V.
WEpNESDAY EVENINO, JUNE 21, 1811.
THE JOURNAL
, -ir ntprrgnpsitT mwwwi.
CX-S. JACkSON..
tn.; amlM at Ta l"fl
Sifta VaaihUI . Portwnw
. - - - nfliM at Parma, w.
fhr tramattaeioa tkroasb tea, "
tTl tnioNM Mala TITS;
gORKIO .nVKBTtSINO KP!" VIT!.?
lfr a'aaaa. WW lertl UiS tfe-plae
' ft BulMUit, (ttrf.
SubMrlntW T'rm kr P ear eSsieae
h Ik laltW llllx r Manee,
Oae Feer.......aj.eo I One seBtB.....e
M.ywr. gt.10 I On aMMIf.....-.f
rtAILV AMD BUN DA V.
IT.S0 I Ot smatk t
. "Iet nao bat have an aim, a i
. jurpo, nd opportunities to at
' tain hla end shall start forth
Uko buds at the kiss of
print. Pay not thou
laekeat talent What talent
baa any of tha great ones bat
tar than their paaalonate trlat
in tha efficacy of labor T
Tha main thing la to have aa
aim and to pursue H with par
: severance. . here ara bo oppor
tunities for thosa who nave pa
Mfe purpose. Blahop Spalding. '
THE nOXEER
IIOSB W1I0 made Oregon arc
assembled for the annual re
union. After 'sixty years and
. mora, the gathering la one of
snowy beads and decimated ranks.
v From 1110 or 1S5J to Jill. Is a
fc few rears old, and. wireless. - It
Is the link between the tallow candle
and the electrie light. ' It Is the
stretch between the ox team and the
cart and the anto, and the step from
a boy's kite to a human being pro
pelled through the sky In an aero
plan at a speed of 155 miles an
hoar. It Is the difference between
Oregon wild and Oregon civilised,
street. , Men are going.' to .do boal-1 with him and were corraled. But
nets, and fit they 'cannot . do ,it on? even Morgan must have paled when
I Washington they will jo to some he had laid before blm for the first
k.kiwJI I other thoroughfare. If the -Inflation time the stupendous sums that bis
I ' ..a t v . 'm ' - n.. l . ( u- wa
yiau IUTUITVU.' out llHUirv w-
ing set the funds to make' the pur
chases lad to be ereatad they did
not exist. a i , ;
He was oVallng In tens and hun
dreds of minions. All Andrew Car
negie's libraries and peace ftfhds.
and foundations, were there on Mor
gan's table In embryo, and bun
dreda of millions more. Show of
value for the billion dollars capital
of the infant steel corporation must
be made. By what necromancy qpuld
those values be made to appear In
the necessary black? and white of the
account books ifhd ledgers?
Before the negotiators lay the
schedules and Inventories of 'the
whole mate of properties impossi
ble to recount. Let them value them
first at their then present worth,
each one by Itself, and be liberal
about It Bach represented an In
tegral portion of tbe steel and iron
trade of the United States. Blend
them and mix them in one huge call
dron, and the trick was done. Tbe
"possibilities of wealth beyond the
dreams of avarice" lay In tbe han
dling of tbe product War was end
ed. Competition bad vanished.
"Take thy bill and write" what
you please was the order to the
new, young, giant. The value was,
at one moment, that of the collec
tion of atoms of the steel trade. At
the next moment by magic, It bad
become one going concern, and Its
capital was doubled. Its future
earnings, tfased on its control of the
great Industry, became the grounds
of a calculation of value that satis
fied bankers, filled the mouth of
Wall street, dominated the steel
trade of the world.
But for how long? That Is the
query? , , - '
Is carried far enough, tenants, will
morejrid more drift Into and build
up a big business district on tbe east
aide..
The popularity of streets Is a mere
passing notion anyway. Streets that
were once on the bosom of popular
ity are not now, even In Portland. A
few years ot change can bring quie
tude and desertion to streets where
once the lights gleamed and ; the
crowds 1oatA(t.
The first law of nature Is .self,
preservation, and tenants under any
sun will defend themselves. If they
cannot pay the price, tbey will hunt
floor space elsewhere, or go out Of
business.
It will be harmful to Portland to
get ground rents, office rants or res
idence rentals too high. It Is infla
tion, and the greater the Inflation
the sooner will be the collapse and
the further the fall. The stability
of Portland lies in the fact that It
has always been conservative. It
ought to be saved now from tbe fol
lies and fury of a landlord trust
ot the poor,, the sick gnd. theaf-
nictea. r
, In Alabama, a number of women
have banded together and ara living
on grass and green twigs.. .Until we
get a better understanding of what
Is to be gained by the new diet, most
of us will continue to eke out an ex
istence on porterhouse, shrimp salad
and strawberries. . ,
COMMENT AW, NEWS IN BRIEF
n z
II TffM From f h P onla I
JL I
TRAGF.DIK8 ABTD GAIXS IX
AVIATION
8 ONE DISASTER follows close
on the heels of the last It
would seem that there was no
advance in this new and peri
lous art. . Skill, courage, experience
In the flylig.man appear to count
for nothing. The record of each hor
rible death Is surely followed by the
(Communications sant ta Tha Journal
for publication In this departmant
should not axcitfd 109 words in lancth
and must ba acoompanlad by. tha name
and add rasa af tha aandar.) .
long span. .It Is the difference be- statement that the martyr was one
tween a rude and puny telegrapn but f the boldest, and had the most ex
perience.
