THE JOURNAL an Independent newspaper C. S. JACK KOI .Pnbttanef tablliihed eery ralog (except Snndayjan rwr Snader aaornlma- at Tbe Journal Batld-Ipe-. Bro1wy anil Yimhlll .. Portland. Or. : Knterad at the poet of flee at Portland. Or., (or trtDtaitnakm tbroasb the maeja u secoaa ' ele matter. "XKLEPUONKH Mala 7178; noma. A-061. All ibnHiiu.1. .kil f hM number. Tail the operator what avpertroent too want. rokKJUN ADVEKTIMINQ BKPBE8ESXATIVB Benjamin Keutnor Co.. Brnoawlck B11., S2S riflb in Maar i'orkl 1218 People's iya Bloa;.. micefo. Subecrlptloa trrma by mall or to ear - areas la tba tatted Btatai or MexJcot nAif.T On year.. $3.00 I Ona month....... 80 - ' BUNDAX m 0m rr $2.60 I On mout....... -28 D1ILT AND BON DAT. Cm eer ,9tM I One month t M B Order- la heaven's first law, and this confessed. Soma are, and; mtiit be, grest- er than the rest. More rich, more wise: but who Infers from hence. That such arei happier, shocks all common sense. : Pope. 0 TEMPERING THE WIND .A RE we standing on the thresh old of radical social change? Are the propheta accurate in their aus-urles? Are forces L at work that are to bring about a gentle but swift transformation of . the social structure with a pur- . . ii i nose or. drying numan tears, euiur matin human wretchedness and rrfnhlnc human noverty? Three utterances by three no table men are significant. Speak , lng in Portland Secretary Red- fiM nf President wiison s caDinet aid: , and use of the waterways. Well considered plans for river improve ment that might not be justified solely on the score of navigation are reasonable when only the ex cess of cost above what should be spent as a precaution against floods is charged against navigation. The point is well taken. No serious objection arises when the government spends large sums of money to prevent floods, but when an appropriation is asked for river improvement to aid navigation op position to the expenditure is based largely on the assumption that if the government makes a river navi gable only commercial interests are served. i Protection of life and property Is one of the functions of gov ernment, a function which Justi fies expenditures for river im provement. But In fulfilling this duty the government enters upon another field. By making a rlvr navigable it opens up opportunit- upon which the enjoyment of Ufa and property largely depends. Improvement of the waterways means that what the people already have will be saved to them. It also means that these great regu lators of commerce will reach their full usefulness in serving more people and more property.. the Nesbits, to be wasted In fus-j door gardens or in the home. It tlan, finery, feathers; and worse?) is urged that with this kind of an How much are we overrating organization is wouia De easy ior and overpaylng-these so-called ar tists, when some of them get for a weefc or even for a ! night, as much as four hard working clerks can earn in a whole year? LABOR I bad as any A DRY VICTORY D There are 100,000.000 of us In America, and I rather expect that the country was made for the whole ' and not for a part of us. If 10.000. 000 of us are comfortable and 10. 000,000 of us are miserable, we neeu not expect to stay here a treat while. Nations prosper not by what they have, but by what they are. It Is more Important that the American people be sound In honor. In morals and In health than that they have bis bank accounts. We can't afford to have factories In which we have a happy and pros perous group aL the top and a suf fering and miserable group at the bottom out In the shops. A nation Is not well-to-do on aa average basis if that average Is mid way between two terrible extremes. We must take from those that have that which they should not have and give In equal epportunlty to those that have not. Here is a man at the head of a department of government that has , most to do with the great indus trial activities of the country. Here is assertion or social justice like unto that of the man who marked 'the sparrow's fall. Here is expres J sion of public concern about those on the seamy side of existence, the .'men who face the fierce heat In the blast furnaces, the toilers at the machines and those whose 'whole round of life is early to ;Work in the shops in the morning and back to supper and sleep at , night. . Parallel with It is the expression of Dr. Charles W. Eliot, president emeritus of Harvard. Replying to .a query from the Philadelphia North American, he said A new religious sentiment seems to me to be gradually spreading through' out the world, and especially among young people in the United States. It Is a sentiment which takes small . account of ceremonies, rites, sacra ments, creeds, and dogmas, but ln . spires an enthusiasm for the ser vice of family, neighbor and society at large. - Oulded by the modern scientlfio spirit, this sentiment Is developing a mew kind of Christianity, based on .the ethics taught by Jesus, and par tloularly on the command "Thou shalt love thy neighbor aa thyself," and the parable of the good