Till: OREGON DAILY JOURNAL. PORTLAND, TUESDAY EVENING, JUNE 3, 1013. THE JOURNAL .' JSIiPTKNIilCNT KKWHrAPK , loUllhr t uiiliaiK'ti ir rtf-nlii mi. mil Kui'lufl ana vrj hitml.ty mriiliitf ill lln Ji.iiriinl build ', Itrumlw. mid n il ti 1 1 1 !.. I'ff I Infill, H. Kumrvii nt lilt aualulftra ill liirlMid, f r li.n.ri,l.k,n tliiiriigli malla a itrcuiiil r ,i f !tr. lUtl'IINXH M.ln 717.1: IRimt. ' A-WM,' Ail df imrf ittriT riirtir'1 tr tbwm nmuhe'a. 111 Ihi ftnffnior w.nf rii-pwrtm-fit T'"'1'-. l'll-il AliVKUTISINO KKJ-MKHICMIATIV RMiJamln ketitiior Co., liruMWlrk Building i-iS rifth ii.nu. New ! 2i tWa'a l.a n-ilMIn. (Mr mm. 1 ' ' bulpj!piio 'Jcriiia cumII or la IOJ aMrat uie umiva B-iates or Mtxicoi . ttr.T Out fttw., $3,00 On nwitk. 1 ecsrur One rnr 12.40 I Ona rvrotb. ....... I .80 fine rear.,,,,.. f 7. AO I On amnio...,.!...! . und roloaRO tha middleman's brako of woman miff ruga. It lu Johnston, i ilnvlng lml In 'moot of Its political froiii tho wheel. ., The company x- hot llobiion, who has raluod tbe gut- reforms, Oregon can claim to be Its peats to pay tho producer mora und frage Jbhu. , dome of thought Kansas makes chnrgo tho consumer lcim. Tho only Johnston Is a reactionary. II Is noise enough to ba its mouth, Rhode middlemen will ba tha 800 houso- the sort of reactionary that voted for i Island suppllos an eye, Tanama a wives, and If they, stick closely to Lorlmer. . colon and alimentary canal; and any- their jolm,. they should bo beneficial Johnston,' issue will be that If , one who Is bo dlsposod may locate middlemen. woman la riven ih .nllotin Ala-1 the rest of Its anatomy. PERTINENT COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF SMALL cuANaa tin TIIK STAV AT 1IO.ML3 !l bama, wtiite women and white men will be out-votod by colorod womon. Alabama has effectually suppressed T IS extraordinary that In such an th6 colorcd malo YOta but Jonn8ton election as that' of yesterday In Portland, scarcely more than 60 per cent of the registered" voters went to the polls. v" ,iIow ' many- of the Btay-at-homes aro" 6n"the streets today walling about the Tesultfl? How many of them are beating their breasts and ululating about bad government. will claim that a colored woman vote wilj express Itself. AN EXTORTIONATE FED r V) Neither humart applause nor human ccnaure 1 to be taken si the tost of truth;' but '.'either should set tin upon testing our elves, Whatcly. . . IX THE KLECTION RETURNS riRdM the meagre returns, I - . i . i. . . . v , (.. I rairnl nl inn m . .i.aln m nt geem cyriaiu uiai ine nutjisucr '""""""j ddipuj. ib iu HE county board very properly cut to $180, the 900 claim of a Portland alienist, who, In the trial of Jack Roberts. The election was one of very great rave test! m oh v aa to th mental con. Importance. Five of the men chosen dltion'of the defendant. are toU ruljrs over 250,000 peo- The alienist demanded $50 to tha pie. They are to exercise almost ir,n tn, mora power .over property than the A.v.a ottnHnoa a run.. X nr " n f, . 18 lcs,ar and $0O for each succeeding day. of Oregon and the supremo court of ... . t im.-io is uu jubuucaiiun tor bucu a fee. Other men 'are compelled to attend court-and testify at $2 per day. Juen whobB tlmo la as. precious and whose services are as costly as aro'those'of tha most famous- alien ists. are reduced to a common i level by tho courts and forced to testify It has boon discovered at Was- leyan university that social dlsslpa tton militates against the student, Trite but true. Tha college, hare be comes the ctvlo tortoise when, ha enters the' world's handicap; Oregon combined. '; They are to Inaugurate a new eys- It Item, of government and It la almost a frsnrhliie In badlv beateri. hold In tbrilr hands the taxing now. Thera Is V strong moral in the er, the administrative power. ' the . result., People are Pick and tired of legislative power, and tho Judicial . ........ .i . - 1 nnu'iK rP tttA Anil.. n t n..iu. A Beeing street? Riven awy on every ""- t"" ul a lowlv 12 ner aw, A' n ntoitavr. with -tin -rtnnuntA affecting a OUartCf Of ft mllltnn rifiO. Bt tt 10 " Per" consideration' or benefit In' return. P'v - - . There Is no kown reason why an The election returns are notice to1 Vet nearly half the reglBtered G3tceltlon hom be mada.la- tha h -ftvarfctnw'iiiv of th ritv tint voters, of Portland didn't 'a CfBe of . n alienist. There ia, no .'tolndiscrlmlhately beBtow franchises whoop . They 'contributed to the known reason why there should be ion speculators, or promoters, or general spirit of unrest and lost con- onffc ar stocrauc ciass or witnesses '.u ' noi- fidence in nolf irovernmpnt hr fv. with all the rest of tha wltnessea frnm ritr nd then annlv them to Ing at home Ttnd leaving the Issue 01 Proletariats. ' .n ! ' to others. ' ma Foruana alienist was an It la likewise practically certain 'The Btay-at-homes aro ona of thaU,tle to his $50 ffo for tho mental that the'eharter amendment respect- mo8t dangerous Influencea la eelf examination. Asldo from that, why lug a common entry and common government Those who live by pol- should he receive $150 for the first use of the terminal on both, sides ltlcs and those who profit from pred- ay and $100 for each additional