THE " OIvEGOU DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, TUUGDAY LVEIUI.'G, AlIJL l), K fl-IEJOURNAL V ".M riMlFVT J ACKMiN . . KKWfirAPFR .tnlHhr .1 iL-.tt.) eifj il:iC 'Pt Butidny M lufc- at Ibe J..nrnl Itulld- tt c.'nmmlwur end V""1''1" "- i'orlhinOr i. . .i.- .......... ar I'firtlanit. IT.. r trmnil..liu Ihruu.h tba mill """' I ii li l Ho.VKS li.ln W3; , ' A! drrtinenU rebed b- tbeea number. I -II h nrTntor wht nrrtnent roa onr. Jl-njumln K-ntnor Co.. .Brun.w1r Mfth aemie. New Jork; 121 faopio a buliwrlnttno Terma by BIJ or to tar add"" tu lb L'uittrf State or afexleoi - DAILT ,. " Oo year. ...... ,$3.00 I On month.. ' SUNDAY. " ' '' ' Ona rnr........J60 t (l mntk.M.l.9S DAILY AND 8UN0AX On rear.. $7. 50 I One month I .M Sensible men show their sens by saying much In few words. If noble action are the substance of life, good sayings are its -ornament and guide.--C. Simmons. . , WHICH? ;':'.-:)',:' ',,, ,' i t rTv-'t 1 '' 'ifi rltERE is no way to-toiBUUdilr stand the charter Issue. ; It la a choice between the nirf charter and the new. It is a choice between government with officials tinder cover by theoio. cnar,, ter, . and government with officials In the open by the new. Those ,who are against the new charter,' are standing for a -charter that has been condemned by every Portland mayor for the past eight years. Those who are for the new cliarterare standing for a change that is advocated by every candidate for mayor but one, and that one ad vocated It until a few days ago. Thenew charter provides a' short er ballot and thereby removes an enormous strain from the principle of the primary laW.Vlt reduces the number of elective offices In an av erage city election to four or less,; and will correspondingly reduce the number of candidates. It will give citizens a chance to kn-w the merits mid demerits el those who Beek of fice.': ; ;:::..;- i There Is scarcely a voter In Port land who knows ach of the present fifty-five city candidates. Thousands "l .uumug oou,, never heard of most f them be- Europe to support the Albani fore and will never hear of them ns In forming an ndependent gov-0-r!ltn u t ,n aWft fitratn n the;ernment and choosing a prince for Primary law. Its cure Is a reducedTinem5Briremi.p0TrTnvl!.rB fu number of elective official, and this Is one of the great merits of the new. charter. :'v; ". " -; " There has been protest against the old. charter.' ever : since 1907. 7 A commission w'as appointed then ' to revise It The agitation against It has ' been going on ever since, and It is now crystalied into the pend ing commission charter. - .Such la the . issue. The paving trust is trying to beat the new char-: te ,Tae' puDlIc service corporations arfe (rjing to beat : it. Those 'who live by politics are trying to beat It. Thel' 'TaJpayets- As6clatfoA' so called, Is, trying beat it . Its tight Is conducted from ambush,-" Kobody knows r where It gets, the large sums ' ot money n is spending in ,j;ne ugni. It ' refuses to tell the name of Its mmbef. 'It? attacks1, on thenew charted consist of lies, slanders and m isrepresentation j.v4 l- Such are some of the JnfluenceB that. are striving to retain the old charter '.The Very '.character ,of the opposition is a powerful argument for average men to support the new charter, - - ; Incidentally, not a man of those attacking the new "charter defends" the old one. The only candidate in good terms, and- Essad: Pasha, v lio ever did that. was" J." E. Werleln j the Albanian with his 40,000 sol in Tiia candidacy for mayor two years diers, marched out in peace. Scu- ago, and he was so badly beaten in the primaries nobody has since lifted a voice in defense of a system con demned, by every one of Portland's mayors for the past eight years. The Issue Is so plain that nobody need be fooled. It is a question of whether we are to continue jiiider the present system, a system" that nobody defends, a system that no body apologizes, for, a system, that Is fought for by those acting in se cret, a system wanted by practical men "who know exactly what ' they want and how to get It, a system condemned ; unqualifiedly by all the recent mayors of Portland. ALASKAN RAILROADS T HE long delay In taking any decisive step towards construc tion by the United J States-gpy " , VWT pen8ating,5erritory.fartheE;., to t the -crnment of railroads designedl,,.., ,hw to open np the resources of "Alaska,! has been broken by the Introduction of Identical bills of wide scope by Senator Chamberlain in the Senate and Representative Wickersham r in the" House. " These bills are evidently based on lbe; reports of the commission sent by; formef President Taffto-AIaska" Inst year. The authorized .mileage 733 corresponds with the 'com mission's advice, and will each both the great coal fields, connecting them with tide water,, and also opening a route by rallrpad through American territory between tide wa ter and the Yukon valley. . The powers to he t conferred by tbese-'Wl.ls on the president? are most extensive, leaving,, in his dis cretion methods- bath of onstrtici tlon and of subsequent operation. Special permission is given for the transfer, to, Alaska, of