THE OREGON DAILY TOURNAL. PORTLAND, TUESDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 8, 131! THE JOURNAL l.NPEPESDE.Vr'NBWSPAPKR. : C " 1ACKSON. .Pebllabar I'ukiiftied tmr cranio, taicept Saodart trry Sandr nornln. it Tba Journal Build-in-. It ao4 XiiublU IU.. Portland Or. ' EDterrd at U poatofflce at Portland. Or., for tnnamtMioa torou.. U alalia u atcon tuna matter. lKI-lCFHONEB "Hats 11T8r- -08t' . All eepartmaBta reaeard by tbesa numbaea, . au to operator wnat department J"" iOREIGN ADVERTISING KKtraSSENTATlVK. Rntnmin a. ,Kntnnr pa.. Hranawlck Bollulnf. t25 rtrUT atMine. New Vers! W Peuple Baa, BuildlDf. Chicago. - SwbecrlpMpa trrroa by mall or to any addreaa tm uia Laiim atataa or lleZKO. , - ' narr.v Cm ear........n.O& 1 One molt. .BO .,.-. ' ' SUNDAf. ' On fear ........ 12,50 I One nwnth........! -2) " DAILY AND 8CNPAX. ' On rar .$7.80 ) One moot.. I .83 " ' Whw we are young, we are -Slavishly employed 1 procur ing something whereby we may live comfortably when we grow old; and when wa are -old, w perceive It is too late to live as we proposed. Pope. , AN ILLICIT PARTNERSHIP rHAT la the social status when the property controlled by a Portland councilman is rent-1 ed for a .bawdy house? . ,v What is the governmental status , when there is revenue for Portland , conncllmen from commercialized vice and when a police commissioner de fends In the police cpurt criminals whom the police are, trying to prose utef . . Bawdy house keepers pleaded guil ty In a Portland court yesterday to violations of the law in a house con- trolled by a Portland councilman. A Portland police official recently ''resigned in the face of charges that 11x9 had used his position to extort . ijtrlbn to v from keepers of bawdy l houses. " i --. ?;r lt la time; for the partnership be tween Portland vice ' arid". Portland jtovenjment to be destroyed. 5 3 ill. AN OPTDHST PRESIDENT OE3" President Taft read the . newspapers, or is ' he served with expurgated, editions fjni which U has been blotted cut out which might disturb ' I 'the serenity of his view on the best --of all-possible worlds? " "I have every reason," said he, "to J ba r satisfied with political condi . 4 tioas." He there refers to what he calls the "trend of the te toward 't'tho Republican party, Its platform and 1tscandidates." .... Since Gover , nor Wilson and Mr. Bryan are equal , I Jy -well pleased, only substituting t Democrat for Republican In the trend of the tide, and make no secret YxA. It, there is mly left the- Progres sive Colonel and he also says he lg !LweH. satisfied, being sure to win. According to the very amusing straw , ; vote taken on' the same street at Corvallls- by one trom each party, "the result entirely depends on who - collects the votes. " r-.The president takes off the gloves J . to "handle two or the colonel's -pet v measures. Singularly enough, as to L'the general minimum wage, he con- :. .densea Governnr Wllsnn'a itomnnt.. tlon the other day that "it would have a tendency to bring down the -maximum to the minimum." Is this - Indeed a "quack nostrum"? The I "president so classes it. j ' The Bull. Moose proposition of an interstate trade commission fares : J even worse. "I am utterly opposed f. to it," says the president. "Such a 7 tsontrol,- tecause not guided Ly law, but by personal discretion, would be J; both despotic and socialistic." There tpeaks the lawyer. Governor Wil ton's objections cover far wider 1 , ; ground. His deeper insight sees in - ,-rtho Bull Moose proposition that the , results of regulation of the trusts by " an appointed commission would mean - both sanction and perpetuation of . control by them over the Industries -of America. Of course the president must lilt ' at the Democratic candidate on the S?? ,0,r,eVe?r !lly and res the careful qualification the governor made of that oft auoted t.iir-! t...' those who take frnm m. Tn . i inosewno take from the shelf Presi-1 Canldi Fenruary " J? w 11 r"ra TuV feuruary, iaij, v in reran his rfpm.inf onstrations to the farmers how thVv -tould safely dlsnon. Z 7 e farmra h u THE YAQIINA BAR HIE sad accident to the new ht ' 1 The Pilgrim, in attempting to i cross in over the Yannina bar ! t--"BL me uvea of the five men and boys on board, must have strongly appealed for sympathy to .the hundreds of visitors who, during many summers, have watch,! iv, i the Yaquina headland the eda-, 0f,'nou8P' a dairy laboratory, a depart- j tun luuj, luneis 01 me j-'aclfic break- (ing in foam on the bar below ti. - scrne Is too beautiful to be associated ' (with sudden death. Yet the doru.nn-' ' forces of the ocean were there -in ,the time, lying in wait for the too : - -"trusting navigator. t : . Sfhce the work of Improvement of i the entrance made Itself felt veoaoiJ varmus eizes ana desrrlntinno ; have aone safel v in