THE JOURNAL AN INDEPENDENT HtWUPArglt C . JACKSON fualtaaed every avaalag (esrapt HontUy) n4 every gaBday morntaf at Tba Jooraal Build' IBM. Broadway aa timtlU ata. rortiana.or. Lotarsd at tbe pontnfflca at fwtUad, Or., for traoaBfcwlua tbreaca tba autla aa eaooaa iaaa atter. ' "- lJiUCfHUMa! MslO Hint Hot a. iU AU meate reaoba tbcs sambera. Tali taa oparatar wnat 0prtHnI aoo win. PUMtniN AbVKUXlBlNU UKrUaMbiNTAaiVa uhni a. kurtua C BenaawleS BMC. (26 Itftk .. Ke yk l Pel iaa lUAt- Chicago. aaaertttua tsrma br stall ar t aa fss la tba UaUe States ar Maslcei DalLX o taat .00 l Oaa swath. 60 SDMDAX Im rtar fl-M I On moot .". DAILT AND 8DHDAT 0B year..' M 0 awnta. 3 When You Go Away Have The Journal sent to your Summtr address. , -a Reflect upon your present blessings, of which every man has many; not on your past misfortunes, of which all men have some. Dickens,. T11K CITY HALL RECALL THERE Is renewal of the threat to file the petitions for recall of tbe mayor and two com- mlssloners. There la no merit in the plan Thsn ia no reason for the recall Thra is no condition at the city hall to justify resort to a costly recall election. Rack of the movement and with out the knowledge of many of the signers of the petitions Is dishon est politics. In the background are masked" political figures who are plotting the recall for sinister pur poses. The names of the honest signers will, if the recall be filed. be used for secret and unworiny schemes. ' Why a recall now? What has happened to justify action so dras tic? What has transpired in city affairs to warrant the strife, the turmoil and the turbulence of special city election? There is no charge of dishon esty. There is no hint of graft There is no surmise of crooked ness. Nothing at the city hall 13 in the dark. Everybody knows what is going on. The city business Is all In the open. No governmental ' favors are being served out on the sly to special interests. The agents of Big Business are not lurking in the shadows at the city hall to get secret grants and underground con cessions. All business has to be done, in the daylight under the commission system, and there can be no crooked deals. There is not one reason in the world for a recall. The recall was not Invented to be used for spite work. Or because certain persons do not like Mayor Albee's moral views. Or because sundry citizens do not agree with Commissioner Dieck's method of handling the paving work.. The recall is for bigger things. It is the people's defense against crookedness, graft. Incompetency and rottenness. Why make it a toy? Why make it something to play with? Why make it a farce? Why make it silly? ST. LOUIS IN STEP S T. LOUIS has fallen in step with other cities which have - discarded the ward system of government. The Missouri metropolis will vote on a new char ter In November, and there is ex cellent prospect that the voters will approve the document. The new charter has for its con trolling idea the reduction of elect ive offices and the centering of re sponsiblllty in a few men. It is the commission plan, by whatever name it may be called. It means a short ballot and ability of the voters to hold somebody responsl ble for misgovernment. A pamphlet recently Issued by the Civic League shows that St Louis electors choose more than 100 eity f fleers. Hereafter, ac cording to the proposed charter. the voter will have but four offices to consider mayor, comptroller, president or the board of alder men and alderman. The mayor will have large ap pointive power.. His official family win consist or tbe directors of nub. lie utilities, of streets and sewers, oi puwnc weirare and of public safety. These men will constitute a board of public service to wnrv in close cobperation with the may or, financial matters will be nn der the control of a board of es timate, composed of the three . 1 . A. f aa 1 nwiive ouicers other than the mayor. There will be an aonoint. ive efficiency board to draft civil service regulations. Sixty-nine ot 195 American cities having 30.000 or more population are already under the commission xorm or government. THE REVOLT IN ALBANIA TllfEWS from Durazzo indicates l that Prince William of Wied lY may not succeed f in estab lishing his kingdom in Al banla. He is being hard pressed by the rebels and reports indicate that his defeat seems, certain. AThe weakness of Prince WH liam's position is that he tried to rule without the support of ' the Albanians. He was selected by the . greatjowers without consulting Jii prospective subjects, and pres NOT POOR SMITH3JTP00R JOHN MITCHELL feW. r OOR SMITH." exclaims the about Dr. C. J. Smith, Democratic nominee for governor. . It would be more appropriate 1 for the Oregonian to say "poor old Mitchell,", the poor old John H. Mitchell that It. hounded through life and hissed at In his grave. If It did penance for a decade, it couldn't atone for the injustice it heaped upon that unfortunate man and his memory. The dead Mitchell is one of the mournful tragedies of Oregon. He was dying when he was on trial. A fatal disease was sapping his strength and destroying his powers. Even without the trial and the brutal attacks of the Oregonian, his life lands would have - soon ebbed. . , .. ' . His money was gone, and In his great trouble, all but a tradition al faithful few had forsaken him. When the blood flow that diabetes often causes was started by the pulling of toothy he was without money to pay hospital attention, and a