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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 20, 1913)
"pLJC", Jl ID MAI !an1 the httiie aD(1 motherhood havo" the work of constructive legislation. flying across the Atlantic -man be I M LL.'xJVmW rINL.;Jiot Buffered. ' He got Into, the,, newspapers ;recentfy awaiting a formal invitation from' A-tX-l-ifcPKNllttXT NKWOI'APKH The anti-suffragists apparently .with the statement that the manu- ...... pohiuhcr leso tight of the world's ' progress. factoring companyin which he is a i. ..i.t mi.r) md I Women were denied souls by the ! heavy owner will 'establish a large fSUWmVmJ. Mohammedans , because to grant-! factory In Canaded: it can sell to , iiieiu buuu woum ub uesiruciive ui Canadians witnoui encountering a I I tlHrJ at (u pu-lulll- kl fori In ud, ur 'araiwu HMtirr. imiMUiiMiuu tbnwcu !m tuiiiti mcod4 cu : home and motherhoou. The cam- tariff wall The general surmise is the celebrated Mr.; McGinty and' the,. mermaias. , PERTINENT COMMENT. AND NEWS IN. BRIEF ilialcn against foot bindlnff in China ' that "ha n mflmifflfriirer th rrtVAr 'iH.u..kTT-... .... o ajwl'.i I" . ... " .. ' ,- Vii dZ,7. :,7.i.. opposition on, the as ., , nil mnrr . - , j w . . v . , .. .. v- -w uui uvno uvv vraii. a ici idiuu l u w tii tm- mint dnnrtBrff tmi wne. 'Bertion that Chinese women would tariff that will disturb the existing: Uba,IUA AUV fell .! .ti Ubl'KUbbM K ?ujinln tvrniiiw .':; Kruitwk- Building. tii Htlli utw. Kw York; 1318 l'pli Hum! Inn. Cblciiro. -UlHKrilh i.luin u iua.il or tu uj mUu- lu-Ui i;lta ii- or Mexico: J DAILY. OM. tar $3 IX) I Oaf mo-th t -M ? IDNDAT Oil fur l. iU Ooa month -2 HAIL M L.MJ become insubordinate, home aban donee, unfitted' for home and motherhood. . POLITICAL RKFKiEKS . .$7 Ti On month .$ .(II E' 'TIs not what man docs which exalts 111 m, but what man would t,do.' Browning. RNEST JAUMSISN, a political prisoner in Siberia, escaped from his guards after working fie months in the salt mines. iS.Then followed three weeks of strug Jgle across Russian stcp)es, during which he had to battle, with wild i animals, cold and hunger. At last i ' . ... ... squeeze that mill owners have on the consumers of the country. It is, in short, suspected that Governor Fobs was democratically democratic only to the extent of Re lieving that promises of downward revision of the fVriff were Btiictly for campaign tises.. " THK PASSING SHOW he succeeded THK LOST STATE in shipping for the lie arrived in Bos- United States. ton. ME steamship State of Callfor-j "e Del,eu'u, ,1M"se'1 ",e- man aguma luiait-u linn nuu lie- back to Act- I nin which wpnt Hnwn off th ! I Alsk rnaat Kundav mnrnlnr landed that he be sent r.in tn iho hitnrv nf Liberia as an escaped convict. q" . ing entirely upon evidence furnished ,, . by 'he agents, the immigration of- n the days whon there was noficia,g ordered Jaum8en d ted on K r0 fWeerm rg,,?r6g0",illlc mSay sround "at be might be and Redding California, the sea- ome , cha T An' editor killed a lawyer in Cali fornia, but editors themselves will admit that the pastime should never bo permitted to become t bo gfneraj as to 'threaten, the .ultimate extinc tion of the American congress. "Uncle Joe'' Cannon .will likely have to be shown that his anxiety to "come bach;" Isn't shared to.any appreciable extent by the progressive commonwealth of Illihqjs. SMALL CHANGE : HE public is paying a heavy penalty for the mock heroics j of the McNab resignation. I That penalty Is the wide publication of the nauseous details of the Diggs-Caminetti liason. All the filthy facts should be buried in I nhllvlAn Vnthtno nhnut (ha nnaA la worth reading The bare announce" ment later that the unspeakable de fendants have Yeen convicted and heavily sentenced is all the case Is worth. There Is not a fact nor a person I His Venezuelan revolution having again ceased to revolve, Mr. C. Cas tro might find If he tried that'he can get quicker and more eventful action out of a Joy-wlieeX Letters From the People (Com-innlmtloaa fnt to Tbe Journal for pub llraUou Id tbl department iliotilU bo written on only oue side of the paper, ihould not exited SCO words iu Icnfth. mid mnst be ocompanlrd by tb iiimi and addreaa of the tender If the writer doe not deal re to nTt tb nam pub-ll-biMl, be ebvuld ao atnte.) - concerned to give the story more land and San Francisco. Puget ) tude theS. and the Portland-San ! newspaper editor at Riga. He was Francisco route was the chief the-! fociated with the social democrat tre of maritime operations on the j ic, 'jatrty' d because of his per- jdoue the Russian , masses he was ; pronounced dangerous to the peace of official Russia and sent to Si- Jaurasen committed no crime; he than passing notice. Diggs Is one coast. In those days, sailing days were more notable than other days in: Portland. They Were 6ignal for the gathering of country merchants! iwho journeyed to 'San Francisco to! make purchases, and others who ! made the trip on pleasure or busi ness. The East seemed farther ; J Their malpdorojjs acts would not in rdirjary circumstances be worth more than a few lines in police court nevs. Hut they are star performers In what has developed Into a national show. The case was given a large aspect when McNab resigned in a spasm of heroics. The national no toriety forced the news agendas to I beria. The immigration laws of the i United States ought not to be used to aid in punishing a man for his ; meet the aggressive demand of tjhe 'political opinions.