THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING. - renKUAKY-: v, ma. THE JOURNAL N TNDr.rENDEKT KEWSPAPga ft. JilKON. .tj SbwS.j- trwrnlra it Journal BU4 ir. Till (iHf JdmnlU U!.. PortUud. Oft Enturtd tt tli poatorflc at Fortlalrf, f r tnnMroUsioB ttiruugk tlM alalia aa ateoas Biat'.rr. - " ' .. 'iltltH(rtliH Uala TITSs Hem -3L All d)rtHient rwchea bf tbew BnsoKrs. leil th eprti what depttmt rat want- tVHfclUN AUVKBT1SI.NO KJH.fi"J,v J--nJamtii Keotnor t, Bronawlek Building i-3 Fifth arena. New XJ People taa BallUlus, CLkifa. ' -! " Saticri)OoB Xerma br siatt or ta any address la tua Luli4 Sum or Xlexlcoi DAILY ' - One year....... .5.00 Oo swots.. J B0 , . :. SCKDAX ': Coa year. ....... 12.60 I Ooe moetV .... DAILY AND SUNDAY ; ' ; -. 17-50 t On Bonth. .....- ALL LIVE BY SEEMING. ' Tho bepsar begs . with U, and : ' the say courtier -. ', . Gains land and title, rank and . rule, by seeming, The clergy scorn It not, and the bold soldier v.. Will eke It with his service; kjl. practice Hi. 'Jl And he who Is content wlrn showing what he is, ' Shall have small credit In church, or camp, or state. Scott A PROGRAM. OF PROGRESS AGAIN The, Journal submits eight important ; reforms which it commends to the intelligence of the Oregon legislators, who have now completed the fourth week of the biennial assembly: , ' 1. Reformof legislative methods and abuses, to Abe end that public confidence: in the legislature may lo restored and the ose' f the ini tiative be minimized. It Is yet early to decider definitely, but many , are complaining that the present session ehows little if any improvement over others that have preceded it, 2. The passage of. a good , roads bill framed in' a spirit f compromise tarrying such provisions a-will com mend it to general confidence and providing the largest possible encour agement for road construction. But little progress in road legislation is B3 yet apparent, 3. The enactment- of irrigation legislation, in which there will be provision, bo far aa the legislature Is "able to further it,' for giving the land to the actual settlers at actual cost, and providing to the utmost ex tent for the elimination' of 'specu lators and speculation from, the de- bauchment of irrigation in Oregon. Progress on this reform, is evidenced by the proposed adverse report" In the senate ways and means commit- tee on the Deschutes survey. 4. Statutory reform of ", court practice and procedure for abolish' ment of notorious laws delays, for eliminating.., frivolous 'motions and technicalities, and fori reducing the cost of litigation, all to the end that It may be sanely done by those Qual ified and not be madly done by those Incompetent to engage in such a re form. A few bills in this direction have been Introduced.' But the main progress seems to be with bills in creasing the number of Judges and multiplication of courts. 5. Enactment of a workmen's compensation law for reducing the work of courts, for saving the enor mous waste of money in personal In jury cases, lor spreading the bene fits of compensation to all classes of workmen, and for bringing about a more harmonious relation between employer and employe. The bill has passed the house with only two dis senting votes. Its fate in the sen ' tte is uncertain. . 6 The passage of an ample.but cot extravagant appropriation for properly representing Oregon at the Panama exposition. 7. - The enactment of a law to reg ulate the sale of revolvers and the carrying of concealed weapons as a means of reducing crimes of vio lence and making human life more safe. .The bill Is quietly slumbering la the senate committee on revis ion of laws, 8. ' The passage of badly needed Amendments to the criminal code for a more effective prosecution o crime. A conspiracy: statute was un ceremoniously beaten;, in the senate Ellis in : the ; house are slowly ad vancing on the calendar, but, with no certainty as to their ultimate fate. To these should be added the Me Colloch-Hagood bill for safeguarding the public in the purchase of prop erty for public uses It is a program of progress to go far in restoring, lost confidence In the legislature- and :l1ninimiziJlrItlI,eKl8lato',9 can d eomething to help use of the initiative. With only eleven legislative days ahead,, the legislature is far short of carrying out this Ideal program. : V A ITT ArPOlXTMEXT 1 !T JS announced that James Bryce, on giving tip the post of British ambassador - at Washington, has . been appointed the British, mem ber of the permanent International court of arbitration at The Hague." Is'o higher honor could bis coun try' confer on one whose worth as a consistent and reasonable lover of 5vace between nations . bad .bona proved by lifelong service to that end. ' " " ' - Mr, Bryce's last . public appear ance In this country was at the dln i;i r given in his honor oh December 1 4 by the American committee : for the celebration (Jf the peace centen ary between the two great English fliaklng countries. -This was the burden of his speech: I count It us Llsh a privilege," he said, "as A i. i.ud to oik lor peace during ni. fits years, and not vtly for S ; ri t (crn our two nations, that ' :l FrltSs Empire and that of the United States, but also for peace between all the. nations - of the world.",' -rQ : -::h '. - Now he