niu,., . . " "ui. mit ai ways knowledge of tbe cleared and ; deepened channel, and the following It; without unceasing deviation, have been required. : ,4 The danger has ever been, and al- ? ways will be. that famin contempt. ?: Descriptions of the V- v r . . j 6 BC- , v tldent so far received appear to dls- -- ill IJI t'CIIH ciose tno cause as lying not in the ,. ba-4airatK-frora-th errr- t,t,rtn ' tha course follow hv th. I vuo iuuik luauwea rjy ine boat If this be so a heavy toll has been r'v1. and a lesson given which should smt as a warning to those who use .Jls not oijly this but airother"lIKe"eTi - trances along oar coast. There Is a road of safety, but It must be In - variably followed, even If the sun be 6hinlng. the winds light, and no dan gef be in sight TO KILL COMPETITION T HE Tallroad-owned Bailey Gat- sert has , been-put on the-run between Portland " and The Dalles .on the schedule of the Open-River-owned steamer Teal.. There is evident purpose by . the railroad to kill off the Open River line, if possible. It was but yester day" that the Open' River company was in the throes of dissolution on account of lack of patronage. Noth ing but a rally by shippers; and by the men who had financed, is losing enterprise for seven years kept the boats on the upper Columbia. It is only usual for railroads to operate steamboats when It Is their purpose to kill off river competition. So high an authority as the inter state commerce commission is on record- as declaring railroad operation of boat lines and railroad ownership of water terminals to have been the means by which navigation of the waterways of the United States has almost been destroyed. So eminent an authority as the congress of the United States has pas$ed a law prohibiting, the use of the Panama canal by railroad owned steamship lines. Under the circum stances, it is extraordinary for- the railroad owners of the Bailey Gatzert to place that steamboat on the schedule of the Teal. Will the shippers of Portland and of the Inland empire permit the Open River line to be 'driven from the Columbia? IS THE FAR3IER "PASSING"? T HE writer of an article In the Atlantic Monthly for October says that under the new condi tions of agricultural life the farmer Is "passing." He grounds his opinion on several facts. The first is that under pres sure to. Increase the products of the land to meet the Increase.of popula tion, and the rise of prices therein involved, Intensive cultivation Is uni versally demanded. - He argues that since more laborers are required for this new method and are not forthcoming, the farmers, unable to secure labor,' are gravitat ing towards the cities in large num bers. Further, that' the "dangerous leasing system Is being rapidly ex tended, and that the ultimate result will be the application of Big Busi ness to the farms. He foresees large areas of land falling Into one owner ship. The prospect is that capital In great sums will be provided for the equipment and working of big under takings, and that the farmer will dis appear. But this writer overlooks the im portant fact that intensive cultiva tion means that the owner of large areas, now only half farmed, will se cure even greater profits and lead a much more Interesting life when his" labor and energy is concentrated on fewer acres. Instead of aban doning his life work and flying to the city that Tarmer will he anchored more firmly on the' smaller acreage, and have similar tracts to 'sell to others, who will follow that same course which epells prosperity to the Instructed and Interested farmer. In this process is the Justification for intensive farming. This means the coming, not the "passing" of the farmer. , ONE HIGH SCHOOL F ROM Oregon to New Hampshire is a far cry. Yet, in the story told in a recent bulletin of the United States bureau of educa tion of the high school of Colebrook, New Hampshire, and its develop ments, there Is much that should reach us. Incidentally It may be specially commended to Mr. Hanley of Har nPV Br nhnoinir an tf f 1 j ;tion for his efforts for instructed" ' farmers. . . vuieurooK JS a nuie town or 2000 people in an aerlcultnral hm ! r many I SUCcesfulI' filled th nand. I vQtt. pninnj ui.u . v U!S'""V1 J,1u cnooi ror u Bl-U001 t i ""u.raI .erfucatlon- As a result the I men and - women, who left the country for the! city. j Colebrook academy , was incorpor i ated a good many years ago into the .B3iem tu eenera! eaucauon in New j term of punishment. And this test j Hampshire. It is now seeking to j ing is applied to him not as a bur adapt its teaching and Influence to ' elar. for instance, but. aa a man the needs of the community around it. Its sureess is shown by additions to its equipment. This high school has now a treen- uoni. unH, ana a workshop, including both a carpen- 8 a ,JiacksmHn "nop. ComP,ete are given In ag- rloulUlre an(1 tne domestic arts. The8 are he vltal ' Inter?8ts of a large part of the popujatlort of Its disltrlrf' 1 ( 'ebrook academy announces v ucwluo a vocational school. it remains a ceneral hivh j school. The state superintendent. of : New Hampshire says: j Its purpose Is not primarily to make j goo.l farmers, or skilled 'mechanics or professional housekeepers. t, 'pr). , niary object Is the education of the boy 'and girl to become a sincere and effr- k ? ? p . an? wom"' caPa- ble of becoming an educated worker witn material things. . A tur. purpose is to educate the strongest J'wutb twtttd Jihft.Jiu:. ju4flai.4o-a-won - f'. - "' "I1"1. . towa.'rt. ProfesTT nearly thirty years has been r.im.tLl slons and business exclusively, As to the cultural Bide, it is held In this school, at any rate, that then just as truly a cultural develop- "roent":bT' TEe Individual ley or girl 4o be had from competent Instruction 1 In agriculture- and in domestic , science as from instruction la Latin and the higher mathematics. , ine flepartment emphasizes the idea that the American high school must be a distinct source of strength to the community that supports it. A-BILL - TO - BEAT - tnl MM.lrn' 1Viilr tf aPiida a i w ---". defends the initiative measure r which purports to fix the "per- :,, centage , that freight rates on lesc man carload lots shall bear to carloads' and to do other things. There seemslittle need for reply, ;" ; Herywhere an entrance into jalla and geraiea spreaa Detween tne car - i J load and less than carload classes. The other plan is In the interest of certain grocery houses which seek to establish small exclusive eones for private exploitation at the expense of the agricultural and producing class es of Oregon. ' The bill proposes to cancel the commodity and special commodity rates in the state and throw every- thing under the classification. It tends to destroy tne commodity feature which is everywhere applied I and recognized as a means of ellmi natlng the known inflexibility of hard and fast classification The commodity rate enables traf fic to move, gives Industries a chance to live and assist products to reach markets features not always possible under inflexible classification rates. No more important issue arises in the high,ly technical subject of rate making, and yet, here is Mr McCune with the statement that "teamsters rates" can be made the basis of rail road rate making wr. Mcune s Din ouxnt to oe beat- en. There are many commodltv - - rates mat are nigniy important for communal development. The rates on grain,, hay, scoured wool, agrl-l" cultural Implements, potatoes, on- tone, iruus, cement, iime ana numer- ous other commodities ought not to De increased ror tne sole purpose of giving a few Jobbing houses exclu- slve territory of their own to ex- plolt. - ; WHAT IS CRIMINOLOGY T c RIMINOLOGY Is a new science. the outcome of a new attitude of society towards crime and criminals. It had its origin In the discovery of the possible unlike- , , . ' " ness to each other at acts called by tne same name in codes of law and also of persons who were allkA onlv in th. foot n in a.i uu.awtui bulb iua; they had committed bore the Baraefstate says-it is "paramount in rate generlo title. -. v. . . vyUD w. iuuu is cutetiy in- ioicdicu w luv ohcuuiiu siuay or I crime as a social phenomenon To a much larfeer class the special interest io m ciiuiiiiiim bb ouman Demgs. And so these people ask what are the phylcal and mental traits of a criminal what in ha Matni-w criminal, wnai is nis nistory, what are and hav beea n,s haDlt8 what kind of discipline can be imposed on him which shall protect society, chance Of restoration. In the old days conviction of nris- a ... .. . oners for any named crime entailed on an me same punishment. Of this, deprivation of nersonal llWtv .... . . was the least part. The same treat- mem m yiiBuii ur penuentiary was involved, submission to the samn brutal discipline, and requirement oa Iho ooma ri.oln. J . "f.cmS ouu uoiuorai- lzing worK, or worse, degrading Idle- I ness. ' But the Inquirer asks, nowadays. u prisoner rsumDer 120 13 a bur- glar, what kind of a burglar Is he? Is he a once tempted or a habitual and professional burglar? Was he armea, in nis Durgiary, and prepared to Inflict death to escape arrest' Whn wrn hla naanHatnu .u. ...1 nis nistory. wnac tne conditions of his life? Frnm nrh mwinn in r. tv- a arv of th imlPtorminat. acy or the indeterminate sentence ;aiuo. n-i imi ia uui a rougn ana ready way of vesting in the-judge wv' rf ,ki,..! he Is often Toth unp p, really unable to exercise, .... ine anting or criminals, the test ing and trying out of prisoners com 1 ne sitting or criminals, imUtert - to-the penitentiary.