JHE' OREGON DAILY JOURNAU' ifORTLAND. ' .THURSDAY; EVENING,; MAY ; 16, 1912. THE JOURNAL A'T.'.'1'or the great Ciatskni aqueduct '' te r ..supply. Their work baa been bo a itiEevDiENT kkwbpapku. ' BntiBractory, mat me c. a. Jackson. T.ibiuiihave orderod six additional locomo- " ! ...MA Htt ftf lit. A iTl . i-Tfrtendnf ominit t ti joumiii iM-.fastening completion of the work. ..Irt.-Wftl.-.M Y.mMM .treeta fartl p,,,. ,0c0nl0ttve fe- :t'i'Jilr the third rail or' trolley, hut Bi.tnr.-; , : tha absence of these reauiremenrs in limn. ofrA l.oftorv rnHn fJnorlal 1 LI.KPHllMtH Huh JI71: aii ... . ...... i. i,,.aa mini in iho onomtor whi nnrtiwrtriji ; ly adapts It to tunnel or iulning H'RKtr.N apvkrtisimi rki'h prsKM ' vk work . There Is claim that they are ; ?in able to haul a beavyfload a dla r. . w.uMinp. niiincn. jlaiue of 100' miles yltl?out being ro- Sutwrrlpttftn Trfmn by ddH charged. 'T ua,i.y I A few years may witness constd ' : rtf... nw;'1" montii 'jerable changed -In the smaller trac- . ' rr.T.' ."...'. I2.m i onmnnt. -;tion activities by the development pAitnSntl. ;'"i application cf the storage bat i. ... tcrj i l,.The lust of gold succeeds the rates of conquest; Tha lust of gold, unfeeling and ' ' ; remorseless! The last corruption of dogencr- . ate man. v . Dr. Johnson. MK. I'KK.VS riiAX THE CRINKLK T THE New York Evening iW haa ascertained that "President Taft's campaign lieutenants say ' , ; '. that several members of the Oregon delegation will vote for his renominatlpn j.t CTticago because of a 'crinkled la the stato law which will give them the necessary excuse." ' The crinkle is not in the Oregon law but In i curbstone opinion by the Oregon .attorney general. Hia opinion no r.ore reflects what Is In the preferential law than what is in the latest cook book. . ,; Under the law. the Tatt men in the delegation are Instructed to vote for Mr. Roosevelt, and If they do ' anything else so long aa (here. Is a chance t6r Mr.' Rooseveltfe nomina tion,' It will probably ' be .the jaflt time they ever go to a national con vention. THE 6TROXG , ARM EMMA GOLDMAN'S manager was tarred and feathered In San . Diego. Tuesday night, and Miss Goldtnafl driven from the city. It was mob violence, and mob vio lence Is inexcusable- It Id. of .a kind . i with, much ther violence in San Diego during the I. W, W, engage ment there. ft But t W. W. agitators are them ' selves advocates of violence. They boast. v that they are - direct-action men... Their creed is to be founti on thlfl page, and it is a. creed that will 'divorce them from the sympathy that many' good people have been .'wont to extend their propaganda. , Their Invasion of San Diego waa a violent proceeding. They hurried Into that city from every part of the , coast. ' r Jhey- pretended that - they were .-lighting In San Diego for the rlghjt of, free speech, when in fact ' they, were'defendtng free riot. ' , Preservation of free fipeech 1b not to the slightest extent dependent on ' any acts of the L W. W. Almost without exception, It has been enun ciated, confirmed and upheld by the Afnerican courts and It will forever continue to be upheld bf the same v authority. It is the -one American HERB Is no use' to encunilier the November ballot wrth Mr URen's measure for 'a new kind ot government in Oregon It would not pass. It ahould not pass. It would not pass, because, the people of Oregon are not ready to change their form of . Government every time they change their clothes It would be beaten out of sight, be cause it proposes revolutionary changes that would frighten citizen into a bitter and overwhelming op. position. it would be voted down over whelmingly, because it proposes to convert the state Into a government al experiment station. It contains almost every new fad in government that has been heard of from New Zealand to ihe North Pole. It contains a little of almost ev er;thing from the shor,t ballot to Chinese suffiage, some of it good and some bad. If there is anything new that has been, proposed as government experiment which is not provided 'or In the plan, Mr. U'Hen aoerus to have overlooked it. In practical effect, it provides for an almost -complete new system of gov ernment and . docs not hesitate to proceed' far In legislative enact ments. It Is almost a new constitu tion'and a new code of laws. It not only, provides new jjl&ns of adminis trative and- legislative government for the state, but-complete new ar rangements In county government. Though Mr. U'Ren. .has aided In doing many good things in Oregon, his proposed plan will create theim pression among those who' have worked s'de by side with him In the past, that he ia going too far In gov ernmental tinkering. By a vote of 49,974 against and 23,143 for, the -people voted down a proposal fo a constitutional con ventlon In 1910, but in 1912 Mr. U'Ren has, held a little constitution al convention of his own ; and may offer the frult-ftr'tts labors to the electorate. - There Is ho use to burden the bal lot with It It would be beaten and It ought to be beaten. A NEW , LAW WORKIXO T HK State Industrial Accident Board pf California recently rendered Its first decision. In the case of Harry Christ, an dagger, and. the good ofces of the I ' the Paclffc Tofephone & t ryr w .aa ,yh a I Telegraph company, who lost an subtract one whit from Its majesty. eye while at work. Th A nAflillarltv nt n nA L... 1 . c T. nit I n a 1. -1 I ...... . -T taotJ nao tbat th 'obs of th0 eye did BOt actu " a "i Kii 'v ''a . . hm. a,'y Pvent his subsequent working, and established customs. The city ,,. H1H v ! t)Ut d,d impair hisj permanent earn- . 