. ULfeliJI ISafM . r- - V