-now -be- rf wv gins, not ln Oregon alone but ln a constantly increasing number Of elates, wheu the prison doors close 1 behind him who then begins his The results of the new method have been described as an effort to make the punishment fit the crim inalnot the crime. And this principle is possible of the widest application, to every grade and kind of violators of the r tne law. It should Inspire not only the judge and ' ie magistrate, but also 1 0 I the great multitude who, In aeere- ,. ... , ,. . 1 . "Ksre- gatlon, constitute that public opin- ion which is of predominant power in securing desired changes In th law. WEIXX)M1C TH K XV. C. T. U. F ROM this the lith to the 26th of present month Portland will entertam.the national con- uuuu 01 me w. (j. T. U. These ladies, who will hnn gathered up from every state in thJfar t0 ln my opln,on: ,f h cn- . v . ".jf eiaie in me nnl records Dronerlv ehnw hi. union to make the long Journey to line racmc coast, are representatives v11' jv.0 uaD uvea conatan!- to tfm impress set on it by Its hon- ored founder, Frances, Wlllard. t " , mere is no sphere of human Ufa 1 loreign to the Influence of th w At ..... - - - - . . w- n men's' Christian Temperance Union.' It enters the school room and has1 fori many years Insisted on having taught there the destructive and de- praving effect of .alcohol on every side of a man. ohvslcal. intellectual. moral , It collects the children in leagues of young abstainers and se I cures the organized Influence ; of friend on friend, to hold them straight when - a clean-start : and a Ihahlt 9 tiAal liw " m rs A i. M A Ituf. I ' . V.-. : r . . . 9 means so much.. The W. C. T. U. ,wm one of the first Jigenclea-wherebylgood women sought to reach and to rescue both first victims and confirmed offend ers among their falling or fallen sls- L rpv. .. ...i... . ... prayer and praise Their emissaries have compassed the world, and their voices have been heard in ,well nigh every land, preaching from the same text, for the uplifting of the Individual and the home. " " " The indirect stake of members rf th . n m tt i r.tnBV J , v a , I " T "8. 5. ?iI.tilan l0" duilcu iu a ueyai imeut tor iu Biuujr of such questions. Their represent atives In this city have repeatedly been heard, and always In the inter est of .peace.. It Is a live and vigorous society that appeals to the citizen's of Port land to help In the entertainment of these, visitors and this not for sel fish reasons, hut that on returning to their eastern homes these ladles may all have a good word to say of their treatment in the Rose City of the Pacific coast.- Letters From trie People (CetDmonicitiona mt n m jmim.i fn L' -.?rv?.tn n'.tl vu win; vm hu oi lot papvar. aaouia TOl wa uu worat in Motto ana mwc t ndr "ii ; th.Tte" d."ot rTtob.n MIB allMMI1- M bMi - tt a rim t R.r Portland, Or., Oct 4'. To the Editor of The Journal Will you kindly publish the following In correction and comment on yup editorial of October 8, entitled, A B1U to Beat"? i ou mate tne interstate commerce commission has never acted upon the proposition embodied in the bill. On the contrary, the interstate commerce com- mission has passed and is passing con stantly upon the relationship that hould obtain between carloads and hees thaft carload shipments. It fixed relationship between carload and less fi'" hAp,mnts Pn thousands f articles in the so-called lntermoun- tain rate cases that in many Instances establishes a greater percentage than carried in the initiative bill. Further fmor. the which the nunr.mn onnrt nf th TTnlf. making,' say "the people - may say" now "railroad rates shall be made," and what system or nollev ahall h fnltn i.ie iuriner uia,i primarily ll is a matter 01 national concern and not of tSS carriers receive a reasonable return upon the value of their property." It also tate" that "maxlrnui loading fa clear ly ,n lno interest or. economy, ana a Unh,ntinv in-r.... minim Justifies a lower rate." These points ar th essential features of tbe rate B ii Inlonl Hiihlpot ' la ernrnAoitA hv th. testimony of traffic managers under oath that thelr ratM ln many lntance re based nn teamster's rates. There- ?Ar. , ..r W rrL ---v, - -'-" .wuB.o a knowledge to fix a remunerative rate, if the testimony of trafflo manager la n, the difference at which a thing is pur chased and at which It is sold, or the c08t and th pZ?tlti and th,a U aU tn'" lu rl" ml" URB1S. It- is a misstatement that "it real purpose 1 to provide a private railroad rate for certain grocery jobbing houses.' J b' LA"!!?, ?19 then fixes a uniform rate for all articles and does not single out a single line of DuiLnf" - vl . aCoompanid by no argument for it There la no argument against it. There fore th blH ,nt"rrp,ta ,tMl' roany of the other bill do. for no argument 1( made pro or cotl( The bill is essentially an industrial