- - -J J AN JMU.I'I Nln.'NT NKW KI'APF.ll "..I ) . ' . ,i inj ixii'fht Smulnjt li II J Miihliiy ti..riili,(J (it '111.- J.inrnul Uulld- .;ui urn) vuniiiiii i t ui iHwii.ffi at r-oitiami, - i'IUI-lNI pi lll (MlJtllUIH-w II ............. f,r triiiixiiiUjtua tlirumjlj tU umlls u tHiiid tlltttliT, " tt I -.1.1 -I'lluM: Mnln Tl7:i: llnnie. A-QOM. A All dnarlnmt ri-m-Hcd If tin- nmiil J. loll tlic oiH-riHiir Ohm .iiiirtriii-nt m "'". J , . .I.....' :-4 1V1.-11TISI u ' n. njiiiiiln & Kvtttnor Co., Uriiiwwlcs wuuuiug :2i I Iflh vimm. New Votltl ituvimm baa llulliliutf. Ctilmco. . ' Huhwrliitlon Ifimi by ittii-U or to any ddre la the Uiihud Suttw br Mexico! , , DiiLt .. . On rr. ...... .$3.00 On month. . t ' ' f V, ... 6U5it)At .: . , On ear....,.2.5a I On onl. . , DAILY AND 8LNDAT One fear..,,. ....$T.B0 1 On omnth... I i It is by attempting to reach the top -at a single leap; that so much misery la caused ;n the world. Cobbett. . ; ; 1 AST ALASKA LINE ' ' , ' . I N YESTERDAY'S Journal wa. the aanouncement that ; nearly 10 000 is offered, as 'part 'M xapltal of J500.000 .iora;Bteamer, llae frotn Portland to ' Alaska; ,.Tie plan Is to make it 'a Pprtland-owned line, to be operated ale tte year round. On the 16th day of. last January j, B, Dodson, a Circle City merchant, appeared before a committee In this city and urged Portland to put 90 a line of eteamera ta Alaska. He aald he wouldi furnish 125 to 150 tona of freight for the first boaCI v 51; . On the. 16th of the preceding, No vember, : J. M. Keller of Skagway urged Portland to put on an Alaska steamer line, saying It would be a big thing for both Portland ; and Alaska and ? that, If attempted, Alaska would meet Portland half " way. '; .;' ' V, 'I. V 'h '? r The eameday, through The Jour nal, H- H. Draper of Skagway called- upon Portland to put on such a line, saying, "We of Alaska have 1 never been abl0 '.to understand why Port land seems to care so little; for Alaska trade, when It has - been a eource of bo much 'revenue to Seat tle and San Francisco." , ' - ,' . t Three days before; L. H, Peder son of Seward urged Portland to put on a steamer line to Alaska, saying: "The business : men of Portland would find an excellent field there . for , increasing i their volume , of trade." -. 1 f :" " '.. ; ' f The same day O. M. Graff of Sew ard appealed to Portland to put steamers- In the -Alaska ' trade, de claring:' '"Alaska is anxious to have Portland as one of its chief supply points.".' ' ''.'? ; v. . fliers is example of the attitude of Alaska business men . toward Port-1 land. . Thousands there want .to do business -with this city. The single thing that stands in the vay Is the absence' ot a steamer line. . : The trade of Alaska has mounted to huge proportions.; $Vsr ; oleven months ending in - May, 1811, it to taled 28,461,074.ff It is more than double ;th : value , of all the wheat produced In Oregon In 1911. It is a sum greater than the yal,ue of ,all the wheat, all the wool, all the "hops ' and all ' the fruits produced Jn Ore gon in 1911, i' For the period Puget Sound ship ments to Alaska, totaled 111,167,638, Portland's totaled 135;646. For the same period, .Alaska ship ments , to Puget ' Sound aggregated $S,054,343. Portland's ' shipments did aot' aggregate one dollar. Proving that location had nothing to do with Portland's lack of busi ness with Alaska, the trade of San Francisco with Alaska for the period was, la round numbers, 1 $5,000,000. Is there any reason why Portland, if she had ' transportation, should not do as well In trading with Alaska as did . San Francisco, 600 miles farther away? The offer of 8100,000 as "part of the capital for a Portland-owned steamer line to Alaska should be an encouraging message to Portlanders. The present trade of that empire is but a fracQonrof what it Is yet to be. Before very long, the coal fields of , the territory will be delivering their stored wealth to the world. ', Did ever any city , have a better chance; t.o secure milll-ns In trade .for Its agricultural, commercial and industrial , output? , : JUDGE LOWELL'S PLAN fUDE LOWELL should tear up I his bill for limiting the ballot r I measures to two constitutional :J--amendments ' and five initiative bills. ' - The legislature should not and probably would not pass it If It did, the people would referend and beat it. Judge Lowell undoubtedly pro : poses his bill in all friendship' for the initiative. But the effect of its adoption would be an act of hos tility, ' ' "Suclra limitation could be em ployed to destroy the initiative. En emies of the system could, in ad- i vance, pre-empt, Jibe two constitu tional amendment places with friv 0 bus i propoBitions and block pro-; posed constitutional changes of importance,- ,'.By the same process; they could file five unimportant bills nd obstruct the enactment of im portant legislation. - - : . . There are a great many interests that want ) the i Initiative; crippled. They would be cunning enough to employ -'Judge Lowell's plan with f piendid ; effectiveness for that send. They could , Jlnd plenty of subjecU 011 which to present bills and amend ments for filling up the seven places on the ballot to the exclusion of de . IcglslaironT-: TrTTT' The coming . legislature, for ex- 1 :) ( I it. )!' .irH of provt-n iniini lance. Ot'il'T jl''Kli.1atur's havo. done ninth ilt inisht ho desired to submit bojuo of t lio defeated bills to t.lio jmoi-lo i by initiative action, but by filins Inieftsures enough to f II 1 tbe restrktt- t,d ballot, such submission could bo bloclied..