TIIK OKEGON SUNDAY JOUHNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MOI.NING, JUNi; Z3, 1013. THEJOURNAL 'ulnUud itrrr aaanln I rout Sao" ft '( nri1a n..rulii at lb Juuraal Build In, Hrual,r anil Vamltlll ata.. I'nrl land. Of fcularad at III nuaiof fir at ItM-Uaail, Of., fat IraBatnlaaloa tUrouak tit mall Man laaa tnatlaa. urn kvitovt.a u.i. till, noma. A-msi ail flaparta-a.it raarbad tijr I baa o IB bar. Tall tha aifpir.r what liana it mt oHI-lliS AI'VKHTIMIMa IKf a.HaBNTTIVS Krnjamln a Kaataut' (a., bniaavlrk Hullllnf tin fifth atana. Naw Votki liie fxn v.a iiniidin. (Mr. ha,trtiia Trrm, lj mall of la a a afla-raaa aa ua uuuaa a lata at Mailcaa DAJLT Oa ttt.m 18.00 Oa axntk ..I CNP4f Om faar. II. M Om ... .....I . DAILY 4X1) ITMDAT Caa !.. IT.80 I Oa aaoatk I ,M Uva cf great men all remind us Wi can maka our Uvea sub lime, ' . And departing leave behind ua Footprints on , tha - sands of Umt, , ' - Longfellow. TJTE WORLD'S CONFERENCE T HE world ha been combed for the talent that It to take rati la the Christian Citizenship Conference which begins In Portland today. , There are speakers from the Le- rant and from the eastern United Btatea. England contributes dis tinguished men and so does Japan. There are notables from China, from Turkey, from France and from many Dther nations. It Is the second world's confer ence on Christian citizenship and the betterment of mankind as the commanding Issue. It assembles la Portland a greater gathering of dis tinguished men than was ever before issemb'led in a .single city In the western United States. The great gathering Is an auspi cious occasion for Portland. The best there is in modern thought re specting men and nations will be presented during the conference. ' New outposts will be set and new iklrmtsh lines be thrown out In the tnward march of civilizing thought u the speakers from under every tun deliver their messages at the omlng meetings. The influences radiated will be world-wide in their effect on the changing movements of the social and economic multi tude. : .-. , Even the viewpoint of the world may be influenced, and the destl ales of nations changed by the thought to be expressed by those who have journeyed thousands miles over seas and across conti oents to. bring . their words of en . jouragement and greeting to man kind. ' There could ' be no nobler con reptlon. There could be no purpose more sublime. A world assemblage. representing races from the Ganges to the Thames and from the Colum Ma to the Rhine, a gathering that makes the welfare of mankind the paramount concern of the world, is i comforting and reassuring fact. moralH. The frar Is not well found-1 It diffuses like light and cnfoll.. '1. Vlca ever inaki awl union, like tho bnzn. Crooks prosper In the dark. There Kathryno Prick's commencrrmnt Is nothing no effective In stamping day address iija promlso of the In out vlco and running down crooks tur. No longnr ahull tho df-af, as publicity, publicity U a warn- dumb and Mind be loft with" fate. ing to Immature minds; it is threat against inaturo minds. Publicity Is educational ao far as morula are concerned. A rorrnnpond- iiK-nHiircd by marks the world 3I v-j him In later life. A "bread and .butter education" may and should bo cultural. Edu cators everywhere are j-fscognhlng tho fart. School are being remod eled; greater concern Is being given Letters From the Pcopfo. They will be rescued from darkness; they will be shown the Joy of living, the child's future. Culture can be Just as Kathryne Frlck 'has been acquired only by equipping the child made happy, so will other JCath- to selze It. There Is nothing sadder ent has pointed out In Tho Journal rynes, not deaf, nor blind, nor dumb, than Inefficient culture looking for how the carpenter's money bribe was be rescued from the darkness of a Job. Identical In every way wlth bribes false standards and Impaired lives. Oregon must keep up with the of political influence for appoint- The world is becoming human- educational procession. Other states mcnt to office. There Is no dlstlno l)d; modern commencement days are remodeling their schools along (Conimunlrallona aanl in Tlx Journal fur Milillrnllii 1a Mil druartmrnl alioiild Ik wrll- Un "ii vi't nna alii ( lh f j.tr. ahul4 iml avaiol HiiO Wurrfa III IriialU anil mual I ruuiiautil lr III tiini and ail'lraa at 111 ai-nli-r. If Ilia writer Im not dr.li to tat (Li uauit .lubllitii-t. b alioulil ut. "Dlsruaalnn lath gratt Of all ra- rornifira. It ratlonall everything It tuiirlira. an iictliy iraoiiticnra. If they hava no roaaou-1 Lewln "would ailrtia, it rii(nlaNly cruahea J hum ouii(tand there." or i!r.r and aula un ua own conniu . alona in their aleaJ." VVooJrow Wllaon. hpfii aaiirl a I'lutlnin aii'lUriffl, 1I1 J. II. ' ailvr rmirl-n taK up tha Rnuntlrt; ao ilia a( fpiHiica of ih timr-worn clml lAtive wua n tvhi In Irk wrappeil In a trad. 