:.T!IE ! OREGON DAILY ' ioURNAE,' PORTLAND. . FRIDAY EVENINO. JUNE , 80, Mail., - THE JOURNAL 1 AH ISIWfENDKNt yifffiWI. JACKSO ....... 111 atraaca, nruw, ... mrf Mnadtr In-, rtl m4 Vaaih rr4 ill rhe MtnffW FwrtlaaA, C., SMlter. TK1 HrWO.IIW Mala TIT! Ilnaja. All Marm-ita rie4 bf Ibaaa Trll trit iihiIii wkal 4prtiMBt you want. Oo year. rrmwoK AnvkanAiNO b r r r ntatitk. hrptla Trws by rntfl or to ny siMnaw la I!m t'DlkH Slates or Mtilra, DalLV. ..aft I mmm 9 t;!lA Y. Ow yar I5.BO I M swarfti " DAILT AND STWUT. On rr rt.m i o I and occupied ta the employment f which hta natare la capable, and die with the consciousness ' that ha has dona Ma beat Syd ney Smith. M GUGGKMIEIMED tbe coast to tha ew dock and to tho lumber trade of that district. ' Having 'that helped- themselves to tbelr best ability the Port of Toledo now -petitions tb United. 8tatea en gineers to take op and complete tbla work, honestly begun . and tarried pn and with value to abow for erery dollar apent. . On what does their plea reat? Eight or nine mllea from Toledo the Sllefi river rnna through the timber region ao named described from the life In John Fleming Wllson'g recent novel. Not loss than IS. 000, OOjI.OOO . ft of. timber stand there, waiting for the logger, and for the exit to be made for ft to the world market waiting. The Iok trine road to connect the Slleti and Yaqulna valleys at Toledo la said to be provldod for as soon as the United States government pro ceeds to complete the river and har bor Improvement that the Port of Toledo baa begun. This story Is typical of bo many In Oregon today. The old spirit was to sit back with folded bands In the hope that the "government" will do the work. The new spirit Is to or ganize, to call the best men In the yti AN INTERVIEW in the Ore- community together, and back tbelr Igonlan. H. li. Bcnwaru oerenas pan. with all the money that not Balllager, attacks eonserratlon- fc peopla can put together. And lata and conveya the strong lm- when, and not until, they bare done pressioo that the Fisher decision their part, to ask thto government, does Injustice to the Cunningham seated 3000 miles away, to under coat c 11 masts. The Oregonian ap take completion of the work, plaods hla Tiew, and insists edttorl- The development of an unopened alfy that Mr. Schwarta' utterance la district, and the welfare of hundreds proof that the decision by the bead 0f hard working settlers la at staka. Ot Cb Interior department 1a wrong channel. The , docks commission tnuut make the terminals. ! i '! . government la to '.'help" make ,thV. fallen under tha Influence of tha drug la a au indent reason.. And who knowa that t la aot "dope" fiends that ar assaulting womon and committing other crimes In and about Portland? Who knows that It waa not auch a flood that de stroyed the Hlllat y NET HUNDItfcD thoaaaiid people iu . iiinui';io i urusuu a falloa . fire chief yesterday. The funeral la declared to hare! been the most Impressive ever held 0 TWTBT - 1 , Ml , 1 ,11 II, ,1 , , II li . ; .: i v COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF In September, 1908. Mr. Schwarti, then, la the field division of the In terior department, stated In a re port that the Cnnnlngbam claims were fraudulent. Which time did Mr. Schwayx apeak accurately In bis official report In 1908. or In his Oregon lan Interview In 1911? Does be confess, now that he waa an un truthful official In 190$, and If ao. what special credence should be given ' to h!a personal TIIE APPORTIONMENT BILL T HE FEDERAL senate ought to paaa the apportionment bill at the special session. It ought to do something to prove that It can do at least a little business while the house'ls doing much. The sIea of the house la properly a matter for the house and not for the senate to determine. The ap- etatement I portlonment' of the body among the about the Cunningham claims lnlatatea w largely mathematics, and JJUJ I also property a house function. . ' In a letter to Commissioner Bal-I The honse baa passed, along with Ilncer. September 23. 1908. Mr. many other excellent, measures, an Bchwartx said: (See page 189 list apportionment bill. If the senate Is of orders. letters, telegrams, etc.. In not actually engaged In obstruction f the charges made by U R. Clavla to rather than- legislation. It ought to ; the president) "I am still of the agree to the bouse bill and end the pinion that thee claims (Cunning- matter. It onght to be the easiest ham "claims) were fraudulent" In I proposition of all offered for the son ' the same official publication, Mr. ate to agree on. and In Justice to It Bchwarti distinctly indicates his be- self the upper chamber ought to pass lief that Gnsrienhelm. money was re- It In order to make at least some eeived. and paid out for operations bow of doing business. by those la charge of the Cunning-1 Moreover, the Oregon primaries bam claims. The facta further ap-lfor nominating congressmen occur pear in a news article on another I in April. page. j In several states in which there However, Mr. Schwarta' and