THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL. .PORTLAND, SUNDAY I.IORNINO, AUGUGT V, VAX t i THEJOURNAL AN INDEPENDENT KICWSPAPEB. -- 8. JACKSON. .Putll--r prm-tied etery inlng (-i-p S-tid.y) J ''ry Hiindiy nwrnhi- Hi T .mitnitl flitll'l- ing, an ana rammii via., " -"v. tinned th no(if fli it Portlands Or. ei- nutter. TELEPHONES Mnln TlT.1; nnme, A-SOM, All department, rr-ed by tli- mini-trn. Tell tha operator wait dcpirtmtnt rod waat, FOREIGN ADVEHITISINQ flKMESBNTATIVH. nnjm1n ft Keatnor V-. Hriui-wl-; BnlMIn, ! fifth Tmi. Nw or liHS Fa-pUTa On Bulldlm. Chicago. , Sutuorlptlnn trm by mll or to any ad-res. fa the t'alted Bute or M-ilco. ' -- DAILT, . On fr 3 00 I On month I .80 . ' SUNDAY. Od rear 12.-0 I On month t -23 The opportunity of a new start la dawning. Then, not a passing wave but a flowing river of jefcrm will result, , .Pessimism ia out of data. ' JTEWSPAPEIi CIIAKITIES : JOrjeM-thfl-mlagtvi; of the LT7 1 DAILY AND SrVPAY. On rr .7.?10 I Oi month. .1 .(B There are many persons, who look on Sunday a a sponge to wipe out the sins of the week. Beechor. THIS HARROW TRIAL A' FTER a throe months' battle In the Los Angeles court Clar ence Darrow has gained a ver .diet of acquittal from a wear led Jury. How much of this result ha owed to the merits of his de- . fense, how much to defects In the atrncture bf the prosecutor's case and tow much to the emotional ap peal Of a brilliant speaker pleading , for his whole future, aye for life It , " self, will nerer be determined. Proh ably the last item of the three car -jrled most weight In that result. To discuss afresh the full merits of the case Is not now worth while. , It la impossible to disentangle it from the McNamara prosecutions la . wblch the asserted' attempts at bri bery formed an episode. The eventu- :. al pleas of guilty, to which the Mc- " Jfamaras, in all probability, owed ' their Urea, showed the temptation to resort to every kind of stratagem to Told a rerdlct of guilty on the mer- lta. On Mr. Darrow fell the heaviest burden of carrying to a successful end their defense, which rested on a denial of all guilt for the destruction of the twenty-one Innocent men. For .... this they were on trial, and thla de- 'nial their eventual pleas of guilty proved was false from the beginning "With thia knowledge in his pos- lession is there any Justification in the ethics of ihe profession for Mr Darow'a persisting in his passionate allegations of Innocence in the press, 'and before the nlons still engaged In collecting a ,-reat defense' fund, ieeb of-whicb, was destined to fill the advocate's pockets? For this a larger Jury the people Of the United States will sit in Judgment. .NEW YORK CLEANING HOUSE HAT are the decent, respect able, moral, and capable cit -l-U-OJiewJprlto jlojw faced with the disclosures of protected and 'highly taxed vice on which a system of corruption reach- igtigli..ajuL.wMa.Jn.ita-j)ollcaer- parttnent haa been reared? ' The tone of the great meeting at the -Cooper Institute was of repul alon, disgust, revolt, and resolve. The names "and records of the com mittee there named are sufficient evidence. It may be taken for granted that abundant evidence against individuals higher ups and lower downs alike will be brought to the full light of day before the district attorney and his aides have done their work. The lid of the Treat cesspool will be lifted wide ; newspapers of the great cities of the United States haa taken their reporters ' behind the scenea Into the daily life of -the poor, the sick, the, afflicted, the aged, who are carrying . the burdens -.of life. The tenemonts, the lodging bouses, the rooms of the congested districts or each city nave been opened to them. Secrets pf life have been un veiled, and heae investigators have carried back to their employers the details that prove the urgent de mands for aid. Not contented with publishing such demands In their columns and appealing to their readers the papers themselves have responded to the calls for help. Once having special Ized in tho aid called for,. one paper arter another has not let it drop, but has spent largasums in relief. No boast of these charities haa been published hore. - It was left for a religious paper in London to have published a collection of the histories of relief. Those that' follow are but sam ples of a larger number. Some news papers have devoted themselves to summer, some to winter charities. The Herald of New York was one ot the pioneers. It has for years distributed ice among the poor. Doctors, nurses, district visitors and all kinds of clergymen agree that! numbers of lives, and lives of babies In particular, have been so saved, Other papers have bought ice in great quantities and sold it out at cost to the poor, or at far less than coBt, in five or ten pound blocks Generally the ice is given out by tickets, but often a thankful, ticket less woman carries away a cube of ice In her arms. Next day her story is investigated. The sick child, or the fretting baby is found, help is given.' Sometimes, a thousand peo ple are assembled and none leave empty handed. The Tribune of Chicago