thronehout the fnll leneth of the atory assaults upoiuUhe common l or attendance 7 I .harbor has Daased. br a Btrong vote. nian "ever fall to vote. The graft- Does an alienist, owe no obllga Here again there is a splendid moral m never till The vicious interests Hon as a citizen to the state? In the election returns. never ran. ine unms ana the in The nubile wants no monopolized competents nerer fall. w terminals. It wants common entry! A11 tbesa K to the polls and cast to all terminals for all lines, it their ballots. They often elect their '-.wants common use of all terminals mea " ls one of the ways to ac Denver man is wearing his broken neck in a plaster cast Rather novel, but not apt to become a popular fashion. Tha poor fellow can't even turn hla head to sea tha necktla dis plays In the shop windows.' ;i ' 1 Acrobatlo climate doesn't ault tha Gresham, 0r., Outlook, which de clares that "the present is the most backward spring experienced in sev eral years." See Peals about it, and get a forward spring on the program. Dr. Wiley; says that a man doesn't reach his maximum efficiency until he-is 60. Often ha never reaches it, preferring to ' supply his boss with the minimum. That's why he has a boss. . . Rather lata to mention It; but dur ing tnat Kissing bee in Berlin the royal guests must have ipherlshed the wish that a pretty queen reigned in tha Teuton realm, Instead of a be mustachad emperor. Lwyr Dunlway has bcom an Many war aelf rilled for mTor.ni1 commlMloirtfra but only a tw could ba chosen. . . r , -? O tha poor oonnrr.nmen, witn a pro, pact of racking- tliclr bralna over a our rancy bill during tha due daya. Th4 wlaar trail nates ara thoaa who pallia that they don't know much, af tar ii, uu dura uiuygoKuil 10 iaarn. In Winhlnaton atata laiy huabanda ara confined in a country atockada and miiaa 10 wora. uooa enough for them, uuk ijr wiree may pa jaiy ailiL A Lana COlintv man wn1 la ahnot hla lawyer. Thii niJt'lit eem axcuaable GRANGE AND SENATE for all lines. It wants the harbor ' Tree and open for all transportation lines and is opposed to monopoly of the harbor by any Una on any f pretext ' - i Just as f&3t as the people get an J opportunity they make their mean I lug clear on these subjects. ' The J old order of bottling up a city, or t maintaining an exclusive control of 5 terminals has got to go. The public ; Is against such a policy and in time win enforce its decrees. .The sooner t those who resist the common entry I and - common use in transportation terminals, the easier the final ad j justmrtitwill.hc. j It seems entirely probable that J the revocation of the railroad fran I chlses on tho east side has failed , But there Is a heavy vote favorable ; to such action. .The vote in favor of revocation is countj. for the apparent collapse of municipal government. There ought to' be a penalty for non-voting. It has been suggested IN RECOMMENDING that tha present two-house legislature of Kansas be replaced by a single body composed of two representa tives from each congressional dis trict. Governor Hodges said In his I 8peaklng for ourselves, wa would regard a Michigan editor as rather poor game after hunting ylck-yacks, tuskywuBks, chinchillas, blood-sweat ing behemoths and other ferocloui beasts In Darkest Africa, In munv cane, but l nnf mtviwnl.l.- it is iUcgal, and ''clearly uauonatltutlonal.'' It doeitn't take a. verv icrloua offnaa to c'Buae tha lynchlnar of a. "nlffirar" down In tha black belt; ona waa killed be cauiia ha rods In a car UcalKind for whit,ea.- 1 ' mm A aener&l forbad women to Vlda aatrlda in a Memorial day parade: which anowa that a man can becoma a general though poianaalna no common aenae on aoma subjects. In a larre cltv It la alwava tn ba reoKonea tnat aoma voters floa't want good government, and ioma othera, though deslrlnar aood government, al ways want to .go about getting it In aome Impracticable way. Till lr nt .To nun mlnir in war with tho United State (a almDlv alllvi Japan la on the verge of bankruptcy and couldn't carry on any considerable war a yar, War takes money. Hut the United States ahoiild therefore ba all tha mora careful to ba Just and avan generous to japan. OREGON SIDELIGHTS riane for a twrt atory brlrk hotel building to be erected at Carlton are being prepared. , Th Kadlatora of Kuirne ara drilling, umler Colunol J. M. VVIIlluma, .TIiRy will niut viry n I k h t until tha IIoh Festival In Portland, When they will march In a body In the- parades in the Kosa City. . Commenting on a rumor that another livery and feed stable will ba started in Jefferson, tha Kevlew says: "Heap TYRANNY OF PATENT MONOPOLY rrcsldont Wilson In World's Work. Take but auch un everyday thing us a useful Invention and the piHtlug of It at the service of men. you know how prolific the Anierloun blind lias benu in Inventloiii how much clvlllzntlon hu been advanced by the etcambuut, tne cotton-gin, tho sewing machine, the reaping machlna, the typewriter, tha oloctrlo light, tha telephone, tha phono graph, , to you know, have you bad occasion to learn, that there ia no honi(iiiv tnr Invention nowadayaT Thera la no an- (tnnnt has at ABtinaai'v. whlnh wnnlrl tin V better, aa the place is too