THE OREGON AIllY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, - WEDNESDAY EVENING, AUGUST 7, 1912. - -. THE JOURNAL . mniiif t The Journal Bull.U lsc. Fifth aid YmhlU streets. PuftUnd. Or. ..eei, mt Portland. Or. t..m1Ii, thrmlh the Bull SCOM rliM sutter. TKCElftXES MilB 7173: Horn. A-W. AU dMMrtntfiit! rertaed by then numtr. TU 1? nprntnr bt department r want. rOREIGTf ADVEBTISJXa REPRESENT ATI VK, K-oJitrta it Keotoor Co.. Rrunialr tiuimins;. 124 Klfia Tfu. New Tora Gl Building. Chicago. JilS Teople SnbaeHpfkw terma by mull or to any address la the 1'nited State or Meiico. DAILY. Oh year 5.on : Oue month w SUNDAY. 0n int ...... t2 !& ' owmth $ 21 DAILY. AND SCSPAT. 0 rwr $7.50 i Oct month t 83 What 35- ecsn do : f r . not h C 1 V the test of powers; what we can T&nffer - tot - aiwHter-1-; t he test 0 Jove. Bishop., wetcott. 5 sitpoi: SUPPOSE the Portland commit tee enUrs into an arrangement with an outside company to give Portland an oriental ser vice for a number of years, Suppose after the three years of guarantee period is past, the com pacy -claims it is operating at a loss, and demands more guarantee. Suppose the Portland' committee refuses a further guarantee and de mands that the -.company fulfill its contract on the original terms. But suppose the company refuses. How can the committee enforce Us demands? To what court would it go to proceed crjalhst a company owned, Bay, In Great Britain, and what, cir cuitous and difficult steps would be necessary To enf -rce performance of the contract? Suppose the company should re port to bankruptcy proceedings or lome other of various well known processes to rid Itself of the liabil ity under the contract. What would Portland do, and how would it do it? " Fpr twenty-five years, Portland has experimented with the shoe trng plan In the steamship busi ness. At the end of twenty-five years we are in a great trade crisis, a lot of oriental business has slipped away, the paramou.itcy in the business has been shifted from -Portland to u get sound, and worst of all, we are without a line. It Is an Inglorious, unenterprising, dismal twenty-five years of futility. Is it worth nothing to us? Writing In yesterday's Journal, W. S. Dunlavy, an experienced steamship man. Bays: "If Portland Is prepared to offer a subsidy to out--lie-4BtereU, i,ha should be -willing to stand a prospective Iobb for a short time to get the necessary ex perience and to havo the satisfac tion -of having the enterprise owned and controlled by local capital, no that she could at all times dictate ; the policy, and keep the service at all times a purely Portland service." . W. B. Ayer recently suggested in The Journal the plan of financing a -locally owned steamship company by Issue of municipal bonds, or by taxa tion. "Te have Issued bonds for pub- Hc-4ocka It .Portland capital Insist on. dealing exclusively with town lots, what may we not yet be com-1 pelled to do? ' CLEAN MONEY I T is not the big contribution that! Is most prized in the Woodrow Wilson campaign fund. The fifty cents from the cal loused hand of the worklngman, the half dollar that is earned by the weat of a toller, is as highly rrlzcd as the $10 or the $100 4 1 1.1.. . ,ula,..T nan. It Is the equality of one man with curitles can be carried on without any other man before the law that legally-authorized Interference by Wtodrow Wilson stands for.' It wus'tlie secretary of state. -fof-lnat reason that ho refused! of If,, 000 corporations organized Thomas F. Ryan's money It Is for j urrtier the laws of Oregon, Sem-tarv that reason that he demands that nojoi-ott savs 11.000 are cr.)oked Men contributions shall revived from 'hide behind the corporate organlza- tbe generalissimos of special prhl-jtion and do frenzied finance thev -lege. -who have kept strings on the would not dre to do personal White House in the past by 1,1 cam- Th Ilan,e of the gta,B of Qr Daign contributions jhl0,)ld ,K)t use(J ,n any The worklngman s fifty cents !,),,. No Rtate ,jrengfl clean morty. It Is only with clean j rorI,oraUon t0 do business without money that W oortrcr' Wilson will I i itl .k... v.. permit his campaign ex; crises :o Le Pa'd- AN OISKGON UFSOIUCE 0-NB of the obvious results of the practice of Intensive farm ing now being preached in every experiment station, ev ery farmers' club, grange and coop erative association, lj to i nlarce and to establish the demand for artificial fertilizers. i ThA threo vttniiv .... Hances are nitrogen, phosphorus ana potasji, and on tho abundance i and rheaih.i'K nf thir . I penda to a large and Increasing ex - tent the Improved productiveness of ) the farm. AH know that C.ermanv has been i for several years the chief source of the supply of potash. Until the : chemical processes affecting the pct jj ash found In various parts of this country are simplified and cheap I ened bo that the soluble saUs can be , put on our markets at lower prires than . the Germans ask, Importation I from Germany will doubtless ron f Unue. But of the American devel r opmsnt there Is well founded expec t tatlon. j Phosphorus is the product