what fare Increases, no legislative proyls- he says now as contrasted with what ion haa been made for reconstruction be said as an official in 1908, are a of the congressional districts; In all mere episode. The big facta ot the states, there is desire to nave ample : controversy are that there art other opportunity for making nominations claimants beside those In the Cun-lln time for the 1911 November elec- aingbam group. There are other tions. men who have filed on coal lands In Serious confusion could arise from Alaska, expecting to sell their hold- postponement of action on the bill lngs to the Guggeuhelma, because The regular session will do nothing by the bottling process the Guggen- before the holidays. Regular ap- helms through ownership of trans- proprlation bills will consume large portation Hnea and other enterprises, attention Immediately thereafter. will be the only buyers. Other weighty legislation could eas- ' The chief owner of the Oregonian 1 ily postpone action on the apportion bas such a holding, and his inter ests are identical with the claimants In the Cunningham group. SEAMSTRESSES IN PARIS THE PARIS seamstress is called a "midlnette," from mldl, or noonday, when she Is often seen on the streets of the capital, ? where she strolls along, smiling, chatting, as she munches her mld day meal, which has cost but a few cents, and usually consists of a sau sage and a piece of bread. She works long hours, often under deplorable conditions, though some of the biggest shops have been busy lately in bettering her lot. Each midlnette is a specialist in her line, as she does only one thing, and can not hope to' learn how to make a complete drees. All work is pre pared for the seamstresses by expert hands in the big dressmaking estab lishments, who assemble and com plete the dress when its various parts are finished. The embroidery, which is such a ment bill until midsummer. If Oregon nominates but two con gressmen in April and the apportion ent bill, providing for three, is ssed in May, June, or later, there will be confusion worse confounded. Similar conditions of confusion can easily arise In other states. These are aufficient reasons for the senate to pass the apportionment measure before the special session adjourns, and It is probable that Oregon and other Pacific coast senators will do what they can to further such action. ALMOST IN SIGHT "0" NLY A FEW years hence steamers approaching the Olympic will becoming from Europe . and the Atlantic coast through the. Panama canal to Portland and other Pacific ports The builders of the canal foresaw this and wisely changed their plans to provide greater width and depth It would become Portland to follow the example of the older ports and In this city. It was attended by larger number of people than .eve gathered here on a similar occasion. It waa marked by a 'greater pro fusion ot floral offerings than ever appeared at a funeral In this city of flowers The bowed heads of those who watched the solemn cortege pass waa silent but eloquent tribute to the services and memory of the brave fire fighter. It was an humble token of the appreciation of hla life and work by all Portland. It was a touching reminder that though we appear to be heart-hardened by every day affairs, we are, after all, In a moment of emergency deeply sensible to the virtues and merits of devoted men. And, while the event Is yet fresh In mind, It Is pertinent to ask our selves why it Is that we wait until men are dead to offer some token ot our "esteem? Why do we not make some acknowledgments to the liv ing that we are not oblivious to their virtues and not unmindful of their services? And it Is further pertinent to re member that the conditions that cut this man down in his prime were in stalled In this city over the protest of prudent men and In violation of every rule of public safety. It la likewise pertinent In this hour of mourning, to also recall that all over this city there are tenements and apartments of indifferent construc tion In which the dwellers dally fac a thousand deaths. In his death, the fallen, ffre chief continued the line ot duty that had been the theme of his devotion In life. We cannot contemplate his sac rifice without being reminded that as a city we owe a stern duty In so regulating the construction of build ings and the environments ot the living that fire and death shall not continue to stalk. Cunniogriam Decision, From the Taooma Tribune. The eommlealoner of the general land office ot the department of the Interior lias cancelled the Cunningham eoal elalma In Alaaka, thirty-three en tries valued at many millions of dol lar The deelaton of the etfmmlMloner la a repudiation or the Baiunrer regime and a defeat ot the Morsan-Ousi en helm plan to grab the richest coal fields In the world. Thus Is settled the oaae which haa ao long aaitated the minds ot Alaskans, as It Is not likely that an appeal to the United States supreme court will alter the deolaion of Seoretary Fisher's department. In which he concurs. The