m THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SATURDAY EVENING, JANUARY 10, 1914. V THE JOURNAL C. B. JACKKON .. . . 1'UlHtHtier IWiIUjiiiI mmmrm Mnln leeut uvdftVt Slid - erery Suudsy nwrtilii- st Tfcn Jirarusl Bulld-t----1a Bros.hrsy ana TsmhIB f Portlsow.Or. Knitree xt tfeepastorfles lit lrftlnd. Or., tor ' trtiwwlmilmi tbnrogb ;tb Bislia con" TKMiPKONtts Mshi T17; Hone, A-Oul. AU sVpsrtswin's mcMd hjr these asmUers. TcIJ i tli operator what JlepaTHnent ym want, s oKEUi. AuvKaTiaisu lliIHai!EN rATn b Benjamin Kentimr Cc Brunswick Bids:., V 2r KtfMi New , Vortj, J'eupW BMy., Ch1esr.- . ? - - ' Kubt1itkm toniM hr aall or to nuy a. 4rrss In . Ui . United Ststes vr . Vciloo DAILY mollis... -- Uim yeif.. ...... $3.00 I Oh mo f .90 ' . ; -- SUNDAY . One jtt.i....X-M 4 -month. t .24 DAILY AND JJCNDAY Ow rr.'.. . wm.Sfl I Oi wWfr. '. 11 us be content In! work, T, do the thing we jean, and : not presume ! To fret because It little. KlUabcth B. Jj"1" THE CXiPEHFlKIt- HLUNDKR f i H AS the liquor trad of Oregon stopped to think what an argument the Copper field af fair Is placing in the hands Of the antl-tsaloon forces? Why don't the higher-ups of the liquor business wire deposed Mayor Stewart to efface himself by re igning and giving opportunity for the election of a different kind of mayor and council? t" Why don't they wire the swamp er In the Stewart-Warner saloon to retire- from his position as councilman ami permit the election -of . a citizen whose business 1b not at loggerheads, with theilaw? Why don't they wire the barten der in -the Wiegand sal 091 to re tire from his councilmanship so .that the saloon business may es cape the blighting publicity into which it has fallen at Copper field,; ; . . " It Is amazing that the shrewd captains of the liquor business should have permitted ithe resist ance of the Copperfield1 saloonistal to have continued so long. It is one of the biggest blunders that the liquor interests of Oregon have ever, made. Copperfield will be shouted from every platform by every Prohibi tion speaker throughout the com ing state-wide prohibition cam paign, The saloon tyranny of the town, the sale of whiskey as shoes to young boys, . the "gambling, the allegations as' to incendiarism, and all the reported violations of law by the constituted representatives of the' law will be a jterrible in dictment that the wet4 will have to meet. . , the sooner they put an end to the foolish .resistance at Copper field, Huntington and elsewhere, the sooner they-will stop produc ing unanswerable campaign argu.- men ts for the use of the dry. " THE Alabama fight A' MAZING Inroads have appar ently been made by Congress man Hobson in what was popularly supposed to be the Invincible batlle line of Congress man Underwood in the ! spectacular senatorial struggle in Alabama. Underwood has the almost solid support of the metropolitan press, but there are predictions now that he will be defeated. If It should come to pass' in the spring pri maries that Hobaon Is the victor, it will be a token of ihe tremen dous hold the liquor issue has on the people of Alabama.; ; Whatever may be the facts. Hob son has in an aggressive campaign succeeded in convincing a great many Alabamans that the able leader: of, the majority! in the na tional house is BOlidlyj backed by the liquor interests. The public mind of the state seems intensely active on the issue and Hobson's meetings are so widely attended i that at every hall where he appears : to speak there is a Jam inside and 'a? great overflow assemblage out- Side. Sometimes there . are shifting Bands in a campaign,' ajid surface indications are not always de pendable. Though the Chunder and the shouting are usually something of an Judex, they are j not always . to bevelled upon. ; , But, guessed at from; such omens at this long distance, Leader Uu ( nerwood seems, at this moment. to be in imminent danger of com 1 ing defeat. j rUBMC PLAYGROUNDS IHE development of a compare tlvely new phase! of city life Is shown by the annual cen bus taken by the Playground ana Hecreation .Association of ' Anrerica. .Itshows that the busi , ness of play is well established in several hundred . cities of the . Lnited States and Canada. 9 . Data was asked from all titles of over 5000 inhabitants, a prin cipal feature of the report lust Is : sued , is :the showing 'qf growth in municipal support. In 111 cities ;Jthe, support Is now entirely muni cipal There are 115 cities in which: the support is divided be tween municipal and private funds, and 110 cities In which the work . Is - supported wholly by private . benefactors. .. .. ; . , ; .ine census snows a total ex penditure of $5,700,000 for the year ending November 1, 1913, in the ' 342 1 cities - where recreation work is. under paid supervision. This is a gain of over $100,000 as compared with he year 1912. Twenty cities, have authorized bond Issues aggregating $,268,000, this money now being: In sight for the purchase - and equipment of addi tional playgrounds. ! Children -in ,70 cities were given playgrounds last year, as compared with 43 converts to the new move ment in 112. The worjc is not confined to vacation periods, for in 1913 there were 33 centers open the year round. S The figures show that ihe pub lic playground is an established Institution. Its future depends upon the wisdom directors, and public officials show in operating the recreation centers and in pro viding for their increase in! number. WHAT RELATIVE? I T IS related that "after ! securing a revolver from onei of her relatives." Esperance Clark, the 16-year-old girl whose body was found yesterday, went to Rocky Butte and