small for two couragement for you to set your wlta livery earns." I" wu, 10 improve uia teipphone, or me camera, or aome pleca of machinery. A, r. V. . , 1 . ' The city authorities at Canby havajn. or. some mechanical proceea; you ara not eltmiKlS5' invited 'to find a shorter and cheaper -' ?.i.fanca "of t'ha tWnV, "chief of V, thnsa" to L stltuted be tViA .ilr.. Police Ut-nvr even made the editor of "f. ,n"nt better things to take their- the Irrlaator clauu. uu in front of his i"9''o. mora is too -much "monev in- ofiice, wlieieuiin the Irrigator man I vested In old machinery!; too much' goes uerore his constituency on the piat- money has been been spent advertising form that that Is carry ng mattera al-Uh m ...na. i. r,-L.. tOKiither too far I . I io iuuu lugeiner 100 lar. . , . I thev ara. enst inn mnh ..i .t,.i- With a total of only eight failures be'" "uperseded by aolnething better. . in spelling out of 18 who took the wnerever there Is monopoly, not oaly eighth arada examinations in Pallas lis there no incentive to lmnrova. hm. . May 8 and 9. a remarkable record was imnrovement hnlnv mativ in ty,.t made and one which. The Dallaa Obaerv- aCrgpB otdmachlnerv anoV deatr6va ' ani iovi r- iai r i imvdiI nil naavp riffln ' . duplicated li thii atata This records iotiv. Ut.v0Ja.PIrU0 ,' thr " . a iercentaga of S.6. IHwBJVv,..Jn5t,ve' Mnt. Improvement , a a, "'! " inatinci or monopoly is against nov Tha McMlnnville Telephone Register f"y. tha tendency of monopoly la to, paya this tribute to a Yamhill county keep In use the tld' things, rnade in ' citizen who dcllgfits In good works: "The tha old way; Ita disposition Is to "stand good a man may do with money ia well ardlse" everything Illustrated In the case of Carlton's Taw . Rndariliatioik ma h' .it ..n city hall, iohn Wcni.erberg contributed J"? 1 .v'!,,.!- , T7- 1 tha location and half the cost of . tha b"1 Ppose aver-ything had been building as an Inducement for the fire standardized 10 years ago we should company to get to work and raise tho atlil be writing by hand, by gaa light, balance of the cash. Of course they did we should, be without tha inestimable (sometimes, I ad- a protest against tha existing status. It is a protest that can easily be i transformed from a minority into a I majority. V In another election tha situation could easily change, S At the Bama time, the returns on J the revocation are evidence of the I ebnservaiism of the ' public The j people are not going to wrong any f body. They are long suffering and J slow. to anger. They. will tear up no railroad tracks and repudiate no agreements uuuer average conat- tions . - - ' I , But on their part, the railroads Jmust be Intelligent They cannot 1 maintain a claim of perpetual fran- f chlses. ;C They must not try to mon i opolize streets. They must not per- fist In such things as wait the specta cle of the objections the Harrlman people brought against the Spokane, ft Portland & Seattle respecting the Harrlman bridge. The contention for instance that the Spokane, Port- land & Seattle is not a railroad, and offered In seriousness, is an absurd- 1 lty that annoys the public and harms the railroads. T The railroad people should read and study tho election returns. There ia no question as to what the ultimate will be. The old order of bottled '.up terminals and monopol ized districts is doomed. Tho new order will bo a fair fieJd and an opon'fight with equai privileges for all transportation lines. It will be an order In which the public will do no Injustice to the railroads, in which the public will Euffer no In -Justice to be done Heelf by. the railroads. that any elector who fails to go to meii8aSe: the polls three times In succession I" common with a large and growing sbould be disfranchised. It is a fi,. i..m.;ni lcglalntlon provided for in our state constitution have becoma antiquated and Inefficient. Our system la fash ioned after the English parliament. ro-tT'C!OTrKT I " i iiuuocu ran upon ing ISCLSSION of tha patent laws distinction between tha nobility and tha Washington women declare that riding astride is entirely "au fait" They have studied tha principle of tha clothes-pin, and know that It Is scientifically correct Happy thoughtl In the "noiseless age" the amateur cornetlst next door may rupture his diaphragm without disturbing his neighbors. t. Home time ago Mr. Wennerberg gave aid of ti tinnhnn. t the olty a fine well timbered park. The mIt lf , . nlIiHBnnll value of such a man in the community " "JJ"fn?j nnr,f . h n..lln..l.il . ... .. MIIUUUIW, WJMUUt Win "MOTHER" JONES, AGITATOR 50 YEARS step that may yet have to be taken. THE PATENT LAWS D Letters From the People (Commnnlcstloni wnt to Tba Journal fnr publication In this department should be writ ten un pnly one aide of tha paper, ahould not exceed Soo word In leagtb and uuat ba ae eompanlad by the name and addreaa of tne aender. tt the writer does not detlre to Bart tn oame publlabed. b should ao state.) How to Exterminate Snails. Portland, June 1. To the Editor of of The Journal In readlna- th let by President Wilson in World's common people, each house represent Work and a decision of the Mn" diverse interests of these class United