7. ;" 0 TIIE OREGON DAILY 'JO LTRyAL, . POHTLAXP, TUESDAY EVKXmp, JULY 28; 1003.: EDITORj,I-AL COcTWcTWENTcXND TIEDY TOPICS Zlf -'BY. v C- S. JACKSON T .' Jtotumaf HILLING OF POUS.TAM'A-NIE (By Paul 0 Laney.) JOURNAL PUBLISHING t COMPANY, Proprietors. Address! THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, Fifth and Yamhill Sts., Portland, On CITY OFFICIAL PAPER. AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER Entered at fi Postomce of Portland, Oregon, (or transmlrslon through the malls as second -cla j matxer. Postage for single copies lor an t, 10, or 11-page paper, 1 cant; 16 to II pages, I Dti; over 21 paes, S cents. TELGPMONESi Business Office Oi gon. Main 600; Columbia, 708, Sudltorla1 Rooms Oregon Main 160. , SUBSCRIPTION RATC8. Terma by Carrier. The Dally Journal, one year IB.Cl The Dally Journal six months J. 00 Tho Dally Journal, three months 1.S0 The Daily Journal, by the week .10 Terma by Mall, The Dally Journal, by mall, qna year..l4.C The Dally Journal, by mall, six months. 1.28 The Dally Journal, by mall, three montha 1.15 The Dally Journal, by malL one month. .51 The Semi-Weekly Journal. The Semi-Weekly Journal eight to twelve pagea each Issue, all the newa and full narket reports, one year $1.60. The Vtekly Journal. The Weekly Journal 100 columna of read ing each Issue. Illustrated, full market re ports, one year, $1.00. ordera and small Remittances ahould be made by drafts, postal notea. expreoa amounts are acceptable In one and two-cent postage stamp. , THE JOURNAL, P. O. Box 111. Portland. Oregon. The hella of thla life are the only ones that need trouble us; we ought to con cern ourselves with real people abodt us, with this life, Instead of with hells or heavens, or saints or angels, or ghosts of which we know but little. The word sal vation will be changed, and In Its place will come the word education; not the school -room education, but a leading out, a developing of nil the possibilities and capabilities of our being. Salvation from Incompletness. There Is nothing grander, higher, better than that a complete man. Rev. Thornton Mills. The killing of Pous-tam-a-nle, the Warm Springs chief, by We-wah, the Pluta, and his band of warriors, was one of the moat treacherous, and outrageoua murders In tha early history of Oregon Indian warfare. The Plutea were the bitterest enemies of the whites And on account of the friendly disposition of tha Warm Sprlnga Indians toward tha white people, they never lost an opportunity to exhibit their treachery toward this tribe of peace. It was in 1887. according to the recollection of Knox Huston, an Oregon pioneer of 40 years, who now resides at Prlnevllle, when the life tof Pous-tam-arnle was sacrificed. We-wah was a sub-chief of the Plutes and led a marauding band under old Paulina, the famous bandit chief. Poua-tam-a-nle was at the head 'of a small hunting party composed of the Warm Springs warriors In the Trout Creek country. Their mission was a search for game. Old We-wah and his band were on one of the murderous marauding trips In the John Day country. Among their many depredatlona on this same trip they destroyed the Clark ranch on the John Day River, now known as Burnt Ranch, and had atolen a number of cattle and horses. Coming on down into the Trout Creek country they struck the trail of Pous-tanrwa-nle and his party and followed It like sleuth hounds, seeing that the band was a small one. They finally came upon the Warm Sprlnga hunters who were camped in a small" cluster of willows In Board Hollow near Trout Creek, about 10 miles from where the town of Ashwood now stands. Although the Plutes largely outnumbered the Warm Springs hunters, they did not see fit to attack them In open field. Treachery was ever their preference and they used It this time. Old We-wah went out on a'stde hill, alone, overlooking the camp of Pous-tam-a-nle and called to the Warm Springs chief to pay him a visit . Poua-tam-a-nle. demurred at first, but We-wah begun to persuade. Among other things he said: "Pous-tam-a-nle, have we not always been friends? Did we not hunt together when we were boys? Long before the white man came we ahared the same hunting grounds, camped by the same springs, shot Into the same band of deer, sat beside each other on the same stream! Are we not still frlenda and cannot we sit and talk together again? Come to me alone and we will talk of old times together!" The Warm Springs chief had long been the friend of the whites and had learned to love peace. While he knew of the treachery of the Plutea, yet the appeal of the friend of his childhood reached his heart. Laying aside his arms he left his com panions and climbed the steep hill to grasp Wc-wah's hand. His men, however, were not so confiding and they lay upon their arms and watched their chief approach the Piute leader. AROUND THE CORRIDORS No one loves a Joke better than Assistant cheated out of his meal and with true in Clty Attorney Flttgerald and in his capacity stlnct he son ate oft the claws and in a aa prosecutor in the Police Court, he finds short time the fish was