THE OKLGON DAILY JOUIINAL, PORTLAND, VVlDNL-DAV THEJOURINAL A)( .MIEI'l'XM'NT NKWSl'APF.K B. iTchM IN mimH I'lil. II. ,'...! ...... .....Inn li.rr.ht KlinduTt . . rjr hiiiKtay inornlnr lit 1t Jonrml Ijulld Ins, Ilroniiwny ml Yamhill n.. I m'l, l ... . 7T .... . ., I'.irtluud. Or u I r- I' .1 pi lu i.miui in v - , for tr.tiimly.l.,,. llir.iuirh ill mail "' rinnn D!'ittr. j i- t.k'i'i4.ivir4 niniH 717.1! Home. A-tOM All Drtn;eut irhel br numb! i n . .. .k.i h ..n. r fm.nf ton want. lTKUIGN AI.VEltHSING !Kl,RKSENIA,Ti B-nlntnlfc Kentnur Co.. Krmtiw.eS B"1Id,,n .-.; Hfth iim. iimm lurks. KM rD Uai Rulldlrm. Cblcusn. " enl.crlpioii Tprni liy mull or to an adir it uit uuiua Bute or wcxica v, OftILT . . Ooi tnr.. $3.00 I n moots. i . BCKD ..' Ont f.......'.lS0 I One mnnt. ; 4UIL. AND 6DSDAT On r... $7.50 I Ob monUi. ....I . .... A There ere. no greater wretches In the world, than rmmy of those, Whom people In general take to be happy. Seneca. -a GOVERNMENT UNDER COVER T I HE choice of a charter is le- tven the one now in- use and the new 00111011881011 char ter. T"; ' If the new one is voted down, we Z shall, remain under the 'present nie- S nagerle system. Hit , is the system J;V under? which " nobody knows any rj thine: about what is going on in gov ' eminent. - . 7 - What we know is that we pay the taxes "and that they are. always T -high.f'i But nobody knows who ti makes luetn high. All we know is that the authority i3 divided be ; tween half a hundred members or councils, , commltteea, "-boards, com missions 7a n d other functionaries; each of whom- hides behind the ' Jother. . ' '-''.; ' -j. f There are so many officlaisriunc Itlonaries and fuglemen, all exerds- flng authority, that nobody can find lout, which one is responsible for 'bad government . . . It is government in.the dark. Jt is government under cover. It is ; government in which officials are without . responsibility. It Is gov fcrnment in which functionaries are i-ii. j. - 1 i. nvcuumauia 10 aououy, - i ., .... If is government in which peopb? jare kept in complete ignorance of "their own biisine'sH. It Is goveru iment in which citizens are allowed 'to know nothing of their own af fairs. It -is government in which tUie man who pays : taxes never knows and never can find out .what goes with his tax money. ' It is the,,kind of government the paving companies want., That is why they are fighting the new char- ' tCr. .' " v. ": .. It' is the kind of government the cheap politicians want That is t why most of tho city ,. hail employes ire fighting the' new charter. " It is the kind of government the public service corporations want. "That is why they are fighting the rnew charter, , i - fter twd" years as mayor, Joseph Simon denounced the present sys leni as inefficient, wasteful and "costiy. ''After his- te-rln. Mayor Uushlight says the same thing. ,( After four years as mayoXhrry I.ane declared that'the present -fjs- 1 . 1 ... 1 . 1. 11 1. i u Li v 1 1. n HOIVD 11,000,000 a year of the people's money. ;. ' -t-:.,-;-.';.-. - ' All those .who are fighting the h new charter are fighting for tbc present system. Those who are supporting the -'j ew charter, are striving ,for .gov ernment in the open, for govern fluent in the daylight, 1 for govern inent under publlcity, for govern nient with every official strictly ac countable, for government In which 5tbe citizen can find out all about ijeverytbing. A NEW HOUSE OF IiORDS ANOTHER Job that the BritisU ministry is proposing to tackle is to reconstruct the House of Lords, with all its features that have endured for many cen turies left out. One of the chief Liberal newspa pers of London publishes details of ; the new measure which the paper says has been adopted by the sub committee of the cabinet entrusted with the duty of framing it. According to this authority th.e new House of Lords is to consist of 10 to 200 persons, to be elected by the same constituencies that now vote for members of the House of Commons. There are to be one cr two exceptions of nominated mem , bers. All such persons as are' now eligible for membership in the .House of Commons may be elected to the House of Lord3. 'It is quite possible that prdpor-, tional representation may be intro duced.. It is believed that, consid ering the great size of the con stituencies, means may be so found for, limiting the membership to per sons of approved position. . Members will be styled "Lords of Parliament." In order to allow qf the election of labor members paj taent'of members is proposed. The powers of the new House 6f Lords, if these plans .jcarrjv-wiiw over finan.ee, none. In general leg islation, the right to amend or re ject bills in the-first session after their Introduction but subject to ; reference to a Joint session of the two houses to decide all disputed points. The hereditary principle will tie .abolished. . Every Lord of Parlia--j,i'ient will sit there by virtue of Ws own qualifications, not his rekt- fired and odd members of the pres- vnt. House of LoTds there are prob ably one hundred wtio would re I t-lvc popular; suffrages enough' , to secure' tliolr election. IJut tho lialt, the blind, niid the very