THE OREGON DAILY . JOURNAL, PORTLAN D, TUESDAY EVENING: JANUARY 23, 1913. THEJOURNAL a S.' iACKSOH. and Bandar Daralnc at ID Joarnai o uild- wig, Ttk BO VI aihllt Portland. Or. tntanJ t th- n at furtlaOd. U tor tnutilttU tttrueik Um ' BMll riaaa matter. ... ." " TJilKl'HOiSES Uala TlTa:- HoBM, A-t ' tell ibe operator h department ,r "a"- fruuuuiv .DVKUTixmu KKf KliSltNT All V Benjamlt A Keataor Co., Bruoiwlrk Boildlng ... fcS fifth imueL Ne Xotk; XZ1 reouie M Building. Cbkco ' ' tuhaerlptloa Term by mall or u eujr addraaa ia u liuuea nutt or uexicwr One year. IS 00 t Ob toatfc 'SO r BCKDAT CM IW........J2.60 I OM tooarn f -23 - v--' '-DAILY- ARB- i0KDT - Ok rear.. 17.60 I On month. I -S3 Great souls, by nature hall divine, soar to the stars, and hold a near acquaintance with the gods. Rowe. RAH, RAH, RAH REFORM! NOT counting Joe Singer, t re quires 65 stenographers, pages, clerks, ., clerkesses,. timekeep ers, tbottteholdera and other person fa waiting, to admlfl'ister to the wants of (ho 60 gentlemen who compose the house at Salem.. Of scourfee, to persons who don't know hat it ts to be a talesman, it; seems a large number. But- it isn't . Real statesmanship is a sol emn thing, ihtt to eome it comes but once in a, lifetime, and then for only 40 days. ' What were statesmanship without retainers and retaineresses! What were home without a mother! ' Of 'course;' The "nttmher of house attendants, v bouquet holders and maids In . waiting is not large, la this not a reform legislature? Did the reforms tiot legln at the begin ning, whea, or the Eaton reforms there were substituted the sweeping abandonment' tf one committee and the prohlbicltrg Of the Janitors from making a fire in' the basement? Palsied be the tongue that says a bouse with a n?rorm record bo rigid, so1"- Spartan-like, Is employing supef , fluons attendants on statesmanship. If 'any man imagines, for one mo ment that there Me too many clerks and clerkesses, let him stop and con template the bill to prohibit swear ing outside incorporated cities and town. 2 Let him ruminate on the ponderosity ' of this long-awaited measure, And then let the saddening thought come to pirn of what Oregon , who introduced It had never been born. Then If he undertakes to say there are too many clerks, may, his tongue tleave to the roof of his mouth, ! ' Jt takes more stenographers and other per diem persons in waiting, When house, Of representatives Is on the reform wagou. If it be re- solved to apply a triple-distilled 'in .Btead of the present double-dlslllled reform discipline, it will take about (57 more stenographers and clerks, or two and & half per statesman, to handle the buslhetm. - . Of course, the public muHt under stand that when you run a reform legislature, you have to ladle out plenty of clerkships to hold the then In line. You can-pi4t.be a tightwad In a reform- session. If you tried that a veto would get away, or in some Other way the governor wold slip something over. Nay, hay. my countrymen; real re forms like the house Is giving us are always dearly bought. You must not complain about the presence in the state house of p. few extra crea tions la millinery, when ITpton, Car penter and the other brave boys are struggling onward and upward for the hnperliihalde glory of our mag nificent commonwealth. Rah, rah, rah; rah, rah, rah; re form! THE KLECTIIOCUTH.N mix ?S TUB legislature curtain that cap ital punishment will be retained I in Oregon? If not. will it pay to install an electrocution process-at a cost of $20,000? Who ' would buy the outfit, if the elector ate, should detido two years hence to abolish the death jienalty? There will be a vote on capital punishment at the next election. The entrance of women into the fran chise will afford the hue. five for the re-trlal of the issue. The votes of . women may result, in abandon ment Of the death nalty. If it should happen so. there will !e no need" Of. an electric chair. If ho death penalty Bhouid be retained, there; will still bp time to provide for killing the condemned by roast- . Jng Instead of by choking. . , Oregon Is not aloi.n in considering abandonment of capital punishment. The. Washington legislature in pre paring to submit tho issue to a voto. So Is California. So is Utah.. So .are other states. The whole country is debating the question. prhe whole country has noticed that in California with capital pun ishment; there are-six times as many homicides as Iri Wisconsin without capital punishment, the population of the two states being about equal. The whole country has observed that .in (states without cap.tal punishment there are fewer homicides per capita and a smaller Increase of crime than in states which have capital punish- . nient ,These inexorable facts are swiftly changing the public mind Into ft conviction 'thai; the death pen alty does not deter, but actually en ( otirflSH murders.' ,or U there a man In the Oregon lsl3latare who can establish that !