giving "Billy" that sufficient latitude for his proclivity. Pre- satisfied feeling which follows a hearty re- quently, as a result, the entire court room is past. " thrown Into a paroxysm of laughter. ' "Billy" refuses to bunk In his own bed and The other day an Innocent-looking German Insists on retiring: with the first fire laddie was on trial for drunkenness. He had de- who adjourns to the upper story in tha nled his guilt and the officer, a fine-looking evening. He loves to play with the boys and npn of Erin, stepped to the stand to tell the Is constantly searching their pockets rbr story of arresting' Rudolph. sweet-meats. He is not afraid of the dogs During the examination It developed that about the house, but likes to play with them, the defendant could not 'speak KngUsh, and Thus far he is in awe of the horses, for they so Mr, Fltigerald called to his assistance a look so large to him. Whenever the fire man named Schlegel. gong strikes "Billy" seeks refuge under a "Now, Mr. Schlegel," began Mr, Fltigerald, chair so as not to be run over. j "I want you to tell this German what this The members of this company think tbejf Irishman In the witness chair, says about have the finest pet in the city and money WOMEN'S WAGES. The article reprinted yesterday In The Journal from the New York, World on "Sex in Industry." 1 of wider significance than to Massachusetts, whence the figures were taken. . The report of the Bureau of Labor statistics of that state shows a tremendous Increase since 1870 in the number of women employed in gainful pursuits something over 150 per cent. Along with this comes a decrease In the marriage and birth rates and a great In crease in the number of divorces. But the matter has still another aspect. Has the entry of women Into the army of wage workers added to the aggregate re ceipts of labor? Out of the wages of labor must come the support df the vast majority ' of the families of the country. Do these families in fact make any better support by the A'ork of women? The Individual man welcomes the wages of his wsjnenklnd aa help in meeting the family expenses and the education of the children. But In the gross, do they,' really, help? One consideration makes this doubtful. Women's wages are much less than men's In every class of work which they have divided with men or actually usurped, wages are. reduced. It is only common arithmetic to Say that when women take the place of men at greatly reduced wagea, the sura total of the families' support is reduced by that much. Man's duty is to support his family, and when woman enters the field of labor, she Is competing with her own bread winner, -And the competition Is deadly. It is doubtless true that In some kinds of work women are superior to men. It Is for that very reason that she ought to get better pay in that work than men. But she does not get It. Leaving sentiment aside and viewing the Question in a purely mechanical aspect, It iaj demonstrated that the work of women In some lines costs men more than It nets. Let us suppose a great enterprise, say a depart ment store, that requires a centaln expend! tore of physical energy. Imagine the work era as so many Inanimate machines requir ing fuel- to give them the power to accom plish the work required. If the employer does not furnish all the fuel, that la if he does not pay wages equivalent to a living, It is manifest that somebody else must furnish it. If the two thousand or more young women who work In this cjty do not average a living out of their wages If the fuel sup plied is not enough to run the machine, the deficit Is made up by those on whom they are dependent that Is to say, the men. In so far as the employer falls short of paying living wages to his women helpers, he Is not furnishing the capital to run his own busi ness. The public furnishes It for him, In the food,, clothes and lodging It supplies to the machinery of the business the wuge worklng girls. The trouble, therefore, Is a double trouble. Indeed It IS trebled and quadrupled. Women working outside the household for less than a living are as costly ns any other machine that does not pay Its running expenses. The men displaced must crowd Into other branches with a consequent competition and reduction of wages. And more than all that, the low wages of women tPiid in some degree to lower the wages of men in their own voca tions. Low wages are sympathetic and poor wages are catching. .The unions of men have doubtless qualified this tendency, but tht-y have not altogether counteracted It. If women must work, It concerns not them only, but men that their work shall be remunerative, and in reality, and not In appearance only, add to the family exchecquer. While men are striking for higher .wages for themselves, they are overlooking an Im portant element oftfle labor question. Some time ago the brewery drivers ' struck for higher wages. They were getting $18 a week and beer money thrown in, about as much as the monthly wage of many women em ployes, without lemonade even. And yet the class of women's work requires more skill, tact