supplies the need of fresh air as well aa milk. With the help of its readera it sup ports a convalescent home in the country. Tho Indianapolis Morning Star furnishes twelve cottages to which hundred of children are sent every year. ThavJDaily News of Chicago main tains a sanatorium for sick mothers and their babies, for day visits only. Doctors and nurses attend and food is supplied. The Indianapolis News spends 52500 a year in taking children camping in the woods. It conducts a permanent relief fund with the aid of its readers. The Press of Philadelphia started crusade against impure milk. A clal care. At the Gordon college at Khartoum hundreds of the sons of the higher native class are being thoroughly and icientiflcally taUght, that from them native official may be chosen for every branch of the civil service. - Common schoola are being pushed into every dlatrlct and the-influenced tbe-consul general is everywhere felt, Egypt prosper but orderjjspreserved,:, -, . THE "GOOD OLD TIMES" IX A' SPORTS MONO old time athletea there is yet a feeling that no form of athletics has advanced" over what It waa 20, and even 0, years ago. This was made apparent the other day when Evangelist Billy Sunday made a day's visit in Port land from his Hood River apple farm. Sunday maintains that base ball has improved not one whit from the time when lie was a member of the Chicago National league cham pions of 1886-6. On the other hand Fielder Jones, probably the most fa mous baseball manager in recent years, and who was -offered the ex traordinary salary of 125.000 a year to manage the Chicago White 8ox, insists that baseball has Improved , that the Individual players and the style of play excel the .standards 'of the SO 's when the Ansons and Kellys and Radbournes flourished. There has been a general improve ment in the matter of records in all forms of sport and baseball is un doubtedly one of these. Twenty years ago a horse that trotted or paced a mile under three minutes was regarded aa a wonder. Of course the regular track racers were under that time but the records were slow as compared with those ot the present day. Now a pleasure har nosa horse that doesn't step a mils in less than 2:30 Is regarded as a mediocre performer. It would hard ly be amiss to say that in Oregon there are three or four hundred mat inee horses that can do a mile in less than 2:30. In 180 Yankey trotted a mile in 2:59. In 1859 Flora Temple trotted a mile in 2:21. Nancy Hanks, named after the mother of Abraham Lincoln, was a, world wonder when she turned a mile In 2:04 at Terre Haute, Indiana, in 1892, reducing the record AM seconds. Lou Dillon reached the lowest record in 1903 when she trotted a mile at Memphis in 1:58 Vi, It Is the same with the pacers, gradually improving from the 2:28 record of Drover in 1839 and the 2:06 of Direct in 1891, to the phenomenal mark of Dan Patch who made the mile in 1:55 at St Paul in 190G. The record of achievement on the trotting and paoing turf shows that the careful breeding and intelligent handling of horses has improved their standard. The same is true of running horses, although not in the Trobably the only form of sport Then h win begin to work for hit own that has generally retrograded Is ' ,n'nrMt boxing, Commercialism has crept Into boxing to such an extent that the pugilists do not haveHhe time to acquire experience and skill until they ,are out of it. , : ... ' .. VoU for Ingle tax this fall snd re member that th capitalist does not wnt It. . MRS. L. C T. . Debs and Union Labor. Portland, Or., Aug. H. -To ths Editor f Tho Journal Tho unions of the American Federation of Labor In Port principal question Involved, but , It l his severe (and Jnet) arraignment of the cureleia, cowardly men in their ef fort to shuffle off their own responal bliltlei on the women. Ilia only real contention la this, for he does not in any reasonable" way jintforrata woman's Protective Tariffs and tHe Victims eta to members for a Labor dav rfrmnn. 1 0I. the women or on woman suffrage. nnnmTm. - a , . I ... . . . . . I TV.- , . . . ,l. , . ; : jvoivm 1 uevciupment pi ine airauon jn vrymai iaae park, jt was I vv mm ma jiamuroi British . parcels post Is to or- ?nncea ?w Mr v to be one " " " pruinin war in ; morai -.--L iv ...i. r . . lot th. orators, , I element, became the first will organise "D w" "Bu-ua-u(uv- I would ilka to iair 'an hnn. ror evil and the second will not orcan - ( i iuii xiua ucen ex who ia a oonsisient member of tha a. ir i i .