(m trocution Is more humane than i :b :- sins', u It is a. jiebaialJe .issue oi v which mb'iitinfs thwiHBelves dis j sU. The horrible contor'.Ious cf thb body under electrocution are univer sally described as being even more ghastly than. the broken-necked vic tim dangling at the rope's end., v -Meanwhile,' why spend money on an uncertainty? . There will be an- other vote in two years on capital; pnnishment, and after that; there may be no need of a $2O,C0O electric chair. ' ?.' A SPECTACLE A SPECTACLE will be presented in Portland next Saturday. It will be in the guiso of a school election, the- purpose of which is to ratify a flTe - and - one - half - m.ni "ie7!nd ntr.,M he issue m , vvu.cnooi oonos -Tne;prOpOrti0n whil0 the con(alner vas bond Issue is to secure funds for the . fn- m.nv trln. i construction of a new high school jnot be excluded when the people get building a trade echool building, ajdon t0 regular bUBineB8 new building for tha Couch school, vu ..,..,... .J. and for the purchase of additional grounds. It Is the manner In which this election-is to be held that consti tutes the spectacle. There ia to. be but one polling place. One polling place for a city of 250,000 Inhab itants is a travesty on the ballot. The Voting will be on the fourth floor of the Tilford building. The polls will be open from one to four o'clock, a period of three hours. What a marvelous process for as certaining the will of an electorate in "which every taxpayer in the city is entitled to a vote! The election is held under the pro visions of an old law which time has worn out and Portland outgrown. It Is a farcical proceeding so far as testing the will of the electorate is concerned. It is doubtful If there Is a statu tory process more antiquated and inefficient In the whole United States. It seems Incredible that so Impossible an arrangement should have continued so long, especially since Multnomah county biennially sends so many siatesThen tdSaTem to legislate for the public welfare. SIGNS OF (JOOI FARMING W HEN a farmer starts to im prove his farming methods the use of artificial fertil izers is more or less neces sary to him. Nitrate of soda Ib at once the most essential and the cost liest of the materials. The In crease or decrease in the use of ni trate Is a barometer by which the interest In intensive farming may be measured. v mineral rose from 1,259,000 tons ln 1902 to 2,504,000 In 1012. Or this total the United States imported ln 1912, 481,786 toni, valued at $15, 427,904. The farmers of the United States began to appreciate the value of ni trate about the beginning of the twentieth century. The increase in purchases was 114 per cent between 189.2 and 1902. Between 1902 and 1912 the gain was 159.8 per cent. Its use ia rapidly extending in every country in which it has been intro duced. Chile has been hitherto the only Important sourco of supply. The ex port Is regulated by the Chilean gov ernment. The world Js being combed over for undeveloped deposits. Whether Southeastern Oregon can become a producer will be a matter for serious inquiry after railroads reach the long stretch of long drhd beaches of the ancient sea so graph ically described in Professor Con don's book, "The Two islands." A BACK EDDY LN OIL W 110 would think that the rc- action on the price of oil J worked by the dissolution of j Standard Oil by our Supreme I Court would find expression In a: strike of taxi drivers in London? I it seems that the price of taxi oil, or petrol as the Londoners rail it, was raised recently ten rents a gal- ion. Whereupon the drivers went out on strike. ' in that city the taxlcab companies rent out the cabs to the drivers dally these lust buying their own oil. The rate of hire is fixed bv law. Which the drivers cannot exceed. The taxi companies and the drivers entered Into an agreement last March on the rale of pay, based ou the then price of oil. People there looked on the taxi drlvers as the spoiled children of for-' tune. The men produced their books and proved that they cannot face the rise of ten cents for oil and keep body and soul together. And the taxi cab companies are not mak ing money, but many of them on the verge of bankruptcy. So the Lon doners must either accept a rise in faros of the cabs or the price of oil must come down. PARCEL IOST WORKING U' P TO January 22 the total num ber of parcel post stamps printed and distributed was 339,500,000. The Bureau of EngraviHg and Printing has been forced to Increase its rate of print ing to 12,000,000 a day. During the first four days more than 200,000 parcels were mailed in New York, and the postmaster predicts a dally average of 100,000 in a very short time. The results of experiments on the comparative cost of parcel post and of express carrying depends largely on who makes the experiments and what are the prepossessions of the sender. JLOr, iBBUntr. m , .Chicago, oe waJ papers exchanged parcels with cities varying from 0 to 1344 mile The parcels weighed , four , and' a half pounds. The parcel post won in com iHjtition wtth the express companies In sums ranging betweeu 5 and. 23 centa and, In a. big-majority of cases,. only" stoct Jobbing, over capitaliza In time also-"j ' " m ; ' tlon.