committed suicide by shooting herself with the j weapon. What "relative'? What excuse did the girl make in asking for the revolver, and on what author ity did the "relative" give her the weapon? In Oregon, no relative nor any body else has a- right to supply re volvers to any person unless that person has a permit from the law ful authorities. Whoever ge the girl the pistol did "so in uter vio lation of the laws of Oregon and the ordinances of Portland. It is as a possible preventive of just such tragedies that the state revolver statute and the city revolver ordinance were : passed. The ease with which the girl fitted herself out with pistol and ammu nition was aid to her in her work of self destruction. It was suicide made simple. It was the ; road to death opened wide. I In her anger, the mere posses sion of the loaded pistol was im pelling temptation to use it. As she held the deadly tool in her hand, the strange impulse that thousands of others have felt, led her on. If no weapon had been available, if there had been more difficulty in arming herself, there would have been time for second thought, and the woods of the hillside would probably never have echoed back the pistol shot that ended the short life span of the misguided girf. The officers of the law should do their duty. The penalties of the pistol statute should be appfied. Relatives have no more right to promiscuously distribute loaded re volvers about than do pawn brokers, second hand dealers, hard ware stores or sporting goods houses. THE ROUMANIAN JEWS K ING CARLOS of Roumania has announced his desire that all legal restrictions upon Jews in his kingdom be re moved. He has promised to use his influence with Roumanian legis lative bodies to grant the Jews all civil rights heretofore denied them, and especially the right of natural ization. The king is reported to have reached this decision because of the large number of Jewish sol diers who participated i In the Balkan war. On its face, the king's decision is a step toward righting a wrong which has ex lsted for years, but in ; view of past promises and performances it may be well to await the outcome before congratulating either king or Jews. Repeated protests have been made concerning Roumania's- eru elty to the Jews, but these protests have availed nothing. When that country was liberated frdm Turk lsn suzerainty by tne Treaty of Berlin at the close of the Russo Turklsh war, a similar extension' of justice to the Jews was promised But in spite of these promises in human treatment of the Jews con tinued. The treaty required that abBO lute freedom of worship be granted to all persons In the kingdom, and that no religious beliefs be made a bar to the enjoyment of any po litical rights. Roumania was com pelled to amend its constitution by striking out a provision that only Christians could become j citizens But subsequent laws, passed under pressure, granting; natural ization to the Jews . have been evaded, and gross discriminations and cruelties have been practiced against Roumanian Jews. There have been many evidences of bitter prejudice against the 300,000 Jew ish Inhabitants of the kingdom, and in spite of the treaty of Berlin Roumania has been able to defy public opinion. " , It is to be hoped that King Car los is sincere in .his recent declara tion concerning the Jews. The genuineness of Roumanian civiliza tion is at issue, for persecution, of any race Is. impossible among civ ilized people. 1 BKITA1VS BORDKR PATKOIi B RITISH marines are patrolling we Mexican border on the British Hondurian side. Their job is to prevent Genera Manuel Brlto, former H governor of tne 6tate of Campecbe, Mexico who disappeared last June after looting the bank of Yucatan of $300,000, from returning! to south ern Mexico and starting another revolution. . ; Brlto is hiding in v Guatamala within easy reach of the Mexican border, but in order, to cross Over Into that country; he must first pass through British Honduras, 't It is said to be the first time GrealJWritaln has placed an armed force In Honduras, but there is nothing In the fact to worry the United States government. " Eng land is doing the same thing that the United States has done along. Mexico's northern border ever since the struggle against- Huerta com menced. Washington credits Great Dritain with a desire to prevent complications by keeping the fight ing Mexicans confined to their own territory. ; - The English have a right to station marines along the Hon durlan frontier, British interests In Honduras are not threatened any more than American interests in the United States are threatened. But Guatamala and Honduras have offered an .almost unrestricted field for revolutionists In general. When one country became Inhos pitable they jumped across the bol der Into another. ! British Honduras has been a gateway to Mexico for freebooters of all nationalities. England has closed the gate, and in so doing has followed the United States' lead. Sir Lionel Carden's -transfer from Mexico to Brazil and the armed marines on Mexico's south ern bo'rder are evidence that Great Britain is disposed to permit the United States to handle the Mexi can situation. THE FARMER'S PUNCH 0 NE of the most effective ar guments ever used in favor of good roads was that re cently presented by a farmer in Tennessee. It was winter and the roads were almost impassible. There had been much talk about good roads but no action. At a mass meeting called to consider the situation lawyers, bankers and merchants talked long and learned ly, disputing whether to raise fiends by direct taxation or by an issue of bonds. No deefsion was in sight. Finally the