of the j phosphate rocks. The chief 3ourcet J .at i a i I ... I p' Prwuu,un lm country have; York at times In the total wheat ; been hitherto Tennessee and Florida .shipments. In 1903, tho port opened oui vuunuus urtibiio, spread over an srea exceeding a million arres. kv peeo found In Idaho- and have TX5c a" V&o r 0 u g uTy" e i a mTn e J and" 'par- tially developed with satisfactory re sults. A ' ' It remains to notice that the sup ply of nitrate of soda tha source of nitrogen for. the farm has been re ceived principally from Chile, where great fortunes have been mace In the industry of preparing and exporting- the nitrate. The export tax charged 'by the Chilean government has been about 1 12.3 4 per metric ton since 1880. That tax realized to th Chilean government $459, 249,155 In the 21 years including 1911. . The Importance to Oregon of the development of the deposits reported over a large area in eastern Oregon, near the boundary line between Har ney and Lake counties, can be read ily believed. The success of the In dustry depends almost as much oH cheap1 and accessible transportation as on the existence of the mineral in quantity and on the purity of its analysir. The new Harriman central Oregon line will provide transportation. By careful -nd re liable exploration and analysis the presence of the desired mineral should be determined, and the re sults made known whether such results be for or agaln3t the Industry In that locality. THE AMERICAN KING N' INE billion dollars is the esti mated value of the farm crops of 1912. It is an increase of J500.000.000 over last year. They are huge figures. "They visualize what the farms meanJThey are new wealth thrown Into the channels of trade, new impulse given to finance, new work and new prof its for transportation. All the issues of stock by Ameri can railroads for all time have -nly mounted to JS, 470, 000, 000. a smaller sum than the American farniB yielded In a single year. Our total exports of merchandise for the year ending with, June, 1911, were a little over two billions, or less than one fourth the value of the farm crops for one year. The bank deposits of the United States are equal to the entire na tional wealth of Italy. They are one third the national wealth of France or Germany. They equal the com bined national wealth of Spain, the Netherlands, -Portugal and Switzer land. The bank deposits are the ac cumulated surplus of all time. They reflect the money savings of the na tion. In the United States, they to tal 115,000,000,000, It Is enly six billions more than the farmers of the United States produced In 1912. A nation's greatness is not in bat tleships. It is not in armed men and drilled regiments. It is not in a nation's power to destroy. The national security la in the soil. The nine billions' worth of fc-.n crops in a single year is the real basis of national prosperity. The banks are merely an episode. They are an cdjunct. The :allroads are only ah" Ihcident., in comparison. They are the vehicle. The public service utilities are a mere side show. Nothing approximates the Import ance of th farms. They are - the great national anchorage. They are the floodga'ea tf wealth. They are Mho paramount' national Institution. The farmer is king. DISliHACIXG OHEGON A HIGH officer in the postal ser vice says crooked promoters come from elsewhere to Ore- gon to organize fske corpora- Hons that they would not dare to thni thnv .organize In other states. I Oregon, , il. . .-I- M a . . i ii j organizing 01 soap-minbie com- i nanles and the floating of 1betis s huslneas is to he and whether or not 1 1; Is a crooked business Whatever corporation the state li censes should be honest. Until it has rroved Itself honest, it should not be licensed. That Ir --hat Is proposed by tho lOlcott blue sky bill, and '.he framer jof the famous Kansas blue sky law j says the Oleott bill 's a splendid 'llcf;urp j "w ran none8t rRen Justify them- .selves If they vote for Oreon to con- Itinuo as spawning ground of dishon- I est companies? The vote for the Olrott bill should ! ''P OXK INLAND POUT G' KNTIJ:MEN with hammers have, in times past, tried to tell 'ortlandrrs that Inland seaports are Inefficient. One said a ship never goes a length farther Inland than can ba helped. 'Montreal ia the leading seaport of Canada. In 1903. 29 per cent of the imports and 32 per cent of the exports of Canada passed through Montreal. The port was then the third of Importance In grain ship ments in North America, being ex ceeded only by New York and New Orleans it has since passed New lo navigation on the 12th of April and closed on the 2 8th of November. IaH . uumerIorUia .ikst lima, Teesels of 15,000 tons began to ar- riva and berth at Montreal wharres, ! The channel to the sea has a depth of 30 feet, a depth recured by the efforts of the Dominion govern ment. , . , Montreal Is 985 miles from the ocean, or ten times as far Inland as is Portland. SLANDERING PORTLAND, BIT- r O enumerate . the difficulties and perils of navigating the Columbia to Portland, requires ; a two-column editorial in the Tacoma