-. ' , uuuu. tended to. Egypt, and la referred to J whrthr Jt possible for a man ; Y- :V" "" n i t ..j trii.i "trt: isvum- oa,iiDer to aavance ine I acvwru vv ui ivi, , , pr, tho Egjptlan agent general. It Federation of Labor? K Ths JournalWlU The Journal U kind Is there Bald that the "casb-bn-deliv- Is it hot a fact that ha followers of snough to print the list, of tha states 6ry parcels post with grat .Britain." Mr' rJb" Bt tn)" moment are trying to I la the- Uaion, together with-the num- continues to develon saHafaetnrilv l.Zn . l. An,rlca, wr unions, with aer oi the electoral .votes that eaon w !m Vi- .?J a n 7fc Tb' ulterior; purpose of wiping them Pnt is entitled to. under tha new con out would DO aided ll Hrltlsn firms OUt nrerjaratorv to InonulnftlnB tha rank 1 a-reaalonul innnHlni.m.ntt..Th. ... wouia advertise more rreeiy in the 01 wage camera witn aciutio imany interested peopu who haven't local Egyptian press. vlLT7 ' 1 .' ' ftheae.' figures handy, and no doubt they nathli an .vfAnalva rnrnl Aalt-v . . TOT"n tm " """" wou,a D ODiJgM Py 'fUCh ft publication Itaiaer an extensive rural flellv- n defense of principles that constitute well, as your SUBSCRIBER. ery route that atretchea from Lon- the ver,y foundation of the American There will b J32 votea in the elec- don to the Soudan!' But tho inci- oration of Labor. . toral college this year, 267, necessary to dent is a sidelight on a noasible and " i"T J"" w ." oowjnf is tns vote by practicable extension of the parcels aswlnat an organized movement which. Alabama lt irimnt s ui...... o post. Similarly in Germany the C. wnl,e osHettSToly championing the cause California 13, Colorado , Connecticut O. D. system s n full operation. .'w i"inio h . mwwi s.Kionaa , Georgia 14, Th n(?rt atal. L Mn. T 1. wiU not bow t0 thMr deepotlo behest Idaho 4, Illinois J8, Indiana 16. Iowa The United States haa almost a mo- prow Mr. Debs- speech at Chicago in U, Kansas 10, Kentucky U Louisiana wyij vi uvu-uoci, uufc uuvu uiu yuuiw tuo tuiiuwiugi Ano ii we i jlu, Maine Maryland Maasachu there Is no known Instance Of its Ve. against your unions, it 1 because setts 18, Michigan 16, Minnesota 13, abandonment. " " yoT' . V" "ow you navs issjssippi 10, Missouri 18, Montana .Kim mom ui vhii, auu i , i-MeuiuBHa, , xNevoaa s, New Hamp that you are animated by a aplrlt of shire 4, New Jersey 14, New Mexico 4 'mladlrectenl' loyalty to thoae unions." I New York 4S. I any member In tha Central Labor Dakota 6. Ohlc- 24, Oklahoma 10 Oro Councll so foollah as to believe that the gon 6. Pennsylvania 38. Rhode Island union of Pnrllnnrt rnn ha knninlnlri ( a...u m n- n . . t' ": r,i li 1 .Vr 1 . . " uouci. mni irnn wno ueciarea i renneaaee IX xexaa zn tlth a vn XlXWAn'Sn onfe hMt unl0n"' "Jf l the paper, ehould not exceed 300 wardt nmy of our caue, can be fit and West Virginia 8, Wiflconain 13, Wyom- int name ana aaareee or tne Ren aer. lriiorra, wnere ine promotion or umomam mo wuicr uuvi hoi uBHiri iu iihvb ini n our nnie nniAOir fir ia inma mamha i a . . . name Dublished. he ehould ao atate.i I . k.-ki. " Tri A ITCCOCIOUS lnuleC ' I W V I IJWIIWI DUil inuur LUUIIL11 SKtS.Llal.aBU I by treacherous doelcna ajralnat the .ro",an(1'Aur- ".-r-To the Editor of Protests Militiamen's Treatment, A. P. of I T , Journal I see In your paper a Balem, Or., Aug. 12. To the Editor of And if not. why should they, on the l. '. r, V. ,"",r ,.D0" V and The Journal I have been following part of union men. Invite the head of ::JL '." .rw" "l0""? " n.i..i i-iin - neoruary ana ane laid har f rat ciosoiy tne story or tne auegea mutiny " vi, wn-- irui.nci ability, nor does he question .their hon- r?v i-ut. f poh v.utnV' tv, ti,u eety, No one who la careful and unpre- IT7.; L"ul Ps5' fd,toV ' Th publl ludlced can reaaonablv infer fmm nr. f In tariff debata sevoral years ago, .lYJJ.pnIAUIcJcsJlliitJft makcahlB lightif 'i' e-uvereary Drougnt our aurtianoa al Letters From tLe People at Qat. 'Wash., during the recent ma neuvers there. Though the Oregonlan haa passed snap Judgment upon the towards unions can by Its envy of what cOTnpllahlng? only be aurDa-sed " on the llth of th, "th. Ho thJuU srs js;?hatIt'" ?xir v ch,ck' raji lingi it is a white Leghorn. Tn mint. tU- n - .... - a ;.r k.7V..: . Vh"; brother. John Mitchell, whom every true ralaw MK8. E. A. MONTGOMERY. concerned and has pacsed upon the case union man reapects: "We are pledged "'tU.' iU tI,0"ri1, I Poverty, Ignorance and aelfl.hn.a.; to ZZ : i I .:.' v be respectful in word and action to v- the question, and has printed the news ftry woman; to be considerate to the News Forecast o tlie Week Washington, Aug. 17. Tho formal no- Just aa It occurred without regard to Uidow and orphan, tha weak and, da- ITLYS rn,aLrirn.kt! liVr. and Repub- Uflod that The Journal dealres to treat, c?,', CO,0V"07 nItlOnalItT; to defend J "Tt 2' WlU the question fairly and impartially. 1 freedom of thought, whether expressed b jnon ldlnf event of the week " cre.uiiy reno ecn rncie r.gara- Dy tongue or pen; likewise to educate reiauon to tne national campaign, ing thla affair aa it has appeared. I ourselves and our fellow workers in the The notification of Governor Thomas R first read of the threatened court mar- historic of the labor movement We Marshall, the running mate of Woodrow tlal of the accused officers, and of the will endeavor to subordinate every sel- Wilson on the Democratic ticket will I .f tt1ba,n1 ? tTk Batta,Ilon, rsh Imputation to the task of elevating take place In Indianapolis Tuesday The of the Third Infantry. I then read of the material. Intellectual and moral con. ceremonv will he held at th. ,.i tne demand or tne accused officers for dltlon of the entire laboring class." rrounila and t. tn , a court of Inquiry, and the demand