obi in both l)ody and uplrit, who left their cas tles and manors and their great town houses1 tQ vote down Home Rule and the 1909 budget will cer tainly titajv in future, 'undisturbed at home. THE PATTERSON RUG1IT t MPItESSEb with his : ef forts1 in behalf of the flood Biiffercrs, sen timental people in Ohio have ap pealed to the president- to par don John II. Patterson, president of the fash register trust, who was recently sentenced to a year in the penitentiary for '.violation of the anti-trust law. ' The judge,. who tried and sen tenced', Patterson saht: You wen belong to the walk of life whtcb '..HhDuld - set an examule. : 'ou have tost the opportunity tlmt was glveu, you by the methods whlih yon liave pursued. In your desire for gain, you USVT-fiot everything else. The only way tTrKk.X can .clmracterize your meiuoUH la to pay that tliey were mean and petty. Jt was proven in court that the trust ' of which Patterson is the head, bribed the; employes' of com petitors, and of railroad and tele graph ' companies; that it main tained fraudulent "competitioa", that by threats and libelous at- tacks upon .the credit of Its true competitors, it brought , them to ruin; that it kept a "graveyard" ex hibit of competitive machines which it put out of business, always open to the inspection.- of .. inventors and investors who contemplated compe tition; and that when competitors would not close out - their enter prises at its orders, it destroyed them by cutting prices below cost. -In twenty- yearSr-the. trust-broke up 160 competing manufacturers, many of wliom were ruined for life. Nothing thatan-y man can do in flpod can wipe o"uTthe record of Patterson's blight on men and in dependent business enterprise. A STRIKE IN GLOVES HE Ilelgian general strike has been begun. Nearly all In dustries on a large scalo in the country are paralyzed,, and the works are silent.. But railroadsr streetcars, gas works, electric light and power works, and the street cleaning services 0 the cities are in usual operation. Save in one iso lated case no Fabtage, or 'raachin- ery and equipment wrecking has occurred That, without question, as in violation of the orders of the leaders. This is distinctly a political riko. That means that the So- ialist party ,is responsible for it, in plan, in organization, and in con duct. ..- .". . Not only has a; strike fund been created in advance, said to amount 13,000,000, but provision has been made for maintenance of the families of the strikers. The intention is to so imperil -the Industrial-4if-ofBelgium that, lest ruin shall result, the franchise shall be extended to every male citizen of adult age, by the concession of that demand through necessary legisla tion. . " It will be seen that just such a result as the English suffragettes are striving to bring about by' dar ing and cruel and wanton breaches or tne law, to the injury or Indl- vidualis, and of large and small communities, tho Belgian strikers are seeking by pressure on the in dustries of the nation while keep ing within the limits of the law. Men cannot be compelled to work in private industries, and the pub lic utilities , which affect .directly the life and health of the people are allowed to be kept moving. The Belgian and the English movements are both forms of war applied jto , modern conditions. . There are: two questions raised. Which method, if either of them, will Win oii'tT "Which method, if either- of. them, should win out? These questions to be submitted, as they will be, to the decision of tho reasonable and solid classes of tho two communities Belgian and Eng lish, whose votes will, in the end, decide. Before either of the two wars was declared the conscience of the jurors in both lands was well dis posed to granting both of these con cessions. Will either or both coun tries yield to compulsion what they were disposed tb grant to reason? ClKlXO,lllL FLAWS r HE Literary Digest publishes a translation from the French of a detailed account of the Iladfield newly invented pro cess for castkig steel ingots without obvious or concealed flaws. The inventor is Sir Robert Ilad field, a well known English metal lurgist, ,and his paper was read at the recent congress of the Ironancl Steel Institute. The invention con sists in, securing the graduaPcool Ing or solidification' of layer-after layer of the molten steel poured into the mold, while by the ..burn ing, under an airblast, of, a layer of cinders and one of coal, "the up per portion of the steel in the mold is kept melted and allows the es cape upwards of all Impurities. The sreel in the mold remains through out the eooling. homogeneous, -arid free from those flaws, which a i t the cause of nearly, or. quite,, all- of the rail fractures that cost so marly lives, in accident after accident in this country. The writes alleges that the pri wary 'caiise of rail accidents here is the fact that iu recent years' the American steel works, overloaded with emergency orders have, with this c6nsent of the railroad ' "com panies , departed , , from yilie; . aeViiro hteel tests that still prevail in the old world. They have .stopped,' lie Pays, rejecting the whole upper