-inarket grabbing, price d-fixing The critics of parcel post base and the other sememes of robbery ia their case on 12 eggs, sent In the., the name of business.? It Is a pro special container provided. The con- j gram by which , the people can re tainer In the Farm and Fireside's j sumo their old time control over experiment weighed ounces, and with the dozen , eggs weighed . just Over a pound and a half... Postage, within SO miles, was 8 I cents. "But New Jersey.' It will make of the the container was good for various state that was the Bheller and aly trlps and was worth getting back for .lum of syndicated wealth, the most 5 cents. Therefore the naDer adds i progressive . commonwealth in the this .last 5 ' cents to the original 8 cents postage, and sets 13 cents as first cost of shipping the dozen eggs, th tnrtrA m t th i , t nrt.,n limit th .h 'age and the cost of the contalner ln miwuo vutuiaiuiB aits uiauo vi the regulations under which the ser vice started. It is urged widely that the distinction between the parcel post etampa and the ordinary post age stamps be abolished and also that the limitations pf places where parcels shall be mailed be relayed. A PEXD1XG BILL, A BILL at' Salem proposes to give the executive authority to appoint special district attor neys or sheriffs for ft limited pcriod-in caso the Tegular officials do not properly enforce the law. Many of the states have r. similar provision, some of them even more drastic. The executive Ib under oath to enforce the law, but, by a curious neglect of legislation, is without au thority to direct the officials who hold in their hands the power and appliances of enforcement. As a matter of fact, so far as en forcement Is concerned, the governor la largely a figure head. The real en forcement is In the hands of district attorneys and sheriffs. it-is a common practice in Ore gon for district attorneys and sheriffs to determine for themselves what laws they will, and what they will not apply. Whatever the law. It has long been and still Is, very largely a matter of choice with the district attorney as to whether or not prosecutions shall be made. There have been notable instance ln which laws were as completely nullified as though they were not on the books, and that by the per sonal will of a district attoiney. It is, in fact, personal government by the district attorney Instead of. pop- tution, There are many who Insist that an additional safeguard against such public prosecutors and sheriffs as are unworthy should be provided. They hold that, since the executive of the state is charged with enforce ment of law, he should have the au thority by which to discharge, the re sponsibility. Such authority, properly safe guarded, appears in - the blfi at Salem, and it ought to pass. PORTLAND CHILDREN' A GREAT army of 300,215 chil dren visited Portland play grounds during the months of June, July and August and a part of September, 1912. It was the effort of little city dwellers to get a breath of the groat outdoors. It was the struggle of the little ones to get away from the! Stony Btreets and granite walls Into : a place where there was. room breathing and pastime. for Did anybody ever stop to think what a privilege these tihv natchPH of green glass, these ruid-citv 'ellmnfiea of Sunshine and a miniature country are to the city children? Did any wealthy Portlandor ever stop to think what infinite Measure might be given thousands of little (tots for this and all future time bv a gift to Portland of other play- grounds and parks? What nobler monument to iny Portland name than one of these patrhPB of green covered with happy children! LIGHT KHOM NEW JERSEY T HERE is an impressive hint in seven bills recently introduced in the New Jersey legislature.! iney are unaerstooa to re flect the president-elect's trust pol- icy - and tnc' Plnt Straight to the doors of the jails. The aggregate of their provisions will, if all the bills become laws, make it impossible for the buccaneers of Big Dusiness to monopolize markets or fix prices and keep out of the penitentiary. The proposed laws forbid combina tions, to limit production, to stifle competition or to fix prices. All stocks must represent . money or property. No dead horses, and no anticipated profits shall be capital ized. When one issue of stock replaces another, the amount must be the same. One corporation shall not buy Into another to establish a monopo ly or to restrain trade. lnuthe case of existing holding companies, the voting of securities unlawfully held Is prohibited. Mer gers are to be permitted only on the approval of the public utilities com. mission, and discriminations in prices are prohibited. ' ' One bill is the cap stone of the structure. It holds the officers and directors of every corporation per sonally responsible for violation of the laws. It fixes the penalty at Im prisonment for not more than three yiaja, ,or a fine of, apt- more than $1000. it is a statute which means that the -way for trust magnates to keep out of jail is to obey the law, ; It Is a trust program that violates no property, right. It Is no assault on . legitimate business. It attacks finance, production. and distribution. The passage of the. proposed laws ' M complete the regeneration - of union all due to the statecraft of one quiet man. It adds to the lmpressiveness and the expectancy respecting the change to take place, within the next few weeks, injthe American White House. : : " 7 Letters From tKe People ? 