THE OREGON SUNDAY . JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, JUNE 18, 1911.' c. a. jackson.., T'HF THT 7T Tv A T I6"0"' tormiM. and that In the inr- arbitration mad by the commission. J. A LU J V- rounding heavily timbered country lit to rob tfi principle of universal an ikdepkwpewt a-wsrarta. be seldom -t sins a 1 foothold. Tbe I application of half Us value. For the p.btuwr mrowinc ppen to settlement of large) I worth of tbe treaty lies In thlsAhst iracia or iimoor una aoes not re- it la a law assented to In cold blood, suit In more settlement, for the peo- on ! universal 1 grounds, suppressing pie securing the land realise its and dominating, all the evil Influ grcat est value lies In the standing ences of anger and Interest that may. timber and they consequently bold arise In any special conflict. . The or dispose oMt for that purpose, submission of the questions to this growth Is offset by decay. The fu Ijvorcan toe corernment ds , cnti- new supreme court must be automaU ture broductlTeneea of the forwata roano 4PTiHTiiNO RCPFBMiNTATtTB, or aoin mature timber in lo and Inevitably and IU ultimate d- depends,' then, on bringing normal PabllaW avarf t-mlnf (awatrt ftaadajr) . eerr SHir BMralna (I 1 M JMrui Hit, rifte an Vaaikltl at .) I Tea Joariil Wall. ta. I -on !, t. Eatara It' fee aoetoe at rarMaad. Or.. r tranaialMlea reaa IM alalia aa eeeaaS timrt awtlar,' ' TKt.irnoNici tula riTSi noaai. t All S-MMoteata KwM af tfetee saaihata. Tau rae anaraiur ! tmnam . re any other owner of. large bodies of standing timber, selling off tbe ma tured trees, baring them felled and removed at, and not after the stsge of ripeness, the California state foreman ester gave forth no uncertain ,3ind. He reminds as that It. Is, well certalned that Jn tbe virgin forest of 'the Paclfie states the annual mature death of husband or father." caption, all North American woodpeck- Almoat on the tima dav aa that ere have four toa. two of which point nn Mt. r. tu.j r.. i- vm I forward and two backward. Further to On Which Mr. Lloyd Oeotgos blllL,a-u maintaining thamaalv.i on the was laid before parliament the Oer- trunk of tree, thair una aro composed relchataf be ran th samndlof stiff feathera.' terminating la aharp reading of the new imperial code of fJ " bA Sftt labor Insurance. . This unifies the the bird in ,an upright position . while exiuung uerman working class m- it i "at work. Portland Critical Po- gition m l ransportation ,:rtJ'MW-T,a,?; th Mm wtr tvery private owner In ere mast carry with It the force of baa XulMtna. Cblraa. the northwest Is doing. Every ef-s law of natare. Irresistible and ab- atacrfatta Vara, by Mil ar la tar Mta 0rl t by t forest SerVlCO tO SOlute. aispose or the mature timber and it has been well aaiti in fh. Ont. a.W.:....4 m coneunuy increasing-. Dut look Itself, fWe have abolished prl- conditions about as soon as poaslble tost la, that all classes of ages In the younger timber shall be growing as tbe matured timber is cut, de cadent trees, being so replaced by From the Seattle Tlmaa, In th opinion of John T. Flynnihe naa wnun 10 the TIrnaa a 11 (ap am I ha A nrtich of th food of woodpcVrs na ahort haul clau of the 1 il,.n a m . A . V I . I , A. iiuiti, aiiouui Mioir uruTtaiuua lO I . . . . . " ... . 7 I ),! . ., .7. . an vara I n.w imiu I oDiaina rrom aoua wooa. niur i iaiw, won oeaiii ana several new trades and occupations h. .nM.a .,.. wih a other parifio co.t nti.a n.. and enlarges their scope, In so fsrbk bavin a chiaeud shape point. la a faw 10,000-ton ahlpa for opera mat insurances for widows and orwnion rorma an xoainriy arreetiv toroucn in ranama oanaL Thus Dbans are added to the Drovlslons wooa-euttin matrumant. ' nut tna mo wnuia watr oonipotltlon be made ao- tha VaitaS Slataa ar Mail. '. '. , - DAILT. akaaataa aA t lUa SUNDAr . " . I unfortunately the law of supply and I Tata war hv nrnvMln a mnhntntt natural renrodurtlon 'iA7TrxDKfrr?,,,r,,,'f 1,ffln,,1 B 'rfPcter of persons. for L We propose to abolish Inter-? ,The annual loss by On raar. IT. SO 0a aaaata. . . . . .S "VThat afiall I think whan I ant eallad to diet - Shall I not mourn for what I ' . rolht hatr mandadT Th chanoaa I lot allp unnotload ;. br. " ' ' Bo little tarklad and ao much' l Intandad! Obf but my plana were greet, my aim waa blh; X waa all ah wtthout, an fire ' within; ; Behold, the and approach, Jut aa I 1 Waa atarttng to sat ready to : , bacilli Harry r. Bowling. ' the people, who by mainUlnlr.g thU LTeirfV m his ghbori th.tTe & service give It their stamp of ap proval. , the nosTOX AFTERNOON it HIS AFTERNOON famous 1, United States crnlser Is to drop anchor. la Portland harbor. : She Is the Boston, and Is hence- forth to perform . part, In, Oregon hTelvr 'old IZU th. only-gun In the party, a small calibre rifle, life. : .The Boston was with Dewey. She was one of six war vessels ' that I Initrall In and applies Impartially to all deal- national war bvnrovMin a uheti. imanv loaIitlea eonala that nrt in who toe same eommoauy, me tute for It." v : y . , .'