'l'liliiii(hollt (tin Joint 1nbt that fol loweil, whn "Wra" mada a point tha chucra of til ack1 audience would alraUi (he mftura, whriia when tha "Virnilll,on Kuila" acorel, hla far more brilliant efforla fell In a emnetery 1, e., ware artail with atudlod atlaiica, or THE HIGH TIDE AT GETTYSBURG Iiy Will r. Thompaon. (Of ha fourth (Iforla, l'ol'a T1rtsad i Itorla'a lilvlalon, l'.wsll'a Corpa.) A cloud iiiMnvHaml tha hollow flvtd. the K'ltlnTlna l.uttUa etnoky ahlnld. , Atliwart the gloom the llhtnlni i inaiinri tion, except that universal condem natfon has not yet reached the po litical bribe. The money bribe Is acknowledged a crime, but the po litical bribe still exists becauso tb? public demands or countenances It. Publicity of the carpenter's bribe and discussion of the incident' have turned people's thoughts upon them selves. Graft exists because the peo ple demand or countenance.it. Graft will exist until the people quit dl vidlng It Into privileged and non mean something. woran, Inaamuch aa the partlaan rootra Antl throua.li tha cloud Borne horeemaa It robe principle of all fla by their own peculiar mthode to bor- . d h.,.h(. thm anj thiowa tham back on their row an faprrnalva turm of Alfred lenry Anq r,0,n ne'Shtatha thunder pealed. nV-tTnm" I h Sy!itV-i? nd 'V1 brief command of Iaa, ' OfcOftaiS U KOSfKU. Mv.rl out that matrhlaaa Infantry . With 1'lckatt leadlnar arandlv down. Tn 1mi Itnum ft on I a I TO r 11 all Bunlnal tha rnurlna Krnaa Church and State Rights. Tortlond, June J7.-T0 tha Editor of w ",v" u""u or oeauny. Vancouver. Waah., June it, , iU. i Journal could any or your many Far heard above tha angry suns I'ORTLAND ROXDS AT HOME T IE final Issue of Broadway bridge bonds was marketed this week. The buyer was a vocational training lines; they are; also extending Influence over pupils U..:vX" ' .1". wader, tell ma tha exact way to go A7r7roTh.VuVu,?7,,5 during vacation periods. , Kansas journ:. nf nav r uin T'. .miikln' roM be,d,T 1( I ' oice tliat rang through fiblloh's 1 Hum ua ijr arairiui inucru, i . - mrh n a r And Chlckamauga'a aolltudea. parents should do with smsll boys "Tha city, elate or nation that rulaa "nun the freah petals through the food Th 1r,: Boutn ch,'n on her aonat auring summer vacations. Investl-1 Christ out of Ita lrglalatlon, lta courta cnopper. wpread tha pulp evenly upon Ah. how the withering t'emoeat hlaw . a . . I a a 1 ... I Si nanlaN1 ai l n L I a. U a. a..a,l-.a ..S A I a. .a. . ' V firm Of brokers., The price was wlth tht. nil ' ft. rltrmlnln written Ita own obituary." peraa over tha maas. 1 88 28 a verV low figure' ' I Purpose or determining Jt would ,om from.thlB th,t th. t. rough the chopper 15 kH'JLu f- h.a themes of employment for the boys, writer had forgotten the hlatory of J "eat cutter. Thla wll - v..-..v v. Tne ,tate has undertaken the religious icgi arnlngs into these excellent se: work. and individuals have contrib- e of a es The price at . which they uted towtrd tne expt5n89. TnJ fa. '.. yields an Interest of more than po.e t0 secure occupation, that .milt I nrlTllertd nraft la plaht nr U l f0Ur na hAU Pr cent- Tne will aerve to build UP the boy's "Congreaa ahall make no law respect day Do not let them touch one LrJn a. i a. v 5i m i ! 1751,898 of deposits by Portland character and i I the same time fur" " an eatabllahment of religion or pro- Do thla upon a dry, fine day. wrong; It cannot be divided Into MOv. Jleang tbt loca, cnaracter and at the same time fur- hlblUnf tn, fr ,rclM thereof." K they are not too hard a right and wrong. ' iFJf ..."T- iL-T i, tilt Talr remuneration for the Waahlngton. Madlaon. Jefferaon. Un. f m drying, they may ba roll, - Pstal wrings bank yields an Inter- work done coJn an(, QfMt a voc,,,;, th, eom. tlmra before they are strung. Mix well and put timea, ualng the will make tha duId leglalatlon. To avoid the D,pt an tnrougni- . . I --! a. at a atate dominated by th " oeaaa . twice as . larga as forefathera had Incorpo- rou would hava them when dried. Ba conatltutlon ta' riratc",IUI "av or uniform viae. which reada: . . i iay . upon a broad'platter to dry all 'Congreaa ahall make no' law respect I dy. not let them touch one another. XOT INIMICAL R' fter tha rolled three String aeparatlon of the church from I "Pon a copper wira about tha thlckneee For morf than 100 yeara this 1 01 nP'n. vo not anarpen the ana est Of only two per cent, or less than Eduction moat abandon Mi ra. P'-ta . . . . . . .. . I - I . L - . - . . m . - . . I I I flf m Klin I. TlA HA a.h WMa.aa a. I PtnBll I IHfl llffAll atlaaala. a,a.H nan tne interest wmcn uroaaway i h. i... v..j v "ie. or morj man i yeara imai- - --".. v miiii un ..i . , ; hrlrfra i,r ' t,on that boy" ihould be Uught nation haa been an aaylum for tha per- oc tha beada may apllt Decorate them (Tha reddeat day lr history.). Agalnat the front of Pettlrrawl jinamain wind that acorched and alnged Like that lnfarnal flnma h frlnaait Tha Brltlah squares at Waterloo! , A thousand fell where Kemper led; A thouxand died where Uaroett bled; In blinding flame and atranailn Smoke Tha remnant through the batteries broke And croaaed tha works with Armlatead. "One mora In Olory'a van with me!" Virginia cried to Tenneaaee: "We two toaether. noma what mav Shall aland upon theae works today ! I A a. AILROAD lawyers