- The traditions j public for the filthy details. There inny i I... A , -i .. Jn I. . . . I . thn nri n,tr aTr-iipRlomJ awv:k,iu ur,.LO is noc a respeciaDie newspaper dui "from" Oregon were largely to the !not fontemplate the employment of j would be glad to be rid of the nau California metropolis. iour aW8 ,to 8",B.t m the send ng of ;6eous narrative. In the latter part of the 70's this !? Siberian It j8 the prlce we are paying for business was at its height, n 1877, m , t. t , , the act of McNab in tendering his there had been an invasion by the', 0ne 0' th t8fdle8 of. 1913 is resignation with attendant fire Pacific Coast Steamship. Company. '6 ""vlval of a system , works. That act thrust Diggs and of the Portland territory territory iof P1,tlcaI espionage and the pun- jCaminetU with their miserable in that had hitherto remained sacred f" offenders with , trigues into the limelight and before to the Oregon Steam Navigation iV dea V ,! f. if the wading public. Company, later the Oregon Railway i ; ' r l A Navigation Company jf!""1. " ""ne" ' ! Captain George C. Perkins, now . nn .. . m ' . . . . . iand render no aid in Buch a pro- United States senator, came to Port-jKram land to establish the competing line., r. ' . ... ... ... IN . PHILADELPHL1 The competition resulted in a rate war in which fares went down to starvation figures, 'and big crowds! made the trip to San Francisco and , return. It also brought to thej route- swifter and better appointed , vejsels, among them tho State of California and ueen of the Pacific . ofj the Pacific Coast line and the! Oregon and Columbia of the Oregon line. - - nation owes its birth, its life, its ! development, its position and glory. F OR years Philadelphia has been known 'as a one railroad town. It was in the complete thral dom of the Pennsylvania rail' its road, being controlled by politicians who held contracts with that cor- Replying to J. E. Johnson. . Haines. Or., Autr. 1. To the Editor of The Journal J. E. Johnson in last Tuesday's Journal says: "I belieW-it to be the duty of any citizen when he , sees an error, fraud or humbug to ex pose it." Then h will, no doubt, be willing to be exposed aa one who knows nothing of SociaJism. Me said: "I believe col lective ownership of all things socially, or publicly, used is a dogma as founda tionless . as a dream, and ridiculously absurd." . Even If it were a dream. It Is a most beautiful" one, and as there are millions of people dreaming the same dream it will beyond a doubt become a reality. ' Again he says: "How are things that are publicly used to be acquired? The only .process that I can concieve by which they might pass to' collective ownership is that of purchase, and we have not enough money for, this." He is. wrong. It could be aecom , More cultivated, less Idle land, Is, the need..- ff ,(:-' mi Not many of the "Won't Workersv can De made to worx. ' - Money wlllonen asylums as well as prison gates, sometimes, :lt seems, . . But Portland, inr. other Orecon rwnlr uuu i reuijy neea mucn not weatner.ua vice.'' . , How nice to be a school teacher, or pupii, over inree weeKS morej.oi vaca tion, i... . .,. - Mother love la diffe rent from Hfflnlt love; the two Mrs. Thaws furnish An illustration. -t , . '-,. ..... 4- Sulzer, It must be confassed.Js a sad disappointment, but that doesn't make the Tammany Tiger- a , more lovable beast - ' m . - ? Now s the time to ride out and view the bounUful beauty of well tilled lertiU.fielde, in the good old harvest nine. , Next to combatting revolutions, the principal business of a Latin-American government is borrowing money in New York of Europe, and mortgaging its wealth and people. Borrowing money by an alleged gov-' ernment like that of Huerta's means more Impoverishment of tne people who should be most oonstderd. - -those wrho toil and produce. . 1 , . OREGON BIDELTGIITS v . h: The Globe-says that a barber' capable home ana iucifttlve .business In. Gold Beach v- Mora than ?00 depositors have ac counts at the postal savings bank at The Dalle,' with, deposits . totaling. In excess of 128,000. 