DAILY EAST OT.EflOyi.Vy. rEypEETOy. OTCEflOy. VRTDAY, FIT.RI'AKY IMS. KlfiHT PAGES AN IM.K-:.MICT NKWSPAI'ER. t'abllati Iat!y and eml Weekly at Tea- dm. in, Orrfuo, tij the BAST CihltlMAN IT liMbll I NO CO. OffMal OnSty Papa. feWatWr Ltilrd Tim itMiUUM. Miat as aroad rlaaa tesaaM Ball Siattee. ON MI.K IN OTHER CITIK8. lawrlal llot'l Nea fcland. I'ortUo. Unf Hvan .Vs Co. Portland, Oregon. ON r'H-K AT ("Vko r.uri-aii. ln Kecority Holldlng. WmMii:'i. 1 I'., liureaa &ol, lur tfraia atrret. N. W. PL'IfSruilTION RATES U.N ADVANCE) I "ally, on year, .y mail f 5 00 I '!!, s.i mi.u;)m. by mall " lLr- tnoiiilis. tj mall 1 1M Ifcllj, onr n iblh. tT mall M I alijr, oi trr. by rarrlv T.!M 'ally, mi i..iiih. ty fir'.T 35 lllj. Hire month, by carrier 1 15 lallT, nnr nmcilh, ty arrlrr ....... . t5 IMibi WeeklT, one frur Ij mall J .M teinl Wm-i!.r. H Dion I ha. by nail 75 kml V erkiy. f'iir won. Us, by mall... .10 Portland a staunch rruWican and a supporter of WIthycombe and Pooth Id the recent election. The Uowr bill U a vicious meas ure more io than people reallie and by signing that bill the governor, a former college professor, haa be come a party to the worat wrong Im posed upon our big educational instl tutiona In the history ft the state. If It la partisanship to point out and expose such a piece of business It la a brand of partisanship In which the majority of people will concur. If submitted to the people the Moser bill would never have been adopted In a million years. Till: t.OI OF ALL. 'Tor Mill the Lord la Lord of might, In deeds. In deed. He take delight; The Mx'ar, the plow, the labor- mg barks, The field, the founded city marks; He mark! the -miler in the streets, The finger upon garden Beats; He marks the climber In the rocks, To Him the thepherd fulds his flocks; For those He loves who under- prop With dally virtues heaven's top, And bear the falling sky with ease. ' Unfrowning caryatides, Then he approves that ply the trade. That rock the child, that wed the maid. That with weak virtues, weak er hands. Sow glad new In the people lands And Mill with laughter, song and shout, Fpln the great wheel of earth about" Selected. pi tainted for the benefit of moth ei. Sophie Kerr Underwood begins a r.ew ferliil romance entitled "Love in-j- Mist." and other fiction of great power and lively Interest la contrib uted by Mary Heaton Vorse. Mary Pulver, Mary Stewart Cutting, Ellea Iuvall, Juliet Wllbor,, Tompkins, and Si(!iey Carter. Grace Margaret Gould, iashlott etilior of the Companion, has provid ed for her readers fifteen page t mole, presenting the newest facif unl Ideas about spring styles. Her ili partment Includes st-orea of pic tuun and a great variety of article, ul! devoted to showing how women ct'j get the smartest clothes at mod est price. The regular Cooking, lluuoeki-epltig, Handicraft, Young iVcple's and About People depart- President Hadley of Tale university, nu-nts complete a number of slng-i- i quoted 11a giving strange advice to his students In a recent PNr Mni address on "The Choice la Politic, of a Career.' He Is re ported to have said in the course of this address: "no man under present Conditions In the Uni ted States has a right to go Into poll tics unless he Is of independent means." President Hadley Is also rep resented as having elaborated this Idea by explaining that men In poli tics, with families dependent on them sooner or later face the alternative of lur uricty and originality full of eiitertalnment and practical Ideas. FINDS WiOO LIMP. (Bakersfleld dispatch to the Los An geles Times.) Thirty-five hundred dollars' worth of gold in one chunk a nugget vtighlng 10 I t pounds has been found near the head of Rock canyon, on the Mojave desert, by Dave Bow r.tan, an old-time placer miner, ac cording to Lance Underwood, who arrived In Bakersfleld this morning from Mojave. f r Rttu'mnm wna tint nrnmrtlir .1 i .vi .. i ... 1 " " "- " u,.,u wmiuum ni w,en he found the nugget accordlng losing their Jobs. t0 Mr. Underwood, but was merely It would be distressing Indeed If going into the canyon when he saw the great lump of gold. The nugget is very nearly the larg est ever found In this vicinity. Mr. Bowman had no scales with him to weigh the gold but rigged up a bal ante witia a 10-pound hammer on cue end and the nugget at the oth er end proved three-fourths of a pound heavier. "Every time the warden of a state prison gives the signal for an exe cution all the Oregon's Judgment citizens are rour Conflnm-d. d e r e rs." This declaration was made a few days ago to a New Tork audience by Thomas Mott Osborne, warden of Sing Sing. The statement Is from a man who knows considerable about the crim inal class and the proper methods of dealing with them. It