and talent, and Is more wearisome and wearing to mind and body. The principal cause of this difference Is th young women as a rule have homes and are cared for. They, can afford, or think they can, to work for email wages for extra spending money. But It Is not altogether certain that it would not pay men in tho long run to keep their women at home, even by paying them the wages they now earn. At any rate, the question is a problem and Is worth considering. THE COUNTY SCANDAL. It Is well for the people of Multnomah County to remember that the investigation into past mismanagement of the affairs of the county has but Just begun. The expert's report filed nearly four months ago dealt with only a single department. His inquisi tion into other branches of the county gov ernment is In progress, and months must elapse before It Is completed. From time to time he will present reports, as the examina tion of the several departments Is succes sively completed. Not ull of the rottenness that has existed will be laid bare, for some of it lies beyond the scope of the expert's earch. Not all of the taxpayer's money that was wasted or stolen will be recovered, for much of It is gone beyond recall. Not all of the grafters and boodlers who plied their trade at the expense of the community will be fully ex posed. Not all of the dishonest or Incom petent officials who were responsible will re ceive the punishment which they deserve. The Impossibility of fully righting all the wrongs that have been perpetrated Is an In evitable part of the penalty which the voters of the county must pay for entrusting their business to the hands of unworthy men. For in the last analysis this mlsgovernment is largely traceable to the apathy of a public which has allowed Itself to be preyed upon by unscrupulous politicians and spoilsmen. But even though it Is impossible to exact the full measure of retribution which Justice demands, the efforts toward that end will b productive of great good and will do much to bring about a higher standard of official duty. Every public spirited citizen should realize that this is the rear end and object of the Investigation nojr.ln progress and should give to It accordingly his heart iest support. Official morality will never rise above the requirements of public opin ion, and a strong popular demand for honest and economical methods In the transaction of the taxpayers' business can be aroused only by full exposure of the evils of dishonesty and waste. . It Is Infinitely better for the people of Multnomah County that the abuses that have prevailed in the county government should be mercilessly exposed than that they should be glossed over or belittled. Only through Buch exposure can reform be brought about. Only by such an object lesson can the Im portance of choosing honest and capable men for public office be Impressed upon the minds of the voters. Up. up, up he climbed the steep hillside. Old We-wah stood with open hands, as If to greet him In the manner he had promised. Pous-tam-a-nle had almost reached his side. As the Piute chief began to raise his hand, as if to greet him, still wearing n smile on his face, there was a flash from behind the rocks nearby and Pous-tam-a-nle fell dead to the ground. A treacherous marksman had been placed there by We-wah to murder his visitor. His rllle had accomplished the foul deed. The Warm Springs Indians were small In number, but they were wrought up to the highest pitch of anger when they saw their leader fall. Heretofore as meek as Christians, they now became brave as lions. The small band charged out from the willows, and up the steep hillside they came like demons, giving their fiercest war- whoops! It was a' great surprise to the Plutes. Although they largely outnumbered the charging Indians they did not advance against them. Whether it was from a sense of remorse or fear Is not known. But they stood stone still until the Warm Springs hunters had rescued the body of their fallen chief and borne It back into the willows. The Warm Springs Indians burled the body of their chief In a nook up the canyon. where they concealed It for the time from the enemy, a:d returned to their reservation. At the reservation a large band of warriors was made up which returned for the body of the dead chief and also gave chase to the departed Plutes. And when they returned to the reservation with the body of Pous-tam-a-nle it Is said that one of the most largely attended funerals In the history of the Warm Springs tribe took place. The open grave In Board Hollow is still to be seen where Pous-tam-a-nle was temporarily laid to rest after his foul murder, and white men and red men still tell of the treacherous deed with a bitter memory of the Plutes' manner of warfare. SUGGESTIONS AS TO ADVERTISING THE FAIR The practical Jokers who are sending Sheriff Storey "strafght tips" on contem- TILLAMOOK, July 4. There are numerous ways that the residents of this great Oregon country can advertise the coming Lewis and Clark Centennial to be held at the City of Portland In 1905, and which will work