7 M ig poBsibllitles, by making It more nil (ntprnrlKP It who rirtllRh fnr ..... ... . . B " 7vTi tr r x. 1 !.aincuu tor him to obtain employ the I. W. W. to eo thera with a olan i , . ... v . ' - ....... .. 7 -luient wnen competine witn other workers possessing their full equip ffient of human, normal, power. The final ruling of the board was to change the arrangements of things. It was foolhardy to expect to do so by violence where so loag as they undertake to ehange existing order by the strong The failure they made Is the same .haf ' ,tt,, ,V, ,ni ,.. . I """" vuuya,ujr OUUU1U UIIOW U16 x-urc .wu. iinjured ,man; $100 for medical and surgical expenses, fiill wages for the time spent in hoppltU, $65 per cent ofjsages for t!?e following eight weeks, and, 65 per cent of his prob able loss in earning power thereaf terthe whole amounting to $1.30 a weejc-vfqr a maximum period of fifteen fears, or. $1?J4. For the loss of an ye, a Jury in the circuit court for Multnomah county awarded damages in the sum CROOKED JUSTICE BRANDT has been ordered by the appellate court to serve thie ' remainder of his thirty years sentence In a New York prison. ' The charge against him was bur glary, but a recent New York grand Jury, after hearing the evidence, de welded that there was not. enough "testimony to constitute first degree bnrglary. It Is alleged that the Judge vbo sentenced him w-as mis led as to the former record of Brandt, and it is further charged that money was used by a rich pros of 111,300. HOMES IN THE .NORTHWEST A FEW days ago Speaker Champ Clark said to ji large assem bly, "To me the most painful feature of the day in which we live (II to RPB A PhnatantW 4nMaBtn ecutor to railroad the defendant into !8tream of the very best American a long prison term. j citizens . of this . country going to . r The case involves not so much the Manitoba an Aiwt- personal fate of Brandt as-the vastly' Why Js thla etrPam of departUTefl -greater issue of the administration ! still in flow' - . of the criminal law in aw state of What are the .attractions of Al- -berta, which outweigh, the ties of - -a " ' .. j nome ana patriotism and entice iy and. fully as regards Any one of the seven atatea.of the. American northwest the . Northwest Develop ment league was formed, with the seven governors ' as ' the titular heads of iti, and James . J. Hill, the railroad, .builder,1 as its, sponsor. The ; league'! booklet, entitled 'How and where to get a new home in the American northwest," Is Just published. Regarding each of- the seven states It gives similar details all either obtained from official sources or from reliable and, sane in formation secured from widely known organizations and men. For each state the booklet gives, population, land area, number of farms, land in farms, average value of land per acre now, and ten ye"ars ago per acre. It givos areas sub ject to homestead entry, surveyed and unsurveysd if any, It gives state lands for talo and the mini mum price per acre. ' ' Then official flguros of' climate, and climatic observations. Next are lists of the commercial clubs and local development leagues all-over each state In turn. Then some crop statistics, and the locations of the United States land offices. A Dl'EL OF MILLIONS I has been ' an , Instrument In jieparat ing them." ,' , . A garrison of fourteen men fig ures In the Turko-ltallan war news. It is almost enough to make a full blown Mexican' revolution. - . ircoMMEl AN V SMALL CHAKQE. : fitrangsi no Juns .flood prediction. A higher, court In New York has reversed two lower courts and held that 'gambling In one's own home is not an offense under the anti-gambling law., And ihe great question is, which court was right? Letters From trie People Articles snd questions for this page k. n w-W,ri nn nn V An, Ml n ft OT the paper and b accompsnled by the than wisdom. writer s name. ins r.nmo win uui ' published, but In desired as atii indi cation of good faith. Will there ever be a law to limit tslkT ......... ( Children in gardens are a beautiful sight. 1 , , - Ths weather always remains Interest ing. ( e Poor Taft; has to fight for his own state. . What's becom of' that Chinese revo lution? !.