are pattlngr""" DQaa' ' things tbey cannot use.; Education the Oregon supreme conrt on 11 " osura tnai more man mree .hould be continuous through school the back for its decision by Qrters or a minion or roruanai sessions and vacation periods. which submerged lands in the mone' 'n"1 fji " postal sav- Portland waterfront are eonfirmad Dang at two per cent and A to private monopoly. . fifty-five thousand-dollar issue of : Why not? . The railroads have B-oaday bridge bonds go begging managed to capture more than two alm.t ' a,le P'c f 88.28 on third, nf th. PArfi.nri mieresi oasis 01 xour ana a nan c "vuuu auu uuwmrvuuan vi Diner lanaa, i - ----.. -..v. ,m, aB.u ," " I Rrava Tannaaaa.! Tn rarVtaa. who found on th ahor.. r imarln sun to harden. When they are thor-Z,:Z,-r.eU!!?L i?i!?V"r'r' " . - - . ... . . : ).... iicai u iiar vuiuraaa Bay: rreedom freedom from tha political aiy ury, anp xrom tne wire-. put into 1 tl"Cloaa round thla rent and riddled cnurcru it la evident that yt thel" L" na ruo ana enape main . ragr church tapntrola leglalatlon there will $enY together to pollen them. Mix What time aha aet her battle-flag be Incorporated into law the rellgloua tew -aropa or roae oil with aloonoi to 1 "h .una 01 iwuoieaay. laeaa 01 ma inaiviauaia composing tnati ,uu " n m HICAGO Is to teach sex hygiene church, anj as aurely as Individual ,tft ands, turning them over be- - jt.j . 1 a . 1 . . a .. a. a ii waan na na taa m i.n.ii ...aa avii laa k uuiar wiaeir in reucioua Dener juai in '""i mi u a auralV Will trntihla ha aaMaanvaait "ulu. " 5. SEX TALKS IX SCHOOLS in her high schools. This in novation will be tried at the vice President Thomas R. Maxahali I wnen the beads are dried through and I . were ahrlveled at the cannon's mouth, tho Second through, aoak them In olive oil f or J And all her hope were deaolate. But who shall break th guards that wan Before the awful face of m.teT xne tattered standards of the South It is the railroads who oroflt mora r Mnt- 11 tbsurd when P08t41 uestIon of Mrs.' Ella Flagg an address delivered In tb Second "r.i !vt grab by which the Portland fore-l ' ' 11 tu" " ""' " ov """"""v "J -.-aa. v ' ngnt, aaytng: shore, that was once the people's, Is now privately owned and held at enormous prices when the people are trying to buy it back for docks for public uses. This private monopoly of the Portland waterfront, the Oregon su preme court In its learned opinion says, is not inimical to navigation. In the opinion, Justice Bean says; ' The contemplated use of the land they can get more than two and a course of lectures, beginning next half times as great an' interest by September, on all subjects pertain- '"Tha kingdom of God waa to b In I the earth, not of It I hope soon all Wipe dry and string. always retain th perfume. Inveetment. for the People, ' From Hugh Hume'a Spec tor. In vain tha Tenneaaaan eat Hla breaat agalnat the bayonet! . ' in vain Virginia charged and raged,. . A tlrreaa In her wrath nnrarart Till all the hill waa red and wet! Investing their money in a gilt edged Ing to sex. The question of instruc- Uxc.uaiv 7rMch the. .nei Jr tnou"nd dPaltori bave Abov th beyoneta mixed and croaaed. Portland bond. uon in tne elementary schools was Uf Jeaua Chriat md rh th. r. ''T " " ,on 0?''"N"n" "aVVi f10"0" .v. ... rate- ),,. i ... fia.n itaaMaJi t. .in. th.. ik. -.i i 7. V. I. "I... fortiana poaw savings Dang. , V-F""''i ""uf" -ciouo. 11 IB BUBuru wneu a CUT Oilers I " a a,ua, uvwuvu ..-. ..., - w u. nicniraicu i....... i. K .. ana ueara acroaa tne Tempeai loua . - . a a int. P.a.MaMI.4 Ha aaaa . - a . . I ..... DMk kWIU J ' .1.0 BUTUI UIUBIII IBIhaa Jt a.aa . aa aaaa - . a . . a a. " - ......-.v v hiiu irvilltlil .IIU UVl I a . . . .1 a.a a a- a a J v m aauwu iuaii oy regenerated laws and ordinances." I 'or lnrelra, mo money ib noi a cltr offers it. bonds for sale on such a plan gln with the high, schools. that oeoDle-of small means In. Port- loung sal a: t land are prevented from buying the securities without . paying a profit to a middleman. It is absurd when the city in offering its bonds for Imaain. th. annatia p.,,. I working to Ita full caD&cltv Indeed, aa The brave went down! Without dls- . jiio eieiiiriu.rr nuuuui. nreu ir. out I Tor raiio-mn hv law Tmi.. k. irirn Pnri anil la An.ai.t.awf la la Ma.i ... I do not believe that tha time la due Tr IT' 7.".. ""V. " r'.T":.'"" '':u They leaped to Ruin's red .embrace, wnen wa anouia lane up tnat pnaaa 01 the queatlon. hygiene ao a?nV.C0?tTpIa:e1 u2 ? .tna ,and sale does It in such a wav that the BonaI P"""11- A" h children in the endeavoring to supply tha lack, (th Portland aubmerged land, by prl- 8aie- aoe" 11 ln 8Ufn a J ln" tne high .choola should be taught matter I enurgeon aald: Chriat tlcallv uaeleaa ranltal. If It war. da. Th.v ni l..j v.mv. .... a l , - I ' r " T - - a..."".. ..vm. va a' m niuiiuci a waav. WHin th. DftraiiaalV. aiAtva. IV. I .--., I .W. I ... I I . a I In., a. a. aa. .haa a a.l a a a...ak...