faithful friend guaranteed the amount. He was without money to pay the physicians, and the same friend stood good for the charge. For weeks before, the bowed form and long patriarchial beard was a familiar figure on the streets. The clothing was poor and the face drawn. Loneliness and sorrow were in, every feature and the pinch of near poverty In every line of the unkempt figure. It was on this: weakened derelict that the Oregonian, rich in tim ber land, rich in mills, rich in bank stock and bonds and real estate, rained blow on blow, insult on insult and abuse on abuse. Not sat isfied with a quarter of a century of persecution, it followed him into the chapel where a great concourse of people paid tribute to his memory, and there it sneered at htm as he lay in his coffin. The fall from the heights of the federal senate to a position among the lowliest of the lowly was the tragedy of John Mitchell. A nart nf rhA nAtttlcal RTHrm of th airafnat than almost nnv man of hli erous nature made him the target of the timber' cormorants who swarmed through the state. They fattened on the system of the day, crooked as it was, and are now enjoying the fruits and the honors of their ill-gotten gains. By the partialities of the law and the in justice of a fickle publid sentiment most of them loaded down with wealth and timber went scot free wtflle hapless John Mitchell was stricken and scarred and slain. In the eyes of those who helped butcher him, It was Mitchell's fatal fault that, he was progressive in principle, though the term was unknown then. Twice he introduced MkMvna VU -A. TV AW AAC3 A AAV A WU U0 tion for direct election, of senators. did not live to see achieved, but for which his voice and his vote were freely given on the senate floor. His sympathies were with the people on the lower . levels, and there was never one of them that ap plied to him for succor that did not ant from tne day he entered his dragged down to the depths, he was was tbe only important newspaper In Oregon most of that period, and its lifework was to harass, handicap and crucify Mitchell. It never used its Influence to strengthen his hand and his work. It pursued him at home and undermined him at Washington. It gave him no credit for what he did, misrepresented his purpose, and ma ligned his endeavors. . jn an Mitcneira lire, ne never chance. He never had fair play. properly represented before the people of Oregon. When fighting for the state at Washington, he was always under attack from the rear by the Oregonian at home. The hounding did not cease even when wasting disease and the pinch of near poverty held the bent figure in a relentless grasp. Mitchell dying, and Mitchell dead still re mained the object of the paper's of pain, the depths of his grief, the row coffin did not protect him from the cruel onslaught. mi . a i i . . . tne isregoman gnouia iorgei old John Mitchell. ent disturbances are indication that possibly all Europe cannot impose a ruler upon people who is not wanted by them. Essad Pasha was the strongest man in Albania. He was the mem ber of the Young Turk committee chosen to carry to Sultan Abdul Hamld the news that he had been deposed. Essad wanted to be Prince of Albania himself, but he gave way to the powers and be came Prince William's minister of war.. Ordered to disband the army he had collected around himself, Essad refused, and he was finally subjugated and exiled to Italy by the powers. It is possible that Essad would have been acceptable to the Al banians, but It is certain that his followers are leading the revolt against Prince William. It would be a difficult task for anybody to secure loyalty of the tribesmen to a central government, but the task may be Impossible when the at tempt is to govern without the con sent of governed. Has Europe blundered again In Its solution of the Albanian prob lem? The powers blundered when they permitted the Balkan wars. What Is all their military strength worth If they cannot subjugate a handful of tribesmen? TURKEY'S PROTEST T HE pending naval bill con- . tains a provision permitting Secretary Daniels to sell the battleships Idaho and Missis sippi to Greece and to use the pro ceeds for building a big one. Tur key has protested against the pre posed sale, and European diplo mats contend that the United States proposes to "intervene in the pol ities of the old world." Secretary Daniels' says the two ships are "misfits In our fleet," and ne ravors tneir saia as an eco nomic expedient. Turkey and Greece are on the verge of war and ownership of the Idaho and Mississippi would make the Gre cian navy superior to that of Tur key. The Turks recently sought to buy a 27,500 ton dreadnaught from Brazil, and English builders are attempting to hasten the comple tion of two large battleships for Turkey. There has been no protest against these transactions; no Eu ropean diplomat has contended that Brazil "Intervened In the politics of the old world. No suggestion has been made that the English ship builders are outside their rights. Whatever else may be said for or against the plan for selling these battleships to Greece, the iact re mains that the proposal Is in the nature of retributive Justice. With the trouble in Mexico threatening the peace of America, Europe claimed the commercial right to provide the warring factions with guns, ammunition and money. ; . Europe furnished the Mexicans with the sinews of war and then protested to the United States that it