-: O-hlgh-O; "how beautifully :dotibtful you are, .. ...... omcenty is sometimes worth more IlallotM Better Than Bullets North Plains. Or.. May 12. To the Editor of The Journal In your editorial of May 7, "The Bed Flag," you give tne Socialists some advice- which is tlmaly and to the point. When you say,, rine ballot is the only means by which so ciety can goyern itself," you set forth truth that underlies all civilization. As you Imply In your editorial, the Socialists have a Just grievance, dui there Js a rtght way t'd correct wrongs. and the right way is the quiet ana peaceable way', when we have such manna nt our command. This riieans we have In the ballot. Not only can-we vote for our lawmakers but In Oregon and ome other' states we have the T is reported that the Harriman system Is to add a stretch of railroad .-om Lebanon to Foster Foster is a point on the South Initiative, referendum and recall, and by Santlam. 25 miles east of Lebanon, united effort we can t," , , . j adopted throughout the United States There is also assurance of renewed lf 0 about lt tn B BaD, way. with activity on the Eugene & (Joos Bay thlj-achlevement realised we can then I hav anv economic changes and regrula- - IT. . li'i... . .. . . . 1 tions tne majomy may Though little noticed ny me pun- 10ra flo th, brethren of the red flag 1 11 j . a 1 1 . . lie, mere is a rawroau uuoi vi niiwisriT western Oregon between the Hill and Harriman lines. The stake is the traffic of the great Willamette val ley, and etch system is making strat egic moves for strengthening Its po sition. Now a word to Socialists anout tne red flag: What great truth does it symbollie which is not represented by the stars and stripes T Doea not old glory stand for Justice, liberty and equality? Read the declaration of In dependence and the preamble to our con stitution. If there have been grievous It What thla traffic 1b to be is un- wrones perpetrated under the flag derstood by sh-owd railroad men. It has been the fault of an indifferent . .1 ahar,saA k irtM,-a eltlBenshtp and not.of the fl??. u poiuj vuujL.icuci.utu 'i j .v. However good anJ peaceaDie tne, in who nave watcnea tne increase in the number of trains during the past 26 years. The old mixed train, which car tentions of Socialists may be regarding the red flag, the people look on it as a revolutionary emBiem. v violence and anarchy. Besides, two flags do not look well under tne same Same white horses, painted dark, are ucvuuiuijf iniaivvivii, Among th advantages of the country m iiw iiigiiwiiy vritiura. The faces that go with some summer a 1111 a art uioillUMOnmen t. a. Miss Summer 'twas so unexpect- , w 'Wiguii iv woo icy yoiir ctnn?&ii: iriul"rtilftlo.n jng .-.o .'j ... iiwuoiiuv earnea itwm There may be a tremendously looming .v io.ituiumi tna nis name Js ijryan.' Thousands will go to Seaside all the same; but it will soon be rebuilt better than ever. . ' iIA.,hu,,iftre any delegates against tflBo r an1 Can we peep about anywhere between his monstrous legs to find for ourselves dishonorable graves? . For years snd years 1 have thought I had neon the prettiest woman only to onng. my mind when I saw another . "I owe you at least tlOOO," said a man. "How's that?" "Von nivii m trar? "8t yer t0 buy 8uburban "nail I Country caller says ho and most of his neighbor say, ''Party and politics ba . but we won't write the other I woraj. Pessimistic prediction: Continuous rains for Rose Festival week. Had, hut lota of country people who help feed the world would be happy. Oranges are agreeable fruit, all right, but it takes a good many of them to equal a fine Oregon apple: In fact, no number of, them can equal lt. v Interviewed seven men, by chance: and has never, done any one any good. Don't make use of vile epithets when peaking of your opponents and leave that to" Mr. Taft and Mr. -Roosevelt. They can do that better than you. Stick to the constitution of our na tion, till by united effort we can make such changes in it as will enable us to. uuinuig ana coma learn nothing. Reed Institute will be one of Port land's most valuable assets for thou sands .of years. Do we sufficiently honor the insensate dust that was Simon and Amanda Reed? rled both freight and passengers, has government. .There Is a way to gain (.only one knew his politics be was the a, 1 rru ri.. v,...-k access to the sacred precincts of the 1 on y. one qualified for a Juror knew ui-l.piu. D1"?-- . -""S "Uuman -understanding, but you will passenger train over the east side never aoie to approach that inner line, to California, which was sup- sanctuary of the average American mind nlAtnontori vonra turn hv th Alhjinv with a rod flag. I think one WOUld local, is multiplied into trains every 8UcceM with tho flt,ir' Rnd few . hours, and all are crowded. our revolution, which is already on. Long freight trains are met on many ( one of ballots and the sooner we all a swing,' Instead ;of the single train thAhZJT!!jtJ?tnZ- .f", ... , 14 ! .