Tribune. A sample of the article is on this page. It will un doubtedly interest Portlanders. The withdrawal of the Water house service to Portland is the text for the diatribe. "It Is thus for mally In effect declared," pays the Tribune, "that Portland as a sea port terminus of the Union Pacific system will not do, will -not f ill -t he bill of requirements, and la rejected without qualification by the Union Pacific, which will now -proceed to utilize the Puget sound facilities that have been prepared tor it at Tacoma." Again the Tacoma paper says: 'Portland has been condemned as a seaport by shipowners; shipmasters and railroad managers because of the dangers and delays to shipping that are incident to navigation of the Columbia river, which leads from the dorp sea to her docks, a distance of about 100 miles."' Again it says: "Against the su perior economical attractions of Ta- eoma's harbor, Portland has been able, for a time to hold an Inferior and unstable position in the oriental trade only by virtue of a subsidy or a guarantee that amounts to a Bub sidy In favor of the Waterhouse line of steamships, which the people of that city induced the Union Pacific tp undertake." This Is what Portlanders get' for being content with shoestring steam ship lines. ' The Waterhouse ships used to leavo Portland shippers standing on Portland wharves, beg ging for cargo space. The apace was being saved for Seattle shipments. The Watirhouse line, was never a direct service. Its service was so uncertain by reason of discrimina tions against Portland shippers, and its deliveries of Portland conslgn- ments so conjectural, that Asiatic j that party to the one that offers a bet correspondents frequently urged :er arrangement of society and it will , ' . ... V. n atter not by what name the party An Portland exporters to ship by the called. ' Seattle lines. By a continuation of changes for the It wasn't a Portland line at all, in actual fact. It wasn't run for tho benefit of Portland shippers. It made Portland a sideshow. It made Portland Puget sound's back yard. It wasn't interested in build ing up a Portland business, and that was why it failed. No bettor thing ever happened to Portland than its withdrawal, in ono reppoel, because the withdrawal baa sorved to dlw lose to Portlanders tho rotten character of the service. It exposed to view the handicaps with , which the export trade was Bllr. ; a ' rounded. ' Still, the withdrawal gives the ! Hv..la of Portland Mninelhlnir to feed .... ., , ,, on. li una mu jnuimio ui i u.imuu traducers with slanders. It gives them something with which to con-iotlc demn thlti Xrt. It fills thw with vkiona of shipd being stiujt in Co lumbia river mud. It retails to them the so-called perils of the Columbia b;r It elves them opportunity to ululate about the so-called shoal places in the riv er channel. It is what Portland gets for con- fining hcrKClr to tilt' exclusive OUSl-, nes'j of swapping, town lots while re-'"" in fi-n I ... . ... .. . Viin Knnn It 4o whit VnfHlnndnrll 1 g(H for thelr lttiL.k of jnu.ro8t i over-1 wuvii. iv w. ,o , 8ea trade alld the facilities of over sea trade. , rortlnni'.ers to owning and controlling The Tacoma diatribe Is a bitter 'its own trade with the nations to the pill but whofre is the fault but our ' A worthy object, and one In ? which we wish you success In Its ac- own- . roTtipitFTiment. Tt will pay in dollars Portland's answer to It should he 'and c.nts. a. f , w summers ago your an oriental Hue that Is hti orimtal pai-r almost unaided, helped in the line. It should be a line with l'ort- I flBht for C?RR milk- ana a marked Ue . r, , . , , . i crease in the mortality of Infants re land men and Portland capital be-1 Bultd. Rvery mother In Tortland should htnd it in order that Portland ex-1 thank you for mnking our milk supply porters may gc an oriental service that will be un oriental service A 111 N( OKI) MA N I T cost Ib'rnhard rrtescn of Dalhis 11 100 to learn that the habitual - ly benevolent stranger who bap- pens around on a Wild West show day is always loaded. Frlesen had eold his farm, and the money was In the bank. A gen- .eel gentleman gained his confidence and explained how the two might make $lo00 each In a few minutes. It was the old Kit me in a new. way. Back of H was the plan of grMIng a lot of money for nothing. We all eem possessed of Innate desire for quick riches, and no questions asked. Anyway, Frleden, rllke thousands before hi ni , Jumped at the chance for easv money, and got skinned out of 111 0Q. Vrobably the time will never Mnn when blacklegs and bunco artists won't find victims Harnum was right. We insist on being humbugged. The Journal Is in the prelimi naries of removal thla week to Its new home. The trr-nsfep-of a great modern printing plant to new quar ters is a mammoth undertaking. It necessarily Involves the temporary crippling of tho energies In all de partments. It limits spare In the news columns, and has measurably Interfered with tho paper's handling of the Chicago convention and other great news. The final transfer of the plant wijl be