farmer who was sitting way back arose and timidly asked recognition. Mr. Chairman," he began, "I am just a plain farmer and have no business trying to talk in this meeting. I am all covered with mud. There is mud on my boots and all over my clothes and my hat it all- spattered up, too. I walked to this meeting because my horse couldn't travel the roads. I've got a little farm and a sawmill just a little over two miles from town. and if I could climb up on a hard road with my truck and what lum ber I've sawed I could clear enough in one day to pay my tax on that road but I haven't got it." Turning to a merchant in the crowd the farmer continued: "I bought some groceries from you this month, lyes $5 worth. I carried them home on my back. UA had had, a. gc foad.it. moaldJ. have been $23 worth, I am sure' The academic" " discussion was forgotten and the practical words of the farmer produced a bond issue of $300,000 and a road on which he brought his lumber to town and returned home with $25 worth of groceries. This simple little story, typical as it is, tells more than the vol umes of the expert dialectician. PRISON-MADE GOODS F OR seventeen years New York has had a law requiring. mu nicipalities ito purchase ar ticles made ' in prisons. The state commissioner of prisons in a recent report said! the law has been flagrantly disregarded throughout the state. Sevenj cities have made no purchases of this sort since the law was enacted. With few excep tions municipalities which have bought prison-made goods have made their purchases few and far between. As a result of law violations by officials elected to administer the laws, hundreds of New York's con victs are idle and the prison store houses . are stocked with goods, There has been nothing useful at which the convicts could be em' ployed, with the inevitable rouse quence of mutinies by convicts. New York is beginning to realize the state's responsibility for men and women in prison. Cooperation on the part of public officials to make the prisons self-sustaining and to create a demand for prison products sufficient to keep the men fully employed is being insisted upon. It is nrged that prison in dustries compete as little as pos sible with free labor, and for that reason there should be no dis crimination against the state's wards. The Empire State's awakening to conditions in her prisons Is characteristic of the times. There is strong argument behind opposi tlon to putting prison labor in com petition with free labor, but. even that argument 13 not strong enough to warrant keeping convicts in idle ness. Industry is the best known cure for crime. The problem Is to provide opportunity for useful oc cupations open to convicts. Other states" are solving the problem on public highways, in honor camps and on convict farms. New;York win not avoid future, prison scan dais until that state adopts modern prison methods. The new minister to the United States from Slam is named Prab hakaravonga. Greater love for an cestral things hath no man than this . that ' Mr. Prabhakaravonga doesn't ask the courts to change his name to Smith. Columbia county is, to vofe on bond , issue ' for roads February 2. J The amount of the proposed issue Is $360,000. No step can be more' profitable to the isolated counties than action for making themselves more accessible by wagon road to 1 trade . centers. Nofhlng Will do more to open up the Jogged off lands of Columbia county : than a good system of wagon roads. - i Brick red hair, green coats land corkscrew skirts are to be the new vogue for women, according to a New York man milliner who has been style hunting. in Paris. We don't know what the corkscrew skirt is, but considering what we have the corkscrew can scarcely be worse than the ills we are flee ing from. "The Oregonlan - has heretofore tbougnt highly of Dr. C. J. Smith as suitable material for governor. It regrets to be obliged to 1 modify its opinion." With those cold, cold words our neighbor abandons Dr. Smith to his fate. Alas, poor Smith! We knew him well. Letters From the People (Communications sent to Tbt Jearaal for publication in this department should be writ ten on only one side of the paper, should not exceed 300 words In length and most be ar rcinpanied by the name and addreaa of ttaa aender. If the writer does not desire to bare the name published, be sboald to State.) "Dlsonasion la the greatest of all reform ers. It rationalises everything it toorhes. It rubs principles of all false sanctity and throws tbem back on their reaonableness. If they hare no reasonableness, it ruthlessly crushes then oat of existence and sets up its own conclusions in their stead." Woodrow Wilson. Enforced Idleness. Portland, Jan. 10. To the Editor of The ' Journal Spurgeon says,, in his "John Ploughman's Talk," that idle ness is "the key to beggary and the root of all evil." I think the truthful, ness of this is apparent to all. Then what of enforced idleness, an idleness which many cannot avoid and which comes to us as a result of economlo blundering. This enforced Idleness is causing a spirit of resentment to arise In the minds of laboring men, which threatens to become violent. These mental manifestations are the result of the awakening of the first law of nature self preservation. When that law Is once thoroughly active it knows no higher law till the end sought for is accomplished. This growing spirit of unrest with its threatening tenden cies is spreading out like a great shad ow over our fair land and the feel ing of being wronged will get stronger and the shadows will grow broader and darker as the cruel and unjust system continues to grind. Let