Samaritan. It is refreshing to turn from the hard, grinding commercialism of the past and read in Dr. Eliot's words a contemplation of condi tions as they might be. What gladness there would be in life under a realization of Jesus' com' mand to "love thy neighbor as thyself"! The Eliot view may not be orthodox, but it harmonizes 'beautifully with the real teachings .of the church, when, at least, ttie church clings closely to the teach lugs and life of the Nazarene. Its close agreement with the Redfleld expression is more significant, espe--, dally when to both there is added , ,the utterance of Winrfton Churchill, : the well known American author, v Speaking on the subject of "The , - Crucible of Democracy," in the Free Synagogue, In New York, : , he said . Men and women of all creeds are arising around us and- flinging- them ISTRICT ATTORNEY GEORGE M. BROWN'S nota ble victory over the Rose burg Brewing Company In a decision just handed down by Judge Lawrence T. Harris of Eu gene is not ' the first instance in which that officer has signally succeeded In applying the local op tion law. Some years ago at Corvallls, ef fort was made to evade the option law by resort to a so-called Social and Athletic Club. The club dis pensed liquors on the claim that as the beverages went only to the members of the organization there was not a violation of the law. District Attorney Brown and his assistant, E. R. Bryson. attacked the plan, arrested and re-arrested the officers of the club and as a result of a case that went through the Justice court, the circuit court and the Bupreme tribunal, the club was put out of business. As an effect, the principle is established In Oregon by decision in the Cor- valliB cases that clubs of the kind cannot be operated in dry terri tory. A curious coincidence is that Jndge Harris rendered the decisions in the Corvallls cases and It is Judge Harris again who holds as annulable the charter of the Roseburg Brewery In the pres ent victory of District Attorney Brown. Like the Corvallis cases, the Roseburg case has attracted wide attention. In the latter, there is likely to be forfeiture of the char ter of the Brewery, because of its violation of the law, and it Is .the first instance of the kind on the Paciflo Coast cases, it N AN address before the lawyers at the annual banquet of the Multnomah Bar Association, C S. Jackson of The Journal, said: Every youth, every man, every law yer, for that matter, should burn It Into his conscience that everything he consumes Is made by j labor some one's labor and if he floes not do enough productive, constructive work: to offset this consumption, he Is a social thief to the extent; or His aeno- lt, and is morally, as other thief. . A poet has said: That which the worker Winneth shall then be his indeed. Nor shall half be reaped for nothing by him that sowed no seed. In his time Colonel Ingersoll pointed out that the United States annually produced 1,000,000 tons of steel rails, worth then $60 per ton. The 1,000,000 "tons were worth $60,000,000. A ton of iron In the ground, he said, was worth 25 cents. That is to say, labor takes 25 cents worth of Iron In the ground and adds to it $59,75. The 1,000,000 tons of rails in the ground were worth $25,000, but finished by the labor of human hands were made worth $60,000,- 000. We build in the United States, a sMd worth$500,000. The value of the ore in the earth, of the trees in the forest, of all that en ters into the composition, of the ship which - brings half a million in- gold, was worth, by Ingersoll's claim, only $20,000. The con struction of the vessel represented $480,000 added to the value of the raw product by the labor of human hands. Labor was the beginning of things. All capital, all govern ments, all nations, all institutions rest on labor. Everything con sumed Is made by labor some one's labor and that labor should have the comforts of life, should be able to lay by something for de clining years, so that the worker can have his own home, his own fireside, and stand before the world, a self respecting, man. A country is not well governed in which those who do the most, have the least. We are not yet fully civilized. fWhen we are, pauperism will vanish from the land. Two hands upon the breast. and labor's done; Two pale feet crossed in rest - The race is won; Two eyes with coin-weights shut. And all tears cease; Two lips where grief Is mute. Anger at peace. children to do ordinary school work three hours a day, six days In the week, through, 'eleven months in the year. At the 'same time the children would contribute largely to their own support by well di rected educational Work, either -at home or in the school, thus mak ing it possible for the grea,t ma jority to remain under Instruction throughout the high school period. The suggestion that vacations be abolished may appear to be In the nature of a major operation. The children, at least, would consider It so. But there is already- a ten dency to utilize the summer period under direction of. competent su pervisors. . School