. by Uecny, by fire, and by Insects journal oaueves in isir, impsruai Yet ' Theodore Roosevelt, the The very essence of productive aiaiemenw 01 lacis. wneiner me mat-1 Bobi, pr,g. mlLa lh- . adTOftllt- management of timber areas lies In ler involves saera bureau.. cor- of arbitration, while in th chair of ; cutting. To hold unused and poistlon or Indivldusl. The forest responsibility, proposes the. lmoos.. bottled up Is'rge acreage of mstnred service nas inaugurated policy aihu A.r . timbers dertendlnar on a aneenlatlv -m.. .. "-"a w shall be no tresty If one party to It tor greater future values, " the ieret oi ait me peopie, ana oesiruci-1 chooses to exclude such matter of height "of folly. Tbe sooner, the ive criticism or fmisleadinc etSte-l ,,,,. hnnnr wlt., . larre tracfi era rnt . ttvar' end h ments regarding Its activities, should .hall h. ; ...ait -.-a rive timber felled ud nt nut ih I. .a 1 ... .l.i. . -suvvui ' 7 .. v v " w nwrhrlthout excuse, by one of the par," r will real, conservetlv farest motives but should .be resented ny ilea thra.t ra, -manarement be Inatallad. : , ' I . ww-va wa VV UV IIV , aVW mW , 1 " I In virgin stands of - old timber some reproduction Is In' constant progress. Dot usually tees valuable species replace the older "trees on which the reputation ' of the oast timber rests. These are , usually Suppressed for want of light and sir, the more Important young trees of the older growths under such condi tions stand shaded and stinted ,for a few years,, and mlseraMy dwindle and die. The ordered catt'a? of the old trees gives tbe young and grow ing trees a rapid, thrifty life. ' It seems, then, that in forests, as In other investments, th talents are more profitable If held under labor ious and careful management than If wrapped up In the napkin of mere Idle and speculative eustoiy. for sickness.' accident, old ag and infirmity. ' The compulsory sick In surance will embrace agricultural and forest workers, so that the number of the Insured will rlnf from 1S.000.000 ( to. sbout: 10.000.000. There Is a political aide to this leg- InUreetlne; feature tn the anatomy of Itual, Inatead of theoretical. th bird la tha tongue, Thla la mora or la cylindrical In form and ueually very long. It tarmtnatea In a bard point with more or Ire aharp barb upon tn aidea. poaunorly. tn typlca! woodpecker tona-ue la ttndd In two Ion; filament of the hyold bona, which curt up around tha back of th akull. and, while they commonly atop between It 1 tha belief of tha writer af tha oener mat ona J 0.000-ton ahlp owned by tha merchant of th eltla, oarry- ma looaa rrom tha Atlantlo ta tha Ta clflo In leaa than railroad time at II pr ton, inatead of tha averasa rail rata of 121, yould not only earn mora el ear money, than any IS-atory building, but THE DUEL OF yOCTU rpHERE WAS a duel In the woods a few flays ago, with eight lit tle negroes as the participants. It was a play-duel that ended in tragedy. The boys had gone to the woods for a day's hunting. A But, there was little . game abound ing, and the youthful blood demand- aglnes an arbitration treaty that is no longer a treaty? Wanton attack Is wanton breach. Not only are the hands of tbe assailed uptled at . tbe moment such attack occurs, but .the treaty-despising' assailant Is A con fessed criminal In the great court of nations, an outlaw with all hands against hlnu i How, far doea his Illustration go, that no man, civilized and orderly citizen though he be. would fall to defend his wife front sudden at tack? 'Does the husband break tbe islatlon. The Independent friendly ih. .v.. i m- ,h. ... would do mora toward hoidtna and Societies of workers, of which thero around tha era. but In other enter ia wndlna; th trad of Seattle, Taooma, are now 1300, with 900.000 melu-j,h r,,1,t nM1 openina- and txtnd. to f"1'"4 'r,,c',' Lo'Anlea ina ena oi in oeaa. in inia laat eaa "" "'"t" man tu tn tawa ever the ' tongue la practically twice tha taaad. . r . ., length of the head. . Thla organ If, In- On that account h eontanda that th cloaed In a muecular ahaatb, ty meana fata of each aaaboard elty of the Paolflo of whlch-lt ean ba extruded from the coaat rla, not with aongr nor tha mouth for a long dlatanca and ueed aa Intaratat eommerca oommiaaian. hut moat .affective Inatewmant for dl. I with th lara rrooertv wnara. m.- bers, will be practically wiped out. Insurance of workers la ' factories, yard and so on, created to link the workers ' to these -establishments, now numbering JOOO, with over 3, 000,000 ".of workers.: will be pre served . and- Increased. The bill Is expected to prove a weapon against both Social Democrats and Social ists. :- : ; . The ancient strife " between the German government;' with Its feudal Inspiration.1 and the Socialists and their supporters. Is 'almost certain to break out nfresh.r r This is the present standing of this great reform. 