J) DAlLr CAtITAL JOURNAL, SALEM. OREGON SATURDAY, APRIL 20, 1W)7. ECRETARY ELIHU ROOT DEFENDS PRESIDENT His Remarkable Achievement in Settlement of Japanese and San Francisco Public School Exclusion Order fc. t'ai'ltnl Journal .presents , r. adera In Orogon the An, ,t passages of tho groat g . , h nmile by Socrotnry i; at the International 1 -vtts conferonco In dofaiiBO cf the wonderful and suc- ?.. l Mntlnt nrtrrtnil nut i- -Hill J'unw v... u t, prcjUint Roosevelt In dealing ,, s ,ho controv rsy tnnt arose wun apanoYcr he txiluslon of Japanese ttJJren from the public schools of &b FrancIsi.o Tho President In vt Instant showed the utmost enrage In den Ing with a situation ihat was load, d with tho dynamite of demagog y, that might havo been ,iplodcd and might havo lnvoiveu no friendly nations In wnr with loss courageous and less Intelligent troat- stst, Following are tho extracts rrom the ipecch of Secretnry Root, who ni also president of tho conforerfco. It It well worth rending: History of the Controversy with In pan. On tho 11th of October, 190C, tho teird of education of San Francisco tioptcd a resolution In these werds: Resolved, that In nccordnnco with utlcle X, Bictlon 1CC2, of the school jv of California, principals ar her 5r directed to send nil Ghlnose, Japanese, or Korenns children to the r-iental nubile school, sltunted on tie south side of Clay strcot, bo tvecn Powell and MnBou strcots. on and after Mondny, October 15, 1906 The school system thus provided kcooI privileges for all resident chil dren, whether citizen or nllcn; all resident children wero Included In the basis for estimating tho amount to be raised by taxation for school mrpoifs, the fund for tho support of the school was raised by genera1 taxation upon all property of rosl-J dent aliens ns well as of citizens; ai all resident chlldron, whether of aliens or of citizens, wore liable to U compelled to attend tho schools. So that under the resolution of the beard of education, tho children of retldent alkns of all other nationali ties were freely admitted to the xhools cf tho my in tho neighbor hood of their homes, while tho chil dren ef Indians. Chlnoso, and Japa nese were excluded -from those Khools, and were not only doprlved f education unless they consented to jo to the special orlontal school MClay Btrnt, hut woro Hablo to bo krdbly con-ji lied to go to that pnr- !ar s hi".! After the jassage of this rosolu H. admi.in to the ordinary pri ory sh. tl( San Frnnolsco was cl tu Jui, anew chlldron, and tHNipn th. government of Japnn ri., r.tutlons to tho govorn- of t!.. nltod Statos that inas- as t'i, , hildren nf roalilnnta un of aij other, for - were freely ndmlttod the citizens of Japan I'ulted Statos wore, ;-i'n. denied the sntno I 2 v r s 1 J z z -x" I THE ROOSEVELT LAUGH. Wlien tho prcsidont is out in the woods ho enjoys u good story, and lus lnunh is honrtv and euro froo. P1U2SI DEXT ROOSEVELT'S LATEST PICTURE. In repose tho president's fnco is very solemn and dignified; in no tion it is ono of tho most cxprcss ivo couutonpueos in America. THE PRESIDENT'S SMILK 1-Olt THE CHILDREN. Prosidont Roonuvolt lovos tho children, nnd ono of his most kind ly smiles is rosorved for thorn. I T Z rfct to taut rtnimni iNrwafHWMM WHEN THE PRESIDENT IS STRENUOUS. When Prosidont Roosovelt clinches a point in tho midst of his oratory his set expression is proof in itsolf of his oarnostuoss. CHARACTERISTIC POSES OF THE PRESIDENT criminatory administration In the other Holds th3 state executive, Is to forolgn countries whoro they may net, Tho tronty-maklng power is not travol or trndo or rosldo Is, and nl- distributed; It Ib nil vested In tho nn ways has boon, ono of tho chief oh-' tlonal govornmont; no pnrt of it h Iftftffl flf trmilv tllfllrltlir nA aliMi provisions