had not restored order. The right of trade witb the Mexicans was held-to be inviolate, but now Oregonian In closing an article I tim. hn waa more sinned' c-PrmraHrm His kindly and aran- I In the federal senate a resolu QVA Ui VU0 ICUUt Ov AA M ,J Bt A vJV "a I m It was the great reform that he meet with a ready response. public career until he was a marked man. The Oregonian had justice. He never had a He never had opportunity to be ferocity and brutality. The pangs sorrow of his fall, eren the nar roor smitn ' ana remember poor that the peace of Europe is threat ened the same right of trade is denied WhPthor of nnt tho lAahn onrl Wnetner Or not tne taanO ana I Mississippi go to Greece or into the . . . . . f "Mlii iucy usvs serreu a i to the part commerce has in nre- rinit&tini? warn upiiaiiug wars. MIGRATORY LABOR c ONGRESS has enacted a law for the protection of migra tory birds. Secretary of La bor Wilson wants an enact ment for the benefit of migratory labor. The department of labor Is a sort of clearing house for men who work with their hands. It keeps in touch aa wpII as it ran with tho in loucn, aa wen as it can, wun tne supply and the demand. But there Is no machinery by which laborers and employers Can be brought to- eether when thfv need arh nthr . Wt.? need, each Other. This important function is left either to chance or to private agen cies which grow fat upon the neces sities of the man who' needs work and the other man who needs workers. secretary wnson wants a com . a vwwa plete Checkine un system, in which state and nation will coonerate. that .m m.iA : - iuo muicuicuto ui 1 migratory labor and see that it is put to the best use for Itself and for tha conntrv TT , anm a-troam v . . . i congestion Tin Tone rart n congestion in one quarter and Daiviijr in nuoiuer may oe avoided, sucn a system may not be es- tablished at once but the fact that there la a f , w tnat tnere Is a secretary of labor in ornce wno sees its need is en- couragmg. Congress may yet be Induced to seriously undertake a solution of the labor problem. TAKING A CHANCE CORONER'S Jury found thatJreacn8 wel1 up lnto th thousands- i atam aa rfc-l nil 4 wt . 4- a m. wa raw1 T . jf J4 A tab! A a youth was killed at the automobile races last Sunday because he waa a tresnaKSAr and also because one of the drivers entered a repair pit at a dangerous vu- "vu were utamg cnances. I The Empress of Ireland went down, carrying 960 persons into eternity, because the captain of the Storstad took chances on running at unusual speed In a fog. The 6teamer Iroquois recently grounded In the Hudson river be- Klnoa : lis WUiaiU Waa IHHITIF enances in a fog. In a letter to the head of ' the steamboat service Secretary Redfleld of the depart- ment or commerce said: I Should say that this oantain If ne naa passengers on board at thn time or the accident: should hv. hnri - " " na iucuh Buapenaeo at least ror the fct"-"" " wins provea tnat he had run at uauni afar. xne undertakers are working overtime because people are taking Cnances against death. The wil - lingness to take a chance, desoite aanger, is responsible for a great . uuuiDer oi accidenU on land and water. And it t not chance-taker who is hurt. Too oiten his recklessness results in tue injury of tha id thu Infirm. the Innocent. people who meet V death on the streets, of the homes . that are burned and the lives that are lost through familiarity with danger. Taking a chance is America's be setting sin. A seventeen-year-old boy should not be condemned unduly because he took a chance and lost.1 Judg ment at seventeen is not what it should be at thirty. Portland's re cent tragedy Is evidence that men of discretion in charge of danger ous places should exercise their utmost vigilance against the chance takers. AFTER FOURTEEN MONTHS T IS one year, one month and twenty-nine days since Broad way bridge was opened to the public. Ten blocks of street leading to the east approach remain unpaved. The stretch has a rougher surface than most of the country roads leading into Portland. The thoroughfare remains unim proved because of tbe protest of owners of abutting property. The PavlnS of tne stretch has been agi ted ever since August, 1905, but has always been put' aside on ac Count of tbe objections of the rest dents. January 24. 1912. paving was proposed, but In April of that vear it was arain diRmlHRort. June 11 1013 tba rrwt wo. n.n.j I J AM. J . - . I biiu ik cauio uowu us a legacy iron the former administration to the ! city commission. I Th. t.av i uvt. a'ouweut ou t ci ubcu i . - . Jf" an1 was n Pint of awarding contracts when remon stances by property owners stopped proceedings. The roughness of the street drives most of the traffic, except the streetcars, to other bridges. Though the Broadway 'viaduct cost $1,586,921.90, it rises to but a small fraction of its Usefulness on account of the condition of the street Though the structure is one of the show places of Portland the .effectiveness of the picture 13 destroyed by the vile condition of the adjoining street, a street in the geographical heart of the city, It Is an indefensible status. The DroDerty owners oneht to with- S, tL,?:, "g , " draw their objections. Their prop- erty has been enormously benefited by the bullding ot the brid and in all fairness the owners owe it to Portland to permit the street to be paved Letters From the People (Communications nent tn Tha Jnnrnal fnr DtlhHf Will ill thla - . 