-'-- ........ -.. The Very knowledge by the Jogls- atl re tna BuCa a pi'OCCBS COUld pO , ... iJ 1 ,i,i. 1 ,U, em nJOTSa- Would make - that- body lation. It Is now, the ever pres ent realization that If a "wholesome measure la rejected iu the legisla ture, It tan be passed by the elector ate, Is the most powerful .influence for making the body responsive . to the people. ' The direct primary law, was passed by ; the people after the legislature reject! it. The local .option tew man passed after the legislature to jected' such a' bill .tor incorporated cities.. The corporation lax law wai passed by Jtha electorate after a leg lslature . rejected ft. ., Tiue corrupt practices lawwas so passep after the In.L.Ll,,., vatMnA It TT":, : Judgo Lowell's: plan Is pot. A good one. It will bo time enough to ye h!ffAr narlftncl ta warrant bo desperate a resort v The point; has' not been reached when Its enemies should' be empow ered to monopolize the initiative with petty measures to the exclusion of Important legislation. .. : j; , THE TOLL OF THE SEA T HIRTY. dead were added yester day to the toll of the sea. Though but a breath beside the appalling tragedy fin the Atlan tic last 'April, ' the roll of the , lost claimed' by an-angry ocean on the Rosecrans at Peacock " Spit 'is a frightful exaction in human life. The list of the missing on the Pa clfia coast during the past sixty years mounts to a melancholy total. Six teen shipwrecks in the period have yielded an aggregate of 1400 lost lives. " ' ,-;.. r :, .' October 1, 1854, the , steamer Yankee Blade was wrecked on Point Arguello with a loss of 180. ' ,v January 6, 1860, -the sleamer Northerner was wrecked off Cape Mendocino and 38 lives lost July 27, J862, the steamer Golden Gate was burned off Manzanlllo and 198 persons perished. July 10,, 1865, the Brother Jona than went down near Crescent City with a loss of 148. :' .. . " February 13, 1869, the steamer Hermann was wrecked in Japanese waters and 120 were lost - August 22, 1888, the City of Ches ter collided with the Pacific Matt steamer QceanIcof t-Fort Pointr and x February 2 1 r 1 8 9B , the ateacer Collma was lost in a . hurricane 86 miles south of Manzanlllo and 198 persons went down with the ship, December. 8, 1895. the steamers Keweenaw and Montserrat collided off Cape Flattery and 67 perished. February 22. 1901, the steamer Rio de Janeiro sank near Mile Rock in San Francisco bay and 128 were lost. . . January 7, 1904, the steamer Clal lam was lost in the straits of Fuca with a death roll of E4. January 23, 1906, the steamer Valencia was wrecked off Vancouver Island with a loss of 120. November 18, 1906, the steamers Dlx and Jeannie collided in Seattle harbor with a death roll of 48. July 23, 1907, the steamer Colum bia and schooner San Pedro collided off Shelter Cove, Mendocino, and 86 perished. September 20, 1909,' the bark Star of' Bengal was wrecked on Corona tion Island, Alaska, with a loss of 111. " "'.::'.;." t..'. August 27, 1909, the steamer Ohio sank In Swanson bay, Alaska, with a loss of four. January 7, 1913, the oil steamer Rosecrans was blown ashore by a hurricane on Peacock Spit and 30 persons perished. The Columbia river Las figured but little In' the great marine disas ters of the Pacific. - STILL SOVEREIGN I T ALMOST seems as if the United States Supreme Court has been studying the latest election re turns. It has rejected the plan of reor ganizing the lately .dissolved merger of Hsrriman roads, , It has affirmed the indictment of Patton and his as sociates, for creating a cotton corner as restraint of trade. These seem im pressive steps by the court in assert ing the authority of the Sherman law. 1 Meanwhile, the dividends of Standard Oil since the dissolution are greater than ever. , The price of gasoline and other . oil products is higher than ever. The corporation seems to maintain as firmly as ever its strangle hold on the American public, the dissolution order not withstanding. 1 1 The defiance will not always go on. The exercise by the Rockefel lers of this power over the oil in dustry by controlling output and fix ing prices will not endure. No anarchist does as much as do they to inflame the country. Their long immunity from restraint ;by a national statute Is a hundredfold more harmful to American institu tions than all the soap box oratory and all . the inouthings of all 51 the demagogues.. . . , a ;;,.",,, ; The dissolution Judgment, against Standard Oil was a condemnation of the corporation's monopolistic de vices. It was an indictment of thftOjmerrtal practices- associated with use of those devices. ;' : The Judgment was a verdict of lHy lis truly iis t!.in;:!i t!:o -rc -cut km liiul Ix-i-a for crinu. if tbo tfHllrijoiiy viih fcujncloiit to dciaand a dissolution, it was Knl'l'lck:nt to jail the lii-iKadiers of tho oil corporation. The Rockefeller anarchy la. a prob lem for Woodrow Wilson ta solve. If ho doesn't ...dO'.it, noma other statesman will... If' civil euits cauuot end SUindard 0118 disregard of the Sherman law, the Jails can. .' 