always have boon reciprocal. During tho entiro history of the United Statos provisions of thin de scription havo Included privileges, llbrtlos, nnd rights relating to the rights of rcsldonco which wero ac corded to tho citizens or subjects of tho most-fnvored nation. Tho ques tions thus raised wero promptly pre sented by tho govornmont of tho United States to tho fcdoral court in California, nnd nlso to tho state court of California, In appropriate loga' proceedings. Tho matter has boon happily disposod of without proceed ing to Judgment In olthor case; but In tho moantlmo thoro was much ox cltod discussion of tho subject in tho newspnpors and In public meetings and In private conversation. It is a pleasure to bo ablo to sav that never for a moment was thoro, vostcd In or rcsorvod to tho stntos. In Internntlonnl affairs thoro are no statos; there Is hut ono nation, act ing In direct relation to nnd repre sentation of ovory citizen In ovejy state. Kvcry tronty mndo under tutlon to education, or us to tho exorcise of religion and ns to burial but not n to education, or ns to education but not as to property or rollglon. That would bo substituting tho mere will of tho stnto for tho Judgment of tho Prosidont nnd Honnto In exercising a power committed to them nnd pro hibited to tho stntos by tho constl- tho authority of the United States is made by tho national govornmont, ns tho direct and solo representa tive of every cltlzon of tho United Statos rosldlng In California equally with every citizen of tho United States residing elsowhoro. It Is, of course, concelvnblo that, under pre tonso of exorcising tho treaty-making power, tho Prosidont nnd sonute Thoro was, thorcfore, no real Ques tion of power arising ttndor this Jap- nnoso tronty nnd no quoBtlon of stato rights. Thoro woro, howovor, questions of policy, questions of nntlonnl Interests and of Btnte Interests, nrlslng under tho administration of tho tronty and regarding tho application of Its pro visions to tho conditions existing on might nttompt to make provisions , tho Pacific const, rognrdlng mnttors which aro not j in the distribution of powors un propor subjects of International (dor our oomposlto systom of govorn ngroomont, nnd which would bo only ; mont tho poople of San Francisco n colorablo not n real oxorolso of , had throo sets ol Interests committed the tronty-maklng power; but so fnrto three different sots of orncors ns tho ronl oxerclsc of tho poworjtholr poolnl intortist n cltlzons of goos, thoro can bo no quostlon of the nrlnclnnl olty nnd commercial ns botwoon the govornmont of thw, stato rights, because tho conHtitu- 'port of tho Pacific const reprosonteU Jquoullon underlying tho whole sul United Stntos and tho government of , lion Itself, in Hie most explicit jy the olty govornmont of San Fran- jot which made till (mentions of Japan, tho slightest departure from 'terms, tins preoludeu the oxlstonoo nnd purpose woro necessary. Many thoughtless und somu nilBohtovom persons havo spoken nnd written re garding these coVforeucea and com munications ns It they wero tho par leying and compromise of enemies. On tho contrnry, thoy woro an ex nmplo of the way In which tho public business ought nlwayn to bo conduct ed; so that tho different public nfll cors respectively charged with tho performance of duties nffectlng the sumo uuhjoct-mnttor niny work to gether in fiirthornnvo of tho tmmu public pulley and with n common purpose for tho good or tho wholn country nnd ovury part of tho coun try. Huoh a conoort of notion with such a purpose was oHtnbllshod by tho oonforouaos und 00111111011100110111 botwoon tho national authorities nnd tho authorities of California and 81111 Frnnclsoo which followed the pnunge of tho bourd of education resolution. Only Hunger of Wnr I,lri la