1 J k. 1 . ten on onI one i(J f h PP. -noold not exceed 300 words in lnth ,n7 mm h. SPlnle,1tbjr.vthe "f me ;nd ddrf" n' " iu. writer uuev I1U' aevira 10 nave toe name published, be should so state.l "DiflCUBHfnn In tho ..atMt nf all p.fA.M. it rationalizes Terytnin it touches, it principles ot all faloe aanctity and throws them back bo their reasonablest-as. If they have no reasonableness. It ruth lastly crashes them oat ot existence and acts op its own conclusions In their stead." Woodrow VMisoa. To Employ the Unemployed. Salem, Or., June 19, To the Editor I of The Journal Permit me at this time, since ther Is ao much general discussion over the "unemployed" I problem, to call your readers' attention I tn thA wnrlc nrnmoted bv tha Socialist I party , membership of this state In an I effort to solve this problem. t Petitions are now being circulated place a measure ou the ballot for , , u .,k nshment of a department of industry and public works under the supervision and control of the state labor oommis- sioner. This department is to furnish j ment to tne unemployed citizens . v,.. ....ui.ki.. ,4. ..... I VS. VlCgUU tJJ COiOWUOU'lift tiiMUOMivo, "systems of transportation, dlstribut- in atAtinnn and nubile works." This proposed new law dn not I create any new offices or commissions, . . , , I ' u " i.wy.uo " i The measur provides that "funds 1 1 for the operation and development of this department shall be derived from tax upon ine 8.s. ?L ceasa I Persons, appraised at au.uuv . or more i jn value. Said tax shall not be leas than 10 per cent, and may be gradu ated abov that percentage by law. This measure Is intended to aolve me prODlem oi me unempioyeu. WhlCn ha,8' ln P.aSt ar;,been morH or less of a perplexing question for our state aamimsiranon. ji wm oe re- memDerea mat tne governor cauea raM"n" ot tn 8iaie noara oi oontrot 10 consider "Vr"r question; but that nothing could be done, for ther was no law giving them power to act. II I this proposed law is placed on our statutes the administration would be able to put these unemployed to work in some established state Industry or on tne pumic roaas. It should also b remembered that the -number of unemployed ln Oregon ravoviau ii vim there were no less than ooo in Port- land. These thousands hav been, and will continue to be, a burden on the citlzenshlP our Btate. uPtl J? them a chance at all times of th year to earn a living. I Copies of thla measure can be had by communicating witn rice. E. I CANNON, state Secretary Socialist Party. So Many as That? Portland, Or., Juno 20. To the Edi tor of The Journal Having noticed In I J ' I ..ltn V.m vamor fln.ni.liil mni tion of the country, I would appreciate through your columns a reply, to the U-in fact. an Industrie m th stat of I nM.M olnno 111 off mora than Hnn nnn .mninvM aTif tiM rirt of k t,,art t -m men 1 V f . J . . . . . Yjat.iv lirnrtrntlm. ? An .ariy AincKraKer. I i (From th Chicago Post.) VmUv VkV. 7 Vh. ie7. r. asylum; th wretched conditions of iallors on merchant veasela and slmi- Lu' ?v"- T,er .f? i nw i-nmriPfi kbqi;. wiidhc nunurraui ed Uiversary passed without mach notice last Monday. l! H waa one. of th earliest muckrak- f' hVtuIf,. J...??,!". purpose ot quickening th social con- 1 science of his time. I R'cl gave new impulse to th work vcauii . J A FEW SMILES i "Now lt as put our head ' together and seo If wa can't ar. ran matters." :i "Put our heads to gether? That would hardly do, Maude. Tour green wijr and my purpl hair won't harmonise," Little Marjori was telling about ber number work at the family dinner table and papa, wanted to teat ber .mildly. , "Can you add a mall sums?" glrller a Tea, papa." 'And can you subtract, too?" ; Take one num ber from another r Tea, papa.' 'That's nice. daar. Vow. let me hear you do it Supposing there wera four fllea on a table and Z killed one, how many would be left?" One."" waa the proud and sparkling answer. "The dead one. A bacteriologist says millions of germs ride on crowded trolley cars." "I'm not s u r prised to hear that. A germ is about the only thing that could ride on a crowded trolley car with any degree of comfort." Whom have you there in towf This is Rio Van Winkle. He lust up? u. so carefully? "We'll, we're let ttam h,m e the w mens Styles gradually, don't I a- hou know?" Two sisters while visiting in Ire land in Victoria's time got into conver sation one day with a tenant of their hostess. One . of the girls, .who is quite stout, asked the old woman it she would have- known them for sisters. Well."was the an swer, "ye look alike. ' but jer sister's slen der, while you, miss well, you favor the quane." Ho paved the way for .the work of Samuel Plimsoll. tha "sailors' friend." Who AntereA n.rHamont o t time when Reade's "Foul Play" was a ractlng the attention of the public 10 lmso s subsequent erf orts is duo measure which gave the British board of trade stringent regulatory powers over the merchant marine. Reade followed the laboratory meth od in tha writing of his novels. He collected enormous masses of material t rom personal observation, newspapers. books of travel and government docu ments. From this Information he fash loned the atmosphere out ot which he wove his stories vitalizing them with his imaginative gift and presenting them in dramatic -style, leaving fact and in cident to convey Its own Impression, lth little Of comment or subjective analvsls. It wan Ma amhltinn tn fc recognised as a dramatist rather than a