Tet there is no check seen either
In the manufacture of aeroplanes,
nnr in tha miranlt nt nw dvtM tnr
Mogul -.locomotive. the one horse ltrentth and lability. Nor on the
other side of the art Is there any
lack of aviators. A week or so after
the French 'minister of war met tils
sudden death only a few days after
the Paris to Madrid, and the Paris to
Turin races had recorded their dls-
THB PACK TIIAT KILLS
The pioneers have seen i a long list L,, ,tll, more numerously fol
of man's devices go Into .tbe discard.
The Hall andvthe ox yoke went, and
the combined harvester and electric
car came. Tbe stage coach vanished
and the linotype, the telephone and
the. milking machine appeared. The
lien, man's tepee with its curling
smoke went with a vanishing race,
and a city of a flnarter of a mil-
lowed race, with even heavier prizes,
was started from the same grounds
near Paris, and three of the filers
met death of course men of great
courage and experience. ;
Then to keep the game fn fashion
pictures are seen in all the papers of
Mr. Arthur Balfour, the leader of
"0
NE DEAD AND three in-
"Labor Insurance."
Tfrrmlston. Or., Juna II. To tha Edi
tor of Tha journal. Tour editorial, an
tltlad, "Labor Inauranea a National
Nestf." In today's Issue has bean eara-
fully read, and It aaama to ma that
corsraaa, whlla anaetlns such a law. Is
tnarely daallna; with tha af foot Instead
of rrmovlns tua causa.
In tha davs befora "tha war." If a
chattal slave was takan sick or Injured
while plllnr up profit for hla mastsr,
tna maatar Immediately consulted the
best af madfeal skill, and tha dlsablad
alava was dootorad at tha inaatars ax
panaa. a
Today n If a wars earner, er batter, a
waa-a alava, la Injured er takee sick
whlla plllnr up profit for his maatar,
tha maatar Immediately hire another
wage slave to taka hla plaoe, and tha
dlaabted slava raeks medical skill
through our charity organisations.
Tha chattel slava owner bad money
Invested In tha chattel alava Tha wage
alava owner haa money Invested In ma
chinery. Practically all sleknaaa and
disablement of the wage slava today Is
tha direct result of tna masters greed
for profit Improper ventilation, unean.
Itary workshops, lack of safety devlcea,
etc.
When tha factortea. mines and mills
are publla lnduatrlea, ara collectively
owned and operated for use Instead of
for profit, then there will be proper
ventilation, aanltary workshops and
safety devices. Then and only then
will the worker be protected from sick
ness and disablement. This Is tha plan
of the Socialist party.
We Socialists believe In tha removal
of the cause. Instead of a remedy for
the effect Let all fair minded people
6MALL CUAKGB
this year also to paes without
r-'Arr7 '"'"r W U big Quantities
la Oregon T .
r - -a- a . ,
like moat aid edaeea 'frequently re
eted as trulama, 'murder will out"
u m iu tnaoy nasea. . t
.. .:-.i e . e- ' '
Ttlfl Jl MAM I - .11 -
. - - - - - - . ... v.pwn un i ,rui.
" if nar minion amau rarraera.
-wj mrm n peqpie me Slat needs.
Wn r aa rnAkt itn, wi.,. .
Ihalr haraaterayoontlnually bite their
llpa, .when nobody doe ao la real lifet
conault Webater'a, dictionary, or tha Bn-
Jured." Is the passing no-1 eyclopedla Brltannlca. or aoma other
,. . . standard authority, for a definition af
tlce. It recounts the story Soc,all.m. .nd th' --d ftuI. dw.i.ra.
tlon of prlnclplea and our platform and
see whether or not we have a remedy
for the evils that exist today.
It J. CORRELU
Willamette. v'. j f
lv The tall prairie' grass that rose
high as a man's bead over the -Wil
lamette valley. Is gone, and in its
ing a regular flight as a passenger
with Graham-WbRe.
However, In this, as In every new
and popular art, designs are gradu
irirl improved .nd .tandardlxed-
flelds, orchards heavy with their v""'? "7""- X VZ. ,
fruitage, the bum and whirr of in
dustry and a perspective dotted with
thrifty farm homes.' It Is tbe trans-
in merely perfecting the mechanism
of 'the early forms. ( : '
In'the June number of the Colum
of a streetcar and an auto.
It is an announcement that once
would have shocked tbe city.
But, we are all traveling now at
the pace that kills. The hurrying
crowd reads of the accident, breathes
a momentary sigh of regret, and
hurries on.
We are all trying to annihilate dis
tance and conquer time. Steam is
no longer fat enough, and we ride
on tbe wings of electricity, and bave
even harnessed tbe wind. -Whatever
device offers us the most speed,
we employ.