an Immense good for the Fair, and that at no outlay of cash to the Individual. The press of the country is, of course, to be considered as the greatest factor in bringing the Exposition before the whole world, but there are the little things that help develop a great enterprise such as the Lewis and Clark Fair should be. . A few questions that could be put before the public In this regard, are like the fol lowing: Are you an Oregonlan? Are you Interested In the coming Exposition? Are you contemplating a trip to the sea shore or mountains, or to visit the East? Do' you wish to help the coming Lewis and Clark Fair? You can help this great enterprise each and every one, and show me the one that will not. A good plan, and one that will materially help. Is to keep the public Interested, create a sentiment and knowledge of the event by writing it, talking It, and thinking it. Much can be done by the Individual to insure the success of the coming Exposition. A most Admirable form of keeping the Fair before the people Is a small lapel button with the words, "Lewis and Clark Centennial, 1905." Have them made In a neat and artistic manner, and within the next year they would be In every state in the Union as well as abroad. People from the Northwest In traveling should not forget when they are away from home, to do the country the honor of mentioning the fact of the' coming Fair, and in registering in some Eastern hotel place your residing place and under It in the register write "Lewis and Clark Centennial, 1905." There are many ways that would be of advantage In advertising the Lewis and Clark Centennial, but these are simple and Inexpensive, and will do a world of good. Numerous counties have organized Lewis and Clark committees and clubs, etc, but the spirit has not as yet developed In this section. It is to be hoped It will. Neverthe less when the time .arrives, Tillamook County will be represented and maintain the dignity of this section of Oregon behind the coast range mountains. Yours fraternally, ROLLIE W. WATSON. Editor Tillamook Herald. PENDLETON, July 24. Responding to your timely suggestion to Oregon editors to give, briefly, their opinion on the best method of advertising the Lewis and Clark Fair, will say that In my Judgment. Oregon could not advertise the Fair more successfully than by keeping Mrs. Edyth Toiler Weatherred In the East, until the gates of the Fair are opened to the public. Cordially, BERT HUFFMAN, Editor East Oregonlan. this German. Then the officer began. "Well your honor, this German fellow was walking down the street. He was very much intoxicated, took up the whole sidewalk and was singing Oerman songs, "Die Wacbt Am Rhine V queried Mr. Fits gerald, who had some difficulty In pronounc Ing the words of the great German song. But the good-natured Irishman admitted that he could not distinguish the words of the song, while the crowd In the room almost burst with merriment. The trial continued, the little Oerman protested vehemently and dramatically that he was not guilty, while Mr. Fitzgerald and the crowd enjoyed the affair Immensely. Finally the Teuton was allowed to go upon his promise not to indulge too freely In the great German beverage. "Just like shooting fish I" Is an expression often used In a humorous way, but the actual thing Is to be seen almost any day out on the long elevated road that stretches across Co lumhla Slough. The water, which has been covering a large section of the country north of Port land for the past month, Is now receding and the grass of the meadows is projecting above the surface of the drying ponds. Wriggling about among these weeds and tufts of brush hundreds of fat carp are to be seen. From vantage points along the railing of the plank road the hunters take pot shots at the swim mlng fish. Rifles and revolvers are used In this sport. as the charge from a shotgun will not pene trate far beneath the water. , Although the sport may seem somewhat cruel, aH fishermen are glad to see It carried on as the carp are unfit for food, do not rise to a hook and, are credited with destroying young trout and salmon. Fly paper, the sticky kind, like some of the great liniments. Is good alike for man and beast. So a Portland resident thinks at any rate. Fans at the Pacific Coast League game Sunday, were kept awake by a cow, moored 'way out in left field, away from the long ones. The fact that the bovine was browsing In the paddock was nothing to ex cite comment had It not been for the yellow fly paper that her owner had fastened to her back and sides right side up. With eyes closed, languidly cbrewlng her cud, the old cow stood still and never once switched her tall or stamped her feet while the little flies butzed, but only once. "Baker County Is too persistently adver tised as a mining country," writes N. C. Has kell, secretary of the Cltlsens' League of Baker City, to George O. Blrrel of the Ore gon Information Bureau. "People do not learn of our farming lands, which can be rated among the best in the Sate of Oregon." "Mr. Haskell Is quite right," said Mr. Blr