Is an encour aging opinion and confirms the Judg ment of the people of Oregon who abolihed the death penalty at th November election. Evidently there are other ways of punishing lawbreakers aside from kill Ing them and running frequent risks of killing the wrong man. In his statement defending the Moser bill which he signed Governor V I thycombe T1m Fwtu About made no reference The Momt BIO to the fact ;he state schools are included in the provisions of that act None of the journalistic defend ers of the bill touch upon this point Tet this feature Is what makes the bill intolerable. It places the Uni versity of Oregon, the Oregon Agri cultural College and the state normal school directly under the spoils sys tem. The positions of all connected with those Institutions are now upon a political basis and the occupants are at the mercy of the governor, his political advisers and their henchmen The awertlon this change Is a step toward efficiency Insults the Intelll- , gence of the state. Placing a man's Job on a political basis does not make him more efficient save for political I'urp'iM-a. If it did then the long fight against the spoils system In na tional affairs has been a blunder and the civil service should be abolished. Newspapers defending this raid for rpolls say it Is to ount the Wext ap polntees. They are either Ignorant of the farts or purposely misrepresent them. There are nine men upon the uni versity board of regents and they serve for terms of 12 years. Of those nine men not more than two were placed on the board by Governor West There are It members on the O. A. C. board of regents and the appoint ive members serve for 10 year terms. Of those men not more than two were placed on the board by the re tiring governor and one of the West appointees was George Cornwall of C ASTORIA For Iafkatj txid Children. Til Iki Yc3HaT8'Ate3j$E::fut JWit the tiuatur of the conditions described by President Hadley were broadly true In this country. Men in political positions no doubt often are confronted with the alternative set forth by the presi dent of Yale, but so are men in civil life. It is only the weak, however, who yield. Perhaps the pressure is stronger on politicians, or It may be that because they are in the limelight the facts In regard to their vicissitudes often become public. But to lay It down aa a rule that poor men in poll- tics must be corruptible to win seem ing success of a lasting sort would be to Indict our system of government and our entire civilization. President Hadley's views on this subject. U he has not been misrepre sented, are opposed to the spirit of modernity. When Engiand was more aristocratic its political system was based on President Hadley's theory. but today members of parliament are 1 paid living salaries. Even in the Brit ish army, aristocracy's last stronghold officers' pay has been increased so that poor men may hold commissions. What guaranty can Dr. Hadley ad vance that wealthy men in 'office would be Incorruptible? Money temp tations are not the hardest to resist Ambition for greater honors lays of ficeholders open to subtler forms of coercion than greed. Fortunatev the spirit of public service as a career is growing in America. It is the duty of such leaders as the head of Yale university to assist in advancing this spirit Chicago News. If applied to the city of Pendleton the Moser bill would give the mayor direct control of 1 Bringing It Home, the public school system. The may or would have the appointment of the school board and the right to re move any or all members of the board any time he saw fit to do so. The board in turn would have' the right to remove any teacher at any time for any reason they might desire. Po litically speaking they would all be the servants of the mayor. Would such a system promote effl ciency In our school system? lire at German GENEVA via Paris Feb. 25. Aco thi?r German aviator flew over SwlfS territory. Swiss infantrymen fired at him over the village of Beurnevesin, uef.r Bonfol. Later French troops at Pfetterhau rei fired at him, but he returned to Muolhausen apparently uninjured. C!:od Remedy Sustains Wcrid Myriad Have Learned of Iti Re markable Curative Value. , mmvlLmmm'ZlC' - Si .n'l. is .mii. . " asm nam win...- :7-v : p.,!' ' Vn'! i,;:i''ili!' '.r " .y: :' : 1! " i 'iHH't- ii i 1 i'f 'i SI iSjf M if. ! Mil s ''Piisa 3 I I : ! ; ! ! 