third of the ingots and have only cut away a much smaller portion. Facts as to conditions of rail manufacture were brought out Hi the year 1911 -by the tests of broken or defective rails , made by the Pennsylvania railroad, by the Scientific American, and by the El) glneers of the Interstate Commerce Commission, and supported the ex isten.ee of rail flaws as the cause of accidents. If. the Hadfiejd process shall prove an effective cure notOnly railroad engineers and managers but the traveling American public will have cause to rejoice. UECAt'SK OF ITS ENEMIES r HERE could be nov more en couraging circumstances than the hard fight that is being made on the new. charter. Many measures are to be admired for the enemies they make. It is impossible to harmonize all the human differences. Thus, there is; an irreconcilable gulf between ' a home owner and a paving combine. The home owner wants paving at low; rates, and the combine wants i fever cent that can be extracted from the home owner. ; Naturally enough, the charter that Buits the cottager doesn't suit the paring mo nopolies. ."''. ' , The-lght-of-lhe paving compan ies , against the new charter is, of course, a desperate; effort to keep Portland under . the present me nagerie government. There 13 no way to reconcile the conflicting in terests of taxpayers, and taxeateriv A charter that suits taxpayers doesn t b u 1 1 taxeaters, bocause, while-the taxpayers want a mini mum of tax money spent, taxeatera want , a maximum of tax money spent. The more money spent, the more emoluments and rake-offs for Job holders. That is why many city hall employes are fighting des perately against the new charter and for retention of the' present system. There is likewise an irreconcil able conflict of : interest between franchise-seeking corporations and the average private citizen. The charter that the one wants, in the very nature of things, is not the best kind of charter for the other. That is why the fight of the puWic service magnates against the new charter is a strong recommendation of the new charter to the averago citizen. ' Possibly the average citizen hasn't time to read the new charter. The public service magnate has. He knows all about what is in it. Be ing a practical man, he knows all about what he wants and how to get it, and that is why he is strong for the present system of govern ment and against a change FROM, RATS TO CHILDREN I N -PORTLAND, what was former ly the dumping site for the garb age incinerator is to be trans formed into a children's nlav- ground. The scene was visited by tho mayor arid park superintendent last Saturday, and arrangements madj for installing play apparatus for the use of Portland youngsters. The substitution of the 6houts of chil- dren at their pastimes on a site once occupied by refuse and Infest. ed by thousands of disease breeding rats is incident to the transforma- Ltion of the garbage crematory from a costly experiment into an effi cient .burner of refuse. Near the close of the'Slmon ad- -min-istratioft the city health board refused to accept the Incinerator, on the ground that it had not met the requirements of the contract More over, the economies of the burner were so bad that ij; cost Bixty cents to one dollar a ton to destroy-garbage. " How the plant has been trans formed into an effective burner, destroying all refuse delivered to it without the use of uel and at a cost of only thirty-five cents a ton is familiar. history. The fact that, there Is to be a playground where formerly, thousands of tons of refuse were piled up, is the latest concrete evidence of the . change from inefficiency to efficiency. It is a change brought abdutrtoy Mayor Rushlight through the em ployment of David Otis as superin tendent and through various minor changes that have been made in the j furnaces of the plant. , ' Hanging on by the teeth and eye lids to the side of a streetcar is a stunt that the Portland baseball faa does well to learn. Another car may scrape him off, but it is wprtn the risk to see a one-to-one tie lu the eleventh inning. Ye Gods of Ancient Rome! You saw, nothing, in the boasted amphi theatres of : your musty past to equal, that Titantrrtruggfe Tuesday between the clean-limbed, clear-eyed athletes of Portland and Los An geles. . It's difficult to get used to the advertising candidate, who heralds hinfself like a circus or a new breakfast food. The old-fashioned among us still cling to the old fashioned notion that a candidate's lire and acta should speak for them selves. Music, 'most beautiful was heard bybut very Yew iiennle af s reepnt u n day e wtu ing concert on the mez zanine- floor of a local hotel. Music lovers who neglect tnis weekly feast are missing 'an inspiration, There were .touches.; as . delicate as the: Ij. , threads of silver that descend the mountain side and slip over the Palisades into the Columbia. Like big, buzzing bumble beeB straddled by demons, the motor cycles have undisputed right of way in Portland. ' Somo day Satan will claim his own. , : Just a hole in the ground at Port land la reputed to , be worth one million dollars. . It's rather a big hole, and a peg 200 feet