reason for the sovernment's ac tion, aa stated in the dlsDatehea. Is laudable enough. It seeks to prevent a monopoly of the northern coalfields by any combination, and alao guards agalnat fraudulent entry of elalma. But tne governments action means a more vital fact yet; It oonaervea for. great Alaskan coal lands. It opens, or should open Immediately, the coal flelda to a broad development which tha north has long deelred and cer talnly needed. It will Increase Alaaka's population, find employment for thou sands of men and furnish the ftneat kind of coal to Alaska for use In Alaskan mines. No more high freight rates from the sound should be necessary. No more should the United States have to buy coal from British Columbia to develop Its own resources. The elimination ot British Columbia will leave open as a market for the Alaaka fwel tha en tire Paclflo coast Steamship trade will not suffer, but rather benefit, as the amount of trafflo between Alaska and Puget sound or the lower ooaat will far exceed the present output of Brltlah Columbia alone when the north ern coal lands are once put under tha process of development ; SMALL CIIANGB ' Thua far. and no farther, Mr. Sun, If eonareas will psse'the reciprocity put ana isae a recess UU fill, Ui couu M7 ' w noi compiain. , . OREGON. SIDELIGHTS The Cost!of FcJcral -'' Junketing Klamath Falls haa ordered a street sweeping maoulne. , ' - rare another ll Ms lite. lie was evl A New Tork mil cents for Savin hla dently an excellent Judge of values. e Accordlna; to all accounts, Chicago Is rather literally a hell-roarfng" city. Yet missionaries are sent from there to Washington Dispatch to Boston Horald. The process of peeping Into, the gov. eminent books 1s maktna a lot of Miit, term.. I "m ci"aurea are or uie peanut va- e . v "uk inat u not auogetner o Union Republican: Wood haulers are making contracts for the fall snpply, the Drlca aaked beln generally It er cora . - . . y tract from their -value aa metiers of human Interest In tbe operation of a great governmental machine. They "cer tainly are keeping some 10,000 govern -- e e- x . ...j . - v-yiuB Hum v,uuu govern Horns talent cleared 110 at' wkll-wa mn '" n ? rtn.i" ." pf last week with "lliuk'r convert comparatively well behaved poo-1 proceeds will augment t THE SEAMEN'S STRIKE T lose no time In providing for a deep- feature In the Paris dresses, is usu- er, straighter channel and for am ally done in separate rooms given pie wharf and 'dock .facilities. If over to embroidery workers exclu sively, and under contract by out Bide employers. The Paris seamstress earns from this Is not done, 'there will be grave danger that this port will sink to the rank of Philadelphia, which once rivaled New Tork, and of Charleston SO cents to $1 a day, tbe latter sum and Savannah." Oregonian. only when she has to work over Exactly so. And it Is the most hours. The girlst for these wages, powerful of all arguments for public liave to find food and lodging, clothe docks. The first fundamental for .themselves, and pay car fare from any transportation Is the terminal, long distances, aa rents in the heart It is so declared by all experts, all of Paris are altogether too high for authorities, alL experience and all them. history. It is -so recognized hy all , Recent laws have forbidden all railroads, and tney gran the ter nlKht work. Each establishment can mlnals as a means of killing water work overtime only a limited num , ber of nights In the year, and then when workers volunteer. SrPPLEMEXTIXG SELF HELP transportation If Portland rises to the occasion, the Panama canal will bring big steamers to this city from Atlantic and European ports, Just as the Ore gonian says. The big steamer is to be the means of reducing freight from the Atlantic to the Pacific to an HE SUDDEN outbreak and gen eral spread of the seamen's strike, centering in British ports but felt wherever the big ships ply, is evidence, first, of the close interweaving and interdepend ence of tbe world's business. The great machine is ao delicately bal anced In Its' working that It has to operate as a complete whole no one part being small or insignificant. What use is It to buy foodstuffs. depending on their arrival, when there are no ships to carry them? How can factories operate when raw material cannot be delivered? Vain is It to count on arrival of ocean- borne passengers for . family, busi ness, or a hundred other reasons, when the ships Jif 'helpless in the harbors. The life, of the world is suspended while the men that own and operate the ships, and the sail ors who navigate them are fighting out their differences. And, as usual in all such ques tions the public Is the real sufferer. No possibility exists for excluding the dara'age to the community. When the railroad men in France went on strike Premier Briand called the military laws into play before the food supply of Paris was cut off. The outcry of the-labor unions was loud. The natural right 'to strike was, It was alleged, infringed. But the men were not the losers