1 (Communication , ent to The Jodroa) for publication in thU department abould t writ tL on only on aid of tb pan, should out M'wil 300 worda in lrtifth and matt b cuiupauted bjr Uia nana and addrena of tea endrr. If th writer doea not desire to hare tlie Dam published, he ahould ao atate.) , The Savior of Our Btate. Portland, Jan. 26, To the Editor of The Journal Another' vampire is on our trail and will suck our life blood while it holds in in Us talons and fans us to elepp with its Wlnga unless wo are res cued by the vigilance and patriotism of Senator Thompson, Joseph Fels has been Bending his famous Naphtha soap dope into -Oregon to wash hr clean of land monopoly and give her the double blessedness of single tax.; It is an out rage against which the weak and pov erty stricken inhabitants of Oregon should be protected by a protective wall higher than the tariff, Joseph la is a soap maker, a araall man, a Jew and a single taxer. What right Has he to send his naphtha tainted dollars into a free state before the inhabitants? It Is none of his business. He openly boasts the unchristian doctrines that all men are brothers, legally enforced monopoly a crime and poverty a disease created by man alone. Every true Christian should despise him. He is an octopus or tne rirst water and a Jew Jew Octopus. Having taken our god, our ten commandments and our Christ from the Jews we want nothlngnbrironi them, not even money. But thanks to the true spirit of American indepen dence and freedom, Senator Thompson is on the Watch and never again will the octopus set its slimy foot over our doorstep or snatch us from our fireside. His bill (Thompson's) will give that rest so long heeded by some of us of five years ln the pen if we directly or Indirectly, corporately or Incorporate, considerately, considerably or inconsid erately or ably take no much as a drink within the atate of Oregon furnished by any octopus whatsoever, leering and i lurking beyond our confines to Influence I us as to any matter pending under the ' I. and R. (Nlshativereferendum). Here after when the eastern liquor octopus Makca to. xtmiiM&jmisilmle, voters of our blind state on the prohi hitlon question they will have to march In a solid phalanx to Vancouver, Wash., California or the Pacific ocean, one ma rine league off shore before they can accept the invitation. The new voters being new in politics can stand It, but think of us men. Thank heaven our leg- islature will be free. We would hate to ; have them move in a body out of the stnte. (Only questions pending under the I. and R. are ln the game). Antl capital puhishment, tabor questions, etc, must cither be financed by us Oregon ians as free American citizens with all ri, .-J;l. ui a iiriftuuui inn rtiaia ur up jii h umiuuil to receive our pay. This is going to be! especially hard on fat men True, th&l octopus might organize an Oregon cor poration with the majority of stockhold er's residents and figureheads and' still insist on pouring money down our un willing throats. The oetopi could print their infernal machinations in San Fran cisco and bombard us as the radicals used to bombard FrtRice from Belgium, Holland and Swltserland, but at least we shall now sleep even more profound ly than formerly, secure in the belief that our bahles are safe and the aglta-; The referendum .should be used spar tion of human thought hes once more Ingly and not rashly, but it is an ex been successfully controlled by law, as' ' cellent Instrument of tho people, and it always has been (nit). Hall to law. there are times when wo shall want to lawyers and lawgivers! They can put back the tides, order the seasons, change black to white, stifle human thought Kiii control human conduct. Mighty law! Mighty Thompson ! W. 8. C. Dork Bill Discussed. tnitlanrt Or., Jan. 23. To the Editor of The Journal-Your editorial In a re cent. issue ancnt the dock bljl Is a very timely one and deserves the due con sideration of all your readers, and par ticularly our representatives at Salem. The bill is a very mild One, just 'and equitable, and must meet with tho ap proval of all honest men; in fact, such a bill has been due a long time. Spo radic efforts, have been made for many years by a few who have always advo cated the free use of the foreshore fot the benefit of all the people of this city. The