square would 1 be required to plug it. By the way, rolling into this hole might create a pleasant impression of fall ing into wealth. Waste' is supposed to be abhor rent to Nature. But Just now it Is wasting thousands of angle worms which sprawl along the pave ments. No birdling needs to be early to catch a worm. ' Is Portland in too much of a hurry for rest. At. many places in the sidewalk parks on the outlying streets, benches would interfere with. n 0 b 0 d y." Women and children would welcome them, and even male grownups would find, theni handy for a few moments' repose. V If everybody would sit down but what's the use? Mr. and. Mrs. Everybody are mest obstinate crea tures, and also rather excitable. If one musthave a perfect char ter, to his notion, before voting for a change, he will keep on voting for the present notch potch style of city government while he lives. Letters From the People Communication! wot to Th Journal for ftabllctUoa la thl Avpartmtnt ahoald be writ ten 00 only on aid ( tbe paper, abould tot txtwed 800 wordt la Itngth aed arnat tie ae rompnldhbT tb aim and addrera of tb Mader. It the writer doet not dwlre to baft tbt Bitot BobUihtd, bt bould to autt.) 'Suffragcttes." 't Tortland, Or., April 15. To the Editor o'f The Journal On April 4, the follow ing, cablegram was sent to Mrs. Tank-, hurat at Holloway prison: t "Women everywhere and forever owe you a debt of gratitude and loyalty. The Enfranchised Women.of California." At a later meeting- of the home Suffragists nent a letter to the home secretary f Eng-land protesting against the Tahkhurst sentence, "In the name of the free women of California." (gee Journal -ef-Aprll 4.) I am sure your correspondent, fV". H. M., will be grate ful to. you for republishing this item, which escaped his notice twice grate ful, since his sisters and hla cousins and aunts are Suffragists, It Is quite najural he should be Interested In what Suffragists do. As to the value of suffrage to women. If it will teach them to observe the ordinary rules of fair play, which are wsually pretty well grounded In a boy'B mind by th? time lie has had a dozen years In the democracy of a nubile school. It jnay serve a use of sufficient importance to Justify the experiment. The first of these rules a boy learns on the playground Is to "take his medi cine." When he has done that which merits a drubbing he getscit, and nei ther dodges nor whines. He doesn't say to his government, "if you beat me I'll starve myself to death." If he should, he would likely be told "'twduld be a Jolly good thing if he did." This commendable rule the American Suffragist appears to have overlooked when sne protests against Mrs. Pank-. hurst's sentence. I-et me refer W.. II. M. to the leading editorial In The Journal of April 6. en titled. "Unhappy England," and also to a brief article in the issued of April 14, entitled, "Woman's Era Now Dawning." If woman will but realize her power inrougn tne love of truth, through a de ll?'0 "W Z at least will see the futility of such weapons as the. ballot. Let her, univer sally and with her whole heart, desire the improved conditions which the Sut fragist claims will result If she exer cises the franchise, and man will pro ceed in aff orderly way to provide them. It appears to be the order of the uni verse that man builds the house wherein woman administers the home. If she have clear am well defined Ideas of tne form ghe desires in the house, for the welfare of the household, so mftn builds it. There Is on need for her to resort to' the hammer and the law, MABEL TV, PLOWMAN. Look Forward to Socialism. Portland, April IJ: To the Editor of The Journal The tendencies of All that has gone before in social evolution make for Socialism. Slowly yet surely does civilisation emerge from each succeed ing decade with nobler thoughts, grander visions, greater achievements, and a. finer sense of justice. The Indi vidual, as an Individual, must continue to give way, to the collective unit, called society, until the future indi vidual Interests are dissolved in the common welfare. When that condition is ftrrlved at, we shall have emerged from savagery into that, society now termed by political economists Social ism. This will mean,, for the first time in human history, a real clvllixa tlonr In our savage state the universal business of ftU tribes was warfare conquest and conquering. This was in variably the function of tribal govern ment. The individual did not conduct invasion or defense, as an individual. As we have gradually advanced in the civilizing process, we have acquired governmental func tion of various social needs, prom-; inent among which are our postal, high way ftnd school systems. Their Initial proposals were vigorously attacked, Just as the proposal of Socialism has been, and continues to be. They were looked upon as innovations that were dan gerous to personal liberty, unjust ftnd Impracticable. , ,The proposition to car ry a letter across the- country for i cents, to people who had no concep tion of organised society; semed alto gether impossible, and the advocate was looked upon as a .wild-eyed agitator, much the same as the average person of today looks upon the proposition of carrying a passenger .across the coun. try for a dollar or so or actual expense. The well to do, and ibany of the clergy, opposed the public school system' on the ground that a general, education of the people would destroy their usefulness, and disqualify em from being "Just common people." The prevailing no tion was the oni? the well to do should, -be educated and prepared to manage the affair of government. To---day .education has become compulsory and 'we wre-eli, en 'tliw way . to the supplying W free text books and eVen food-and . clothing to .pur school children.