I'tvlliigi of IV'oplo. There was ono great nnd serious WWrr , jW count! tkMU, Ut n. I frf'th-K i,,er Tmi,1()s ,, NalloiiK. Kelprw! a:riaaiiL hola-aan ! "ll r ..1. !!., ... ..... " lilt t Uli'ni Mt OAli nn.lnn wa- ... w, mll MI.IIU1. . W- lL " uitory of ike otkier f UMiunff ttia nanat fninlllnr "S" Ml .1 .H.nilA.Hl.na.1 Av.vlaAa ' --..kwv,mi W"i viavn King power. To se " of one's anunlrv - "nutory laws and dte- perfect good tomper, mutunl confi dence, nnd klildly consideration; and that no soonor hnd the views and purposes of the governments of the United States, the state of California of any such question. So Qiit'Ntlon of Htiitim' Involved. Since the rights, prlvllegs ltlgliti and I public mootlngs? What would bo 1 the effect upon our own people ot .the rwipoiiBM that natural rosnt- ment for such treatment would elicit from tho Japanese? Tho first nrtlolo of tho first treaty Japnn over mado with a western pow er provlded: "Thero shall bo a purfoct, perma nent, ami universal pcaco nnd a sili cons and cordial amity botwoon tho United Stnes or Amorlcn on tho out) pnrt, and tho empire ot Japan on tho other part, and between thotr people respectively, without excep tion of porsonu or placcH," Problem Va to Avoid "Warlike UNpoMtlmi. Under tho treaty which lioro tho signature of Matthew Calbralth Perry, wo Introduced Japan to thu world of wostorn civilisation. Wo had nlwnya boon proud ot her won derful development proud of tho gonitis ot tho rnco that In a single genornttnn ndnptcd an anclont feudal syBtom of tho far oast to tho must advanced standards ot modern Kur opo nnd Amorlcn. Tho friendship be tween tho two nations hnd been tpo miliar nnd close. Was tho dotinrn tlon of that treaty to he art nsldo? At Kurlhama, In Japan, stands a monumout to Commodoro Perry. raised by tho Japanese In gratofnl appreciation, upon tho site whero ho landed nnd opened negotiations for the treaty. Was that monument, henceforth to roprosont dlsltko nnd resentmuulT Wero tho two peoples to fnco each othor across tho Pacific In future years with angry and re sentful feollngsT All this wns In evitable If tho process which neomod to havo hoRiin wns to continue, anil tho government of tho United Statos looked with tho greatest solicitude upon tho possibility that tho procesa might continue. TI10 People, Not din GnvrmmcHt, Make War. . It Is hard for democracy to loam tho responsibilities of Its power; hut tho peoplu now, not govornmont, mako friendship or dislike, sympathy or discord, peace or war, hotwoon- nations. In hla modern day through the columns of the myriad press nnd message flashing ovor countless wires, multitude calls to. multitude noross boundaries ami oceans In courtesy or Insult, In amity or In dotlnucu. Foreign ofllcoo au nmhnssadors and ministers no longor keep or break tho poaco, but tho conduct of each people toward ovory other. Th; people who permit thorn- snlvuri to treat the people of other clsoo; their Intereet In common with construction and of soopu ami of of all the people of the state of Callfor- f00t of the troaty Itself -all quo- nln represented by the govornor and tlons as to whether the claims of countries with discourtesy jimt In legislature at Sacramento; and tholr Jnnan wore woll founded or not; all lt are surely sowing tho wind to Interuels In common with all tho peo. riHestlons as to whether the resolu- reap thu whirlwind, for n world of ImmunitiM. both of nerson aad ro- ' ,1 at tU Un"l States reprosentod tlon of the school board was valid "Hllen and revengeful hatred inn and tho city of San Franclseo boon )e,ty. to-bo nooorded to foreigners In b" l,,M watloaal government at or not -seem temporary and eompnr- nover lie a world of p w. explnlnod by each to the other tlia)iOHr 00,,, and to our cltlzeM In i Washington. (atlvely