- down the red flag and holst the stars with occasional extras In the grain and Btripea Logic is better than lead moving season, which was the an- in this case, and ballots will prove more Cient order. effective than bullets. The Oregon Electric is added, and won.t h;Ip ' ur CttUB(. Keep y0Ur many trains speed over lt each way atheism to yourself.- You cauBe some every day. and all are crowded.The I to. thing it is a part of Socialism, it is ... I . ., A n.r.tlu. ntvmria1tfnn.nn nJLSI Man rrom way hole enact laws freedom. that will bring economic W. H. BLACK. the trains, and all are busy with a constantly growing traffic. The rail road dividends of other years are multiplied and multiplying. All this transformation in two or three decades Is to be followed by similar changes In the future. It is the growth of a kingdom. It is the coming of an empire. Nobody sees Believe Bryan .Will be Nominated, tt o rbarlv as do the ahle mon who Portland, Or May 15. To the Editor 1 1 .u. j..ii 11 -i or Tne journal w. j. oryan. oy nena uWiiLrui uie ue.uu.ee ui rwiiunw. i . .,,,,,. ih man America I ine present una mo couung great- 8ver produced, does not have to chase er Waffle is a rich prize for railroad around the country seeking nomination, fHonta tn nnUn1 fnr THlo in tt to a la Taft. Teddy et al. " V " '"I .l .V - T- .1. -..tl disputed by two rival systems, and mMta Bry,n ttt tne rlyht momerit, win I out romi.fi tn in nulr why "extra choice" stuff iit.r. for instance is always quoted low or low est; says he is going to quit raising any "extra choice." Here's hoping Madero wins, soon, de cisively and thoroughly; not that lt Is certain that he and his government will be fit and' right, but rebellion must end somewhere, some time. The more the Republican -psrty, as such or its squirming fragments tries to -extricate itself, the deeper it sinks in the mire. There's Its tariff and trust record of 40 years. Good bye! .. - In the absence of -an east side preach er his wife preaches and perfoi'ma his other ministerial duties douhtlpn with entire satisfaction, to the- people inter- euicu. vYny snouinn 1 a preacher s wire be a substitute, often? Many a woman might make a better preacher than her preacher husband. . , vi OREGON SIDELIGHTS . II. Smock ot Eugene has goose perry Dunnes ,mai prouuee at we toio of -41000 ver acre. . -s-."4m, , -J -n JSUgiine , Guard : Bugen is .buiralng mbre houses than ever before, and w imre juav pejua iq f raw. - Lakevlew's postofflce force is sadly overworked on account or tne rapia in crease of business, which has doubled lu two years. . Bible classes for men and women have been organised 4i tha-l'resbyterlan church at Baker. A membership of 100 la the mark set for the men's class. Albanv Democrat: The street car now has a motorman and conductor regular ly from 7 a. m. to. 7:30 p. m all the time, making oomplete service of lt. A sanitary survey of Medf'ord has hnwn tbit mnillttnna ahnut the PLlMlO school buildings are far frtnti Ideal. The Greater Medford club has Dpened a cru sado for modernlsina all - equipment. ' Eugene Register: JSVllliajn Pwston while workJigui hir garden . dug up a Paraguay coin about the else of a silver dollar, bearing date of 18S4. It had a hole bored through It and had evidently been worn as a charm. - .6orvaJlis Gazette Jlmes: The Felton brothers and Prank Schrack. have re turned -from Lebanon, where they fin Ur.ed plastering tl)e new S28.000 Pres byterian i hurch. Which has been, under construction for the jast year.i . The' Seventh Day Adventlsts of the southern Oregon conference in the past year paid In tithes and special offerings a grand total of $l8.48il.3. The .con ference Includes 14 churches, with a membership of onjy a little above 600. Sherwood News Sheet: Building ac tivity has been rcBumed in Sherwood with the opening of spring, and several t-aaMonnaa are now under contract, with possibility of tTHs being the bl--wt year In her history for the building trade. a AlK.nv T"mncratl... Albany's fire Rlarm box system continues to be In a orrlble condition. lIri fact it never has done reliable wok from the very be ginning, always causing trouble. .It should be rebuilt or done away with entirely. "Burns News: The principal business street of Burns' will be one of the best In the state outside of the smooth sur face streets of the large cities in a few weir Pi Had to srrade " with a fine quality of gravel, rounded off and rolled, it will be hard, smooth and permanent. Th. huiMlnar committee of the Pres- bvtnrlan church at Lebanon, according 10 the Express, has contracted with a Portland firm for the seats, for the main auditorium of the new church, at a cost of about $700. delivered In the ohurch. A Seattle firm took the glaas contract at $400. Condon Times: John Crane has a remarkable hen on his ranctv a White Wyandotte, whirh has- laid 13 eggs, every one of which measures 7-H inches sround and 8 Inches lengthwise. There h. larva nan artrn but to Ret a baker's dozen of the aame site Is rather phenomenal. Lake view Examiner: . Not content with striking artesian water, oil, gas and the like up in the Summer lake sec tion, a vacuum "has now been found on James Partin's ranch. It Js said it came near swallowing up the Hale well drill ing outfit. The well was down several hundsed feet when the bottom dropped out. An attempt Will robably be made to continue in an effort to strike an artesian flow. The I, W. W. CreeJ ; V From tbs Atlantlo Moatolx - i . Lor la. F. Deland contributes a detailed study of the Lawrence strike, quoting verbatim from a, manifesto Issued by the I.W. W.:. 