in the end, because the rights and wrongs of the workers were fairly considered when the strike had been quelled and ended, and the evil passions that were mounting higher each day the strike lasted were stilled. The sympathy of the public- with the worker was never so consistently ex pressed as Is the case today. But when, as In the present case, the property, convenience, the for tune, even the life itself, of inno cent bystanders Is suddenly assailed, sympathy, and a reasonable public opinion have no fair play. The worst damage falls on the wrong shoulders, and essential justice Is endangered when prejudice is roused. Conquest of Meningitis. From Harper's Weekly. Now that the pitiful story of menln- gltle la ended for the curative effi ciency of the Flexner serum ta scientifi cally established, and It has taken Its place alongside vaccine and diphtheria ann-toxm it is pleasant to recall that the scourge barely outlived a century. The first epldemlo that we know of broke out In Switzerland In ltOt. and exactly 100 years later Or. Simon Flex ner waa officially Investigating an epi demic In New Tork city, and laying out a campaign for the methodical and sci entific conquest of "spotted fever." There are no disheartening pages tn tho closing chapter of the story of men ingitis. In September, 1908, Dr. Flex ner was able to announce that iSt cases of meningitis had been treated with the serum in various parts of the wortd. Of this number it cases, were properly eliminated from analysis, for one reason or another. Of the remain ing 391 'cases (in all of which bacter iological examination of fluid drawn from the spinal canal had demonstrated the presence of the dlplococcua) 295 had recovered and 98 had died. The percentage of recoveries was, therefore, 75 and the mortality was 25 per cent Perhapa the most strikng result was shown In the case of babies. Epidemic meningitis has been uniformly fatal to infants under the age of 1 year. The author of a famous text book on the diseases of children (Dr. Holt) reports that, of the 20 cases under 1 year treated In his hospital wards, not one recovered. But In the series of 393 cases treated with the Flexner serum, 82 were Infants under 1 year of 'age, and half of them recovered. The investigations coat a very large amount of money and the loss of some animal life about 26 monkeys and 100 Die. e e Man writes a long letler to a news- papw (o snow i no neea or more uni- veraitiea. a far greater need is more agricultural and other Industrial lm piements la use. . , If tho automoblllats had to Aav for the . . . . . . gooo roaaa iney rioe on, perhaps some or tnem who are arructea witn speed- mania might be content wits a some what slower pace. e Tho law that Mrs. Dr. Owena-Adalr worked for so long, if put In operation awhile back on a certain degenerate, would have prevented that horrible quadruple murder of tho Uiu family. e e Iceland haa granted woman suffrage, unlikely Farm.' Tho feign gehoei but it Is that many women Piano fund. Fort Orford la 'lively with teams haullnw in lumber railroad ties and dead cedar bolea for Dlllna and telo- Fhone poles, according to, the. Port Or ord Tribune. ' " Sheridan Sunt The new cement build ing for the electric light plant Is near ly com Dieted and will be a model flre- Droof structure. Tha new encina . la yet to b placed la postlon. . The Carton tribune remarka'af Dev. ton and vicinity that It "seams strange sea, Harry Bacharach nt itimiu r that tn a country town no country prod- and Oeorge W. Bean of . Tamna. and ucta are available, and that supplies I iv.nffio. t... r-i." are more numerous than a joke book. flfaVaala frllSMeanJl lea aa Will 4. i aac m uii VI 4 Uf Deal" noes py uie rotoroao entertained at the expense of officials and former of. neiais. - rosainiy petty 'wastefulness may bo shown on such a general acaia as to make a Deroocratls Issue of cam ymimn uiiiur, ,- There Is. something funny,' for exam ple, tn almost every peg of 'tho tea tlmony taken by tho bouse committed on expenditures Jn the postoffice de parwneni, me capers or that commls sion, appointed more . than two yearn it investigate tnoronani tha auk. Ject of time recorders" and consisting Of Postmasters D. (V Owes, of Mtlwaux must be Imported from other towns." 9 m - Leo Hofstettor of Prairie. City Is a farm name, the first Orant county man to register J Mrvloea Bacharach, who will there f mm this country en that I arm sane, tie cans nia rarm w wrinaiea in ma aigeativc an- W"J... "'JlIT.n .rf!aT oy JPale. lUy Glasscock ' is second paratus when he denarted from AtL-iU wv.w , -' ---- with Illahaa, A nll-v mnA fitnnk farm. nil. v. TV vu nn omciai journey, Began pli- iOC up accounts of 13.01 luncheons and Prairie. City Mas ft f r ay 1 1 He calls his farm Jer- haps had wrinkles In his dlgeatlvc an? mVi piSlue. a wari Tollmiu i l7 Iwl ' Apiary and Stock farm. umon acout: WhV prVprV5 o? ,0r dinners In eompiril Itr Chamber? ThTeol f.