3 lodging gruba or anta from their bur row In wood -or bark Hence, while moat birda have to b ontnt with aucb Insect aa they rind on tha aurfaca or In open crevice, the woodpeckera d vot their enarglaa to thoa larvae of gruba which ar beneath th bark, or vn la the heart of 4h tra. "I,?.: "l M rel Port One of the boys bad repudiate lta saflc- aTn 7ar.rrZ;ra dMl l Picture "ons and protecUon because he Tin- Boon, in three hours and eighteen (.. ... v. .v v,. " la dirata th fcnno- nr iif vf. f, t iS.giMJSIhow t0 the,r r9Uf parts In As Talleyrand. .aid: -Let the ass fv4 j2h 0'Umle,y-7t the speechless drama of a fight to ns. begin. They were the break- uw vne oimurn coniro over the death. ' ' ers of the law not the cltlze 000 square miles of territory and 1 000,000, people. ' ' WIth the- Boston at Manna, -were the Olympia, Baltimore, , Raleigh, Concord and Petrel. Their combined The rifle was supposed to be un loaded. The twelve-year old boy picked up the gun, ran back a few paces, turned and fired. A sixteen- tniifiaM waa It Alt . O I ' " it ilV .v-- v-V, l""'jcelred the bullet. with a smile that lees than the "displacement of the United States battleship Delaware now In British waters. ' Their com bined fighting force was 1743 men. Opposed to' them were seven Span ish cruteers and the forts at Cavite. .The Americans opened fire at 5:41 and withdrew for breakfast at 7: SB. They returned to the battle at 11:11, and ceased firing at 12:40 p. m In the period the Spanish squadron frose on his tips as the lead coursed through his brain, and chilled his heart. , . -V Maybe the movlng-plcture show had nothing to do with this tragedy. Possibly the Inspiration that led to death would have been born of It self. But, It Is a great thing to feed the youth on spoken' drama. citizens who protected themselves In the moment of assault , Should the citizens need to ' stipulate themselves out of the shelter of the law In advance lent lawless ones should violate It? We are attempting to set a new standard for tha twentieth century. Let us not go back to the evli days: when only might made right. eaya: "Th editorial orltlclam of th Xonf. and Short Haul' la tha Tlmaa baa opened, th door of dlacuaalon ' for a tubject Which la Ct vital Importance, not only' to Seattle, but to every geaport en tbe' Pacific coaat , ; . Thy locate thair hMrf.n nM tn. inmrm may aa grounaa ror loaai grekt accuracy, and oftn cut mll Jluala upon bank clearanoea and" bolea directly to tha nurrowa Af tha I hlnge . of that aort between Seattle. gruba. - In ona caaa tha grub had eaten Portland, Taooma, San Francleco, , Le a burrow through tha heart of a mapla Angelas and San Diego, but 'there la aapling. but lta poaltlon waa accurately one place where they will all either sink determined by th bird, which- than cut r awlm together, and that la In th In-' through . tha Solid live wood until It tarauta commerce commlaaion's pending VALUES OP CANADIAN LANDS ""c"7a in ",T0W na eatraotea the aaoiaion upon the long and ahort haul. ... .. , I ino, t , ,. ,. .."', '-, Lett cri From tLc Peoph LABOR INSURANCE A NATIONAL . NEED v r THE. . PRESIDENTS WEDpIXQ SILVER 0 F ALL THj: landmarks In hap py, wedded life the silver wedding is the best .The giamor, inougn not the ro- kllled and 214 wounded, The Amer ican loss waa seven slightly wounded. The battle occurred May 1, 1818; but on account of - the refusal of Hong ' Kong cable authorities to transmit the message, the news did not reach the United, States until freed from the smoke and powder r . Huv. v . . . . , - had been destroyed and the forta "1 , b-o. very manyimance, of the original wedding aa - . an.. m a . I navriTIIH T HPaT TH rla ITinWIfl eW hliltMl la m. . . enencea. une panisn-ios was 117 r ' " . . r.- 0. may nave long since oaeeed. u.ua- iny cannoz. ai ora to see Dot the long, familiar, intercourse drawn the pair hH JThi.. .i .M li 4UO'-r"" into that oneness which outlive? house high class plays. th mr.Th. . t. ..! The Woman's Drama ? league jpt lly transmuted Into affection which Chicago in its flght against the mov- burns, till life ends, with a steady lng pictures, ha been Joined br rav. Mar 7. Probablr no event M ' ail i Daniel rronman of N Yrt;M:l'vh";fii.V -.-i.--ir . . . . - . . 1 r.-.. v.. m v.. a. . I -" othui- aiBXOTT ever DTOaUCea a mora MarVl aiinoo mm lirot DlOWItlnna rath- than .) I- v. nt. . . . ' . .IW IV. v, . I ---- Ul, 111- .xncai erreci on so many people, and icoBy aea 0f man and wife. Dangers and Ticis- ioe uny cruiser Boston to appear in lov CTn " sltudes have been met and passed Portland harbor this afternoon "er7td- J t11 rleoa have together; Scars may be left, but tb played her part In the great game, been eut to 15 cents flat, all re- gorrows that, they represent i have In size, armament ?and . fighting Mrrcd. A eoncedplan.rwin he been dulled by time. The man has power she was the fourth vessel of "obmltted to all theatrical managers taken his . place in life, has devel- importance 1n Dewey's squadron. i,Tft h,h Hyu' nd n