THE- OREGON DILY JOURNAL flpRTLAND, ! MONDAY EVENING, JANUARY, 1912.' i notions ara TT7 in . "T ""M 7T XT A T .' not DelIev that out own "' ' 1 riEi -1 VJ U rviN rxJUr I the only way' of salvation aw in pKtenpent wswbpaper. ' ' Perhaps the most Important of. all r tTx'icKox '" . . ,.!''' our new year, s anas Has to do wun :. wndn Kurainir at The jorni iroiw-1 or practical education In our schools. . . '" ""' "- Port"nd' j nut ta bring Quick results the par- -J'Sa4W m"8t Mcourage this change wm miiw. ror it is a change in alms or tne teaching of both high school and public school of all degrees. Alf these are homely things. They are ,at our very doors. But when the end of 1912 comes a most ma terial change for tho better may bo seen. "... . i , KKMCI'HONES Main TITS; Mom. A-OORl. J ,. All eVpartiaaiira fwcbad hf Ih Mint'. ; I , Tail th otrator wtxt lp.rtmnt yoo want. I XHK10N AnVKHTlStNU KRPKKSKNTAT1 Vg, , f !- rteejasiln A Kaatnor hi. Bmtiwl Bitldln. X-"5 Klfta aranno. New 'York; 1218 Peoples J ia BaHdlns. Cth-.ro. - . Cneavrtpttna Terms r mall at t an address v.. J, Is ta L'ottad St. tea or Mexico. . ( ItAILT. I One rr.. S5 oo I' o monta... 1 8t!N0AT. On rear rv. 12 0 I Dm month DllLT AND SCNPAY. On ar......t.ST.B0 I Ona month..... . .SO . .Hi . .TO AN AFFAIR - OK HONOR I hardly yet have learn'd To insinuate, flatter, bow, and bend my knee. ' ' Shakeopeara r ts UNDESERVED CTtrTICISM 0 CCASIONAL hints by writers In The Journal's "letters-from the-people" column do the Portland Commercial club in ' 'Justice. They are hints to the effect '. that Jn Its publicity literature . the ' club has sought to bring worktngmen ; - to Oregon in numbers for. the pur- pose of beating down wages. - . It Is an unjust and undesenred '" critlci&n The club is ,a splendidly patriotic organization. Its endeavor f has always been for the upbuild of V,j Portland and the state. ': -v. . It spends large sums in the effort -.'- to develop Oregon. It maintains ! "Lliureaus with the object of bringing capital into the state for the exten 6lon of manufactures, and in that ' v activity has added many enterprises ST that give employment to workipg- '. men. It la constantly engaged In an ef- t",?"fort to enlist investment of all kinds and it Is from Investments that work- ingmen and labor draw wages and " survival.. It aids. constantly In move- - .cients , for waterway, development, v public docks, and other public, activ ities for the benefit of all classes and , conditions of society. It has on all occasions exerted its influence for public reclamation of ;C arid lands, as a means of providing homes for the homeless, and strives - at all times to promote dry farming ....Jn a further effort to get land for the landless: . .-' It loses no opportunity to promote ; '-"unity" and kindly relation among the various . districts of the state, even -tuio the remotest borders, and in that . "' - function, has sent Us members in largo numbers to every district. It has ...been zealous, in season and out, In every possible movement to promote the building of railroads, the con J"; etruction of good r6ads and in every other endeavor that seemed to prom- r Ise amelioration of the surroundings . and better the condition of all the .- it people -of Oregon, regardless of lo- ' cation, situation or level In life. It: is'an organliatlon that recog- ir nlzes no distinction between men, that sees no differences in. people, -that has no politics, that.knowa no -fl1""asa-aiiirthat'reah3-thatHhe;b6gt conditions that can be madeto sur- 5 round every unit In the social body, v whetber high or low, are for the beet " Interests of Oregon. It has for years spent its money and devoted Its best energies for all things by which ser vice could be rendered tne state as a whole. Its purse is always open and its hand ever ready to help the commonwealth and all the people of the commonwealth. Its members are taxed for main- tenance of the organization, and the L. organization spends large , sums in the entertainment of persona In all ; walks who visit Oregon, from the i president of the .United States down Jto public delegations , or protective "Investors seeking locations. T It is a splendid public body, and Jt snouia oe neyona me cruicism that occasonal writers have cast In Its direction. PROSPECTS .-AND AIMS T is well that the state senate and the department of j'iRtice did not come to actual blows In Judge Gatens' court .room Saturday. Perish the thought. It would have meant the hope of Scotland and the hope of the 'Irish race thrust Into a bont for championship honors with out a moment's notice and without chance for preliminary training. The senate must certainly haye come up for the second rourtd short of wind. The department of Justice must Inevitably have been wobbly lii his punch and entirely too fat for a wninwina finish. Worse still, there was no provls- when- the . loan Is approved he can begin building and: the . money li available' as the building progresses ' A . somewhat similar plan is in op eration in New Zealand, and Is in contemplation in other British colo nies. ln Algeria, France helps "the Arab farmer through the land mortgage banks for which tho state supplies the capital. The last report showed loans of over half a million dollars to these Arabs, who have quit fight ing France, have obtained farms, are raising corn' and wheat,, and have taken up the task of becoming re spectable! French citizens. Doubtless Italy hoped for a similar experience In Tripoli, but eventB show. that she will have to pass' through the fight ing stage that kept Franoe busy for forty years before her Arabs were content to turp their swords into plowshares and their spears Into pruning hooka. Instructed in the lor of-the fields andriToods.,-.' '-i ' - ' v.''; ' r 81r 'Francis may not make soldiers df Wis' boys but he is .training them tor I tlzenshlp not of England only but oJJ the world. 