novelist, but In this he failed. His plays were disappointments. He Is remembered for bis stories. The Earth From Four- Miles Up. J Augustus Post in American Magasine. i For every mile's ascent 96 milea of view open out, so that at the highest point I have reached, more than -four miles, on could Be 200 milea on the i earth's surface in every direction, un-' less low-hanging clouds 11 between the aeronaut and tbe rest of humanity. Sometimes like fields ot polar ice. sometimes opal and rose and gold, aometlmea crimson with unut dna it is a wonderful thing to see th up- per aid of a sunset! the floor of clouds, ever shifting, ever taking on more varied shapes, move beneath vou. or von rise through a. hi v. ing one. in a brief white solitude. One side of th cloud floor may be red above the last rays of the sun, while waves of orange, purple and sulphur- ous yellow stretch across to the cold blues of the east and the silver anlen- - - dr of the moon; for it is at full moon "at iong-aiBtanc Daiioon raoes are auwsvys "ngRi u puwj. Here V'U iu,u" i. lxjr"Z ' 9 the mass stretching beneath you and I . V. .. 1 J 1. I . m nnri ki, ui.. .io n .1 V-" ? . I , . ' currents of hot air breaking through the cloud bank from below. Tour pulse rat rises; your respira tion grows faster, perhaps your hands and feet a trifle numb, as th baro graph needle rises indeed, by this time It has risen above th card en tirely, for th Instruments commonly in use record only to 16,000 feet, and is making its mark on the metal of the cylinder; in time U will leave he cy irjaer altogether. If you 0Den a bottle of water the alr that ha3 been conflned at a lower level pp, out it you werft openlns; a bottof charged water. Going high- 8tinfor mA bave reached an altl- tude ot 8eVen miles the air is so thin tnat on mUst -take along oxygen to breathe, the pressure at sea level being 15 pounds. Up here you are subjected to only half tha pressure; -you feel lirhter than cork: the nerves are drawn taut. If von seka a nencil or vn. finder into vour akin tha inden- tatlon will remain Just lik making a a- - A a V . a m i noi in a piece oi putty, uoctors can this "nitting.- and on th surface of J the earth they tak It aa a proof that I nfft 4- extinct. There Is less "mountain sickness" than one would think, Judg- rfaks ot earth, but then in mountain climbing there is great physical exer tion, exhaustion ven, and her ther is absolute calm nothing to do till to morrow, and that seems a long way ahead, with no ,brese, no sound, no motion, save aa some, movement of your own jars th basket a trifle. The Umbrella, ' From the Washington Star. A man represented aa qualified to speak on such a subject was recently quoted in tbe press as saying that th umbrella Is becoming obsolete and that fewer df thes devices for th protec tion of one" a self, and ethers, ar be ing manufactured in this country year after year. It Is hard to believe that an lnatitution so popular as th um brella, both with borrower and buy ers, la doomed to b rolled up and packed away for ever and ay. Th world wagged, of course, before th umbrella was Invented and will eon tlnue on Its way even should.lt disap pear. Every man who has owned an umbrella knows bow quickly It can dis appear. An umbrella, particularly a new one. can vanisk without leaving a clew to Its new address. Another strange thing about th umbrella la that it will go out and fail to com back when the weather is most In clement. It does not often disappear in fair weather, j It will stand for days contentedly and demurely In th hall rack or umbrella stand while th sun glows or the stars gleam, but let black 8S 1 - . PERTINENT COMMENT tMALlj CHAXQB Aa in tha Tamnlea hlorkari affair. Gen. Uuarta'a - second thoughts are nearly always best. a What ia needed ia an inktdittmui belt one that not only will keep the trousers up but the ahirt down. Many of our Ion headed buatneea men are wlshina? to ainlain thav hail invtmea meir savings ia a straw hat mine. a a It must be conceded that women ap pear to be cooler and mora comfortable than men. And they are easier to look at. anyway! However. Mr. Mellen mar not be called upon to explain why the rail roads should have more money for car rying the mail. When steamers 800 miles apart can converse by wireless It la plain that solitude is going to be a scarce article on this planet before long. a One thing that may account for the Mexican situation la the fact that Mex icans eat chile con carne and drink mescal and pulque in summer. Further evidence of tbe plutocratic nature of our population wfll be found in the bulletin of the New York board of health which says that Americana eat too much meat. Smooth wire is driving out barbed wire in the cattle country because tbe government says It is lust aa aood and costs leas. Koonomy is a great little assistant to numanejpropaganda. Poor Kermlt Roosevelt! Not only must he submit to the obscurity of the conventional bridegroom, but even aa a Roosevelt he must be overshadowed by his protean parent in person. a Senator Cummins seems to. bave bea renominated by a decreased majority "on suspicion." The standpatters sus pected that If he were not renominated be would become a progressive and the progressives were afraid that be would. ROVING FARMERS From tbe. Christian Science Monitor. Our contemporaries in all parts of th United States, and especially in tbe middle west and southwest, are commenting generally upon the migra tory tenant