rlpnrlun owner of land has no claim superior to the non-riparian owner of lund: this is a principle of law so well established the worlf over, and ac knowledged by the United States su preme court, that It requires no further comment. There are still a few old men living who can remember the circumstances under which the various acts weft passed that tried to give the riparian owners a, quasi title; therefore the fads are known. This bill asks only simple justice. Without this, Portland could never be come a thoroughly equipped seaport; and It i right up to the legislature, whether It will serve the people of this great state and help to keep her In the forerront as a great shipping state, or let her dwindle Into Insignificance. The elaim that has been so often and so foolishly made that the foreshores of the Willamette are swamp lands ts too silly to deserve even a moment's thought. That there were some swamp lands in Oregon, near some of her riv ers, I know to be true, but they were not near Portland. , Inasmuch as there is a "provision la the bill to have the supreme court ot Oregon pass upon the equity' of the ri parian owner who has Improved the foreshore, it should not be lost sight of that many of these Improvements have earned fabulous sums of money and have paid themselves many times over; while, at the same time, these' flimsy structures, veritable flretraps, have caused other property owners great expense in paying extra premiums to protect their interests against fire. . GEORGE POPE. Referendum for Prodigality, Portland, Or., Jan. 21 To the Editor ot Tha ' Journal -if; tpB yr. ,arfl supposed to represent ua at Salem In. slat on, making unreasonable appropria tions It will be necessary, to use the referendum again. . We , know that a certain amount of money ts required' to Carry on the various department of state government,, but tho publlo Is pretty well are when this quantity la - COMMENT AND SMALL, CHANGE Patience Isn't a virtue; It's a neceV sity. There' Is nothing as ' impossible , a Bom people. - tTJbu have a WcTTcomlng puTyour whole aout in It, - Cold cash will burn spendthrift'! pocket a hole 111 the A man thinks a woman, odA- if she doea not try to get even. . When you have a lawsuit to lose you tuu aixora to nire a cneap lawyer. There are lots of people In the swim who cannot boast of clean, records, Ana- many - a man has renented at leisure wno never married" at all. , Money makes the' mare go and t ib.oh more 01 11 10 mane tne auto go. It takes most of us longer to make up our minds to do a thing than it does to do It. .... ,1.: '. ., y .:. . : . An old bachelor gets a bad ease of stage fright every time he thinks of marriage. a'i " '- " If a man marries for money It's a safe bet that his wife fails to get her money's worth. ' a a Going to law .is one of the most sat isfactory reqreatlons a man can indulge ln-ifha ls'ji lawyer. Some men are born great, some achieve ' greatness, and some manage to put up a successful bluff. Every man lives to congratulate him self that ha didn't marry the first wo man he thought he was , in love with. After a man has taken, a chance It sometimes happens that he would be only too glad of a chance to put it back, j SOUND AS DISTANCE CALCULATOR By Garrett P. Servlse. Sound co n s I b ts of waves, or.vib ra1 tlons, which travel through the air, at ordinary temperatures, with a speed of 1140 feet per second. At lower tempera tures the speed Is slightly decreased, and at higher temperatures Increased, but the figures given are sufficiently exact for common purposes. Knowing them you can, for instance, tell In a moment how far away from you a thun der storm is raging. You have only to count the number of seconds that elapse between the flash of th lightning and the sound of the thunder, and multiply that number by 1H0, which will give you the distance of tho cloud from w the dlBcharge took place. The 1,Bht travels more than 900,000 times ss fast as the sound, so that the latter has hardly got started before the former reaches you eye. Slnco there are 6280 sound o thunder, or any other sound transmitted through the air, takes about four and two thirds seconds to go a mile. .5 Another useful fact to know is that sound travels faster in water than ln air. In the proportion of at least four feet to one. In some experiments sound has been transmitted through the water or a river at the rate of more than a mile per second, but its average velocity ln water la about 400 feet per second. Tho sound of a bell Warning a shin to keep away from dangerous shoat would require about 23 seconds, to nr el,,- .. : 1 . I . ., ..... "rough, the water intatfotit five and naif Seconds - There are. Imaginable ceeded. Members of the legislature seem to pass bills appropriating $500. 