7 ; ' '. , - Lei Hen From tLe People COMMENT AND NEW3 IN BRIEF, (Cornni Uili 'tlona aant to Tha Journal for pn!v tuiM ui'partpiaoi anuuta out minm In Ivuglb and mint b arcompaQlad ana aaurnaa or ua aenaar . . lleillcn i I tl S()0 worda t In b tba Ion for seconds, for referee or for smelling 'salts- and sponges, and no decision as to whether the mill was to be under Marquis of Queensbury or the revised football rules. The senate would probably have hit tho department of Justice below the belt and the wholly untrained pride of Scotland would have fouled the Irish hope unlimited times. Professionally, the mill would cer tainly have been a failure and whol ly unsatisfactory to the fight fans. Financially, It would have been un satisfying for there was no side bet. no provision for division of the gate money, and no arrangement for fight picture privileges. It Is far better that the affair end ed as It did in an armed neutrality. Judge Gatens would probably be Jus tified In recognizing a permanent state of belligerency and ordering a stay of hostilities until the Wilde case Is finished. Meantime, the senate should go Into executive session and pass a con current resolution declaring that he will meet ther braw Scot on any terms and ' with ' any weapons and fight him to a fare-you-well. To which, the pride of Scotland should reply w'lth a motion to strllte out the resolution as Incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial, and come back at the Irish wonder with an offer to stake the issues ot the dispute on a game- of .domiiiom G GOATS t THE MAN WITHOUT A IIO.MR B" EINO an old fogey, a man has wondered at the Increasing number of persons, with home addresses In the telephone book, who etect to dine abroad on Thanksgiving, Newr Year's ' and Christmas", Kelng, also, a bachelor, he muses upon the home conditions that Bend a family to tho superficial and Incomplete enjoyments of a hotel dining room. He wonders. why peo ple with hearthstones of their own do not want to sit by tnem. It distresses him. He Is down cast at the shattering of traditions and customs. He Is shocked at the turning of what in his youthful days were sacred' home festivals into a sort of public show. He finally con cludes that all Buch marriages must be farces and failures, and resolves to remain in an unwedded state for ever. .. He reflects upon the New Year's orgy. Before nls mlna s eye is un rolled a panorama of women find men of, .his acciualntap.ee celebrating the New Year's advent. He remem bers the wierd movements, the fa miliarity. He recalls the wives and daughters of hla business" associates engaged In "stunts" that put the turkey trot, the grizzly bear, the Cubanola glide, the Davftas dip, -he Parisian can-can and the Hoochee Coochee to the .blush. And, his bach elor heart Is filled with gladness that none in those extraordinary scenes of revel was related to him by stronger ties than friendship. He compares his fate with that of Blubps, who sat with his wife and three daughters in a putillo dining room, with their forks on their tur key and their eyes dissecting the various "combinations - ot dlners-and j their sartorial display. He finished his dinner, returned to his club, and was elad of his freedom, glad that! OATS on the farm are unique in he had escaped being tied to a home this, that they not only raise a j that is no home. And, the next crop or mohair each yea, that j morning, he went to his office, and, represents a large proportion of ! to the woman who asked an lnter- thelr first cost, but they are such , Vlew, he gave forth this sentiment: tTu D(l. OIl.l VT9t pfhd leton, Deo. J9. To th Editor of The .Ir turnal. Under tha heading quot ed n&uve, Alfred D. Crtde Insinuates that t am either the victim or some "johi. 1". or that I am trying to deceive the po &1 of Oregon. With your kind permlfu lon I will let Henry Oeorge "I'rogre: Vs and Poverty," pages 403-404 annuri for me. . Horn U whn,t Mr, George ways: "I. do not propose either to purchase or to fii; irlscate private property In land. Tho flrbt would be unjust; the second, nt-edletiji.., -Let the Individuals who npw hold it still detain. If they want to, pos session or v'That'thcy are pleased to carl their land. Let -them pontlnue to call It their Ian fl. Lct'them buy and sell, and bequeajpi and devise It. We may nafely leave them the shell, if we take the kernel.. It Is not necessary to con fiscate la nil; It Is only necessary to oon l'lscate rerk:J What I,- there fore, propose, as