rel. "Take, for instance, Eagle, Pine and Rye Valleys, In the Baker country. Some of the finest farms In the eastern part of the state are to be found there. Then, too, a report of the value of grains and live stock. raised In Baker County will offset the pro duct of the mines." Mr. Blrrell says there Is lots of room In Baker County for those who do not desire to mine. J. S. Cooper banker, hop-grower, real estate owner, promoter, 83d degree Ore gonian has been down from Independence the past two days, attending to business matters here. He is accompanied by his daughter. "Some of the Valley hop fields will have an average crop," said Mr. Cooper, "but 'the yield of many of the others will be plated train robberies really ought to quit. The poor man is getting so nervous that he can't sleep o' nights. A San Francisco grand Jury has declared Mayor Schmltz "rather unfortunate" in his appointment of Civil Service Commissioners, and has recommended that in future he shall not be guided by "political friendships" In selecting men for such offices. The policy of appointing professional political spoilsmen to the Civil Service Commission evidently works as badly In San Francisco as It has fii-Portlanl. T In the international drama of "The Open Door in Manchuria," China seems , to have the , role of the door mat. - MRS. CHANT SEES NO HARM IN WEARING TIGHTS. Mrs. Laura Ormiston-Chant, the English temperance leader and social purity cru sader, now In New York City, admits that she likes roof gardens and music halls. "I do not think it wrong for men or women to have legs nor have I any objection to tights when they are worn for right purposes and in a circumspect manner. Other wise, the whole practice's immoral and should be prohibited by law. "Nothing Is more beautiful than a ballet properly conducted. But an improper ballet Is the most Improper thing on earth and must be condemned by all mothers for the salvation of the race. "In regard to music halls and public places of amusement, I do not think it fair to Interfere with the amusements' of the poor and leave those of the rich unques tioned. Over here such things are not abused as they are In older countries. America Is still young, full-bloodeo' and strenuous. Americans have not as yet had their blood vitiated by age and custom, but some day they -will and an ounce of prevention is worth five pounds of cure when the disease is incurable." Detroit Journal. PERSONS TALKED ABOUT. Mile. Cauchet. a young lady living In Montmarte, France, has toured the world, paying her expenses by lecturing and by giving lessons In French. She went first to Belgium and then to London, Dublin and Glasgow. Subsequently she visited America,' Africa, Australia, China and Japan, and returned to France via Russia and Germany, Lieut. -Gen. Sir George Stewart Smith Is' convinced that the wprld is made up of two classes Anglo-Saxons and foreigners. . i Senator Warren of Wyoming has Just been in New England to -see his daughter graduate at Wellesley and to visit his son, who Is a Harvard student. That's one way West and East are knit. ' Senator J. W. Bailey of Texas has a stock farm in Kentucky, and up to a recent period, owned one of "the finest places In Texas, a combined 'farm and ranch, in the fertile prairies of Dallas County. Capt. Wells, late chief of the London Fire Brigade, has $10,000 a year and the in finite possibilities of party generosity in his new position as Chief Agent of tho Con servative Unionist party. A marble bust of George Stephenson was unveiled at the railway station at Rome recently. The bust was presented by the Institution of Civil Engineers to the munic ipality of Rome as a Supplement to' the tablet placed in the-vestibule of the railway station at Rome in 1881 to commemorate the centenary of the birth of the. father of the railway system. ' somewhat be to give up the ghost on this account, for If the hop yield goes to the bad, there are other crops. And Independence keeps growing right along. We have the best town In Ore gon, and It Will not be so very many years until it is one of the largest." There's a new coon in town. His name U "Billy" and at present he is the pet and pride of the fire laddies at Chemical house No. 1, near Second and Oak streets, The little fellow with the handsome coat of fur Is only seven weeks old, but he is one of the liveliest pets in the city. Crowds gather dally at the engine house to watch the curious animal play In the puddles of water in the gutter. The raccoon was presented to Foreman Ed. Davey a week ago. He came from Oak Point, where he "was captured a few days old. The first day In Portland he was kept chained, but he appeared so much 'at home .that the boys let him run at large and now he Is perfectly contented to bunk with the fire-fighters. The other day the firemen got a large and vicious crawfish and "Billy" promptly started in to eat him. The fish used his claws, to good advantage anda soon had pinched the coon's feet. But "Billy" was not to be are not going merely give me some heartlesB Tejolncr Tmfl would not buy him. m m m "I do