Those in the street are all speed
ing as though each was a woman and
every day a bargain day. We. be
grudge every passing moment its
right to glide by, and strive to com
press two moments of work into it,
formation of the wild and the Cre-Ib,an ma&wlM n article, by Angus-
i . ... . irnsa UAar . jivttAi in mar AAir"a . 1 11-
won oi; a commonweaitn. came r "liZi" . I Each speeds a. though the revolu
rrom ine leaaersmp or me pioneers, -"r L. " ,71 . , rrr.in-! t ons of the earth and the welfare of
arhn nnirriwi their tiAtnAa hnrnri f Ti I writer tells us that itx a new machine . . , A
, -w - , , : . . t..iv. v 1 me race aepenaea on ms geiuns iu
Mls-ounand, . for the long Journey to a..?a!!lVl: Ibb" destination. Yet, the cold fact
me, uregon country, iaeea.ua per- -r-. . """.Trt i remains that as each In his time
US Of privation.: hunger, unbridged h,...J,tGd. A n?.W f0rm .of W,?.?' LiMM hv tha wavsld. another stens
m i i..- -M i witii riATihia . nna nn rinMr-iiira i -'- J ------
extremities." . Further. , tbaf . Mr. jj d tak h' n l
n i- p-i k;. . iHarrlman passed on, and the stock
pushed wonder, in 'automatlo bat-1 c.k!" KkS; "d-5l
streams and hostile Indians. . It was
"a , Journey to an empire that the
jiands ot the pioneers have made Imperial.
WILLAMETTE'S WOOL BEST
anclng devices. He is, said ta be ! nanc and transportation felt no rip
able to turn his attenUon completely tvl' .J .
slow walk, but times have changed.
The slow-moving Journey to the cem-
Ifrom the operation of his controlling
levers, and to write a note with pea
E DO NOT yet know the pos-
ttltllttAa nf thm Will tt I t1 An a of nana- arlilla Via
valley. A letter to C. C. machine took entire care of itself jfteJ7 ? 'oroten- pd int."I. 5
Colt of the Union Meat com- and continued Its steady flight I at he flyl momentt. we hus-
pany from the veterinary director through the air,
general ana livestock commissioner The Wrights, also, are said to be
of Canada is in evidence. It Is seriously considering radical Un
dated Ottawa, June 6, and acknowl- provements in their present methods
eaging tne receipt or a sample of 1 0f control
VtTllf.aiA 1 I
niiuoeus .vsuer JOng wooi, says: So. with France. America and
It is an excellent specimen being England all engaged, in working out
softer, moe elastic and possessing new plans with feverish energy It
more lustre than any Wool of the maybe based that in, the multitude
same class from tbe other states. It 0f these counsellors may be found
u superior to any wncom or cots- the wisdom that leads to safety.
worn wool grown in canaaa, ana
ieompares favorably with samples I
have from Great Britain. The fact
that your climate Is very similar to
the south of England no doubt ac
counts for this. If wool of this qual
ity were put up properly. It would
'not only be worth five cents a pound
HISTORY AND, FUTURE OF THE
STEEL TRUST
T
HE HISTORY of the. United
States Steel corporation is too
close for a balanced, complete,
and true Idea. The figures
more than the harsh, dry fibre of the tbat cross or fill the stage, Morgan,
Jong . wools grown . In Utah, Idaho Gary, Carnegie; Gates and the rest,
and Wyoming, but would -hold its are too near to get them into proper
tie the dead off to the grave In a
swinging trot. If we keep tip the
pace, presently the horses will be
too slow, we shall shoot a man to bis
burial lot In the swiftest auto, hire
professional mourners to weep, and
throw the dirt over his remains with
a motor shovel.
The recurring accidents with their
heavy toll on life :.re the visible
signs of how we are gambling' with
life, time and distance,
THE rOOR IN ENGLAND
own against English competition,
even on a free wool basis."
' The sample In Question waa from
a Cotswcid fleece. The letter shows
what can be done In the Willamette
Valley with Cotswold and Lincoln
' weep. It should be a stimulus to
farmers In this region to .redouble
their efforts.
,-fi Not only is the wool thus excel
lent,' but the climate and foods of the
' Willamette valley produce the big
gest carcasses, a circumstance tbat
contrives for a heightened profit. It
1s a fact of incomparable value to
.the, region. When it becomes un
derstood, every farmer will have his
'flock of long wools, and devote hlm
elf assiduously to improving the
breed to the utmost
INFLATED RENTALS
INFLATED ' RENTALS are menac
ing Portland. The misgivings are
not only over what has come but
, what may come.
week are going to drive some, if not
all the tenants out. A doubling of
"rentals is usual when as is fre
quently - the , case, they are "not
trebled. '
"' Inflation, is always dangerous and
never more so than in rentafl.
iuwe u ou avcuv-iy u wnicn HCU-
tfons values are . more, destructive.
Fiction Is never business, and specu
lative prices are rarely sane.V r w
-. Portland large, and popular
streets have many competitors. . Every
business driven by Inflated rentals off
Washington street, helps a rival
proportions and perspective to each
other.- Yet if we delay the attempt
too long the future will, have be
come the present, as the long film Is
wound, and the time for action by
the real party in Interest,' the., pub
lic of America," will have passed.