us be ware, for already the wolf of hunger and want is prowling about our homes. Let us remember the French revolu tion, and let us not forget what men can be driven to do by bad conditions. Now. mind. I do not indorse violent methods, but I utter warning. People on the cabin deck of this old ship of state ought to know better than to allow those conditions. I know why we have not righted these great wrongs. It is because we have been beneficiaries of the exploiting system. But we are going to come down out of the cabin, and so below, until but few are left. J do not believe those of the upper strata of society are all bad. There is much that is human about them. There is much that is clean and good and pure. To such I bring the cause of humanity. To them I appeal for justice and opportunity for the suffer ing poor. And of the leaders and teacher of the people of this land I ask. "What are you goina to do with this question of needless poverty, this enforced idleness, this lack of oppor tunity, this injustice? Are you to con tinue to offer us remedies that are only palliations? Will the teachers still deal oat platitudes instead of plain truth?" I believe there are good men amcng the clergy, but they are handicapped by the system. Our churches and institutions of higher learning are in the grip of the exploit ing system. So are many of our news, papers, and I believe that the hearts of many ministers and editors burn with truths which they dare not utter. The man of Oallilee also had his difficulty. He said to Pilate, "For this cause came I into the world that I rhi Kht bear witness unto the truth." He bore witness on the cross. He is our example, and he alBO said. "Who soever taketh not his cross and fol loweth after me is not worthy of me." W. Hw BLACK. Women Indorse West's Clean-Up. North Powder, Or.. Jan. lOj To the Editor of tha Journal The following appeared in the La, Grande Observer of January 5: "A vote 1 of the women of eastern Oregon no doubt would advise Miss Fern Hobbs that her part in the grandstanding of the chief executive was hardly expected, hardly needed by the state and scarcely appreciated by anyone other than the political ring that is using this young woman as an actor in their drama," No doubt the women of eastern Ore gon will be able and willing to speak for themselves when the time comes, without consulting the savants of the Observer. We feel assured that Miss Hobba has the support of the majority of the women in eastern Oregon, and so has Governor West. The time has come when the violators of law and order must submit to chastisement, and we feel grateful to Governor West and Miss Hobbs for the part they are taking in bringing about ; a much needed reform, and will show our ap preciation whenever the opportunity occurs. A WOMAN VOTER. To Mr. .T. E. Adams. ' Portland. Jan. 10. I ask you to give space to the following matter. In the hope that It may come to- the notice of J. E- Adams, a letter by- Whom ap peared recently in the Journal, In which he stated that he had worked for the M. K. & T. railroad. I lived In Texas a good many years. My father went to work for the M. K. & T. in 1880. and worked on it steadily until his death, last November, as a passenger engineer. His name wa E. I. - Gale. He w called "Gene" Gale. He ran out of.Denison to Greenville and later out of Dallas to WtchHa Falls. Perhaps Mr. Adams has heard of blm He -was well known all over the system, as was also my brother. Will Gale, who was at Houston. I am sorry Mr. Adams Is disappointed in Oregon, but hope he will have better success in the luture. JENNIE J. GALE EITELMAN. 287 Falling street, Portland. Complains of Fish Warden. Kerby, Or., Jan. 8. To the Editor of The Journal I want to call atten tion to the action of the fish, warden at the hatchery on the Illinois river. He will not allow a fish to be taken awav. but it must be left to rot on the river bank. No wonder :tb com mon people revolt when they sura treat ed that may. It will soon be as bad as living under the- English laws, where one is not aHqtved. te say hs soul is his own. . ? A SUBSCRIBER.-. A FEW SMILES At a recent duel the - parties dis- charged their -MatoU without effect. jwnereupon on 01 ' tn aeonla Inter posed, and proposed that the combatants should shake hands. To thlB the other second objected unnecessary. Their hands." said he, "have been fshaklng for half an hour." Maid I've come ma'am. Mistress Indeed? Maid And would you give me a. good reference, m a'a raT I'm' aoing to Mrs. Jones, across the way. Mistress The best In the world. Mut- grive notice. glt. I hate that woman. A Scottish farmer of a miserly dis position bought a horse at a fair. On the way home he thought a drink of water would refresh, so he cot a pail of water, but the ani mal would not take It. When he got home ne offered It a feed of corn, but to his surprise It would not touch, that J either Weel." he muttered to himself, If enly I was sure ye were a guid work er, ye're the verra horse for me." Jim "Hoivsiry la y Is tne oest policy. after all." Bill "How?" "Remember that dog I stole?" "Yes." "Well, I tried two hull days to ' sell 10 one of- W JJpi s'n 6 shil-lf 1 I went, JyJ nest man, 'im, an no fered more' lings; so like an honest an' guv him to th' ole lady what owned 'im, and she guv me a suvrln." Mrs. Murphy's husband was ex tremely 111, so she called the doctor and then anxiously inquired as to the , to 1 '-' ,.t ultimate retirement Is made. For any am sorry to otner purpose there are results that say, madam, replied ,ncre4Be the value of the security, the doctor lively, I but none for mlIltarIflm. By the or i. S ! "lo