1 . ,i-. Baker may have a "better baby" 'eon test if the plans of enthusiasts are car ried out. The idea la to have the event during the county fair neit month. - ..:.r. ... -.y v; Medford Sun: The nrescnt veart will break all records for travel - to Crater Lake from Medford. Walt until the per manent, highway over the Siskiyous is built, and watch the auto whetja hum. , ' Mrs. William Gray of Laweh, In Har-neytx-ounty. lias started & movement for the fighting of the rabbit pest by means of rabbit proof lancing, the building of which is to be financed through a publlo loan. ... , ... . The flalem "Clierrians are planning for a grand ball at the new armory on tlio evening of September 6, for the purpose of raising iuuda to meet the expenses of th band- that will accompany them to the JPendieton Round-Up. t . T, Astoria Budget: Clara C. Munson, mayor of Warrenton and winner of the isuu capital prise In ttat Budget s goia contest, Announces thaTfrom her prlsx she will donate $100 toward the repair- mgarnl -embellishment or Bi. Thomas chapet at .Warrenton. - - Secretary of the Interior La no la Im portantly right when he says that 'i should be made as easy as possible for homeseekers to obtain land, and diffi cult for mere land speculators. The problem Is. how? This will be at leabt partially solved in the not far distant future. IN EARLIER. DAYS tif Fred Lockley. . - The Junturav Times of four six column pagett. two of them home mint, has ao- Pear mi as the Journalistic representative of Uio new town in Malheur county that Is. the present. terminus of the O.-W. R. 4i K. extension destined ultimately . to Ushers are .not as yet disclosed. . THE fMPEACHMENT OF SULZER plished in three dif competition, purcli GOLF AXD HKAINS 0 It fferent ways, namely. onfiscation. If purchased, the money which now gcjes to profits would In less than ten years pay for every Industry; and in one year could pay the national debt. If they were to be acquired by com petition the government could compete them out of existence through new in dustries with better machinery operated at cost. However, the capitalists realize this and would gladly sell rather than bo competed out of existence. Again he said: "What benefit could the average citizen receive from an in vestment in railroad stockt None what ever. It is only the persons that are adapted to that lin that could receive any dividend whatever." He la right. What benefit could the average Sunday school boy receive if h attemDted to receive a fortune j ! hv rnhhrv? None whatever. It is From the Omaha eWorld - Herald. " If on half of what la charged against him by his relentless and savage ene mies is true;' if one halt the evidence already adduced lh corroboration of those charges 'stands unrefuted in the end, what a fall, what a pitiful wreck of a lite, will mark the close of the public career of William Sulier, gov ernor of New York! - He was Endymlon a. pure and beau tiful youth sprung from sources the most humble and reared and taught amidst surroundings the most poison ous, by companions and preceptors tho most dangerous. During , almost', his entire adult life a member of the Tarn many organization, honored by its stern chieftains and acclaimed by its rank and file, he was nevertheless friend of the neODle. nlumed chamnion of truth and righteousness a trusted knight and leader among those who fought the forces of greed and privilege and plun der. From a place high "in the national councils of his party he stepped to one of the most splendid position in the republic the governorship of the great Empire state, with its 10.000,000, of populatlon. Just ahead and there are reasons for believing that he gazed long and fondly on the' vision glittered tne w u v t uo vuj u-uu no i v u i tw o ccJi - rC61 V ally pui tivii i i " w - v t '- front was bottled up. But the old order seems in fair way to change. There has been a revolt against conditions of monopo ly that have practically held the at that I think the railroad stockholder, like the robber, will not be benefited in the end. He says: "Socialism is a theory that will not stand analysis." Is that a factT It has stood the analysis for a good many years and I think they will remain sianaing even A- SOCIALIST. NE by one our cherished tradi tions are being torn down. It has always been supposed that the game of golf was one pe- CKliarly adapted tO men Of full ritv In trnnannrtntlAn hrmiWn .rr;rU'w ,I CiPa"ly:IOr A popular demand tor competitive after J. E. Johnson expose, it. "error. . ; k ,v r , I . 1 1U uot TulTe 8 transportation has finally brought waud or humoug. .,, uibu tovyoniiua i muscles, i about the signing of an agreement " Z 7-tr; It-.Z'T a i Dy the city and the railroad which A Peace Proposition, iSrwo?ioF5?!atrp,s to rr that ?in? ,b aniS;r:.iubi,raendre til uJB ' ' six-.embarrassment to muscle in Ps-jwnarves on the Delaware river. It teen lives. , J,ef "QU'nnSth e l atter. In Proof breaks the monopoly along the river B a J? ,Ca,ifrn,a f t hi8thyPotne8i8, Mr hitlatch se- front and openg the way for mu. The Columbia steamed into Port- he says, is played through the lower land harbor under command of Cap-: nerve centers and motor channels. tain Fred Bolles July 22,' 1880, and I Poor golf results from the direct The agreement is yet to be rati fied by the. city council. As the council is under the control of the was wrecked in a collision with the interference of the brain, or con-ini.u fi. , schooner San Pedro, off Mendocino, ; sciousness. Probably this accounts ' tr"! 