The only recourse Is to deal with
each, separate episode, as the evi
dence ' about it Is fairly complete,
and jtrust to the historian of the fu
ture so to arrange them, that the ul
timate and essential truth of history
shall emerge. j
The first scene, then, In 1901, is
of war. The forces in the field were
the Carnegie steel, wire and tube
works, the Republic Iron & Steel
company, the National Tube com
pany, the American Steel & Wire
company, and the Tennessee Coal
& Iron company, for the Llg pieces
on the board and railroads, ore
beds, lake ports and millions of mis
cellaneous assets for the pawns.
The great constructive mind was
that of J. P. Morgan. His vision was
both wider and farther than that of
the rest What he saw as a vista, of
an immense trade, organized to pos
sibilities of unheard of profits that
his ambition grasped at, his courage
and fortune stimulated him to take
hold of, while his Judgment of men
tiught him to find the only factors
able to bring together and to organ
ise the enormous undertaking.
The weapons he used were money
and fear. -, . v.-.
Where it was needful to his ends
ULLER KNOWLEDGE of the
details of Lloyd George's bea
eflcent bill bow In parliament
ary examination discloses new
points of general Interest. Not, only
Is compulsory insurance against sick
tneas and Invalidity enacted, but pro
vision Is made for enlisting a force
of physicians In tbe pay of tbe state
whose duty , Is the continuing and
periodical examination of the In
sured. Thus not only Is shamming
or "malingering" to be fought, but
early hygienic and medical help is
to be secured. From the first, care
ful reports, are to be made by these
physicians. A mass of data will be
obtained on preventable and curable
diseases. "
As part of thisampalgn'the ap
propriation of 17,500,000 for tuber
culosis sanltorla, and $5,000,000 for
annual expenditure In their main
tenance, Is made,
A further progressive point is this.
Local sanitary inspectors and health
officers are made amenable to , the
law, If any epidemic of preventable
disease occurs through their neglect.
Old age pensions may be reason
ably Included as an Item In the na
tional expenditure on behalf of the
poorer classes. These pensions serve
physically as well as mentally to pro
long life and health. For the cur
rent year the cost la estimated at
$62,075,000.
The above Items, with .$250,000
for the Inauguration of sick Insur
ance, make up $74,825,000.,
The provision for the British navy
for. this same year is $221,965,000.
No Wonder that the arbitration
treaty is looked forward to on the
other side of the Atlantic with
thankful eagerness, as opening the
only, and ' the reasonable, prospect
for removing a burden of needless
taxation from the shourders. of the
Judge Coke and the Recall.
Central Point, Or., Juna 17. To the
Editor of Tha Journal It Is noticed that
one editorial of the Oregonlan calle at
tention to and condemns the system of
permitting so many unhung murderers at
large in this country and then tha next
day It writes a rebuke for tba sugges
tion that a judge be recalled because
ha contributes by undue favoritism to
tha escape of a cold blooded murderer In
southern Oregon In a county famous for
Its number of such crimes and also for
Its leniency In permitting only two to
be hung, out of a list of nearly a hun
dred murderers in a history of about SO
years. It Is not for the cause of better
government or for any of th argu
ments that the Oregonlan puts up
against uie recall of this judge but It
Is due to other reasons that it gets ao
bus'' with Its editorials In defence of
this Judge. This Judga rose from ob
scurtty in Coos county in a couple years
by being the attorney for the Southern
I'aclfla R. R. company and tha earns
proceas made him one of tha wealthy
men of that county and tha same In
fluence secured him the appointment to
the judgeship, and It Is this delicate re
lationship to this railroad Influenced
newspaper that brings out the bum ar
guments against the recall of thla judge
and the defence of unhung cold blooded
murderers in aouthern Oregon. If tha
Oregonlan wants to harp on this case
let It print all tha facta as to tha judge
and the murderer It defends.
If tha people gat a judge who doe
not know enough law to Instruct a jury
it is time there was a remedy for re
placing' him, It Is tha best means ever
discovered for getting rid of judges who
get their places not on account of their
ability as judges or their knowledge of
the laws but through their oolltlcal Dull ;
and a stand In witn Just such degener
ates as the one who committed tha cow
ardly cold blooded murder referred to.
It would add to the Oregonlan's power
for good and Its Influence among men
If It would devote its editorial columns
to a better purpose and keep ita subsi
dised Influence out of such matters; per
haps after awhile the Oregon or Port
land people would be led by Its argu
ments and advice so that something It
favors or argues for may bave a ma
jority of the people to back it up.
The people of tbe district in which
this judge occupies the Dench ara cap
able of deciding this question themselves
without any advice by or from the Ore
gonlan, but ita interest only shows its
masters when the silent and secret re
lations between Its masters, the railroad
Interests, and this judge are known.
P. CBRIAN.
Man ' awatlowed-' li im, in
months, and la erawina ..j ..nbiin.
pver the feat and tha lift ha won by id
, :. : a
".'Whan' a e-trf la marrl-4 v
had better Smile and make tha bant of
lillriaV " ' '"-in-iaw ima i io meir
. a re ... ,;
Tha laat Af tha thraa kma V.1IA-
1s married and (Jramlpa and Oranduia
Bryan have the home nest all to them
selves., , (, ..,'
A man ran elalm to be a Democrat
or a Republican, and think; talk and
vote as he Pleaaaa. . Isn't Ma a fr-a
csvnirr wnaii .,- .