States supreme court re f1.;""0 thJ! SL'" . , . I vin I'-fliuinniB CJ en ill, oiiu III coinciaenr. i no nrpsinAnr snva nna run4 i ; : Of the reforms to be undertaken Is a "Vtem has been practically abandoned U Totlced "inquiry '.fhowT revision of these laws. The supreme Ah u??7ulh?I?. 0iJi! rld This correspondent court, after waiting a year for con- concern in divi. 7rT '1 elT 'h"r AhV t50Ubl" system for legislating that will .vi ccrTai "VxtanL .vP- - -i? w "IVI wj AkUll rtTTINO TOST OF LIVING WASHINGTON consumers, ln- A eluding (jifford Pinchot, for ' y y tner chief forester, and P. Vr. De Graw, former assistant postmaster general, will attempt so lution of the high cost of living problem through the Pepper and Salt company. This company, recently or ganized., will attempt to eliminate the middleman by direct delivery of farm products to consumers. -; . The plan is to serve J 0,000 fam- i!les with: vegetables and othef farm produHjpat-ias.EllShtly- above t ost. Tho' customers wi 1 1 be Biipplleo!' through 300 of the best housekeepers In BIected localities, who will receive their food supplies freo in addition to nominal salaries.. Application has been madd for space in the munici pal market, where farm produce will . be received and distributed. ' r The Pepper and fJaltxompany may be a workable splutlog of,the cost of Jiving problem.' Public markets lit America have bWa flfy .racUonay PUcxessful because the market basket "T.ct on out of style. Too manv gress to act, has reversed Itself and thus In effect revised one feature of the laws. In March,-1912,the supreme court, by a vote of four to three, decided that a patentee had tha right to pre scribe conditions under .which his patented machine could be used. The claim of the manufacturer of a pat ent mimeograph that he could force purchasers to use paper, Ink and stencils manufactured by the pat entee was sustained. Chief Justice White, dissenting. said:. j Every men kimw tra.ls row wide spread limitations on the use arid'Prtcei or paiemea articles, i bought a razor some tlmo ago, arid when I began to use It I found I had infringed the pat ent, according to this decision, by pay ng tho prjee asked, which was lower han that prescribed by tha patentee. Who Is to predict how far this practice is going to upreart with the sfrnctlon now given it by this court that is. unless sonifl P'giplatlve authority steps in and atops it? A patentee will row have tho right to bring under the patent laws all con tracts for coul or electricity used to afford power to work the machine. Take a patented cooking utensil. The power ia now recognized to bind bv contract one who buys the utensil to se it in connection with no other food supply but that sold by the patentee. The Illustrations might be multiplied In definitely. They are not Imaginary. Tho court reversed itself last Mon day, by a bare majority, five to four. After vainly waiting a year for legis lation, the court now holds that it la not an infringement for a Wash Ingron tlmg store to soli' a patented medicine for less than $1, the price fixed by the patentee. - This decision Is In line with Presi dent WllBon's criticism of the patent laws reprinted on this page. Chief Justico White says the patent laws Bnouid not be subversive of public policy. The- same doctrine Is ex pounded by President Wilson, .who proposes complete reform, of. the patent lawB; The patent has become a tool of oppression. i-ne rights under 1 iiao vr.vu HllUBUU UUU1 11 JiaB DCCOme a means of tyranny. It Is a splendid faet that the president of the United States should have begun agitation for reform of the patent laws at the moment when the supreme court of the United States enunciates a new and better doctrine on the subject more efficiency and quicker response to the demanda of our economic and so cial condlttona and to the will of tha people. Governor Hodges would have his single 'legislative body meet "in such frequent and regular or adjourned sessions as the exigencies of the pub lic business may demand." Tha gov ernor would be an ex-offlclo memfber and presiding officer. Governor Hodges states that he! has been led to advocacy of hla plan by his experience of eight years as a member of the Kansas senate, and by contemplation of the good ra sttlta -achieved by cltlesmder tha commission form of government When a member of tha Arizona constitutional convention, George P. Hunt, now " governor, advocated a single houso, believing that the pres-' ent system 13 "unnecessarily cumber some." Governor Hunt holds that the dual house plan Is productive of no good results that would not as easily be achieved by a single legis lative body. Whether for better or for worse, tha movement of the Oregon state ! grange for abolishment of the state senate Is likely to command strong support, a fact for which the late senate In Its resistance to good legis lation ia largely to blame. No In dictment that anybody can bring against the senate is as strong as is the indictment of itself in the list of "splendid bills the Oregon sen ate of 1913 defeated. Tho proposition to abolish the senate was voted on in Oregon in slve scale. There is a very simple and tueap way oz eraaicatlng slugs