the simple yet sover eign remedi lato appropri ate rnt by taxation." It win H seen from Mr. George's own words, . quoted above, that the pri mary object i of single tax la to destroy private property In land. The raising of revenue s Incidental. If the single taxer have . power to adopt their sy- tern, they . till be able to control the officials wh o administer It Being op posed to prl yate property In land, ttiey will direct tihfc power of taxation against It; for If Hi a landless majority can b Induced to r4vlft the whole burden of taxation upon land owners with this object in vhsw, they can, by the same logic, be led to support one public ex travagance iter another until the full rental Value of land has been consumed by taxes. Herein lies a rich field for exploitation. Last year when all prop erty owners w ire required to contribute toward the suj port of government, their united resistaiKe to public appropria tions held tho combined levies of all the taxing bol Js of the state down to twelve million. But the gross output of farms and ranches alone exceeded one hundred million. When the rent al Income of lots, franchises, fisheries, forests and mint's Is added to this, we have a tnuj (.turn which might be ex pended by enti! t prising officials In pub lic Improvements! We would have work enough llor all at good wages. Everyhody wr old be prosperous and happy except , the luckless land owner. Even he would V consoled by the knowl edge that his substance was. being squandered In a good cause. This. .Is the statement of Henry George, the pro pbet of single tax, and a fair Interpretation thereof.- The single tax its and I have one point of agreement, however. They profess concern for th common welfare of hu manity. So dT t, If the editor of this great paper tfhljiks elaboration of my plans would 1 e worthy of space, or If Mr. Cridge Yiruld like to exchange v lewa before 4L ubllo audience, X 'am prepared tp nuatcth Ideas with him, or any other slngue taxer. Respectfully, j C. P. STRAIN. As sessor Umatilla County. good land :Clearers that they would fee worth keeping for the good they do. From 1867, when Angoras were broligTiflhtd Dfegffif rrom California, to 1911, when the crop tif mohair realized between f 150,000 and $20u 000; there has been a steady though a slow growth of the industry. The reasons for the slowness are not far to seek. In 1867 there were not many flocks in America from which Oregon flocks could be started, and the price Was very high. The An-j gora was a new animal to the Oregon ! farmer. Its care was an unknown) art. Even as, late as 1880 they were ; almost curiosities when exhibited ajrj the state fair. And more Iriflnen- "I have no sympathy with "this feminist movement which leads women to desert their, homes. It Is i the exodus of wuajnap from the, home I that Is responsible for marital un rest. If women would stay away from cheap places of amusement and attend to thel&ousehold duties and the moral welfare of their husbands and children, there would be thou sands of cases less in the divorce court. Good morning, madam." WOKLI) SCOUTS B OY .SCOUTS we have heard of since 1903 when General Baden-Powell Invented them in England. In America "there tlal than all othpr'mnsoa thorn. woo nr. v.rt hni n minAn.nf ti,.n ninndinjt.twmi, In some or these cities . it " , 1 Z" . """ , " ' -TSthe plants U b abandoned altogether, 1 1 1 1 ji nnLii 1 1 i r-ri hii kim t iiii ! mri i 11 uii irimr a pa miinn d cn n M-"nsfi nni-ii. .1 1 .- uauab I V j XY J t 1 .j 1JU1JU MIOW X U . i (tUL'W ClUU vertlse the Angora ; through the 1 Italy, But who are these World state at largo. I Scouts? Is It a rival organization to Nowadays the Angora has come j the Boy Scouts, and if so, wherein J UST as the dying year compels the backward look so, when the uewyear presents Itself, . the view sweeps the new horlaon to see and to resolve. In spite of the proverb resolutions will sorely be made the thing is J- that they be reasonable and prac Ileal. As we look at home we see tht, ' t Oregon may go far' in this coming Jear on the course of development of her possibilities. 1 .But united, log . fcai, and Instructed effort will be needed. - , We should urge first the adoption 1,1 at the cooperative Idea, over the en tire statej The age of isolation and . narrowness is past or passing fast. - The application of cooperation to the t , industries and the improvement of "the land is urgent. The orchardists IP of Hood River and the farmers of - the northern counties have proved s Its value. It Is not now a question I' of 'detailing possible 'instances, but I ,to set minds working on possiblll J ties. Along the same line comes the . gospel of better farming the exten- lnto Its own. The Northwest Angora Goat association Is a permanent and well organized body of men "who are enthusiasts ' for 'the . goats. Its an nual show, which Is. to be held for 1912 at Dallas, on the 3d. 4th and Eth instant will rightly attract' a large attendance, many of whom will be buyers "intending to start new flocks or else to raise the standard of existing flocks by pure bred buckB and does. To those who intend clearing land this winter it is suggested that, a was the need