Russian Office- amal TJarll.raW
has bean sent to nrleon tar two vuri
for fraud. If he had been named Liar
liarllaraky. he would have "got" three
Within oartal-A4r Jin cart In llmlta.
women ara bvtta" students than men,
air la than boys., The two new women
lawyer stood far above tha aVaraa-a In
vie xamuiaiioa.
Proaecutlflna' ' f or frsuds In nuronaaa
of naval supplies at Seattle are some
thing new, but tha frauds, there are
reasons to believe, have bean perpe-
trataH A nan wa m
) ' a.
"Wall street la a 'good plaoe for you
and meito keen away from," remarked
Mr. Oary to tha chairman of the in.
veatlgatlng com mil tee. But Mr. Gary
never got far away from Wall street
or out of touch with Mr. Morgan.
,. a i
'Tha Oary .dinners. Judge Oary testi
fies, ware designed aa conferences- to
maintain an "equilibrium of trade" and
"proaperous conditions." Meaning a
virtual monopoly by the steel trust,
and prosperity for this and other trusts.
Whatever ether, crops may be short,
or infrequent, tha crops of new lawyers
and doctors are always over-plnntlful.
A batch of 71 new lawyers were created
tha other day. Tha curloua feature of
tha Incident Is that aeven failed to
pass. '
tbe
', OREGON SIDKLldlT J
Weston people recently , enjoyed
rars spectacle of a lunar rainbow.
a e ,
"Huntington Is 'confronted with the
neoassity of Inereasing Its water supply.
Tha thermometer st rrtnevtlle ' rose
to. fl degrees June u, me record. lor
L. a. a. a,..,-.-' I .
I1W wbUI v . leij. , .
, .a e
If. J, Klmmnns for st Years aunertn
tendent of eVhonle of Wheeler county.
has boUgut ao abstract business at Con
The new Presbi'trlan chureli-a
Myrtle Creok wss dedicated inat flunday.
An older adlflct was buraod 'down II
I months ago,. . , .
Among tha new Improvements prom
Ised Uuaene bv the Hon thorn Paclflft
company in July la adtdtional sidetracks
in tua ireigni yaraa. , j
John la Harris, formerly of Klamath
Falla. baa recaivad aa arrtolnlment as
statlatlclan In the forest serrloe. .He
will be located at Chicago. -.
Tha Bedn.ond lslly llpokaaman'a e
latenca cloaed with the third Issue,
i BuRlnwas oonsMeratlons lafluenoed the
publishers to. discontinue publication.
- '.'' ' ' x "
- Former Msyor I fairy Laaa .of this
clt- will deliver the oration at the
f ourth or juiy celebration at corvaula.
Hla early boyhood was spent, lo that
town, . .. .-, ........ , .
Miss Florence Van Bibber has been
appointed supervisor of tha ' Florence
dlatrlct. which includes many or the
school districts of tbe western part of
ine oouniy. , . ... ;
' ' a- e ,
T. R Luckay. while at Newport dlr
iin ror agates at rye creeK peaca. un
earthed .an antlrated pair of hand,
cuffs, covered . with rust, , two and a
nan reel unaer ground. : '
i ; . a e . .. v '
Union Republican: W. . TownW Is
Installing a portable gasoline pumping
plant on his ranch, and-water will be
fiumped from dltchesi Later ba may
netail a system of wells for' use 4n
Irrigating.' ' ' ;
v ' K ' '.l'.'r" '-V ,(
Jor Steve, ones famed as a hunter of
tha sea otter on the Curry county ost,
haa reappeared at Port Orfod.v A gdod
... .li., akin la wArth'llMMA ISOA
and the hunter. must ba aw marksman' of
.. Hill on Reciprocity
From tha Nsw York American
million.
4:
Tha analnaa.- anoolntad ta exnert
Myrtle Cre-k'e sources of Water supply
haa renorted in favor of boring out the
corporation new supplying the tunnel.
The voters have already authorised a
t:o.000 bond Issue.
SEVEN FAMOUS ORDERS
The Order of the Thistle.
"No one attacks me with Impunity"
(Nemo ma lmpune lacesslt) Is the
motto of Scotland, and likewise the
motto of tha Order of tha Thistle, a
Scottish order, sometimes called the
Order of Saint Andrew. Tba year
717 Is given as tha mythical data of
Its founding. This order was especial-.
ly destined ror tha nobility or Scotland,
although one riband Is generally given
to a prince of the blood royal. ,
Tha .Order of tha Thistle was per
manently established In 1540 by King
James V, who being honored with the
Order of the Garter from his uncle.
King Henry VIII, with tha Golden Fleece
from the Emperor, and the Order of St.
Michael from France, resolved to be In
royal mode, and so made this order for
himself and II knights. In imitation ot
Christ and his 11 Apostles. Than cele
brating all the festivals of these orders,
be set up their arms and badges over
tha gate of his palace of Linlithgow,
joining St Andrew's with .them.