being "I do not conceal from myself that . v.. .. ! h taken notice of by the appointment of trade unions have made mistakes," Mr. :,:, ' , ' . such a court, and the withholding of the Mitchell concluded, "but I submit that k. !?, " , p;r" order of dlsbandment pending the find- they should be Judged not by their L V , 7 same remarkable degree. Running society was seton foot where a three i horses have been of about equal oFsIx ounceottlefpulreilik was r, Peed fronr-18tfron in indi.ldnal - open. If It be just sluiced out and left -, to be filled again from the same cources the last state will be worse than the first. ' Whether reaulta wljiof ylll not, Whether they can or cannot, be "made permanent Is the great prob lem. Radical Improvement Is possible only "If the connection between the - civilian fosterers of money produc ing vice and their partners in the po lice department can be not only " troken but killed out. To wholly extirpate vice from a great metropolis is impracticable in this stage of the world's history. Probably there 13 as high a percent age of vice In London, Paris, Berlin or Vienna as in New York-possibly higher. But the general and ouc ; cessful warfare against the white lave traffic illustrates the fact that commercialized vice can be warred against, and the campaign not be relaxed until it is won. The nubile sold for a cent. The death rate of young children has already been re duced one half The Indianapolis Star Is promi nent In relief funds for catastrophes. The space is tilled, but not the list. The hand of charity is always extending. It is not to be doubted that this charity will cover a multi tude of sins of the papers of Amer ica of omission as well as of commission. ENGLAND IN EGYPT I HE government of Egypt is an anomaly. The khedlve is the J1lLLJ but is supposed to be advised, and if necessary controlled by the Eng llsh consul general. This official is I Burke ran the 100 metres in 1896 Instances. Swimming has increased in speed since the professional J. Nuttall set his recorTof 1 minute, lT seconds in 1893 at Staiybridge, England Charles M. Daniel of New York set an amateur record of 55 3-5 seconds at Manchester, England, in 1907 Now comes Duke Kahanomoku, the Hawaiian, with his remarkable rec. ord of 1 minute 2 3-5 seconds for 100 metres at Stockholm, Sweden, in the recent Olympic games Probably the most striking exam ple of the Improvement in athletics Is noted In the Olympic games, which covers a wide scope of compe ution. jerom Athens in . 189 a to Stockholm In 1912 affords a period that will admit of comDariaon exists? Are not our own bov. a iroo unions, or some gentleman who has al o . Ktt.iin r V. ,:rready espoused our cause, than Mr. month nr inir ,nh, .k Oebs, who is an apostata from our ihattalion. CauJd.M4ii.JtteUoail e mustered out, disbanded, or dishonored I Xr.",, ,Z . " 1 ,,,r" a month from now as well as now? Ev ery accused person has a right of de- ln reality the man in possession for the ' bondholders, 'English - and French, .wbo .. luppljed the. funds of government. A first rate man waa sent to take In 12 seconds and Craig ran it last July" lit 10 .-CSV ' Clark In the run ning, broad iu'mp at ..Athena . leaped 20 feet 9 3-4 inches. Gutterson at Stockholm made the phenomenal charge In the person of Sir Evelyn I Jump of 24 feet II inches. In 1896 Baring, afterwards created Lord j Garrett put the shot 36 feet 2 inches, flXJL. x. . Itar- i-ii"---'- -a. - .... l ....... . ' rumer. UBUer aim me riSCai SVB- enrT tMo v.ai. MpnnnoTrl vri iry - i buwru iiivvfwuuiiu uuiit,u 1 L. uu tern was reformed, and native usurers ceased to oppress the peas antry. Cotton planting was bejrun. and the annual Nile floods were con served and applied to the irrigation of an enormous area. A system of national education was begun. Egypt feet 3.1 Inches. Probably the only form of athlet ics that has not shown a decrease In time for a given distance Is rowing. Difference in currents probably makes it impossible accurately to Judge rowing. Since 1878 Harvard prospered up to a point when a and Yale have been rowing their an younger generation of native Egypt- nual race at New London, Connec ians, not brought up under the hands ;tlcut, and the time, 20:44 3-4, is a of Turkish pashas and Levantine j rood average the demand of the accused officer, for dltlon of the entire laboring class." rTr .