is nd longer the trusted representative of one countrybut as 8umehe duties of an arbltrattonal judge of the one international court. To the office he brings not only the hardly earned knowledge of the mysteries of International law, but his long: apprenticeship in the 'af fairs of nations. .He, better than al most any living man, can make the ancient claim, "t am a man, and to nothing human' do I deem myself alien." As traveler he has visited almost . all lands,- and claims wide friendships in every capital. Not merely traveler he has studied all nations, and has reasoned out and written on the essence of their insti tutions. The candor and transpar ent honesty'of his' books commend him to the multitude of Jila readers. Mr. Bryce was qualified especial- y for the mission to . the United States by the authorship of the clas sic 'American Commonwealth," be tokening a sympathy that could not have been excelled by any native born. His six years at Washington have completed Mb fitness to deal with every issue to be laid before the Arbitration . Court. To every Judge of the high type, to whatever nationality he may be long, it is as much an Instinct as a matter of conscience that no par tiality for country, class, or person. shall interfere"' with f the austere strlctneBS of his decisions. WHY ' OREGON LAGS I S THERfi no higher function for a legislative body than the raising of salaries and creating new Jobs? If not, what end does a legisla ture serve? ' . For Instance, the Imports and ex ports in 1911 of San Francisco to taled 1100,331,439. Puget Sound's aggregated 184,493,572, Portland's total was 113,268,174. .'V'A San Francisco has a territory trib utary by gravity, of 8D,000 square miles,? traversed by 6000 miles, of railroad. Puget Sound's ; territory made tributary, by gravity is a few hundred square miles. Portland's territory tributary, by gravity is 250,- 000 square miles traversed by 8000 miles of railroad and 800 miles of navigable rivers." . : ".. v - ; San Francisco with 80,000 square miles of gravity territory had nearly eight times as much foreign trade as had Portland with 2 5 0,0 0 0 square inlles of gravity territory. Puget Sound with practically no gravity territory, had more than six times as much foreign trade as had Port land with 250,000 square . miles of gravity territory,' Puget Sound's in crease In Imports and - exports in 1911 over 1310 was 318.468,038, or inore than the total of Portland's importB and exports. The figures how the difference In progress in tne three states. Washr ingtpn Is forging ahead. ' California is forging ahead. ' Oregon, with far greater advantages of ; location, is lagging behind. Two hundred and fifty thousand square miles of grav ity territory eeems to' mean nothingi to Oregon. - Eight hundred miles of inland waterways seems to mean nothing to Oregon. - Yet, when a plan for developing Oregon is presented to . that body, the Oregon legislature turns its back. When a broad plan for ascertaining possibilities . as to water powers for development of manufacturing, com merce and prosperity is proposed In the body. Senator Perkins, who hap pens to be chairman of the senate ways and means committee, frowns upon it --v""": The Deschutes project is a mat ter in which -all Oregon is concerned. It Is a matter on which the United States government offers to expend $50,000. It is legislation to give Oregon a chance to move forward, as California and Washington are mov ing. It is legislation for giving distant people a chance to come to Oregon and help pay taxes, help grow prod ucts and help make soil yield wealth It is legislation to attract capital for establishing Industries, employing labor and sustaining homes. It is legislation .that affords the legslature opportunity to promote Oregon, to advance Oregon, to en large Oregon and expand Oregon. It is legislation, to command the re spectful consideration of men who hold themselves large enough men tally to make laws and direct poli cies for the state. , . It is legislation through which the Oregon move forward as Washing ton li moving and as California is moving. Is the legislature of 1913 to go down in history with a record of re jecting such legislation? IS IT A POSSIBLE REFORM? BOUT a year and a half ago the proposition that the Episcopal church in America should take active part In the movement for church unity was considered by the . general : convention with ap proval. , It. was admitted that most solid obstacles had to he overcome if ' common ground were " to be reached with ' Congregatlonallsts, Baptists, Presbyterians, and Metho dists, But the aim was of sufficient Importance to be well worth the ef The Edinburgh Missionary, con ference of 1910 gave proof that in the missionary fields of the world differences in usages of worship In the appointment, ..otdera, and . cro- liturgies, and of a prayer book, and of historic creeds, did not , prevent the missionaries from presenting common savior and a common Bible to the natives among whom! they worked. Why then should not the same perspective, apply at home? It . was also manifest that - the overpowering need for Christian so cial service was felt in every branch of the Churoh of. Christ, at home even more than abroad, and that the one great army might be recruited from , many forces, each of which Is now waging an independent fight. But is not the great impulse to wards unity among all home di visions of the Church losing its per vading force? ' ; In Boston there has been begun a series of Sunday . afternoon ad dresses, where ; representatives of six denominations will "speak frank ly concerning what they consider es sential in their conception of the Church.". The Rev. Alexander Mann, rector of Trinity church with which the honored name of Phillips Brooks will ever be connected--was heard first. He found that "as one goes about from .one great . communion , to an other," one finds men content today to confess their faith largely in the words of the Apostle's creed, or, if not, in words synonyomus with them. --K 1 - ' But there the lines of agreement stopped. . The rest of Dr. Mann's ad dress had two main divisions. The first , expressed hl confidence that in a future re-united church would be found diversity In public worship but practical agreement in the faith of the Incarnation. The second part admitted that in the last great point of divergence that of resolute ad herence to the historic episcopacy, and to the three-fold ministry of bishop, priest, and deacon by the Episcopal churchthere was today no hope or agreement witn those 'great communions' to which refer ence had been made. ; This being the best hope that Dr. Mann had to offer it is easy to im agine how his subjects would be dealt with by representatives of the other, the "high church" branch of the Episcopal church. , To them various points . of t possible conces sion indicated by Dr. Mann are v as rockB on which they have anchored matters of doctrine and . ritual es sential to them as the very basis of belief. :Xy;- It seems then that, after all, so cial service is, and will be for years to come, the only common ground of action between the churches. ' WHAT'S THE ANSWER r HE lawyers of the legislature seem determined to ignore the emphatic public demand for court reform, and intend ap parently to substitute a sweeping In crease in the number of judges. - The' Journal submits the Broad way bridge litigation as an example ot the Judicial folly that the, lawyers insist on perpetuating in this . state. The record of that case , is illustra tion of an intolerable condition that awyers and Judges are refusing to remedy, and against which,' ia any referendum, the people would vote twenty to one. ' ' ; y By an overwhelming vote, the peo ple of Portland voted an issue of bonds for building the , Broadway bridge. They wanted the structure. It was needed to relieve the conges tion on the-bridges. , ' It was opposed by certain prop erty holders. They refuEed to sub mit to the will of the people, and found in the courts and court follies a means ot blocking the bond Issue. iney resortea to technical pro cedure. It was a litigation in which any sane administration , ana sane system of Judicature should have ended in a few weeks, or at the most in a few months, i But by quibbles, by technicalities, by frivolous moves, by eavll, by trivialities, they kept the ltlgatlon in the courts for two years, three months and nineteen days. The record of the case runs like this: November 1, 1909, Duniway filed the Frank Kiernan suit, asking a temporary injunction to restrain the city: from selling Broadway bridge bonds on the ground, that the pro ceedings of the. city were Irregular and the initiative unconstitutional. January 14, 1910, the city de murred and on February 15, 1910, In a hearing before Judges Ganten bein, Bronaugh and Morrow, the de murrer was sustained. Meanwhile there were various proceedings In court Involving stipulations between the parties and extensions of time, February 21, Duniway filed an amended complaint involving other technicalities and renewing the peti tion for an injunction. April 2, 1910, the answer of the city was filed and asked that the suit be dismissed. AprU 3, 1910, after a hearing, Judge Morrow ordered certain see tlons of the answer stricken out May 10. 1910, Duniway demurred o the answer. May 18. 1910, Duniway demurred to first and second separate answers. May 21, 1910, Duniway moved for a decree for,plaintlff utfon the plead ings. 'V . May 24, the city moved for dis missal on the pleadings. -' May 27, Judge Burnett allowed the city to withdraw Its motion for de cree from the files in the case.- . May 81,. 1910, Judge Burnett re instated the motion of the city for a''docree. ' V v; ' June 6, 1910, Judge Burnett de nied the motions of, both , Duniway and the city for decrees. : ; , ; ' June 13, 1910, Judge Burnett ren dered a decree in favor of the city and against Duniway. .' . : There ' is not space here to pre spnt alj, the, record. 