&r&t?; 7 V tho official figure was rnrfnad twirik Haa awmmiam tha nrih vuiisuiniiii m nav rov an nsii attaMtai iv m i.m riiaMv. or friemf I ,0?f whloh eom- ou of th Iffln- n4 kept It UP' for 41 days. Becb Fly. HI IS no relative Or rrieno, I .T tn in..j ahn tha inlnt- araah at. . l. .. ,Wara,nmayr,?a h U '? & ' ' ' STT W,th " "'.S i-fly crusade. arMi-.4n- ...4.. -v. I ' hoar' whl1' Bsao worked his suh- "miVch played by the JuVll. ban'3 "" 1'WP' a eomDoeed bv OUa Neal and ar- average for II days. One day ransed by Bill Toney. It shews what wnen Bacharach was living-high at kind of material our McMinavllle mua- the moat fashionable hotel In Waahlng Iclana are made of. The niece will be ton he hail a hrk. ...a , published In band form soon. luncheon that eoat 11 IL an Paisley Press: The. editor had his 'A":"' was gorging him, first view of the Ana River Irriaatlon wittr break plant and the artesian well on U P. KllDDel'e ranch, laat kfondav. He can only exclaim, Wonder fig I and let It e e A Texaa man reoovored damages for tho death of his daughter caused by flies from an adjacent establishment. the Judsa who tried tha case bain named Fly. Ho Is no relative or frlen however, of This case sets the good anti-fly at ' e Payne. Dalsell and other standpatters say the Uvnoorata. in bins to reduce the tariff, don't know What they are about. Perhaps not and It most be conceded tnat Aldrioh, Payne and the other standpat leaders always knew juat what they war snout: tnev sitnpiy turned the schedules over to the trusts and protected interests, ana toid tnem to nx tn: ouues to suit tnoroeeivea. e e "To vet Into heaven there's lust one way. And mat a my way," so some roixs say. "It's very doubtful if you get tnrourn unless you oeiieve just as we do. We know exactly what all teste mean. Through all Ood'a plans we've clearly seen. The hama and crowna we'll aurely receive, because Juat thus and so we believe. And those who dif fer from us, we fear Batnt Peter's wel oome will never hear. On us clean waahed aheeo he fairly dote. But there's little hone for you doubting goats." But many thoughtful, mind free men. know only that dust la within their ken. And venture not with im- fudent eeae to aoive God a mighty mya erles. No wonder "tie not all a joke- that often 'tie said of these know-tt-all folk, that if they go to heaven most of the rare would llkwlo be sent to some other place. go at that, for he Is stumped for lan- rast at 11.75. luncheon at 11.10 an4 dinner at- I J. 10. They wore running up other expenses on a similar scale and -when the audi- guas to express his amassment and de- tor turned tho accounts back to Post- "nl - - I tnAatae flanaral UKK.w . ........ ..w.awv,. vr pcrutin e e Lakevlew Kxamlner: With potatoes new selling at t and ( cents per pound It Is a matter of wonder to us why more eastern people do not take ad vantage of the many - ODPortunltlea whloh thla section offers and take up the growing ot garden produce. There's money In 11 New equipment for the C. R. of O. line haa been ordered In accordance with the recent order of the atate railway commission. New rails will bo laid from tha Junction to Union, a new motor car and a new combination car for pas sengers and baggage will be installed at-once. The engine now In use will oe ueed ror freight purposes only SEVEN GREAT NAVIGATORS William Dampler. One of the moat adventurous of the circumnavigators of England n the lat ter part of the seventeenth century was William Dampler who, aa bgoca neer, pirate, captain of the navy, and hydrographer, had one of the most eventful careers 'Of any one who ever sailed the seas. Hla parents, who were very poor, died when Dampler waa quite Xung, and he being compelled to shift for himself, went first to sea In charge of a Weymouth trader. The hardships of a voyage to Newfoundland disgusted htm, and he returned home. Sea life holding a strong fascination for him, and the Dutch .war of 1(73 having brok en out. he at once engaged In tbe royal navy and waa present In a number of bard fought engagements. Tbe first Important voyage of Dam pler waa when be engaged to ship on board a ketch bound for the Bay of Campeohy, with a cargo of rum and sugar to exchange for logwood. He paid particular attention to hydrography and pilotage, and In his account of this voyage he has described iho coast of Tucatan from that landfall near Cape Catochs to the anchorage at One-Bush- a-ulnea Plirs. The eventual savin of i Key with minuteness and accuracy. human life is Incalculable. ' Incidentally. While homeward bound Dampler notes the outcome will probably act as a that the ketch blundered onto almost check upon mischievous legislation every shoal, reef, or Island on tha way, growing out of the unintelligent sent!