01)1), or eVen $1, 000,000. with the same easo that they use in ordering dinner. Oregon Is a large state in area, but Its population is barely more than that of Boston, and not so large as that of St. Iouis. It is hot wealthy, either. We cannot expect to spend as much as Washington, with more than double our population, or California, with three and a. half times our number. use it A VOTER. The Charge of Inhumanity. lortland, Or., Jan. 25 io the Editor Of The Journal The story In Friday's Journal of the -arrest of ul men who had sought shelter in a free reading room and Of their heartless dismissal by tho polk JuUgo should bring the bluBh of shame to every citizen of Port land. Where can men go who have no money and no work? It was to their credit that they were found In a re spectable place. All of them agreed to work if work could be found for them. But how can men, without means of transportation, get to the railroad work more than 100 mllea distant that the Judge recommended? Seventy cents would not go far toward provis ioning 64 men for the journey. The sentencing of 180 duys on tile rockplle, if found in Portland without Work, or loafing around public reading rooms, is indefensible. What are free reading rooms for, anyway? Are they for peo ple who have plenty or for those who need help? If fof the former, then the alleged free reading room Is a delusion and a snare, and should no longer allowed to tempt men "who are hungry and homeless, Inside their doors. What a travesty on Justice? and ln the name of religion! That there are hundreds of men In enforced Idleness In Port land is no secret. That many of these are in this condition is due to' the fact that they listened to the alluring tales of Christmas baths in the Willamette, of the all-the-year-round roses In the land of opportunity for the poor man, the west, that wars sent out by the city boosters and the real estate Inter ests of the country; with the result that men have literally flocked hers from the east until t.iere art 10 men for every job offered and I. believe that Is a conservative estimate. How long will this thing be allowed to continue? Until thinking men and women rise ln righteous Indignation and place the ban of publlo opinion on this "man's inhumanity to man." .;.,.'.. J.. W. PEARSON.. Good Roads and Engineers, Eola. Dr.. Jan. 21 To the Editor of the joftrnal. In the Journal of January 17 appeared an editorial entitled "Tha Toll of Ignorance," in which tha county judges and county commissioners, In convention, were severely criticized for passing A resolution against creating the orfloe of state highway commissioner. Are not such officials representatives and servants of the people? . And did not th e Jeojledeelare agal n stjcrcs ti n g t.he j office of state' highway . commissioner last ..November? , Such being the case. why should they have passel a resolu tion otherwise than that they 'did pass, if the people should rule? ; , In the same editorial the Statement Is made that "there Is not now in Oregon one" avalhible road engineer,'1: and also ' ' r' ' N NEWS IN BRIEF . OREGON SIDELIGHTS - y ''T: V7V . " " -;.;r - ; -t'" r ; The ;high school boys at Tangent have organized a band. ' I B. Luper will serve them as director, ' , .- - Eugene-, Register: Establishment of fire lines and a paid fire department wwn-wwHif mep m liTttgene gf owtn a uiu a cuumrj town to a nusuing city, Koseburg Elka will bull another story a third on their temple, at the cost of $15,000. The new story will be useu rur Dusinesa sessions ana ino sec ona 1 or social uses. . , Baker Demonrat: The torm tnv ha given the orange groves of California a touch of cold that did damage to the extent ot iiu.uoo.uuo.- Ana tfils. top, nearJjoa Angelw-where-many-Baker peopie are. aojourning in an imaginary escape trom com weatner at nome. . , Condon Globe: Two, hundred' and rilnai teen rabbits, seven owls' and one crow met tneir fate Sunday as the result of tne blt( raUDlt snoot lie d br t ie mem, bers of the Condon Gun club. B. K. Searcy's team won by 36 potnts The losing side served the winners a ban quet at the Hotel Oregon. , North Bend Harborr Allen KIshriti has patterns made and castings poured jor a gas engine wmcn he nas invented. it is somethino- entirely new and dlf, ferent from all other makes of ensrlnes The chief advantage, claimed for the motor is that it will run without the use of any sort of an Ignition set or carouretor. . -- r - .. - : M&rshftpld ftecord: In no nlare will berries crow and vield mora Drofuselv than In Coos couniy. but heretofore the marKet nas peen nmitea sna conse- fluently the berries have been Brown only tot- home- consumption, The -es tablishment of a drier makes a mar ket and opens up an unlimited Industry lor tne tanners. Albany Democrat! . Th new Rtreet f lusher recentlv trurrhased bv-Mavor Gilbert and Councilman John. fl. Simp son for use in the street cleaning de partment 1ms arrived. The stiperin tendent of streets of Portland informed Mayor Gilbert during the lutters visit to Portland that sweepers were rapidly disappearing and that flushers would be used altogether ln the future. circumstances in which the 18 seconds thus saved might suffice to prevent a