'Thn rnja wng appealed to the state supreme court, and November 1, 1910, :a decision Was rendered in favor of the city. , , It wajj followed by a second Broad- way bridge suit and technical pro-! ceedings ta the circuit court result ing in a second appeal to the su preme court and a second finding for the city. The litigation " did ; not cease to harass the cocrts until there was a final appeal in October, 1911, to the United States supreme court, and a decision by 'that tribunal dis missing the case February 19, 1912. For two years, three months and nineteen days the people of Portland had to submiL ; AH that time they heard complaints from lawyers about congestion of the courts and need of more judges.; Ait that time, they saw the courts used, not to promote justice, but to harass, handicap and delay 'Justice. They saw throughout those" two years, threa months and nineteen days, the courts used not to aid the people but to oppress the people. . , - " : 1 It is a reform of such : practices that the people are demanding.; Is the answer of the present legislature to benot a reform of the practices, but a multiplication of judges? H03IE RULE AXD AFTER O ME rule will set the seal of political fact upon an economic emancipation of Irish farmers and cultivators which has been long in preparation but slow in com pletion. ' : The most recent observer of Ire land revisited la Mr. I. M. Kennedy, who has very recently recorded his Impressions in The New Age. , He finds the bulk of the Irish people in the three southern provinces giving far more thought to the practical problems that confront agricultural communities than to the form ot Home Rule. The' real question for the Irish farmer today is how best he shall profit by his emancipation. He"own8 his land. He sees his Industry as the most Important, the most stable of all. ' He sees its pos slbllltles of development But the ownership of the , land .is but the first: step, The Irish . farmer must get; rid of the money lenders who have preyed on him for a century and more. He must learn the lesson ot improved agriculture. He must solve the problems of transportation, and so reach the best markets. Ire land is losing its taste for 'political talk and is turning to work. Here is In full Bight, as Mr. Kennedy says, nothing less than a spiritual as well as an economic revolution. Completion of ' economic freedom will be the first fruit tf the political freedom Becured by Home Rule. - The new economics are centered in the cooperative societies, fathered by Sir Horace Plunkett, which are of more importance to Ireland, says Mr. Kennedy, than Home Rule. " They have evolved a new spirit of self- confidence, of self -respect,-. and of common purpose, . Irishmen of all creeds and all parties lr.ve found found that, regardless of religious differences, they can work together in harmony, and they do.. In the cooperative societies Nationalists and Orangemen stand together for common ends. And the movement is spreading everywhere, v ' Joint economic action will heal the wounds of sectarian and political strife. So will the vicious inher itances of past generations disappear. With a prosperous Ireland the ef forts of its un-friends' to perpetuate the old hostilities will fade out and die, and a united Ireland, an autono mous Ireland, will prove a content ed unit in the great sisterhood in which the1 self-governing colonies ot Britain find piace. Letters From trie People (Conimunlrttiotii Kent to Tbt Jonrntl for publication in ttali department bould be writ ten en only one side of the on tier, ibonld not exceed SOO word .In length and nuit be o eomptmta or tn nam ma addrew or toe aender. If the writer doea not desire to bare the name pubUabed, he ahotud e state.) Revolver and Rom. Newport, Or., Jan. 81. To the Editor of The Journal I sea that the Perkins revolver, bill has not yet passed .the j Oregon senate. I can see no good reason why it should not pass. It Is In the line of right, Justice and reform. The Indiscriminate use of the pistol is surely a ghastly toll on human life. Tha pro visions of the Perkins revolver bill are not an Insane or Imprudent regulation. I heartily agree with you and every effort in support ot it or any other really true reform measure. But In all kindness, when you say to the readers of The Journal that the pis tol (even In the hands of bad men) "is the means of accomplishing more kill ings than all other agencies combined," I beg leave to disagree with Tha Jour nal most emphatically.'-' You say one homicide every hour (presumably with the pistol) or approximately 10.000 per year, and for the sake of the argument I admit that to he true, yet while the platol was the instrument used in thq killing, intoxicants were the real causa of the Instrument being used in many cases. Not less than : 3000 homicides were committed last year In tha United States by persons who were under the influence of alcohollo beverages. 1 - Ap proximately 200,000 human bodies are today sleeping, in drunkards' 'graves Sam's legalised saloons last year. A ghastly toll on human life of BOO every day or 20 every hour. It's plain to- ba seen the liquor killing of this country exceeds that of tha revolver by 19 every hour In tha day. In s licensed grog ihoo at iBurratsvllle, 10 miles from the na tion's capltol, plans and details were laid ot the awful conspiracy for the as sassination of President Lincoln. ' From that bar-room, inflamed by its poison, John Wilkes Booth went forth on his errand ot murder, and thera returned after he had achieved hi dastardly am bition, nerved by the inciting force of liquor 1 History records that Charles Qulteau was also nerved by it to assas stnate President Garfield. Leon Csol goss,. for years a brewery attache, was reared in a saloon kept by his father which for years incubated v anarchists and anarchlstlVi.propoganda. And