unimportant. It was not a 'Against such a feeling treatlei entiro harmony and good under- foroiK aountrlee are n nroner sub- Tli Wm 11 Perfect Conreri or niiesiloH of war with Juima. All the are waste papor anil .llitlonui- Jet of troaty provision and within Action, ( fuollsh talk about war was puroly oy tho empty routine of Idle form. iim iimiti nf Dm irAn(v.uivi.r iuiw. isttah ono nf th Mu tiiraa tUftaratkt ' KMiiwiinnai ami iiniiMiHiittvii. Theru The great question which oversbad- or. and sinoo such rluhta. tirlvllegM ' governmental agwele had author- wns never even frirtlon lietween the,owel all ritanieeiun of the Ir-mHy of standing rsultod, with n common doslro to exerdse the powers vested In each, for the common good of the whole country, of the state, aHd of tho olty. m .. lt.n ! Ull fUt A Slates Aro Unknotvii in liitunitKloual AfTnir. Legislative power Is dlstrlbHted: upon some subjects the national leg islature has authority; upon ether subject the state Iegtltiire has au thority. Judicial power hi dtstrtUuUJ In some cam the federal court have Jurisdiction; In other enaee the Ut courts hfive Jurisdiction. ttxeitiw power U dletrlbuted ; In some field the national exeemlve ts to aet; In and Immuultioe may be given by troaty In contravention of the laws of any state. It follows of neceselty I that the treaty-making power alone has authority to determine what those right, privilege, or Immuni ties shall bo. No state ean set up It laws as against the grant of any par ticular right, prlTllege or Imiuanltr . Ity to do certain thing relating to two governments. The question was, the treatment of Japanese residents what stato of feeling would he or eat In San Francleeo. These three Inter- m between the great body ot the nets eould be really In 0011 ft let; for people of the United State and the the beet Intereet of th whole country great body of the pooplo of Japan Is always the true Interest of even j a a riHHjlt of the treatment glvea to state ami city, ami the protection of : the Japanese In thin country? the Intereets of every looaltty In th What was to he the effect upon ooHntrr hi always the true Interest that proud, sensitive, highly oivilUeU any more than against the grant of j of the nation. There wa. however. ' people aro the PaelUc. of tho dla- any other right, privilege, or Imwnn- j a suppose) or apparent dashing of oourUwy. Insult. Imputnttona of In Ity. No atat oan say a treaty way Interest, and to do away with thli forlorlly and abuse aimed at them In I, ISOt 'u the queatlen: Are tho people of the United ttlataa about to break friendship with the poie of Jpa? That question, I believe, hud been happily naeweied Ih th nega tive. fhe clock tick and tlrhs ti ilmo away, thortoaluK sip our ll al iv IJat. dxlak and tie aierry, For mm day you win w grant to alien resident equality of ronforono. eoMinHnleatioo. eontpaii-1 the eolumns of American newepapor Yo eftstt Itorky Mouutali. r treatment as to property hut not ae son of view, explanation of poller and from the platform of American (Free sample at lr Biones i.r. reck ', ft IP CUsiitf llri.. r... . .. --- iiiiinei I'nirM(fcMi. t Vurk Anrll n Aithnnoh " u the hartlost kind tCll. ..I .... t . .I. , " K.f,IU IB UVtIIB K h- living of the new tun . dr,,Jif' at Cripple Croek. )rk, r, u-d aHd thQ bore la !i.i . .. . ..... f II '"iimhbb a uisuinw iftti,, ,r'' vork t Installing ij l,""i'r.or will nut be fln 4 srMi wkg, aild maehlno l8ttWjul Bot n operation until M Th aoprts4or. when J!' Ai" lvatloH work for tht a pecuIUr quality, heias: rly a, falls to enable the Oak warden to hard as Hint, hot attor a hoi I keep a better watch oa any fleher 'drlllesl It Is easily broken by tho ex-! man who trie to flsh too near the nloaiaii af nawiler. It Is ImsooaiWe ! fall. There Is-u strlet law against to predict Jnet now whoa the hlf flehlng wltljln a eortala dUUnee of J bore will rWeh that point whoro It hi the falls, but It Ut alleged that cor to cut the water cotsrs. Lj bUilJin. l..