gardens are an-! indication of this tendency, and there Is increasing effort on the part of educators to keen in touch with children the year through. GO-TO-CHURCH SUNDAY G' OING to church one day will not make a saint of any man. but It may start a habit which will assist in the transforma tion. ' For - that reason Portland's go-to-church movement, which Is to culminate April 19, is especially Important. What was once a common habit, growing out of a sense of Individ ual need as well as personal dutyl has ceased to be common among people of the Protestant sects. People who seldom sit in the pews are the ones who most severely criticise the pulpit. They have withdrawn from communion with their fellows, many assuming the privilege to condemn without any real effort to appreciate. But the church has no occa sion to complain of hostility, though it has ground for objecting to Indifference. It is not true that the world is turning its back upon religion, but it is true that indifference has begotten antipa thy to anythingwhich deepens the seriousness or curbs the material tendencies of life. One need not be a communicant to appreciate what the church la doing and what it can do if given the support and guidance of people who know the world's needs. Dr. Samuel Johnson said In his Life of Milton: CHICAGO'S NEW CHURCH JOSEPH FELS By Dr. Frank Crane. POSSI BI LITI ES OF THE, PARCEL POST c HICAGO is soon to begin the construction of a ngw church It will be for use of the Chi nese of that city, and the As in the Corvallls project Is being backed by the fed- enormously strengthens erated council of churches, assisted ne errectivenesa of the local op- by the Y. M. C. A. UOn law. I Ti a nmanti oil Ion nmlnHriTl The Brewing Company contended hav united in the enternris is mat mere was no legal authority that sectarianism is not easily un ior me annulment or its charter, derstood by . the Chinese. They are even if the facts alleged In the confused by it. Missionaries found complaint were true. that it was easier to make a China The state claimed that the facts man a Christian than it was to set forth in the complaint If es- make him a Methodist, a Baptist iBDiisnea, warranted the cancella- or a Presbyterian. Missionaries to tion of the charter of the defend- other lands have found that simple ant. lb I PhTQHonltT' wffThrhrtf otitt nnftlAnla. On defendant's demurrer, Judge label, is more acceotable to the Harris held that the state is not heathen than any system of theolo- UUJUCU Bingie remeay or gy or peculiar belief pumsnment, but Has the power Chicago's new church may serve under the statutes to annul the even a greater purpose than that warar ana deprive the corpora- of converting the resident Chinese. uon or any right to exist." HOW MUCH IS FOLLY? w There are a great many people, not Chinese, who are not attracted by Sectarianism. These' people fail 1 r. A A WmnV . t M l " LS1 SLB .IT"d theories which separate the de- lightful to the educated To be of no church Is dangerous. Religion, of which the rewards are distant, and which is animated only by faith and hope, will elide by de grees out of the mind unless It be Invigorated and reimpressed by ex ternal ordinances, by stated calls to worship, -and the salutary influenoe of example. Many other cities have had go-to-church Sundays, and they have resulted in uplift movements, the effect of which will be felt long into the future. In some of these cities the campaigns were not waged entirely from the religious standpoint. It was agreed by all thinking people that If men and women could be impressed with the duty of supporting institutions whose potential power for good Is unmeasured the problems of every day life, of business, government and all human relations, would be slmplifled.- Religion is a universal need. It was Thomas More who said: - As down in the sunless retreats of the ocean Sweet flowers are springing- no mortal can see, . ; So deep In my soul the still prayer of devotion. Unheard by the world, rises silent to Thee, As still to the star of Its worship, though clouded. The needle points faithfully o'er the dim sea Bo dark when I roam in this wintry world shrouded. The hope of my spirit turns trem bling to Thee. , nominations, -lnese people are four V.if an Y. n T . . . I ccv, uj ura tcauiugo yjL tew, out as hog Latin to -h.j -u t. jr ni.'j. J ''" .Christ, but a doctrinal sermon bores them. If an undenominational church is good for the Qhinese,,why would banked around the playhouse like t u" BUOU , J oine5 PP"5-' great rows of field guns waiting " ,fner? dImand, ia for the hand wave of theommandinl W,nat officer. good purp0se does sectarianism if n j an . I serve f (Copyright. 