for them? These questions are answered in an article about them in the Janu ary number 6f the American Maga zine. Albert Jay Nock Is the writer. In, the first place the World Scout idea Is the reply to the objection that Boy Scouts are soldiers In the egg- In England they are welcomed, with the" notion that In them the na tion has a reserve from which In the coming years her regiments will bo recruited. Not that the Boy Scouts 1 nro not the gainers by the discipline! The Telef ihone Situation. Portland, Or., Dec. 27. To the Editor of The Journal. -The telephone situation 1h again combig to a crisis In this city, and If the taxpa yers and business men are to put a stpj to the continual repe tition of this i arce, the time Is now ripe to do it. A' glance Intel" the history of the tele phone business? over the entire country shows that win 'rever one company has had a monopo 'hflerh rates. Inefficient service and d4eburteous treatment of the public havi resulted. On the other hand, where a., competing company has been In the f I M, tho rates have been lower, the aeHlce vastly better and the public has- received decent treatment, but the teleiplaDne user has been no bet ter off bees 11 He he has had to pay for two telephoin fs Instead of one In order to reach alf tho people. The local tttuation at present Is this. The larger 'telephone company has al ready acqu'r-d ownership of the com peting systc mi In Seattle, Tacoma, Bel lingham, Bt Ut Lake City and. several other plac s, and Is negotiating for thosa Is Lik-w AnBreles. San Francisco. Oakland, Sp (kanel Portland and the sur- ::, SJlAliL CHANGS. Tt saloons never close p on January -Old Granddadriv Tim vii). vn.)nn , 7' --'. " ""."V""- .vlrvb hPPr w Tearfor ... v a ' a .::'' 'i W '..,", . Bplte of too much politics, 111! may w aws-w s vuu ' yenr, II.Ma akl. 111, . duihw uungs mia oountry ! narer nun vi, ona 01 inem is colonels. After thv holidays noml will have mvro money, many win hay less. k , .a a . It is said mainy broke men are trying to go east out of tha refrigerator Into a a ' ... " Apparently the favorite way of Col ons .tiuuBcveii 10 procure peace is to - a a In th mind of some deteotlves a few Slightly suspicious circumstances are fcnougu. 10 justify hanging;, man. Man SPntnCiTld lrfe Tmnrlsonmeni in now iwk una wno nas servta Jtt years, has been found innocent and dis charged. But the law can't give him baok those 16 years. ' - a The Interstate commerce commission can't understand the United Btates su preme court's decision In- the Willam ette valley lumber rate case; .nor, prob ably, can anybody else. . a a. . Now Bla: Tim Sullivan of New York li not Quite a model man; he's a ward politician and owns saloons, and Is boss ot the Tammany clan;. but when the final round-up comes, one needn't feel surprised If ho shows mora treasure banked above than many Dlouewlse. Kv- itry Christmas he feeds many thousand of poor, and gives thorn socks and shoes; every summer sends thousands on pleas ure trips fine, to dispel tneir poverty blues. Hig Tim may be a rather bad man In some of" his works and ways, but there's surely a big good, streak In mm, to give thousands of poor happy days; and so 1 wouldn't dare to say that when he "cashes In," the good he has done wouldn't sink tho beam and lift his load of sin. ; i V ' OKEGdy BLDKUGUTa. : ' Pallas' school population In 13tXn . -a ; ., .': ! - - ' C. N. Smltlt Is publisher of the' Currv county Leader, a paper recently, founded, and isftued weekly. at uuigiois. . ....... u ' -A V ,A neno firm has let ths contract for a cold atoraire nlant at Iakevlew. 2 63 feet with provision for enlargement, Washington county's school census discloses 7640 "persons of school age, a gain of 528. Hlllsboro has 816 and. For est Grove 75-- , --- A revlvafls In progress at the Meth odlnt church at Tha DaHes. At the Olu-lstian chnroh a revival series will be opened January 4. . FnUrnrlaa Renord Chleftan! Ed Hart slaughtered two "pigs" a few days ago that tipped the scales at 840 pounds. Not so bad 'for Volga" Just-past a y' Old. . ' ti.in T)-latpr- Mavor Barter has signed up the 387 100O municipal bonds and they hav been sent back to Seattle-. Tim monev, is expected to b forthcom ing. In a short time. Th .rri.r at the Albany Herald is sued an address on Christmas to their friends and patrons. It was written by the Herald's "devil," who contrived to itet no end of genuine humor Into 800 lines of verse. Th. nrn. riTr r"niirter obtects to tha I tennis court In the publlo park, saying: j The tennis court simply ruins the beau ty ot tha whole park xne wire Is most unsightly and svery blade of grass is tramped out. m rv. nu nuh ninK nffers a veal's subscription to the person bringing in the heaviest five potatoes. The same offer Is made for carrots and winter tnmlna The Globe's object Is to collect a Curry county products exniDii. WW Vtnnif. TTernld- Th Schramel A Da- vles Lumber company Is Just finishing a shipment of three cars of heavy tim bers of extra len'gth to Fort Stevens, to be used for Jetty construction and other work at tne mourn or tne wuiumui. Wanton Pood De struction From tha Detroit News SEVEN SACRED BOOKS Three Vedas of Uie Hindus. The Three