- Society has, begun to learn that each child I an asset to be developed tor its greatest degree of utility, and that for every neglected and uneducated PERTINENF COMMENT SMALL CHANGE It iH fllRO a free country ag-to-or- Ithotfiaphy. One cloennt forget the world as easily as it forgets him. One ran live on two bits day or less, but does It pay? The Jlder one gets the-more he ap preciates spring. It is improbable that Appraiser King will become Tammanyixed. . l'. That none of the Beavers Is ft Beaver makes no difference. Rah, rah, rah! Better get that Batch of land-a home, croft before the Tanama canal is opened. .. . Some dny the capitalists may fore close, and "take over" all Rurnn anil Japan., . , - ::.!. ,, ' ,: f. . : .;'', ' Leader Underwood Is an extreme op timist; says the tariff bill, or bills, may be passed by May 1. . '''. - - .'' '. :"' :''-' If one likes midwinter weathrt- In April all lie has to do is to move east ward from 1000 to 8000 miles. .- . . t .. ; . ; This ' administration Inn't trumhllnir with fear lest the United States be in. continently licked by litis Japan. It Should be difficult in nlitsln vmi the small percentage of names needed ror mat u. or o. referendum petition. . ,To put the loan sharks out of busl-. floss will be dolnir ft verv ood lob for many people of small means and for the community in general. Ing kingdom of less than half a mil lion people seems to ft big country like this amusingly farcical, but Montene gro has some Justification for taking herself seriously. TICKLING TOMORROW'S PALATE By Herbert Corey. " Washington. .April 16. If the epicures will kindly let their mouths. water for a, moment? - Thank you, gentlemen. Here's ft little cheer for you. The great American ter rapin is to be saved to future ages. So are the shad and the lobster and the can vasback duck. That genius In the department of agriculture who suggest ed the other day that we all go to rais ing hippopotami in our back yards and keep edible muskrata In the rarlor where we used to have goldfish merely had his wires crossed. - The supply of food fishes la general is tiot decreasing, arid there is every reason to think that our typical American delicacies will be saved. Let's take up Brer Terrapin's case first. The Indians used to dig him out of his native mud tend make stew of him. The white, man got a tasto and played him off the boards. . There are records in existence showing that the contracts with bound men In Virginia at one time provided that they should not be forced to eat terrapin -moFe than three times a week.' Of late years only presidents and United States senators and rich clothing merchants could get him. Even they were apt to let their Hps smack at the wrong time, and revel n a terrapin pleasur .when they were really eating "sliders." Five years ago the supply of terrapin n tne wild state was practically ex hausted. About the only real terrapin dinner of the- past year was in honor f President Taft. His hosts for the night ransacked , the markets of two states to find enough of the toothsome turtle to make ft showing. For years it has been taken for granted that Mr. Terrapin was rapidly passing into tra dition. Every one said that he could not be raised by band. As usual, everyone was wrong. They're not over talkative at the bu reau of fisheries. Co that few people know that for the last four years ft ter rapin farm has been operated by the government at Beaufort, N. C. Maybo the officials didn't say anything about it because previous experiment had not met with success. But it has now been demonstrated not only that terrapin can be raised on a "farm," but they, can be raised as a commercial proposition. Slow sales but large profits seem to be the order. Soon we will be hearing of young girls from Vassar who are op erating terrapin cowles as ft means of livelihood and of getting into the illus trated papers. . ' The Beaufort terrapin station Is built at Mdewater, so that about half of It is covered by each tide. Well out of the reach of the waters the terrapin are provided with sand in which to make their nests. The farm is surrounded by fence, sunken so deeply that the bur rowing turtles can't get out, and a wire net prevents them from swimming ftWfty.