law of the state of Idaho, and "wfi docther" Prhaps of other states, no bonded mm Mr. Morohv debt can be created in a school district with an air oK16!" for Permanent improvement. JHo .ZiThe theory is plain, that if running thing is. my poor husband !. six feet ; three in his socks, so he'll last some . i . limn yei (Pointed Paragraphs Many a man's enthusiasm is merely gush. Ignorance is the inspiration of nearly all arguments. Being the friend of a "good fellow" is an expensive Job. More things come to those who are too busy to wait for them. A man must use his head If he would get there with both: feet, Ever notice how little attention is paid to people who talk too much? A man's conceit looks suspiciously like wisdom from his point of view. Some men never get ahead because they are afraid they will earn more than they get. Perhaps the reason a mother expects her son to become a great man is be cause his father isn't. When a small man finally makes up his mind to fight he begins to look around for a friend to hold him. i . When a jyoung man writes to a girl on a postal card she may as well chloroform all hopes she has in his di rection. There's one thing we like about a girl clerk in a department store; she j never sneaas orr to tne nasement ior the purpose of smoking cigarettes. Latter Day Confucianism. Bradley Gilman in Review of Reviews. China Is tossing restlessly in her' age-long sleep, and shows signs of awaking. ' This situation appeals to the United. States only Indirectly; but most of the land-hungry European na tions are waiting at her bedside, and are guessing as to her present patho logic condition and her outlook for future health and strength. Compe tent Judges near at hand agree that if China were to produce, soon, some great leader, he would become the cen ter of crystallization for the saturated solution of loyal sentiment, which is latent in this mighty people. Lacking such a living leader, the Chinese may call upon Confucius, and unite the" several diverse provinces under a potent bond of religious fervor. How. ever the Influence of the great ethical teacher may have waned during the past century, he has not become a neg ligible quantity, as the recent surpris ing observance of his birthday (Sep tember 27) fully attests. About a week before that datt a circular letter was sent to sit th governors of the provinces, setting forth the virtues of Confucius. The Intention was that this statement should be presented to local magistrates," and by . them be brought before, the plain people. Thus a way would be prepared for the subse quent elevation of the great and hon- iim1 ma a- a tha ten leader of th new republic. Naturally, we would expect him-Jto be held most highly in honor by the old dethroned Manchu dynasty. "Young China," however, realizes that the country greatly needs both a leader and a religion, and that these two needs could be met by a revival of the Confucian cult probably in a modernized form. Twenty years ago the sage's birthday was observed only lightly and sporadically, but this year there has been a wldery spread and distinctly fervent expression of public devotion to him. Decorations, processions and public meeting, are reported -from all the provinces. "Young China" Is willing' to concede much. If only It can gather in most of the factions, conservative and radical, throughout this heterogeneous nation. At one celebration, not far from Can ton, hymns In favor of Confucius were sung by four graduates of the Canton Christian college, and the- words were set to the music of "Ye - Banks and Braes of Bonnie Doon." and to a favor. It Methodist melody,. The effect of this year's observances is to suggest the conjecture that China's awakening may have to be primarily religions, and secondarily political. What will result from this call to Confucius? Shifted Emphasis In News. . From the New York , Tima. Not tha routine newa of social move ments and scandal, nor the grist - of governmental machinery, figured chiefly In yesterday dispatches. . The mosts prominent rplacaf was gtvta. to PERTINENT COMMENT SMALL CHANGE Perhaps men can be forced to be rood, or better, after all. Wisdom increases, but the mystery or life remains unsolved. Wont-workers injure the chances or worthy men willing to work. But there may be praylnc for rain before the winter season is over. Prepare not to cubs the regional bank commission, whatever happens. Shouldn't oriental languages also be added to ths high school curriculum? Lent is far off yet. Easter farther; eggs will doubtless be away down then. Buying everybody buyer. Oregon products helps in Oregon, including the borne of the "unemployed want almost anything else, n a Jail sen tence, in preference to real work. Several Oregon counties have decid td at last to do what is absolutely necessary to get good roads pay their i.vsl. vniy an emnlover can work over eight hours a day any more; he usual ly nas 10 wora mere than that long or go broke. m Judge Bushey of Marion county, who will pay no widows' pensions, seems to consider himself a legisla ture, or the supreme court, or both. CIVILIZATION'S CHIEF HINDRANCE ! I'Tom tne Lewiston Tribune. i It is very hard to manifest any serious or sustained Interest in the topic of International disarmament and the voluntary abandonment of war as a means of settling disputes, but to day's announcement of the attitude of European banking interests on the subject comes about as near doing so as anything of recent occurrence. That is to say, the bankers no longer want government stock when issued for military purposes, as they are already overloaded with that sort of paper and for