the plant of the Panama canal .works of all kinds nnd its use thee In construction. Although the invasion by the gov ernnient of the field of railroad rewi t twi-HHi ttftfa)ioB..i au. . a large scale Is a comparative noyelty ; ct s precedent in man.1 respects is Tumul in tl) purchase and operation ' t ho Rovf rnment of the trans-isth- :;t r.iilro!id nf Patlama. ' " li1a',o, coi'ltal ha"surrcnderc(I aUinii(s lo complete nil 'or any of the Alaskan lines. Construction by the 'ample, moans of the government la the only alternative. . Kxpericnce at Panama has proved that govern ment engineer officers are most fully competent for the heaviest en gineerlnc and constructing exi- j genciea. ' Mil. LO.MHAHD IX r X ANT nddrecs last night, Mr. Lorn bard again denounced the com mission charter. But recently Mr.' Lombard thought he knew that the commis sion charter was splendid and was advising his audiences to support it. Now," he- thinks he' knows that it is not as good a charter as the old one, and advises his hearers to vote it down. ' Matching up what Mr. Lombard i thought, he knew about the commis sion charter recently and what he thinks he Itnows about it now.'can anybody tell with safety just what Mr. Lombard does know about com mission; charters anyway? ' Meanwhile,0' Mr. Lombard, two yeara ago, was bitter In his attacks on the old charter, and clamorous In his demands for commission gov ernment. In an address in Port- d . h)g camwaKn for mayor Mr. Lombard said April 26, 1911: , Where doe Mr. Rushlight stand on the - commission . form of government? MP.'fWfitein is defending the old char ter, and, placing the .'blame for' condi tions on the shoulders of past mayors of the city.' I say a complete revision of the charter Is needed, ' tlmt will do away with antiquated, methods and bring- responsibility home to each of ficer of the city. If I am elected mayor I will at once appoint a com mittee to prepare a draft of a com mission form of government to be submitted to the people hot later than June, 1912. , A DARING COUP K' ING 1 NICHOLAS of Montcne- gre has the reputation of be ing the 'most astute politician among European monarchB. Europe, through its ambassadors' conference, agreed to support the demand, voiced by Austria, that Montenegro recognize the boundaries ropean princelings began pluming themselves for . office, hoping that lightning might strike them. ... : . : Meanwhile King Nicholas went on with the siege .. The commanding 'general of the 40.000 Turkish soldiers In Scutari was Essad Pasha, an Albanian by blrthi and a chief among that hold but half savage people. The4ma jorlty of his 40,000 soldiers "also were Albanians, the Turks having a great liking for them. The major ity of Essad's forces were Moham medans,' v:; -:-:-r;: ; -.::..,: .. lot the besieging forces at, Scu tari about 40,000, or one half,' were Montenegrins, the other half Ser vians. JDispatcheS' told us that the two halves did not agree very well and that the. Servians were going home and they did. But the Montenegrins, being left "1 alone, redoubled their attacks and captured ';' the heights overlooking the defenders' trenches. Then fol lowed a fierce assault. Essad Pasha surrendered, and the Montenegrins marched into Scutari. Austrian pa pers prophesied a massacre of Al banians in the city. But no vic tors and vanquished were seemingly 1 t a rl ti 'o a trrtr HttlA hnh' htr oil the bombardments. ' Kicholas was. left In the city with his Montenegrins, vowing, that none of the powers should put him and his men. out while life lasts. Austria ground her' teeth and put 10,000 men on shipboard at Trieste,; to occupy Montenegrin ports, and cross the mountains to Cettlnje the capital. But now Essad Pasha plays his strong card. He announces himself as prince of his native Albania and he has' 40,000 argumenls to back him in his sol diers' rifles. The chances are that Albanian opposition to him will not be very serious.'.,. If It turns out, as probably It will, that Scutari is left to King Nicholas, and the new Albania es tablishes Its capital, and gets com- themselves as satisfied, what can Austria do about it? Non-interference and neutrality are the ties that bind the European concert, and that Austria cannot afford to break. Then the coup of King Nicholas wins. , : .('...:. ; i. DAIUv LANTKKN METHODS' w ITH what alacrity the well known "Taxpayers' League" hastened to assure the' pub lic that it is not the "Tax payers! Association," and did not send out the lying' circulars about the' new charter. . There is not an organization in Portland except the "Taxpayers,, As sociation" that would stand sponsor for the circular for one'taomeht.) The so-called ''Taxpayers' Asso ciation" could do it because it is without pride of ancestry of hope of posterity,. It sprang inta existence over night, and will vanish with next Saturday's balloting, tn effect, It is a doorstep foundling, with only dWiigTlo appear as its, sponsors. It was formed to do Jtist such things as issuing the lying circulars whicl the Taxpayers League, has hastened to dinown! There is other campaign - dirty workthat If was formed to do for tlio benefit of men who remain in .ambush and refuse to -hiako their identity known, What better" argument for the adoption of the new .charter t'hifn tliia over-night dark-lantern ."Tax payers' Association?" ; When the opposition is cloaked, maske4 and ambushed, when it Is ashamed of its .methods and ashamed to be known in Its work, how fitting for honest men to be for the new charter? When, then? S PEAKING of the reports of the Bureau of Municipal Research on Portland'- governmental system, the OregonJan Baysf " Still It seems that thenbureau tnlftht enlarge Its own efficiency by conduct ing surveys only ti such times as its reports are not likely td.be suspected of political coloring. .