and snails that ought to be known to every one who growa plants or flowers and garden truck. It consists of alrslaked lime applied after aundown, broadcast over all the crops attacked by snails. The dry duBty lime on falling on the damp body of the slugs and snails Im mediately kills them by contact alone, while the growing plants ara rather benefited by the lime. If plenty of lithe ia used on a dry night after aun down not one. snail will escnna death However if the lime is applied before the snails are out enjoying their meal they will not come near the lime until it Is moist. In which condition ir rw. not affect them any mora. Two or three Wrsls of lime on the acra will dispose of these pests on short notice. When airslacked lime la not handy fresh lime is beat Blacked in the following manner, when a barrel or more is used at a time. Dig a trench somewhere in the ground and then dump the fresh lime in it and cover up with damp soil, but uo not use water on it or tho lima will burn and be worthless. Two to three days will render all the lima tit for use on plants. The following day after the application the lime can be washed off ji aesirea, Dut wiil do no harm if left on all the time. Hope that all those who have snails to contend with will convince themselves of tha effective ness of lime when properly applied. Tha cost need not be araat. aa a harrAi of lime is $1.25, Increasing In volume 3 times when slacked. J. O. BACHEH. Nuggets In Jackson Comity. Talent, Or., May 28. To the Editor of The Journal Some people say they don't think there is any gold in south ern Oregon, but wa'can convince them with tha nuggeta picked up here lately, Ona on Goose creek weighed over six ounces very pretty apeolmen. Another, I picked up in the Savage mine waa worth iiud. numerous smauer ones have bean By Herbert Corey. Homer repeated "Mother" Jonea, In her deep, alow tones. "My noma is where tha fighting la. X live with ray people In their misery and their Joy." The defect of the oratorical style Is that it seems hlfaluting for ordinary cOnveraatlon. And Mother Jonaa always talks In rolling periods and thunder ous marchea of aound. At first the other fellow pulls. back, being under the lm rression that it ha doesn't look out something will ba put over on him. By and by he come to the conclusion that Mother Jonea can't help it Bhe has been exhorting and preaching and talk ing rebellion for almoat 60 years. In that length of time one's style must take a permanent form. Further, it afforda a certain protec tion. And "Mother" Jonea calls upon it whenever she is asked to talk about herself. She will talk of her work. She will tell of tha militia demona and the devils of the Baldwin guards, who turned the miners out of their shacks Ju tha cold valleys of West Virginia laat winter. But when tha Inquirer wants to know something of the real Mother Jones, thla veteran of the labor movement retreats behind an assumed torgetfulnesa. "Just say," aha remarks with a laugh, "that enough lnjuncttona have been is sued against me to make my shroud when I die. And that while I've been fighting for 'right' as against law' for almost 60 years, I've only-been in jail once In my life. I can't remember what waa the first strike In which' I took part I sup pose that I have been in more strikes than any other person in the country. I was In the anti-Chinese agitation in California In the late 60'a." She Is 81 years old, this apple cheeked woman with the soft white hair fluffed over her templea and the soft white frills at throat and waist She looks aa though she'd make a splendid grand. mother. Her voice ia low and deep, with an enticing tang of Cork about it, and aha has a way of holding one's hand and softly patting it that aomehow warms the heart In figure she la stout. thickset, and sturdy. Iter eyes at first are gray, frankly appraising and some what hostile-. Later they ara soft and blue and full of humor. She aeema such a kindly, dignified, lovable old lady that one gaspa when he hears her aay placidly: "I raised bell with them on Cabin Creek damn them. She did, too and it-waa "because of Mother Jones' insistence that the United Statea senate has Just adopted the Kern resolution looking to an In vestigation of tha state of civil war, complicated with anarchy and blood feuds, that raged through the valleys of Paint and Cabin creeka for the past year. But . tha writer was not inter ested in what had happened in West Virginia so much as he was in thfy clear eyed, lively octogenarian. Bhe la not merely tha most effective woman agitator in the country, but aha la aa effective aa any man. Her voice is al waya listened to where the thousands gather in the mining country for a big strike. She la orator and general, and, above all else, recruiting aatgeant The men may stay doggedly at work in the tipples while the walking delegates are shouting, but when Mother Jones turns that vitroiio. tongue upon them they walk Out Time after time she has raged before the. stunned mllltt&,shaklng her f lets in their faces, heaping abuse on them, swearing Ilka a fishwife. 