THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND. ..TUESDAY EVENING, JULY J22, 1813. THE JOURNAL AM lftDEPR!lKNT NEWSPAPER '. is. 1 Ml Hints ..Pabllaher tuMK'iifd eerr mcuId irireur Bandar I and ri.fjr Sunday mraruinc at lb -Journal Build In, Broadway and Yaablllata.. Portland. Of. Lairred at tlia puMorric at Portjaud. Or, for tramuiloaioa ttinitil tar walla aa accoad cum , waiiar, v t, . p. wj- . .e- . ., . .y ' -c - ' ' lKLKr-HONK . Main Ta Home, A-e51i All dpaxt mania ranched lir ttaeaa mnuwra. lell tbe operator what dapartmant roa waul. aOHfciluN AUVKM'f'IMINO Hitl'lUiHMNTATIVK Hftijaroln kentaor Co., lirauawkk Bulldlnf 2S Utib avauua. Nn Vii 1318 Feopla baa BulMlnaV Cbicaco. ' eahecrlptloB VvriM by mail of l a ddni a im Laura states or wraico. DAILY Dm rear L.;. ..15.00 i One month f 00 SUNDAY Ooa rear .......$260 I " month ' I ' DAILY AND SUNDAY On yur :" 7M I On mouth .S3 - The first duty of a wise ad vocate .- Is to , convince hie op-, pooenta that' be underspends " their 7 arguments and eyrpa . thlsp with their Just feeling. -Coleridge. A WICKED ABUSE -a A seeks to set aside the refer endum of the workmen's com pensation act. . One half ,' the signers of the -'petitions ive addresses between Front end FlftR Street; land between," Jef-iei-son andyCouch to . Portland, This means in at tne compeiutauon r act Is held tip. by persons within a Very emau precinct oroniy t a. diocks area In the city of Portland, and It Includes the North End. Most of the signers are persons . of whom little or nothing- is known Aside Iroin - perhaps fewer than a dozen,' there are no names of . well known business, professional, or worklngmen on the petitions. - -More than .300 names appear twice. - Approximately 300 give addresses that are not addresses. ' , Nearly 100 give addresses at a First- street hotel which keeps - no register; - and most if not ; all the . signers "are believed to be tran- - slents. ' A similar number locate themselves at a North End lodging house, and not one was living there when the place was recently inves tigated, .- V, 4j' These petitions as they stand axe a . most wicked abuse of the refer- . enduni. , They confirm the need, long ago urged by The Journal, of legislation to thro w safeguards around the petitions.' .They show as this newspaper has often pointed out that the friends of the initiative and referendum should place re- . fctrictlons. on them so as to .save the system from becoming the plaything of crooks- and the toy of evil pur pose. ', . ", The friends of . the system must do something of the Kind or its ene mies will do worse. Just such ex amples aa the . compensation peti tions I give opponents a ; club with which to beat the system to death. The abuses are no argument against the referendum. , They are an in- . dlctment'of ns for our neglect, to .throw , adequate safeguards around the signing .of petitions for the ref- : erendunV we ought to provide a way to . punish , crooks who employ the ref erendum for crooked purposes. of 'a 'alii t while"" giving" better value. J be no 'guess work, t'foj; ' it baV been the manufacturer and dealer' will the history of public service corpora- take advantage of the psychological tlons in America that they. have law of buying. Through the prac-1 often defeated . regulation because tic of years it has become a fixed I legislative . bodies tall to regulate habit .among men to "purchase at j intelligently. , , v i V i - figures that are multiple of five. I , If the streetcar company can, sell For instance a man; paysv$2 ISO six ' tickets for twenty-five : cents, or:3S for a suit, but he does not land at the same time 'pay; upkeep usually pay.; 3.38 or, other, odd land return a compensating amaena j nrtna . ' Inn a fAlr vnliiation -JsT Itft rrnnrt.N One ,6f, the; jreatesC benefits to after interest and:; o t'c. twed be derived from rthe" proposed cat charges are met, tha i company ln"the tariff, 6n' wool will he a bet- should be required W sell tha six ter quality of woolens as, the rin- tickets. But here comes the ques- will force . the American manufaC' lurer to Produce woolens that will stand comparison with them. NOT TERRORISTS 1 service companies, : "and, especially etrestcar companies, have ; followed a policy of increasing their capital ization as fast as earnings increased, a practice of doubtfur fairness.