'u r . ai tnnt uv i , , , . . . the result would be in doubt were it July 21, 1907. with a loss of eighty-, for the low scores turned in by John nnt ttir rho fapr thnt ,.. ... six lives. ID. Rockefeller. William H Taft anH . " ' . i ' --...v fno coo fa In t ha t w fham haa n v The Oregon first docked at Port- Andrew Carnegie. i November. i.U"" UC' , vj6C. " 1 , . " " ",i The Ultimate unfettering Of the universal. It advocates the brotherhood Estacada, Or., Aug., 18. To the Editor of The Journal Tho Journal is doing a great work in advocating the study of the dictionary, and In this connection I want to . call attention, to the term "Roman Catholic" as a familiar example of the misuse of words. "Catholic!' means "universal," or "all inclusive," and .there can be only one pothniix r.ittHnn or church: otherwise ! it is not Catholic at all. There is only one science of arithmetic. Twice two is four, in all religions and languages, and ! it would be as correct to say "Roman ! Catholic arithmetic" as 'Jtoman Catho ! lie church." -.""N" i The Socialist movement is a catholic One. it is worm wiae. international, more convention may have persuaded Wil liam Sulzer that the "Tammany taint would prove fatal to his further aspK ration. However that may be. .ie round it necessary to break with the organi zation, and he turned, with characteris tic and tempestuous fury, upon his Old .companions and associates, He sum moned all the people to his standard to fight with nim for the utter destruc tion of the Tammany power, and amid flaunting banners and blaring trumpets he rode resplendent-at the head of the hosts. Thrice armed he seemed, be cause he had his quarrel Just. All right minded people had been taught to look on Tammany as the embodiment of po litical sin and corruption, and so their prayers and hopes and cheers were with William Sulzer as 'he charged the Tam many citadel. Only look at him now! But yesterday there was hardly a newspaper in New Tork but applauded and supported him. And today there Is hardly one that is not demanding his immediate resigna tion that the state may be spared fur ther disgrace! That fickle Dublio opin ion which was so-lamorousiy with him now thirsts for his blood. His wife, whom he permitted to come with such woman-like , self-sacrifice and devotion to his rescue, lies now a" nervous wreck In that blighted "house of the people' w;iete yet he dwells, and all his desper ate efforts rare directed to saving him self from the final, crushing disgrace of ejectment from his office. What really has happened to effect this great calamity we must wait for the evidence of the impeachment pro ceedings tOmake sure. But what seems to have happened is the old, old story "his honor rooted in dishonor stood." IVhat seems to have been already shown Is Nat the taint he denounced so mag nificently in Tammany and its braves was In his own blood, subtly implanted there through the years of close association- and Imperceptible, almost un conscious, assimilation. The practices he denounced in their leaders the cor rupt conversion of publio funds, the false and perjured accounting of such funds, the mania for the stock market were, it is now charged, his own prac tices as well. It I in public life in any event the sin of sins for which William Sulser stands impeached hypocrisy. No man can conytilt a greater crime " against popular government than when he puts himself at the head of the hosts of righteousness, to charge upon the strongholds of enUenched wrong when there is insincerity in his heart and he practices or upholds secretly the evils he publicly denounces. For his crime, be it soon or late, will find him out, and when it does, when he stands exposed, It means another smashing of idols, a further crumbling of Ideals that are sorely needed to keep our publlo life clean and wholesome. It means the sowing: broadcast of new seeds of sus picion and distrust and cynicism, poi soning the minds of the people and add ing immensely to the burdens already borne ' by the honest men who are In the vast majority who serve, the peo ple in publlo office. When a man like Sulzer goes down the faith of multi tudes droops and withers and the en tire structure of government Is weak ened as by a smashing blow. v Alaskan coast in 1906. Of the four latch calls attention to the low popular ships on which the grave i scores made at the various country and gay of the Oregon common- clubs. These scores seem to indi- the t voters themselves. wealth of that time traveled, the Queen Is the sole survivor. She first arrived at Portland, September 18, 1882. In 1890, her name was changed to "The Queen", and by that name . -. . . j j -sue is B tea wing up suu uuwu uio cate a direct relation between brains and strokes, the more brains the j more strokes. The more the intellectuals devote ; their minds to the control of their' muscles, the more they interfere with the education of