farmer, and they are al most a unit in deploring the fact that he is becoming a factor of soma con sequence in the agricultural situation. He is a very different person from the emigrant who seeks and settles in a new home, for he is not. It appears, in any true sense a settler. The cen sus bureau notes his presence and his tendency to move about from one farm to another, apparently Just for the sake of moving. It has been claimed that one reason for his restlessness Is the insecurity of his tenure; on the other hand, it is asserted that his methods are such that he prefers to obtain a few crops at the least possible expendi ture of labor and, when he haa dissi pated the fertility of the soil In one Quarter, to move to another. As to the question of insecurity of tenure, the St. Paul Dispatch, speaking doubtless with knowledge of condi tions in Minnesota, says that landlords as a rule would rather have the ten ants remain, but that the tenants are often rovers and are not happy unless they are moving every year or two. There is still Another way of looking at this problem. Perhaps it is Just aa well that tenant farming is not Lwholly satisfactory In the United States. Tenant rarming is necessarily o u mrn I a t wlfh lnnrllardiom and land- iordism and successful agriculture have not been regarded as identical anywhere. The tenant-and-landlord idea BORROWING ON INSURANCE POLICIES Br John M. Oskison. Within the last two or thre years the llf lnsurajic companies have bean preaching to their policy holders against the practlc of borrowing money from the companies with poli cies as security. In Its last annual report the company in which I am insured says that its loans on policies at the end of th year amounted to over $88,000,000; this waa per cent ot th total assets of th com pany. According to its statement my com pany has a better record than the other big companies. A The companies ar quit right ln urging policy holders to refrain from borrowing on their policies. Making a life Insurance company act as your banker Is a mighty expensive way to finance your needs. Just as the in surance policy ought not to b con sidered as an Investment in th ordi nary use. nor aa th most profitable method of saving, in the sam way it should not be regarded as a legitimate business asset against which to bor row money for ordinary needs. If life Insurance haa any intrinsic clouds roll up and rain pelt down and that umbrella Is gone! It has no sense of direction and no homing Instinct and never finds Its way back. Widows and Orphans. From the Seattle Sun. It has been said that th first us of the term "widows and orphans" as designating corporation stockholders was in defense of the New York. New Haven & Hartford railroad. There la grim irony in the phrase when used in this connection, since this railroad, by the rottenness of its roadbed, roll ing stock and equipment has made real widows and orphans of more women and children, perhaps, than any other road in the country. Now a new bit of irony is being in jected Into th situation. Th -widow and orphans," long th fU front behind which the directors hav hid den, ar rising to demand their rights. They contend that th directors not only hav robbed the public, but have robbed th stockholders as well. They will sue, it is said, to collect a hun dred million dollars or more that has been diverted from them by the dl- rectors. Success to the "widows and or phans." If their efforts do nothing mora than to let still a little more light Into th way th New Haven and many other railroads ar managed, they will have served a good purpose. Old Type of Engine Revived. From the Birmingham News. . That Ideas frequently take a long rest has been demonstrated once more. This tlm It ia ln the construction of the latest and largest locomotive. This locomotive, built for a big northern road, will. It i predicted, give the steam engine a new lease of life, be cause the tender. Instead of being a dead weight, has been converted into an engine and aids ln carrying the load. By this means the advantage of the electric locomotive, which carries no tender. Is offset, and one of tbe prim reasons for the substitution of the latter -haa been eliminated. Th steam engine, despite Us tender, be comes as powerful, pound for pound, as its rival. . Thla 1 chronicled as a marked ad vance in locomotive construction, and AND NEWS IN BRIEF . OREGON SIDELIGHTS Slogan contests are in progress At Rose burg. A slogan for the city and one for Deuglas county ar to be adopted on or soon after July L a a Certain streets in the-city -of Flor ence are being planked in lieu ot pav ing, and property owners along the new roadway are preparing to put la It foot cement sidewalks. a a Editor Toung of tbe Sentinel, be lieves It Is tlm the Kansans at and about Coquille were organising a Sunflower club; hence he summons them to enroll, and advlaea an early picnic a a Manager C. I Oand of the Eugene cone ciuo reports that the free em rloyment bureau conducted by the club found Jobs for 1081 men- during the months or March. April ana May Since the club was established .15 months ago 6ISI Jobs have been found. a a That too much prosperity Is a seri ous handicap, even for a country editor, la v the conclusion of the Mo Mlnnvllle Newa reporter, which ob serves that tha newspapers of Yam hill county are "much more newsy since the political advertisements have disappeared from their columns. a Corvallls Gasette Times: It Is to he hoped that the flower show sched uled ror an indefinite aate next rail may prove the Inspiration for much plantlna- at this time. Corvallia can grow aa beautiful flowera aa are to be found any place on the globe. The dtr can max its flower show a great advertisement It It cares to do ao. a a fossil Journal: The atlla for the new Christian church have ben laid by the minister, II. u. Ford. They are IS feet off the ground in front owing to the steep slope of -the hill and that will make it eaav to ex vate the basement that ia planned. Tha buildlnc is to be considerably larxer than the other church build ings of Fossil. AND FARM UPLIFT has never been popular In the United States, If for no other reason than that tha removal of the owner from the land and the substitution for him of a person who has but a temporary or passinc Interest in the property. Is disturbing to the social, moral and re ligious organisation of agricultural communities. In a recent issue of the Farmers Mail and Breeze is a strong article bearlnar upon this phase of the uufajec from th pan of Warren H. Wilson of th Preabyterfan board ox home mis slons, Philadelphia, in the course of which he saya: "The best farmers in America are religiously organised. Good farming means perman enc. a a a xh farmer who let go, no matter how much money he takes with him. Is not a good farmer. To stay in the country means that the farmer is serious and devoted to the best interests of the country communi ty. a a The church in the coun try is an expression of th devotion of the farmer, to th land." There are priceless grains of truth here. Turning th land over to the tenant often to th stranger, frequent ly to the alien, can hardly be called good citizenship, no matter how it may be regarded In a business sense. The cities of the United States have tor years been recruited from the coun try; It will be well If th republic shall look to It that th recruiting ground for Its cities in the future re mains in pOHBession of persons having something more than a passing inter est in the soil. The purity of th stream cannot be preserved if Its sourc be neglected. merit It lies in its valu as a protect ive measure. It is a good way to provide against possible loss of life or Incapacity ln tbe future, so far as your family Is concerned. The whole business is organized and figured out with the thought that what the com pany sells Is insurance. They arc -not the best agents for handling your in vestments; they can't do nearly as well through endowment policies) as the savings bank if you think of them as depositartea of your savings. But because you can borrow up to the indicated loan valu ot a policy and get the money at S or 9 per cent, with a minimum of "red tape" you are forgetting (about one ln five' of you) .what you meant to do when you took out your policy. A lot of you who borrow on your policies are never able to repay the loan. This means that you have aban doned the theory that you owe some sort of protection to the women and children of your family; you have enlisted in the army of fatalists who says: "Live today and let tomorrow tak care of itself!" the achievement has brought forth much favorable comment from tech nical journals. Now comes the Scien tific American, and. while giving full credit to the latest railroad monster for Its power and efficiency, goes on to show that th idea of converting the locomotive tender into an engine is not new. It publishes a photograph of a locomotiv erected In England over a half century ago, in which the principle of the self-propelled tender was embraced. Fifty of thes engines, the superi ority of which waa unquestioned, were built at that time and were in us for several years. The final abandonment of the type waa due to the fact that It waa far ln advance of th times. Trains were not heavy like they are today, sidings were not long enough to accommodate trains of unusual length, and the aded power of the new loco motive was -not . needed. Since that data matvelous changes have come about, tne advances in this- country being: most marked, and the revival of this type of locomotive seems to have come at an opportune time. "Dumb, Driven Congressman." From the Tacoma Tribune. - Th reactionary press is now crit icising President Wilson for forcing the anti-trust bills through th house. It Is charged that the president used all his Influence and compelled th house to vot for th measures, al though the members did so very reluctantly,- even sullenly. Let us see. There wasn't a single vote against th trade commission bill, there were only 12 votes against the railway securities regulation bill, and only 64 against the Clayton anti-monopoly measure. In other words, not only was ther no opposition ln th majority party to these measures, but only an insignificant handful of Re publicans and Progressives dared to go on record as opposing them. Thi can hardly mean other than on . of two things; either th measures in so Inherently reasonably that even tho politicians in hostile parties fel that they could not justify a vot against them, or public opinion Is ao strongly for these bills that they ar afraid to 7lac themselves in opposition to it. IN EARLIER DAYS By Fred Lockley. Sol Durbla is a Buckeye. II waa born tn Richland county, Ohio, . 