bred in that atmosphere tha assasbln of Wil liam MCKtnley went naturally and surely to his fate. John Schrank, fol lowing his attack on Roosevelt said "I ratr- a- wairwn rae i" nttut "Tenth "atTTCt; between avenues B and C, New York city. I hava beer engaged In the saloon business as proprietor ana as an em- niove nearly ail my life, until I docldd that it was s my, duty to kiU Colonel! Roosevelt1 Schrank himself mar not bs a victim of alcoholic vlrua. It mat ters not here - The fact is that the liquor traf lo, breeder of vice; crime and anarchy, and fountain head of debauch ery and defeneration, was the master of Scbrank and Caolgoss In the school of life, and hidden devastation of the peo pla goes pitilessly on. A train wreck occurred at Coring, N. July 4. After an exhaustive Investigation . it was found the engineer had been drinking. Too drunk to observe signals properly. The result was 49 people killed and It Injured. This muBt bo charged up, not to the ptstoL but to Uncle Sam's putrid legalized saloon system. . - .' . x E. W, DURKEE. A Prodncer Seeks Solution, J - -Holley, Or., Feb. 4. To tha Editor of Tha Journal Tha author of thp Small Change column, in a recent Issue of The Journal, offered this Item: "Portland does sot need . a larger : population so much as a larger producing element out- siaa or Portland." -' Permit me to pm sent a leaf out of our own book of ex perience as producers. W ware poorly equipped for farming last year, it be ing our first year ' here: yet : wa raised tons or nn vegetables, which are rot ting on tha ground because exorbitant freight rates prohibit any attempt to market tnem. Glva us farmers reason able freight ratea and lack of produce will be no excuse for hunger In tha cen. ters of consumption. There is no limit to the producing ability, but under these conditions thera is no incentive to pro duce. .We would selj and go to New Mexico, but tha same conditions exist In that ; quarter. Immense crops of de licious fruits rot on the ground. Why? Simply because greedy, profit-gobbling railroads and commission men loom be. twlxt tha producer and his market. Lots of encouragement for tha producer to produce, Isnf It? v. As a solution of the problem 1 have been studying Socialism lately and 'I must say I almost believe that Socialism is right' I Ilka the Socialist policy of ownership and operation of the railroads and all publio utilities, by the people and for tha people. I agree heartilv with their Idea of eliminating tha federal Ju- uicmry, ior u is piain io d seen the people will new enaot their own laws while this blighting power exists. Should wa get too obstreperous with our HttU initiative 'and referendum; his highness can hand us our quietus with tha one word "unconstitutional," and from his august decision thera Is , no appeal vuuw a King no morer I believe Mr. Wilson is a grand man. bersonaUv and politically. I believe ha is a man of the people, pnra minded, Intellectual and Uon-hearted. But while I earnestly hopa he may be able to alter tha condition of tha workers, I fear he will fail, be causa, it la my opinion, that the pres ent system of government la outgrown and that we need a new governmental garment instead of patches on thA 0I.1 one. Christ pointed out the folly of putting naw wine into old bottles," and -" vn a. worn-oui coal. ' So, you vniisv uur savior, was not a re former but a revolutionist.- How he de spised tha greedy oppressor, and how his heart ached for tha poor and unfor. nate. Ha was the companion of the common man from choin h thu t-i of HeaVen and Earth, Ha Chastised the profit-takers and condemned riches as a bar to heaven. Moreover, I believa tho basio principles of Socialism ara found ed on his teachings, and I am persuad ed that It will not reauir mtiih Tnn evidence to convince me that Socialism Is the temporal aalvatlon of the world's peoples. Anyway, it is up to me to find a way to market my produce. If Socialism is ms aunwtr, men welcome Socialism. ' MRS W' H- BKUCE. " Misspelled Words. . i-oruana. Or.. Feb. 8, 1918. To the i-auor or Tha Journal One would imna, juagmg from the mtsspelled words painted on windows, . woodwork, etc., and show cards in various places of business throughout our city and sur. rounding- country, .that' Wat were very mucn. in neea or a spelling inspector, and also a spelling school for adults.. I have often wondered why It is that the average person can not spell the words m ordinary use In the English lantuaae. Wa might make some allowance for dear uncle John in his annual Christmas let ter to US) where he Informs us that "the old brindell kow kicked tha buckket Krlsmas eve," and we might also maks an occasional mistake In misspelling a word in our correspondence, but when it comes to placing these misspelled words in a conspicuous place where they are to remain Indefinitely, it Is exceed ing the "limit , The surprising part of it is, I have found in calling people's at tention to one of these examples . of letter juggling that hot one in 10 had noticed it, . and I have , been asked: "What's wrong with it? . How do you spell ltr I hava kept a list of some of the words that have been displayed in our business places for several years. THE GREAT ACT By Dr. Frank Crane, .. Listen! all ye who handle the public. and I