1914. b-r TPranlr r.nnm.t There died the other dav in Phil,. delphia a soap maker by the nam of Joseph Fels. ! i If not the greatest. h th. mnt typical, significant, and characteristic pnlanthropist of our day. This fas was because he represented direction which modem altruism la taking-. vi Sine the Impulse of Christianity b. cams a factor In the world man have mors and mora been drlvan hT Min. science to help the poor. The earlier manifestations of this desire consisted In giving- alms, caring fur lim aic. ana OUtrwl aasimtlna? me lauen oy tne way la the march of progress. , i In time Intelligence Dereeived that this sort of thlnar is futila. bna endless.' So long- as the economic sys tem unaer wnicn we lire continues to manufacture human wrecks our f fort 10 neip oniy result ) in palliating the evil effects and con tin ulnar th ma chinery. ; i lience the striking movements of modern times toward healing the hurt of humanity are aimed rather at pre venting wrong than in carina: for wrong's victims. "That la the aim of socialism, of single tax. of democracy Itself. : Joseph Fels felt the altruistic call. He thought, however. He gave him self to radical reform. He objected to being- called a nhll- anthropist. "Charities," he said, "are the agents of pauperization." Further: We cannot get : rich under t resent conditions without: robbing somebody. I have done It and am still doing It, but I propose to spend the damnable money to wipe out the system by which I made It." i i When asked to contribute to a sana torium for consumptives he answered U quote one paragraph of his letter): "X contribute no money to charity. I know that neither your charity nor any other can do more than tempor arily relieve a few individual cases of distress. I know that what the Door need most is not alms, but a change In social conditions which will make almsgiving; unnecessary. It Is to help in bringing- about such a change that I give whatever I can spare to the abro gation of monopoly and special privi lege." I 'hold no brief for the propaganda of the single tax theory. The point I make Is that while it may or may not be the right theory it Is the right Elnd of a theory. Because It goes to the root of things and does not skim the surface. n, ; The Intelligent man of today is shy of old fashioned charities, for he sees that real charity is changing- unjust conditions. What the manly poor want is not alms nor dole, but opportunity and a square deal. How he goes at changing bad con ditions is his own business. It may be through one Ism 6r another, this party or that; the main thing Is; Does he strike at the root or chip the bark? It is claimed for Fels that he Is largely responsible for the radical movement led by Lloyd George in Eng land against the vested wrongs which have there oppressed the poor for cen turles. Also, he Is credited with hav-i lng been a considerable factor in the effort to take the veto power away from the house of lords. i He purchased 1300 acres at Hollesley Bay, In England, and organized a col ony for the unemployed. - This was eventually taken over 1 by the govern ment. ; ' i . i ' . He gave away (360.000 ia year in England, Denmark. Canada, the United States and elsewhere. All this money went to the destruction of those stupid strongholds of ignorance and privilege which create poverty. 1 It is for this reason that I call Fels the meet rational philanthropist of his time, and place his name In the list of those who benefit their fellow men by money above those of Carnegie, Rocke feller, Dr. Pearson, or any other prince ly endower of Institutions. I I . . , . ; ' From the Chicago Daily News. CARRYING THE BIBLE TO ISLAND PAGANS By the Secretaries of the American Bible Society. From the Bible House In New Tork a thousand Bibles have Just been sent on a voyage of 15,000 miles. They are part of the eighth edition In the Gilbert Islands language, printed by the American Bible Society, and their destination is Sydney. In Australia. there to be reshlpped to Ocean Island and Apalan, In Micronesia. The prep aration of the Gllbertese text was the loving labor of a lifetime to the fa mous missionary translator, the late Rev. Dr. Hiram Bingham. The fin ished books disclose a happy collab oration of Bible Society and mission ary in giving light to the isles that "wait for his law." in the bindery at the Bible House poison was worked Into the covers to discourage insect foes; the packing room was turned into a ttnshop while the books in parcels of 20 were solder ed up' In tin to guard against wetting by waves or weather, and the ship ping office supplied the tin cases with 60 stout boxes as armor against rough handling by stevedores of many races all these pains being taken to insure the safe a rival of the precious freight at the Gilbert Islands. The cost to the American Bible Society of this consignment was 11367. It is a free grant to the American board's Mlcrone sian mission. While the missionaries are freje to give away the Bibles at their discretion, they will return to the Bible Society the net proceeds of sales among the people of the Islands. Ocean Island, to which most of these Bibles go, Is only a mile and a half In 'diameter, a! mere dot on the Pa ciflo ocean, almost under the equator. seme five thousand miles southwest fit San Francisco. But the 40 boxes landed at Ocean Island will be sent or taken on adventurous voyages of ZOO miles or so to other