THE MOJtOilCi OKEliOIVIAJS, AUGUST 5, 1U13- FORTLAND, OBEGOS. Entered. at Portland, Oregon, poatotflcs a second-class matter. Subscription Rates Invariably, In' Advance: BT MAIL J rally. Sunday Included, one year $8.00 Dally, Sunday included, six months Daily, Sunday included, three months 2.35 Daily, Sunday included, one month .?& Dally, without Sunday, one year - 8.00 Xally, without Sunday, six months . .... 8.25 Daily, without Sunday, three months. .. 1.75 Daily, without Sunday, one month .. ttu Weekly, one year 1-50 Sunday, one year ........ 2.50 Sunday and weekly, one year -0 (BY CARRIER) Dally, Sunday included, one year 9.00 Dally, Sunduy Included, one month ..... 1o How to Remit Send postoftlce money or der, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at sender's risk. i3lve postoffice address in lu 1. including- county and state. Voetafce Rates 12 to 10 pages. 1 cent; IS to o2 pages, 2 cents; 34 to 48 pages, 3 cents; 60 to 60 pages, cents; 62 to 7(1 pages, 5 cents; 78 to 82 pages, cents. Foreign post age, double rates. Eastern Business Office Verree & Conk lin. New York, Brunswick buiiding. Chi cago, steger building. San Francisco Office R. J. Bidwell Co., 742 Market st. European Office No. 2 Regent street S. W., London. PORTLAND, TUESDAY, ALGCST 5. 1913. RECOGNITION OR INTERVENTION, WHICH? By persisting Iri his refusal to recog nize General Huerta as President of Mexico, President Wilson not only re, duces himself to the alternative of in tervention, but gives encouragement to the many influences .which clamor for intervention. By refusing to recognize the fact that Huerta is President, Mr. Wilson, by implication, assumes the right to decide who is, or shall be. President. The only manner in which he can exercise that assumed right is can reaj nis scurrilous sneers at the by armed force. He cannot send an American flag without indignation and terms) which -would Insure economical but satisfactory operation. It should begin this year. The subject is ripe for action.' Exhaustive inquiry has been made by committees of both House and Senate, and all the facts necessary to base a conclusion have been ascertained. There -is no excuse for delay. The House might as well consider the bill now as kill time in waiting for the Senate to dispose of the tariff. SOME REMARKS ON ANARCHY. The Oregonian has not assumed its usual editorial prerogative of editing the extraordinary letter from J. K. Sears, printed today, for fear it might not be able to interpret correctly what the writer meant to say. We shall leave each reader to judge for himself. Dr. Leach is at war with organized society, and with the forces that con trol it. He would revolutionize the one and destroy the other. He is a Social ist who supports the I. W. W. move ment, and he describes the I. W. Ws. as comrades and brothers. Anarchy is literally the absence of government, and specifically it is the "social theory which regards the union of order with the absence of all direct (government of man by man as. the political ideal" and demands "absolute individual lib erty." The anarchist is broadly one who advocates anarchy and specifically he is "any person who promotes dis order or excites revolt against estab lished rule, law or custom." There are various ways of bringing about an archy, and they range from the bomb and the torch to the soap-box and the vocabulary of inflammatory speech. Editor Leach would appear, in this view to be something of an anarchist. In any view, he is no patriot, for he is not a loyal citlien. Who but Mr. Sear., and was fortunate, considering his sta tion, to get work as cashier in a small Albany hotel. But he was not content to remain there any longer than was necessary to save a few dollars, . with which he opened a small tea store. Here his remarkable business genius began to develop. As he saved money he began looking for new worlds to conquer and after a thorough investi gation, took up street and sewer con tract work, which he carried pn with great success. He was not . content with small contracts. He went after big business and landed it, together with the necessary backing to operate on a big scale. His success here still was not big enough and he branched out into lighting, and later oil, and still later power and traction. When he took up each succeeding line he studied the details so thoroughly as to become an expert, even making him self an authority on electricity. The financial gulf Mr. Brady- spanned during his liberal lease on life is best estimated by noting that at his death he was a director in sixty big corporations. The contrast is found in a glance back at the beginning of some fifty years ago in the humble Al bany hotel. If success may be gauged by achievement in a given field of en deaver, then Mr. Brady's success was tremendous. army into Mexico without authority of Congress. But he does not ask that authority and announces that inter vention is impossible. It is difficult to perceive on -what grounds the President refuses recogni tion to Huerta. The Mexican Congress, representing the people, has recog nized him. So have the principal Eu ropean powers. Our Ambassador to Mexico has told the whole story of Huerta's accession to power and has explained existing conditions in Mex ico. He concludes with a recommen dation that Huerta be recognized. Having been created by the Mexican Congress, the Huerta government ex ists by right. Controlling every state except Sonora, and holding all the bor der towns except those of that state, and all the seaports. It rules jn fact. Believe as we may that Huerta attained office by the murder of Madero, we cannot ignore . indefinitely the patent fact that he is acknowledged as head of the republic by the great body of the