-a.a iJ ' T Art nna k.ii.u. l-rr i. . . . . a-"- mi. iwiini in me rctuiar ariuBa oaoaa .."" ua" iuiiuuibi uisaa. " . "w " f epim i..,cKing m th ohuroh, It I would oav tha dcoo.ltora three or fou, n smues on Uiorys bloody racel ' ""All thi ehlMrTh. V' 'T.'l1 P !; it would be lent to Inv.atora; . ' POORLY PAID MINISTERS , -f-a-ROGRESS and poverty accom Lar papy each, other in Canada F The Toronto Methodist confer ence recently reported t h a t ministers are ln many cases paid starvation wages. Many are ex - tremely lucky if they get their sal aries when due. Many do not re ceive, the jnlnlmum wage fixed by the conference. .. And these men are fighting ln the crusade for upbuild' Ing Canadian peoplel . .. v . In the Toronto conference last year 112 ministers received 119,687 ' less than the conference minimum. During three months of the present year three ministers were paid less than $20 each, nineteen less than $100 each, and thirty-seven less than $150 each. In points outside . of Toronto only thirty-one ministers were paid in full. Toronto is a comparatively rich and populous conference. The Van couver Sun says the figures are as- tounaing: It Is a question which ahould be taken up by the church without delay. The wrong, for It Is a wrong, Is one which If not set right without loss of , time must greatly weaken the energies of a body which haa alwaya been one of the principal factors lo. the moral and BDlrltual advancement of the country, Jt is a matter ln which people of every denomination who are Interested In the - betterment of our people muat feel themselves concerned. f With a few individual exceptions, "Canadian ministers are little worse off, financially, than ministers ev ery where. Few people recognize the minister's worth to a community. jj. He Is not only paid low wages, but the wages are paid, grudgingly, s : Attention is being paid these days , to minimum wages legally enforced, , but nobody has shown concern for the man ln the parsonage. People :v are' saying that starvation wages ; drive girls into surrender of their Tlrtut?, the girl's most precious pos- I al rt . - a . a. . eebBiuu. inn pun may ue rienr. in - saying that starvation wages try the a i a 1 . iia A a , naiin ui uijuaiera 10 iae uimost. s GRAFT XOT DIVISIBLE , AMTA BARBARA'S cafoenter who offered $1000 for a post- mastership ; furnishes the Oak land Tribune a text for a ser mon against spreading the Impres sion that graft is common In public life. The Tribune is right in say ing only a small minority of men ln office are crooked, but It Is wrons in . advising against ' publicity of -asroakedaess. ' . " The Tribune Is 'alarmed lest 'pub lic attention directed to public crooks have a baneful effect noon Thv Call .(ia.llfl.il hi. a kii.1 . . II waula a Ik. ... a ... n..4...alu. T " V. V ' .7 V - . o.. ... .tin. . a i - '" v.t vu iiai ivuvuiiiin oiae in tun in neaven tn iinnni vate ownera) la not inimical to naviga- poor man cannot buy, but must put of, thla kind. Scientific instruction Is heir I from Caeaar-'l ahonM h. .fr. tJ.?t u?.U"9d "flV". wouM rM! T!l!r.,mri? lni MX' who set the bars an important factor, and It will pay borrow haln from h. ...-;7 ." ua In hav. fh h.at In.trnrtnr. xh. ... .a . "T.-T. " er;t ,r-i ouBineaa Diocaa ana wouia uiuiii aa. - - a.a ava. . a. aa .a. a a. a . a. a. WUUIU II1I1B 111 Til . BB IT I ..... . I a.. . K. . . . - a . L t . . . I a. w , a tavB.a vu aa ji.y ma w( v. innunieriDii wor.men tlon. On th other hand. It Is plain to hla money In a Dostal savinca Instl. anyone that tha Induatriea of commerca tntlon at a rreatlv redneerl rat nf and manufacture with which tha ahore luuon " a raiiy reaucea rate or of th Willamette ln our metropolis I Interest teems, and tha storing qf tha artlclea Two hundred thousand in New to have talnable. inaDie. , arm of flesh Instead of depending on in the construction, and of .n .rmv TnT std. who aaw the future oom The Chicago '.US . . . 0f men and women' in tovtArWZ&U, and nrnrlnMa. aa-wall aa tha ...,, . , ' ' prOVO VSlUSDle 10 Oiner CllieS. X nere , .. nu taat commia- celeratlon to navigation JT llAm f teach,n V'Oo thefo What a contrast is Justice Bean's fa"!" "ore' ..T11 nrst '10"'0(' of sex ln public schools. Success or " tach all nation." Matt ii.ii-if. nnn. development and upbuilding of city and Of nationa on that slippery slop aiaio. loaay, it ib pracucaiiy laie. i Amia in cneera or unriatenaomi The monev that la drawlna- hut 1 nerl ' cent In the poetal aavlnga bank should S?d.1,vf,J vHa toTP th iron will language with the language of Fed- W" B0,d "ma" buyers, and the f f tfa per,ment nlnge He did not aay, "compel.