shipwreck. Still more remarkable, is the differ ence between the speed of sound In air and ih Bond bodies. In the heavier metals, such as lead or gold, sounds travel at nearly the same velocity as in water, but In more elastic metals, llkd iron ana steel, its Bpeed suddenly in creases to more than three miles per seeona, wnion is six or seven times as rapid as the night of a bullet. In wood sound travels about as fast as in iron, provided that the direction lii which its waves move Is thfj-tmma as that Ih which the fibres of the wood run. but if the sound is transmitted across the grain of the wood its speed is reduced to from a half to a quaHr-r of what it is in the other direction, the amount of changs varying for different species of wood. How long TFe the waves of sound In the air? They differ according to the pitch. The average male voice. In ordinary conversation, produces waves varying In length from 8 to 12 feet, while those Of a woman's voice are only from two to tour reet, Waves 60 or 70 feet In length, vibrating at the rate of 14 times per socond, produce a very grave sound which Is Brareely perceptible by the hu man ear, while waves only .half an inch length, vibrating between 20,000 and 30,000 times per second, produce a sound so Bhrlll that it, too,, passes beyond 4he range of our hearing, although It may seem as hoarse as the roar Of thunder to tne Hearing apparatus of insects. All sounds, wnetner grave or Bhrlll, travel forward at the same rate. Misstatement that "John P. Stevens, the noted railroad engineer, says In his book that In all America there are not ten engineers fully competent to build a perfect Wagon road," If such is the case, where 4vould we find an expert we could afford to employ, as against older ana wealthier states that might want to employ him? Or should we desire and be Satisfied to timploy an in. competent engineer To charge that the funds spent upon the public roads In. the ptt)Jt have been utterly wasted and uselessly snuan dered, because thoso In charge had not been, instructed by some, so-called road expert is absolutely fale and mislead ing, and those making such statements are olther utterly Ignorant of past con ditions and results or are deceiving and misleading Intentiohally. I will admit that some road money ha been mis spfnt In the past, as it will be In the future, but taken as a whole, the pio neers ln our public road work hava ac complished maivetous results with the funds expended under difficult and dls. couraglng situations, and tmder unjust adverse rf-rtltlclflm, and they should be granted just credit for their work, al though such work is hot ample . for heavier traffic arta for all future timeM. Not to do so arouses resentment, ani mosity and inharmony and makes har monious Work Upon road problems more difficult. . It this meets approval for publica tion I will write another letter upon permanent results from past road ex penditures, based upon personal knowl- eage, observation and experience and not mere theory and assertion. , GEORGE C. MtTTY. N. J. Sinnott of The Dalles. Sherwood. Or Jan. 21.To the Editor of The Journal Will you please tell me through your paper who ia ths Unltef" States representative from Oregon .be sides Hawley and Lafferty? H. 13. COLE. 6 Know Wkat You Want See That You Get It. " , . .... .. . r That is the secret of efficiency in modern day shopping. Un less you do know what you want and insist upon getting it, you are apt td be disappointed in the things you buy. - TltE JOURNAL is a purchasing directory for every kind of : : good clothing, food, and articles for the home. It Is your most , ,' economical shopping bureau because it enables you to purchase I the best of everything and live better for less money. ' It enables you to know" just what is best to buy and tell ydu' : just where it is best for you to' purchase, through its advertise ments. ' , , ' , , . Read THE JOURNAL'S advertisements closely and con stantly every day. This habit will protect you from purchasing ' questionable products and being imposed upon by unscrupulous manufacturers. Ji, i : : &irZi '';?A,ri,'.--. vI s 1 vK::;.' irTniftufaewfefso iskeir through advertisements in THE JOURNAL are among the most reliable makers of goods in the world. , Patronize them. It will ', ' pay you to do so. j " - r, - ' - ? :i 1 (Copj'righC 1912 by X P. Fallon.) ' .'.,,! Barking Up tKe Wron ' ; ; "Tree;-" . From the Louisville Courier-Journal. The New York Herald thinks that "Woodrow -; Wilson talks i through his hat. His recent Chicago speech-, ths Herald sayB, ''was not the talk of a stateSmaa'to a gathering "business men, but such a psychological effusion as might , be addressed , to a class of students, mischievous In its, attack upon the country's courts and' banks , and business men and methods." t Then the Herald proceeds as follows: : "Business men," Mr. Wilson said, "have not .'husbanded', but 'exploited' the coun try's resources. . They certainly V have developed our resources, as the Increase ttrotir -national -weaittrfronr' iT.ooo.ooo, 000 in JS50 to more than tno.OOO.Ooo.OOO today bears witness. His talk about monopolies is neither new nor true, and surely attempts to suppress competition are now being drastically dealtvwith. The assertion that 'honest men are now at a disadvantage in America' does not comport, with the facts nor with Mr. Morgan's recent testimony that charac ter was of more importance than, col laterals. .