people. Huerta's resignation and the succession of a new provincial President pending an election has been proposed, but Huerta refuses to resign. Mediation between Huerta and the reb el leaders has been suggested, but with whom should we mediate besides Huerta? With Carranza, who holds only Sonora, and not all of that, for he has not been able to take Guaymas! With the leaders of numerous bodies of bandits who overrun other states, but who take a, town only to loot it and ride away? Merely to state the proposition Is to prove its absurdity. So long as recognition is withheld the agitation for intervention will con tinue. The rebels do not ask interven tion; they only ask belligerent rights that they may import arms. If we were to invade Mexico they would make common cause -with Huerta against us. Those who ask interven tion are many of the Americans who . have suffered loss in Mexico, concession-hunters, Mexican schemers, sol- dies hungry for promotion and adven turers hungry for spoils. The Ameri can people as a whole will not hear of it. If the murder of Madero be the sole resentment? BY MOB OR BY WHIM! A circus is advertised to show at Ore gon City on a Sunday, and the District Judge 'issues an injunction restraining the local authorities from any inter ference. Yet the Governor of Oregon ignores and defeats the orderly proc esses of the courts and the regular op eration of civil law by his threat of martial law the last recourse of the state to preserve itself in a grave crisis and the circus does not per form. At Bandon, the community, acting in its own protection and from a pro found sense of injury to its own respect and dignity, resquests an unde strable citizen to leave with the plain intimation that measures will, if nec essary, be taken to enforce its ultima tum. , .' Yet the Governor of Oregon denies to the sovereign people of a munici pality the right to attain a desirable end without the law; but at the same time he asserts his right to rise above the law when his feeling, or sSnse of propriety, or whatever it may' be, is shocked at something or other about to be done somewhere or other in Ore gon. ' ." -' .. If the people of Bandon have ig nored the constituted authorities in doing what they, were practically unit in thinkingought to be done for the public peace, they have not trans gressed more than the Governor of Oregon in doing at Oregon City what he not they thought ought to be done to preserve the tranquillity of a certain Sunday. Is government by executive whim to be preferred to government by the mob? borly spirit will begin to. bear, fruit in co-operation, the farmer will gain the full reward of his labor, and his pride In his success will descend to his chil dren. They will acquire an ambition to stay on the farm and will pity, not envy, the city dweller. There is room for many Denmarks in Oregon. It remains for us to prove that we have as sterling character as the Danes by making these many Den marks. .' The current issue of the Bend Bulle tin, is called an "Annual Development Number" by its proprietor, George Palmer Putnam. Aside from the twelve pages of news that it custom arily uses to "cover" Crook County and Middle Oregon, there are thirty-two pages devoted to exploitation of re sources. Its reference to a modern electrical plant capable of serving a city of 25,000 people will be news to many whose ideas of that region con sider its development in the primitive stage; so, also, will be the statement that "20,000,000,000 feet of timber 13 tributary to-Bend," and that "227,000 acres offer profitable opportunity to settlers." The Bend country is not an undiscovered region of Oregon, by any means, yet this number of the Bulle tin will give reason for sound thought on the part of investors. GERMS IN A NEW HAl'NT. Smokers of cigars, when, they pur chase a fragrant or pungent weed, are wont to snip off the end in an auto matic cutter to be found in every cigar stand. Simple performance, indeed. and one that would seem to be with out any danger so long as the smoker keerjs his fine-era. awav from the blade. reason for withholding recognition o( , matter of fact there is an in Huerta, Servla furnishes a precedent sidious danger in the act," for death . . i 3 n -; .. . i. t -1 j . . ' ..... ..... to suiuo via. uc" mo .runs -"" ana disease lurK in tne little device. Queen were murdered and King Peter From the TJnifed States Public ascended a bloodstained throne, sev- Health Service comes the warning in eral European powers showed their the 6hape of a health .bulletin. It disapprobation by remaining unrepre- brands the cigar cutter as a deadly sented at Belgrade for some time. But uttle disease breeder. they finally renewed full diplomatic jt develops on investigation that the relations when King Peter's rule was smoker almost invariably nuts the accepted by the people. A local rebel- cigar in his mouth after buying it. lion and the forays of bandits are no - excuse for our not following that prec edent. LAWS FOR ALASKA J-RGENT. While the coal fields of Alaska are awaiting development and the Navy and the Pacific Coast are awaiting the supply of fuel they can furnish, Con gress has been fiddling away its time The Senate did practically nothing whjle the House was considering the tariff. The House has done practi cally nothing since the bill Then he sights the cigar cutter and proceeds with the snipping process. Hence from the secretions of the mouth left on the cutter many orders of disease-producing germs are dis tributed. Tuberculosis and even more dreaded afflictions may be passed on in this manner. This being the case it would seem that the automatic cutter's doom is sealed in these sanitary days. Many fastidious and cautious smokers, if a tobacco user