will tell you something to your advantage. ,;" ',,,"-'" '''''" ' !''H ' I mean you telephone girls, street car conductors, waiters at table, lunch coun ter attendants, railway ticket agents and brakemen, tellers In banks, and clerks In department stores, and any body else whos business It is toeal wun me memners 01 tne common crowd. ; ' ' ' ' ' ' I will take my text from the words of Miss Minnie Warner, the highest paid switchboard operator of the Chicago Telephone company, as reported In the newspapers.' Said she: 1 : "Don't be .mechanical Make . every roan on tha wire believe that your soft est tones are for him alone."; ; Further more, she said: - ...,v. v Don't ba indifferent Make .every kicker believe you are broken-hearted because the Una la busy." , I take my hat off to Miss Warner, and if my wife will let me I would like to send het a bunch of flowers. ' It Is a great temptation for the busy clerk to drop Into machine-like ways. It does not require so much vitality. v But it ia a mistake; ' I do not refer so much to the feelings ot the customer, for perhaps you may not care a hoot how he or she feels, and all you want to do Is to fill your time and get your wages. Besides, you may be so sorry for yourself that you haven't any sorry left for customers. - Hence, we. won't discuss the sentimental side ot tha ques tion.1 .'- --v--: ' " - Let us go to the strictly business and selfish side. Do you know that your greatest asset la being human? . ' v Ah!";you reply.1, "I'm so tired and worn out that I have no vitality left to palaver over people." . " . '' Then put on politeness. - I mean it. Act the part if you cannot feel it Form the habit of smiling, pretend to be deep ly interested in each person, learn how to maka your voice sympathetic lay In a store of agreeable phrases to hand out to each one. ',-;vV 5 !"'"- . ;. .'..,. . - This la not hypocrisy It-ls Uuttlmuta. I)o" you realize that it Is the human clerk that is in demand, that attracts customers, that stands tha best chance I for promotion? " ' , "The -publio is a great baby," soma and I tnust eonfess that I had not tha time to jot thera all down. On a res taurant on Madison street, th word pastry is painted very nicely "pastery." In the card room of one . of our local hotels a Bign' that Is otherwise a nice piece of artistic work, warns players that gambling is prohibited and that i rames mar not be Dlaved for money ori'i'"""- "".i""'"'"" aiiempiea merchandlce, with merchandise spellea with a c. I have scsn doughnuts spelled doenuts, , I havs seen . masquerade spelled maskerade. ; i have aeen black berries spelled blaeberries. - I have seen knives spelled knifes. I have seen ap ples spelled . appels, bananas spelled banas. Away out on the Oregon cieciric up Salem wa'yi some sign painter who bad perhaps been raised on a race track. has painted and erected a sign on a tract of land, which is offered for sale. The sign reads: , "10. 20 and "40 acres tracks for sale." I went over the brow of the hill and looked all over that sec tion of the country for a 10. 20 or 40 acr race track, but J couldn't even find a' horse track. It is not alonai these misspelled words that have daily drawn my attention, but It i also the oddity of some of the signs. r For instance, a few years ago barber shop on Haw thorne avenue l.ad this sign on display: 'Shoes shlned Inside." I think If any ona of tha .observant kind will maka a list of the rnlssuelled words that meet his gate day after day it won't bo many weeks until he agrees with tna writer that the average business person of to day should take a post-graduato course in some spelling institution. - Approves the Alternate Stop. Portland, Feb. 7. To the Editor, of the Journal I read a letter la last night's paper, by a Mr. Lewis, protest ing against tha , alternate street car stops. He wants an expression from others-1 will give mlne. I am most emphatically in favor of tha alternate stop. I can sea whera there will be a great many people save five or ten minutes each way every day. . Think of the thousands of minutes saved every day, and as "time is money' in these days of hustle,. I say lot us.; save: all tha time- we can. . , ; ' ; o '':v . - : To think of the cars stopping every block is absurd. Every one knows that. with Portland's snort ; blocks, a car doesn't get under way until It has to begin to stop. I think I express the opinion of a great many people when I say, "Hurrah for the alternate stops." 1 have talked with a lot of people in regard to it and I find only a very small percentage opposed to It , I really feel sorry; for Mr. X.;wls, though, 1 to think that ne nas to waia a -wnoie- ron land block to get to his place of busi ness. How sad, indeed, for tha poof man! -V'.'- !-- .-- .