1 , -One - Rockefeller in - jail -for - ix months would do more than a thou sand dissolution suits to end the crimes pf' extortion of, which Stand ard Oil jhas': been proven gall.ty.lQne of these denouements or the other is the logic of tho late election returns, and one or the other is very certain to yet come to pass. Tho American people are still sovereign, . ANDREW JACKSON rrtllE recent testimony of J. pierr 1. pont Morgan before a congres- filonal committee at Washing ton must have unconsciously reminded thousands of Americans of the historic' strugsle between PresI dent Andrew Jackson: and Nicholas Diddle of the old United . States Dank. It appeared in the evidence before the committee that' only 180 men are the .directing ; force (behlnd a banking and industrial capital of $25,000,000,000, or about one-fifth the "f entire wealth of the United States. Jn 1913.. what would An drew Jackson, wise through hl ' ex perience with Diddle, say of Ameri can financial concentration ? A . ' , Nicholas Biddle is one of the dan ger signals of history. Andrew Jack son in his great conflict with Biddle and the money power; is one of the guide boards of history, "' 'A 1 W, . Biddle entered the United States bank.: honorably : purposed.) ' He sought) in. 1819 to rescue it from knavish hands. He rose on merit to the headship of the Institution. . But the mingling of banking with national politics .corrupted him, as it will corrupt almost any man. Long direction of the pulse of busi ness through the bank, long dealing with men of influence in legislation who - needed his Influence, as he needed theirs, bloated him into a na tional boss. v He came to dispute with the White House the issue of what should be the financial policy of the republic. As head of the bank, he assumed to direct congress as to financial legislation, a function that constitutionally belonged to the pres ident And his cabinet. To achieve his ends, he carried politics into con gress and banking into politics.' He hired senators to act as coun sel for the institution. He loaned money freely to congressmen. He advanced large sums of hank funds to newspaper editors, accepting as security. He printing . presses adopted many agencies for control of congress and public sentiment: and sought, in effect, to .have his bank supersede the constitutional White House in governing the United States. It was a crisis in national history. The need of the time was for such a man as President Jackson. No man less resolute, less resourceful could have emerged victorious from Buch a conflict Time and .history have approved Andrew Jackson in his resistance to the encroachments of. financial interests upon the execu tive and legislative functions of the American government. The career of Andrew Jackson is a warning to the American people in 1913 to so reform their banking sys tem that the Washington govern ment can never again be dominated by such a power as Nicholas Biddle sought to wield. THE ADVANCING CHINESE IN CHINA, the -ICwantung provin cial government has granted a ten years' franchise to a Chinese Trust and Guaranty company to do business as a side show to the Dairen produce Exchange. The cap ital stock is $500,000. The government requires a large deposit as a guarantee before the new company begins business, and further retains a supervisory gov ernmental control. A full inspection of all books, accounts and documents is to be made at regular intervals. Last, but not least, the government requires the company to pay to It during the life of the franchise twen ty per cent' of all fees and moneys collected from its .future clients. Meanwhile the new government is nothing if. not practical. The minis ter of agriculture and forestry has started to recapture and develop the Chinese silk industry. . The Chinese consuls abroad are ordered to report on the silk industry In their districts and on means of developing the Chi nese trade. Improved methods and machines are to be introduced- In spection bureaus under experts in silk manufacture are being estab lished at the six centers of the In dustry with duties akin to those of the agrtculturarexperts'hef e. . The returns of .Chinese revenue for the past year largely exceed the estimates, and are ahead of any pre vious year. The motor boats on the great rier are crowded with both passengers and" freight, and 'six new motor boats are now being built CORNERS IN NECESSARIES THE Supreme Court of the United I , States has now construed the I first section of the Sherman !) : Anti-Trust law, which forbids restraint of trade or 1 commerce, as applicable to indirect restraint. An indictment was returned in the New York Federal Court against James Patten and; three; off his as sociates- eMOTpirtag--tC',Tiranr s leged corner in cotton. '( 'The validity of the indictment was clia.1!