may be said to have such was sent Qualities, long ago noted the danger dux tne average smoiter sun utilizes A NOBLE DEED. Let us not forget to give full credit to the people of Silverton and vicinity for their share in the fresh air move ment in behalf of Portland mothers and children. How many of those who believe Portland is responding nobly "by contributing $2000 to the cause realize what a great share of work and responsibility has been shouldered by the people of one town and Its environs? - It is a new thought, at least In thls part of the West, that' duty to aid, com fort and repair a city's unfortunates rests anywhere but in the city itself. But at Silverton is a' community num bering possibly 2 000 souls which says to its big neighbor of more than 200,- ooo. You have your poor, your snut ins. We have boundless fresh air, comfortable homes and no poverty or misfortune of ojur own to tax our re sources. .Delve into the quarters of the poor, search your tenements, ex plore your basements, seek the moth ers and children whom a vacation in the open, smiling country will benefit. Send them to us. We will take them all. We 'Will house them, feed them, restore the color to their cheeks. It will cost you their carfare and no more." Where in the history, of Ore gon is there anything like this? Though not intended in such spirit, the pro. posal from Silverton has challenged Portland's forethought, charity ' and enterprise. We have only In a meas ure provided parks and public play grounds. We have twice refused to spend more, although urged to do so by those who have investigated the city's needs. We have gone through Summer after Summer without organ ized effort to supply a deficiency that a small community in the Willamette Valley knows exists and undertakes to fill for us. We did not even think of the need or the remedy ourselves. Shall we hot read a lesson in this friendly, nob!0 effort of neighbors, and profit by ft? It Is dangerous business to-suggest material return for wholehearted char Ity. Not for the world would we. seen in this enterprise a motive other than desire to help others. Yet the fact remains, although not contemplated by the originators of the plan, that tall- verton is securing a better grade of publicity than the most handsomely colored and widely circulated booklet could offer. Growth and prosperity of a district rest not wholly in develop ing resources or Industry. The good haracter of the people who there re side is no inconsiderable asset. What pleasanter prospect could there be than the making of one's home In a community of wholesome generous. neighborly people? Who today would not have faith In his conquest of hap piness If he selected Silverton for his endeavor? We trust and believe that that com munity will be repaid in a thousand ways and in a thousand fold, and we know that not the least of these-Te-wards will be an inner glow that comes warmest from performance of worthy work not Imposed, but willingly, cheer fully, anxiously sought and undertaken. The professor in politics is becom ing quite common. When E. Benjamin Andrews broke into the ring in the nineties, he was hooted out of college, but now we have Professor Wilson in the White House, Professor Merriam ran for Mayor of Chicago, and Pro fessor Buchtel was Governor of-Colo rado. The professors who became act ive in the Bull Moose -party last year were numerous, and now Professor A. B... Hatton, formerly of the TJni versity of Chicago, has joined them. He seeks the Progressive nomination for Mayor of Cleveland. These are great days for the professors. EJVTTIXG IP THE WINTER'S FORK Bow One Fsmer Provide Mam. Bieos, Laird and Sausasre. - DALLAS, Or, Aug. 2. (To the Edi tor.) Having lived on a farm for 25 years I am going to try to give The Oregonian's readers some of our ex perience and try to show why there are a great many advantages over city life on the farm for a large family of small means. This article will show how we raise our supply of bacon, lard, etc We have a hoghouse built of small logs. It is 9x12 feet. It is built with hed roof and faces the south. It is partitioned off in a small hallway about four feet wide for one to enter and feed the hogs without having to go In the part where they feed. The hogs enter their part of the house by a small door in the west end of the building. About the first of October every year we buy three pigs that are just about old enough to wean. We prefer barrows to sows when we can get them. We get Poland China pigs when we can. For the first month we keep them in the hoghouse. Then we let them out in the pasture part . of the time and by December they are large enough that they cannot crawl through fences and we let them have the run of a pasture which has a large open shed In It. There they Winter except that in times of severe storms they are shut up in the hoghouse. But generally they like the open shed with plenty of old straw In it for bedding. We find they do not do well when they are shut up for any length of time. Their diet consists' of separator milk. potatoes and scraps generally. When the milk supply begins to fail In the Summer they are fed all kinds of garden truck nearly anything that comes handy. In September we have a small orchard of the sugar plums to It was eighty years ago on July 2 9 that William Wilberforce, father of the anti-slavery movement, died, and a month later the British Parliament passed the law abolishing slavery in the British dominions. He began movement which led to bloody wars in the United States and in South Af rica, but which has now encompassed the world. He was the original aboil- tionist and , for forty-five years .he fought from his seat in the House of Commons for the cause to which he devoted his