-' Perhaps we can petition Mr. Josgetyn to grant Mr. Lewis the special privilege of a stop at his proper street and save his poor, -tired feet that one "whole" block's walk. . JOB BLISS, The Ways of the Toiler. Silverton. Ore., Feb. 6. To tha Editor of Tha Journal In reply t a letter printed In your paper entitled "Bead This. From a Working Man." I would say that I also have traveled a good deal since I began to paddle my own. canoe. Tha writer of the letter states, that ba has never been broke, a fact that a traveling working man should be proud to state. Perhaps it ha had told of some of tha conditions a traveling working man has to undergo his letter would have sounded like a second "Gulliver's Travels." I have seen men living like dogs, both in cities and In camps, but still they ara satisfied to ba in a con tinual ' struggle for life, occupied ' in tolling for a few who by the most cun nlng devices rob them of tha fruits of their toll rob them s skilfully that the. poor, blinded masses have grown to consider eternal toil tha natural stats of man. Even more, they ara ready to persecute him who would elevate them, and.. worship him who would sink them deeper in baseness and bondage. When I reflect on this almost hopeless dark ness ot soul that has marked tha- his tory of the past and is too much tha character of the present I do not won der that it Is very few who have an inclination .to helo the workinir class. The people of the United States ara yet but partially free. They still Inherit from customs and prejudices the fruits of an ancestral oppression and a bond ago of .centuries. ; . ' A good plan for cities to adopt would be to glva all men applying a chance to work an hour for a meal and an hour for a bed, or IS cents worth of gro cerles per hour. A. P, LIN8COTT. ' - Canal Machinery for Oregon. ":; Portland, Feb.- "1918. TO the Editor of The Journal-Why not petition con gress to bring to this country soma of the machinery employed In tha con. struction of the Panama canal, to be used in tha clearing of logged off land and the opening up of Oregon slough t . , . A SUBSCRIBER. OF BEING HUMAN body said. '- It's true. ; I'm one of 'em. I confess I flee a sour ball clerk as I would a soured glass of milk. Whir nnt humor tha public then? . . I know a ticket agent at Wnwf.r Mass. His name is Jim Heal v. t nn- slder him the best agent In tha tTnitd 8tates. Because you can't get hlra out of humor. I used to co Into his offh-s and pretend to want a railway ticket Just to get under his delightful Influ- anna " - One day a wealthy And rude old lady. as some ladles are most likely to be cranky when they get old and insolent wnen they ara of tlia first families In town, came nto-ueaiy's office. He was pusy at his desk, A pile of letters was stacked up at hla right hand. He was behind In his correspondence, trr which siate or things you or I would ba irri table, ' ' , ,. ' ' The old lady, drew up a chair, ' sat down by him and with one sweep of her hand scattered all hla letters over the floor. -. ! ;.:--... '.A-;-j "Now," she said, "you .attend Vo me!" Healy turned around, laid down his pen, shook hands with hla visitor, and said,, smiling: How, do you know, Mrs. Jones, you've taken a load off my mind. , was Just wishing I could get rid aomehow of those pesky letters. Please tell me what I. ran do for you.". - , 1 .. He sold that woman over aeven hun dred dollars' worth of steamer tickets Why snap at people?. Why show Im patience? Why treat them with indif ference? It's all in a lifetime. It's all part of tha gam.;..': -? ;-. And nine tenths of your game, be lieve me, is making people feel pleasant Are you afraid of being treated Ilka a dog?' Do you want to assert your manhood? Then assert it - by not da cendlng to the yellow dog level of tha Insolent customer.i ! CfcH-i' Bg human! Because you are a tele phone girl you don't have to cultivate a pie cruat, voice, dead and repulsive. As a stfeet car conductor you can say a cheery word to the tired old woman with a basket As a.brakeman you .can iMaJt-a'W)tl-eaee-fiiU-( people warm In the cockles of their hearts, i . Bo human, Bade, eveh at your counter In the department sore. Take It from me, it's money in your pocktt; beilds. oeld joull think more of yourself.; 5 , Wilsonian Simplicity ' . From the Boston Globe, Social life at the White House re mains extraordinarily simple, notwith- atandlng the great rowth of preelden- to bring back the somewhat courtly at mosphere or the Washington and Adam administrations, which Jefferson rudely dispelled. 1 The president of the Vnlted States i the most powerful and often th mot distinguished political official in tha world: yet no little princeling, lording it over a square mile of sovereignty, leads an existence bo plain ocJ bears himself so modestly. , Our democracy has triumphed in that reepectj at least ana here at any rate wa do! not glva the Ho to our professions. ) Wo are so democratic. Indeed, that it is a question if social functions In our official life ara not a failure. : There is a pretty, general agreement, now It Is a tmng or tna past that tne inaugur. ball was not a success; the attendance at that function declined one fourth in the 20 years between 18S9 and 1909. Nor are White House receptions un qualifiedly successful. They may be brilliant affairs la the eyes of thfe fam ily 01 a new congressman from a new country, but soon or late they cease to Impress, and became a bore. ' At them older ; members of T the official circle meet with deprecations and ; apologies and when they greet a forelgneri accus tomed to tha courts of royalty they art uneasy lest he bs laughing in his gold braided sleeve. ' ' . , The constituent elements of tha gath ering necessarily must ba representative of all our social diversities. Democracy makes that necessary. And