- Of what "political" purpose does the Orgonian suspect the bureau The bureau favors no'candldate, but strictly' confines Its reports to ques tions of" how Portland can better its organic system of government. Is the.lOregonian not Interested in . such questions? ' Does - the Ore gonian think it wrong for the means of bettering, government," to be dis cussed in campaign, time? v ( At just what time does the Ore- gonian think It would be proper for the bureau to make reports as to the " defects, in Portland's .old char- 'V- '. ' - -;t ' ' -.''-. Does the Oregonian think it would be better to withhold the reports until after election, when there Is no chance to vote to abandon the old charter,' thereby Insuring .two years more . of a' system that has been denounced by every...mayor of Portland for : eight years? Or, does the Oregonian think it would Abe 'more fitting for the bu reau never to submit the reports at all. a consummation so much de sired by the public service mag nates, the paving trust and the tax eaters. ;- ' - The bureau Is the highest author ity on city government In the world, and its work In Portland is at the, instance of a committee of patriotic Portland citizens interested only in better government for this city.' ; Seriously speaking, if the findings as to tne. oia cnarter by such a bureTu-Tr9norto-De considered when a new charter Is pending for adoption, when, In Heaven's name, is. the proper time for them to - be considered? THE VOICE OF A TISTOL w HAT happened when the voice of a pistol whispered appeal ingly to a weakminded boy is recounted on this page, ,lt occurred in' the Elgin tragedy, in which a defective boy of fourteen shot and killed a mother, and then, with an ax, slew, her two small chil drea who were eye witnesses to the shooting. ; - t The act was without provocation. The boy had found the pistol In a cupboard a few days before., Sight and subsequent possession of the weapon aroused a latent suggestion in the weak mind to use it. Mrs. Sleep happened along at the psycho logical moment, and became the tar gefc and the victim. The case is not isolated. In vary ing degrees, there have been thou sands like it. The -graveyards are crowded with victims of those in whom: possession of a pistol was the suggestion or , temptation to use, it. The hew pistol law of Oregon is sound, to the core in principle. It is founded on common sense, and is bound to become a part of the crim inal code of every state. The Elgin tragedy Is so clear and so convinc ing as to press forward restriction of pistol sales and pistol carrying as a basic reform. ' " There are provisions in the Ore gon law, that functionaries cannot afford to overlook. . If these func tionaries 'permit sales and carrying of revolvers In violation of the lawj how can they explain when a homi cide is committed with a weapon so bought and carried? RESOURCES OF OREGON T HE State Bureau of Mines was "a creation, of the last legislature, and a worthy one. The governor was charged with the selection of the seven members, and combed the state oyer in all districts to make WrtW'tnft ' -Me-wbrk 1 was. d!stjlbutedV!'eacft man being a specialist; in his own line. The very variety ' of the de partments is indication of the' varied character of the resources of Oregon- .: ;- : :-.jr: - . Metallferous and hydraulic mining has' been followed in Oregon , since the early days when the 'pack "trains at Corvallis were loaded '" with the flour, and bacon, and apples of the Willamette Valley to supply the gold miners at Jacksonville and the foot hills of the Siskiyous. The placers were rich in those times of recent dis covery. Subsequent developments in quartz mining in gold and copper, in iron mines, in silver and platinum, in quicksilver, ana in various new met aj3; of the present day, Jjave Juggled Vide prospecting and promise 'rich returns, r- ;.;:.';..vY. Oregon is rich in , widely scattered deposits of clays of all kinds, firs clay, bulldinj5 clays, pottery clays, of cement rock. Yet we still Import our building materials from sister states, and even1 from" abroad. There is a great, field , for domestic mnnnfac turera.' n . .