life. So ashamed Is New York of Sing Sing prison since the recent revela tions that Judge Dike, in sentencing a criminal recently, said: On "account of the revelation of conditions, hesitate to send you there at this time. The awful blot upon the state, made by the isclosures of what goes on there in Sing Sing, makes me pause. , That is a confession that the law, as embodied in the Legislature, is crim inal. tin t r t Via dnato Cnnrrun 1 nnm lnally In session from day to day, its "e disseminator. Now that the v, fflor rlrow ih.lr government nas issued an aries regularly, but one-half of that warning the unobservant should be body sits with Its hands folded or with protected by a new health ordinance doing away with the ominous cutter. its tongue wagging about nothing in - particular, while it waits for the other half to act. When some Senator at- I A gentle FIXANMAL GENICS. tempts to start action on behalf of I We are reminded by the death of '. Alaska, some other Senator, who op- Anthony N. Brady in London a few- poses the particular measure in ques- days ago that quiet, efficience may win tion, interposes his veto. . its way to the very top in any field of The people have a right to demand endeavor. -Brady was one of the great that both houses of Congress shall financiers of America, yet in no way work at the same time on measures does he suggest the ordinary .type of which urgently call for action. We aggressive, dominating industrial cap- never hear of one half of a factory tains. He was merely a student of stopping operation while it awaits ma- men and business, a financial genius terial from the other half. No bust- with "an infinite capacity for. taking ness could survive' such time-wasting pains. methods. Congress is wasting not only in many respects Mr. Brady' was . Its own time, for wh.ich the people about the sort of financial hero we have paid, but the time of the thou- should expect to meet between the sands of Alaskans who await the Gov- pages of a Sunday school story. He ernment's action to open the coal- set out In life with nothing except na fields.- It is wasting the excessive price tlve grit and energy, took a humble now paid for coal for the Pacific fleet job, saved his nickels and- dimes and for the shipping industries of. the through frugal living and good habits, Pacific Coast. - . started in the tea business through The promptness with which, Con- having learned by night study the in gress passed the rvewiands' arbitration tricacies of the trade and proceeded bill -when a strike threatened" to tie jh the course of a lifetime, to amass up the Eastern railroads proves that something like $100,000,000. All-this Congress can act on other subjects time it is recorded that he maintained than the tariff when driven to, -do so an absolute loyalty to his friends, kept by urgent necessity. The ease of out of financial scandals and did not Alaska is equally urgent. There is misuse the vast power that was his. no essential ditference between , pa- What a different man from the usual ralysls of a developed section like the financial prince Eastern states and prevention of de- Mr. Brady was a small man, weigh velopment In a new section of country hng about 114 pounds and being five like Alaska. It is equally the duty of feet seven inches ill height. He was Congress to prevent obstruction of es- always kindly and unobtrusive. -If w tablished industry as in the East, and may believe the testimony of many on to remove obstacles from development servers, associates and close personal of new industries as in Alaska. friends. He found in an absolute mas- The interests of Alaska and of the tery of every, business matter, requir- wnoie racinc toast aemana mat tne iner his attention the only weapon Government build a railroad from the needed for playing .the big game pf coast or "soutnwestern Alaska through finance and playing it well. Other ft the coal fields to the Yukon River. No nanciers might be domineering, selfish " other power can be relied upon to tyrannical and aloof. If they chose, but complete the job. Private capital Brady made It -plain those attributes would buna only to the coal fields, for I were not a necessary part of the role .the extension of the Yukon would The -man's beginning was truly an not pay for several years. The Gov- unpretentious -one. His folks were ernment should lease the road on poor, . he had an ordinary education Newspapers of every shade of opin ion are hopping on the spoils system oker In the Income tax sections of the Underwood-Simmons bill. Con gress has been smoked out and must either throw the shield of the civil service law. over the hundreds of men to, be. employed In collecting the In come ' tax or must shamelessly and penly gratify its appetite for spoils. Japanese fishermen on strike on the Vancouver side of Puget Sound may coerce Chinese,' Greeks, and Indians, but the white men they- run off musjl be a puerile lot., A few husky Colum bia River- Finns are needed up there to preserve the peace. The story of the taking of Mount Bagsak by the American Army which General Pershing led against the Moros should end any doubt that American soldiers would emulate the deeds of the Japanese at Port Arthur, should occasion arise. The politicians on the Chicago School Board have been defeated by Mrs. Ella Flagg Young, the superintendent, and she has won her strike. That shows what one determined woman can do when backed by public opinion. - THE EXAMPLE OF DENMARK. The story of Denmark's rise to pre eminence among the agricultural conn tries of the world, as told by Hector MacPherson In his letters to The Ore gonlan, should serve as an inspiration to those who bewail the decadence and backwardness of agriculture in" this country. A