-.: , "Each female terrapin lays from 12 to 14 eggs." said Mr. "Dunlap at the bureau of fisheries, "and about 90 per cent hatch. ' There Is practically no mortality among the youngsters, and they are raised very cheaply. We feed them on .the commonest sort of fish. We have been operating the farm ftbout four years, and now have a. fine crop of 3-year-olds, We think that we have completely demonstrated not only that terrapin cn be. successfully raised un der seml-artificlal conditions, but that they can be raised commercially for profit. The chief dangers that threaten them are herons and rats, which eat the little fellows, and unattached persons of the male -sex, who steal them when they lire 'grown. 'It is quite easy to guard against, both perils." Likewise the lobster Is not becoming extinct. Those who reasoned -that the supply is becoming exhausted because the price in the New - York markets lately went up to 75 ' cents a pound msy take heart. He is actually in creasing on the Maine and Rhode Isjand coasts. The bureau of fisheries .points out child society must answer to itself. The chief obstacle to the fuller develop ment of the collective idea is that old savage Instinct of individuality. This, in our modem business world, ;tneans the ability to extract profits, to ac quire that acumen to successfully- come Into 'possesion of something produced or possesed by another, by 'means of trade or barter. That old commercial Instinct has become, so thoroughly im planted in us that we regard speculat ing or trading in commodities as more dignified than their production, and this practice has become so general that we ate seeing its effects in the Increasing difficulty of ft great mass of humanity to acquire -anything like a decent and respectable existence In a country with boundless resources and teeming with wealth The matter of tariff on "com modities will not meet, this difficulty; for just so long as we adhere to the rule of producing and distributing com modities on ft gambling basis, Instead of for social use. Just "so long will these, difficulties remain with us. ":" A New Crtsstown Proposal. ' Portland, Or., April 15. To the Edi tor of -The Journal In regard'. to the east side crosstown carline, I would Jlke to state ft few ideas-not only tnlne AND NEWS IN BRIEF OREGON SIDELIGHTS -At Pendleton, the flunhlnff system Is to be applied in street cleaning, super seding, the ancient sweeper. Myrtle Point now Ims In force an ordinance . for reUrdlng the 'speed of autoa to the 12-mlle limit. , ., A urODOSltion foe furnHllllff Aav mnA night service of light and power has been put up to the people of Couuille, The First Presbyterian church at Klamath Kails, which started last year in debt. Is now', clear and has I1Q0O in its building fund besides. ' ' " - .-,'.'' ',' ' ' Condon's council has ordered that the paving of Main street be rushed, and has Instructed the city marshal to Im pound all stray animals,' including chickens and lambs. J. Albert Matson has asked the city of Marshfleld for a franchise to install, all over the city, 24 Inch conduits "for conveylnr electricity, eteam, water and other utilities for the use of the pub lic." " .. . , , -. - - ' . - ''., v ... It is a matter of , only ft short time Until all tike range lands in the vicinity of Fossil will be homesteaded. The Journal says: "Inquiries for home steads are becoming more and more fre quent as the days go by." 1 ' ' '-'i, ''''"'.. . A band of gypsies who recently en camped near Monroe have folded their tents an4 fllttod. THe Leader says there was some excitement among Mon. roe mothers until they had rounded up their little broods and found there were none missing. Lakeview Examiner: " A large num ber of homestead applications are being received at the land office., Most of them are for lands In the northern part of the district, and are made by people residing in Oregon and Washington, al though occasionally persons residing in the middle west gather on to 820 acres. the need for real protection for the lobster, Jioweysiv Not-so .manjrof him are being caught to the pot as a few years ago. Wherever' there is ft pot there is also ft fisherman who lias no conscience about selling the undersized robMers. although the state laws all forbid the sale of a lobster of less than nine Inches in length.. The small ones cannot be safely exposed. In markets, but are bought by pin-headed summer hotel men, who make chowder of them. The lobster catch in Massachusetts Is undoubtedly on the decrease, because of the universal disregard of law by the fishermen. In Malpe,' however, an effort is being made to enforce the law. The same may be said of Rhode Inland. In the latter state a method of artificial propagation, developed by - the govern, ment experiments at "Wood's Hole. MaM., some years ago, is being tried with advantage. ' After the eggs are hatched the tiny lobsters are kept in screened pots on rafts, and the water is agitated by means of slowly moving propellers;- Otherwise the - youngsters rould gather in clusters and the strong er bnes would eat each other up. "We have our choice." said Dr. Dun lap at the bureau, "between raising many little ones or fewer strong ones. During the last fiscal year 2010,09,000 lobsters were hatched at the govern ment stations. Jy this means we are able to keep thesupply up to normal, wherever the state authorities will co operate with us. The need for closed sea-son where the fishermen will not obey the laws la imperatively suggest ed." .'