-; as well, as on to some that were not In mentalities of those who would prevent animal experimentation of all kinds. There are still legislators who see the wisdom of preliminary ..experiments be ing made upon guinea pigs and monkeys instead of human beings. COCAINE B mHB PEOPLE living in and near Toledo, the county seat of Lln- - coin county, bonded themselves average of J$6 or $8 per ton instead , ander the recent law for 50 of $26. It Is to he a means of add fOOO to aeepen ana bulknead the In g new and hugft depots to the channel of the Yaqnlna river be- transportation map of the world, tween their town and the Pacific, and it Is possible for Portland to so 1 Under competent advice they went appear in brilliant colors, to work, had built a dredge, con- The light broke in, on Portland traded for Its operation, for building several years ago when the people a wharf and dock, and for straight- voted heavily for public docks: May- .ening tne over names. Thus., of or Simon beat the program, but by their 150,000, about 130,000 is ab sorbed, Tbe removal of two larger and threo smallersand bars between Toledo and tbe ocean and to com plete the improvement is estimated to cost not over $100,000 in all. Then a channel of 15 feet will give access- or tha steam schooners ot . . t , another popular vote, the electorate restored It. A docks commission 1b now In authority, and upon it rests tho responsibility of whether or not Portland will be in readiness for the canal opening. OYS IN PORTLAND are not the only sufferers from tho spread of ' the cocaine evil. Pennsylvania is engaged in an active campaign. Detectives for the board of health In Philadelphia have found that the sale did not cease when the druggists were pursued and punished who retailed the drug over the counter. They ascertained that in one drug store alone twenty prescriptions were made out by one so-called physician, calling for amounts of cocaine varying between 160 and 200 grains. They caught a negro peddling the drug in the ten derloin district who confessed that he had paid a doctor 50 cents for a prescription. The district attorney declares that the case of this Doctor Kiley is by no means the only one that will be very promptly taken Into court. All this appears In Philadelphia, where there has been for two or three years a vigorous agitation against the cocaine evil. The spread of. the habit Is so insidious that, In spite of the vigilance of the author ities, the conditions above described have existed and are only now re vealed. f f It Is highly Important that a strong resistance to spread of the Broad Utility of Banana. From the Washington Herald. To the average northerner, the banana Is but a fruit seldom eaten In any other manner than raw, but In the tropics It is often baked or fried, forming a most palatable food. Banana flour makes very acceptable cake and bread. The flour Is prepared by cutting the banana in pieces, frying, and then grinding. It is difficult to make the flour where the climate la both warm and moist, but there are many elevated and comparatively dry places near rich lowlands, where the fruit may be dried and ground, and thua preserved for long distance ship ment. Extensive banana flour factories will ultimately be established in the principal banana growing sections, where the undersized fruit will be con verted into flour, or perhaps Into, some new and delicious breakfast food. "Banana flakes" may sooty bo with us. wuen uii DBJianuB are piacea in an in closed barrel and , allowed to ferment, they will produce an excellent vinegar. From the ripe fruit a delicious cordial is made. Banana sugar is made In Jamaica and banana coffee In British Oulana. Dried ripe bananas are superior to figs, for when split Into four slices and thickly covered with powdered sugar and exposed to the sun. they turn to a Jelly-like cdnfection. Dried bananas weigh approximately only one-ninth as much as the bunches, and nave a same percentage of reduction as to cpace. This fact 'alone would save a large amount of the cost la transportation and the cold storage of fresh ,frult. Heavily compressed in a small space, they would make an Ideal ration for soldiers and travelers on long inland tours. - Banana oil, which Is used for apply ing bronzes and aluminum paints, Is a misnomer, for while it has the odor of banana, the fruit does not In any way enter Into 'its manufacture. j the way, "and so," he says, "In these rambles we got ss much experience as If we had been sent out on a design." After this trip he shipped In expedl Hons which, although he falls to credit them as being such, were little more than piratical adventures. Upon one of these trips Dampler found that the ves sel In which he was sailing was too small for his purposes, and without any ceremony he found a Danish ship at Slerre Leone which mounted 86 guns, which was promptly appropriated. This was In the latter part of 1683. For the next eight years the pirates added to their number from time to time, until eventually they had 10 sail and nearly 1000 men. It was then they started on their eventful voyage around Capo Horn, landing first at Guam, and from thence to the Philippines. From here they cruised to China, and Sumatra and it it was not until the 16th of September, 1691. that they again anohored In the Downs. In 1697 Dampler published his famous "Voyage Around the World," which met with so much success that a second vol