completed after midnight Saturday, aud then with the great Hoe presses and other (julonjrit uJiA-tuaUad - la . itu y tbax newspaper establishment In tha north weat. The Journal will have no apologies to make for Its service, Several carloa's of old potatoes on Front street, Portland, for which growers were offered $1.50 to $2 per hundred last spring," are beinjj of fered now at 25 cents per sack, but nobody buys. What to do with them is the problem. For once, growers made a mistake. In formally opening the campaign, Chairman Hilfcs Ignores the bull moosers and directs his fire on Woodrow Wilson. If Mr. Hilles be lieves the bull moosers to be be neath his official notice, he has a lot yet to learn. Letters From tKe People (Communications Sent to The Journal for publication In this department sbotid -be- written- n -enly-eneld t the paper, should not exceed 190 words irr length and must be accompanlm! by the name, ami address of 'the sender... If the writer does not desire to have the name published, he should so staaei? 1 Facing Great Problems. Portland, Aug. 6. To the- Editor of The Journal. It se.ems etrange that there Khould be such a contention among the people while each one Is striving tor what lie thinks is right. But this continued strife must bo from a cause; and while so many of the people are deprived of the necessaries of Ufa In a land of plenty, the cause will remain, the disturbance will continue, and the crimes In society will flourish. The laws that govern., society become more complex as the population on the earth Increases. It is like a pyramid of rocks built one on top of the other, and to remove one rocli weakens the whole structure and makes It dangerous, es pecially for those who have most to lose. And g-enerally the disturbance oomes from those who have least to lobo. but it also comes from those who have most of the burden to bear. And t,h,ir dissatisfaction is expressed in va ried -ways. They are denounced as "agjtifters" and "soap box orators." It Ih fluite natural that those who are in possession and power would" be opposed to any change In the present order of tilings upon, which their security de pends, and they will put it ofT aj long as they can. But changes will come In spite of opposition. The world will con-- tinue to progress as It always has, step by"stp, to the better. AnJ,thoso who are ou top must not think that they can forever "stand pat" while the world Is moving on. To keep pace with the world we must progress, or soon be buried, as the fossil, by the evolution of life. And any political party that does not keep pace with the times must like wise die. The people will turn from better we huve come from Hie darker ai'rs to this hlRli stage ot civilization, with all its wonderful achievements; but ilo you think that we have reached the pinnacle where we can stand snd fflory over it? Were it possible to file out In one bins line all the children that are marching to work each morning, and then to look upon their bent forms and dwarfed bodies, and to look Into their fiauhr and hunjery fares, what a ad showing It would be for a great and prosperous oojintry! And man, the highest typo of God's creation! Why does he allow hla. children to labor in dusty, disease breeding dungeons, while men are Idle? Why does the mother e"d them there? Is she lacking that 1,-ve ut.d motherly Instinct? No, 1b thfif cam umiua an1 (h. pum. in it of Is that same cause and the cause I a thousand other ills. And better It would be for all humanity were this .cause wiped from the face of the earth lit does not show the lack of patriotism t rry 0L.. a(,alnst tnose. wr0nlf8. Tn9 loud mouthed ndtator Is more pafrl than tho silent bloodsucker. FHL1X ONE IH, The Sale of Liquor. Portland. Aug-. 6 To the Editor of The .loifrnal. In your editorial column ' August 5. appears an article on the it I'll n W a rH' u farm uhloh ma .u 'tt nlan Is at least humane. It can hardly be ex pec'.ed to reform an inobriate. In nine cases out of ten, after a certain degree of Inebriety is reached, the case Is hope less. Hu is a lost man. He Is more to be pitied than to !e punished." This Is ,r,n ,rll'- but while reading this, the thought will compel attention, Why ;make Inebriates' WVi v l.rtill,. ,,". . . nc(!l w nose or.iy pronnrt is mis poor, lost man or woman? Why give place to such a business? Does It pay" Virnr ranr l inil.iivnrln. In r ror 'ne rn,iri t "rink, wont you nun another such crusade against the deadly gun of the legalised ll'iuor busl nf'. Eventually out of f very fifth home one of thf'He sam babies that escaped death from the germs in the milk, ir cumbs to the more deadlv Krnis which Ht'Klrnv Tint nnlv 1 1 f u . n. In, m,ln... i...