- i I .y t.!,o J. !! , .' :i n ;. It was (HiiiiiiU-d by tho govern meat tli at to confirm tho indictment it wa.n iiisccHHary that '.tho 'lower court should havo held that a "withhold ing", of the cotton Irom tho market wna charged. Tho majority of tho justices of the" Supreme Court hold the indictment valid, and James rat ton and his co-defendants must now go to trial. -rJ" usUco : Vando vaster deliycred the opinion for the majority of , the court. He' held .that it is not neces sary that ! parties .should ; agree to suppress competition among ) them selves to make them punishable under, the .act ,,, Tho conspiracy to "create artificial conditions which necessarily impede pr burden .the dud course' of uch trade or com merce, or restrict the common J,iber-1 ty to engage .therein;, is forbidden by tho act. ' , - Speculative contracts or purchases of the necessaries of life with a View to forcing up the market' price - for the benefit of the speculators are now put under the ban of the law.- .The right of the people at Urge to cre ate the. market price by. the unfet tered operation of the law of supply and ' demand In open and normal market is affirmed,., i?:. '- -'v. .' It is to be understood that this law applies' to interstate commerce only. :..'-!)";";V 1 ;';' i:l The Jurisdiction of each state cov ers contracts entered into and to be completely .carried .through' .within Its , own boundaries. ; y . V; . . The diBsent of .' Justices Whiter Hughes . and Lurton was based on the technical construction of the de cision of the lower court, and not on the wording and legitimate meaning of the section of the Sherman act In Question. ;.' ;-. '- ;),; ''. ( Communication tent to The foarnal for pabUeation la tbls department anoald b writ ten on only one side of the paper, ibonli) not xctc4 800 words In leng th and mntt be ao compaoled by tbe name and sddreca of the sendar. If tbe writer doe not dealr to bar the asms published, its should so stats.) Views Have Changed. Portland, Or., Jan. J.-o ths Editor of The JournalA little less than a year ago, after having lived In Portland only a few months, I found myself out of employment, and after having made sev eral unsuccessful attempts to get work, and having a small family to support, I admit being a little nettled at local newspapers because they boasted of Portland's "greatness." Iu that frame of mind, I wrote a let ter to the editor of The Jour nal, told of my fruitless search for work and mildly hinted that a city should have something to offer those who eagerly look for an op portunity to exchange their Services for a living before it boasted of Its "great ness." After the DubUeatlon la The Journal. of my plain letter, I was fairly show ered with offers of employment. This gave me an idea of what a news paper of The Journal kind can do even in small matters, so wnen Mr. Suren of The Journal advertising staff Sug gested that X enter a yearly contract for advertising In The Journal, there was no argument needed to convince me of the advisability to do so. - I have followed carpentry until I understand how to manage It as a business on my 'Own Account; but lack ing the means to build myself a house, as an evidence of what I could do, and being' a . stranger, chances to "get In" seemed small, but I put in a two line ad. in your paper, reading: A. E. Wllc strem, house, office, store repairing, re modelling, building. WoodlaWn .2029." In less than 30 days after my ad. ap peared the first time I had nearly; $3000 worth of work through that ad. Part of that was for one fair jslzed .Job remodel ing an old house located at Thirty-third and East Main street, which anyone is welcome to Inspect, as It Is nearly com pleted. The other part was for a num ber of small jobs, which, though small, were just as heartily appreciated, be cause I havo started In business to take anything that comes my way except un earned money no chance to do that My object In writing this letter is to tell you that my opinion about Port land's claim to "greatness" is changed, not because I have made "strides" in the direction of financial betterment, for I haven't, owing to the fact that, without money, friends and pull, one must do more than what he Is paid for in order later to get more pay for what one does, hut I am confident that one can get along here in Portland If he uses the right means of making known his wants and requirements. Right now, though, I haven't more than two weeks' work ahead In sight. am confident that before two weeks are past someone wanting a house built or repaired will appreciate finding my little two line ad. in The . Journal as much as I shall appreciate his patron age. I thank you or what The Jour nal has done for me in me past, and the business that it will bring me In the future. A. E. WlKSTBQM, ' 45 West Sumner street "Our Boasted Prosperity ;M Portland. Jan. 6. To the.. Editor of The Journal Is the high cost of living problem imaginary or is it stern reality? That should depend on the financial po sition of the person concerned. It Is not likely that our millionaires are seriousj ly worried by the high prices . of the necessaries of life. In Its report of commodity prices for May 1, 1912, Bradstreet's shows the Index number $9.27, the highest on record. The index figures for. May for each year since 1904 are given as fol lows: 1904. 