-. - The next branch fuels, salines and fertilizers will, find ample em ployment for more than one expert. Not one OreKoniau lu a hundred has more than the - vaguest' idea of. the riches" of the stain in these depart ments of enterprise. Tho bureau has assigned ma terials and forestry relations' to a special department. - No department w ill better repay prompt and vigor ous work than this, if the demand for good roads Ij to be met. i A president who is a mining en gineer has been etected, while the heads of the State University and of the State Agricultural College have been given charge of conservation and transportation. Thus the work haa been divided up. The time of planning ahead is past. The day for development has arrived. , An I.'W W. speaker at Portland said Sunday nght that his people are silently organizing in the lumber camps; and that when strong enough thev will riAmanri And . eet nhnver baths, reading rooms and planoV Sensible ambition, this. And the bosses may well afford to grant such boons If by so dping it will lessen the booze evil and other brutalizing influences. ' , - . v r . -j '4 One wonders how the Portland scribblers happen to know anything. They don't want to know history. They sprung the gong on L. M. Lepper, East Side booster, just as he had flung out his verbal skir mishers for a masterly oration on the battle of Waterloo. The Harney County News says that "the Bend Bulletin is an inter esting and amusing little cuss, even if It Is a slippery and artful dodger." Trap It, brother, and ship it . to Portland. There may be room . for it in the monkey cage at the .city park. ..-' .'.''' V,;:','' '':":''; '"',', Letters From the People (Commnnleattonn nt te Tbe Journal for publication Id tbts department boold be writ-1 ira vh vim wiiw aiuv tit mv )Bivr, iuvuiii mi txeerd 8(iO wor til (a length and muat be ae tompanled br tb nam nnd addresa of tbe ender. If the writer doe not dntra to bate tba same published, be abonld ao state.) . Commission Exegesis. Portland, April 28. -To the Editor of The Journal There Is a story of a young modern preacher." who was ap pointed on a certain occasion to give an exegesis of a text of scripture. When be had concluded a brother of the old school remarked that there was no ques- ttu" aa the comtteteqf-the "exit Jesus." In all of the speeches I have heard and In most of the articles written, ex plaining the provisions of the proposed charter, there pan be no question as to the lack of a studious digest of Its con tents. If not too late to shape it up before the primary election, would it not be a good and helpfut plan for some one of your capable men to prepare and vou nublish a terse and unprejudiced 4... -.1,-, 1 ll .1.-1 obvious intent of the commission char ter? It could start out something like this: - Under the new charter we propose to elect five citizens to run the affairs of the city.. One of. these we elect mayor. These five are to work at this one Job during business" hours and be paid for it., No one elected can qualify unless he can furnish a -satisfactory moral bond In the sum of $25,000 to protect the city in case Jie falls to properly dis charge his duties. It is Intended that the surety companies having $125,00) at stake, will scan with considerable vigilance the fitness of each of the five applicants for a bond. The city has no such protection how. - , - The mayor will have no veto power. All business done must be a matter of record, Whether orders or ordinances; no secret meetings, and all meetings as well aa records open to : the public. Every three months there will be. is sued a statement of the business, done and at the end of the year the Portland clearing hoUsa , Will , furnish an' expert to audit the year's accounts and certify as to their correctness," etc.,' etc., etc"" , Note: If a business vision, a big and ever increasing future," if love of, his city and pride In his workj. if a good salary and the feeling of power, won't give the city a clean cut business man agement, then the voters -who opposed the Incumbents, the citizens at large and the tremendous force t a $25,000 bond and the inspiration that will arise from the fact that the city hall, on the adop tion of the new charter, will ever after lie directly in the protecting 60 mile shadow of Oregon's strongest Institu tion all these will, The proposed charter Is drawn to get better results for the city, on the policy that "you can't keep a bad man up nor a good man down,'' and "there 19 always room at the top." ',' ' So everybody is protected, as far as can be foreseen at present, and the cit izens can change add to pr take from this first document as experience will surely point out. . ' It seems to me that when old Pontius Pilate of the bonding company gets the new mayor spiked to the cross of re sponstbility for his acts, and with anj Inscription that begins, "Know all men by these presents that we bet 125,000 to a buffalo nickel that this man is a good man and will stay good," the may or av H 1' look at the gen tlem en oocu py I ng Uke promlnent-positions on either side, with like inscriptions over them, and he will say as his ears take in the strange languages or the mob "malfeasance," dereliction," ' "neglect,"' "corruption." etc: i'Verily, you are with me this day in Paradise." ... p. . G. IIUGHSON. : 'Where Roes Olson Stand? r, Portland, Or... April 28.