islands of the Gilbert group, by Richard Grenfell, of Australia, who acts for the American board. The secret of the choice of this little island as a distributing center is Its great wealth of phos phate. which attracts steamers and makes trade serve evangelism. Steam era going to Ocean Island for phos phate that will fertilise the fields of Australia, carry from Sydney tne Scriptures printed In New York to be the seed of a spiritual harvest through out the Gilbert Islands. So the ends of the earth do praise the Lord. the multitude who frlvoled and fluttered under the. glare of the lights and the diapason of the or chestra. The automobiles were no voice be raised In criticism, for been demonstrated in small communities that one church if niir nennta 4f it be ' can serve many people of varying n,,t ww- ma - , beners as to minor articles of " "" uivuey I falth twuo irum i now many workers YiaA in trill a tnAnth . . TZZr S2000 a nl-ht nr isnnn rcauo- lur luo moBl Par an agree- ;ri,: -YE".. curam " " " .v. ".I. : y . u'6UNment to disagree mildly, on nones i. " J.,T. T aI. ' sentials Ajvoij uuiiiu- iu uuo worm nas to Most of thef denominations agree on essentials. Sectarianism to his rift. . The "rights of man" Is now being supplemented by another philosophy, Whioh proclaims the duties of qn Society and government are also responsible for the individual. The motive .Is religious, the end Is prac tical. Thus society protects Itself from the ravages of waste through useless, feeble-minded, criminal yes. and irreligious citizens. Thus, as the religious idea develops, government develops with it. They go hand m hand. ' There seems to be a rising tide of humanism. After nineteen cen turies, the spirit of the Galilean ihas swept across the seas to tem per the wind to the shorn lamb, FLOODS AND WATERWAYS EPORTS from the East tell of threatened floods as the re sult of melting snow and spring rains. The need of controlling rivers for protection of - dwellers along their banks is thus f again brought into prominence. ; : Streams must be kept withrn their banks In the Interest of ltf and property, no matter the cost, , and the Chicago News uses the flood reports as an opportunity to how the relation between control be created by human endeavor. Somebody had to create by work the wealth that went to pay for tnis glided scene of song, music and fine linen, at $6, more and less, per. There is SCHOOL VACATIONS " A protest against the repeal of free toils Is voiced In ringing reso lutions by the Central Labor Coun cil of Portland. The toll on Ameri can products for' " American con sumers through the canal is a toll on every American toller. Some body has to pay the added freight money which a toll on products means, and that added charge has to be created by a worker. The Labor Council Is right. The pro test of every worker In Oregon ought to thunderv through the Cap itol at Washington. V R. P. P. CLAXTON, United J States commissioner of edu cation, insists that -. there should be some kind of complaint that taxes school activity, for most philflren are high, and they are. Some men in the summer months. He is are mortgaging property to get opposed to what he calls the "long, the wherewithal to pay them, in- wasteful vacation," insisting that cidentally, it was- noticeable that some kind of instruction should be some of those who wall loudest provided. aoout taxes were spick and span Dr. Claxton says that school In the lights and lure of the opera, takes at the most 900 hours a lierore tne xpera, we had Marie year ont of Kilo wafctno- hnnrs Lloyd, at $1550 per week. We are Assuming ten hours of sleep for nave n.veiyn wesDit Tnaw at children each night, the average uuu or so pen we had Frits! child spends about 600 hours in Scheff at $2625 per. . , school and the remainine. 4510 And we complain that the cost waking honra ruir. nf nrthnnl 9nm. of living is high. We loftily won- mer work, the ' commissioner saya, der why so many people are poor, should last not longer than four We look askance and in incredible hours, from 7 or 8 o'clock to 11 wonderment at the army of the or 12 o'clock Jn the forenoon, unemployed. Th nredictibn is made that the Isn't it true can we deny the ao- school of the future, both In sum- cusation that we are a silly. In- mer and winter, Will give less tinie congruous herd of faddists In to intensive study and more time pouring the dollars of toil into to productive work,, under super- the Japs of he Schelfs, the Lloyds, vision of Instructors In shops, out lier friends throughout Oregon are grateful for the complete re covery of Mrs. Clara B. Waldo from a recent surgical operation performed In San. Francisco, and her return to Portland to reside. As a former lecturer of the state grange, as a woman of high at tainments and broad observation, she is known and highly esteemed from border to border of the state. Her operation followed a trip through Europe, and her present return to Portland is after an ab sence of many months. It can never be dull or stupid conjecture to ruminate over the question of what business Mult nomah county had with $3000 worth of bedbug poison. "4 Expert Themselves. "Disturbances have been noted on Mars." "Is that soT "Some think Mars is trying te com municate with us." "I wouldn't wonder if they want to congratulate ; ns on finishing the canal." ' .