nerve centers T coast, biding the time when she too, lhtch would control the muscles ac- perhaps, may follow her compan ions of the golden days of the 80's to the bottom of the sea. vTTJJ'HE ANTI-SLFFKAG1STS THE JOURNAL is in receipt of a marlted copy of the Woman's Protest, published by the Na tional Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage. Mrs. Josephine M. J. Dodge, president of the asso ciation, writes that she will deeply the magazine and Hs contents. A leading article says: curately, is the conclusion of Mr. Whitlatch. In choosing golf to develop his theory, Mr. Whitlatch has sought to cruelly destroy the pleasure of a THAW HERE are those who profess fear of consequences to fol low if Harry K. Thaw is not recaptured. Evelyn Nesbit Thjw is affrighted at thought of the harm he may do her son. Sundry judges and law yers tremble over the prospect of personal vengeance Thaw may wreak on them. The public properly sympathizes with those whom the Thaw escape of man, universal peace, the abolition places. of slavery and bondage, and the enmina- NATURE tion of poverty, prostitution anu an ma LOVER. other miseries tnai now aireci me Hu man race. . The Catholic church, and indeed all churches, stand for exactly the same things that the Socialist party stand for.' 'Why, then, do not all the Chris tians Join the Socialist party, or all the Socialists Join the Catholic churchT Why do people working so zealously for the brotherhood of man oppose each other tn such an unbrotherly fashion? Why do those who labor for peace still continue to quarrel? The chief cause of war seems to be the great disagreement of opinion as to the best method of preserving peace. If Brother Lind succeeds in pacifying the Mexicans and Inducing them to quit cut- suffering for a sight of green fields, or that; we must widen our , streets to care for the immense crowds who pack them. Let us enjoy the advantages which our rltv affords and thank Odd that the lines have fallen to us in such pleasant bearing bondsm pay 6 per cent of the Tropony They j.i l. -.1 k.. U- .,111 game which the Intellectual deems I make afraid, but holds that there renown as a miahty medicine man to be his own. Ia nonsibilit.v that it has pvsn it will be in order for him to Introduce fntiira 1 a new brand or topacco to me socialists his pwn. FOSS F IX) PS AGA1X T HREE states will elect gover nors in November Virginia, New Jersey and Massachusetts. The Massachusetts situation is i "pecuiraf." j Eugene N. Fobs, the present exec utive, three times elected on the more to 6ufer. If Thaw'B i movements are to keep on tap the scarlet story of himself and Stan ford White, if we are to be regaled afresh with accounts of the liber tinism rampant through the careers of this pair by the re-opening of a book that ought to remain forever and Christians. - If he can Induce these two factions LOVER AND HUMANITY non-Interest would acquired. rnis would make quits a burden on the people to pay 6 per cerft yearly on about $90,000,000,000 'of 6 per cent bonds. This would equal $4,600, OOO.OAd yearly that the tolling; millions would have to pay to invest In some thing that would yield them no divi dends. . -m" J. E. JOHNSON. , "Fifty years ago takes Pendleton c't to the Very beginning. of things, said one fit PemlletelTs pioneers,' -'Mrs. Aura M. RaW, who died fe weeks ago, lived for T0 i'ars $n fendie fonr'Shf was born August 23.-1829, in Kehnebeo county, Maine. - Her- maiden A a ' m . i t .. UHl.i.w Ctanlibn' llUfUB WAS OlOIBO. uiytl"'! juovejoy VMQrse, was itosvm pAnllutn v r.H THlnt llfirlt. Sllk WSS married at 1 to Moses E. Goodwin. In 18 tney 'atarted for the west. They Spent ,the winter Vif 184P9 and 1850 in Wisconsin: Thai fair of 1850 found them: in Iowa, "Next spring they started for Oregon. They took up a place above , Vancouver. , When' the Indian war in 1865 broke out, they built a raft, and, putting their household goods on U, ftna&t nnn U - tt v. Kl ..(.,., tn Vnrt Vancouver. They built a hotel at Van couver, which they ran for several years. "In -iJ862 they suited with two ox , teams for the, Salmon City, mines, In Idaho,' Mrs. Goodwin driving one of the ox teams. "Jonathan Swift had a place a -mils west" of the presenfclty of Pendleton, where the stages stopped. It was known . as Swift's Station. ' "They Bedded to winter at Swift's sta- , t . a . . , . . . - . nuu. mr. wuuuwin naa a good cnance iw slse up the country that winter. In all directions the bunchgrasa stood -shoul- der high to his oxen. He decided to stay, mm a 1 1 r V. m twinA . . , 1r , . I 11 n . " v avuu vmmjri j uvuiu iiw long remain unsettled. He bunt .a rough boai'll hntl onI nut tin a tinln.tv ffnma . time, later he rented his saloon building to Lot Llvermore for a store.