-'.. " in" ,alr a court of Inquiry, and the demand being "I do no conceal from myself that . ;::"::rV":. . . r jt g . . . t , i--. ''vvi u uciuuiiflLi a. i mi it i lie m will be Judre Alton Ings of this court. Now I read of the mistakes, but by what good they hve t " ana-twvernor dlsbandment order going into effect, and done. And you will find our doctrine , '" "uureBS or acceptance. of the officers and men being denied as contained In our pledge in only two I A lc rrtBlitnt Sherman wIU be notl- thelr right to a court of Inquiry. places in America in the church and rlou or 1B renommanon at his home in During my residence In this state, I in the labor union." i mca, ne entertainment will start Havs never witnessed so raw a piece ofl A an humble member of one of thefTue8JaV evening with a band concert. injustice. Why all this haste about dls- test unions in Portland, I believe In I iireworas ana parade. The formal cro bandlng the battalion? Whv are the this doctrine, and Judging from the monies will be held the foUowinir da'v men at the head of this great military sentiments of my fellow workers, I In Roscoe Conkling park. Senator Suth- organisation of ours afraid to get both could not get one voice raised against erland of Utah has been selected to sides of the story? Why do they want !t- 1 think u a reat mistake that an make the notification address, to wipe out the terrible stain on the orator could not be selected from some Georgia Democrats will enpage In a reputation of the Guard before they oU,ur Political party, who would have general primary election Wedneadav. know for certain whether such a -tain moro honorable intentions towards our , preference vote will be taken for United States senator .and candi-. absenting themselves from a demon' stratlon which should tend to promote the fundamental principles of union labor a UN 10 N M AN,. Dr. C. T. Wilson and Suffrage. Salem, Or., August 16. 1912. To the Editor of The Journal As the temper ance people have recognised Dr. Wilson aB an ardent advocate of absolute abo fense. What opportunity has been ac corded "the- accused officers ami -merr of the Second battalion to make a de fenae? It is true Governor West will give the. officers a hearing after the dlsbandment order has gone into ef fect. Much consolation In thia. Who ever unru ui nunKiiir il man. nnn Tnn . .. ,, . ... giving him a heartng afterwards? Can ' . ..f. ... . J..iA" it be possible that there may be some 0n .uf'f-- Many o them truth in the statements printed in The ,hinU rm i, r.in t i,. ..,' i. Journal regarding the accused's side of that his main argument Is asralnst wo- w..a . ..j, "u tt.i ii yuK0JU1 win man suffrage. If the doctor meant Just there, la a shadow of truth in the alle- what some of our temperance people ganons or baiuroay s issue or IQe Port- think he does, sural v thar. is m,n4 fn- na uy jew: n ny aiun i me gen- objection; for they think he would urge .mi moil ul in- uttjun n-imi jrunra all men in Oregon to vota against wn- permit the order of dlsbandment to stand man auffraga for the. reason, aa they until after the court of Inquiry had filed think he says, that if women are allowed its report? to vote they will cast a majority for rr' v. . . l v . . . . il.x.. f . . I . . . . . .. . xuuuKn uui very nine naa peen aaia ine suDDon or tne evi ana not th mnA In defense of the accused, except that These temperance people fail to see that they have denied disobeying any orders, the doctor does not mean that women publlo sentiment In this section Is with are not to blame for the temperance the accused. Though thosa In power can work being set back 25 years In some apparently rule or ruin at present,-the (states, "nly ft" they fail to all vota, chances are that the people will bring land vote together, but that he do-is them- to-- account 4b one way or another 1 blame ... tha xttcu ar..therxowarilce for their actions. The "gag" is applied In shuffllns their own r.sponslblllty to tha Second battalion. If there haa "Pon the women. I infer from Dr. Wil been any fair play In this matter, X, son's articles that he Is not opposed to Opinion, the public conscience of the .nations is the potent and driving force. Engaging in the white slave r- business is abhorrent, and utterly ' ""disgraceful. One sharing In it he - comes a pariah, an outcast, when his connection with it becomes known. " Judges will boldly administer the law, Juries will convict, and prison doors are wide open to receive such ' criminals. . , Is it any less disgraceful and ab horrent to be either a silent or an ac- tive partner in levying toll on the gambling house or the brothel? ,Th . police army of New York numbers ten thousand men mostly good inen and honest citizens if they tavo a fair chance. Cannot the re sult of this uprising of good against vll be that the solid conscience, the ' sprlt de corps, of this army should , fee organized against a guilty or ,,ta!nted minority? Cannot It be made plain to' Its members that this sin and crime is worse, is blacker, in an enlisted officer than In the out " aide civilian? The function of offi- traHt7oiasj?irr and-iitsptrtt-the .T tk jallUc T ujgaUott Am o iu te : officers of the army ia aura now. financiers, but educated In modern and western Ideas, began to make themselves felt. Then Lord Cromer resigned, to have a few years of easy life In Eng land. Sir Eldon Gorst, an aide of Lord Cromer's, took his place and soon died In harness. Lord Kitchener, the conqueror at Omdurman, the avenger of the mur dered Gordon, the pacifier and an nexer of the Soudan, having com pleted his term as commander in chief in India, was sent out to fill the agent general's place, with even a freer hand than his predecessors. Ho has recently reported on his administration, and his account Is before the world, as well as com ments of eye witnesses. The soldier has turned cotton planter on an