1; t.- vv -.5 ;'V...' . ; "As a- revolutionary organisation ths Industrial- Workers of the Wjirld alma to use any. and all tactlca that will get the reaulte sought with, ths least expenditure of time and energy. The tactics used are determined solely by the power of the organisation to -make good, 1 - tbelr- -se; The traestlen - or 'right' and wronr does not concern .us. "No terma made with an employer are final. All peace, so long as the wage-system lasts, ,1s but an armed truce. At any favorable opportunity the struggle is renewed. . "The organisation does not allow con tracts with the employers. lt alms, . where strikes are used, to paralyse all branches of the Industry involved, when. the employers can least a,fforJ acesea tlon of work durlna- the buav season and .when there are rush orders to. be filled. "Palling to , force concessions from the employer by the strike, work Is re. sumed and 'sabotage' Is used to force the employers to.eoncedo the demands of ths workers:' . "During strikes the works are closelv picketed and every effort made to keep the employers from getting- workers lnjo the shops. .All supplies are cut off rrom striKe-nound shops. All shipments are refused, or mis-sent, delayed and lost if possible, "Strike-breakers are also isolated t6 the full extent of the powers of the or ganization. Interference by the govern ment is resented by open violation of the government' orders, going to Jail en masse, causing expense to the tax payerswhich is but another name for the employing class. "In short, the I. W. W. advocates the use of militant 'direct action' taotlcs to the full extent of our power to make them." T This is not political Socialism, says Mr. Deland. It is not anything; political or theoretical. Thrl'W. W. does not talk, write, or argue. It acts! It cares nothing for "right" or "wrong." It open ly defies government by law. and an- " nounces that lt will use any violence it can commit. '.-""" ouotlnr from flies The Indians Of the Trlnevllle Review, nf $ft valirs ftto: Warm Springs agency experienced one or their old triuai practices me inner dav, that of klllinst one of their doctors who failed to cure a patient. The In dians all pronounced it a Juat act, as they believe an unsuccessful doctor 1? not fit to live. This, -we believe, is the fifth " medicine man they have- killed Within the last five Jyears." 1 Tanglefoot By Miles Overholt SEVEN. PROPHETSrOE THE BIBLE Elijah. the struggle is mighty. It s a duel arise, a hush like as at a funeral will of millions, and it ia betas ailentlv Immediately come over .u ..isy . throng. I nen will oe . inunaerea mrui lu lub fought with - consummate skill and intelligence. It melans more lines, more branch es ana more extensions. It means better tracks, better accommoda tions, more trains, better schedules greater -facilities for shipper and traveler, and a tremendous future ae centuation of western Oregon. A FAMILt COTJKT r HE first year's work of the Chi cago Domestic -Relations court was discussed in the May 11 number of The Survey. The more generally important question convention, the country, the world, an oration that only Bryan can deliver, an oration before which the great speech of '96 will pale into Insignificance. . At Its close the roof will be raised 7 feet 4 inches, hats will go tn the air; delegates will have no hats; they will neither want nor miss them. Bryan will be nominated "by acclamation and he will be elected president. Will he make rood and males-good times? Tea, a thousand times, yts. Bryan knows the-' science of govern ment. Bryan will domiuate the house and senate for right, .something no pres ident in my time (nearly 30 years) has ever done before. Big business, high finance, does not nor ever did want Bryan. Those that the above oppose, I love, Thoy oppose Bryan because they fear him. He la the man or tne nour, turned on the advice of the experts the man of the people. He can save as to horf the work nf that rnnrt thin-nation. He is the Lloyd George of could bei-'extended, and also sim plified. The essence of the new idea was stated by Jane Addams as a law court which was "a place of frlend-H America. . We want him, we. win nave htm; lonj enougn nave we waitea. K. TEiS81AXH. Juuge Hanford's Ruling. Portland, May 14. -TO the Editor of 1 i T......1 i.Mlnv tn nram r a . .... . . .. . .