bill, and under Us provisions hntire state of Oregon will develop uniformly. Compared with other states. Oregon Is dwarfed Industrially, bnly 5 per cent or tne manuiacturea arucies consumea 1,1 the Btat are manufactured in it, wherea. if the state Is to be saved 0'or?!!iPt' by their past mistakes, and elect develop Its manufactures, which can be done under the provisions of the bill Any transportation student will ad mit that Portland will be a side trip for aH - thrwigh 4raffir between-GaiMfaP-'VJS-0-808- . .. nsili wJe Vim Thai man aariii crhr Kir 1 a an0 eastern points when the projected unrt nontral Oreifon are comDleted anrl with the loss of Transatlantic steamship business now in process, unless manu facturlng is developed, Portland will lose her prestige. The proposed rate bill is ihe only thing that will save Portland, FRANK H, M'CUNK. Bourne's Tariff Record. Portland, Oct. 7. To the Editor of The Journal Regarding the candidacy of Senator Jonathan Bourne, Jr., to uc ceed himself in th United State n oit. T wlah to aav that it look tn m like an egregloua error on the part of our aenlor enator to go behind the rt- turns of the primaries ln Oregon and claim by his action that he should have , - l...t t w mt A . r Vt mm D.!H Deen T, , .1 tilt T V. regardless of the fact that a majority 0f the Republican votes were clearly fast for his opponent. The senator is an undoubted champion of our "Oregon system," so called, and the primary law in th state. Then why should he re fuse to abide by the result of the pri mary election? Thl would seem a Ht tie like the Inconsistency of the Roose velt theory that so, long as the law op erated In hi behalf it Is all right, but wrong " " The real trouble witn Benator Bourne's candidacy before the . prlmarle is not t it . was a aliiiDle cua of f.n.,- on the part of the senator to stand by "VPJiortof therue JExg-. W" Pr0 ef leglalatlon in ti- i 7 'hatit.U 17m bobm M. Laoiiette, the stalward Progreesive 111 rn" ,J.ni.,,a ai' "nate.'in nis lead- .Mhin Tiffin nr twm. utnBsueis t ..... ' '"'? 2 : :..v. .'T pbui xur real revision of ,the inxitt COMMENT AND SMALL CHANG3 . Bryan ana 'Wilson are evidently etlll iiarmonioua. "Infamy"' la still a favorite word of we .oionere, '..... s a '. . It can never be undone, but it needn't ww Muue agani. - - - - -F,ve oandldatee for United States sen. ware ratner more than enough. niAII ! It V. Aai a mm 1a- aaM.ll H off ipe. ana lmaj;ln-4t- a -loud, largj arSlJw!iSln .?,,)r Job but the people offlcef better men, as a rule, for U?2rnlany li,ace th campaign ''just ..... ..w r. aa earner. "" ; wrJgiri,'ifreintn' flea - of poultry, repeated advice raise chickens. of "thl 1S MT'-Jt'- conspicuous caee the aifuLULlk " compared with tne airriculty of successful work. n,n m if llroaa commlsslonas be faHon : di 'lmPrtant eurv-job Investl satlon of express charges In Oregon. States rwf,VTvk4i:'.th United naoituai Latln-Amerlcan revolutionists. Helen AnuM . ' " good. not have done io much the rebel 'habit miTrda1 useful Te Nlcar2gmlr1 S0therland'.8wSrkleu, what was don olid v."l carnpalgn contributlonsrnav ht near v SEVEN FAMOUS BIBLES Tyndale's Bible. nuam lynuaie. a noted biblical translator and martyr, was born ln England, and having become attached Tarn i . . . to the doctrines of the Reformation in the early years of the Sixteenth cen tury, he devoted himself to the study or the Scriptures. The open avowal of nis sentiments and his disputes with church dignitaries excited much opposl tlon. He began preaching in London about October. 1523, where he made many friends among the laity, but none amng ecclesiastics. He was financially and otherwise en couraged Into the translation of the Scripture by his friend and patron,- Sir Humphrey Monmouth. Unable to do so in England, he set out for the continent, and appears to have, visited Hamburg and Wittenberg, but the place where he translated the New Testament, although conjectured to have been Wittenberg, cannot be named with certainty. It is, however, certain that the printing of the New Testament ln quarto was begun at Cologne in the summer of 1526 and completed at Worm. When he left England, his knowledge of, Hebrew, if he had any, was of the most rudimentary nature, and yet he mastered the difficult tongue so as to produce from the original an admirable translation of the entire Pentateuch, the books of Joshua, Judges, Ruth, the two Samuels, the two- Kings, First Chronicles and the book of Jonah, so ex cellent, Indeed, that to this day his work ia not only the basis at Tthose portions of the authorized version, but consti tutes one tenth of that translation and very largely that of the revlaed' version. The Tyndale translation appeared be tween 1525 and 1531. Most of this work was accomplished during those mysterious years, ln places