- Thla'aami be better employed. Tha Spectator .tched " held th tremW,n . ! fllla li an .wsaoClit iWal Ilia .aviaa-l m-Vt .".v.. ... I Jaaiia mm IA "If an ma. k... a.llhlnlra l atan..! k. 4. n.. ItmA I. Ila.l Hill. eral Judge Bordwell of 1m Ane-oiat Justice Bean the same as that railroad lawyers. Judge Bord well's the market to small buyers with language 1. that of a tribune of the e,"al people. In the case of the people ,a "Traor'' ,f 'Vu n or of California vpr,,a th. R.,i,aM wi uonus waa aoia to .Haiumore Pacific railroad, Judge Bordwell ?f sma,mns n?ne instruction .ova . . ivaaja. any only m kJUQ uaiuiuuicau. j As a reneral Tironosltlnn tldalanrta which are immediately or In tho future the same interest rate went at will be useful for navigation, are pot Ata.. ...l.J a. .a a . . m. . mo suujtjci ui pnvaie ownQrsniD. Tn-ey I fiAerii.i v.,A a uwu w. Fir"" are held ln common-the atate la vested . . .;VaT "chools may not be the best place wun tine aa trustee. Tne atate oughtlvc" J Dl "u 'u l fir not to, and cannot without violence' to 1 000 Offered in the U8ual way tne purpoaea for which it exists, alien- hrontrht Mds for n n I 1501) (111(1 7 . " v. au into absolute private ownership l.... . . .1 V'l is better for tne scnoois to under- auch lands. Such allenatlnn wm.M h. worm, or aooui one eierenia ot me an infringement on tha natural rights amount offered. of the individual, and, therefore, aub- A chance should be given Port- tw.i?iris ir4 b,uyer8,to bur portiand bonj8' render of an attribute of sovereignty. Te P'an sale should be SO an abrogation of a vital political func- changed that Portland securities LnJ, v tlon. It la. therefor forbidden. .h. be broueht wIthfn thft J nHghtened vtCft Justice Bean savs nrlvate mnnnn. Li .l . v u, . , ..., I- a- M m-m-m a v ay I III I II H II II III (II PHI I II VMM I llr W nST nor I a w-a a a . oly of the Portland waterfront by for an orphan.g Bavlng8 or'a tonam &iron railroads and others Is "not inimical mite to be a Shangnai beacb comber, to navigation." ' ' "dressed ln a tattered pair of linen oreecnes." ma soie assei consists laiiuin v. niiciiutvu, win uiuko .....a ta ... ' . I , , , . . . .. . , . - . nn it,. Mn.f,.i.na JL MM.U? ,d. " T n hw my worda thinka it should be deposited in .J : cantlle concern Immediately bout-Mr" . r.. - na oenev not, i judg him not" John regular savings banka whera it w a lausuBge in aimo8i .,u .,AAnnn . j a v i must oe aeucacy, dul me essentials 11111. that ln the brief of the avn0ther J00'000 nd, Put .then .?? should hot be slighted. Does Rev. Mr. Lelper want more Mrs Younr is Hght In savlnr the Mr lnn x-brut offers Hla ohurch, or Mrs. xoung is ngni in saying tne do., h Wlint BOmt) of th r b cnier aim enouia oe 10 promote per-1 of in Revelations lt:ST sonal purity. There is nothing to be gained through purely academic Parents who object to power spoken GEO. F. BROWN. the would not only pay the owners a fair lntereat but could be used In trade, commerce Where floats her flag ln triumph a till I and develooment. The Journal thinka I It might be used In th purchaa of fold up th banners! Smelt the guns t Ood lives and reign st He built and -1 lent ' Th heights for Freedom's battlement I Bit Kim Itl. or frtaf MVlt1in tk ai.nl. I a. .T" aA!.' TLh"e rt-laand b0n8 l Btructlon should remember that fail- c 0 e . , .. ... ure of the parent to instruct forces 88.28. What is more, the Baltimore ,v . -i-i-n ... a the task upon other people. The for such instruction, but until par ents realize their responsibility, it is better for the schools to under take the duty than that boys and girls learn under less favorable circumstances. Children cannot always be kept in ignorance. They should not be A Pink Whisker Reminiscence. Centralis, Waah.. June 16. 181S Tn th Editor of The-JonniaWn V tWni I,,,,, .a rri,. T...M..1 .. . . " I iur ui cuy a uevciuimieiiu x no journal SSUt O'... wM hav. our. Improvement bond. Improvement bonds. The Journal's Idea haa merit It would provide an absolute safe invest ment at a fair rat of interest for th person of small means and would fur nish th capital for eome of tha plana 1 Love rulea. Her gentler purpose runs. A mighty mother turna ln tears -The pages of her battle yeara, Lamenting all her fallen sons. Judge Eordwell says the state ought not and cannot without vio lence to the purposes for which it exists alienate such lands. into ab solute private ownership. He says such alienation would be subversive .MISTRESS AND MAID S I of a superabundance of leisure in IX simple rules, said to have ,to reflfct at his particular solved the servant girl prob- "a Iair ,fz,? y"i w lem in a New Tork household, may be worth a trial by the ling's well known description. of the'purposes of organized govern- distracted mistress and the, disgrun ment He says it would be a sur- tied maid. -Miss Helena Schwartz render of an attribute of sover- has been employed by Mrs. J. B. elgnty, an abrogation of a vital po- Jacobson forty years. They got on litlcal function, and It Is therefore nicely; they are still friends. Helena forbidden. And the Oregon supreme says it is not inimical. court H' A COMMEXCEMENT DAY ELEN KELLER, the "miracle of the age," . has astonished audiences with spoken ad dresses. Deaf, dumb and blind since infancy, she has progressed under guidance until now she can Hspeak and be understood !l3inly. Ten days ago Kathryne May Frlck, thirteen years old, delivered a commencement '"day a'dclresa at tho Mount Airy, Pennsylvania, Institu tion for the Deaf and Dumb. Ex cept for a glimmer of sight in one eye, making it possible for her to distinguish light and dark, this child is handicapped as was Helen