- ' "In 1864 ha took up what is now the west half of Pendleton as a homestead. He soon had- a herd of cows, and for a long time his place was known as But termilk station. Goodwin., did not nnn. ' fine himself to buttermilk, though. - iiu ' and Swift, like most old-timers, used to be able to put away their share of whis key. One time they made a 'compact to atop drinking. They estimated that they took 40 drinks a day, so they decided, to taper off by taking on?, less drink a day till they quit entirely. Whenever they wouli lose count they would go back to tu ana start all over again. Arlthmetio wasn't their strong point, so they were continually losing count and having to start all over again. "In the fall of 1864 Goodwin built a toll bridge across the Umatilla.. During the winter months and during high' water it Was a regular mint. He charged 60 cents a bead for cattle, 25 cants a head for sheep and $1.50 for a team anl wagon, and four hits for each additional Span of horses or yoke of oxen. "The stage station was transferred from Swift's station to Goodwin's. Abe Miller, now of Pilot Rock, took up the east half of Pendleton for his claim. Goodwin wanted the entire half section, so he swapped a .few cows and some pigs to Miller for his claim. "When the county seat was changed from Umatilla to Goodwin's farm, County Judge G. W. Bailey suggested that the prospective town bs called Pen dleton, after George W. PendlefOn, con gressman from Ohio. "Goodwin's hotel stood whers ths Hotel Pendleton now stanJs, and the nreaent hrfrlorA nrnna th. if.ra.M . .' cated on the site of the old toll bridge. f. ana Mrs, uoodwin donated a block of land for a school. The courthouse now occupies this block. They also do nated a block for a courthouse. The People's warehouse now stand mi th. original site of the old courthouse Aura street Is named after Mrs. Kaley, while Cosble street is named after her mother. Cosbie Sawtell Morse. Ann street u""u iwr uranoms Ann iownsena. Raley street is named for Mrs. Raley husband, Henry J. Raley. After the death of her first husband, Moses Good win, in January, 1871, -she married Henry J. Raley in May, 1872. "Mr. and Mrs. Goodwin had three chil dren. The oldest died when a child, tho second, Wallace W. Goodwin,' was murdered on Snake river, in Idaho, in the early '70s, and the thlrJ. a daughter, lives in Portland, being the wife of S. A. John. Mrs. Haley's second husband, Henry J. Haley, died 87 years ago, Mrs. Raley was known as the mother or Pen. dleton and was universally respected and esteemed' Mr. Johnson Comes Back. Kenton, Aug. 19, 113. To the Ed itor of The Journal I have read two arltcles in the Journal written In re ply to a criticism I made of collective ownership of all things publicly or soclaljy used. I will endeavor to an-' swer.-both I have never seen Socialists, that came so near agreeing on one point. The first criticism is the . wild, weird and incor rect comparisons of "W. M.," who com pares our present form, of government with the monarchtal. The latter was objectionable .to the colonists on ac count of the tyranny of Great Britain. TheyJon their independence, after a struggle lasting nearly eight years. The comparison of "W. M." is as Incorrect aa to compare a mule with a horse. His argument falls flat, the same as if a . -. . 1 1 . . ............ .... certain person vuui n, Duuviuio uu a public calamity. The whole dismal chapter and all the principals in it would be to the public if view through a and the condition of man-' ton last week and declared his in,' ' . e . ved through influence Itention of again working with h 1 whole30me etfuIneB. mairted for the Detroit News to sup ply the additional bit of exclusive There is fiomrthlns wrone with ihi condition of women today. There-is no ! democratic ticket, is expected to be question nhout it. Suffragists and 'the Republican nominee. Governor anti-suffragists agree on tliat point. Vn was. fnrmorlv a To.v,iia. V?iL!!'.r!'bu .-H addrd th;,.,; inhf hl I most profitable u.c i-ouuiiion oi women couia ; , - " : . . removed from kind fmprov 'A great weakness of the anti-suf-We 'ard that a fraglst argument is assertion that tra,n was stalled to the new movement Is nrimariiv m u, j." " ' ' ! minutes by grasshoppers, but it re- - i -iiccu uiMioeii as euveruur, not as a the interest of women. It is not a. Democrat, buf as a Republican, sex movement any more than is the Republicans sought to drag for church a sex institution, even though mer Congre8sman McCa1 ,nt0 the most members are women. The I field, but McCall declined. His re grest need today is development of fusai to make the fight Is regarded mnri in untitle nnt fn. 1 i . , -.