Some Scotch writers, ever fond of
antiquity, not satisfied with the nov
elty of this institution, affect to call
it . most -ancient aa to Its derivation.
But for this they have no better war
rant than tba dream of King Hungua,
tha Pict, to whom St Andrew, mak
ing a midnight visit, promised him a
sura victory over his foes, the North
umbrians; and tha next day St An
drew's cross appearing in tha air, he
made his words good, and tha
Northumbrians were defeated.
On this story, as they say. King
Archalus, about tha year 7S7, framed
tba Order of St Andrew, 700 yeara be
fora King" James V revived it. But
after so many ages. It is remarkable
that no foreign testimonies or authors
ara procured, no contemporary vouchers
to confirm, or'even so much as mention
It; se, that this part, relating to Its
great antiquity, must ba given up as
a fable.
Immediately -after- King James V.
had founded and established this or
der, ha died. In 1H J, -which put an and
to tha design fos- that time I for it
being about tha time of tba forma
tion, when raugious disputes ran to a
great height it waa deemed Impious
to Impersonate In an order of Knight
hood, Christ and his Apostles; nor
was this honorable order thought of.
till King Jamea VII of Scotland,, and
II of England, renewed It, by making
eight knights, on the 27th of May, 17.
But th glorious revolution .hap
pened the following 'year and no mora
knights were added till December, 173,
when her majesty. Queen Anna, was
most graolously pleased to fill up the
vacant stalls, agreeably to tha original
atatutes .Of the order, to which she
added soma new rules. In 1714, King
Qeorga I waa pleased to confirm the
statutes of Queen Anna, and several
mora, particularly that of .making rays
of glory to surround tha figure of St
Andrew, which hangs at tha collar:
and as" elections and installment were
both wanting, his majesty ordered that
chaptera of election should thenceforth
be held In tha royal presence: snd tha
great wardrobe to provide suitable man
tles, and other vestments, for tba
knights and officers of the order.
The statute of 1827 limits tbe num
ber of knights to It members of tha
Scottish nobility. In addition to the
sovereign and princes of the blood Tha
star of the order Is of silver with a
round gold plaque bearing a thistle on
a green field. Tha ribbon Is green.
Tomorrow The Knights of Malta.
when he had men like Carnesrie
and Gates to deal with, he bongbt. I British nation while . she willinely
The rest flinched from actual combat l bends to assume the additional care
Limit the Speed.
Portland. Or., June 19.- To the Editor
of The Journal In Sunday's Issue of
The Jounnal, under tha heading "Luna
tics," you discuss ths question of what
to do with the spied maniacs, and men
tion tna ract that fast driven autos ara
not only dangerous to life, but are an ac
tive destroyer of roads. This Is the first
time I have ever noticed either of these
admissions In any dally or general
newspaper in tha state, and The Journal
Is to be congratulated on Its courage In
referring to tnese tabooed subjects, for
tha auto dealers generally manage to
get space filled -up with a lot of rot
about how much advantage It la. to a
town or farm to have autos rushing
by the door and, ergo: Build good roads.
you also suggest in another editorial
that with better understanding, di
vergent views might be harmonised at
the "good roads day" meeting of the
uregon Development league at Astoria.
As a mere atom who does not own or
use an automobile, I would like to make
suggestion to the automobile people
themselves whereby all the differences
and misunderstandings can be elimin
ated. - - : ,
The first and greatest Is: Let a res
olution be Introduced by some auto en
thusiast or dealer, advocating a law
making it a misdemeanor, punishable
by both fine and jail sentence, for an
auto to be used on tha public high
way geared so It can run faster than
the legal rate, and let the resolution
be adopted. The maximum speed al
lowed- under tha law aa you state Is H
miles an hour.' That la faster than ft
ought to. be, A driver of a team going
10 miles an hour would be arrested for
fast driving. Why not the same speed
for aa autoT ftBut if a .machine Is
geared t not go faster -than tha legal
rate, It will not ' jgo faster. It won't
take half. o many "patrolmen and the
evidence Will be absolute and unques
tionable.' I suggested this, during the
session of the legislature, through your
columns, over my initials, anil ( hap.
pen to know of members, of 'that body
who were atraia to introduce sucn an j
amendment' y- ' !';. r.. ; .
Tba second thing Is for tha auto pao-
pie to show a willingness for each coun
ty to say where Its roads shall be built,
so they will dot be suspected of trying
to use their powerful Influence on a
"commission" or "superintendent" for
tha building of roads that will ba mere
ly speedways for autos. The farmers
and ordinary cltlsens of Oregon ara not
earrled away with (ha idea that an
"Alaska-to-MexIco" highway is worth
what It would cost The average far
mer would rather have part of the road
fund expended on tha cross roftM that
leads out. to his own and nis neign
bora' farms (ban to anjoy seeing
streak of dust pass on some one long
highway through tha state, even if it
contains - soma eastern or foreign mil'
llonalre. It might possibly ba worth
a few dollars, to a hotel or real estate
man, but. he falls to see where bis ben
efit eomes In. :
In an humble occupation I have been
around among tha farmers of Oregon
considerably and It Is a straight tip to
the jby riders and' auto dealers that
despite all the sentiment tbey may at
tempt to create Just as sura as they get
a set of laws enacted such as they at
tempted In tha last legislature, tbey
will meet a referendum' and be defeated
by the people. Again I say, let them
show their good faith by declaring for
autos with no high' gear on. when on
the public highway.