Keller. Kathryne has been attending bcuooI three years. First writing it ou a typewriter, she delivered this ad dress to a large audience: I am glad to be able to talk to VOII today. Four yeara ago I coulii urn write or aay many worda. but now I can write on a typewriter and am learning to speak and to read books J like to go to school and I am hn nnv all the time. I am very glad now ba cause I ahall go horn next week, but my teacher will teach me at homo in uly and August. I like to read and tudy. My friends at homo are varv kind, to me, and I shall have plenty of rides tn autos and trolley cars. I shall be very glad to corns'' bank' . tn achool ln the fall. Friends say that when she en tered the school Kathryne was lit tle more than a tractable animal. ow she is becoming vetoed In the rudiments of an education. She is being educated because sh. is capa ble of happiness. "I am happy all the time." Education that does not look to ward happiness .is . hardly . worth while. H applness 1 m a'y 'Bbt' 1 cenwrto all, butt education should equip the liyjiviauai lor run enjoyment of . it should happiness come. .And happi- Toung Italian marquis is hunting work in San Francisco, having lost the remnants of his fortune on Wall Street after parting with most of it on the Paris Bourse. Apparently well Qualified for a Job as son-in-law in the millionaire quarter. has three rules for maids, as follows: 1 The maid must not wait for the mistress to tell her what tn do: aha should always know and do It. Diamonds weighing a total of 2 When the mistress wants to go more than twenty-eight tons have unv.Tflrd t0 been taken from the earth since leave, the maid muat stay at home. .. . m . ... ., S If the maid aees that the home Is the dawn Of civilization, according a good one she should, appreciate it I to a Frencn metallurgist. Yet we'll .Mrs. Jacobson says the following all carry the hotel clerk's burden three rules for mistresses have worked well, so well that after near- Uncle Sam having failed to recog- ly a half century of service Helena, nize the Huerta government with New York's model maid,', waa tho P&rt of. its anatomy still intact, who honored guest of her employer at a will be competent to identify the reception last week: remains when the insurgents finish 1 If tney find that the maid is their Job? worthy, reckon her as -a member of r'.ia, . ' . With- the suffragettes resolving 8 Whpn out with her treat her as t0 8 n the warpath in Vienna and an equal, introducing bar to your elsewhere,, their.-recent - European friends, , conference will largely assume the If mistress and maid wish to solve aspect of a Budapest their problem, why not give these rules a trial It may yet be possible. Oregon Eaperantlsts are In ses to reach a' common ground of un- slon at McMinnvllle, but the Yan derstanding. After all, the maid to- hill county farmer displays no en day may be the mistress tomorrow, thuslasm. . The new tongue won't Herbert Corey entitled. "Senator Jones' Costly Holdup." In thla letter lta au thor mad use of th statement, "couched in tha incisive forceful nesa of contemporary classics, that during the race Between J ones ana ie-wia for con greaa in Hit Jonea "rot Jim Uam'a goat," which reault aroused tha tatter's wrath. Mr. Corey further intimates tnat tn getter waa "not modeatly prouu oi me geiung. "Not modeatly proud" la an amhia-u. oua term, If w put any faith la. polit ical iraoiuon or record ox those daya. Mind, you, I make no attempt to blink tne ract tnat jones got Jim Ham s goat, all right;. but that succeaa was achieved by a, crass holdup, and not by a aquar aeai, a ngnt in tn open, and coarse procedure naturally arrfuaea anyone's wrath, b he pink-whiskered or no. During that campaign it was common report tnat Jonea' political managers dil igently side-stepped Jim Ham's standing unaueugo 10 a joint aeoata Between him self and th Honorable Weslev. Thla bit of Fabian tactlca waa prompted by ma gooa ana auiricient reason that Jones esquires wer well aware of their chevalier's Inferior, forenslo ability ahould he cross swords with tha Knight of tha Pink Whiskers. " Moreover, this aspect of the case mad it Impossible for "Yakima'a" aeconda to ahed th mem- oriea of either Don Quixote's battl with the windmill, or th well-known fact that ln controversial endeavor Jim Ham to use a metaphor of tha ran ire could ride with a clean saddle, and ride straight up where Jones couldn't drag a rope." Howbelt, not until near the close of th campaign, and then after they had, NEWS FORECAST FOR THE COMING WEEK made of denomlnatlona amall enough to bo within reach of the postal savings bank depositor-$lo to 1100 each. To meet tha inevitable objection, that money invested in a oona is not available as money ln band or bank. The Journal would hav th bonds ac cepted at th city atores as cash. Th plan proposed by The Journal has been tried with unqualified success In other cities, where wag earners Washington, D. C, June 18. During th greater part of th week th eyea of th nation will bo turned toward 1 Gettysburg, Pa., where,. SO yeara ago, was fought