enor mous scale. The cotton crop was threatened by the cotton worm. Kitchener had close investigation made, and over-irrigation was de clared to be the source of evil. This was corrected, and the greater part of last year's cotton crop was saved. By the new barrages of the Nile an Immensely Increased area, prob ably a million acres, has been added to the cotton fields. Abuses of tax atipn have been redressed, and the pooretnf the- Egyptian culttvatort ari9orili8.ioa(lib z. progress. Education la Lord Kitchener's spe- In baseball there never was auch a player as Ty Cobb. This is ad mitted by men who have spent a life time In the game. What Cobb would have done to the pitching of the time of Sunday is a matter of conjecture. Instead of batting .420 lie would probably have batted .600. In the day of Sunday the batter was permitted to call for a high or low ball, whichever he could hit safely with greater frequency. When Sun day was playing with Chicago the pitchers were just beginning to use overhand pitching. Previously they were compelled, to throw an under hand ball, which cut down the speed of the pitch. It is generally conceded that Charles Comlskey of Sunday's time revolutionized the style of play around first base by going deeper into right field, but in thoso daya batters were prone to hit the ball out instead of bunting. The bunting game, which demands the greatest possible speed -both on the part of the batter and the fielder, wag first used generally by the Baltimore Ori oles of 1894, '95 and '96. The cum bersome lnfielders of Sunday's time would be unable to prevent bunting as it is done now. In Sunday's day thers waa no lucn thlnf aT" a "waated",iall .or .'Mt and run, im provements qf ttfo last few years, ' - ' " -"" ----- r for one, have failed to note It. I LLOYD ELLIOTT. To Relieve Traffic Congestion. Portland. Or., Aug. 16. To the Editor of The Journal Keferrlng to your ed itorial last evening on the congested condition of our down town streets, I beg- to suggest that the only practical way to overcome this will be for the lty to build two tubes under tho river, one north along Sixth or Seventh street, the other east and west along Stark or Washington street, coming to the sur-j face about Seventh and Washington i and compelling the Street car companies and possible h.avy traffice to use them. It la comparatively only a short time before this will have to be done, and considering the saving of time that could be aocomplishcd. tho cost (which I do not think would be excessive) should not b considered. I believe your paper oould do a great public good by comin out strongly In ,advocacy of such a plan. I believe the publlo could soon be brought to see it, as a case of saving in time. Not long ago, while In New York, I took the subway at Fourth avenue for the ball grounds at 168th street; time, 10 minutes. I returned by the surface ele-ctric; time, ono hour, I trust you may see the Importance- of building these tubes as It appears to me. MAKTIN WINCIL women voting, only so' they vote right. but that he docs question the motive of the men who favor woman suffrage. Now if these temperance peopla un derstand the doctor's doctrine on this suffrage question as appears to them from the doctor's articles aa published, the logical conclusion is that If woman suffrage should win in Oregon, it Is liable to set the temperance cause back 25 years. But others of us temperance folks do not so understand him. We do not believe the suffrage question is the Gates named for governor and other state officers to be voted for In the com ing alection. It is expected that United mtet-8efiAtor Bacon -Wflfce named jrdr moat to Us feet with a declamatory cf max to tha affect that 'Benjamin Frank lin was a protectionist, I didn't believe it, but I couldn't-make an honest donlal at ths moment. At the first opportunity, however, I looked , tha matter up. To my great surprise, upon glancing over the Index tO' collection of , Franklin's writings, I found proof, that my adver sary was right. "Franklin was a pro tectionist: for there In 'that Index these words stared ma 4n th fa:o: 'Protec tion, a!good thing for the commerce of nations," But I turned to tha text as my adversary probably hud not to loarn why this acute philosopher, dla-tingul-hed in a ' great period of' tht world's history, thought so well of tar Iff protection; and this Is what I found that Franklin Jjb4 really said; "It Is a good thing for the commerce of na tions to stabllah protection against pi rates on tha high seas." Of course protection ' against piracy Is a good thing. But protection against piracy la the very reverse of protection against trade. With piracy, or protective tariffs, trade Is obstructed; but without piracy and without protective tariffs, trade is free. Now, every plausible argument for tariff protection Is like my adversary's Interpretation of Franklin. It is up- ' side down. For instance, there 1s tsA balance-of-trade argumont. We are told that or exports exceed our Imports. So they do. .But how can a people prosper with outgo larger than Income? Oh. they tell us, these protectionists, that