of concealment so secure and well cho-j downward, but it is a well-known fact that he did not do thla. While it 1 true that Senator Bourne V,. J en to the state an excellent serv ice ln the senate in many respects, yet in this very Important particular he ha failed his constituents, and thereby does not meet the full measure of a true Progressive Republican, any more than does Theodore Roosevelt, the rsc uou pretender. Beyond doubt the tar iff question Is the most Important na tional Issue before our country today, and the people want to see it settled; they want to it settled right. that Is to say, ln a righteous way, so that the burden will not longer fall so heavi ly upon the patient masses. Nearly everywhere, Oregon as elsewhere, In the union of states, has this temper of the people been clearly evidenced, and sure ly Senator Bourne has not overlooked this- significant trend of publio senti ment upon the question. But upon his part it is too late to remedy his mis take in voting for the iniquitous Payne-Aldrlch tariff bill a it la too late for President Taft to rescind his mistaken action, which will cost him his defeat. In vetoing the tariff reduc- tlon bills, The only hope left for the people be- I all of the time, will earnestly and hon 8tly '.'stand by their guns" and wage a fight that is the people's fight against uamarwTw a, aauaaa av iiiuii sivufiv if J a M 7 people at this Juncture who will relieve them of any doubt as to his efficient and tjgh action upon this question, and many other important public questions, Iri their behalf, in the United states senate, 1 our "brave and indomitable Harry Lane. ' A PLAIN CITIJfEN. Why He Will Vote for Competition. Portland. Or., Oct. 7. To the Editor of The Journal Until recently my nat ural inclinations were to agree with the Portland Railway, Light & Power Co. that competition ln furnishing electric light to this community would be of no public advantage, -provided we had a commission to regulate the present com pany. But I have changed , by mind, and a we shall soon have an opportu nity to vote upon the question, I shall most decidedly vote to permit competi tion. I will1 give my reasons. When the present' company says. It welcome a commission to regulate pub lic service corporations, I do not believe In its sincerity. If It were sincere, it would start ht before we ,have such a commission to regulate Itself along the lines that will be demanded of it . by the commission. I admit that during the rush hour tome people will have to stand in somo of its cars, especially during the evening between 5 and 6 o'clock. But what shall be said of the policy of taking off so many Sunnyside car ln the morning, that aisles of Mount Tabor cars coming to town at 9 o'clock are filled with atraphanger? How will those straphangers vote, when hey-hav-r-baae t" hlt-eomebody'4 head? .., - A Montavllla man was telling me why he, la going . to vot for competition. Klectriy4lght wire go on his .street within 20 feet of ht house. He asked la have his house, connected with), the wires of -(lh company, and they de T A'7' :'':'.''' -r,:vr':"M ::.-; 'WaHls'ejH-l fai 4ayaV naj. . rnttfK x- NEWS IN BRIEF ; OREGON SIDELIGHTS The first elortrln atn in Wnndhurn made its appoarance last week, U lureji a iuncn counter. . ;;iThe Sllverton high eohool now offers --un, rngusn and German courses. ins enrollment of 100 student is. ex have secured the i-ontrant nf rirllllnir the well at Monmouth for the city .water Oregon Cltr rnnrUi" Thn avravattn for the flew Carneala riiihllo library i well along. It is expected to be finished and opened for the public in , three s Iudependence Monitor: A party found 10 acres of mvumm.nt lanrt urrounrl by good farms near the Newton place on the Pedee a short tlma aao and hss Juat-eompleted filing ra-the-traet for a uomcBieaa. - ; - .Vf'v' ;. k "Forest "Qrftvi tTTaws Tlms t John Kanes f Gales Creek has a large stum puller, which he bought ln Iowa, Th puller, it Is claimed, will yank out stump three feet across, v It works by norse power. lnts ITeraWrr-Klclintai 'TUn Lents resident, who has been engaged in the culture of mushrooms on a smalt scale, brought a single mushroom to this office that weighed, one and a half pounds ana measured, 27 inches in cir cumierence. HUIsboro Lndfirifinrtont; Tha nun street fl usher throws I a stream with such force that debris Is washed into the gutters on either side. Pressure from the mains -compresses air ln the tank as the water is drawn from .the nyarant ana mis supplies tne xorce. Dallas Itemlzere Thlrtv-flva vears ago Mrs. Sol Blessing bought her hus band a cigar for a birthday present Looking through an old trunk last Thursday, she found It, carefully laid away and Intact, and Sol celebrated his sixiy-tnira anniversary by smoking- it. sen that neither