. ; . Tiiere is some hope for the shad, too. most toothsome nd boniest of fishes. LThe -war department hag recently re stricted the fthftd flshermei in the plac ing of nets, in Chesapeake bay. These nets have been catching the shad on their way to. the spawning grounds. ftnd the extinction of the species would be but a matter of time., Similar ac tion will be taken at the other spawn. ing grounds:' There "will never be as many shad as there were once, but they will at least not be exterVnlnated, The supply of mackerel has largely decreased, and most of the halibut now offered In the markets comes from the Facifio coast. But codfish are 'actually Increasing along the Massachusetts coat. It Is reported that blue fish are disappearing, but that is a habit of the blue. Sometimes he Is not seen for years. When they were first reported on the Atlamte coast the oldest fisher men did not know what they were. Her. ring are holding their own. and the men haden which is of value principally for the oil he affords are Increasing In number, Although,. It was once .thought that they were bound toward extinction. The supply of fish In the great lakes Is Up to normal. Whiteflsh inLake Erie ftre even Increasing. Generally speaking, the food fishes of the deep sea are, aft numerous as ever. Their range is so , wide they cn never be fished out. It is , only the shore fish and those that run Into bays and rivers to spawn that may be de stroyed. The German earn isn't con sidered an especially valuable fish. Few people know that tralnloads of live carp are sent from the Illinois river to the markets of New York and Philadelphia. Fewer still have ever seen the carp on ft restaurant menu. But he is a good food fish, for all of that, although the sportsman bates him because -he de vours the game fish in the waters he inhabits. , ' Finally, there . is the canvasback duck the. only gastronomic rlval to the ter rapin, He. Is about done for, and he can't be artificially reared. But a new law empowering the federal authorities tb take steps to protect nil migratory birds was enacted by the last .congress, and the bird men ; at Washington are now drawing tip rules to be enforced at the opening of- the next' hunting season.) And it is hoped that these laws . may be so strictly enforced by federal offi cers that with the cooperation of the states,, that this last delight of the epi cure will bo saved to posterity, but of the entire population : of the Peninsula..'--The first is that it is ab solutely .necessary not only to have one but two crosstown carlines ' Any one who will study the map of , Port land will notice that this carline mbst reach those districts that are the most populated. How will the people in Kenton, North Alblna, Piedmout. Ver non, ." Highland, ..Woodlawn, Oakhurst ftnd Irvlngton Park reach this district unless Athere be a regular carline on Killingsworth avenue? At present this great and long street, "which reaches from the' Willamette to the Sapdy and Slough road, has only lnterurban serv ice. Killingsworth avenue, has the great car barns, the finest high sctiool in the city and also ft library, is It not high tiriie that this great district should get better .service? - A carline) from Dawson street to connect " with the east side crosstown lines on Twenty-eighth and Thirty-ninth streets would serve , population', of""' 200,000 people. The Northwestern and the Port land Railway 'companies are one.The people are one more fooled by the 4wwiftble ftftUmi ia iUgU.i. ultUMy There Is rio rellelSfrom the new conjfl cern. Hut there is ono concern fhatJ .twu.u R '..yi J BlL;, ft 1 . I 1 1 1 1 W. XJUVH flut. solid eight, 4f' you don't do your duty when the time conies, ' : ... ,;, GKORGE JfEYfctt. THE PANKHURST CASE 1 ' From The Public. ikThe Mississippi valley conference ot woman suffragists which met last .week at tit, Louis, ignored Mrs. . Pankhurst's case. In its bearing on civic morality, this silence was ' manifestly right; in its bearing upon woman suffrage move ment in the Mississippi valley, It was as manifestly wipe, Better In both re epects, since the subject is beginning iu uAv-'ite at-rious interest In thin coun try, would have been a, pronounced pro-' test against the criminal methods .for which Mrs.' Pankhurst nd her follow ers .professedly stand and which they are ruthlessly carrying out. Better, too, would it be, both for the Integrity and tho easier progress of the woman euffragiji movement in this country, if the nation al ossoclatlon 0t, woman suffragist were to protest against the criminal policies of the Pankhurst faction In Great Britain, or at least to withhold appearances of approv&l. Those meth- f ods ars so indefensible with reference to political action, so repulsive with ref erence to moral standards, and so un wise in their tactical aspects, that the democratic agitation for woman suf frage in the United States can hardly afford to be identified with them ,ln tke i public mind, .,,.'; Already abandoned in Great Britain k.. .ti i.i j.. . .. . . . h i i-auuuo-t Buiiponera anu most or its strongest leaders, the