country shorn of its rich est provinces and with little left but bog and sanddune, has become a model to the world through the unaided ef forts of its own people. . The Danes saw that Character is the first essential to success. They had character to begin with, or they would not have made the beginning, but they proceeded to strengthen it. . Rigid economy of their meager resources and in production and marketing was nec essary, therefore they resorted to co operation all along the line. Only by application of science could their nig gard soil be made to yield a fair re turn, therefore agricultural education took front rank in their school curric ulum. Their home market was too small to consume the country's farm produce, hence a market must be found abroad. This required the es tablishment and rigid maintenance of a high standard of quality; which was possible only by community actiqni. It required that every' farmer be a good farmer, for one bad, shiftless farmer, If permitted to market his inferior products, could seriously damage the good name of a hundred others. -. Successful practice of all these methods bred pride in the farmers calling, which inspired him to con tlnued effort. The word picture given by Mr. MacPherson of Carl Busch showing his well-kept, diversified thirty-acre tfarm and then surveying "the splendid landscape which stretched away to the northward" be speaks this pride. Carl Busch tound pleasure in the good work of his own hand and brain and in that landscap which had been made splendid by the efforts of himself and his neighbors, That pride felt by the parents explains why the children go to the agricultural school and willingly return to : the farm. . ' What the Danes have done in .the face of so many obstacles we in Oregon can surely do in a land thrice blessed with fertile soil, abundant wood and water, equable climate and almost un. limited home market. With trolley lines reaching through the valleys, we need good roads to make every farm accessible and small farms to permit Intensive cultivation Und to promote growth of rural communities in plac of .Isolated, farmers.. Then, the neigh- W1IEHE WRONG IN WEALTH BEGINS They. Who Devise and They Who In herit Take Indne Advantage. ' PORTLAND, Aug. 4. To the Edi tor.) On street corners, park benches and other places, well-meaning, public spirited citizens often congregate to argue thus: John Smidt makes $1, 000,000 a year; ergo, the whole system of society must be wrong that makes it possible for-one man to earn $1,000,000 a year, while others that do useful and necessary work get only a bare living. Suppose you well-meaning citizens produce your own light or get it sup plied by a co-operative lighting plant at the lowest possible price and at that price it cost you ?1 a year. Supposing now John Smidt comes along and offers you better light and at half the price you are paying, you certainly are going to accept his offer and so is your' neighbor and by and by the whole civi lized world. You are making 50 cents on the deal, while John Smidt may make only a penny, but the millions of light users may bring up his pennies to $1,000,000 a year. Where is here the moral wrong? Is this not fair and square? I know that not all the millions are made In such a fair way, but what I want to show is that the fact that a man makes $1,000,000 a year is not priori evidence, that he is a crook or that there is something Wrong with the system of society. The "moral wrong of the possession of great wealth comes usually in the second generation. Men of honor, of manliness and of everything that is best in man, who would rather disinherit and disown" a child than see him win in an athletic contest bv taklner imorooer advantage over his competitors do not feel the least twinge of conscience, not the Half a Century Ago ripen and we turn them over to the I least reflection on their honor, by leav- hogs and It is astonishing how fast they fatten on them. By the time the plums are gone there is some field corn and then they are fed grain for about a month in dead earnest. We butcher them about the last of Novem ber. They are confined . to the hoghouse most of the time for the last month before they are killed. We have a large iron Kettle and all the rendering of lard is done out of -doors thus saving the muss in the house. The men do all the work. It takes nearly a day to render lard properly. We make the Sausage and pack it in small stone jars and set them in the cellar; covering them with melted lard. We make a brine and pour over all the 'scraps that-do not make sausage. using them to cook at our convenience. The fat of the jowls are rendered into lard. We salt the hams, shoulders and sides with rock salt laying them on a platform in the smokehouse. There they lle for a month being examined and resalted In places that seem to need it occasionally. Then they are thorough ly washed, hung up and smoked for about two weeks more or less, when they are ready to store away from mice, flies, etc. M. D. TWO SIDES TO EARLY CLOSING. ng them an Inheritance of thousands or millions. They do not reflect that by doing so they give their children an unfair advantage in the -contest of life over their less favored competi tors. And boys manly and true, knight ly and noble hearted, who would tight to the last drop of their blood over even a suggestion that they took a foul advantage over their competitors in a race or other athletic contest, do not blush or hesitate to take advantage over their competitors in -the race of life by accepting an inheritance. And a cowardly advantage it Is, in a re public and democracy, where personal service is the only standard of merit. Some will say this would be leveling society down to the least fortunate. On