- v w. iuc ueiie- BS Significant. Th nferenxa la fit of women alone, hut for ' !.... u. - . ! , , , , I me. lormtsr congressman aoes general good of men and women. not look upon the present as a pro T$e big argument for woman suf- pitious time for his candidacy, frage la the fact that placing the Fob8 first came into national ballot in her hands injects a new view by deserting the Republican u UBr oe a controlling In- arty and accenting a. ttamnerstin nomination to congress. He was (elected, and his election feast? Sheriff Word and Mrs. Schwab, t n a riw r l'ndi.ra t Inn on1 thA T Twr Tir closed, the Thaw escape is a real j mlgnt al, be COmrades. Hallelujah! Of Qods people to quit hating and ' eak foundftUon. Tho misleading stater recognize each .other as brothers and meBt'appears when be states that tho smoke the pipe of peace together he i coionlsts sin '76. secured the lands by will bring about a revival of relifilon co nnBCation. ' The land was given to Lciiii uijiuuiia .i.jr ounuujr ever , the colonists- to improve and cultivate u.caiucu v. oy, wwuiu mi u ue a iove , certain stipulations. Happy day! But I fear that a multitude of words not dignified enough to find a place in the dictionary will make their escape but - they Opposes Advance Water Payments. Portland, Aug. It. 1918. To the JBd. Itor.of The Journal There have been charges, of graft and deception against the water board of this city for several years past, but of all the bare-faced, brazen and presumptlous propositions ever presented by the water board In the past,- none can equal itt absurdity the preaentsoheme of th commission to collect from , the people water rents for three months in advance.' Where does the commission present any remuneration- to the publlo for the use of their money for three months 7 Besides that, is it not contrary to the general Welfare to withdraw from cir culatien this vast amount of money, which , would be collected under the system proposed. and bury it in .4h vaults of -the city treasurer's office? Now, as far as I am individually con cerned, it WOUld make no Ait f.r.n sincebeing a home owner, I expect Ho jthpija'fnp' obligingly went out, jive in- rmuaira, dui now about the renter7 Where the man is working iby the day be pays water rent, for three months in advance, but in a few days Pointed Paragraphs The liar has lots of competition. But it is the natural bent of some men to be broke. Truslf the budding orator to deliver a flowery speech. ' -) a There ars more blockheads than wooden legs. ' t Men waste too much good energy in making fools of themselves. Almost any man can acquire popu larity If ha is willing to pay the price, c . - "Thsre's many a trip 'twlxt the cup and the lip,' says an old toper. Every rich man imagines he would enjoy helping his poor kin if he hasn't any. , v' " 1 . It takes' a man of strong will power to' .look unconcerned when his wife tells him he has been talking in ,hls sleep. ; The crowd In the parlor consisted of a man, a girl and a lamp. "Two la com pany," protested the man, whereupon were' . compelled " to pay a- certain J he finds- a better position - tn-some amount of taxes to the British govern ment;'' -They were taxed without rep resentation.' They were overbiirdened with taxation, but were under British protectorate. . But the laud belonged to the colonists. George Washington through tho various avenues of free ,0mti-A 30.000 acres of land. The col speech oerore the happy day arrives. 0nits no doubt paid for their lands , , 3' JONES. I f0ur or -five times over in taxes. To . . . . . -j assert that the American people confis - Those Jrcsh Air Children. ; caud their land Is false. Our govern Portland, Aug. 19. To the Editor of ment has never1 encouraged confiscd The Journal As one reared in "New' tion. purlng ' tire :admiMstratiotiof York city, where over large areas there Jefferson' he, bought a vast tract of is nothing but brick, and cement, where iland from the French government, playgrounds are few, I realize- the value known as . the Louisiana purchase, for a 1.1 .i -m ... . . . nc ann nnn Alaska. wm nurchnnoil , - "i--, "(is ii i . kiiu uicBBiug vi viib , country weeK lot. T1"'v . . . information that "besides clogging the children of the tenements. But fl fpom the Russian government and paid tne rans tnev nit on tne anvin am nu2iri ovr th taiv nf tovtn- -mi. or. other locality, and it is necessary for him to take - the position at . one or lose the Job, and rather than spend the time to have the commissioner adjust his claim for rebate, hs forfeits to the city ana moves.'away, Psychology of the Auto Horn. From the, Seattle Post-Intelligencer. There . is , soma publlo demur mani fested against certain hoarse, raucous automobile horns that are held, to lack the, courteous note in crossing warnings. Itl 1st even eontenfled that sundry per sons, who happen to be down on . .their luck, have been driven to soap box orn- fiuence into politics, an influence that must elevate the moral-tone. 'The anti-Burfraglts have adopted the designation conservationists. They gay , education Is woman's greatest need. "We want to con serve tho home and motherhood." It is , necessary to go back only a few years to 'find a similar argu ment nd .against woman's educa tion, ' Hut woman is being educated; was one of the straws that foreshadowed Democratic success in 1910. His nomination as governor and his three times election to that "position are' subsequent history, .... His present flop back to the Re publican party is on tho grounds, Governor Foss Bays, that th Repub lican party is better qualified for wheels, and kicked the engineer and Ldren. to the country from Portland. firemen to death." , Colonel Roosevelt is already deny ing that he will be a candidate tor president in 1016, and thus consid erately gives the usual advance no tice to his political, opponents that they'd better get ready to kick- his hat out of the ring. " I " "r it To charge the United States govern . . Mrlu .frtiilrlriti lnnna hv mir(a seems a critic sm on. our beautiful city. lon. ,,-,6 r on the men that I am all over the city, and I have yet to ! trmd ths constitution of the Unite find a place where .