- What He Wanted. From the Kansas City Journal. "My wife Insists on having a fly ing machine" ' j. "We have some that are perfectly safe, sir. ... "Have you one that win fly at an altitude of about ten inches r NEWS FORECAST FOR THE COMING WEEK During the coming- week! there will be numerous elections and! primaries, the results of which will afford food for thought on the part of the politl clans and the public aa well. The long and bitter contest for the United State senatorshlp between Congressman Oscar W. Underwood and Congressman Richmond P. Hobson will be settled in the Demooratio primaries. 10 do neia in Aiaoama Monday. At tin same time a United States senator for the short term, 10 representatives in congress, governor and other state offi cials, members of tlfB legislature and county officers will be selected. Of national interest will be the spe cial elections to rui vacancies In the seventh district of New Jersey and the twelfth district of .Massachusetts. Both elections will be held Tuesday. The election of the Democratic candi dates is expected In Massachusetts. In New Jersey the result is more doubt ful. with the Democrats, Republicans, Progressives and Socialist all making nara xignts. I Wide attention has been attracted to the municipal campaign in Chicago. where the aldermanlc elections will be held Tuesday. Great doubt exists as to the outcome on account of the vote of the women, who will exercise the right Of suffrage for the first time. Several women are among ' the candi dates .for places in the aldarmanio council. On the same day as the Chicago elec tion several hundred other cities and towns of Illinois will hold their elec tions.. The liquor issue is being foua-hl out from one end of the state to the other, and It is believed that the elec tions will result in a large increase in the "dry" territory. Wisconsin cities also will! hold their spring elections on Tuesday. Most in terest centers in the mayoralty fight In Milwaukee, where the contest Is be tween the Socialists and the support ers of the non-partisan administration. At the election to be held Tuesday in Superior, Wfs., the voters will pass on the question of the municipal owner ship and operation of the street rail ways. ; t Voters In the state of New Tork will got to the polls Tuesday to east their ballots for or against the proposal to hold a convention to revise the state constitution. .1 A Republican "get-together" dlnnes is to be held in Chicago Thursday un der the auspices of the Hamilton club of that city. Senator Cummins, of Iowa, Governor Tener of Pennsylvania, and other political leaders of national prominence are 'expected among- the speakers. Republicans of Maine will hold their state convention in Augusta; on Thurs day. The principal work of the conven tion will be the framing of a platform. The party will make. Its congressional and state nominations at the primaries in June. ' A state conference of the Progres sive party of Colorado is to be held Monday in Denver, for the purpose of planning ror tne coming state cam paign. - . . i Important decisions may be handed down by the supreme court of the United States when it reconvenes Mon day after the recess of two weeks. Hearings by the Interstate Com merce commission on applications of railroads to continue after July 1 their holdings of water lines, under the dis cretionary authority conferred upon the commission by the Panama canal act, win begin In "Washington Wednes day, and continue ior several weeics. The new Federal Industrial Rela tions commission has decided upon Monday for beginning its hearings in Washington on the metnoas or adjust ing differences between employer and employe, such as collective du-kuud& conciliation and arbitration. Delearates from practically all or tne western states will attend the Irriga tion r on cress which is to meet in Den ver on Thursday In response to the call Issued by Secretary of the Interior Tana The congress win roiiow me annual conference of western govern ors, which Is to be held in Denver on Louisville will be the scene of an Important gathering of educators dur in the week. The occasion will be the first joint convention i duuiu Educational association ana tne cunw ence for education In the south. this treacherous thing. O. my fellow citizens! Have you had any cards, let ters or literature from any other can didate but the next gov mean Smith? The truth Is. he sent out some type written letters, and is not a multi- grapher hirer. Wouldn't it be swful to find he had hired a dastardly mem ber of the.multigraphers' union to do some work for him? Let him Deware. Th Orns-onian is having the multl- graphers" caves watcned to eaten omnn at it. and the man the Oregonlan catches and knocks Is usually