th great three days' battl that ended th Confederate Invasion of tha north. The semi-centennial Js to ba mad tha occasion for a. mammoth reunion of Civil war veterans and a have eagerly bought the bonds of small five days' celebration that will Include denomination. They learned that for mun,,,, by prominent men of the making purchasea th $10 or 120 or $50 north and .ontN togetn.r wlth thd un bond was Just as good aa th. flO gold Te,llnr of .emSriala, etc, pieco or $50 bill; and that ln stocking Wlth th, beginning of th govern or tea pot It was worth a great deal mtltlVa flBCal year next Tuesday, a nun,. mora, as while there it waa accu- ber of leglBiatlV0 act- of the iagt oon. mulatlng interest; If it becama th pry Krtl.a and ,averti important new reg of burglars it could b easily traced;' ,,i.ainn. n .ha ..i " and if it, wer deatroyed by fir, Jt was th. -0Varnment will become on.ratlv-. not lost to the owner. The popularity of the postal savings bank system was created by th Im mense amount of free advertising it re ceived; It is a fairly good system, but because it does not allow tho deposit ors money opportunity to work to its full capacity, it can be improved, on. The Journal's proposition. Is bitter. With adequate publicity, it can be made as popular here as it is In St. Paul, Of most general interest, perhaps, will be tha introduction by th postofflce department of tha C. -O. D. service of th parcels post. Reports from all sections of the country tell of elaborate preparations for a "aafe and sane" celebration on Friday of Unci Sam's one hundred and thirty-seventh birthday. Congreaa and tha departments of government in Washington will take a recess from ?, " ,., : .? I Washington will take a recess fron Philadelphia and other cities where " Uhur,day untll Monday. President Wll son expects to spend the holiday with his family at Cornish, N. H. A statu of Zacharlah Chandler, twice senator from Michigan and secretary At Target Practice. From London Onlnlon. Sergeant I don't know what to do interior under president Grant. -wui oa uiiTOJieu in maiu.ry nun in me capitoi on Monday. The atatu la a about these men. There hasn't been a hit signaled this half hour. Subaltern Give the order to charge present, from th state of Michigan, the targets with fixed bayonets. BEFORE SIX THE NEW EDUCATION fit his wagon. T young. Immature minds. . It fears I ness cannot come to a single Indl- "","u, a.uw. Atgvit p u uiy-TiaijaL u is a community blessing; A Chicago rhvslc'an asserts that HE old-fashioned notipn that married men outlive the bachelors. education s cnier purpose Is to But somehow there always seems provide the learner against the to be a bountiful widow erop awalt- necessity or aomg woric is go- ing the bachelor picker. ing. out or date, xne 01a idea or culture for its own sake is giving An Atlanta,' Georgia, alienist de way to the new ldeaof finding a clares that 'Americans are fast go- cultural significance in every plain ing insane. One's neighbors do ner- occupation. Oregon scnooi superm- sist In acting queeny. tendents are grasping the new idea. They favor vocational training in the high schools. They have started in the right direction. " ' The superintendents propose to remodel high schools so that a boy or a girl may study along lines of natural adaptability. They are op posed to continuing a system that imposes studies which drive boys lua ""giiTffTtiray " froiifsttid7. ."in? I ''"' new idea does not eliminate' any of the. essentials; it segregates , them and make's them ; available. The boy's education is not measured, finally, by 1 school marks. It is Smart Btisiness. From the. Weekly Telegraph. A customer walked into, a, bootshop recently r.nd asked for a pair of boota. The assistant, a you th of If ahowed him a suitable pair, the price being 16s d. 'The customer stated that he only had 13a 8d with him, apd inquired if ha could pay, that and bring the Sa next day. "He waa told that he could do so. Arter tne. customer, wno was a prietor severely reprimanded the assist ant for allowing the man to Jake the boots, saying he would never sea him again. "Ay, but I aball," replied the emart youth. "I wrapped up two boota for th left foot, sa he's pomad. to com hcv" By Ir. Frank Crana, fCooyrlght. 181J. by Frank Crana) .Almost all the qualities that are the cursa Of mankind are carefully taught to children. .Tha child gets his stock of cussednes well laid in before he is six years old.