Vedas are the most an cient books of the Hindus and It is the opinion of eminent- scholars that they are older than the eleventh oentury before Christ "When the Indian branch of tbS Aryan family settled down In the land of the seven rivers, now the Punjab, about the fifteenth .century B. C:, their religion was practically nature worship. It was little more than ador ation of the forces which were every where In operation around them for production, destruction ' and reproduc tion. But It was physlolatry develop ing Itself more distinctly Into forms of theism, polytheism,', anthropomorph ism and parithelsm. The Hindus thousht of the phenom ena of nature as something more than radiant beings and something more than powerful forces. They were addressed as kings, fathers, guardians, friends, benefactors,- guests. They were Invoked In formal hymns and prayers In set meters. These hymns were composed In the early form of the Sanskrit lan guage at different times perhaps dur Iiib: several centuries, from the flf- fl 1, 9 1 m - LZ, '. r t 11 ' ne' I enjoined. But the tendency is to mill vvt nlrs thla kai.nl ...ill 1 i. : v . . 1 . .. uiuaii tuiuug into war(1s RnMIPrlnir permanent clearing, by eating off the spring and summer sprouts and so killing the stumps left In the ground; ; ,,,. L. And, finally, goats are the easiest, of all farm stock, and the cheapest, to carry safely through an Oregon winter, for they are hardy and well clothed. ' FRENCH HO.VTE - BUILDERS a- THE French republic helps Its peasant and working men cltl zens to obtain their own- homes. Three- years ago a law called the Ribot law was passed, and its" actual working is proved. The state lends money to such cit izens at the low rate of two per cent per annum. He repays the advance sloo and short course work of.the'at such a rate that In between ?n Agricultural college the support and 25 years he has a'clear title to i ttractically of the effort to set the I his home; The state lends onlv to - expert, agriculturist at work in all the poor man and the amount 13 lim- "Centers in tne state, i Next surely must come land clear I lng, and this not in little spasms of ; Individual efort, but in a business J. like and organised fashion'. Mining Is. very well for those who" are calred to it. . But .'what mine comes .near . in value to .the uncleared land of western Oregon? 5 , Who-can,, forget good roads? Let I sometimes - be-content - to ttoUow ; "where spme other man "leads and Tho World Scout movement has for father Sir Francis Vane, him self a soldier, who volunteered for the Boor war, and brought back two medals and five crosses for h Is gal lantry. But Ho brought back also the conviction that the ancient di vision of people' into, natives and for eigners Is all wrong. That there are no foreigners but all people ape just folks, human .beings, with the same hopes, fears, ambitions and de sires. So the World Scouts are boys, and. in othc fa they will be allowed to go to ruin ;is a "horrible example" of the "folly'- f granting franchjses to "Independent" companies. This latter method wps tipod a number ojt years ago In Detroit,. 'Michigan, and In Toledo, Ohio, and IN fbcing uwed today in Seattle. As soon fh the Portland independent system is a ('quired by the larger com pany, the Tfites .will fly skyward, "the service, wfc "h Is bad enough now, will grow wora and the public will have no means ' ff redress. An example of this was g! yen In this city after the old Columbia r,(mpafiy was purchased by its competitor.. , t Seattle San Francisco are pre paring to )lve the difficulty by oper ating muni' llpal telephone exchanges. A very few y jars will show this to be the only woluti tn. Good and efficient ser vice can b., I given at an actual cost of $1.50 per 3rlonth per telephone, all over 1 this being . livldends to the corporation on Its wateB ed stock. There is no rea--son why tlaia city should not purchase the present ;', automatic system (if It can be obtained at a reasonable figure)' or build one rff Its own. By giving good service at) ,al low, figure, the older 00m- pany wouUl fe compelled to meet the re. tluced rent 1.1 price or retire from fmr field. Tie, older company could be forced to give long distance service, .thus glvt: If? the people the benefit of their enti ro -system outside the city until such.Hilme as other arrangements are made. Of cour objection will be made hy some to t e municipal ownership Idea, but munlc pal telephone systems are a success in ya number of Canadian cities, and a Irtt e number of cities, In this oreanized for kindlv and couraewin !r 1 y " 0 wwuia organizeu ior jtiuuiy ana courageous Uiese .An p perg0ns want to see the acts, regardJess of nationalltywand, ! water syst tmsor postoffice department In a few months over 50,000 Of them ! controlled by private corporations as haveboon enrolled I tney once 'vere? 1 anl not ln favr of nave Deen enronen. , I municipal. .wnerahlp of all utilities un- One morning, the writer says. heider existil iig conditions, but I consider road in the London papers a story 1 the telepl.ono situation too Important n. n,A . . . I to. the bus; (pness Interests of the city to of a thirteen-year-old boy who. had ;,. unrated . ff.r..t lmmiarra.nts. who were afterwards nem In . the' highest veneration as patriarchal saints. Eventually the hymns were believed to have been directly revealed to, rather than cbmoosed by. these Rlshls, and were then called divine knowledge (Veda) or the eternal word heard and transmitted by them. These Mantras or ' hymns, were arranged ln three prin cipal collections or continuous texts and bfcanje known as the Three Vedas, tfro sacred books of the Hindus. " The first and earliest was called the. Rig-Veda. It was-a collection iki hymns, arranged for mere reading or reciting. This was the first Bible of the Hindu religion and the special Bible of Vedlsm. Vedlsm was the earliest form of the religion of the Indian branch of the great Aryan family. Brahmanlsm grew out of Vedlsm. It taught the merging of all the forces of nature ln one universal spiritual being the only real entity which, when un manlfested and impersonal, was called Brahm (neuter). When manifested as a personal creater, this being was called Ifrahma (masculine), and then mani fested ln the highest order of men, was Called Brahmana ("the Brahmans.") - ; From tha Detroit Nsws, . M. J.. Maloney' president of the De troit Retail t Grocers association, is authority' for . ths Statement - that two . carloads , of eggs wers recently taken from cold storage, and destroyed, ' From that statement several deductions . may be drawn. Ths first U that eon- ' slderlng ths nuallty of eggs that, are ' often put upon the consumer, those two carloads must ; have been very bad In deed. .. The chief Interest, hbwever, Ilea . In the explanation of this over storage. ' Mr. Maloney explains that 'these eggs ' were not put on the market While they were fresh because- had they been of- . fered for sale "they " would have de moralized the price of the commodity.' ; One must gather from this that the morals of tha market must always be tn a precarious state. Eggs In a fresh 1 state are ene of the most wholesome of food produots. They may .be .utlluied mt In a multitude of ways. In a' city of the slie of Detroit there Is always " demand for fresh eggs ; at the hospi tals and at a, score or so of charitable Institutions where the normal demand, for." foods is always somewhat in ex cess of the ability to furnish. Those eggs might have, been boon to scores of invalids, . convalescents, old , people) and to hundreds of orphans,' Ttfer would have been useful for consump- -tloTi at the almehousesr Tylunm an4 even the penal Institutions. They wonl4 have benefited hundreds of poorly noww ' lshed children ln the crowded, homes si the poor.-- . ''vl'V;'1-.''.:'.-. , But no consideration of Utility . charity enters into business ealcul- v tlons. An oversupply of eggs to tho : , extent of two carloads mightv if loft to the unrestricted market, have caused, the ruling price to drop fron-twenty-'"' five cents to twenty cents for a day or two. Buch a reduction would have stimulated consumption. For "two - or y. three days families which could not af ford a liberal feeding; of . eggs for twenty-five centsa a doen - would , take advantage of tno reduction and benefit accordingly. The probability is that having found by aa unusual indul gence how wholesome eggs ..are, con- . , sumption would have continued above the normal rate for several days there after, but the agencies which control food prices are af rala to take me sugni- est chance of abatement. . Better a complete and wholesale loss ty spoiling teenth to the tenth, B. C by men or luie substitute for the self-excltlng light and leading ajriong : the Indo-Aryan Shouts of tho Shaman priests qf-'an Brahmanlsm .was rather a philosophy than a religion, and ln its fundamental doctrine was spiritual Pantheism. Hin duism grew out of brahmanlsm. It was lirahmanism, so to speak, run to need :and Fpread OBt Into a -confused carnations Personalities and In-JthAn voluntary lowering of -the prico The Yajur-Vedtt, the second in Im portance of the three books, are partly metrical and partly prose, , If repre sents the growth of ritualism or sacer dotalism. The main object is nd longer devotion to the gods themaelves, The sacrifice has become the center of thought Its nusjlc power la .conceived to be a thing "per sj," and every de tail has become all Important' In fact. and ln brief, the Yajur-Veda means the. uemcauon or the sacrlfloo In every de tail of act and word. The Rama-Veda, the last, la the least clear of all the Vedas. Its stanzas, or miner groups of stances, are known as "saman!,';,., (.melodies). They are pre served in tnree forma. The eaman-mel ody and the exclamations Interspersed among the words may, therefore, be for even a day or two below, the dictated rate decreed by prloe-mklnaj . commit tees. When. one considers the feet that tod large a per cent of tha population is "underfed beoause of tho reign of high prices the'wehton destruction of . wholesome- food ln ear lots- takes on the aspect of a crime against, society, and as the condition grows upon us as a nation, it will sooner ornate "be so declared by law. y Tanglefoot:' By Mile Overhoh earlier time, Tho basis of the Vedlo peligion Is nature worship. Each elejnent Is del weu, iji3 