'But you're bound to like her when youj anow ner. ene merely uses tne metnoa without the au- wlrelesa telaaraDhy. Personally. I could have managed to plod along without the aeroplane, and I could have been happy even without moving pictures. . heart which made the Mary Jonea of hnvYntinn h7. hJ 60 years ago into a labor leader. And i"!10". ,h" .i"". . th-a then one perceives that even after the TJ"'," ' JV ;, opp.xhr.oVoewnto7?h:Va.vold' r" tSsaf wr: elder friends, "tho husband aha loved d"".rru.lA lm bfi' !?,; "S1. lI !n and tha four children she adored died B, T' of scarlet fever. She had been married ' nJ ""T? but six years. From that moment she iench'," VlX" il PPornltT haa given to all humanity tha love that 'bh7 ahe had lavished upon her own." . T.P'Ji LI .ihJ"Tnt v She was but 8 years old when her ?.en'uf' m'r,c t.hu', ?.r;e father f.cd from Cork to avoid arrest '7 0"n. .An Iir" "V as a revolutionist No doubt that made "LSJ",' h f e?!B! ho" d?7lc tho election of 1912. But the, plan!f0un5' and all of these in a radiua of was complicated with proportional representation on the proxy system of voting on bills and other revolu tionary changes. Yet In spite of the complexities, 81,020 persons voted for the change and .71,183 against It - If submitted without complex in volvment, the Issue will have a pop ular appeal, and the Oregon senate will have a desperate Btruggle for survival. AN A NTI-SUFFRAGE ISSUE fronr the convenient delivery wspon. t'.t 't-' .-, ':: Tho WasliipgtQDtoiupany proposes to Lltch up producer aud consumer 0: XITRD STATES SENATOR JO-'HKPW-F.JQHNSTON of Ala bama proposes to rflafcff -his eoming campaign for reelection on the sole Issue of anti-woman suf frage. . - Tho presumption is that this wise and worldly senator wants to go hack to the senate. It is a fair as sumption that h has selected what he thlnks'hls strongest issue. It is a safe guess that Renalor Johnston is -eonvinroa thnt "en'Md ffe make his campaign on any other issue he would lose, lie hopes to win by asserting; given the- ballot. , , Congressman Hqbjpjuwho.-sailk tbe Merrimac, (s Senator Johnston's opponent and Ilobson la an advocate t - .---,- 1 - ,, , ..--'-.- - . . . . , . The number of women who follow the vice profession at New York is estimated at 15,000, and the number of vice patrons at 150,000 daily. A woman Investigator applied to 122 five miles Of Talent, Jackson county, uregon, 0 U tloUKIBBR. Text of Sixteenth Amendment. Shaw, Or., May 81. To the Editor of The Journal Will you kindly publiah in The Journal tha sixteenth amendment to tbe constitution of the United States. C. B. J. The amendment folio waf "The con gress shall have power to lay and col lect taxes on incomes from, whatever source derived, without apportionment among ,tne several statea and without re gard to any censua enumeration."! , , . , "Financing-Farmers. From the Omaha World-Herald, -It Is said that many of the eastern bankers aro taking a lively interest In rural credits, aomethlng that they have never paid any attention to before. That aha baa found, most effective. You can't whip a mule with a ryestraw. "When did you first become Inters ested in the causa of labor?" "I think I waa always ' Interested," said Mother Jonea, reflectively. Her answers to questions about her own personality are always - vague. They are intended to deflect curiosity. But by and by the persistent inquirer learns from others that tragedy of the a deep impression upon her mind. Somewhat later tha family settled In Toronto, and there she obtained the groundwork of her education. She taught for a time 4n the publlo schools and la remembered as possessed of a keen Intelligence and remarkable debat ing ability. Then she married George Jones, a union irtin moulder. Bha went through a strike with blm, and her power aa a speaker held hla union to gether. She is entitled to at leaat some of the credit for creating the system of woman a auxiliaries, which are now a feature of many labor organizations. Then her skies crashed down about her and for a time her friends lost sight of her. The first that waa definitely known waa when aha appeared as an organiser wherever miners' or moulders' union was at war. Always ahe made one re quest that in the Hunt of fuller knowl edge seems tragically, pathetically sig nificant. , "Call me 'Mother Jones," ahe told the strike committees. As to her history for tha past 60 years what Is the history of & soldier in an active campaign t A( happier woman would be gathering her grand children at her knee.. She baa gone from camp to camp, from, labor war to labor war. The newspaper-files of 40 years carry the record of her activities'. She is awakened from bed by armed men who command her to dress for de portation. She fights six guards who try to force her over a state Una, She leada mob after mob of fighting, curs ing, maddened men. She defiea quaran tine, and investigates labor conditions In Europe and in tha child using mills of tha south, and marches with Coxey's army. Bhe out-marchea and out-maneuvers troops at the head of her atone throwing- strikers. She tramps 18 and 18 miles & night through the Virginia trust is that he can't get capital to make and market hla invention. If you want money to build your plant and advertise your product and employ your