1 1 1? mWffi H K ! B ii B 1 1 i '1 !!J i; W h ff f' SI !! ":;!'' N ;i!!7 X " 0iMi ft. W 111 md mMMM msm ill isNf The (Elistemiiig CURRENT THINKING THE MAKC1I VOLX'S CXJMPANION. JIOMK In the March Woman's Homa Companion is started a movement for Utter motion pictures throughout tne United States. The editors of the Companion are to have submit ted to them each month several bun ed films In advance of their re lease to the motion picture houses. From these they will select from 40 o 75 which are especially commend able both from an artistic and eth!'; a standpoint wi.'l publish Uiia list at films, rec ommending that their readers see' them. This will enable parents, women's clubs, teachers, librarians and others to help raise the stand ard of motion pictures, thus provM ! ii:g for the children and the young people of our country clean, whoie- jmc, educational, and genuinely en tertaining pictures worth seeing. Thw movement Is predicated on the fa.'t that motion pictures are of gigantic Importance in this country in as much 4 they now draw every week more oung people than are in the church es on Sunday or In the school on week-days. Many highly entertaining and in From the vrry fact that S. 8. 8., the famou blood purifier Is a natural medi cine, it la opposed by thce wbo ran not give up mercury and other dangeroiii drug. Habit la a atrance master. Af flicted pi-ople use mercury with a blind force of habit Not warned by the rheu matism they see all around them, on- mindful of the locomotor ataxia, paraly-1 sis and other dreaded results or mineral poisoning, they cling to tbe fait disap pearing treatment so surely and post tl re ly being replaced by 8. 8. 8., wherever the llglit strikes In. 8. 8. 8. la fast be coming the world's panares for all blood troubles berause It Is welcome to a weak stomarh. is taken naturally Into tbe blood. Is a wave of purifying Influence knomn by its remarkable curative results, and Is the standby of a host of people. It goes Into the blood and remains a strong medicinal Influence to tbe end and thla without an; other effect than that of s purely rli auslng projierty. It Is the Gioiit universally recom mended bluod remedy known, and baa sustained its reputation for half a cen tury. Ita logrrdlrnta are Nature's defi nite antidotes for germs that create our worst affliction, liet a bottle today of snr druggist. Refuse all substitute. Write the medical department. The Bwlft Fperlflc Co.. 112 Swift Klrig., Atlanta. Oa., for free advice on hlnrd troubles, and now to overcome them. This department is one of tbe finest belps to men to be fou4 anywhere, and l,t la entirely free. ' German Coffee Cake MadwWitWYaast By Mrs. Janet McKenzie Hill, Editor of the Boston Cooking School Magazine. . There U no warm bread quite as appro priate for Sunday morning breakfast at German Coffee Cake, yet It is seldom made by housewives who do not bake their own bread. If K C double raise Baking Powder Is used it will be Just as good as if raised with yeast and it will have the further ad vantage of being fresh and warm. Save this recipe and try it next Sunday. K C German Coffee Cake Two and ons-fourth euvn tided Hour. Each month thvStoelUaspoonfuU KC Hakini Powder; a met iUBjfwniut mini taiiletpoonhtU melte ter; g labiespoonuU melted but- tugar; 14 r it I 1 f Ml iew miuc- Sift dry inirredienti torether. beat the tee. add milk and butter to th egg to make one and one-quarter cups; stir all together with inverted spoon to a stiff batter. Turn into biscuit pan and spread even. Brush top i I - 1 . 1 . I. J 1 o -II struitlve articles are also included ln;u " "- opnnsie sugar thir burnt. .u, h as Ida M. Tarbell s Kr.ouna 'P- Young Glrl'l in moderate oven. jllftntitulrkft tf "A .... -.. . w... , . , , ThoughU." and an article entitled ' ippie wse or rrone Kucnea ean , The Uea We Tell to Men." which is " w"- M " "r covering th persona. confeIon of a womn,, JsS who maintains that women rarely tell . . d , . the truth to men and that it U the mltn th, me fof cff,. G,ke. n'en's fault. Ul.cardo Martin, the .er-. CMtc., r.. on tll- . c. li brated opera singer, writes on .Vieima neiDt. Yml What Is rjood MUHlC?" and In the fr,. K serulin th eolnre.l eeefifir,!. r..A letter liable department scientific ; 25-cent cans of K C Bakine Powder to nformation and uggestiorui about the Jaquei Mfjr. Co., Chicago, being luxe to ll. e prlng disease of children i write your urnc and addrcti puialy. Always At Her . ShooldeE From the time she ran from her husband this man was ever at her elbow, with his sharp, handsome features and his coal black eyes. She knew no reason for his persistent attention. She was haunted by his eloquent expressions and his low, persuasive tones, By George Randolph Chester and Lillian Chester V is an enchanting story, an entrancing story, a story of absorbing suspense. "Runaway June" has never before been published. It was written for Ameri ca s greatest newspapers; in this city it will appear exclusively in oman The East Oreg Watch for it don't miss it It will appear in serial form, starting soon.