tha excessive outgo will all come, back to us In pure gold. But It hasn't They toll us that It Isn't excessive outgo all the time. But It Is. Sine It. 4. according to the treasury reports, the total excel of outgo over Income, of exports over Imports merchandise, gold and sliver, all together aggregate a great deal mora than $3,000,0.0,000 two-thirds of It since 1906. Evidently we are a trib utary nation. In Great Britain Imports exceed exports; they gut tribute Instead of paying tribute. Then there are tha statistical com parisons of foreign wages with Anior- can wages. That argument also la up side down. Thoso statistics are mis leading in two ways. In the first pla.e money wages may be lower abroad, but real wages higher, because the cost of living Is less abroad. In the second place, time wages may be less abroad than time wagi a here, when the same wages measured by the effectiveness of the work for which they arc paid are less here than there. When these statistics are lnvoMguted it will usually be found, either that they are fulpe, or that Amer ican wages are lower substantially than foreign wages. Could there be anything more absurd than most arKumorit for tariff protec tion for workers? The protective tariff either Increases prices, or It does not. If the protective tariff does not In crease prices, how can It Increase wages, except as he-at brings frobt- by its ab sence? But If the protective tariff does Incrmse prices, it cannot increas. wages. The only way to increase wage. Is to increase domand for labor prod ucts. How can highnr prices of products do that? If the protective tariff did In crease both prlceB and fvnfres, it would taku more from the worker In higher cost of HvlriK us n consumer, than it could give him In wages ng a worker. I'rotectlvo tariff are taxes on pro duction, and taxes on production neces sarily make high prices mid low wager. Thorold Roger shows that high prices and low watfefi, nnd low prices and hlli wages, have gone together through six centuries of industrial history la Eng succeed himself. Chief Interest centers In the contest for th governorship be tween John M. Slaton of Atlanta and joe tun tiail or Macon. products of their work, alwavs has, docs Republicans of Delaware will hold j now nnd alwa; s will make for poverty their state convention In Dover on Tuee- ! among the working class. It stands ti I'on't rh-pj l'O tuLPtiu'r -in tha United Stateji (t the present moment? Tariff protection, like every other ta upon workers and the -!r:cesjLe!!L...and.. ay ror the nomination of a complete state ticket, and three candidates for presidential electors. ' The president and Mrs. Taft and many other notable men and women have accepted Invitations to attend the garden party to be held Friday on the magnificent John Hays Hammond es tate at Gloucester, Mass., for the pur pose of raising funds with which to erect a memorial arch In Washington to the memory of the men who went down with the Titanic. Of Interest In church circles will be the consecration of Mgr. Georges Gau tliler as bishop of Phillppopoljs and aux iliary bishop of Montreal. The cere mony Is to take place In Montreal on Saturday. Saturday Is the day set for the offi cial welcome to b given In New York In honor of the victorious American athlt wo- .toobr part- In the- recent Olympic games at Stockholm. The pro gram will Include a great parade down Broadway, to be followed by the cere monies of welcome at the city hull and a grand banquet in. the evening at Ti raee Garden. Among the conventions of the week Will be the American Apple Growers' congress at St. Louis, the annual meet- ng of the American Federation of Cath olic Societies at Louisville, the national reunion of the LoyarOrder of Moose at Kansas City, and the annual meeting of the National Negro Business league at Chicago. Single Tax Aids Poor, Portland, Or., Aug. 13, To the Editor of The Journal I have bees reading with. Interest the pros and cons of the "single graduated land tax," and while there Is lots of room to argue In favor of the single tax, I do not care to do so. All I wish to say is this: Does not the working people and small land owner know by this Urns that tha capi talists and their papers have never aa nsver will fight for anything: to the interest of the poor man, and tha fact that the capitalists are fighting with all their strength the proposed sin gle land tax should tell the working man to vote ror ana not against it. I If the single tax harmed the noor and benefited the rich, as the rich manV papers claim, rest assured "the rich man would not work againat It, but for It. 1f " thr poor"Tnanw1tt incs waits up to the fact that what the rich man wants-and fightr for i-the thing- that bs (tbs poor man) wants to voteagainst. SEVEN ODD SECTS Shamanism. reason that It would be ao; It Is a fact that It has been so. Protection Ih one of the advance agents of poverty. Tinier the protec tive tariff, monopolists filch food from the poor mati'a table; under the pro tective tariff, monopolists aubstlttite shoddy for wool In the poor man's cloth ing; under the protective tariff, monop ollsta