17.94: 1805. 17.88:- 1808, J8.31: 1907. $8.94: 1908. $7.97: 1939. .80; 1910, 19.05; 1911, J8.48; 1912,1 $9.27. This Is an increase in trice of J pur ueiu iruin.j.sva a ivii. John Mitchell, In his book on "Organ ized Labor," published In 1904 or earlier, says: "For the great mass of uhskllled wdrklngnien residing in .town? and cities with a population of from 6000 to 100,000 the fair wage, a wage consistent with American standards of,. living, should not be less than $600 a year." The rise In prices would require $700 in 1912 to purchase what could be Jiad for $600 in 1904. ; ;:-;'. Professor' R. C Chapln, recently"' in, vestlgating, , living conditions 4n Now Tork City, estimated that a family con sisting of a man, wife and three chil dren under 14 could maintain "a normal standard, at least so far as the physical man Is concerned, on an annual Income of $900. In November, 1912, an officer of the striking Chicago street car men's union presented to the wage arbitration board an Itemised budget showing the least a family of five should receive to main- Wm -decent - vlgr an -wtrir WttTTow? ance for any luxuries, was $1154 a year, Professor Scott Nearlng, Jn . his "Wages in the United States" has made . . , , 1 Letters From the People AUD SMALL CHANCE To ortiltrato, or. not to arbitrate. is mo jucBtiun or 0110 or litem. The Turk eoin to be a cbsq of th umler dojf with lio friendu. 1 Wllftn Mm rinvnliirul vtwltn thn XVhltn Wlien a Hard front does utrlko nouth ern California 4t Uona u heap of mis chief. ' . , '. ., . ' ... ' .," ',- . . It might bo ) more , -intorHptlng - If Colonol Hosevelt would ohi out tu Idaho and ,ay It. . , , 1 -, v j . ; Mrs. Stonker 1h liavlntr a "flnn tlmn." fmiig tittr, iuhmw intiliooa, . mid ng,u HUle good as pueblo. lany people are !e)ti)OCt!nflr the com v, le1.4lature to b the -best ono yet tu wn-jun, uui oon 1 oxpuoi 100 inucn. Willlahi nocftefcllor ecm to ' be nearly rm 111 an .it be had been ecmvtcUfl of HomoUiing And aeniunc-bd to a term ia.prlson.. J - V :' : 7 . ' To make .roasonuble appropriations! uppry reaoonawe domanfls is elway a diftieult if iot ;n iniposlble problem to.- MOtve. ... ; :( v..-. .. ..,: ,A , ' . r ' I ( ., ; .''.. .' '' The next 'president will have a) lot of large ana important public 'ques ons on 'hlg hands, and can't aiiord to play politics much, v . . " : T. K. Bheridan wai formerly d promi nent cltUsen of Douilaa county. Or., and D'? old neighbors and many- Oregon friends think none the lesa favorably of him because he ia temnorarilv cnnflnnd la an Idaho Jail. ' ) ;-i',.f-y ;- . v. "- r ii-i,;-;' iH.. -v,:.u-. It is said that it Ja unlawful for the cats, yet a policeman .was commissioned 10 enooi some cats wun Duuets from a bean shooter. How la it that th nan of this" Instrument makes cat shooting lawful T However, It would doubtless be a good Job to ahoot. about three, fourths of the cats. ; ) ' - COLlMEITi' Folly of De 'j'ssepsCanJ; Enterprise in Panama; Joseph Bucklin Bishop in Bcrtbner's. . At Intervals there is presented a per formance of ; opera-bouf f in . a ) grisly setting of pestilence .and death,, with the leading actor, the all powerful di rector of the entertainment, dancing and ' pirouetting in the front of the stage, blissfully unconscious apparently of everything except b'a own capers. His deeds and doings fill large apace in the record, and have for many years been the subject of animated and bitter controversy. Was he an enthusiast so blind as to be Irresponsible, or was he so bent upon success that he was will ing to adopt any means to secure it, or was he the foremost impostor ) of hi time? The record of his proceedings may be 'l&ft), to supply ths correct an swer to these questions. Surely, no great engineering work was ever undertaken in a more Jocund spirit than Ferdinand da Lesseps exhib ited when he entered upon his second task as the world's chieicanal builder. His success-with the Sues canal seemed to have turned his bead so completely that all obstacles were .virtually In visible to him., He was the. first pro moter of the age, tbe flamboyant collec tor of capital under whose seductive ap peals all French purses flew open. Had he been an -engineer his appeals would necessarily have been deprived of that appearance of boundless , confidence, that jaunty disregard 01 all mixicuiues, which made them so attractive and so nearly Irresistible to his own people. If he saw obstacles, he refused to take cognisance of them. When trained en gineers called his attention to them, he pushed them aside as jinworthy of serU ous attention. He had cut a sea level canal through the Isthmus of Sues; he would cut a sea level canal through the Isthmus of Panama, ' ; For several years after the Ameri cans entered upon the task of opening a waterway across the Isthmus, there were visible-from the car windows of Panama railway trains long rows of abandoned locomotives, dump cars, ex-, cavating and other machinery partially cupful iitudv of all wage data avail able up to 1911. Relative to wae he says: "Half -nthe-adult- males- of -the! United States are earning less than $500 a year; three-quarters oi tnem are earn lng less than i 6 00 annually; nine-tenths are i uoe v nig uu " , while less than 10 per cent receive more than that figure." Is all this the "greatest prosperity on earth" that we have heard so mucn about T If so, for whom? And in -the face' of such conditions Is it not dis gusting to have anyone, let along work- ingmen, wag 0 tneir somiy io aop their families on starvation wages 1 Is It right and Just that they who do the useful .