- --iLiiuuuui nT - - ... - - . nip wnere family troubles eould ,,, T M.nford haa annulled the be straigKtened out rather than tan- citizenship of Leonard Olsson ..because gledmir: The establishment of one. he admitted he was a Socialist, and -ad- court to deal with the familv nroh- vocated radical cnanges inne: insutu; iom Q ,v,t .j 1... tions or tne country. ' Batten of Improper decisions, fhflu enced by personal considerations.' He -let off a millionaire smuggler without punishment, but -sent a twen-ty-five-hundred-dollar smuggler to Jail these Americans. t6 the bare prair ies, where the horizon fades into indeterminate distance, and the only breaks in the uniformity of surface are the square box dwellings of the settlers? Always "excentinir the tall ,v" tncHa f h . . l,c raw' ai tu i'roaa aepois, ana . ...i-.V . . a in a night, marking-tho state of fl railrnnfl n-Hnrnov in Wi(A.n:n .i,. clslon in a case tetween ttteonla ! inva6in by the new -railroads of and the railroad, and Is suoiwHed -taif6 "Wtfpleo lands Lands, have had his campaign financed with rallrbad money; And there are others;"" v It ihr country paying proper tt tentlo'a to the selecion of its , judges? , Are we paying sufficient attention to the? selection of Judges in Mult V. : STQRAElX)rOMOTIVES . THE country JUv watching wltn'in terest the development of this storage " battery locomotive, a Kin are now la ui, la con'stmct. intbe tunnels on Manhattan Islaud .... ,''.,... j....-.'. - and yet more lands there Is the at traction that makes up for tfte inev itable risks and hardships of that newest of new' communities. Could not these good people find a promised land .within the boundar ies ef the union? Conlrl not thav ! take root where the whet nv freezes in August in the afield? Where crops can be "rotated and tock. can- ,be reared where j or chards will prosper,, and dairying pays where fuel iB-pUntlful; with oiil4)urnIng,up the-, corn crop" to keep from freeslng? , To answer such fluestlona honest Judge Han ford uMo tk.t Via ni-tnoinln nf fitvin.1 ifim. inckney of the juvenile court. He wMoh nroposes that all industrial ln- chareed narent'al neclect and ineom- stitntinna shall become the common netenev with tho rlelifiniienrv of Tbroperty of the people, IS a dangerous three fifths of the 2000 children who heresy; contrary tp tne . . ,1. v. vi . "I guarantee -of" lire, ltnerty ana property, had passed through -bis court while 5,hna. whn mot.a rate, crude theories he had occupied the bench.. He In- hostile to the constitution are barred stanced one family situation which from citizenship. And this Judge, with lhad involved recourse 'to four courts,' the tyrannical power of a q.r, can en, Th'nnM.m nf ,, ' ji J force' Wa opinion as . law and deprive ..... , 10 uwn 1 , .1. ,,nkh n and nia fran- wnn oy tne county court.. Trouble cni.e a, tltough he were a crlroioal.-l between the husband and wife had Why stop here? lf the principle is cor been before the , domestic relations rect, disfranchise all naturalised Bo- court' Proceedings for divorce had eiaiute ln" 8l" lY .. . X?v 1 , v. iii.,, .x . "r the American torn "Socialist this most been taken in the circuit court. The i.nhfn ri,ht. t interests and the troubles of the i,t it be a crime hereafter to propose children had been aired in his, the changes to the aonatitutlon. Evidently luvenile court.' One -tribunal-, with the thirteenth amendment abolishing 'jurisdiction coverlne all the nhnRoaT chattel slavery waa an outrageous at 1. - covfrias me pnasestor,k on th(J con,tltution, and espeoially Ul oul-" tt l-at"3 reiurm piainiy violated the guarantee to liberty. Wen demanded. , ; deli Phliilns. .William Lloyd Garrison. The chief Justice of the Chtr-a?o4 Abraham Lincoln and others who' be- municipal court proposed legislation 1Iaved ln the dangerous hereby of aboji incfeasinir and miUn'e MMimmiii tlon should have been aisfrahchisedv . It ncreasing, and making continuous, woui4 ,e)sm ajM at thoM wbo gently liability to punishment for family de- have advocated amendments providing sertion. The judge of the domestic I for an income tax and for direct eleo- relatlons court showed the urgent! Uon ot president-and senators are also need for establishing a "delinaueht f"eT" 01 .. , . u- . " husband-finding bureau," In conneo-l nM ..m-. . . tn h. n,M m tlon with - his court; and the - allow- pacer, drawn uio by- men who lived and ance of sufficient funds to make ef I died (before the development of our fectlve such . an agency. " modern industrial system, t New Uaws In the list of aims of the domes: t'Tnnow , " k zz!li tic-relations court,, as stated by the hni cf the- past forbidding growth and presiding Judge, an. Important -effort development. .