whlch no provision looking to " '! would be eaten up In time by the ac cumulated liability. Governments, however, continue to pile up national debts for running military expendi tures, without adequate return to the nation and with an Inverted pyramid being erected that must some day come down with a crash. Meantime every government In the world, general and local, Is confront ed with demand for tax money for useful and necessary purposes that strain the resources of statecraft to effectuate without making the burden more than the people, many' of them, can bear. Education, sanitation, roads, streets, bridges, parks, playgrounds, benevolence, regulation, inspection snd innumerable other public rights and public benefits and conveniences are being required at the hands of government All of thes proposals are of merit, as the expressed popular will conceives, and add to the sum of human capacity and welfare. None of them can be met efficiently, be cause the required publio money is YOUR MONEY IN LIGHT OF THE FUTURE By John M. Osklson. If you are a pessimistic Investor or a discouraged Baver, lost in perplexity over the problem of living, the price of eggs, and the Increase of extrava , gance; lr you are uuims ,!..-.. ' wnv. read H. G. ""T' " . ..ThR Passionate VHsnd. If vou can t reaa u an. turn over to page 264 ana gei miu vour mind the picture of America, and the forecast of America's future which Mr Wells makes. He's a shrewd and sane novelist, an excellent observer. I can uive you only tiny tablets of his hopeful and encouraging observa tion. Such as: ', "In spite of rawness and vehemence end a scum of blatant, oh! quite asi nine follv. the United States of Amer ica remains the greatest country in the world and the Jiving hope of mankind. It is the supreme break with old tra dition: it is the freshest and most valiant beginning that has ever been made In human life." And: "There is in America a splendid the announcement of -the test, the most considerable and crucial ever made with the gamma rays of radium In a case of cancer, to save the life or Congressman Bremmer of New Jersey. On the success of this demonstration will depend much In determining the question whether sufrerers from one .class of malignant tumors. In this country and all over the workl. shall have the radium treatment, bir rren erfek Treves, president of the Radlun t..iilni. nf London: rruiewui Von Czernv and Professor Von Behrlng of German v. Professor Frederick Soddy of Scotland, and Sir Alfred I"rc-e Gould of England are concerned In this matter, as well as lr. Howard Kelly and his distinguished colleagues in the United mates. The scientists are seeking government patronage in the extraction of the rare element from its ores and its distribution among the hospitals of the world. The news of scientific effort is over shadowing all other news. Modern discipline and progress attend the real ization of their efforts by men who are discovering, more rapidly than at any previous time in history, the hid den forces in nature. More significant than a ehanse of ministry In France or the issue of a Balkan war is the an nouncement a Soddy or a Ramsay may make tomorrow about the loosening of forces in groups qf atoms. The goal of these experimenters Is not that of the old alchemists, who sought merely to transmute the baser into the more precious metals. They seek to fertilize the earth forever to laying hold of the Inexhaustible stores'?.? nitrogen in the air; they would unlock energies beside which the power of tides and water falls, of steam and electricity, seem pitifully small,, and they would heal the chief ills of humanity. They are the mighty men of these days. They have done much, and they promise more. ' Accounting for Bandit Villa - From the New York Evenlpg Post. Te merciless manner In which Villa and his fellow commanders in the north of Mexico signal hce their vie lories has Justly stirred public bom and indignation. But' those who would fashion out; or :tne -Danuit. Vina an argument against, the Jasttce-of tilt cause he represents fail to make out tbeir case.; Tb ferocity t Mexican warfare might becomparjJ-wlti the AND NEWS IN BRIEF OREGON SIDELIGHTS The Grants Pass Courier is of the firm opinion that the city manager plan is one that offers the real solu tion. Albany Democrat: Governor West has taught Oregoniane some new les sons in geography. Who ever heard of Copperfield until receiftly? a Students of the Burns high school are to Klve an entertainment the pro ceeds of which will be used to pur chase 41 high claas gr&phophone. Salem Journal: The debate whether it should be parcel post or parcels post was settled by the letter carriers at Christmas time, it is parcels post. Trumpet call in Salem Statesman: "Let's hurry, and get as many as pos sible of our permanent highways com pleted for the thousands of visitors who will come in 1915, to attend the San Krancisto fair." The dean of the Baker Herald's dip lomatic corps proposes this: "On the theory that a watched pot never boils, we might get quicker results in! Mex ico by thinking about something ielse." December was unusually dry at As toria. According to Weather Observer Uilinore the raiiffall was 7.06 inches or 5.59 inches less than the average for the corresponding month of previous years. m m Starting th new year right, the Marshfield Record jubilantly says: "The year 1J14 in going to be the best Coos bay has ever had. More horpes will be built. More streets will be Improved and more business will be done by everyone of us." not available. The military establish ment is the only branch of govern ment that does not have to count the cost, and