ume waa later Issued, the "Voyages" running through several editions. Dampler began his second navigation of tha globe on January 14, 1699, and succeeded In sighting; the eoast of Aus tralia n the following July 26. During this voyage' he made the discovery 'that the eastern part of New Guinea did not join with the mainland Of that Island, and that 8t Oeorge's bay was really St George's channel, dividing the .Island Into two. On this voyage his vessel sprung a dangerous leak when within sight of Ascenalonand went down, and the shipwrecked party were compelled to remain there several months before they were relieved by a homeward bound squadron of ships of war and Eaat In dlamen. Dampler, although an admirable ob server and excellent hydrographer, was Ignorant of discipline and quite unused to command. For that reason he had many altercations with those under him, and upon one occasion he was found "guilty of very hard and cruel usage." and "not a fit person to be employed as commander of any of hla majesty's ships." This did not prevent Dampler In preparing to depart on another voy age to the West Indies, from "kissing her majesty's hand, being Introduced by his royal highness, the lord high admiral." It was upon this voyage that Alexan der Selkirk the "Robinson Crusoe" of fiction was marooned at Juan Fernando. This voyage was no damaging to the reputation of Dampler, from his piratical metnous, that the ship owners of the day declined to entrust him with the command of another expedition. But he engaged himself on the Duke privateer, passea arouna tape worn into the Pa th latter held them us a rear or an.' and then the money waa allowed and paid. Otherwise, It was asserted, tha threo hungry postmaster eould have gone to the court ef claims and forced the government to pay tho laat peony, although this Is disputed. BtorhNi about such wastefulness as this of tho three postmasters arc naar. ly always whispered around Washing iuit. out uie investigating committees of tho house, such as are now operate Ing, bring the facta out Into tho open. u aiav ihm uieni a natter or record. For tho testimony Is printed. . where It may bs seen by all men, and natur ally makes a lot of officials squirm un comfortably. Fomi ens Is generally to blame, but only an Investigating com mittee or come stern superior official I ca Mien mane n puun just where the blame belongs. . Always in Good Humor NO PLACE FOR IT. ;.'( From tho Chicago Record-Herald. 'T "We've got to move our seismograph" I away rrom nero. This is a had location, far it." , wny so r . . 'i "Old man Armstrong who lives across tho street keeps continually disturb-" Ing the. Instrument by hie treatment of the young fellows who come t see hie daughters," 's.'fl AN IDEAL ATTAINED. . From the Washington Btar. -"Were any of your boyish ambitions ever realised r aaked tho sentimentalist., -zee. repueo tho practical person., -wnon my motner uaea to cut my hair I often wished I might be haJdheaded. TROUBLE. From tho Washington Herald. ,! '1 suppose you hato to see your daugh ter rnarryT" said the young man. " "Too. I do." admitted the father. "Her mother has made It a point to be mighty sweet tempered while tho court ship was going on." j k HIS REWARD. From tho 8t Loula Republic, tHe caved my life." declared the.'mlt llonaira. "Hand ma a hnaiaiii ... niftn rMli Balklrb ,n- V. ..II..,.. I l . m imprisonment, crossed the Paolflo and coming home by the Cape of Good Hope, arrived In the Thames on October 1, 1711. bringing with him species and mer chandise to the value of nearly 11,000.- 000. Dampler's share of this would have been a competence In his old age, but tho prise money waa not paid until 1T18. He died early In March of 1716, and al most unknown and in penury, which Is rather remarkable considering the large J captain scope of his exploits, and the vast for tunes that he carried from the seas back with him at various times to Eng. land. - Dampler's "Discourse on tha Winds" may be even now Justly regarded, so rar as it goes, as a textbook of that "Going to make out a ehockr "No; going to indorse him for a Car. ncglo medal." WON'T NEED HELP. . ' From tho Mariners Advocate. My husband is particularly liable to" seasickness, captain," . remarked a wo man passenger. . "uouid you toll him what A At Irt MAM. . .H Tain t necessary, mum," rspliod Aba, e u oo it." Mining Magnate's Wife: "Of course, my dear, like all mining camp heroes, my husband occasionally uses rather venemeni languega.' Rcctor s Wife; "Tea. hut I suppose you goi usea xo it, just OB a nlarrv. branch of physical geography) and his man'a wife gets used to doing without , .... . .w. ..i w.-.