- . . . . . 4 . - ueen naisnea, st,at ! 6B 4't a foundation for a in u " Tb m,u iHtoJ?4 in ,sr8!nB out Umber t iu!!.Ub?r airlal necoaiary aJiJJ 1JB machinery building , 0:u " now la course . woa. Th i.. v..ju.. c!alei h v. .w . " miov ovv VVaV V k Jrtrlnj the tunl 1 of talu local flshormen fish within that dletaneo on dark night, when the 1UL. srvlilli2lit tianlliig Fall. warden are una We to see mess. 11 Oregon Plcy, April So A laneo thought that by using the search searchlight lias Uen Installed at the light the offenders will be seen and mmmmm i i . ""j? Rrrested. The searchlight Is the large one that was used or the gov- otOmaCll riXpCrtS jernmeat building at the lwls and tnara rair. iiany people win rraem I br that the rays woro often thrown 1 clear ever to this city. may disagree as to the exact cause of indigestion, but vihon food dis tresses the stomach, all disturbing elements are quickly quieted and removed by a dose or two of Beechams Pills American League Note. It seems that the report that Duo don and Towne. of the Sor..are to go to the Minneapolis club of the Ameri can association, I not founded oa fact, Coralslcey deal that ho Is tcsds to let the two me leave th c$ub, A yet the road from the bite league circuits back to the hushes ha not been very crowded, bat wait. The season has not fairly started yt. neither have the eollctte throw anJ the dumb pay. WtMtern papers all agree that Jim Defobanty has a great fotsste a third baseman for the Ilrowna, and give as the mala reason the fact that Cin cinnati released blm. Delia, Sey mour, Stalnfleld. Overall, Crawford. Day. Ilcklcy. Droot and others ar taken as precedents. Owner John J. Taylor, of the Ilostoo club, announce that he ha glvea up hope of coming to terrnn with Fred Parent, and the oaoe great shortstop U now on the market. Hebo Ferrl, of the Ilostons, la not In hi hast form Just now. Hobe'wai spiked In the foot a fortnight ago, hod It may hamper him for week. Grinth has discouraged Billy Hog la the latter' esTort to maater the fpitbalL, Oriatth toW him that th splthall I gol for a pitcher who has lost hi other tricks, and Uogv I far from that stage. Lajole says he l going to speal next winter looking up his relative He denies the report that he m golnir to play Independent ball over there. Fielder Joae say he won't mek any predictions, but adds that there Is no club In th league which looks good enough to boat the Hot. and bo says ho has a good pair of eye. Tho new rule that forbids base runners to pas each other deserva hearty support. There Is ao chancm of Jlru McCluIro to get ahead of Hal Chaso when the two are circling' the bases. Griffith Is certainly gambling with hi pitching staff, and he ought to win on account of hi nerve. Ho Is boldly planning to throw the work on five roeo, thr of whom aro prac tically untried; Clarkson, Keefo and Brocket!. "twy" !tU, of the !U9M Box, U lamming the ball h way Out singu larly remind oa if the world's championship r! - lucy" la evi dently trrlPg t" ' '! -tii iho COO of till f.l-N.fif k LsfaT IbKL P m psnssiIrsTBWsBBn4LllJJj Do Uy at? U Ihty'rs not ZX A.CTI.Y tifbt. ht us make tbm so. Wfcsn wji flt yeu, w fit you AC CUKATKMT, Uoog sp4rtnc, vsry DM4Wry scUelUle apwratus sad th riulr-t knowlcds en. sblloa us to cerrscUy use In anw. our own, comsltte workshop, wiih every fMUHj a to tb grhxlln of spcUl ate all at yr 4Ufom htfe, aeurt a Mrvke not powtbU trtth ethn h feftu. ntlr iulp, Asl--de your Uuhi liT, or srt ntr Monsell Optical to. WtkCVMtMM 4amJn1 JBLNsWUM SB SrBSHSSSBV SffSBBBB' TBSSfPSSS) SSMBS TST SSSnBJSSS McmUS. U