oped, and Is known for what he la. Twenty-five years aro. tbe Boa- e'lort made to make the movement n. t v.. v w, , ton was one of the premier warships eonntry-wM. . , ... with children, bears the sacred ia vo unueo oiaies navy. , TO ail in- mir irzammi is mat tne lugh tents and purposes the navy of that C,M theatres need the gallery gods, day consisted of the Boston, the Chi- and the gallery gods need the high cago and the Atlanta. The three class theatres, were sent across tbe Atlantic to pass The experiment wfll be watched In review before, the admiring eyes tth deep Interest, of assembled Europe aa proof that . - i I'lXJUDS KI5IXG IN A CLEAR . ear country had a navy. The Dela ware Is alone twice the displacement of tha, country's navy of that time. .The span from the Boston to the . Delaware Is the measure of human , development In a generation. Ship . to ship and gun for gun. the Dela ware is mistress of the seas. Ko oth ." r floating fort Is so powerful. In the international ' review off Spit head next Saturday,; she will be tha ' central figure, and with her line of five turrets pom which ten twelve inch guns frown will be the cyno sure of tbe gaping multitude. : The Oregon people may well take a pride in the famous Boston. She Is to be the nursery of a cltisen naval force, and in the last analysis. It Is the citizen, fighters that decide the issues In all great wars. THE OLTMPIA RESERVE W SKY ITH A CHORUS of gratula tlon the proposal for a gen eral treaty of arbitration between this nation and oth- nama of mother to all within the home. The pair are IJving for their children mainly, and the . new gen eration Is beginning to fill Its own ranlMn the battle of life. ' Silver Is the typical metal, by gen eral consent It Is white, clean. bright, but not too costly for every day use. ' ; lust as all the world loves a pair of lovers so, when the-silver wed ding cornea round, the world regards the wedded pair of twenty-five years era has been received.- It was to "tanding with a calmer interest embrace all matters of honor and tnd TerT oftea wJth affection. vital Interest Nothing else was and low the same. Be it the I -. v- t,n' N THREE; GREAT countries, the United States, Germany and Eng land labor . Insurance against sickness, invalidity, accident, and death. Is, at this time recognized as of the first national Importance. Philanthropists seek ft as the pressing need in order to relieve suf fering, poverty and . penury. The working classes In all three countries recognize It as the most Powerful agency to remove one han dicap on lives of hardship and slen der .opportunity. ., Statesmen see In it the growth of the Industrial efficiency of the na tlon. It shall serve to increase the potency of labor, both In quality and In continuity of wage earning ser vice. It shall postpone, or shorten. the times of dlsablliy, partial or com plete. It shall relieve the Injured, sldlr. or 'dying from the fear of -Im minent death and of Us- dreaded eon- sequences to those who are left be hind. In the United States the cause, is advancing by Irregular steps, both in time, degree, and place. . As accl dent Insurance and employer's lia bility In many states it. has' made its way. Ita general acceptance Is not rfar distant. The principle is admitted. . Its application Is de bated, and especially whether spe cial Industries shall be admitted to its benefits, and what proportions of Its proceeds shall ,be contributed by workmen, , employers,' "tor ' the state. - v U ; c-- In Germany and England accident Insurance Is of general enactment. Its progress Is being closely marked, not In contemblatlon of Its with drawal, but to study Its possible ad justment and extension." - : " Labor Insurance, in view of sick ness, disability and death, has lit the two European countries named, "Under this daolilon the great seaport eltlea of th Paelflo aaaboard will lth r eontlnu t erv aa th ocean gate waya to the Interior, by reaeon of tha ao called 'water ratV nd th back haul prlvil, or they will drop t the ansa vUble dlatlnctioa of being th laat eta- HE ASSISTANT superintendent of immigration for Canada has made the following announce ment . i ua average values joi i , : wiatw Tt.-..rn. vt-te ai.a .mm a. . I aV aaa a--e-aaVal wna, or uncuiuvatea, unas in cana-i, vanconver wh -una t? t v-Pu, " " " " . :. : mm Am ha.a .. T- iiA, un tbapuon on a tranecontJnenUl rai road, da have been as follows. In Editor, of The JeurhaWnfty-one rears . Trom pr.rlou. rullnga, aa wall u iu ijvi, ti.iv. la iua, ago, jonn erown made a raid on Harp- $5.84. In 1008. 