-To the Ed itor or The Journal I noticed in the Sunday Issue of the Oregonian a two column illustrated eulogy of Fred Ol son, candidate for municipal Judge" at the coming primaries. While it com prehended the history of his life fromJ me log caoin to me mansion in wntcii he now resides, and also chronicled the narrative of his six .years'--tenure as Justice of the peace, during which In failed to accomplish anything or evan- gelize the whole world, as he now de elates, If elected, he Will do, why did he ro", artfullv dodge any - issue that ' he .i .,. ... i ..: , , ... j . " . iooiini nuuiu jMHiunr ur injure ma can didacy? Will ,Tho' Journal do quite a favor to.a considerable number of vot- e,- in thi nplciitmrhoorf hw askimr-Mr Olson publicly if he Is for or agalnSt!1" the commission :Xdrm -.of government? Will you please ask him further h"jw he expectj to parole prisoners7 after sentence is Imposed, when he knows, or else is very vaguely posted on his au thority;, that,; after sentence, the case ! Hn.lff nut nf.lil. rlttlH..r. .rp la the. bands of the parole board. V..,:.:--:? .;;,-.:,:-: J. L. QUINN. : A Farmer's Complaint. Sidney, Or., April 28. To the Editor of Tli e Jfurnal-A"Srrrat deal Is said about - the;-rates transportation coin- PERTINENT COMMENT SMALL CHANGE Is everybody some sort of a klckert Being president is no easy Job for a fit man. . Beats all how much some people know that Isn't so. ; .... e . e '. . ,, , c . A man "fit for mayor ,jls a man to, be . . There Is scant originality of thought or expression in the average candidate. , The 'hen that lived 25 years and'lftid 4500 eggs deserved an honorable fu neral. - . .. 'My I What ravishing heads of hair some of those candidates show In their pictures, ' "-, . ' Having nothing better to do or talk about, bodh people are predicting a big June flood. , -" :-: v--. ':;:- ' The Republican party may "come back.r but if so it will be a very dif ferent Republican party. . Some' nations, like .some men, appear iu ilium iiiui innir main ODiecc or rx- laince in 10 Dorrow money. Maybe the owner of the Beavers' will hive to lay it on to the 13 year. But '13 was nothing to boast of. '. Bab,! What a fiokle-false spring, to allow Jack Frost to come sneaking around o nights the last week In April. It may be a debatable question Whether we need a good deal more gov ernment or a good deal less. One or the other, apparently. 1 Orchardists cannot complain this year Of buds and blooms developing too early. But the prospect Is fine for a big crop In due season. . . NEW YORK Hear Joseph Sechler Coxey: "Blood will run in the gutters in 1914, Capital will try to crush strikers by the use of soldiers. It will be worse than war.'-,. - - . Sounds a good deal like a Mother Shipman prophecy. But Coxey means it vo'ha'rd that after you talk with him you feel like buying a rifle and a lot of -buckwheat on the way home. He'a the man, you'll remember, who led the Arirty of the Commonweal across the grass to Washington rn 1894. . '"Dissatisfaction always follows a new tariff. The workingman is discontented now. That means strikes. With the I. W. W. leaders in the saddle the radicals of the A. K. L. are Joining them strikes mean violence. Witness Lawrence, and West Virginia, and Pat erson, and the skirmishing by villages In Colorado. The I. W. W. either win or lose a strike. They never split the difference. "The tariff, the Strikes, "and the dis sension over the suggested changes in the monetary system will aid the I. W. W. leader ta A their .JdeJd.Tr-lbft.Bali:J darity of labor. The moment they come near enough to cripple the means of communication In any state the troops must be called out. That's what the I. W. W. want. They sincerely believe they are engaged in a war, and that their victory depends,upon their oppo sition of the force of labor to the force employed by capital. It seems to me these rays of discontent are being focussed on the body politic as through a burning glass; Next year I think, the body politic will begin to wiggle itself where the rays meet." . Coxey has been called a crank be cause of his good roads and flat money Ideas, and because he was the first to advocate the radical ideas that have found recent favor with the voters. But he is so little of a crank that he has I bum up a sound, well-banked fortune although he doesn't believe in banks and therefore Is not looking forward to solidarity and bloodshed with any true Joy. .- - . . ,. .. "The best wish I have Is that I'm a poor prophet," said he. . Cab-using New Tork is pulling, for Mayor Gaynor's new taxicab ordinance. If it becomes law, it will reduce the high cost of taxicabblng and eliminate certain dangers of the present. - The police are frank in declaring that 200 of the public chauffeurs are graduates from Sing Sing. They warn against taking a taxi which carries an extra man on the driver's seat. "Because the odd man is apt to be a stick-up specialist," the policemen say. Overcharging by taxi robbers is an old story. But now and then an anec dote is worth recounting. - One of Broadt way'a most prominent actors objected laat week to a charge. "Why should I pay you $4 when last night I paid but $2.50 for the same ride?" he asked. The chauffeur re piled with unexpected