-work of the world should ,dwell In shacks and live on the meanest of food, eking out an existence little bet ter than that of well-stabled cattle? " Is the merest animal existence all our boasted industrial 4evelopment is capa. ble of giving our workmgmen, their wives and children, or are they, through Blavelike docility and stupidity, allow ing themselves to be robbed. to support tbo idle ana extravagant; vv. sa. Capitalism and Capitalization . Portland, Or.. Jan. 7. To the Editor ! of The Journal Suppose a man earns; and eaves $10,000. Has he not a right to spend that money? Surely, but he does not do it, usually, lie saves it and spends some other person's money. He saves his own pie and becomes a pensioner on the public. If he can invest the $10,000 so as to return 5 per cent in rent, interest or; dividends, that will bring him $500 a year, which is .more tnan tne average wages of the men who do the hardest work. 1 " ;r ' . .. Suppose Mr, Mortimer Moneybug owns a block in- Portland valued at $1,000,000 and that ! the Income from It is 5 per cent This means that the public pays Mr. Moneybug $60,000 a year as a salary or pension and does not require mm to perform any service in return. . ; The capital stock or capitalized value of , rallroods, foqtorles Indeed, of all property is thus evidently and Indis putably a mighty burden of debt on which thfr whole publiepayawnV inter est or dividends, tor an tnese are pniy; different names for the same thing, a tax r tariff levied on all society for the benefit of'a part tnoreof. , j , This explains the astounding paradox of modern "progress," that the greater the Wealth of a country th$ greater the poverty and 'misery of the masses of the workers who produce that wealth. The prosperity of a country la meas ured by its capitalized value, .but, this valuation is Only an asset for that part of the people that owns the wealth un der ancient forms of law and custom. It is a debit, or charge, against those who produce the wealth, but are dis credited or disinherited by these anti quated customs. -' These: parasltid tributes rent, Inter nt and dividends are" collected off thi publie by the Juggling of prices and waees. xney are eitner aaaea to tne prices Of goods, thus increasing the cost of living, or they are deducted from -wagV9rrmsdtirtngfterpttTcliafllH2 power oi tne vomers ana enppung me market, We thus have the other paradox, that NEWS li'l iiiU;-i; OKCC01J 'CIDELIGIITS One of tho crylwx nm-ds of Mulheur cwiiiiy, tn iJi'nux-r.it.MiyH, l a. county ihiui iiiiiu. ,1.1 hl'hiih urn iu(Jii.:(nt tiro now pruvidca tor Dy iin.iina (,,1; outilnlit (t.lproiirlutlunb, 1 . "' ' , The Paisley I'ichs demands that the flly coiincll JpfiHitae jiKiiliiHt ..thtt xav liiK llorwcs it ml town that cut tlio prov etulor out'of the wriioiiB of farinvrs Who oonte to I'ttlslcy to tnai-ltet. ' Miimltfteld JRM:ord: ' Thn new police CtiH Hyutem to be H4l .In Mni whfU'ia in cru)y to 'OiKirate by rthe ,tf-b-phono com imn'. There will ,bi .thrpe police call boxes and -lights, ' ' .... ... ,. , . . . -, p . , v. The new cieumery of -the Lower Co Itimbla 1'urmaix' j-omjittny. the Astoria, liudKi.-t sa, : will soon b6churnliK' five tuiip uf butter per illem. yiUlnm itohy,. an expert irom inacpenaqnee, 4s tp take charge as manager. ; ' , t , , ,,, ; ;r , The Ijokevkw EamlnM;; !: with Its New ' Tour's Issue ' entered I Its thlrly Xom th ytjur, ' imd .the ..Kxnaninei wan niiikfH nil iuumrilulnt rwettrdinir.thn .rt-at. ment the people of Lttke,.couiy,.are &(:' cordlnsr liVtil.tind. hIpa(Eprf;i(f;. ; ; Lebanon Tribune? In several Lebanon yaras' roses :are yet In bloom.- In 4he east'jwe Jfigd Of itiuw stojais, ib&ttxtH and belOw sero weather. 1 tThese .faots ouccht to be sufficient to satisfy anyone seeking amUd and salubrious .climate that Oregon is the placs to, live. ' ;:, ' Bend Bulletin! No better tribute to the advancement Bend has accomplished couid be asked than .that afforded -by the opening of its splendid new banking building.