that is the only branch that is unproductive, save only In the remote contingency of war. That con tingency is too remote, the thought ful people of the world are beginning to declare, to be put ahead of other considerations that are immediate and pressing. There are some classic stories fa miliar to newspaper literature of men who have litigated almost a lifetime in the courts over the ownership of a pig, a fence or a dividing line, at a total cost to each of them many times the value of the object in controversy. The excuse usually given Is that neither of the parties to thn lltia-ation cares anything as to the value of the ' we had got there, ae heard of the dls object In dispute, but that each of ! covery of gold near; Sutter's Fort, them cares so much about the "prin- "1 came at oncei to San Franclsoo, ciple" Involved In the issue that he ! Retting there in VP fall of 1848. I will exhaust every resource of law to mined on the Featlfsr river but caught establish it, even If the effort should - severe cold wh&h settled -in my cost him all that he possesses. Only chest. My lungs gained roe so coa members of the legal profession, and stantly that I wensback to San Ftan not all even of them, are able to ap- Cisco. General lhe, with Joe Meek, plaud this devotion to principle. All j d Just come frorf Indiana overland, others pronounce such ruinous per- i DI bis way to Oregpn to become gov slstence the obstinacy of fools. The . ernor of the- terrltiyy. I went up on idea, that Impels them to pronounce ' thlr at- JoB Meek was the best- hot i hearted old soul yen ever saw. establishment of the alleged principle is as, little worth tha cost of the methdd as Is tha trivial object Itself, Warfare, and tha preparedness for waging it at any moment, ara coming San Francisco was;a city of tents and to bs quesUoned in similar terms of wooden shacks with an occasional practicality, and militarism's phrases adobe house. It seems as If most --"economic Interests," "spheres of every building was4 saloon or a danca influence," "balance of power." na- . iouse. if tionai honor" are fast losing their I V were pHetty bad. The- doc- speciousness. The frightful coat of j tor didn't think I W6uld liv very long militarism. In depriving tha people of i be thought I had,lthe consumption. I the means of getting along and saving , stayed In Oregon Ctw nix anonthir. eom themselves In everyday life, la the ns to Portland in sfhe fall of 184. I answer made to the mockery of "pre- , PH a hundred dollars for a tlckst paredness." in like terms a made, to back t0 San Francyfco. thinking I ws tha foolish litigants. strong enough to !; take up mining crudity, a directness that cleared my about a dozen housis and a few stores Spirit as a bracing wind will sweep the i on Front street atj that time. I re clouds from mountain scenery. Com- member there were; one or two as far pared with our older continents, Amer ica is mankind stripped for achieve ment. All America la one tre mendous escape from ancient obses sions into activity and making." "What are we going to dor Wells found is the guiding Inquiring of the American. Tha opportunities and the enterprises are here how are we to bring them Into a profitable combina tion? We are new and unhampered. We need- to be told so onoa In a while. We need to be told so in order to keep up the courage we were, born with in the face of pessimistic talk about the sins of our economic rulers, in the face of socialistic talk which mis represents the meaning and spirit of socialism .and in the face of threats by state and national legislature to reeulate our saving enterprises and our Investment enterprises. No, we're far from even the begin ning of decay! greater ferocities of Bajkan warfare among Christian nations and allies. But assuming that Villa is an outlaw, who for twenty years has been a men ace to -public security, what becomes of the argument that the salvation of Mexico rests only In the strong arm of a dictator? If the Iron rule of Por firio Ilas could not rid Mexico of brigandage; Is it not apparent that per manent peao in Mexico must coma in some other way than through the sup pression of popular freedom? Brigand age on a large scale cannot flourish anywhere without tha secret support or a nis onienxea population, it was """ Slcily that drove the people to sup- port marauders and secret societies of which they were so frequently the vic tims. Brigands though t'.iey may be. Villa and Zapata are th products of a political system tn which the masseu are made to feel thst the "law" an administered from above is Intended not for their benefit but for their subjection. Study Any Old Thing. From the Unpopular Review. And not only were the college rolls and records indicative of democracy, but there was a democracy of subjects to study. You had free election; oik subject was as good as aaother, out course as valuable as another, one course as valuable as another. So long as you had the required number of credits, the character of ths credits made no difference. An hour contained 69 niinutss. and no hour set up to be better than its fellows. A college education was -defined as "something of everything for everybody." and th definition was especially applicable to the education of the state universities those great examples of learning In action. In them anyone might study anything at any time under any !n etructor. under any conditions, and in any place, for you could study in ab sence, and by correspondence, and hyp nnilam nnit Christian Science. Atwt ! wn, vou aot through, whatever vour method or matter of capacity or dodl- Ity or imbecility, you were labeled A. B., and