elected. j. j. in. IN EARLIER DAYS By Fred Lockley. Letters From the People OonmsnleatloDs sent te The Joomil tor ?ctik-atlon in thla department ahoald he writ en on only one aide of the paper, ahoeld not jt srut wirii I. i.nvth ana must be ac companied by the name and address ot the (coder. If the writer oes not desire to bare the sane pabliaheo, saoata so eiai.j "DUenaeloe Is the treatest of all "-form- ..M.itA. .nrrthlif it toaebea. It robe principle of 11 tle aaaotltr and throw them back on their reaaonablaoeee. If ther hare no reaaocableneaa. It rnthleaeir mine them out of existence atJ sett np Its m eonciueiOBS ia uesr w. Wilson. Allowable Vivisection, Portland, April I, To tho Editor of The Journal Zn answer to the eai torlal in Tuesday's Oregonlan upon a recent operation In Baltimore where a child's eve had been restored to sight by grafting from a pig's eye. I wish to refute the sarcastlo asser tion made by the writer that all anti- vlvisectlonlsU disapprove of "pig vivisection." a .imiii that are daily being led to the slaughter houses, where they are mercilessly killed for no other rea son than to satisfy the human appe tite, might Indeed serve a better pur pose to humanity In the hands of the vlvlsector. If pigs were their only victims vs might readily approve of vivisection and rejoloe in the great advancement of science, hut our sar castlo writer In his enthusiasm over this one great operation has lost sight or. or at least has failed to mention the fact that the lives of hundred of little children, mostly of the poorer classes, are today being sacri ficed. and many are being permanently Injured, through the experiments of the vlvlsector... It is In defense of these little chil dren. and those dumb animals which are capable of great love, that the fair-minded antl-vlvLseotlonist stands ready to fight. The few benefits received from vlvi section are lost sight of by many of us when we consider the price suffer ing -humanity has paid for them in her own life mood. Reason, Justice and love are but synonyms of "an tl-vivisection, an without any one of these the world would soon degenerate. ANIM S NET AG, A Discovery Regarding Dr. Smith. Portland, April 4. To, the Editor of The Journal I think it dreadful the way Dr. Smith, Democratic candidate for governor, is making the morning dally worry. He seems to be the only J candidate that really Is getting on their nerves. After a long and faith ful search ror something to say against the pestiferous Smith, ' they discover, that he sent multigraphed letters to some friends and to some voters, to QX&tX candldatej has done Discusses the Two Kays. Portland. Aortl 8. To the Editor of The Journal By what "priority of right" does Thomas B. Kay. the poli tician, and chronic officeholder, seek to set himself above the common Tom Kay, the expolioemanT T. BL Is a self aggrandlxed individ ual possessed of enough egotism to make him imagine that the "divine right" rests solely In himself, and that any reckless aspirant from the lower strata who attempts to butt In must surely suffer defeat. Tom Kay, the expollceman, is noth ing if not a self assertive character of the progressive stamp, who, feeling himself In a position to rise in the world, has come forward to grasp an opportunity which his right as Amer ican citizen gives him to aspire for an office he feels qualified to fill. Who can say that he may not prove t be the better man of yie two? True. Tom Kay, as a policeman. In the execution of his duties may have brought down the wrath of many per sons who do not care for the law's ap plication when directed against tnem selves, but we must pause to ask If those same duties were not performed in the interest of the public gener ally! A nubile servant faithfully enfor clng the law must in a measure Incur the hatred and stir up the dander of many citizens, but this must not be held against him by the voters of the state. Let the public be fair. The two Tom Kays are out on the same ticket for the nomination for state treasurer. They should be aoooroea the same Impartial consideration lu measuring their respective attributes and qualifications. BERNAIUJ 20.ujukxh.iu. After establishing a colony at Port Orford in July. 1861, Captain William Tichenor resumed his regular Port land-San Francisco run. The Sea Gull, with Captain Tlchenoe in command, continued to make regu lar trips and on August 89, 1851. left Portland with Dr. Anson Dart, super intendent of Indian affairs, accora- panled by 11. H. Spalding and J. X Parish, two Methodist missionaries. At Astoria the steamer took on board Lieutenant Whyman with 11 soldiers. two mules and a mountain howitzer. The ship arrived at Port Orford on September t. TVault had been sent out on a surveying expedition but his party met with disaster. They were attacked by Indians, several of the men were killed, and "TVault went , down the coast to Cape Blanco. He reached the mouth of the Sixes River, -where the Indians took his Sharp's rifle away from him and also took all his clothing. The attack on TTaulfa surveying party