- Tha any town -but 20 years old, .which' up Jto J8 months ago was 100 mllesirom a railroad, oou Id war rant such a structure, :is remarkabfl. , , party at Nf. C. Baragars was photo graphed with thfl e.n folks ..in their shirt sleeves and the women in summer dresses on green lawns, but this week has witnessed higher, temperatures than last week.,, , . ;'X-r-' ; . i . . i : 1 1 i hidden by a Jungle growth of creeping vines. Visitors w.exst told .that this -was "old French machinery," standing where it had been left when th French com pany collapsed 20 years earlier. The little locomotives and cars, almost toy like in appearance when compared with those in use by the Americans, bore elo quent testimony to the. irresistible on ward march of mechanical Invention. Time had retired .them from active serv ice as completely s if they' had never existed, leaving them stranded as here "junk" , along the wayside of progress. Covered with the softening . mantle of vine and leaf and flower and overshad owed by waving palms, they stood In silent dignity at the fitting monuments of a "lost cause," making a spectacle so .eloquent with the sadness of f ailure,, the pathos of defeat, that few beholders could contemplate It unmoved, and no Frenchman could look upon It with eyes undlmmed. ,.. , . The story told" by these silent wit nesses was a true one, for the record of French effort and failure at Panama, with Its mingling of folly, absurdity, greed and heroism of Ah highest qual ity, is one of the most, pathetic, as It Is one of the most diverting, in tho history of human endeavor. The proj ect wag doomed to failure from the outsat, andlwas, fairly rushed to de struction by reckless and rascally man agement, but it deserved to succeed because of the rare courage and patri otic devotion of tbe men, many of them the very flower of young France, who did the work In the field. The shame of the failure has, been told by. many pens, and not always' with either char ity or careful regard .fcf .truth but gtha deeds of the men who faced pestilence and death with Aunfllnqhing, coy rage,' many of them dropping into .Unnamed graves, "ltave passed with slight and far from adequate mention. The Americans who have succeeded theni In the task at Panama, and who have studied the re sults of their work, have a very high appreciation of their intelligence and xe.al and the warmest .admiration -for their courage. the more plentiful the crops are, the worse off the producers, dn the rural dlstrlets-nany-ktndS'Of ttaff wtlfrnot pay cost of transportation, while In the cities most or the inhabitants are In a chronic jptaf "of Restitution, ft 4 ) V - i There 4s bo remedy WtMs' condition but the entire abolition of the clumsy and complicated mummery of capitalist law. Society must Jje reorganized and,, reneea n accoraance . With tne .prin ciple, of natural gelations.1 . ' -lw in its true sense is the natural relation and correspondence of men and things, of properties sand proprieties. The thihg now called iW is entirely .fta-, natural and inimical to the welfare of mankind. . '" '"!r . -What is needed is not more legisla tion but -Intelligence to make an end of legislation through the discovery and application of the laws of life that are always operative. These laws will de stroy humanity if not utilized for its redemption. ) , J. I JONES. ;,.;....". ... ....i .i.i .i-i,'w. Were tho Chinese rioneert? ." Woshougal, Wash., Jan. 6. To the Editor of The . Journal The , wonderful discoveries in healing of broken bones by Dr. Alexis ' CaMl reminds me of an account given by Hue In his "Travels in the Chlfteao ; Empire", of th healing methods found there. It is as follows: "For several years w had for one of our catechiats.a man who had the pre cious" gift .of being able to set frac tured limbs. We -had tieeh hlm 'opeVate upon and ciire th ex,tr,aprdnarraclUty more than 0 unfortunate man whoso bones Were broken and ven crushed. The operations were so euocessful ,that the patients used to 'cdrfte' themselves. Women ; Woman 'js the purchasing head of the .home. She riot only .; ' buys most ,the things Vsed irt the home, but .most of the - things 4ise4-by the tnan of , each family as well She purchases the food, clothing, furnishings;- and utilities; buys the children's outfit And several times Asotuch or -iier -own -use as is needed ; by the average man. ' ' I) '; . ;'' :) p )- A''-''--- ' t.-;- -''''-.'''. XXi;:X 'ij x'';-j X' ' -...'t -nVi , ;t.;-C-; x,-tS x.. It is natural, therefore, that she should read advertisements more than merf, because advertising "keeps her posted on the newest t and best merchandise, the best stores at which to trade,' , V nd, the bestvalues obtainable. She buys'tiilngs to better ad- ;. , varitages than .jnan-wmake8 .the money go farther--by reading , advertisements. v ". ; " ' ' " w ' "'".-', , Read the Advertisements' in THE JOURNAL closely and ' constantly every day fortthe aake of ECONOMY. ( r i ; (Copyrighted. 1912, by' J. P, .ilt I.ulco )!. r.i.l,I-ti,.pui,ll(-,iii: It 1 not the lllici tii of the tiewnpni'i.-r.