the ecclesiastical nor diplomatic emissaries of England, charged to track, hunt down and seise the fugitive, were able to reach them, and they are even yet unknown. Impressed with the Idea that th progress of the Reformation ln England rendered It safe tor him to leave his concealment, he settled at Antwerp in 1BS4 and combined the work of an evan gelist with that of a translator of the .Bible. Mainly through the instrumen. taltty of one Phillips, the agent either of Henry VIII or of English ecclesias tics, he wa arrested, imprisoned In th castle of Vllroorden, tried either for neresy or treason, or both, and con vietea; was first strangled and then ournt in the prison yard, October S; 1040. . lynaaie never had the satisfaction of completing his gift of an English oioie to nia country, but durln his lm prisonment he may have learned that a complete translation, based largely upon hla own, had actually been produced. The credit for this achievement, the first complete printed English Bible, Is due to Miles coverdale. Coverdare had mat Tyndale abroad and Is said to have a- ' "' me translation or the Fen tateueli. "i i name s accomplishment, aava George P. Marsh in his lectures on tbe English language. "Tyndale'' - transla tlon is the most important philological moment or tne unit half of the Six teenth Century, ' perhaps I ' should Say of .ue niiun. iriB ueiween. vnauoer -and Shapespeare, both as a historical relic and. as having more than anything els coruriDuiea io nape and fix the sacred dialect and establish the form which the isioie must permanently assume In an see, Tomorrow-The Great Bible. -, manded a minimum, charge of 11.40 per month. He refused to si an the con tract. A few months after he changed ma mum, dui rouna tne price had gone to $1.76 a month. How do you think that man will vote? And hla nelghbora? There seem to be some evil geniua in tne omces or tne Portland Railway, Light & Power Co. that la bound tn ereate hatred toward It just at a time wnen u neea publio support. A SUFFERER. Direct Tax or State Bonds. Oregon City, Or., Oct. 5. To the Edt tor of The Journal The stand you take In discussing the tate aid bills tn The Journal of the third lnt.. will work out pretty well in big business, where large sums of money are being handled In doing business, but when it coma iu levying a one mm tax on all the tax payers of the etate, it J an entir- .jr ""iweni inmg, ana the effect are entirely different Every body car. manage to spare a one mill" tax aeh year out of his earnings to build road with nd In this ease, every dollar of direct tax that he pays. is. j ttt- putting that dollar out on Interest for 30 years. Some may have -to ecpno- mf.v .1 le In orler t0 th'" money, they may not be able to buy such a fine suit, or such a fin buggy or quite such a costly car, but If they did not pay it, the money would not be put out on Interest, but would sim ply be used for luxurlpa on f- uc"l aeeper and deener hnttTtfT- 'rta one else to build their roada for them, and at th time the first bond become, due. Mult nomah county would be required to raise more every year to pay her in terest and sinking fund, than the whole state would have to raise with a direct tax. GEORGE HICINBOTHAM The Old Way. Portland, Or., Oct. 7.-To the Editor fn J. 'Jornal-An article In thl. morn mi ?tTni ((totw 7) under the o iv - . ;UCky .Dofr" " "markable only as a demonstration of the mental strength of the ordinary Republican Thoae exercising the frinchlse T prlv": logo are supposed to acquaint them, selves with the issues fo? which theV are to contend,- and .upport those thev fKleo: "H?.. apLoack a in the '70 the Republican whip ha snapped the enslaved and driven them, into line- oftn by coercion of the-poor employe with an implied threat of . dlsohari un'ce he voted according to the die tate of hi master. - q. c, n. , j Who Han This Magazine? Redmond, Or., Oct. S.To ha m. of Th Journal.Belng a contnt read- r vi jour vatuaoie paper, i ask the aid of your letter column in locating a Mn. ey magailn' of 1909.1 The only means of identification a to wliT'v"! I an article on "Th Lot Blue Bucket Mine." . contributed by Salem. O? man hi name unknown to me. IWwlirbo greatly appreciated it any reader of The Journal noaaaaaino .v. rlgbL Dumbei.j3f.ai(Lmagain.wiu man, hi name unknown to m. - - - J. W, SHIVELT. Boy of 14 .hot a comnanlon. h wounded him badly; c T hi Hroti er of 19' uiiii tt,. .nn.. i,. '. , .Ui little girl. O' whafanloe plaything for a half grown boy a guti lat , . ' Ttird Party Coliesica h (Moody' Magazine.) That the new-party wlll poll a big vote this year goe without saying. But that they will stick together on any such program at Is outlined in the platform is absurd. : They may succeed .In ma.hlng the Republican party and n time supplanting it, but If. they