--. ; hut hereafter, for it is written "no ; drunkard shall inherit the kingdom of j aml " Won't you, through wise edit- "i ii'i, oirjw mo i uuiin ii mhfb in noiiurs and cent alone, of allowing such a business to live when Its r,nly product Is the peor loet fellow who haa to bav "I ,T ,C " "LK" ,r. P": rent or us wno CO not contribute to the flucci es of the liquor buxlness? J t. M. "The Day's News." Portland. Or., Aug. 6 - To the Editor of The Journal It Is all In a diiy's news. It in in almost every day'e news "pity 'tis, 'tis true." Here wc find ourselves in this 'won derful new country of ours after a half century of unrrelle led Industrial de velopment, during which wealth has ac cumulated fabulously and the sentence above from your editorial today Is the bent we can do as an epitome of the net result. And yet yot say, In effect, In an ad jacent column that the old parties have Justified their existence and Unit there Is no necessity for realignment upon the real lnues of the day and hence no need ror the (or any) third party. If I you reawy believe this to h a fact then I shall venture the prophecy that you're In for the surprise of your life when the returns come In next Novem ber. For the woodx are Just full of us who believe that something has got to he done, and In our own time, to bring about a more equitable distribution of tha products of our Industrial civilization There's enough and to spare for us all for every man who Is willing to do nn honest days work, and the observing man in tne street is putting two and two together and realises that such ex tremes aa go to make up tha "day's news' are really not necessary at all And If tho "Bull Moose" can convince the people that his party stands for this forrtrr rvqnirr flcnirtheTe's t ofng to ba something doing in this country on COMMENT AND SMALL CHANGE! Business bankruptcy ia a rare Item of news these time. The Washington state Bar association 5 lined no credit by its Indorsement of udge Iianford. Though many lawyers arc excellent cltlxens, few lawyers are politically or socially progressiva. . . . - .. The president is always to be cred ited with moderation in lanauaara and dignity in deportment. Now the big keynote has really been sounded by Taft himself. But there will be many minor notes, a - - The CaVmorists trial lasted II months and cost Italy $800,000, a record for some of our courts and lawyers to envy. , , ...... A government of law and not of Beo- ple, is Taft's slogan. That would be very well If "law" meant SDeedv and etjual- Justice. dleaied, arid lus- tlco are often ouite different The Meyers will case seemsato frnish an example of this. Portland used to kick at the railroads. or because railroads were not built; if it isn't energetic it will have a kick coming to Itself. , A Sierra mountain vouthr.lt said to havo been discovered to be a great poet, but people will be slow to believe it, for his name la Smith. General Oroieo says he does not re cognize the United States; Its too amnll an affair for such a great general. What he needs is a rockpile for about seven years. - - The men who founded and laid out Portland are entitled to much credit, but they bullded badly In the matter of small blocks, narrow streets and no alleys. It is the big real estate owners who will profit most bv a permanent, suc cessful oriental steamshrp line, as they do ry every enterprise that helps to make a greater Portland. Negroes cannot be blamed for think ing and even saying thai their ostra cism by the leaders of the new party is not comportable with a square deal. And In the northern states are quite a lot of negroes who are allowed to vote. SEVEN NOTED PIONEERS Dr. William The pioneer In the charitable work of the Humane society was Dr. William Hawesv-the founder of that society whoJ was born In London in 1736 and died in tliut city in 1808. Today every city of any sixe in the civilized world lias its society working along the lines laid down by Dr. Hawes. On the carriage" road, close to the border of the Serpentine, in Hyde Tark, London, stands a little building that will recall to ail visitors to that city the work that Dr. lhiwes carried out for the benefit of humanity. In 1778 tho gold medals of the British Humane society bore the head of George III and In order to show It in ap preciation of the value of Its work lie ordered this building to be constructed on the shore of the Serpentine, and hud it fully equipped with every appliance necesHary to restore life to a person nearly, drowned. Ten years after it was built the king's sun, the Duke of Cumberland, aaved the life of a young girl rom the Serpentine, and upon him at St. James' palace, the gold medal was bestowed. William Hawes was educated -at St. Paul's school, London, and served an apprenticeship with a surgeon and chemist. He worked so faithfully and showed such skill that at 23 he was al the head of an establishment In tint Strand, with a share In the business and lie had a large patronage. At 37 Dr. llawes decided upon what should be his Ufa work. He had felt an earnest desire to do something for humanity. He read ot an account of u society at Amsterdam that was then six years old, the duties of which were to restore to life those nearly drowned, the first Tuesday after the first Mon day In November. And on amount of hammering about "Socialist, anarchist, lunatic,'1 eti, li suing to hcaS. it off. L. R. E. Quoting Frdm an Historic Cae. Newberg, Or, Aug. 3 To the Editor of The Journal. My