agents -and make a market for It, where are you going to get ltT The minute you apply for money or credit, this propoal tlon is put to you by tha banka: "This invention will Interfere with the estab lished processes and tha market con trol of certain great industries." We . are already financing those industries, their securities ara in our hands; we will consult them." 1 It may be, as a result of that con sulatlon, you will be Informed that it is too bad, but Jt will ba impossible to "accommodate" you. . It may be you will receive a suggestion that If you rare to make certain arrangements with the. trust you will be permitted., to manufacture. It may be you will re ceive an offer to buy your patent, the offer being a poor consolation dole. It may be that your invention, even lf purchased, will never be beard, of ona In. That last method of dealing witn nn Invention, by tha way, Is a particularly vicious misuse of the patent laws, which ought not to allow property in an Idea which is never Intended to be realized. One of the reforms waiting to be rtn dortaken is a revision of our patent aa v tie In any event, if the trust doesn't want you to manufacture your inven tion, you will not be allowed to, unless you have money of your own and are willing to risk It fighting the monopo listic trust with Its vast resources. I am generalizing the Statement, but I could particularize it.'' I could tell you instances whore exactly that thing hap pened. By the combination of great ind- v trles, manufactured products are 1 "t only being standardised, but they,ni-i mmna hoi-nr- th. T,rivnti r..M too often being kept at a single point can forcibly abridge her right of free speech. And now she is 81 years old. and gray, and without a home. For years Mother Jones has been the dependable trouble maker of 'the United Mine Workers. It has never been charged against her that aha has attacked em ployers who were fair and generous to their men. in comment on tha others she employs a fiery, bitter style of speech that has both breadth and edga. uioodnounag or the press," "vamplrea," fat toads of capital, "blood-suckers.' and "murderers" run in a pleasing pat tern through her oratorical Web. She Invented tha strike march, in Which women and children lead the column of strikers against a resisting tlppl. That formation not only baa a aentimental value, - but even a mina guard will hesitate to fire upon, the weak and helpless. In West Virginia ast year a press censorship kept the ruth from .the world, until a guard kicked a poor Italian woman in the aide one night "I never beard my baby call to me again,"-she said to those who waked her from her faint That did more to arouse the world across the Kanawha than lf 60 men had been bullet rlddlad against a wall. Mother Jones is going on to Washing ton, and then back to West Virginia, to keep on her fight for law and order and. decency In the mining regions. "Tha day is coming slowly," ahe said. when even tbe poorest shall have full proteotlon by law, And it ia coming raly." ... su real at.atn ae-enclos to rant nrnnert ! Interest is dua largely to the depression for Immoral nurnoses and waa Pft. 1 li th" bond. and stock market Investors tor immoral purposes, ana was re- ,ftr, Bcarca( . not becaUM , () fused In but 17 instances. Gotham money to Invest but, on account of 49-welcome ta wiateverApromlnenco Josses which , have been aeoruing for It may gain from thesa statlslcs. Portland may sfi6wIEa western independence but will never be truly metropolitan -until its - pedestrians keep to the right on a crowded thor oughfare. Watching their free and easy rambles, a New Yorker would sniff and call them bucolic. Mtt requires 12,600 tons of Colorado ore to ..produce 12 drams of radium, weighing less than a silver : half dollar. Tho nerviest of wildcat pro- frToters couldn't work "' up much1' en- thuslasru over a radlunijninevL- Indiana is the nation's pulse, ac cording to Vice-President Marshall, more than a. year in their investments in bonds and stocks. Farm credits are -thf "safest thing; In the world of In vestment, and as the price of land con stantly increases the safety increases. Farm credits must be handled In an en tirely different way from ordinary ored ita in commercial affairs. This Interest of the eastern bankers should be dupli cated by those In the west If farms can be financed at n living rate for the farmer, production would ba enormously increased and that would .make -more buoincsB for the (jankers In the, ordi nary lines 'of business.' If the lands of this state could' be brought to full production, the business dustry of the state, while every aort of financial assistance has been given to men in other Unas of business. Numerous farmers, if they could get credit at reasonable figures, would lm mansely enlarge their business. There would be more milk and butter pro duced, more cattle raised, more wheat harvested, mora of every sort of, prod uce put upon the "market A farmer who has only capital enough to stock up with one team, a cow and a few hogs, cannot do much toward increasing the products that go on the market, but with mora capital furnished at reagfln-4 able rates, be would largely Increase his outDiit - Tha'Tankee bankers are, awak- ins- to this situation. Western bankers would do well to take tha matter into consideration. moving o.f 1 the crops and the bualnoEa aC-thactttee would be Increased in tha same proportion. The farmer has been left without financial assistance, and with many in fe poverty striokea way they have carried on the ona jgreat & .Passing of the Spellbinder'. From tha Denver Times. As a mover f crowds, oratory ia as obsolete as tha horsecar. Denver's com mission election proved this again lf. indeed, a recognized fact needs further proof. 