kindness. - "Boss," -said he, "the only reason is that I need the money."" ' The fare is usually helpless. . He doesn't care to go to a police station to have the dispute arbitrated. And he ,1s Just as apt to be overcharged by the chauffeurs who .have placets upon the hotel stands as by those who bargle for business up and down Broad way. The 'theory that the $500,000 which the cab companies 'pay to the hotel keepers for their occupancy of the city's streets ensures the cab user against overcharge is a mistaken one. "Gentlemen," said the manager, of one of the greatest hotels to an inves- panles charge, as discouraging the farm ers from shipping produce, bjrt there are other causes that are more discouraging than transportation charges. A short time ago I shipped a coop of 14 chickens to a commission merchant In Portland.- When I shipped the -chickens they weighed 82 pounds, hut when the returns came back I was given only 71 pounds. rThe distance from Portland was only about three hours. One might expect a-small 'shrinkage, but 11 pounds was surely a pretty big rakeoff. -The producers of farm products seem to be mulcted by everyone' with whom they try to do business, and are looked upon as a legitimate subject for exploitation. If these conferences that meet Xo study rural conditions and high cost of living and our good professors at the college who "do so- much for the farmer" would investigate these small matters, it would do more good to the farmers than land banks and expensive college professors. - J. F. D. , Marriage Law Complications.' Beaverton, Or., April 29. to the Edi tor of The Journal I would like infor mation through The Journal concerning new ,ftw' I see by the papers that after June 3 one has to get a certificate to get -married, and it has to be 100. Now that means perfect, and how many can be found Who are perfect? Probably one-half of our men are afflictel with rheumatitsm, and the. other half have catarrn; ana that is not being perfect. Theft,' why should a woman be allowed ""? V- .1. , Z 1 w some malady? I think the result will bo that the majority of them will go out of the state, to marry. If they. have the same law In Washington they .will go to Brit ish Columbia, and then, could a woman sue ft man for breach of promise if he could not get a. license? ; r t Then f ste time Iw Ulk-rf iawtnn bachelors. Can they tax them when they refuse them a license? This looks like a mixed up mess, and probably the result will be ten times more bachelors; No one, will be allowed to marry onlv the high toned. Is that constitutional? 1 ; A READER, AND NEWS IN BRIEF OREGON SIDELIGHTS 'Headquarters of the Whitman forest reperve will be removed from sumpter to nuKer. ' The Hllltsboro Argus congratulates WaHliinuton county on its $2,000,000 of deposit oanaea tn nome towns, oennos what the east end deposits In rortlanil. : Boys taking domestic science In the Hood River iilgh school course are giv ing dinners, cooked and served. by them selves At a recent dinner there were on the menu "light biscuit, roast beef, Jellk'H, asparagus tips, baked apples, vegetnblcs, peaches and cream and angel food," Fof a number of years Albany lias enjoyed the distinction of being the railroad hub of the Willamette valley. A fen weeks ago the Misfit Man of the Democrat asserted that the eity may rightfully claim an additional distinc tion of being the ' dog hub" of the same territory. . 1 Pendleton East Oregonian: V Though there is no shouting about it, Pendle ton is enjoying a good period jt ad vancement and It Is fast making this city a better, 'more modern and more wholesome-place In which to live. The Improvements are coming as the result of natural demand, not from agitation. Pendleton Is not getting ahead of Itself. We are Just catching up. , . - . ; Alta Illatt of Lyons won two prizes at an ' educational .rally contest held recently at the Jordan Grange hall, in Linn county. One prize was for the best map of Oregon and the other tor the best solo, given to pupils below tnc seventh grade. Alta Is a bright pupil in the fifth grade. AUa's brother, Roy, also won a prize. The Lyons school secured more prizes. Including the spe cial prize, than any of the other five schools in the contest. DAY - BY DAY tlgating committee, "I give you my word that we make only lft per cent on the business we give the taxi company at our hotel. You do not grudge us that pitiful little cum. do you?" . That pitiful little sura proved to be 134.000 annually. Where do relatives come from, any how? Not long ago an old man died In Philadelphia. For three year he had been a patient in a hospital there. The hospital authorities had tried their best to find his kin and failed. They traced his life from the day that he landed from an immigrant ship, and they could not learn that he had ever written a letter or received one, "Three weeks after his will proved that he had saved up $7000 there were 11 claimants." said Dr. O. C. Lane, who tells the story. r . Last year an old woman died In New York. She had been known as an apple seller to an earlier generation. They held some faint recollection that when her daughter died, he told