second edition "Sixteen Years In Oregon." which will soon be ready for the public, will not only riisect the evidence glcn in the Winters' deed controversy, but will also give an account of the witnesses present at the trial who were waiting to give evidence In my behalf, and the documental evidence 1 had, including many or w inters sis-'naiures, present T mt - -lt- K a rlnoiaUn sri K V (he circuit court and the ,upre.e couri '.. Tho following is taken from the decls- Ion of the supreme court and Is a fair sample: "Winters sem to have been a keen, catrulattng business man, careful and even miserly and stingy In money mat ter, and .ucli a courso would have been contrary to bis usual hablta and char acter." The evidence r,f the plaintiff wit nesses In the easo shows that Winters wat contemplating giving hla property to the temperance movement; also giv ing this same property to Mrs. Max well, his housekeeper. The testimony also Hhows that Mrs. Rutledge had bar gained te lease the property for the measly sum of $150 a month ror rive years, and the evidence shows t hat the property bring $450 a month, rental. The above. I a fair sample or tne opinion. Another section taken from the opin ion la1. "We do not believe that Winters was foolish enough and unbusinesslike enough to have dona an act so Incon sistent with his character and habits." WILL E. rL'HDY. Oriental Line Xeeesrjr. Sandy-. Or, Aug 4 To the Kdltor of The Journal. In your editorial entitled "The Live Man's Way" you hit the nail on the head In regard to making Port land a seaport. But jrou cannot drive It n far enough with one lick, lou must keep on hammering. When we look all about us in every direction and see our wealth and our wonderful resources, snd then see other cities with not half tha wealth and resources tributary to them, develop great seaports, with their Alas ka and oriental lines pouring In and out, the vast wealth, of our empire, are we not Justified in aaklnir ourselves what Is the matter with us? Why are we thus without ample oriental and Alaska ser vice? Just keep on asking that old question, "why?" What Is the use te keep grumbling about our trade slip, ping away from us to other ports, with out applying the proper remedy? The bonus way ia not the right way, and never will be the right way. Tha Lord almighty has given you a river as great, if not greater, thun any upon which the largest seaport cities of Europe are built. And the barriers ore leas, too, than s6m of the large sesport cities nf Europe had to contend with. Why ia all your vxport trade going to California and 8eattlepnrta?Talk about tha ben efSta of thranamft canal. What' ben efit la tha Panama canal going to ba ta NEWS IN BRIEF i OREGON SIDELIGHTS 8. A. Pattlson, who founded tha Can tral Point Herald six years ago, has old tha paper to E. R. Qieason and E. Bacon. I A contract, for tha remodeling' and rcuuuuiua; ui me snnukiftuu nu vitv erection of several new buildings at the county fair grounds haa been let by the directors of tha Baker Commercial dub. . "y" " : Baker Democrat: Such thunder claps aa were experienced Friday night tested the veracity of the oldest inhabitant, who has been often heard " to remark that severe thunder and lightning were strangers to this part of the country . Baker DemocratiaIn the construction of the new St Elisabeth hospital every bit of tha materUL with one exception, is home product, from tha building stones and brick to the lumber. The single exception noted ia the steel work used for reenforctng. a A telephone -company- has- -en ganlied at Monroe. The object Is to give Monroe direct telephonic connec' tion with all parta of southern Benton, as well as long distance tier vice by the Independent system. Forest Grove News-Times It ts not often that a fruit man gathers two crops of 'apples at one time, yet B. H. Tupper picked from an apple tree fruit that grjaw on the tree last year and had remained there until now. Last year's apple was In a fair state of preserva tion. And this la no nature fake story, either. a a Astorlan: The consumption of pota toes in Clatsop county annually amounts to fully 60,000 sacks of 180 pounds each, and of this sum not to exceed 40,000 backs are grown at home, although all the land In well adapted. Bottom lands produce 350 sacks to the acre, and up lands 250. sacks. The average price to growers the past decade has not been less than $1,25 per sack, and in gome years as high as S3. a a Eugene Guard: And "Mil no steps are taken to build a city ball, badly as it Is nede1. The several municipal de partments are scattered throughout the city, and tho old shaok on the county grounds is a standing advertisement of Eugene's lack of enterprise and elvlo pride. The liveliest, fastest -growing town In Oregon is too poor or lacks the spirit to properly care for the admlnnts. tratlon of its own business! Hawea. persons who had been overcome by gases or who had been burled while in rendition like death. Full of enthusiasm In his belief that lie had found his mission In life, ho paid no beed to tne opposition he' en countered, and the ridicule to which he was subjected. At his own expense he offered a cer tain sum of money to any person who would try the means t aid he pre scribed upon any person who had re mained too long In -the walr of tha Thames, between London and West minster bridges. Witnin a year so mnny persons had been saved that' it looked as If Dr. Hawes' private fortune would soon be given away In this scrvlc.'