89.54. In 1909, ars Ferry and captured It Aa held $18.52. In 1910. $14.84.', . " . U but a ahort time when be hlmlf This publication Is made to stlnr. cPturd and banged. Thre waa ulate prospecUve , Immigrants to areat xclterat In Una oounty. Mo. nmmr.t artlr.n fA iM-nfa l.nd. w wnera in' wmr waa man located and fore prices soar out of , reach. It does not seem quite in accord with all we hear about what are called cheap lands In Canada, but the fig ures are official, printed as an ad vertisement In one of tha chief Eng lish magazines. . ; the tendenoy of preeent laaialatlon. I am firmly of tha belief that th Inter tat commerce eommlaaion will bold In tha forthcoming deolalon that na aaa port la entitled to va water rate unlaea It actually employs tb water te aatab Uah that rata. ,. , . ' And that lm net unjut lthr. It B-, In tb employ of a pbyalctan. Tb doe- tor wma the owner of one slave butlattia. with ft rat n it-ha Ulked little of tha queatlon ef slavery. Portland with Ita great navigable rivers,. Once he did admit that It waa wrong are not going te employ theae natural and that It degraded th alave and tils agencies of transportation for their own master, however, he aald, w bought benefit, aa wll aa for th benefit of thant with our own money and what tbe producers of the Interior, then there ar you going to do sbout ltf . Is no reaaon why they should enjoy a ' In tbe winter "uf 1100 X returned te lower tranaoontlnental rat than We-V Iowa, and being opposed to alavary, natch, Spokar , Walla Walla or Th,- l . n I wi a wuiu w ui iapuB- I tsmiimm. . , . . XUee BCnOOIgina. Illcan nartv. tolnaal tha wlilia,VH k If tha aaiaaaMl IHaa i1aa ) m.: Peking Correspondent London Tiraea. and want with th orranlsatlon to Dav-1 reada te lolly them Into tha belief A friend ef tnln who haa Juat re-1 enDOrt la th fall of 1111 we want! that they are entitled ta a. lower rail turned to Peking from Tunnan sends I from Davanpart to Rook Island. TIL. to I rate than the people of tha Interior by left it. as arbitration on ail president of the United States and "1.," ". :: I' u impoiranz aurerences was J"-- " .'a . , DI" rancn lit has , entered the sphero of practl aiready adopted, at anv rata h w,tnv nisvwen tried help mate, all America and England, and had been wno mow. to pair wish them In' the framed by the genius and heroic IN A RECENT editorial entitled "A Blight on Development" the Oregonian criticises the national . forest policy, claiming It results in "bottling up" the state's timber resources and prevents settlement of aarrinnltnrnt lands Citing the Identical case, the .. wyiujun nauuuu r ureal, walcn tne Oregonian holds up as a elarlnr ex ample of the 'blighting effect of the wholesale extension of the forest re serves," the facts relating to this tern cory are these: la 1901, through political machi nations, some 705,000 acres was ; eliminated from the Olympia Nation al forest and opened to settlement. It was claimed; that the land was best suited to agricultural . use. At regent leaa than AAA . , a .jj jl IUU3 nojmous tract : are under cultiva tion.' the rest being held by a few large timber companies, in com parison with, this land thrown open to the homeeeeker, but acquired by timber companies, we find, some 6000 acres of true agricultural land within the area which Pinchot able to keep from the reach of the unscrupulous politician and the ever ready locator " which have ? been opened to the bona fide setUer under th forest homestead Jaw.:. These figures would tend very strongly to the conclusion, that tbe real JiomV seeker secures some measure of con llieratloa within th boundaries of truest sense many happy returns of that day which is the middle mile- p iaw service on various occa sions. The proposed treaty waa formulated on thla side of the ooean. I Btone on their Journey, as wss rlgnt, and submitted to our friends on the other side for such minute scrutiny as the Importance of it should demand. This treaty had no preoedents. It dealt with no past history, no exist A FOREST MANAGEMENT ' ' k aaaaaaaeBBaa - - m S BEARING upon a pending ap plication to the government for A a aa (.erma lor cuiuug a large quan- ff mamwaA 4 V i . mg state of war which It was to ter- rv4-., xfi-.i : mlnate, there was therefore no nos-1 .h ..i. .hi. . -. I nwrem voiuuiuia, oiaiv f ui ester slble definition for Its sphere) of fn- o. Norri. Hr.man nt h.f .f- ture efficacy. a tn via ti i. T a ' t ... j. ... I vi-.n,a w VUTJ W1BUUU r ireaiy or alliance. Inf that nniv t ,m- : ...u blndlnr ch niwm tllZl ZZ "r.r ::r , D V,VH DM.vaaj u vuui-t lis i nrnn aw nr nur lavara i wvi attana m aa. the aid of the other if attacked by Ural Interest on forest management ouiae enemies Eacn party to It The Inquiry was made if the old was to enter only into relations of irnt inn absolute friendliness with the other., each year to consume the under To exclude by specifications possible brush and trash was of benefit to va.UOCo ui oiiencs oiween tne tWO the forest. Th at at a, f A,t . agreeing nations would be to rob it swered, no. The results of repeated of every distinguishing virtue that fires by Indians can be found, nearly J. L ' .a ;' ' everywhere In the state. If ne goes It should cover everything or it into the woods ; and examines the wa aJa'n how- butts of the old trees as they are What the proposed treaty could felled It Is found that although th do was to define, not the, possible large trees have not been burned an causes of offence that It should the soil haa hn mtffmwiw ntA cover, but it could provlda tba meth- ttr bako tne roots so that the timber od of settlement of all causes." This has been killed. It attempted to o. Its rltlcs on Thna if w ra tn t - each side of the Atlantic find nOlmanATlt tlmVia- minnltr V ui vBisDiiaa-i arrawrn mnar na nrAfwM rnm lng a preliminary eommlsslon. drawn Running light ground fires through from the panel of the members of th timhar tn hnn M.