them that She had neither kith nor kin alive). Rut she'Tiaannofe'tlan'flOOOn "bonds, Of the 63 claimants more than 80 were able to prove that they. actually had a plight relationship to the deceased. But the prize story of all Is that of Daniel Creedon, who lived In an old mill at Woodside, L. I. In some way he man aged to put away $50,000. More than 1000 persons in all parts of the world put in a claim for that money. Only four made good. Those who are fighting against the present habit of permitting certain classes of work to be done in tenement rooms have pleasant little stories to telL Mrs. Florence Kelley of the Child's Welfare league recalled one. She found two small kids with whom she had be- come- acquainted staggering along West Nineteenth street They were so com pletely overshadowed by their burdens that Mrs. Kelly, could Just see , two stubby little legs wagging studily on under each bundle. "What are those bundles?" she asked. j"'Pants," said the youngsters, suc cinctly. , "And why are you not In school?" she demanded. - . ; ' "Aw," said the elder, "have a heart. Can t yuh see we got scoilet fever?" And they had, too. Or they had had not long before. The Joke is that both were supposed to be strictly quarantined. "I don't know how many dozen pairs of those pants were finished in the three or four flats in which persons were sick from scarlet fever," said Mrs. Kelley, "Pwrhaps the worst of it is that they were all knee pants Intended for the use of healthy little young sters.. . ,'r. ,. .... .... ; . ..,;. ,... Little attention is paid to the shots fired now and then -in the bomb belt. The police take the attitude that firing revrhers at each other is an aradlcable trait of the Italian. Now and then a story aeveiops. t Salvatore Variscl was arraigned oh the charge of shooting inree times at Herman Knepper, , "Sure I shot at him," Variscl told the magistrate, calmly. "But I missed him." , . "And why did your' "Aw," said Variscl. "It was awful quiet that day. I thought I'd have a little fun." It recalls Don Marquis's storr of the negro who was arrested for shooting a friend. . ' - ... , .. "S'possinM did shoot htm?" he anirt Indlgnaotly. "I didn't huht him none. De J3ullet hit him in de haid." Wall Street Wisdom. Frorri the Omaha World-Herald. The Wall street Journals a'r forever talking about the demand for Increased wages regardless of "the value bf the product" which U about as evasive a way of meeting a proposition as could be invented. They never attempt to tell what the value of the product of labor Is, for they would meet with insur mountable difficulties in that direction. What is the value of the product of a fireman or engineer , on a railroad? Will these" Journals endeavor to tell? The wage workers know -that the value of the money they have been receiving for the last few years has been constantly decreasing, that is, it purchases less and less as the years Was by, and they can estimate accurately what the loss has been to them. Moreover, the product of their, labor nas been increasing all the time for the engines are larger and the trains are hauling more freight with the same number of hands. v According to Wall street papers, all wisdom is located there and never es capes from -its precincts. One of them say 8: . - "The most dangerous threat overhang ing every branch of business is that of legislation by politicians who take some sort of pride In admitting that they do not understand the intricate business processes for which they propose to leg islate." Members of congress are generally spoken of by these men as the scum of the ignorance of the whole country, whereas there are men in'' congress of tho widest and most. prof otind culture, In whose presence thesei speculators would appear as . mites of the gutter. Most of Wall street could not pass a kindergarten examination 4n i political economy arid know as 'little about the strenew of gwyerwrf)--e-o-wHd tHmia Indian ' in a. crowd or nine of them the question was asked: "How many.imem bers . of the cabinet are there?" and not one could answer. There is no "intricate processes" about stock gam bling that a scliUQl boy cuuld nut under stand, i THE ELGIN TRAGEDY . Dispatch to Chic-iiKo Tribune. Tills is tlio Htory of the mnnier on the Slecb funii an it whh tnli! In- I lor. man Copies to his mother bix! fa Hum-: "I found the pistol" on a Hhclf In the cupboard several days before. There were a lot of bullets with It. I put tlio Iumu.ii ana me duiicis Jit my porKetr- l thought I would have some fun. I never tllOUffht- of Imrttnir iinvnmv Wlion l' CHme into the house' I saw Mrs. SUe. When I got homo from school, soiti thing seemed to keep telling me to sbo, t Mrs. Sleep and I Just pulled the ' i- volver , from my pocket and shot I didn't wartt to kill the kids, but they had witnessed the shooting and I had to.".. , - : ; , .- A pistol,, left carelessly in an easily accessible spot, fell into the bands of a degenerate boy. The weapon carried with it its own latent suggestion to kill.' ? .