HORACE ADDIS.
A Queen With Nothing to Arbitrate,
From the New York world.
Statesmen may confer over treaties
of arbitration, but if the queen of Eng
land, as was elegantly said In New York
a few days ago, ; "slaps your wire's
face," what la there to do but load the
gun and grind tha sword T ..
It appears that her majesty of Great
Britain and Ireland baa figuratively
slapped the faces of several American
wives, and .ths worst of It Is that she
threatens others. On tha subject of
divorcees she has opinions not only, but
convictions. ; She will not receive them,
She refuses to arbitrate. Thus the very
crisis which every lover- of peace has
been dreading Is seen to be at hand..
In this country wife Is a wife, no
matter by what method, direct or clr
cul.tous, she may have been obtained. If
anybody slaps her face it means war.
Unhappily a good many American wives
of that sort that seek royal favor have
bad mora experience wtth parsons than
with undertakers. Tbey Are not wanted
at court Unhappily again, the affront
Is aimed only at tba United States, for
there Is no favored nation. Divorced
women elsewhere do pot at once aspire
to-the highest social circles of London.
" President Taft and Foreign Secretary
Grey have about agreed that questions
of honor can ba arbitrated. What Will
they do with the mora difficult prob
lems of marriage; etiquette and fern m-
)nity v . - -.
TWfoot B'Milgrhol,
My brother Ed ens summer's day was
hoeing in tha yard.- You see he had the
toothache that is why he hoed so hard
nd so he swore large atar-shaped
oatha oh . finger and on thumb he
talked by hand exclusively, for Ed la
near, and aumo.
While Ed was working patiently and
painfully -at-thaj; a thought of most
tremendous site came romping through
his hat and so he dropped his hand and
hoe and; grabbed his Sunday: coat and
hied.' himself adown the street like
Casey's billy t goat j He never stopped
until he came to where tha busy throngs
were buying groceries and clothes,
He waited long; at last be Saw a nil
grim ' from tha woods, and' bo ha took
the guy aside and told him of his goods.
He saidby he,nd and pencil point
rve gotja mue tract, rm sura 'twin
raise most anything, and how's, the time
to act- The tract contains four acres,
too," s Ed said in language plain.- "and
Just to : parttjwith ;'em" he said, "Is
bound to 'glveine pain." '! s
Tha pilgrim, learned the price! 'twas
cheap, and then produced the cash. Ed
took tha shekels hurriedly, and then
ha made a dash toward tire, bank where
in be placed tha money ' with a slam.
tnen gave.the pilgrim hla receipt a deed,
then Ilka a clam, be said no word by
hand or foot . A few days after that,
the pilgrim asked him, casually, "Where
are my acres air
'Then Edward laughed unon his hands:
bar laughed with right good glee, then
pointed to his open mouth so all who
ran could .see. -' 'The achers" Edward
told the man, "four achers; take a look:
they -raised the deuce; they e'en raised
me." The man called - him ; a crook,
And then In rage he batted In my poor
old brothers head. v That's : why there
I
From, the New York American. J
."Find out who got Root to Introduce
his amendment Trace Ma antecedents.
They maybe you'll be able la aooount
for his eourse." I . . ,' .
Jsmee J. Hill, ', empire builder of the
northwest and who for a .generation
has been advocating reciprocity with
Canada, thus dismissed further discus
sion of ths opposition of the senior sen
ator from this state to. the Canadian
reciprocity pact . ..-'
Mr. 11111 was seen at tha' offices of
ths Northern Securities company yes
terday by an American reporter, lie
was rushed with business, ss ha al
ways Is after arrival - in New York,
but he is so Interested la tha auccaas
of the trade agreement between ths
united Ptatae and Canada negotiated
by President Taft that he stopped all
wnrs to iaiR anouc nis favorite subject
wnetv reminded that opposition seemed
strong among. tha farmers of his own
part of tha country, he shook his aria-
sled head Impatiently and said: -
"It's a ghost dance that's all It 1st"
By -this time Mr. . Hill had stepped
out of kn elevator la the Mutual Life
bunding, holding to an arm of the
reporter, and dashed Into Nassau street
with the agility of a youngster. .
Clutching the reporter's arm. he
pushed Ms way through Hhe jostling
crowd Ibat lines that thoroughfare at
tbat hour and almost dragged hie com
panlon down the street toward the cen
ter of tha financial district, where he
bad an engagement with tbe laugh
of a Btentor ba rapeated:
it's a ghost dance. The farmers of
tha northwest are not opposed to reel
proclty with Canada. X group of poli
ticians up there who are being pulled
by strings that .lie beyond their do
main are taring to excite the farmers.
ust aa the medicine men, er snake
doctors, used to do among the Indian
tribes In the early days when devilment
was afoot These anake doctors would
lt the Indians around a camp - fire
sad start a ghoat dance that worked
them up into t frightful fury. Then
tha Indians would go out and ravage
tha white, settlements.