-i...a both nations on The Hague tribunal. Utter, as a meana of fire protection, to study the matter In dispute, set- must he done with the utmost cau tle It if possible, and. if not, to ar- tlon and under rarafnl .nnriw range an u umaie ana disinterested Fire .properly controlled Is some body of arbitrators, drawn from oth- .times beneficial, as in clearing trp er nations, to hear and to decree a old windfalls, dangerous slashings ssWement, ; ; ; . ,: aad in burning brush, after logging : But there Is to be a string to this operations. - But it must be -con-procedure. English critics suggest fined to those areas and not allowed Tf"A-u.m,t t0 enate Of the to run through standing Umber." United States.to give or to withhold Dealing then with the question as lta approval the arrangementa lor to th wisdom of the government, or labors of Lloyd George, has passed Its second reading' in the house of commons, and Is now undergoing the test of minute dissection in commit tee. So far : the criticisms are on detailed matters only, of adminis tration. . and ' possible , extension.' Neither on th Benches or .tne gov ernment or the opposition is sny found venturing to obstrutt its pas sage, t f,--:, In the United States Louis D. Brandels of Boston delivered the In his - replies he 1 other, day, at the National Confer ence or cnarities ana : uorrections, an address which Is an appeal to statesmen and philanthropists which surely cannot be either ignored or forgotten. . - "We have learned," said he, "that financial dependence , among .the wage-earners is due. In .large partt to sickness,' accident. Invalidity, super annuatlon or unemployment, or to premature death of , the breadwinner of the . family. Contingencies like these, referred to in the individual case as a misfortune, are now recog nized as ordinary incidents of the lives of the wase-earneroJjad einca our existing Industrial system is con verting an ever-Increasing percent age of the population into wage-earners, the need" of providing indemnity against financial Iobsos t from . such ordinary contingencies la the work" lng man's life has become apparent So sickness and deatnt benefits and methods of compensation for acci dents have been resorted to. . . "But this partial working men's Insurance has served mainly lnouak lng clear, tho need ;of a. comprehen sive system which shall' extend pro tection, also to ; the wage-earner : in case of invalidity, superannuation or unemployment, and to the widows and orphans left helpless by th pre- m th following Interesting- not of the conditions prevailing In that part or Tunnan which i adjoins British ter ritory. . . - , . . Tormerly any dirty 1UU cubicle serred as a achoolroom, and a crowd of unkopt tyoungatara, prealded over by an 111-pald. bespectacled pedagogue, pro- ducal appalling discord by reciting, at tha top of their voice and each at a. different-ky, pas sages from the classics.- Now ona enter a epacloua, wU lighted room, with orderly row of daaka, whr alt th boys poring more or Mas silently over thair taaka. ' Only I riv years ago a Yunnan girl who could read waa a rarity, on who oould Dotn read and 'write a phenomenon. Now In avary town on or more build' inga bear outside the legend In Chine e. -jciementary ecnooi ror aina. and any morning on may. met bvie of llttl maldena bouna thither.': elad tn long, dark bin gowns, and their balr fn neat ly plaited queue. None but girl with natural feet ar admitted to thes achoola, a aenalbla rul wlTlch th of flclals are determined to maintain. - For tha foot binding cuatom la dying In Tunnan. There are two almpl reaaons for thla. , la the first place, non of tha woman or tha hill,, tribes, who are re garded as savagea by the Chinese, bind their reet Again, all ramlllea with anr pretention to eoclal rank own One or two alava glrla, who strict custom baaed on convenience, demands ahould go barefooted. If, therefore, th Tun naneae mother, continue to practice roan finding. It la chiefly with th Idea of distinguishing bar daughters from ner nanamaids. Great Talne of the , Wxncka. ' Of all tha blrda that further: the Wei far of trees, writes F. E. L. Boat, Vof the united Btatea biological - survey, woodpeckera are the most Important The value of their .Work, in dollars and cent la impossible to calculate. Dr. A. D. Hopkins, of tha bureau of ento mology, haa said that the annual loas from Inaect work on forest treea amounts to at