. People no longer laut'hed at Hawes and some of his friejads gathered at u cafe in 1774 and founded tho "Human society" under his direction. On April 4 of that" year," Oliver Goldsmith die.l. Dr. Hawes wrote an account of Goid smith a death and dedicated it to Kir Joshua Reynold!" and Edmund Burke, two of Oliver's intimate friends. In this he lulled uUention to the danger of a medicine than greatly mi use and called "James' Powders" whirr,, he claimed, had eauHd the death of Goldaniith by too excessive donea. Tins created a renewed interest in the so ciety that was looking Into such im portant niatteiK, Dr. Hawes was an hnnornry member of many humane socteties in Kurope, Asia and Amerlcu. He was so absorbed in zeal for his favorlts work that lie left but a small fortune for his wife end children. Tomorrow Claude Bourgelet. Portland's shipping? It will be to Port land just whut Alaska's shipping has been to Portland. Your export trade will all go via California and.Sca.ltla ports. There is more energy displayed and more development going on now, in western Canada than anywhere on the western continent, more railroad build ing, mora seaport building. Why? RHif-ing apples and strawberries won't make a seaport, nor the Almighty won't come down and build ships and make a seaport for you. So. what are you go ing to do about It? If you haven't export trade, that, In Itself, Is an acknowledgement that you hav.irt a se.iport, or that you haven't inaiuji m uiuiuv rnougn 10 nuuu a sea port, If yon can't buu.il a i-eApori ctm ZT.T.l'V, y.J,P ( the use to spend all those millions on your nrr ana iiarDor : j ne niggardly policy of our administration at Washington, D. C, end our antiquated land laws have been great boons for Canada nf late ycara. We started wrong In the firnt place, and now we art learning that we must work out our destinies on different lines from which we have been follow ing. We need a little oil of progress on the axlctree of our understanding. We need lasa politics and a little mor com mon sense In our destiny building. K. J. BOYLE. Slandering Portland. Krom tho Tacoma Tribune, It was not so had In the days of small shipping, but Imagine the costiv detention resulting to a modern freight er, now so common;' of 10,000 or more ions, aoaea jo me really great risk of crossing the. bar! Every dnv of tht detention means not only idle eBniti Invested In ship and cargo, but also absolute waste and loss of operating expense. Add to that the dangers of Injury and further detention In crossing tha numeroua shoals of the river both waya, and even In lying unwarily in her berth at the city front when the river Is falling, thus Incurring the risk barft- ly oscapea recently by the battleship Oregon of settling In the mud and there being held for weeks or months until next rise of waters. The meaning of that would be something far short of a. prof itable voyage. If It should not even por tend financial failure to the owner. And we ara not to forget the onerous port oharges, the heavy ptlotage, lighterage and Inauranee that have made the Co lumbia river notorious in shipping dr oits aa one of the mpst expensive ports In tha world. . Tha reasons ara hera sufficiently shown why Portland has been con. ilemnrd as a seaport, why In order to the fiction of commanding a share In the oriental trade She was compelled to lie down on the Union Pacific for pull ing the ehestnuts out of the fire In so subsidizing the Waterhouse tramps, why tha tramps have retired from the Ill requited and losing service and why the Union Pacific, Instead of abiding at Portland, has, at cost of many millions, acquired trackage rights to and lrge terminal grounds at Tacoma as moans, of snte and economical outlet to the orient for lta water-level traffic though the Caseade mountains. " TTiaratsposea of Tmafif arTTFvaT of Tacoma, Americas. King Henry Clews' Letter The United , 6tatea seems to have taken in mother nature as a special partner, and once mora - the country promisee to be fevered with good har-. vests. If present calculation are real' . Ued we ahajl garner a 700,000,000 bushel wheat crop, a 2.J00.000.OOO bushel" corn crop and a 1,200,000,000 . bushel oats CTOpT-The yield of potatoes and hay la alao likely to be conalderably ahead Of last year. The total value of these five crops Is estimated at $3,J0O.000,0OO, or about J200.000.000 ahead of last year. In all probability, the aggregate of all agricultural wealth produced thts year will be about $9,000,000,000, as against $8,500,000,000. the figures of the dnart menl or agriculture laat year. What this annual production of new wealth means to this country may be estimated when It is remembered that tho capital