8eptmbr 17, 11:9, and has lived I Oregon for th past years. Botb -bis father and mother wr of Grmia " deacont. having baea born in Feun- - sylvanla. "When I was a little chap. IS rears old, w moved from Ohio to ' Illinois.'' said Mr. Durbla. "Our plac was not far from Nauvoo, the Mormon . settlement. I can remember I was greatly interested in a building they war putting up that had a wood a a ot under each corner. Tbey told m it waa a tempi built after th styl of in tempiea built la th Blbl times. in 1111 we Went to Clinton rountr. Mlaaouri. My mother-a baauth waa very poor and father thouaht liat a " Chang of climate would help lir. iothts health did not Improve, so w decided to go out to Oregon, where w heard th climat was very healthful. Whn w atarted from Missouri for Oregon mother waa so poorly ah had to d helped Into th wagon. We did not expect her to Jive. Sh got stronar and hearty coming across tho plain and she spent nearly half m century ner in Oregon. Sb lived to b (1 years Id. Thar war It of ua children. In. eluding a pair of-twin boys and a twin ooy and glrL W crossed th river at St. Joe. Ther wer about t whom In our party. W elected W. O. TVault captain. Th graaa was fin and w mad good tlm to th South Platte. There we split un Into two parties. V went with th amaller party of CO wagon. Wa struck out ahead. Amour those who went with us wera that T-Vanlia tnhn n cv-i Waymire, Sol Tethrow, the Fullers, Amoa King's father, the Simmln fam ily, who settled on Howell prairie near Sal am; th lngalla and th Harron family. "We cam on to Ash Hollow, on to th North Platte, the to Ft. Larami. then on to Independence Krx k. V mat Brldger at Ft. Bridger and ne waa mighty cordial to us. From ther w went to .Soda Springs, then on to Ft. Hall. Near Ft. Hall th roads fork, on going to California and the other on to Oregon. It was near Ft. Hall that wa ran acroas Stev Meek, a trothr of Joe Meek. He had his wife along wttn him. They wer both on horseback. He told ua about having to leave th wagons at Th Dalles and having to build rafta to go down the Columbia. H said ther was a better road by which we could drive clear through th Willamette valley, so they hired him to act aa guide. "In coming down the Snak river w struck a party of several hundred In dians, who had been out on a war ex pedition. All. we men folks of the train went- out with our guns s few hundred yards from thi wagons and refused to let th Indians com near the wsgons. W crossed the Sna'A and went down about a day's Journey and then struck out tor th Malheur river. We traveled up the Malheur for a day or two until we struck a anyon which led off toward Harney lake. W crossed the divide and struck th north side of Harney lake. From there w struck off for th headwaters of Crooked river. When we cam t Stinking Hollow some of the party re fused to start out across the desert. Those who did had to come back for kegs of water. The rough lava rock rut the hoofs of the oxen. There was little or no grass and the wstor was so strong with alkali that nelttier th peopl nor the cattle could drtnk It Right then our party got hostile and threatened to hang Steve Meek. Meak rode day and night trying to atrlk th trail he was looking for. He ?-.ad to leave the party to escape being, killed by those who thought he had led them off on a wild goose chase. We finally started bac, passing near wher Prineville now la, and struck rp th Deschutes at the Big Bend anj trav eled until we came to where Shearer's bridge now Is. We crossed th river by swimming the rattle at the mouth of Tygh valley. We took ihe women, children and our goods across th river by uMng our wagon beds for boats. In Tygh valley we met W. H. Rector and Sam Barlow. They wer going across the mountains an-1 want ed us' to come along, but we had bad all the mountains we wanted, so w went on to The Dalles. "It was our party that started all this talk about the Blue Bucket mine. I do not believe there ever ws any thing in that story. You see tMs was ln '4 5, and gold was not discovered until three years later. Than a--i one In our party claimed to hav seen ftomething that looked like golj while we were wandering around In the des ert. At first th story waa tha it waa a nugget as big as a walnut tliay had hammered out flat on th wagon tire. Pretty soon thaw" nugget had grown to be as big r your two flata and they claimed It was used to hold the Kitchen door open. As a matter of fact. I te lleve the whole story wan a myth, for our wagon tracka could have been readily followed when the party went out to look for the Blue Bucket mine In the early '60 s. 1 rode the range all over that country In i73 and I could atlll find our old trail." The Ragtime Muse Wishes. It's rather late for wtuhe now. Though once I'd plenty; At forty I've forgotten how I wlahed-at twenty. Mv hopes were rather lofty then. " No doubt, and sporty; But many things tone down ln men Who've rounded forty. In youth of course. I need not sr, - I hoped for riches. I'm glad enough to own today On pair of breeches. i Aria mm (vi idwwi That era ne'er bit me Ther war none then. I've one hop now That non may hit me! I recollect I hoped for fame; To cut some capers. My fond hop now to keep my nam Out of th paper. . T. A. PAIT. From All Side. : "Tan you send a dog by parcel post?" "I am afraid there would be a bowl about It it you did." The Sunday Journal The Great. Home Newspaper, consists of Five news sections replete wita Illustrated featurex 'lllui trated mafatine ot quality. Woman's section of i ire merit. Pictorial news supplement. - Superb comic section. " . : 5 Cents the Copy