least tl00.000.600. and the woodpecker is king among the en mla of ,:inect ;pats. s' :'.v'""-;i ;: Persona who have aeen theae active fllttl creatures upside down on the bark of a. tree they were tapping may have wondered how the birds could maintain themselves In all positions. But nature haa attended to that, and haa equipped tne woodpecker apcialiy for his busi ness. . Tha lege of these bird are ahort and atout, and the toea are furnished with atrqng, aharp clawa. With one ex- hear Owen I-iOreJoy apeak.. Ha spoke reason of an unused ocean highway,', of tha Dred Scott decision which to a hey must not complala when the peapl certain extent aaUblished alavary all ef tha Interior aeek rlUf at tb bands ever th United SUtea, th deolalon of th eommlaaion." .... ' being ta the interest of th alave hold- An authority an tbla complex subject ar. ; - . ef rate baa made the following oom- , Tb lata d eclat on la th Standard Oil parlaon: The distance betweeh Seattle case ta In the Interest of trusts and d Spokane la Its roll by th Great combines, they have taken thav place of Northern: by the Northern Paclfie SI9 pi . alava holdere. , Xxrjoy'a adylc rallea; by. the Oregon 4c Washington was to keen the Renubllcan nartv In (via Portland), about S mllea. In. power until th old Judge die oft At lord to do any buslneea between S-t that tlm thr court waa divided. newlatUa and Spokane. ' each , road rauat there ta only on Judg with the people, charge tb aame rate or far. , - the reat are with the Interest. I . What would happen under a strict It appeara that when they assumed I oontrucuon or tft long and ahort Haul thr JeglalaUv part of th government etaueeT Certainly the shortest line they would aend congressmen - and Ink the low eat rat, and there members of the senate noma.. - . by aecur all th bualnes. t What ' Thar ta but one way eut of the mat- woul1 .happen toeoaat-trefflo -with ter and that is to call a national on- " Mtonaapolla, SU ertltufnnat kammMIim anal mAnn a wtmm Paul, Omaha and Kansas City Br Com- constltutlon. Tbe judge ar assunvj P1'. mk5'5 Bndep ,tVew,,? constitutional that Is not aitlafactory wnlcB hjSd tha ehortat line to tb Interests. - ' , i . " vi inaunuco a an uiia ni( uiv tmfat rat In nearly all tranaaetlona governs th purchase, Seattle would oonsecroeat ly los two or thr competing mar- keta In which to buy; and tha convers would ba equally true on or more ef th eastern eltlea would lea Seattle's trade. The argument . for more ships is timely, becauae, without them, the ten dency la toward a strict application of the statute, placing the coast cities at a disadvantage, it ia a matter inat A brother of Owen Lovejoy- dltd a ' newspaper at a point oppoalta St Leula In 1111 and waa killed and his presses destroyed" because he -waa op posed to slavery. .;,"--; ..-I ' 8. a SCHOONOVER. Ills Lafayette's Xmbrallav ,v j From Norfolk Landmark. Mrs, Roawell R. Boes, -wife of a chaplain In the United States navy. now atattnnad. In thai NArTntlr naw van has a novel rello of an umbrella , pre-1 merits tha cloaat atudy of erery mar. Cnani, suniUHiunr aura au m,r v.u- News. Forecast aented b tha cltT of Soaton tn Tfav. ette In 1824. It is probably en of the J sen on the Paelflo slppev Mat and most axpennve modal ef that period. Mrs. Hoes, In showing her heirloom, always dwalla on our modern departure from tha waya of the early fathera. "Think of a great city." aald Mrs. Hoes, "presenting to the president a. W Tf.lt.a aa.t.aa .. . . A like Lafayette auch a trTvw'effenrl "Washington, t). Jun. 1T-Praldant "-rtlf SI ..'-r.-.a and Mra Taft will celebrate their allvar . -V . ,7" .T, . '. ".r"" wedding, the twenty-fifth anniversary " I r th.i, n.i, -1 tha Wt.lt TTnnaa assortment or auver that would Sut the r .1" ZZ2 "1 i.ir. roval mat at Windsor on nt k. .. I Monday. They are planning to, make nlng. But Boston, in 1824 . presented an umbrella." ;. , -C-.- ,:.'.;-. It la built' on fat. aubstantlaL renu- ine whalebone ribs, something lmpoa- slble to obtain now. The points are of line ivory, now yellow aa a - daffodil. and the handle ia ivory, quaintly earved and Inlaid with gold and allver. On the handle la the head of Lafayette -delicately chased, and about th allver rim at tha extrm end of th handle la In scribed, ; "TO our nation's guest" SEVEN FAMOUS ORDERS Knights of the Round Table. . The first establishment of an order of xnigntnood ia or great antiquity. Among the earliest of the European-na tlon a history notes, in some form or an other, the inatltutlon of an order of chivalry, lta members conatltuting the hlguest dignitaries of state. In' Beeklng for the origin, of thla cuatom, we are led back to tbe feudal ages, and the commencement of the period of knight hood, as we Understand v It, may be placed at the. beginning of the tenth century.. From the twelfth to the four teenth century It had a great influence la refining the manners of most of tha natlona -of Europe. . - -. : .. . : If not' the oldest, at least the moat Interesting of the orders of knight hood, waa the Knlghta of the Round Ta ble. The earliest mention w have 'of this order Is in Goeffrey of Monmouth. fnrthsr trastttto-imada by Wace,Iln 116B, occur hat two snort linea!