-.ii.i;-;.rir was to "make" the court eiiuaily as nt suppose: wa even deny socialist good an agent to' l?eep -riusbtfnd And hostility to the eonstitutonal guaran-, wife together fend thuato t-tatTin r le" wt vropeny. . mi untrue , mat "tne lit 'v . I- gt , Socl,lll8t- ,tr ha or Ua mitt object vu v "viuo muucui.O uv iv the oomplete elimlaation Elijah was a Hebrew prophet of the ninth centOry before Christ. It was Elijah who appeared before King Ahab of Israel, who had given himpelf up to the idolatry of his Phoenician wife. Jezebel, and predicted a great drought. He . was compelled to seek refuge In flight and concealment. - It-Was ln thla hiding that he was fed by the ravens in the torrent bod of the stream Cherlth and by the widow whose dead son he re stored to- life. In the extremity of the famine Elijah appeared, before Ahab, before whom he called down fire from heaven to con sume a sacrifice to Jehovah, with. the result that the king ordered the exter mination of the prophets of Baal. He then put an end to the drought by prayers to Jehovah. Late he de nounced Ahab and : Jezebel for having despoiled- and murdered Noboth, and was eventually carried,. to heaven tn a oharlot of fire. i Elijah was perhaps the greatest of the prophets of the northern kingdom. He was of Tlshbeh In Gilead and the narative conoernlng him Is taken from a separate source and contains the tra dition of the prophetical-companies. He lived for a considerable part of Ins Hie in the wilderness of Damascus, appear ing only at intervals ln the land of Israel. . - - - r'? Ha annears aa the most hemic form 1 among the .prophets. I Each of his brief words ln an effective deed. The aw ful apostasy of his people forced him teappear as an avenger. ' His elements were fire and storm. But though he was obliged oppose the, seducers', kind traits ar not wanting In his his tory...... : , . . 1 By Elijah's - faithful- seal -far f Odd's law ha saved the people and reconciled the rising generation with the fathers. THE GOAT. . The grecer stood ln his two shirt sleeves; and be also stood In hia store And he sighed like a hers with the horse-slsed heaves and he rub bered his grocery o'er. And he said: "if I cut down the prloe of soap the gink on the corner there Will give It away as premium dope and cut down my trade for fair. If I chop, ddwn the price on the bakery stuff and lose, say five dollars a day, . The bakers will come with their usual bluff and take all their stale goods away.t ,.. The grocer again sighed a sigh and a haflf and he looked at tits prloe list once more, And then he burst forth ln a sorrel horse laugh, and again looked hia grocery o'er. He found that the margin of profit he made was heading him onto the glide, For the prices he paid to the whole saling trade were high a the In coming tide. ' But he was the fallow who got all the kicks tne nigh cost waa laid at , hie door. And lie picked up a couple of cheeslflod bricks and he slammed 'em, ker plunk, on the floor. Then he took all the -ags from the goods here and there and marked era all over again: 'Til show "era," he said.-"I'm-a regular v baar: the two-bit stuff goes now at ten." When the customers cams they pro- - - 1 ceeded to squeal at thil hlgih cost of food and the like, - Though -the prices were cut from tlia head to the heel, e'en the middle man's profit must hike. And the rustoniMrs kicked and thf-y bawled and-they hewled arrd they called him a robber and thief, And then when he showed 'em the cost prloe they scowled and showed their Inane disbelief. 1 Then the grocer arose In his wrath and , . dismay and kicked in the front of his store,, And he jumped ln the creek at the close of the day, and he hiked to the Beautiful Shore. FrorA the theological point of view very noticeable Is the conscious monotheism contained in his mockery. Tha story of Elijah is rich ln the miraculous and has on this account often been called legend. Yet by his extraordinary power he wrought, great changes In the land. .The principal miracles which he wrought before the people, the an nouncement of .the drought and the or deal on Carmel, admit no rationalistic explanation. EMJah, produced an in delible Impression upon, his contem poraries and upon posterity. The following is an Elijah story A man's friends all know that he is which was very widely-circulated andln,love bve'ore h discovers lt . which was even given a place ln th . Jf thM - 8 BpIn8ter beKlns-to realize" llthurgy. To a pious but very poor man that ghB ml8.)nf; the Mri. ... e It's easy to convince a lasy 'man that he is the victim of hard luok.- ft's all right to think good thoughts, but It's more so to do good deeds Pointed Paragraphs Elijah once appeared and offered him- self as a servant. The man, at first re fusing, finnlly took hirh. He did not keep him long, however, for tho man j neerled a skillful builder for a palace ! which he was about to build; Elijah of fered his services and the pious man offered a high price for his 'seryaiiti Elijah did not disappoint his new mas ter, but prayed to God. whereupon sua Only the real optimist jam smile ia the face of advertlsy and mearrit. denly the palace or tne King Scooa mere ( Tne man wno understands the true in readiness, (philosophy of living Is glad he's alive, The story of Elljah'e translation is, t thus described by the Moslems: God EvSn at' a' society ball clothea do not had told