there la nothing to stop men from getting Into the senate and thence into the East room so suddenly as to leave thera no time to order their first swallow tall or their wives to find a, Washington dressmaker. , Pomn and ceremony ara as alien to America as orange trees are' to New England. - A White House reception, therefore, is too simple to be a' pageant and too stiff to be a pleasure.! . To many poor presidents the state dining room, has been like an! altar of sacrifice, the Blue room blue indeed, and thai Green room a place where, in a green and yellow melancholy, they must stand like Fatlence on a : monument, smiling, at grief. Lincoln, who . untd dally to enjoy throwing open jils office door and submitting to the pulling and hauling of a mob of callers his "public opinion bath," he called it coitld endure the ordeal of a state ulr an evening reception, where he lent the passing throng his big while-gloved hand often without seeing a faie before him or hearing any of the f 10000 per- functory words adressed to him. cieve- land never well dissembled his reluc tance on like occasions. -. ; : If Mr. Wilson really looks upon tha formal White House receptions as idle and irksome things he should ba made free to discontinue them. - We ought to be enough of a democ racy to recognize the- equal right of the , president with every , other citizen to eat and associate with whom he chooses out of " office hours and . that at least we have not hired his wife and his' . entire family to do our bidding. With a little practice we ought still further to progress In demooracy until we ara above running after Tany man, even a president, and counting it a privilege to shake his nana.. , ,. Perhaps this course of instruction by the schoolmaster president may be in store tor us. If so, he has opened It", very wall by exemplifying rather than preaching this higher form of democ racy. For, have you noted that ha bus mot ; accompanied his acts with any flourish of trumpets or any protesta- tlons of virtue? - ' : - 1. 1 ' I m.. w.tiMM. Senator tsaney s erecting into a pnn nlnlit hla refusal to nut on a dress coat Simplicity is not a quality to be pa- - raded, a merit to be boasted, a thing to talk about The minute it is made a virtue it becomes a vice a humbug and a nuisance. Wilsonian simplicity appears to be the right brand. . - News Forecast of tie doming Week Washington, - Feb. I. Monday is tha day fixed by the senate for taking a final vote on the much discussed Bhep-pard-Kenyon bill prohibiting shipments of liquor Into state where prohibition laws ara In effect - Hearings In the suit to dissolve the United States Steel corporation , ara to be Tesumed ' Monday. a The government ha Tirarf liolltf rnnMllilod ita IntrodutV' now present Us side of tha case. Among Its witnesses probably will be Judge Elbert H. Gray, chairman of the corpo-' ration! James A. Farrell, president, and Henry C. Frlck and Other of , the di rectors.'''"":' " - r ' -'; '' ' The two houses of congress will meet in joint session In tha hall of the house on Monday for tha purpose of counting the electoral votes and formally declar ing the election of Woodrow Wilson and Thomas R. Marshall as president an vloa president respectively, - --' Monday morning is the time set for tha start ot tha suffragists from New York city on their "hike" to Washington. The marchers - expect to arrive in the capital on March 1, In time to partici pate in the great suffragist parade and demonstration to ba held on the eve of the Inauguration of President Wilson. Wednesday, the anniversary of the birth of Abraham . Lincoln, will be ob- arvea as usual in many pans 01 tne country.. One of the most notable fee tures of the celebration will be the dedi cation of Lincoln hall, a magnificent Illinois as a memorial to Lincoln, . - Progressive leaders from ell parts ot . tha country will attend the Lincoln -birthday banquet at tho Hotel Astor In New York city, ' Colonel Roosevelt and former Senator Beverldge,- of Indiana Will be the principal speakers. .'I tm.UI . A.K w v B " " MV... W U,l" quet' In Kansas City, . with uoverior Eberhart of : Minnesota as tha ".chief srjeaker Baron Von Bernstorff. German ambaBS.tdor. will banquet of the Lincoln Momoi elation in Kpnngrieia, in.,, atyj Senator Boran oi laano win oa nearo lar gathering in Baltimore. Tha . late Vice President .. James Sherman will be honorcdf by memorial services In tha senate Bfiturday. Presl. dent Taft, his cabirje and a large num ber of distinguished people, will attend. Michigan Republicans will ( hold a state convention, 'at Lanslns Tuesday n name candldatfs for the euprems court bench and minor state officers to be voted for at the spring election. Brigadier General James Allen, ehlef signal officer of , the army, will roach the age limit .for active service Thurs- w dayti On the sama day. Rear Admiral Joseph B, Murdock will be retired from ' the navy on account of age, Other events of tha week will Include the schedule meetings ot the American and National Baseball leagues In New .XojktXUbaJpeeUnsLfif .UteOeglBlaUvs assemblies in Alberta and Nova Scotia, and a special convocation of Queers utijverslty, at Kingston. Out., to confnr tho honorary degree of LI,. IX on the lliike of Connaught, governor general or Canada. . ......