ure as tgnithe dawn as Lsnas, tho sky as Vanina, and the light r ino stormas Indra. A single obJtx:t ln iiatureliay be represented by Aside front' the three canonical Vedas mere is as fourth which Is uncanonlcal whlclwifight be styled a Veda of magic, called tho Atharva-Veda. It ls'.fjlled mi manner or charms and Incan tations ror wealth and for children for long life-and good health, for love ana ior revenge, charms for plants, anl. mals and diseases, curses and m'u dictions for the destruction of enemies and for counteracting the enemy's black magic. Linguistically and chronologically far ii.ur man me lug-veda .the material 01. me Atnarva-Veda Is In. all prob- auuny as 01a in some of Its parts aa tho most ancient portions of tha Rla- It In an invaluable document for early Hindu religion as tha oldest 01 us popmar raith: lted. The borrower must have In hand one fifth of the cost' of the house and the stale lends the re mainder. He has to keen uo a life gone into a burning house and car ried out a baby -a risk that grown ups feared to take. The father of the baby offered the boy money. He g. b. ir. Itemari tblo Figures If True? Klamath Falls, pr.t Dec. 29. To. the 4 .... ' TVa . TAttmol. A refused it, -saying. "No, its my 'Job, I WOrtTiy cot respondent : defend hanging I am a World Scout." - - by rocours t to the Bible, while others If. us some o. I our opponents claim, laws Sfime old woman needs nHntln ! iually coi.nbat It from the Bible. across a London street. Perhaps a cat or dog must bo rescued J'roin cruelty.' Perhaps a' child has to If ho dies the insurance be fished but from the river Thames. insurance polIy for the full sum while any part of the""debtis'"6uV standing. If ho dies the insurance money goes q repay the state and fcfie house becomes tbe.-property of the widow. J . .. -" Thus, If a nfan has $160" he can borrow from the state $640, and Perhaps a run away, horse breaks loose. . Therf the : World Scout finds hfa ... chance, .... .They .are .-- physically trained, are taught fo swim, aye taken Into the country to camp tnd are ordain d --by God, then muder is sanctioned thy him, ...If .thy brother or hy wf(e;Vl thee to' serve another god. "Thou shalt Surely kill him." .Thou shalt stonjrt' hUn "tillhe die." "Thou sbalt slay fold and young." "Thou shalt run then! through -with .". the sword-": Vi jho:: was-lt -Wiled- the man for" picking t up chips on the Sabbath? Who was It i killed the man for touching the sacred tarkf We can not accept morality from your Moses. His his tory begins with a murder. He butch ered thousands of helpless men, wom en and children. Away with such char acters as an -example for people of the twentieth century to follow. . The church has been sending unbe lievers,to hell for zuuu years ana nave they checked criminals? No. Does their teaching hold . ln check criminals? Let us see. In 1905 there were 332 prisoners in, Oregon. There was one free thinker and one infidel with 115 claiming nb creed and the rest church people. " In 1910 there were 901 prisoners In Wfljihlneton. with 9 heathen and 23 no religion. That leaves 869 church members in the pen. In 1908 there were In California 2711 prisoners and 2424 of these were church people. I could go on Indefinitely, but this Is enough. , Our dealings with criminals must" be to reform, not to punish. .Punlshinent is vengeance, brutality, Only animal instinct. - lo you believe a criminal ever came from a good home? I trow not' Not,, unless society turned him out so. A man must make a chum of his boy. He should not rrequent places where he would not take nls boy. Its up to the home and the school to save tho boy. The church and Sunday school have utterly failed. Governor Wst must have the sup. port, and demands it, of every intelli gent man and woman, and, most of all, our schools, in his psychological way of deallnar with the unfortunates of society. He has not lived In vain who re forms a downtrodden life, or kindles to flame one latent spark of happiness within a human breast. f . F. B. SMITH. Noi authority is quoted for the fig ures ln the foregoing letters. Proof of their' authenticity would have to be presented before they would find gen eral acceptance. Receives Too Much Boosting; Sherwood. Or., Dec. 29 To the Ed itor of The Journal. It seems. that Portland is now, and has been for some time past, "getting the effects of a lot of misrepresentation - In the shape of advertisements scattered all through" the eastern states. The results are an army of 5009 unemployed and half starved people lured here by tales 'of plenty of work-and big wages and cheap land, any one- of which Is a fake. Borne of Uieadef tlslng Funi like this: "Carpenters' wages In Portland, $7per day." - ;Whea Tom Lawson -went back east Tomorrow The Eddas 'of th ttinavians. J 1 T after a two months' trip through Ore gon, he said to the easterner, "do out west. The Opportunities are everywhere along the road, along the creek, on the nuifciue ana most every old place." IJut ..o aucu 10 uuu mat one. must have considerable capital., We ' ;an't df?ny that the opportunities are many for tho man with soveral hundred dollr ti. the man coming here with only a little '""' "'an enougn to pay his fare will find the opportunities very few And I ask why not give the whole truth of me situation, wnen sending advertis ing matter to tho east? Portland and Oregon are good enough to stand on their own merits. And surely Buch misrepresentation of the facts can do the city or state no per manent gooL The real victims of "these glaring ad vertisements are the Innocents . CHARLES DEVERELU Largest Cargo of Lumber. Bend, -Or., Doc. 29. To the Editor of The Journal. To settle a dispute would you kindly print ln The Journal tho largest cargo of lupnbtr loaded in any vessel on tho Pacifio coast? 