- I tivnunoiii, w mn many omcri auojeoia mat ieu witnin ms experience, is per haps equally good. In thoir clear, easy, homey style, hla writings arc almost classical; his surveys and charts, mak ing allowance for the imperfections of the ago. are most highly eommendabe. and hla dogged determination to keen and preserve his : journal through all hardships, dangers and adverse circum stances, is oeyond ail praise. Tomorrow Ferdinand de goto. The Rich at Bummer Resorts. Brand -Whltlock, .mayor of Toledo, Ohio, writes tha following poem In tha July American Magazine. He calls It "At the Summer Resort": Yes, it Is 'beautiful: this peaceful scene Of .shimmering lake, deep In the pine ' woods greep, with happy, brown kneed children. outn ana maid, er folk in aummer white arrayed, an at piay, these golden vouth and maid And eider roiK in aummer wane array. At tennis, goir. ana boating an at play. wnerewitn iney wniie hours away. it is a mere question of channel I habit be orrered In Portland. The and. terminals. The United States j knowledge that young . oya have And yet and yet I wish I could not see, Back in the city's heat and misery. Those patient men who toil In shop and mill. Their work worn wives,, their children wan ana sun, Wasting their lives In cruel sacrifice . To give these Idle ones this paradise I , Great Seal, of the Confederacy. The News and Courier of Charleston has started an Interesting discussion as to the present whereabouts of the great seal of. tho Confederacy. There ' are plenty of Confederate flags, plenty of Confederate money, but those are per ishable relics and will soon. In tho na ture of things, pass away. But the seal of tho Confederacy Is a thing made to last. As a result of the discussion, the sea has been traced through several hands, and the conclusion of the whole matter is thus summed up by A. S. Salley Jr., secretary of the Historical association, who says: "I am assured by two men of high standing In the literary world that it is now in New York, and that for some reason the owner does not wish his name made public for the pres ent." Making Use of It. From the Cleveland Plain Dealer. "There Is no use giving you a check, my dear. My bank account Is over drawn." "Well, give It to me anyway. George. And, say, make it for 600. I want to pull It out of my shopping- bag with my handkerchief at tho bridge game this afternoon." " A Wise Precaution From ,the jLonlsvllle Courier-Journal. 'Ill'call tip my wife and tell her I'm detained at the office." "Be cure to churtho door of the tele phone booth, j Last time I called up my wife from this c,afo she heard tb, or chestra playing." V-"-' - - ; Double Meaning. ,, From the Harvard Lampoon. i Lord llount Auburn-Ore millionaires common In tho states T" k . Dr. Beacon HW -Ts most of thorn. i - j i , . . , , . Meeker Than Moaea, v ' IPrAflri ttlsft A fntsM rtl aVa x'1 Our notion of tho meekest man Is an wno is errata to attempt borrowing a part' of his salary from his wife. Other Women's Husbands. Other women's husbands Are so modest and shy, They never flirt no never. They would not wink an eye. When they 'are out upon the street With oyes cast on the ground; They never jee tho girla who pass. They never'look around, Other women's husbands ' Arc so homesick when away) They send homo picture postals. Mwfit Ifumor ' (Contributed ta Th Jaii.n.I t,- u. . flie nmottii Kansti pwt, His pnwe-poeaif sr journal.) bis column la Th luiiy There are divers times and when for aundry human reasons aaoi I wmiM ... hi. ... . i . . (!" eorrow uaif... listen to .a Jest; when emotlona aantifc And dreary of wlfey all day. If business keeps them out of town. i-ir a lew uaya or a weeK, They never think of having fun , No pleasure do they seek, Now, my husband is so different. That I'm Jealous when left alone. And I fancy his every movement Has a meaning all It's own. t I know he's no saint he angel. i Know ne- is no Deaiit: mental and reflections incidental claim possession of his headpiece end . his broad and manly breast. There? are moments when he'a weary of this world that's passing dreary, and he wants to sit In silence thinking thoughts Uhat" smell of smoke; and at such ablttei ri'iiiiuiro in njr spous ana ires son nearly always comes to Jar him' with a punk and pallid. joko. ; j -have sat, too, sad to frolic, with my itonii ach full of colic, drinking yarb tea fronn a dlDDer. while I tW ZyiL?I .22 'ft"!!, f "J em nd found n4.;; -- i.- . ' "(-"uiivi.n in id ioio a siring or yarns around m. tin; I smote him with a fig trco that was growing by my door, i haV sat, of I k The Rose Festival nopo oenuaed, sat alone and mourned i From the McMlnnvlllc News-Register. Jeffries Just little year, ago, and The Portland , Rom Festival has I an aleck then narrated wlttlciama.antt. i' proved as great a success this year" as Quated, heedless, of my tears of ane-m.h ever, perhaps an 4Rroater one. Port- bllnd t0 M m? earkin wool Follow be.,." land andYlso OregKas a whole could SJaKV-W not afford to fall to carry this feature 1X&53& out In the most attractive way. It Id a gaga! If yo find 'your vlntim. riI great -advertisement to tbe world, : and I bitter grief and sadly rurslng. It Wore ? eves open our own eyes ioin groat boot. Ii Roe ay. Baker, Or. possibilities this region , la , eapabl of I well to can your- legends or you'll tear tht souU to rnga! - - V?V Jr eoerrlabK-. J04O,t h, .f Okw alattatw Ada cm. A v;