not think the statesmen of the United! States pay enough attention to the affairs of Japan." said K. K. Sameahlma, a native of the Rising Sun Land, but now a Seattle busi ness man, who recently visited Portland. "And I am quite sure that the educated peo ple of this country do not pay. near enough attention to the doings of my former home. , Japan owes a great deal of its success to tho study of foreign ways and manners. When-., ever our government heard of a law passed by the American Congress that could be adopted, thereby benefiting us, it was done; we took models for our fine navy from tho, crack battleships of England; we took the plan for our army from Germany; fros r n..ut. Ti.,M i. .... i. V. I many things. Bo, I think that if the publio men of the United States would keep in closer touch with Japan, they could learn many useful things that they now seem to be In the dark about." m m m "That story about nerve that was recently published In The Journal does not touch a nervy incident that I met with In my travel ing career." said F. H. Jones, a traveling man of San Francisco, at the Perkins last night. "I read the story when I was in Port land about a month ago and then I thought it was one of the best of the kind that I had ever read until I underwent an experience of my own over in Seattle a little while later. A fellow drummer who was known as a good fellow had borrowed an even $100 from me. on a note payable the aext day. The note was not paid the next day nor for several days, and as I had Just drawn the money from the house, I did not feel like calling for more funds. Still I could not go out on my route because my-sole possessions were a mileage book, a few satchels and about $5 In coin. Well, I could not find my friend, and I had to live in Seattle for nearly a week and In the name of the house, mind you. I knew letters from the nouse wouia be sent to me acertain points and so I wired the postmasters to send them to Se attle. The messages ate up the $5, and as I had made no affable signs to the hotel man he began to wear an anxious look., Then came a telegram from the house, telling me to report at once or look for another Job. Next came my friend with the $100. He asked me to set them up on the strength of gettlhg the 100 plunks back. I did so, to the extent of a bottle of extra dry. He asked me to do it again. I did so. He wanted an other, but I refused that. 'Well, then let s shake the dice,' he said. Talk about unex ampled nerve! I really felt that I couldn't refuse to shake, so I took the offer and lost. Nerve? Here I lent $100, very nearly lost my place, and yet had to pay $7.50 In terest upon the loan of my own money," If you don't want to make an enemy out of a friend never loan him money." This advice was given yesterday by Capt Empkins, a Columbia River pilot, to a group of waterfront men. , "About three years ago," continued the captain, "I considered a certain man in this city to be one of the best friends I ever had. On an evil day, however, he struck me for a loan oi zd. tie promises. 10 pay u oacK ma snubbed me at every opportunity, and Tw has Btill got my money at least I haven't seen It since he touched me for It. When he began to get too overbearing, I reminded him of the little debt he owned me, but he would pass on. Now, he never recognizes me. And this is what usually comes from loaning money to a friend." "Of all the cases that have come to my at tention as ar pharmacist, the most 'peculiar was that of a man whose scalp overgrew his hair," said Druggist George Jacobs last night. "The man came into my store Sat urday and he asked me if I could give him any medicine that would act as a hair re- newer. J glanced at him ana saw that was as bald as a man of three score an ten, although he did not appear to be more than 80 years of age. I asked him what caused his baldness and" he told me how it occurred. He was up east of the mountains on a -sweltering day about six weeks ago, and he thought that if his hair was closely cropped he might not feel the perspiring ef fects of the sunshine. He saw the barber and the barber did the work. Since that time he has had no hair. The scalp, I pre sume, simply overgrew the closely cut foots of thehair, and he Is now, therefore, bald. His case was one that I could not treat and so I referred him to a physician. Now, I am anxiously waiting to hear the report of the doctor to see if he can do anything for the man. - . - NOT 80 VERY VERDANT. He is a young man and he has recently come from one of the. country towns up the state to make his fortune in .this city. To his minister the young man was complain ing the other evening). N "Remember,, my boy," said the clergyman, there are things' In life better than money." s "Yes,!. know .'that," replied the young man, . briskly, "but It takes money to buy them." Philadelphia Public Ledger. 0 i , 214 victims of the fourth. The Chicago Tribune has discovered that there, were 214 deaths from lockjaw In this country, as a result of Fourth of July. Of these, 52 died on the Fourth Itself, and 163 later. ' . ' . .