occurred shortly, be fore the arrival of Dr. Dart, the Indian agent with Spalding and Parish. Iter. J. jU Parish at once offered to pro ceed to the( scene of the murder and investigate 'the outrage. He took with him two Indians whom he had brought with him from the Columbia river and the chief of the Indians of Sixes River, This chief had come in and returned T'Vault's rifle and offered to guide Parish to where the Indians were so that a council could be held 'and the murderers apprehended. The council was held by Rev. Parish but the In dians were so outraged by their chiefs action that immediately upon the de- . parture of J. L. Parish they killed their chief and quartered him. One of the chiefs three wives carried "the chiefs remains to their village, where she burled them and word was sent to Dr. Dart, the Indian agent, of the action of the Indians. He sent out runner and called a council of all the Indians. Spalding and Parish and Dr. Dart, the Indian agent, returned to Astoria on board the Columbia in the latter part of September. On the re turn of the Columbia to Port Orford she brought Samuel Culver to act as Indian agent. Next month both Xhe Columbia and Sea Gull were chartered by the gov ernment to take Colonel Silas Casey and his troops rcjpslsting of cavalry and artillery to Port Orford The Sea Gull brought Company C of the First Dragoons with SS horses and 48 mules from Benlcia. This company was un der the command of Lieutenants Stan ton and Stoneman. Colonel Casey, who had arrived a few days previously on board the Columbia chartered the Sea Gull to convey the troops to the mouth of the Coqullle river, while XJeu ten ant Stanton with two whale boats pre pared to ascend the Coqullle river In pursuit of Indians who were still hos tile. The troops were landed from the Sea Gull although one boat load was overturned, but before all the troops were landed a heavy gale made the sea so rough the Sea Gull anchored and waited for morning to land the rest. Next morning the storm was more severe so the Sea Gull had to re turn to Port Orford where she dis charged the rest of the troops, who started by land for the Coqullle river. Lieutenant Stoneman built a block house on the bluffs which commanded the Indian village and the river. The Indians were entirely unacquainted with firearms and when the howitzers threw their shells Into the Indian vil lage they were terrified. They fled In their canoes up the river and were pursued by the troops In the two whale boats. The Indians were so se verely punished by the troops that they never as a tribe entered into hos-' tllltles against the white man again. Points to Front Street Files. Portland. Or, April L To the Ed itor of The Journal I am fully in favor of every movement toward rid ding the city of both horse files and bouse flies, and will help all Z can. but there is one place It Is up to the authorities to keep clean, and that Is Front street. I work Just above on of the main fruit and produce mer chants, and there are others all around. In the summer it becomes necessary to onen the windows to keep from suffocating under a tin roof, but the flies and smell are as bad. li not at the time, they often prove to be later. Keep the swill barrels clean and the files wilj not congregate and. con sequently not breed. There is to be a law, Z understand. to force residents to keep the lids on their garbage cans, but what About the downtown places? i JAME3 ELLISON. Harry Tracy's Death. Freewater, Or., April 8. To the Ed itor of The Journal Please give me exact date of the death of the deeper ado Harry Tracy. J. H. WEST. Harry Tracy, surrounded in a wheat field by a posse, and with a desperate and probably mortal wound in the leg. blew out his, brains at about 11 o'clock on tne nigntioi August o, iv2.j Newspaper In Swedish. Portland, April, 4. To the Editor of The Journal Please tell me, through The Journal, If there Is a Swedish pa per published ; in Portland, if so, wheret SUBSCRIBER. Yes; the Oregon Posten, published at Second ana, ptark, streets ' The Ragtime Muse Love's Tragedy. Deer lost love of long ago! Parted by a rate malign. Much I mused upon your woe. Missina: these strong arms of nine. Oft I dreamed with fond regret, or tne Deauty ox your tece; None I subsequently - met Had your loveliness and gTace. Z was sure that you. out there. - Long and patiently would wait. Sloping stui my tot to snare, . ocoraing any otner mat. So I. dreaming, tolled, unwed, -Seeklnsr wealth to bring to von. Thinking nothing need be said , ur tne love or lovers true. , ' Fortune finally Z won. At a hitter, cruel cost I Z came to vou on the ran For the love I now have lost. Tea. I find forgive these groans is a loslns- ram a I iou are ooese Mrs. Jones, w Waiting u are ob And you've quite forgot my name I The Woman's Page The Journal each evening; pre sents a number of striking features. Many of them are of exclusive interest to wom en; others are of general appeal: They all are worth while. Cul tivate this daily feature : page; you will find It profit able." , T f