-. person need go -Btates . Whose-preeepts we are asked to more man two or tnree blocks to find .1 .. The Mexican unpleasantness-has bad one pleasant reult in demon strating that Progressives, Republi cans and Democrats are all broad enough to become Patrlots-i-wlth a big. P when occasion demands. Perhaps tho several aviators who c.ro away behlnj their schedule, In ;'--;-'-'' .ri--'M" : ' r -'l'." green fields, and vacant, lots, .While the city is "rich In tfarks and public play grounds. Our attractive ity park, our unsurpassed Mack-ay park, with Its -natural beauties, our Holladay, Peninsular and polumbia parks to say nothing of th park blocks and the playgrounds, are wlthfl$ .f walking . distance : ,XW the most congested sections of our 'cltv. Af te ftttandingjhat most beautiful en-J lertainmeni ny me cnuaren at Penin ulariark I felt regret "ihat many chil dren ln country towns could not have the benefit and privilege of such train- ikgr instead of sending Portland- chil dren away from those advantages. Portland Is neither congested nor overcrowded, nnd it-is unfair, to give the IniprcBslon that our children -are i Tt . ...,,-!, ..-.i.. y ' discard and follow Karl Marx.When the stars and stripes were trailed in the. dust, did you ever hoar of Marx lifting them up? w, "W. M." states that confiscation would be, one means of acquiring things publicly used. have proved his assertions that the colonists of '76 ac quired their lands' by confiscation is false. 1 an astonished , to see such lit tle knowledge; of historjf,, .erha .110n..'-v-;r-"'Vr--,'--',-',-:---"'-','?H'''-'.-!' : To acquire-property by confiscation j would be to , destroy ths copstitutlon of the United States. This would have to be dona -to admit of a form of gov ernment : advocated ' by 'Marx. Confis cation Is revolting to a civilised ' na tion. It' was jl' mode employed in the dark ages. , , , "W; M." states that they-jwpuld Issue wil mm inuvca. aiway. . . luca, nav oeen ariven to poap dox ora- And if this is tne means by " which tory by the petulant, harsh and blatant Mr. Daly, the commissioner, expects to barking, of the "cross" horn at -street enrich., the -city, let it be known he is ! crossings tM'workin?aM ' T0 "v' . and there are. many It is now win known th-r ', " J ot them the ing of the horn carrlei comaiHanTjmSctl g yondf the ordinary against the former water boards were warn,hsr' Tnera ,s an b-rltable,4 eontro either of malice or Jealousy, but Just us vers,"l" not ln th8I 'CTi1sa": horn r that sure aa thi)JKy8tem of collecting water awakens resentment in the breast of the cowuiioubu ii will nvs in tile ."IIvit.r afv"vii. j.l ib uiuun. jit um nu- ure or a Bt. Bernard dog barking at a poodle In his path,-and Hs effect is a cross between a dog's bark and the combined- crow of four doxen immature roosters, neither sound being particu larly pleasing or attractive. It seems to say "Scat!" without preliminary apol ogy, It-i plain that much profanity Winds, of the people as the : greatest monumeirt of folly ever erected by any administration SrC the history of Port land. ; WILLIAM JK. LAKE.;, Memorials to King. Edward. ' JUeven .JSogarth .Road, 8. W, London.- Aug. ,7.T6 the Editor of The Jouhal- -; May I, ask for the hospitality of yotff :-'ahd Ill-feeling .have been provoked" by columns to eflablejne .to state' that, by."1!1' ' ' ' " desira of her maiestv. aum Ai-.'.a."-'1 -'Oit; tre!h hand.Vthsre are horns lars. for publication in due cour., of ,aV;st'rainUhat waft toward one like a for- " memorials, of : whatever-!? of the music of child. . home, tn the colonies and abroad, ' to hood,feTUi.-i a 1 moment, '-',f please." ft his late majesty, Kinr Edward.5 aM- aiso.Uesms -ta aay.'fand one Ullges Instantly et any events connected with; the Wng Ai.no trouble 'at oil glad to oblige. It . dutlnr Ma life of WhicH there Ms Wen wkfts itoward . bne "dike a benediction, any reeorft u&W-Jmm- .H.unmitrtakvbly-strdkee the fur the ' 4 shall h-huch obliged, therefore, te right wavyVv&vv'vv.;, - - v hear from those Who may be connected Ths Sltoatlorr as to automobile warn-" with suchmemorials, or events, when. I jings at crossings V much lks life in' shall be glad to send particulars of the general, and the Same rule' applies. One information required, . f never gets very far with a tlub. Cour- ' , j.4yJL0NEt JAMES GILDffiA, ijesy wears betters, and goes much far." v't- - R. G. V.;D., ,-C. B. 1 ther". V , i