-; -jy. "F lrat Arthur la roonde Table . Don't Brltona dlent matnta fable." Layamon comes -close upon tha' heels of Waeer! and In Roman -de Brut expand this simple statement and gives the story of th carpenter coming to th king and proposing to make a table at which th high ahould be-even with th low, and ao rivalries and blood shed' toe bencef orth nrevntd. ( - There aeems to be some unauthen- tlca ted ..connection . between thla ; order and the legend of the Holy Grail and Layamon clalma f or th carpenter tha Idea of representing tha table used by our Savior at th last supper. Layamon thua describes the crafty workman's meeting with the king: '-v ., jk, "Hall. Arthur, nobleat of kinga. I am thine own man. I know of treeworksi (carpentry). I . heard say, beyond tha , (bat. thy knlghta generally, flgbt at thy board: on midwinter's day many fell, -or their mlckl prld wrought murderoua play, and. for their high lin- n men wouia DO Wltnin. ' tlut-1 Will work the a board exceeding fair that moreai may ; au sixteen hundred and more, i ao that hone may be without. And when thm wilt ride thou may est carry u win tne ana aet it wher thou wilt and then thou needeat never fear, to the world's end. that' aver anv tiMn a knight at thy board may make fight, for mci a ana.ii ina nign OB even With the row. . -, . . ; i.-'W'i' rfV;'.:':! j Timber .waa brouaht and thav iuv.ni begun. In four ; weeka time tha work was oompieiea. , xnen Arthur - uim. moned all ftla knights. : All aorta were there and they were all seated, the high With th low. ThiB la the bearlnnlna- nt "f legenas regarding the InatU tution of tha Order of tha RamA t.ki- i Arthur .waa crowd kin, A .i--aJ ir.M,;.iM iraternlty . of knlghta .that he created conatsted of rour ana twenty, or whom ha waa nhi The table contrived by the eannM.' according to traditions, hangs up In th castle of Winchester, wber they used to meet th tlm of their metln hai The object of thla order waa "t tect and defend . widows; maldena . mtA cniiuranj relieve me aiatressed, main tain the Christian faith, protect pi! sruna, . aavance nonor and aunnraaa vice." Upon any complaint mad to me aing oc injury or oppression, ana nt thesa knlghta, whom ha klnar ahnnM appoint. waa to revenge tha same. And further, every knight waa expected to perform and instruct young lords and gentlemen In th exercise of arms. , - Tomorrow OrJer of the Garter. . i it an event Of Importance, especially to their relatlvea and intimate rrienda. The president baa Invited SO of his boy hood friends to attend the celebration. A a-avHan nartv at thm Whit Hnuaa will be a leading feature Of th featlvttiea. - Praaident Taft Will attend the Tale commencement on Wadneaday and the next day he will apeak at the conven tion of the New York Bankera associa tion at Manhattan Beach. It la Prob able that on Friday be will take a trip on the Mayflower to Fall River to at- tend tha celebration there of th on hundredth anniversary of the establish ment 4f the eotton manufacturing In dustry in New England. The attention of the world win be centered Thursday , on Weatmlnster Ab bey, where King George and Queen Mary, will be orowned with all the elaborate and splendid ceremonies that have at tended almllar event for ages. Aalda from , the coronation there will be , a aucceaslon of brilliant ceremonies and pageants that will combine to make tbe week in London on ever to be remem bered. , The , chief event : of - the weak may be summarised as follows: ' Monday Arrival of th royal guests and official representatlvea from all parta of th world. .: !-. v Tuesday Tbe king: and queen will give a state; banquet at 'Buckingham palace. 1 Wednesday-The Duke of Connaught will give a dinner at St. Jamea' palace. .Thursday Their majesties will drive in state from Buckingham palace to ' Westminster abbey for the coronation Oeremony.;..v--iV"';-v: Friday Their majestlea will make a progress to the city and through a por tion of South London. Saturdays Thelr majeatlea, with the royal gueata and . foreign envoys, will go to Portsmouth for a great, review of the fleet off Splthead. ' . ' The notable-con ventlona of the week will Include the sessions of the North American Baptist : convention and the Baptist World Alliance, in Philadelphia; the annual ' meeting of the ' National Association for tlie Study and Preven-' " tlon of Tuberculosis, in 'Denver; the thirteenth triennial convention ef tha International Sunday School association, In San Francisco; the thirdty-thlrd na-- " tlonal aaengerfest of tha-North Ameri can aaengerbund, In Milwaukee; the an nual meeting of the Canadian Press a.- - soclatlon. In Toronto, and the aecond annual convention of the Intermountaln' uooa noaas s association, in Pocatolia. ' - Idaho. . . . ; t