-: i-.-i';,:; In vhi4 ths Herald, having ln Its tima swallowed many camels,, ; and a few dragons, strains at a gnat, i '-Business men." so-called: ara rneltho anMi hn salt, to ba ,taken' gingerly betwixt Tin ger and thumb. It was only at the I annual dinner of the New York Chaml of Commerce that Mr. Root spoke to t. text or aisnonesty In business life m imuvujt man Mr, mison, aaaressiu the same type of audience, sooka I Chicago. Was Mr. Root "talking throukl life U a 9" .1 In this connection the Herald's eltal tlon of Mr. Morgan seems infellcitousA Mr. Morgan is one of those who achieve the rare fortune of having their bad works somewhat more than counterbal anced by their good works. Mr, Mor gan admitted under oath of having been one of a group of men who during a term of years, subscribed millions el" money to buy the presidency ef the United States. Can such men ba paraded as examples or commercial honor? Are they not proof of ths truth of all thai was said by Mr. Wilson and Mr, Hoot t Should they not the rather be lashed with scorpions? Is it not true hat America reeks with the lust of money; thatihe gat-rlch-qulck spirit pefmeataa Its business fabric; that tha trail of the trade-mark is over us all? Should.' not every effort to cast out. the Monev Devil be approved? Should, not evetf word spoken in warning be applaudcf Bur, the Herald takes the president elect to task upon still another com Again we quote our esteemed New Yo contemporary: ,, , fin asserting that 1t ! believed this country that a poor man has less chance to get justice administered to htm than a rich man'' we are sure that Mr. Wilson has been misinformed. It would be a sad day for the Country If such a belief prevailed. It is unfor tunate that our nest president slwuld indulge in these discouraging and dis quieting flights at a time when bual ness interes tsresuJYjcJeritlj dlsjwcted by the tariff" and "money trFTrearTngs and agitation for legislation ranging from a pew banking and currency sys' tern to regulation ot tne stock ex Changes." Tne counerJournai, wnicn is gen erally described as a "reactionary, whatever that may mean, by the yawp ing crowd of so-called 'progressists, who propose to cure sin and disease, poverty and blasphemy by act Of con gress, makes bold to say WbodroW, Wil son is right. The poor man has no where in these United States' the Chance of the rich man before our courts -of law! What with crooked judges , and crooked lawyers and crooked juries what with jlmcrack technicality and the law 8 delay the rich man has always a hope and something mora than a chance. Not in any country of contl nental Europe does criminal justice hang so lax as In the states ot the American Union. Our courts of crim inal procedure deserve to be a scorn and byword when compared with the crmv lnal courts pf England, Prance and Ger many. The Herald may pique Itself upon tho prompt trial and conviction Of Becker and the gunmen. The case was wholly exceptional. Nor Is It ended yet. 'The Courier-Journal engages tO'bet the Her aid a clear that Becker with money be hind hint never reaches the deetrto chair, and that if anybody gets there, it will be the gunmen, Who have neither money nor friends. The Herald closea Its homily thus: " What we have witnessed Within tha last two months ia not merely, a political change;' It Is a change In the attitude ami Judgment of the American people,' Mr. Wilson toW his hearer. What we have witnessed In his election through the aid of business men and! they voted for him because they woraf weary of that very line of talk fromr a rival candidate and relied upon MfJ Wilson promise that he weuid denotltt lng to unsettle business." ,- ? ', 1 Put the Wilson vote and the R00via vote together and we have an over-l whelming majority in protest against ex-l luting conditions. This Is still further! increased by the Debs vote. Mr. Wll son Is not amiss, therefore, ln consider-! lng and calling the result of the'leo-l tlon a "revolution." Two types of men need to be takeh by the throat; the rascally professional politicians who, plastering themselves over with the party label that promises most, get in a back room and dispose oft other men's interests and . rights; and the rascally business men, who finance! these professional politicians, taklnrf their toll In class legislation, In special privilege, in charters and In franchises to rob their fellowmen. ; . ; No, dear old Herald, you are wrong I dead wrong and you owe it to a greatl fact to be more discriminating in yott Judgments. '( '