"But these snake doctors that are bow
trying to ralae tha devil in the north
west ara finding out that the ghost-
dance game can't ba worked oa the
palefaces .up there.
President Taft told the real truth
about it in bis speech In Chloago re
orally. Ha hit tha - nail squarely on
the head when ba declared that only a
few politicians In our section of the
country ara declaiming against reci
procity with Canada."
Mr. Hill had reached nis destination
at thla point of tbe . conversation. Ha
stopped on tha first step of tbe big
financial house at which ha had a press
Ina encasement and so absorbed .was
be In his subject that he continued to
talk-
"Wheat" in Minneapolis yesterday,"
he went on, "was f cents lower than it
was In Winnipeg. It Is (00 miles be
tween tha two cities, each of which Is
tha cantor of tha wheat Industry of
Its section.
"It costs t cents a bushel to haul
wheat from Winnipeg to Minneapolis.
Yes, sir, Cents a bushel. Then how
can anybody claim that reciprocity with.
Canada will mean the ruin of tha grain
industry in the northwest or any ether
part of our country? Such talk is fool
ish. It makes me tired. It Is tha
gabble of the snake doctors who are
trying to start a ghost dance.
"Do you know." Mr. Hill inquired.
his eyes biasing with enthusiasm, 'that
wa now do an annual business of 10,
000.000 with Canada? I wonder If Sen
ator Root stopped to think about that
before he adopted bis queer course?
"These figures mean ' that we do a
per capita business of IS1 a year with
Canada and that the balance of trade
in our favor is 111 per capita.
Why, we do only 117 par capita
of business a year with all of Great
Britain.
"Tba southern people and their rep-
reeentativea at Washington have a live
lier appreciation of the prospect af
forded by the reciprocity sgreement
with Canada than have those of the
noftffiaVThey see that with even the
limited form of free trade offered by
the pact the market for their cotton
goods and raw cotton will be enlarged,
as wall as that for other ot their farm
and manufactured articles.
"We have tha Canadian marker right
at our back door. We are looking for
markets In all other parts of the world,
where our advantage cannot possibly
be one half so good as in Canada.
"Wa have overloaded our consump
tive capacity and wa must find an out
let In order to prolong our prosperity.
In dealing with Canadians it is lust
like dealing witn our own noma roia.
We have to do no special packing of our
manufactures In order to suit the pe
culiar tastes or forms of Canadian buy
ers, as wa have- to do for nearly every
ether foreign market And we don't
bave to break bulk In transporting ship
ments to Canada.
"The situation Is so plain, so clear,
so obvious and so tempting that I can
not understand how any sane Ameri
can can hesitate to embrace It."
. Why He- Didn't Stand Up.
. From Tit-Bits, v
- It was married man's night at tha
revival meeting. .
"Let all you husbands , who have
-troubles on your minds stand' up!"
shouted tha emotional preacher at the
height of his spasm.-- -
Instantly every man In the church
rose to his feet except one.
"Ah I" exclaimed the preaohelv peer
ing out at this lone sitter,, who occu
pied a chair near the door and apart
from the others.. "You are one in a
million." - , ,
"It ain't that' piped back this one.
helplessly, as the rest of the congre
gation turned to gaze suspiciously - at
him. "I can't get up; I'm paralysed."
H
eroea
I
s no Joy today -for my poor brother
T.A -.. .,, :. . 1.- ' T ".V;' vV. '
Ed.
It ' is ' rumored " tbat the young Prines
of Wafea and Kaiser WllHanVa only
daughter mav ronrrv. They are. more
fr lesa, cousins about- 40 time over, but
mat is no oojection in European royal
circles..... V1 "-. t
(Cootrl6ated to The Journal by Walt Mason,
tha famona Kansas poet. His proM-poems are a
rafnlar feature of this column In Tbe Daily
Journal). . '.. ,.
' I read about the warlike guy whoWf
... . . ..... V . . i
smiling guts iu dhuis; ana naugni can
still his Jqyous cry and nothing him
can, rattle. But nobler than the man
who wins renown, with battle axes, Is
ha who springs some sunny grins while
coughing up his taxes. The captain
who, : in time of wreck, is free - from
fear's emotion, who calmly walks hla
sinking deck, alone upon the ocean, de
serves a wreath upon his tile; tie's
surely smooth as wax. is; but O the
man who wears a smile while coughing
up his taxes! ; I've seen, a brave police
man walk where vicious knaves were
lying, and bullets barely mtssed his
block, and bricks and knives were fly.
ing; I've seen the wild , beast . tamer
fool with savage bears -and yakes; but
O the man. who's calm and .cool when
coughing up bis taxes! Let oak leaves
on "his brow be-laid, let -nothing; be de
nied him! All other hemes wilt and
fade when' t,hey are brought beside him!
No greater shall be found while-earth
revolves upon Jts axis thla lofty soul
of ; sterling - worth, who smiles when '
paying taxes! v,- -,, ;
Copyright. Ml". y ' ft..a-f7 '"
Corf Uatthsw Adaau, Mfofli f 'Uf-j-aj
c '
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