- Som psychologists say three, -'-'. - - - We overrate the Inherited meanness; most of It is absorbed from his environ ment by th child along with his first ideas." . In tha realm of fundamental moral truths most families are medieval, aom of them almost pre-Adamlte. Th cWld"s eyes ar very sharp, Ms absorptive power .is strong. H sees through you and unconsciously "repro duces you. "Go away and don't botherl Stop that nols and clear out of here!" By this tha child gets the principle that the ideal condition, the on enjoyed by papa. Is on of self-indulgence; that when on Is at ease one is happy, and when any Irritation is at hand one Is to be fretful and Impatient Children hkv to learn bad temper, petulance; and an ger, and they ar well drilled in theae arts. They learn also tha lie that while ln the realm of dead matter there is inex orable and fixed law, ln the realm of apirlt there la only whim. They soon see that to put their finger in the candle flam brings immediate pain: to disobey parents, to b "bad," may or .may not bring suffering; It all depends on how his rulers happen to feel. Moral painful effects ar to be dodged. This is tb foundation of the criminal character. He learns th medieval error that life ia to ba governed by rewards and pun ishments, and, not by an Intelligent knowledge of consequences. "If you ar a good boy I will give you an apple, and If you ar naughty I will, apank you. So no grows up with th rotten Wednesday Is tha date set for th beginning of the , aldermanlo "boodle" , trials in Detroit The defendants, ln, eluding nine members of th board of! aldermen, were Indicted last Jvly on charges of accepting bribes and con- ernment Is as essential in the family spiring to accept a bribe for their votes as ln the state. I and influence in th passing of a meas- Sometlmes he learns that to fawn, ure affecting city property transferred cringe, flatter and lie will bring him to the Wapaah railroad. "Honest Tom" what he wants, and to be honest will CHlnnaa,- prealdent of the board, will ba Only, onus trouble. Having by their lne ni 01 xno aeimuuu w do inea. niriirncaa. and ai fiahnaaa thnrnnrhi Representatives of th educational drilled their child in the art of lying and hypocrisy, parents wonder why he is not "good" when he grows up. "What would company think if you ahould act SO before themT Tou muat practice being nice at home so you can act nicely before people." Thua is th interests of the entire country will be-, gin to assemble In Salt Lake City at, tha end of the week for the annual con-" ventlon of th National Educational as sociation. Other large gatherings of th week . will includa h Christian Citizenship Conference lh Portland, Or.,, ' th international eisteddfod in pitts- pro- spat In his mind, that good. and bad xnaaa pleaaiog or dlapleaalng someone ln au thority, and do not mean hla own con aclouaneaa of moral quality. , He la carefully trained to obey author ity and not to govern and obey himself. Th average parent baa no conception of th faot that dmocracjr or ear&or child trained in tho moat demoralising burgi and the opening of th National principle v a soul can havenamely, to Conference of Charities and Correction make "what other people think" his at Seattle moral standard. In other words, h is Events of th weak abroad will Include taugm to D as wrong, unclean and un- the Henley Royal Rowing Regatta on Just as he likes, provided bo is not the Thames river, the Royal Agricultural 1 found out , . v society show at Bristol, England, tl The child bumps Into a chair and military centennial celebrations ln Ger- cries. The mother says: "Naughty many, the French amateur golf cham-' chair! Mamma whip chair," and beats plonship tournament at La Boulie, the the furniture. Thus th little soul is opening--of an International exhibition taught that barbarous principle of ven- of sport and travel at Tho Hague, and reanca. nhinh ia tha. Kiit-a an KTi.a tha annual congreaa to be held ln Lon- ness of all criminal law. "n by the International Bureau for th When th child is good w do not 1 Suppression of th wnite Biav Traffic notice him; when he cries w pet him and offer him averything. Thus h Pn.nt.aH Pflrfltrrsnhe learns th fatal principle of "government rOinicU rdldgrapnS by nuisance," and how-to attain hla de sires by making himself disagreeable. Many a man's soiled oharaotar baa Frequently you meet benedicts who look as though their wives had caught Many ar taught th vlcloua nrlnrlnl. It. aan waah ad In a woman's tMr. or Doing a Duiaan upon others. They are never maae to picg up their strewn A man without ambition is as us- playthings, attend to their own wants lass aa a laat vear'a doc llcenaa. ana wait upon themselvea. withnut which hablta thor can ba no raai brotherhoood nor religion. ; mey ar taught to rule when thv them robbing the ice cht can, ana serve wnen they muat: vet m . character la sound when one does not When a fool married man needs to act precisely in an opposite Way, aerva be chaperoned by his wife every time when he can, , and rule only when he h travels h ought to stay at home. must 1 -. . - .:-,r- '. They ar taught that law-breakina- la I When a married man aroea down tOwn pieasanjus na..oniyoeaja&alaadafroia 1 avaryiiichtita.a i.nra ign that h. 1 ior xear 01 punishment; lnatead of tho faced th paraon with tha wrong womana, twh that tha only pleasure s in find- - - , : , ' ing out th laws Of the unlveraa and "If it wasn't for carfare and Inn. keeping them. , V . t0n." saya a bachelor, '"a woman Take it all ln all grown-UDS deserve I wouldn't hava anv need of manav whan a deal of, credit for. being as decent aa aha goes shopping. But vry married. tfiey araa. . . ;. 1 . man knows batter. . -. . I a '