Pankhurst -faction is rapidly making its methods appear to Americans as being much lees like "ft Joke on John- Bull" than heretofore. Deliberate ftnd persistent crimes which rUe to the grade of arson .' and bomb-throwing and have murderous -probabilities of . horrifying nature, 1 " cannot long be regarded as a, joke on anybody, -and this quite irrespective of distance or ot the fact that they are perpetrated by gently nurtured women;;' who think they . are thereby helping a good cause, American opinion is be ginning to regard this outbreak in Great Britain very seriously, and not - wun tne favorable kind of seriousness-- its promoters are lookinV'for either. . It Is beginning to take its place in Ameri can opinion along with the criminal ,. (policies of that ruthless faction of So. ciallsts which William D. Haywood rep resents, and its corresponding faction in the trade unions of which the Mo Namaras are a type factions that turn for redress of economic grievances from educational agitation to dynamiting and . -other forms of terror. The plea that "things are different in Great Britain," and that we of this country "don't understand the necessity" , U.I r ... ... . iur uemuus crimes use arson in pro moting the woman uffrage movement' over mere, is cnitaisn or worse, mere . Isn't a. word to say in defense or exten uation of the Pankhurst compaign of orime in Great Britain which couldn't beta truly said for similar' campaigns In this country If the criminal faction In the - woman suffrage movement here ... were as boldly to adopt corresponding " tactics, There Isn't ft word to be ftald in defense or extenuation of that cam paign which couldn't as truly be said; of any campaign of crimo for the. promotion of ny political purpose nywhet.crConsldpr the es sentlal character of the . crrtnlnat country in which there is ft large though probably not yet preponderating opinion in favor of woman 'suffrage, Is slower than it ought to be in extending that -democratic rlirlit: -nherminnn a faction of woman suffragists, opposed by many woman suffragists from the start and abandoned in shoals by their own' a" socltes later on, conspire to break up public meetings, to destroy property, to '. endanger life, to threaten the kidnaping of children, and otherwise to fly in the race, not only of the elementary laws of the country but of elementary public morals. They call lt' "wr." So said , Carrie Nation of her hatchet perform ances when she adopted similar tactics in milder form to compel lawmakers to . close "down the liquor traffic In - the United States. Bo says McNatnftra1 of his confessed destruction of scores of human lives at Los Angeles. So say all physical force revolutionists, - If that . palliation were admissible, where would it end Grant that the Pankhurst fac tion in Great Britain may rightly, "by . running amuck with ' firebrands and dynamite, spread such terror on all aides as to coerce legislation Allowing wo man suffrage for the sake of peace, and you grant all that any physical force revolutionist demands. Grant that, and you grant the right of physical-force trade unionists to coerce by the same criminal methods. Grant that, and you grant that Socialists who stand out for ballots instead 4t bullets are the ten derfeet their dynamitfrtg critics call them. ,. Grant that and there is no po- . lttlcal purpose, no civic reform, no prog ress of any kind to which you have not given license to make "war" upon eo clety. Grant it, and you grant to antl suffraglsta the same criminal Indulgence ' to terrorize In opposition to allowing woman suffrage, or to terrorise for Its abolition if allowed. In I word, to ap prove Mrs. Pankhurst's campaign of crime for woman auffrageor even to remain silent when there is occasion to speak is to approve the breaking up of mo .uuuuniiunq. vs. l,ll UIUW, ll JB iu consent to cancelling every reason for giving the ballot to anybody. Pointed Paragraphs A man can knock and knock and atlll fail to make a hit. Love levels all things, when love li on the level. ' - ' . . .-.'"';;.,:; 1": e '.;,. y:v"' CZ'"; A-flock of microbes may do . more damage than a flock of elephant. - '-,.' ,' i ... - ' ' Shorter -engagements, if followed"" by longer marriages,' would help some. V'-,- - . v: Some women look upon eliarltyas a stepping stone to society. 4, .w Satisfaction ran never b cniMntn ' After loot's wife-had been turned into a pillar of salt ' sne probably kicked because she wasn't ft marble column, v The "Sprucing-Up" Season You, sir, c&nnot get kwy -from the "spruclng-up'' sug- ftestions of spring no matter iow Indifferent you may be to r the question of dress at ottur seasons of the year. , - This is a good 'time to visit the stores that cater to men. Look over the new thlnes i-n scarfs, shirts, waistcoats. What -about , hats and canes and umbrellas? And there Is always - ; the question of a new suit or a light overcoat. -: - , , -' .' I . ' . 'Read the . sdvertipnments TUB JOURNAL. They will take you to the right hops.,for the things you waht. ' And if "you don't know what advertising to offer good sug .gestions. - Read the advertisements, NOW. r- ;:I;-;..(,v.z:d 'V -V