the contrary, -rightly understood this is meant to give equal opportunities to the less favored. PHILIP WEISS. TYPICAL LETTER FROM SOCIALIST He Can't From The Oregonian of August 5, 1S$3. The citizens of Albany and vicinity met at the Courthouse on the 23d ult. and organized a company of militia. The following gentlemen were elected officers: John Rowlands, Captain; A. Hannon, First Lieutenant; S.."E. Young, Second Lieutenant; James Elkins. Or derly Sergeant; R. Fox, Second Ser geant; William Tweedale, Third Ser geant; J. W. Jordan. Fourth Sergeant; John Purdom, First Corporal; John Foster, Second Corporal; E. y. Beach, Third Corporal; N Wright, Fourth Cor poral. Washington Territory election re turns for Delegate to Congress: Ray ner, 1262; Cole, 1462; Turner, 102. Cincinnati.' July 29. A Lexington, Ky., telegram says the rebels attacked our forces at Richmond, Ky.. and after an hour's fighting the latter were com pelled to fall back to the Kentucky River; badly cut up. Memphis, July 22. Jackson advices to the 15th say that Sherman's Army left for Vlcksburg after the entire destruc tion "of Jackson. Marysville, Cal., July 31. Yesterday was the occasion. of a large mass meet ing and barbecue by the Democracy of Yuba, Colusa, Sutter and Butte Coun ties. Speeches were made by Hon. Tod Robinson, ex-Governors Weller and Blgler, J. M. Coffroth and N. G. White sides. In the evening a long torchlight procession paraded the streets, headed by Chris Andre's San Francisco band. Arrangements .had been made for speaking in the evening on Second street, opposite the Western Hotel. So great a number crowded on. the bal oony around the building- opposite the hotel that its supports gave way, pre cipitating the whole mass into the street. A Mr. Sharp, of this city, was Instantly killed and between 30 and 40 seriously injured. Mr. Whitley last evening brought down from Cariboo, via Victoria 'ind Oiympla, two very fine African camels. They are at present quartered in Ben nett & Quimby's stables and will be exhibited this morning. These are two of a cargo imported from Africa to California some years ago with the in tention of using them for carrying goods to the Southern mines. The Victoria Colonist says that Mount Baker was in a violent state of eruption on Saturday, July 25. . .. The heiress of the Guggenheim mil lions can have as many or as few husbands as she will.- There are-millions of good women, Who marry for better or for w&rse, who are the main stay of the Nation. ' The "new Ambassador to Germany complains that the Embassy at Berlin isn't large enough to permit a visit from his mother-in-law. Splendid structure. President Wilson's manner of dress is being closely copied by public offi cials around the Capitol. What a lot of fun a humorist could have with the toadies. ;"?:. That-New York theatrical concern which offered Bryan a job at $50,000 a year as press agent should not over look Oregon's Governor. No, Geraldlne, the fact that Secre tary Garrison was impressed by the Vancouver post does not imply that he is a post-impressionist. Saturday Nisht Shopping Is Boon Many Working People. PORTLAND, Aug. 2. (To the Ed itor.) There is a general acquiescence to the pithy saying "majority rules," and since The Oregonian has printed so much of the opinions of a benevolent minded minority who sincerely believe it is to the best interest of the com: munity to close stores Saturday nights, I beg to speak these few words in be half of ithe majority who are benefited by having the stores kept open Satur day evenings. " . I do not deny that this is hard on the clerks, especially the women; that many of them are too tired to enjoy tneir free Sunday, and that it is especially hard in Summer. I agree that no per- on of leisure should do any shopping after 6 o'clock, and I even think men and women who can do so should shop in the morning., I deplore the fact that department stores and others for the sake of a .financial gain should sacri fice the health and happiness of their mployes. . . . y But the side -I uphold Is tnat or tne srreat number of men and women who have no other' time to do their buying except Saturday night, to whom Satur day night closing would cause more hardship than that now endured by overworked clerks. I mean, for ex ample, laborers, their wives who are kept at home all day wonting ror tneir children; factory men and their wives, stenographers, dressmakers, men. and women employed in other capacities in offices. ' Last month I asked the wlte or a laboring man what she thought of the Saturday closing act. Her eldest daugh ter, aged 16, Is employed in a local de partment store. The woman said: , Oh. I hope .they don t maae mem quit Saturday nights. My husband gets $2.50 a day. He gets terrmiy tirea. He comes home with his pay envelope Saturday afternoon, and I say to him. Come on. Alter, dinner - we w-iii go down town and see the stores.' He en joys that. He likes the lights. He buys the baby shoes and gets tne other kids what they need to keep them de cent. We all go down together and choose them. He used to drink all his pay up when we lived in Brownsville. You see. he came home tired, 'mere was no place S- could go with him; he used to go out by himself. We were so poor once up there, we had to asK lur neip. -vtyi tie iiuc uiueoi emj awtul tired. She says ner ieet acne. and I know they do, but think of all the heaps of folks it helps. That is my plea. Think of the heaps of folks It helps! I doubt not the Con Burners' League and the Industrial Wel fare Commission mean well, but I wish they would think of some of the rest of us wage-earners, too and ask if It not better for the minority to suffer that the majority may live? Who that sees the families downtown together and the