stock of alt the railroads in tim TTnit.ii aLiLEa-is pwced-at-S,7fl,000,OOOr An- Increase of $500,000,000 In agricultural nromicjs In a single year cannot but ba a powerful stimulus to business. Bankers in all portions of the west -are agreed that the crop situation Is satisfactory, that business Is in mora promising condition than for several years past, and that the business men of the interior have decided to eliminate , politics from thoir calculations. Thla. Ui a , practical expression of ncfaased coMwenoe based upon positively !m- proved intrinsic conditions, - XhaxQltOA crop seems, likely, to aULjjelow e(lriy .. expectations, but the yllwiltrn"evor theless, be large, and planters are secur- lng prices whlch afford goqd profits. The-south enjoyed exceptional prosper--tty last year vand Is not Trikely to fall, behind 'seriously during the next 13 months. August Is usually a month of deterioration, so a maoderate rfwUfng off In condition need cause no surprise In the final reports. A Tha stock market has been strangely backward In reflecting the betterment of conditions In the interior. This must be largely attributed to the absence of genuine leadership. The stock market is literally taking care of Itself, and stagnation was Increased by the fact that the vacation season Is now at lta height. Wall street is not governed alone by crops and business, aa Is tha case In the Interior. Monetary condi tions are an Important influence. Bo, too, are 'international affalra. Tha money market reflects increasing hugl ness nctlvltyCommerclal paper la more plentiful. Time money ia hardening and the Increased demand for funds la being felt In all directions. According to the last statement of the national banks throughout the coun try, loans are more than $QO,OGO,000'1n excess of a' year ago. Canada has be gun to withdraw her balances from thla center. Western and southern demands will shortly become more pressing, and there has been soma expectation that Europe, owing to strained conditions there, would depend upon New York for gold in settlement of Its obligations to South America. Easior conditions, how ever, are beginning to prevail In Europe. Germany has been paying a portion of her American loans, Indicating partial relief of strain in that quarter, and In both I'arls und London cheaper and more abundant money Is reported. Among the reasons why New York has been less .sanguine than tho west Is the tremendous output of new securities during the first six months of the year. While the distribution of these has been much more successful than misht havo born expected, nevertheless the ncHl nmrket Is somewhat congested by sin-li exeuHtilve offerings of high grade secur ities. In time they will doubt lens .ha distributed, but August Is not generally considered a good investment month.. In July tho output of new securities whs only about $34,0u(i,OO0, as against $130,000,000,000 a year ago. This ts an unusually small output, and proves the Inability of the market to hike any fur ther new lsii at tills time. Pointcd Paragraphs Your discretion might loplc like cow ardice In another. Many a young man's chancas In life go up in cigarette smoke. A man knows more at II than he can uulwrn belweta that and 60. A gir! never boosts a new love affair by boasting of an old one. m m Some men are dumb because their wives never give them a chance to talk. A woman can't feed a man so much taffy that It will spoil his appetite for it. Even the man who Is hti own worst enemy li always ready to forgive hlm sel.V ' If it were not for the trusts whom would a man who falls In business blame for It? In a woman's eye, the most attractive thing about a man Is her ability to at tract him. Money mnv bring happiness, but every man on earth would like to try the experiment for himself. There are lots of funny things to be seen In this world, and among them Is a fat woman sitting on a little piano dtool. When a couple In ngaged they look ut each other's virtue with (Magnifying glasses, which are thrown undo on their wedding day, Tanglefoot by Miles Overboil OUT WKKT. Out west most anywhere the women V0tl And opportunity Just stlcka nround. Nobody ever has to he the (mat. And nature's kind of partial to the ground. Tho htnumH am all chock full of speckled fish. The woods urc running over, too, lth gam". Most all vou have to do is sit ;i iul wish. And '"Ws'll cull you by your fain ly name. Out west the sun Just haflgs around and smiles, And doesn't try to burn the atmos phere; Old winter never practices his wiles He only come to sort of stretch the year. The folks out west don't try to steal you blind, Nobody thinks to lock his money pouch; Mas .ever body's of the Jjiughlng Jilnd, They'vq got no-Mstll to" carry 'round a grouch. Out west the kids are nearly alwaya kids, And flowers clog the paths thatlead to fame; Nobody's roughly Jerked along time's skid::. And everybody gives his proper name. Tha begsar meets a friend on every . block, Nobody thinks he s better than tha rest; No one has time to stand around and nx, , i And that 1 why nobody leaves the west 3