do the Jatter their wing, will-be clipped to a decided : degree, for they can only r bold permanently together by concen. '; Ji .on 8me definite and harmonious I prmciples and not undertaking to throw " op to.vry orank 4nd-thorlt In the land. . . - s. . .p : .. f . But whil w need not take thl. new V party too seriously tlil fall (except that J.wlUt "complisiL tn defeat of ik Mn Taft), there Is a !gniflcanc Ui " thl movement which hould not be lOBt -..".S: vEhtt Chlcao gathering was made -up to th extent -of probably 85 to 90 tJ Ptwnt-of-formerRepubiioansVWTfie program ;o.,1 enthuslaUcally adopted J how, how-remarkably political and -conomlQ ideas and view hav changed -iU this country in recent year. Even M tour year, ago.'" when lit - Hooaavaif. ? m jollwu forcing , through t . iui9a or nr. xart, there waa-: .n,, -T!r- ,8ma11 Pontage. - the -Republican delegate who wr in tor La Foiietta- ler rh Tnaii ri.r,v ri , rr but it will be remembered that.h had - v,,! corporara guard' around him. NOW we flnrtt hn... .k.. .w. t .. fabrio of tht "old .Republican party . ia w permeated , with "radlcallm. . , Who would hav ben rash nougri to trdict.r" u?,ur - that "Tim" Woodruff! - ""JUnn. George W. Perkin.nd , Frank Muny would b out for th re- S . I. , JudM8 for woman "uffrage, for imum "d for the regula- .. tlon of prices , v. Urinr y,AM hvn " -'' n hla supporter hav. hown a profound limnn - state of public tne tendencies -developed In th Dmo- W nBtHPanLaI' would not hav. ' ?5ht ' ln8lnloant; but her nfCmltJi ZL pam m in oia partar, I rtyVMrigdhtJt6re"t' aDd .Poi5M Always in Good H umor HE HAD THE LAST WORD. From the Boston Transcript. A lecturer was annovi h.. . the audience who lnalataii . . va takkim tut asking question. "Sit down, von aaai- said a second man, Jumping up. "sit down, you too." cried a third man: "you are both asses." "There seem tn ha . about tonight." put in th lecturer calm ly: but for heaven's aake lat n. h... one at a time." ., . "Well, you go on, then." said tha . man, resuming hla seat. FINANCIAL, Exchange. T don't know whether it 1 a m . thing to encourage women to go into politics or not." said the man with the furrowed brow. ........ "Surely you do not douht that- bllltyr ' 'Not In the least But think of fh appalling sum that win ohange hand If they get to betting hats on elec tions.' TRAPPED. From Birmingham Age-Herald. HI conscience hurt And he was sad; He ne'er would flirl Again, egadl The reason why? , Oh, can't you guess? ... . With aoulful sigh The maid aald 'Tea." RESULTS. ' Exchange. Advertising i a great thlna." aald th Cheerful Idiot, a he laid down the paper. "How do you figure that out?" askad the Old Fogy. "Here's a man who advertised for a boy on Monday," replied the Cheerful Idiot, "and on Tuesday hi wlf pre sented htm with one." Chicago Record-Herald Tou're going to the smoker tonlrht. ren't you?" , "Nop.' "Why, the boy are expecting you." "Tea. I Intended to be present, but veu see. wo have th recall ytm In 6ur family, and my wife ha Just srer. clsed it." Pointed Paratfrapns Th wedding ring I a exoluslve cir cle. a There 1 little doubt that th young: dl good. Host people would rather take adrlc from stranger. A fool and her money frequently mar ry Into th nobility. a a " . Th straight and narrow path doean't look good to th rounder. a Blessing often come disguised, butF the wolf at your door never doe. f The more Justice some peool mkt thm less they are Inclined to boast of It, a a X algh-prlcad. box at the opera seem - less expensive to some people than th cheapest church pew. A woman I never willing to admit that she waa In the wrong until after . the man ha apologized. a When Dam Fortune knock at a man'a door he always "rubber" to e If the neighbor are looking. a ' a And It might be well to take a course ln .physical training before you start out to show a man the error of his ways. . a : Every mother is firmly convinced that she Is capable of picking a better usband for her daughter than she did for herself. Warning to tne Voters of Oregon Th proposed amendment to the rat Annstitutlon which will appear, on th- ' official ballot n November a "Noa ; 808-t. " carries, win taKe away from the people the right to govern them. .elve in tsaation matter and return to the legislature and predatory and nrlvate Interest the power to Wo. - lals" auu - .uuu measunau I th inference ...at u,e peop lrs"V I upon auoh thing at the poll.. jZttY voter who believe, the peopl. lhou ,ia and who believe, "unequal tavn- nnr I II -' '-'(--..lil in hn.. in,-"; ""trf-T-Tieireve that the people at the ballot box .hould have th. right to pas. upon taxation rrtea.ure- - om .ff,cUvefc MT7t I .manVimlt i ' "ug prW vant the amenumcnt from ''law of Oregon." C. S. JACKSON, . .Portland, Sept. 10, i2, . vw'ow"; HWjsW jean-asajaVm.i-fc-s