tired-looking men and women making . their purchases baturday nights can doubt this? A WORKING WOMAN, Oregon hop pickers, most contented of all who gather the fragrant crop, know what to expect if the Industrial Worker gets into'the yards next month. If there is anything in a name, Sec retary O'Shaughnessy ought to be able to "handle the Mexican situatfon just where it sits. Mayor Albee had 2840 visitors dur ing July. Without Inside information we can guess what 2839 of them wanted. Chicago contemplates gift of a cook book to every bride. Why not, also, a box of dyspepsia tablets for the groom? Huerta. says he will not resign in his hour of trouble. Thaf a what his vic tim, Madero, said." Calling home an Ambassador .Just to "fire'" him is a Bryanic way of sav ing his face. Enough having been killed, the Chi nese rebellion is announced as nearly suppressed. John D. says he la still a boy at 73 And still saving up for old age. The story of Noah is found on stone. A hard tale, indeed. Even a "trace" would be welcome. of precipitation Express "melons'' are due for woeful shrinkage. See Anything- Wronar In the Leach Activities, M'COY ' Ore July, 27, 1913. Editor Oregonian. In todays Oregonian, and In an Editorial, "Act'on needed not suplneness" you say ljt A more or less condemnation of the Authoreties of Portland for their supperession of'vio lence In the Streets. 2nd Aand their is complaint against the people of Ban don for driving the ANARCHIST Edi tor from the town. Mr. Editor, was there any violence or disorder of any nature, until the Au thorities raided and assaulted the as sembling people? I inquire, was there any violence or disorder? .1 have been unable from reading the Oregonian and Journal to discover it. In what did the disorder and violence consist? And was It agitating and educating the workers to stand together and demand better conditions under which to work? 2nd, Why do you -characterize Leach, The Anarchist Editor. What state ment did. Leach publish that are Anar chistic? .What statements In his paper classes or defines him as an Anarchist. Is the fact that Editor Leach is a Socialist cause sufficient to characterize him as an anarchist and to justify riotous mobs to destroy his property and drive him from the community and from his adopted home. -Having" received- similar treatment in the long ago were William Loyd Garrison and Wendel s Phillips Anarchist Editors and agitators and along with Leach do you characterize and condemn them as Anarchists? Please to Inform us why Leach is an Anarchist and why Garrison and Phil lips before him were Anarchists. Our ear is Attentive. Twenty-five Years Agt BIT THE DOG DEMANDS NO WAGES Ills Advantages on Farm and Elsewhere Are Pointed Out. - SATSOP, Wash., Aug. 2. tTo the Editor.) I have been an interested reader of the late letters in The Ore gonian concerning our good friend, the dog, and agree with the writers that dogs should not be allowed to roam the city streets; but when a man comes out and Bays that the dog is no good and of no use in the country I want him to show me, or give me a chance to show him. He says a boy will drive In the cattle, etc,' just as well as a dog. I want to say in the first place that a dog asks no wages, all he wants Is fair treat ment, and I have Airedales that will drive the chickens, sheep or cattle Into their proper places and keep them there while I eat my dinner or attend to other worl The same dog will find me all . the birds that the law allows In a day, will tree a bear or cougar on the side and will not let a hobo, L W. W. or an Indian taxk back to my wife In my absence. I would like to say to these people that if they do not like a dog, do not own one, but, for the love of Mike, leave us alone that do appreciate them. It reminds me of an article I saw in The Oregonian last Winter telling of a hunt taken by a certain Portland crowd. In this article it said "no pumpguns allowed in this crowd," then it went on to say that every man got the limit before 9 A. M. It set me thinking what an awful crime would have been com mitted if some man with a pumpgun had been there on the ground and got the limit. 15 minutes before 9. I would hate to condemn the collie, the bird dog and pit bull just because I like an other breed more. A man is entitled to an opinion, is he nott I agree with the man that said: "The fetter I know some people the - more-I think of my dog." Be fair, always fair. ' R. T. K. JAMES K. SEARS. SAILOR DISCUSSES SINGLE MESS Wardroom" Diet Wonld Tempt Him to Serve Maximum Period. S ALTAI R, Or., Aug. 2. (To the Ed itor.) The Oregonian's recent edito rial on "Democracy and the Navy" leaves much unsaid, and perhaps you will permit a retired "gob" to "pipe up." When I first 'read of the proposed single mess for officers and enlisted men, I wondered whether under the new regime the men were to wax fat and saucy on officers' fare or the offi cers grow gaunt on a single diet com posed, or rather decomposed, of salt horse and other nautical delicacies such as "wireless" (known to the landsman as macaroni) and Cape Horn stew, an alleged admixture of hard tack and sweepings from the gallev deck. If the ward room (officers) bill ot fare is adopted recruiting officers need no longer hold forth with alluring posters to show what a path of roses awaits the coming of the "rookey." What a hardship-it has always been for the humble and lowly "flatfoot" to express his true and candid opinion of his division officer at mess, know ing that that dignitary was far from earshot, lounging over .