Elijah in a vision to go out of j maba the man. nor the lack ot thra the town and to mount anything which i the woman, he might see before him. He departed j . with his disciple Ellsha, and seeing a ( And many a man gets so mean that horse, mounted It. God covered him , he actually doean't" car what people with feathers, enveloped him with fire, think of him. took away from him the desire of eat ing and drlnktafr and Jolted him to His angels. Aooordlng to Ibn al-Athir, God mada Elijah ox-twftfeaft latarsy ?ma a and" angwf; earthly and heavenly." Tomorrow Hosea. rights In this country." Socialism calls for the common ownership -pf the pro ductive industries In the same way as the postoffice IS now common prop erty. This will not destroy but .increase the property of most of our citizens, who, despite - tha 'Constitutional guar antee of the right of property, find that thoy have little but the "right." So clalists hava no wish o interfere with personal property the Individual home, furniture, books, clothes, etc. Only those densely Ignorant or desirous of arouilns prejudice against Socialism ever make SucTI assertions. . Not only this, but therels nothing In th oortaUtuttan -even as it stands today that would prevent the principal Socialist demand the natlosal owner ship Of tha great. Industries of produc tion and- distribution. ,oniy through far fetched interpretation by the Judi ciary could the contrary be held.-': See for yourselves-fread- the eoalallst na tional party platform, arid then -try -to. rmo.any clause or tna constitution nat Is violated -by. its principles., The " Socialist demands requiring amendment to the constitution are polit ical ones, and are now being- held by a large, part of the .voters ; They are for the easier amendment of tha constitu tion, the aleotlon uf the -pregideaUand Judges by direct vote of tha.peOpla; abo lition of the senate and the adoption of the Income tax which has become, un Trusting the People. - - 'From ths New York Vorld Senator Bourne of Oregon Is oj those - candidates for reelectio should view hie defeat with philosl Calm. He was determined to leav matter of his candidacy entirely to the people. He mads no . whirlwind cam palgn. . He did hot stump the state. He opened no headquarters, had no political manager and did not poUr ' out -his wealth for charity and church organi zations, like '"Colonel Ike'.' Stephenson of 'Wisconsin, tn 'prdtr to influence the voters at ths primaries. ; T8t the people rejected htm and declared that they had had enough of him. . , ; 1 O.n the whole; Jonathan Bourne Jr. has been a worthy senator. -'He Is a faithful and loyal representative of his State. He voloes a good many fads and novelties, but theyVare- the fada and novelties of Oregon. If Oregon bad been ready to try any more experiments in advanced government it would hav found Senator Bourn always sound Sn tha faith. . What Oregon did waa always right and he hoped that-the rest of the unjon wotfld profit by lt progress. But it .is hard luck after such unr auestlnnlng devotloa : tor the principles of hia locality' that the .Iboal ' verdict ahooidmr ar sunrmflnr tocjult Washrng- ton-and return nom. The "peopi ruls t.'.Oregoa,..utAtby:a,ungratful';to' persons who trust them Blindly, and w( iw It makes a difference -whether a girl says she will ba a young maa'a ' slater or his sister's. A woman must . be. prof icient In the art of making up if aha would have a mirror lie to her face. . Many a girl starts out to marry a millionaire and ends bvTaVih In urn li ing to support the man'she does marry. Lay P reach era ts main object copstitutlonal by the interpretation of fear that their judgtrienti ia not alw n of property the supreme court.-. ; w. U, J sound.: j .'; ' '-;:';,,"'. (CoDtribstad to The Journal by Walt Mitoa. the famoui Kudu poet. H! proac-pnema arc reculur rc.tura ot ttala. column to th Utlly JouruiU.) Ah. my. weary heart ls reaching for nepenthe sure and true, . for so many men are preaching that I don't know .what to do! Tired .and stricken, I d termlns soma fat novel to peruse,- and the book turns Out a sermon, and my soul contracts the blues. Worn by worldly strife and hounding to the show I go and find that the-' actors are ex pounding doctrines that dlBturb my mind And the dally prints are screech ing sermons on the nation's crime : and the magazines are ' preaching on the- evus or tna times; all the doctors ate discussing- health rules till they brbig the tears, and the scientist's are fuss ing, pounding texts into our "ear. Ever one is bent olj teaching, teaching us with voloe and tonguei every one Is bent on preaohln till tho Jsst lone dog ia hung;. . It would make the world less solemn, make' quc-.ouroey far more, nice, I.- .'.-once could read a columa that.uoll1atngTfiQ isjotTadvloej .If the speaker in the forum' and the writer' in the prlnta.-wouldn't hag ths folks and bore m ith a strlng ef He,lpm. Hints. L.op,ij0T, 11.11, 07 , i ' Jm Adam. ySJXJl lat I I"