had a fortune assured until you found out ' that tha great democrats world thought A, B. ao bet ter than D. F or any other romblna tion of letters, or no letter at alL ' . IN EARLIER DAYS By Fred LockJey. "I guess I am Portland's oldesf resi dent," said A. B. Stuart, bailiff of tue grand Jury. "I have lived In Portland 64 years. "I was born In New Jersey on De cember 12. lHi'S. When I was IS years old 1 went to sa as cabin boy on a sailing vessel. In 1S4S I shipped on a whaler. Wo cruised through the Ber ing Sea In search of right whales. We put Into the Sandwich Inlands, which in taoe dayH was the rendezvous, of the whaling fleet. Krom ttu-re we went on another trip to the Bering Sen snd on up to tin- Arctic circle. "The following fall that Is. the fail of 1846. we ane down the coast and put in at Yerha Buena. as the link" village which later became Sun Frar Cisco was then called. California whs then a part of Mexico. At that ttniu tlierc were five or six atebe hulilnu where San Francisco now stands. Wo were there -several1 weeks, the sailors spending most of their lime ashore ei tendlng cock fight. and attempting U tide the wild Spanish ".lorses. "The native ("HUforntans certainly toik life very easy. In 1M7 we j. it in for a while In Magdalcna bay on our way hack from thei Sandwich Islands, and we again enteifd, the Uolde.n Gate and spent some weeks Ht Yertia riuena. Wc went on up the "vlaskan coast, cruising past the country willed was destined 50 years later to create a stampede with its discovery of gold at ("ape Nome. "The 'Vesper.' thf ihip I was on, was in charge, of Captain Clark. We hsd pretty good luck on this trip. We were equipped to take care pf 3."30 casks of oil. We ued to throw the harpoon 'into the whale, bring them alongside, strip the-blubber, try it out, secure the whalebone and keep a look out for another whale so that we could complete our cargo as quickly as pos sibly 1 remember one time on this XtXP'. the lookout in the crow's nest had called out 'There she blows.' We tum bled into our boat ' and.' wera soon In striking distance of Abe whale. No soon er did the harpoon strike the whalo than, instead of sounding, -it -lashed furiously out with Its tall just as we ere backing awn'. l masiaed our little bpat into splirjters. There wasn't enough left of it o swear by. We swam around in th icy water, holding to oars or fragmens of the boat until we were picked up by the other boats. Whenever we got eslght or ten whales i and filled our barrels of oil we went 1 back to the Sandwich 'islands. This wan In the summer; of j "The harbor of fe1n Francisco was a wonderful' sight wrn we left. There were hundreds of sailing vessels aban doned on the ceacfi, tne owners ana crew having gonelto the gold fields. 1 again, UUI A iquhijl: nun iot un work, that I didn't; have the strength to handle a pick an3 shovel' so I came immediately hack o Portland, getting here in the winter of 1849. There were back from tha rtvefe as First street. "Every one that$r me 10 x orxinna in those days I. had achance to meet, as I was clerk in the f'arren House. Cap tain Hall, an old sUa captain, was the nrnnri,tnr nr th. ttel. Ho Wired me ; to run Jt for ;llrn j lt wa8 ocated at ; the corner oT FroWt and Oak streets. Beds were a dollarsso wera meals, ana we 'had all the buness we could do. I ran the hotel durlpg 1850 and 1801. "After leaving tt& hotel I took ona of tha first mail cotitracta let for car rying mall from jfortland. My con tract called for ttl$ carrying of mall from Portland to liifayetta. on horse back. I soon soldf my contract to a man named Ktrmefrom the Nehalem valley. ,i . "I went into the Impress buslnesa T worked for Todd AjjCo. until they sold out to the Adams Impress company. I rode pony express .if rom here to Jack sonville. Later I'nv'y extended the line to Yraka, Cal., andjl rode to Yreka. I received S1S& a month, but It was worth It. , i? "Housejj were Sdifto "5 miles apatt and of course thert were no stations where horses couil be ehanged. I used to carry alongibeads and tobacco, stop at some Indian ramp, leave my horse and take onf of theirs giving them a few handfNils of tobacco and some beads. I woild eat whenever t could. I have oftja made from 76 to 100 milis a day If j had good luck In getting change of! j horses. In those days packers, mlnyrs and travel at n were always gladijlp have you stop land tae a meal wiBii thrm. so i usu- t ,)y managed to sttsike. some house, or camp with some paexer tor meats. tC- n.-.(ria,Iv i .ouldjlklll a few grouae. make a cainpfire a.tjd roat ths grouse over the, coals. ThNj Indians called me 'the rapT Man.' "One time I nit;4t party of Indians with their 'r tafit n. They drw their bows and arrows and it looked for a moment as jijf there, was going 1o he the end of niti, but suddenly one of tbem recognize-jlme and told theis In eiilnook that I las the paper man and that I had aay been good to the Indians, so tbe lei n no. Even when the Indians ijwrre killing other white men they neiler bothered me. I had always treated ijhem fair and Indi ans respond wonderfully, well to good treatment. - "Later I was excess messenger for Adams & Co., on tle steamers running from Portland to SSan Frsnclswo. For a while I workd r the Wells Fargo company as inssstnger and later I started in the exprff business for my self, running on ta? Puget sound aoJ tc British Columhui." r The Sundiy Journal The Sunday iloanial'g ; news columns are; supplemented by a variety f new reviews and illnstrttd feature that , command aiientiosv - ' This big paper lie complete La fire newa section,' 12 page magazine, and comic aeetJoa. 5 Cents ihe Copy :