1 says there has been more than 3.000,- 000 reet loaded on vesels on this, coast. B says not. J. F. B. On .October IS," 1910, the British steamer Knight of the Garter left the Columbia river for Shanghai with a car go of .-6,000,000 feet of lumber, the larg. tst cargo of lumber shipped front any port in the world. The cargo was load ed at mills ln Portland harbor. Any number of steamers have carried lumber cargoes from" Portland measur ing 3,500,000 feet and occasional car goes of 4,000,000 feet .are dispatched. The average tramp steamer ln the lum ber trade carries about 3,200,000 feet.) The Problem of tho Unemployed. Portland, Or., Dec. SO.To the Editor of The Journal: Among many excel lent editorials, appearing . ln The Jour nal from tlmfjto time, I note In your iBsue of the "th, two: "The Worklessv? and "Can We Do Worse and in lssVe of 28th: "Five Thousand Reasons' which are exceptionally timely and, per tinent. 1 ""They" strike -ihe nail.'sauarely on tne head, and; have'' evidently .produced re sults. ' ;" ' ; . ' ' -,; .- ..... .,t That-nail, however, 1 set In a knot cxtrejnely dlffic'ult-.of -penetration,, but when l-U -.la7.' f lnall- driven homer -the problem of unemployment will .be solved, and the wan spectre of poverty and want will disappear from the earth. S - . ' - V. B. MATHiJffS, ' -.- ONWARD AND UPWARR - - - r Tuiior-haaaii b. railroad ln Arrenttne From -a fellow whose purse was exoeed- Jngly lean. . - . He neirtd the coin to get something to And toaVd him to eoverjds jOWtrowln So I 'purchased the railroad." I traded my railroad in Argentine The entire deal was "unslght and n- For af rubber plantation with trees Oil , -23ftrow - In 'a wild, :reokles region la Old Mexico . . - '. . , .. I traded my,, railroad. When a friend of a friend with a gold ' mine for sale . ' Tackled me for a trade, with a pitiful tale t took: a n'ult deed to tho mine In Brail For my rubber plantation, tho trees and good will; , " So the rubber was his. , Then a man who'd dlsoorerea an aspnae turn Dea " . Said he'd trade for my mlna "Bron UP bo," ho'sald. , . . The bed was somewhere ln tho poutn Philippines, . And one couldn't get mere wunow Hy ing machines; But I traded the mine. The asphaltum bed was a druSF and a loss, . ' . ' . So I traded It in On a pitch and a toss For a rich bed of pearls near tho Wild Sandwlcn isies. With a straight guarantee Hto war twenty-oda styles - 1 1 Twas. a bed for a bed, , "j' Tear followed tho years and tha pearls stnved In bed; . Great visions of wealth no more) entered my head. - . . Came a geezer on day In tno) sronesx or cars. . . .. . x With an offer to trad m a Dig oho ..- Jdars; . . , So I traded my pearls. . - My holdings get. farther and 'farther They're enhancing in Talus, no doubC every QBLjt r So rm hoping some dy. slnco Mars is so high, . ' ' I can trade in rny land for a home la the sky-r- - - ; For the, sweet by and by. Tho Coffee. -J , From the Touth's Companion, mv,- nthar morning, at the breakfast iv. -Kir 5?kinins's. who was ln a highly self satisfied mood, remarked to Ms wife: b -' y '"What if I were one of those bus- bands, my dear, who get up cross in , ti,, Tnornlne. bang things around, and kick because the coffee is cold T" "Why," "responded Mrs., ekillings, sweetly "I Bhould make It hot for you." A Surprise for Congressmen From the Minneapolis, Journal. Congressmen who visit the isthmus look with astonisnment ana aimosi,. with awe on Colonel Goethals It is dlf-. ficult to understand a man wno is noi trying to make a million for. himself out of the f situation. -t- .-tr- Tke Yqung Year t wish you a happy year, but It will 1 hoin! I fear If you don't ret out and hustle ln the good old-fashioned way; all the wishes ln the land will nnTbeln vou If you stand mooning like a locoed gander, while the other put Up hay ' Now the new, year's ushered In . and a lot of boys will win fame and honor by the bushel .ere it runs : Its -course and dies, tout they won't bo stand lng dumb waiting for a snap to come; they'll be busy as 4h bumblers so will you- if' you are wise! Oh, I wish you peace and health, all varieties of wealth, but I -don't believe you'H have theni If -you don't get out and dig get up early, ln the morn, saw your wood and shuck rorrifc-writayour-name-.lo . golden letters, on the shining thlngmyjig. Ton , will find this rul correct-revery man's the architect of his fortunes -on this planet; and while .wishe help alongt lie won't wintheeherlshedgQal,.jron,'i-ac cumulate a roll, till h goes and does bl duty With whoopsydoodlo song! Orrrlicbt. "ItlJlj'by . Ceorge Uatuiaw 4dams. I