-his wine and cigars In the ward room. I trust that The Oregonian will no tify its readers as soon as this mo mentous question is settled. If the Navv Department sees its way clear to feed the enlisted personnel on ward room diet I feel certain that several thousand ex-man-o'-warsmen, like my self, will be only too glad to re-enlist, and stick through 30 years of service to retirement and three-quarters pay. A-FOUR -YEAR-MAN From The Oregonian of August 5, 1SS8. New York, Aug. 4. President Charles Francis Adams, of the Union Pacific, last Wednesday had a short conference with Henry Villard about the joint lease of the Oregon Railway & Naviga tion Company. Villard Bald today that he learned from Adams that he still favors the lease. J. M. Redington, publisher of the Heppner Gazette, has given up the de sire of getting rich suddenly by specu lating in Walla Walla real estate, and has purchased the Puyallup Commerce. The following suggestion relative to the location of the Skidmore fountain has been .received by The Oregonian: "Would It not be well, if possible, to change the location of the Bkidmore fountain to the intersection of Sixth and Morrison streets?" J. H. Smith, railroad contractor, ad vertises for a thousand men to work on the Coeur d'Alene railroad. N. J.. Blagen will begin work Imme diately on the proposed four-rstory building, corner of C and First streets, 100x95, which will, bo- built expressly for W. C. Noon & Co. About 20 ex-Union soldiers held an enthusiastic meeting In Justice Tuttle's office last -evening for the purpose of organizing a Harrison and Morton cam paign club. Major A. T. Sears pre sided, R, T. Chamberlain acting as sec retary. Navigation on the Upper Willamette River has been suspended for some days In consequence of low water. Tho Oregon Pacific Railroad Company's steamer ' William . M. - Hoag has been hauled off temporarily. None of the O. R. & N. Company's boats is running above the mouth of the YamhilL Civic Art Commlaaloi, PORTLAND. Aug. 4. (To the Edi tor.) We note In the press that the Civic Art Commission has had under consideration a matter of vital impor tance to the property owners of the Peninsula that is soon to come before the Council for adjustment. In behalf of a "large number of interested peo ple I ask The Oregonian to give the personnel of this commission and what portion of the city they represent, and also whose interests. W. F. DICKENS. The members of the Civic Art Com mission as appointed by City Commis sioners Dieek and Brewster are the following: E. F. Lawrence, architect; Albert E. Doyle, architect; Joseph P. Newell, engineer; George C. Mason, contractor; Robert H. Strong, of the Corbett estate; Arthur' H. Devers, of Closett & Devers; City Commissioners Dieck and Brewster. ONE WAY TO GROW GOOD CITIZErVS Subscriber Believes Bible Reading in Schools Helps the Country. PORTLAND, Aug. 2. (To the Ed itor.) How came he to be an I. W. W., and how could he have been saved? Who were his father and mother, and how did they start him?. Solomon said to "train up a child In the way he should go and when he is old he will not depart from it." If all youth had proper instruction early, perhaps the majority would grow to be better citi zens. " Would not the teaching or reading of the Bible daily in all public schools tend to make better citizens of the young people soon to succeed us? Those who heard Judge McGinn introduce ex President Roosevelt last year at - the Tabernacle were amazed at his splen did address, with his Bible text. And perhaps the extraordinary' common sense that he puts into many of his decisions comes from his great knowl edge of the Bible. Harvey Scott was a great man, a great student of the Bible, without which much of hie greatness might have been dimmed. The recent action of the Legislature of Pennsylvania in enacting a law re quiring the reading In the public schools of a brief - passage from the Bible each day, . without' comment, shows the trend of . the" times. The plan of Bible study in North Dakota public schools is of great in terest, and received with favor by all peopled There 1s no history of the Hebrew people or literature that Is acceptable to all branches of the Christian church. Bible study was prescribed, and any version. Catholic or Protestant, may be used. Our schools must not be mixed up in sectarian disputes, but a knowledge and study - of -the greatest history in the world, the . greatest moral laws, and sweetest and purest language, surely . must tend to reduce the number of followers of I. W. W.'s, Holy Rollers, etc., and surely will up lift and bring the people nearer, a re gard for law and order, and create a desired commendation of a Mayor for wishing peace and fair dealing, rather than a desire to. recall him. for protect ing our flag from insult. YOUR READER FOR 20 YEARS. South Sea Information. PORTLAND, Aug. 2. (To the Edi tor. Please Inform roe where I can get correct information on the Island of Tahiti In the South Seas. HARRY STARK. Go to reference department of Public Library. In the Accident Column. New York Press. "Did you ever play polo?" "No, but I fell off the top of a clothes-horse once with a hammer in my hand trying to fix a gas fixture." The Fljlngr Frosr ot Java. Harper's Weekly. -Th Javanese frog is a creature measuring between 15 and 25 Inches. The skin of its back is pale blue . and by night" looks dark green or olive brown. The frog remains motionless during the day, with eyes sheltered from the light and with belly up, clinging to its support by adhesive cushions and by its belly, which - is provided with a sticky -covering, - and It is hardly distinguishable from the objects that surround It. At night fall It begins Its hunt for the mammoth crickets on which it feeds, making leaps covering seven feet of ground. During the leap the play of lungs filled with air swells its body. To descend from a height It spreads wide its claws and, dropping, rests upon Its feet.