grind down the wagea of the poor who svibnilt and -hoot down or starve out the poor who don't submit Could piracy on the hltfh seas he 'any worse? The Ball Moose, The big bull mooe. with his area to the sun Could never keep pace with the "iStran uoua On. ' Oh! obstreperous Teddy of Oyster Bay, nun, you me dear people are all to tha Jay?" A fricTTd or the laborer. Ah! t. it Is true, - Th "'J'rut'- a4 the "Big- Boys" wn - labor for you. MeCormtck Is one of the laboring friends, Frank Munscy poor soul, on the Bull Moose depends. Coorge IVrklni. .a.QstJjor. poor hard. worklnp; man. Is plugging for Teddy as hard aa he can. The needs of the people, the Bull Moose can see, But. dear, trusting people, that need Is Juat 'MK." To the Republican party he aoon said good bye, When at last they "got wise" td'.'MUi" Majesty "l.'f ' But the grand old party was quite SOd enough When It gave him the "plums" and " stood for lils bluff. They know what he needs, and you bet they're on, For the big Bull Moose Is a big "bull con." ANIM M. SNETAG. Shamanism is a doctrine that has an uncertain number of followers, and may not be classed strictly as a religion, but It is looked upon as such by the great majority of those who worship under this 'belief. The minister and the priest of the Christian church be seeches the favor of tho gods; the sha man, as the leader In each section Is called, is believed to be able to compel and command them to do his will. It is really the name for a complex of practices and beliefs connected in some parts of the world with an ani mistic stage of culture. Tha word "Sha man" Is of Hindo-Porslan origin, and denotes "idolater." It is-the religion of certain tribes in northern Asia, but the area must also bo extended to Amer ica, where the medicine man of the In dian has in great part the same func tions and beliefs and follows the same practices as the shaman of Asia.' The functions of the shaman, In' the belief of the worshipers, are summed up in the securing of good for those Who retain his services and tha avert ing of evil from them. This Includes the direction of ceremonial, arrange ment of dances and feasts, healing of the sick, guarding from sorcery, secur ing rainfall, and divining. In these va rious performances ecstacy Is often em ployed by the shaman, and la induced either by narcotics or by self-hypnotism. Themeans by which these various func tions are performed are held to be mys terious, and: known only to tha user, or if known to another they would be dan- werous for him ta- employ. In the healing of the slek thera are often combined an' empirical herbarium and the supposed control of spirits. De. ception of the patient and identity of means employed characterize the opera tions of shamans In the old world and the new, where they frequently diag- iiiuesa aa caused Dy foreign aub- Eugena Guard: Tharo is mtio room for more railroads into ugene" from the north or west. Southern and east. ern routes aro naturally beginning to receive attention, and it will not be long before the road up the McKcnsle. aa well as the proposed Crcswell and shape. Pointed Paragraphs stances Introduced Into the body bv ' p,easant Hill carllnea, take definite vii or aoroerers, na these sub stances they pretend to remove by ma nipulation and suction, having prevl ously "palmed" or otherwise concealed them about their own persons. Knowledge they pretend to gain by sending forth the "dream spirits," one of the four spirits possessed by them on a search for the cause of ijl or means of good. The cumpulslon of sDlrita in accomplished by tha, "word of power" mcaniauons consisting of unintelligible formulas and often of mere gibberish In which, however, the shaman has full confidence, a belief in symathfiti magUs is a normal accompaniment of shamanism. The abaman may.oome to hla iuw.m either by parental endowment derived from an ancestor, by gift from fn vot ing aplrlt, or. from training by an ex pert practitioner. Most commonly the shaman Is a man. Among the Yakuts, the Ca'rlb tribe, and - In northern Cali fornia there are female as weil aa male Shamans; and In some ceases, notably the Yakuts', male shamans have to assume women's dress. Sacrifices, rift, beads and tobacco, and a few drpps oi . , " Y Ur l mm. a. m - 1 tht novloes blood form ---B-nri--w4-rocfti . .. ... . - . " - i r . . . . . Assume cheerfulness, though you have it not. What a plrl likes about being secretly, engaged is that everybody will soon get next. A man never realises the value of a closet until he acquires a family skele ton. , About one time out -of a billion a man can lose all Ijls money without losing most of his friends. . . It is sometimes dlffloult to convince a man' that two heads are better than one the father o.f twin,, for oxamplo. It haa been discovered that aawduat has been sold for alfalfa meal. That is worse than selling it for breakfast food . livestock can't organise muckrake or vote. cantatloni with tha American Indiana. TsmorTOw-rTptemlsm, wrongdoing of a youh manr but th 1- -.'-.---,'ir-.l. r Jt V't.JI.IlV- uuiiiK iiure is neuoer xorgiveneas nor onarwyr ' so, young man. oult.