-j Ilia are tltriutim.it by nu-li tyriuuiliss tis thn of tho Idtvlio. court;. It 1h the freeilojti o tho people,'! The .rtcwKi'iipur. can exls without 'dlseusKlon of the actions of th'' courts; tho ncwsimpcr may enjoy "publl,: conflduhco uiidsuiiport,,whnQ..iaiiorlni the constant cncronchinent of the Judl j clal branch of the government upon Ihi other tlnpartrnonts and upon thoir ryan t tern, tho people. The public; howeVuf ,' cannot, afford' 'that the press shall b thus limited or-oppressed. AW the onlyt nicnn of koeplng -informed of the actH of their public servants, , the people in-J viie lymnny witen mcy wuncui mui i" newspapers shall be terrorized Jnt cowardly sileijce. r, i, ; (. ' , Spokane Bpokesman-Rwiew: In view of all the facts and circumstances it m Inevitable ' that r. the , -'Idaho ! suprenn court's decision of . this, contempt casi siioum can to be indorse oy . tite ma Jority bf the -thtjiking people of Idaho U'be vitiating fallacy dnithe deolslon is that it -ignore -tho fundamental right; of tho citizens and prosii of a nation to criticize the courts that , they -bave crai ated. This supreme court vin effect Set.-, the creature above its" creator. Th' court has gone .out of Its way- to find grounds .for Justifying its decision. Its Judgment Is farfetched. When it speakv Of jUlaged rViUfying the 'courts-.ts WbI cause of 'more than 100 criminal cases of dynamiting," it drags Jn matters that havo' nothing to do with the case under ooasiaerauoa. , . ; , t Sacramento Bee: Judicial outrage hw been committed in Idaho by .the supreme! court jof the state, in pun.ishing for al-f leged .contempt of .that .tribunal thf publisher and .the managing editor oc the Hoiee Capital -Nws, along with onil of th stockholders of that paper. " It iu! not the Boisa newspaper men who de-l serve to ds in jaii, dui tne justices wno have abused the power to send them thera And nothing that shy newspaper ever, said could do more to bring that court Into deserved public contempt than this petty, vloious, arbitrary and tyran- Dical decree. ' r, San Francisco. Bulletin: ' Plainly thee Idaho Judges who are so determined protect their dignity lent themselves tol political Job that would have ais-i graced a ward heeler. Theodore Roose-i velt sold as much, and the only Idaho! editors who published his denunciation are punished as .m&lefaatQra ; Thus doj the veopis learn tnat a tree press nas no place In a reactionary, scheme oft government ,' ) Albany Detnocrat: We know some-I thing of the first cltisens of Idaho, in eluding the members of the supreme court of that' stale. A" good Judge lsj seldom a good politician and strange ast it ma v mam moat of the sunrema court! judges of Idaho are selected from among! tho ranks or in politicians ana noq from ths lawyers who have attained eminence In their chosen profession. Thel gentlemen who . concurred" la the ma-l jority opinion In this case are no exoep- tion to tbe anovo ruie, wnen tne con sUtutlorial amendment providing for the recall was submitted .at th last ses slon of the Idaho legislature the mem bers of this court made no secret of their opposition to the provision provtd lng for the recall of judges. Had Judges- not been-- excepted from-tlwl operation of the recall, the Democrat is firmly of the opinion that tne majority members of the highest tribunal In that! state would soon be -called upon to give an accounting for their unprecedented and arbitrary decision. Euaene Segister: Over in Idaho we ore Jbeing .treated to a spectacle that might well justify the belief that the clock .has rbeen turned, bacx top years and we are living in the middle ages. Broadly, contempt of court should- con sist In refusal to obey the court's man dates, in this sense, it should be and must " be sternly upheld. ; The Idaho newspaper men, however, did, not refuse to obey a mandate oi tne court, uney metely published a criticism, made ' by Theodore Roosevelt, characterising the court as reactionary and against the in terests of the people. Their conviction seems to be the best possible proof that the colonel knew whaOawai talking about ' " "' ' ' ..s Salem Journal : No '.doubt the editors are )gyllty of contempt now, if they were not in venturing to" criticize the action of the immaculate ones, but they are not alone. Every intelligent man In the United States is heart and soul With the editors, and If the IdAho su preme court could Bend to Jail all who not only have, buf who express, their unbounded contempt for the Idaho su preme court Judges, they would find the jails, and prisons of the whole world Inadequate to hold them. , They are not Judges, they are tyrants. Pendleton East Oregonlant The action of. the Idaho court is chiefly valuable ! In that it will further shatter the ldes that Judges are superhuman and canndVJ do wrong. The highest court in ldono is controlled by narrow minded and con ceited asses who lack wit or they would have concealed" their shortcomings. -. ii ' i"" 1 1 ? 1 ; to thank him, to the chamber he oo-l cupied beside ours; and in the pres-1 ence of such results, we never felt inclined to laugh, because the plaster he employed to promote the Junction of the bones was made of wood lice, white pepper, and a fowl-pounded to death." X' '" & ' .' ' Possibly Br. Alexis has studied In China, Huo also' found .their knowledge (that Js the common people's knowledge) surpassed that of ISuropean physicians on other matters of healing; instances being given on page 23, volume, II, al ready quoted. , . F. V. MOSS., Arc Better Tkan M en Fallon. )S'?''':w?fiH