- -. The boy kept it In his pocket for a few days, fondling It constantly;- exam-. lnlng it occasionally in secret. - And all the time his thought were dwelling on the weapon and the power which Its possession i conferred on Jilra. Finally the victim, Mrs. Sleep, and the oppor. tunity to kill presented themselves. The pistol's latent suggestion to murder be came active; The boy's weak will suc cumbed to its power, He killed the wo man and then the little eye witnesses. It is probable the Sleep tragedy, in addition to prompting legislation for the scientific care of defectives, will ' arouse agitation in this part of the state for more rigid laws regulating the carrying 'of firearms. It, now is reaN ized that the mere possession of a pis tol In the Coppes boy's case was an In centive to use it Ills emotions, accord ing to his own statements made here in the Jail, were like those of a man stand ing on the edge of the top of a high building. The man with difficulty re presses a desire to jump; the boy, be ing a mental weakling, was unable to repel the suggestion' to kill. ' The boy told his story of the murder after the first manifestation of emo tion he has exhibited since his arrest His father and mother had come to El gin from Piano to talk the ease over with him. '-: - - ' When the father and mother walked Into the Jail corridor the boy burst out . crying. It was several minutes before any one of the three cduld talk. The father began crying when he drew tears i to the boy's eyes. Deputy .Sheriff George German took the boy out of his cell. ....::.-.-,;- -.N I.";,.,,:, a "Hermy. Hermy, did you do It, did you do It?" the mother asked as she clasped the boy In her arms and kissed him. '- - "Yes, mother; I did It t shot Mrs. Sleep and then killed her babies," he sobbed. ..-' 'But, my poor little boy, you did not do it alone; someone musty have helped " you," the mother pleaded. . ,;" "No, mother, I did It all alone, nO one told me to do it and no one helped me," he cried, and then threw, lils-arms about his mother's neck. ; '. ; ' - "Hermy, what -made, you do UT. Why did you do It?", , "Mother, mother, I Just shot ber, that is all," he answered. Then he detailed his meeting with Mrs. Sleep and bis yielding to the pas- ' ion to kill. Mr. andMrs. Copps announced they had retained the law firm of AlachuleY, Putnam '' James of Aurora to defend the boy. The senior partner In tWs firm is Samuel Alschuler, recent candi date for the Democratio nomination for governor. ' ' ' Detective Edward Held, to whom Her man confessed, today told the state's attorney that so far as he was able to , estimate rrom an tne evidence ne naa heard, Mrs. Sleep and her two children were all murdered within six .minutes.', . Pointed Paragraphs ill There la less fun in gambling if you can afford to lose. A woman seldom knows what she wants until she discovers that aha can't get it ',. , - With riches some men Imagine that they can gild a lot of vices until they look like virtues. - e The difference between the average young woman and a fsuffrag etta Is gen erally about CO yearsV 4 When a small boy overhears the doe tnr tn in r his motherXto take plenty Of exercise, that's bla cue to be good. ,, ; After a woman has spent 2& years - ; trying to make a man of her son. along , comes another woman who proceeds to make a tol of him in 20 minutes. -.,.r i ,' "' Intervention In Wall Street. " ' From the San Francisco Bulletin. : Revelations are piling up that show the Imperative necessity of intervention in the affairs of Mexico, not on its soil or in Its domestio matters, but in Wall . street, New York, and Lombard street, i .nn - ottiM. th wnrlc tit naclflcfttion ai MVlluu... w - ' - t- - - ; must be done. Certain great financial Interests need to be choked until their .'tongues protrude a foot or so; then per haps they win loosen tneir grip on un happy Mexico. So far the, conflict of contesting greed has cost, something like a hundred thousand Jives, hunger and misery to untold thousands-more, money losses running to hundreds of millions, the utter ruin of a nation and the disturbance of the world's peaoe. Beyond a doubt this kind of intervention is demanded. It should not be delayed a moment. 138 Years Ago To-Day : One hundred and thirty-eight years ago . today Paul Revere took the famous ride that linked his name forever with the heroes of American Revo-.' lutionary history, i:, f :, . , A lone . man on horseback ' stirred up a whole countryside "every Middlesex village and farm," as we are told. If newspapers had been more renerally circulated ; the Mid- ' dlesex folks would have known all -about the movements of the king's troops. They would have been prepared for the news that Revere might have ent over the phone to ten times as many in one tenth the time. .v.'.t - 'In every corner of this great country people know what's aroing on in all other corners through the medium of the dally newspaper. i And the newspaper Is the medium that the business world employs to bring to gether buyer-and seller. When you read the adver tisements in THE JOURNAL aiuiiar Xha t .this, depart-. ment. represents a distinct service to you. It Is. the means of communication between the reliable store and your home, .-' L'se It carefully and systemat ically, , ,; -