1 For yeari tfce decline of the silver tongue has been swift and continuous, until now the stump speaker and spell binder are quite aa old fashioned as the hoop aklrt and powdered wig. The peo ple attend no more, either on speakings as tames, ia raaah the .waters It, i qecessary- for tha orator h.-men still possess booming voices and expansive vocabularies to pursue , them in the street, to course them la autos, to steal upon them unawares. Even then da tha voters blandly tol- lonncr erate the haranguers, listen to them and eya them much aa they would the itin erant patent mediclna vender ; or the smooth gentleman on the corner who wraps a S3 bill around a caka of soap and sella the whole for a dime., . On tha ballot the othar day, placed next each other, were two propositions, tha second nullifying the first Ona was wise and necessary; the other impru dent' at this time. Both had oratorical supporters who urged their passage, and timid folk expected dire- confusion, if nothing worse. Tetlha voterarheedless h qrSt speecnes, voted up the wise meas ura and ' voted down tha 111 advised scnems by practically the same totals, reversed jas between. "for" and' "against" The same Independence of thought And action was observed throughout tha en tire ballo't Tha -American voter la no longer led by flights of rhetorio or swerved by dramatic eloauanea. Ha realises that ways of learning ara open to Mm as well as to tha orator. lie studies his publlo problems coldly and Impassively, cuts his sample ballot from hla favorite newspaper, marks ft care fully and methodically, goes 'to th noil. and vote hla intentions regardlesa of ward worker or local Demosthenes. it is rougn on the erstwh la orator. and vocal campaigners, but who will say that conditions under discriminating, educational voting are not better than i?J.daT" of 8motlo"a'.- hyiteftUa of development and efficiency. Tha increase of the power to produce in pro portion to the cost of production la not studied in America as it used to ba studied, because if you don't have to improve your process in order' to exoel a competitor, lf you are human you aren't going to Improve your process: and lf you -can prevent tha competitor from coming Into the field, then you can sit at your leisure, and, behind this wall of protection which prevents thu brains of any foreigner ""competing with you, you can rest at' your easa for a whole generation. Can any one who reflects on merely this attitude of the trusts toward inven tion fall to understand how substantial, how actual, how great will be the ef fect of tha release of the gentua ot our people to originate, imprtiva and perfect tha-lntsruments and circum stances of, our Uvea? Who can say what patents now lying, unrealized, in secret drawers and pigeonholes, will coma to light, or what new inventions will astonish and bless us, when free dom is restored? Are you not eager for the time when the genius and initiative "of all the .. people shall be called Into the service of business? When newcomers with new Ideas, new entries with hew enthusi asms. Independent men, shall be wel comed. When your eons shall ba able to look forward to becoming, not em ployes, but heads Of some small. It may be but hopeful, business, where their ... best energies ahall ba Inspired by .the knowledge that they are their own mas ters, with the paths- of tha world open before them? " Have) you no deslra to aee tha mar kets opened to all. To aee credit avail ohu in dua nroportion to every man of character? To see business disentangled from its unholy alliance with polltloat . To sea raw material released from the control of monopolists, and transporta tion faculties equalized for all, and every avenue of commercial and lndus- trial activity levelled for tho -feet of all who would tread It? Surely,, you . must feel the inspiration of such a new dawn of history I 1 . - Pointed Paragraphs j Busy hands can find their own mis chief to do. - Most of the entries in the Iranian race are" also-rans. ' ' -v . The honesty of one tnaa U aftaa good policjr for others. a . The under dog wants no sympathy; what he wants is assistance, - Sometlmea a man Is So shiftless thai he Un't even a successful liar. J! - - ' ' -' " ": '' His satanld majesty offers women diamond tiaras IiiKtead of halos. - 4- What Changed Him." I ' -, From Judge. . ! - ' Crawford Do you like home cooking? Crabshaw 4, did befor I got married, The man wh,o doesn't ; ret ell thaf'a coming tov hljn is generally, lucky. v - - '.- ' - , . Ik accord with the eternal fitness o things, a man with narrow shoulders ought to wear a broadcloth coat