-' " - Mr. Daly's proposal Indicates that Portland's new rovernmcnt is tak- them- jng hold of issues vital t6 the peo ple. There Is ground for hope that T IS unfortunate that the I. W. W. propagandists style selves Socialists. It Is an Injustice to true so- decidina these issues action will ciaiism. it leads some good-inten- be ju8t t0 ajj concerned uonea eociansts to do sympainisers with the I. W. W. scheme of things, a blunder that they never ought to make. There is not the slightest, rela tion between syndicalism and so ciallam. '."here Is no common bond a jtrall , that amella ' like Satan's breath, it mar be a motorcycle and it may J be a "meteor;- bat In either event you'd ' better do some fancy footwork and resolve forthwith to make your will. Pretty aoon there will be no Mex ican question. The question itself may survive, but Is being compre hensively relieved of its , aiillcose adjective. , REGULATED UAD1ES iHERETcould - be- no more con vincing proof of the value of ; regulation In eradicating rab- ies"han is the" case of Great between the program of direct ac- Britain. In 1895, e72 persons died tloa and sabotage, on the ono -hand (from rabies as a result of hltes from and real socialism on the other" mad doga. The -wldesDread fatal The head in the I. W. Wk Is Wil-1 itles caused restrictive measurea to llam D. Haywood. He was dismissed be' inaugurated, and all dogs were from his relation with the true body ordered muisled for a period of six o Socialists. He has no standing, in months. In -addition, six months the organized trades. Hejs not a quarantine was required -befooe any union man.' He has no record as a dog was allowed to be imported into leader who gains higher wages .or jthe country. ;., , f Better conditions cf labor. I .A remarkable decline In thiwdeath Genuine c-ciallsm could not stand rate followed.' In 1896, the deaths for Haywood's preachments of class! fell to 438, and in 187, to 151. In natrea, violence, disorder and rev- 1898. the number was 17. n1899, olutlon. True Socialists could not nine, in WOO. six, and in 1901, only stand to be a party to duping ignor- one. In 1902, there was an out ant men, women and 'children into break in the north of Wales, with false hopes of elyslan fields of ease 13 deaths. In 1903, there' was but to be reached through, direct action one death in intimidation, terrorism, blOOd- PW in vnnra nnt thorn has hAn shed and anarchy. Your real So- no death in England from rabies ciaust nas no rroiisn notion and caused by a mad dog. The effec spreaas no ioousn gospel mat in tlveness with which; rabies was some mysterious way human happi- stamped out is a suCficient answer ness and an ideal condition are to to those who oppose application of attain mrougn overtnrow or ail restrictive measures, government and proceeding to live Regulation la not- only desirable in a Btate without government or . a protection to people, but it is means of government due as a protection to dogs. If the Whenever a Socialist who really dogs knew the awful character of believes in true socialism argues Inkhe maladv and could but speak, defense of. the I. W. W. program, there Is no doubt that these loyal he is not acquainted with the awful and faithful animils would vote for chapter of syndicalism, terrorism proper and seasonable regulations. and anarcny ror wnich I. w. w Weston, the veteran pedestrian, is 75 'years .old and Is walkiug yet. Which leads to the reflection thit many young aviators are not flying yet at least with mundane wings Socialists assert that Secretary Daniels Is responsible for the Se attle riots'. He ia to about the same extent the Angel Gabriel would be for an insurrection In Hades. No's the time that the fry hich wasn't swatted employs hiiuseit most busily in recalling an unpar donable oversight. Time la money; but after you've had your "'time," some other fel low always banks the ensuing usu fr"uct., - - i 'r." 1 ii "i " "" ' " i 1 " 1 " 1 Letters From the People , l .1 .. , i'i"'!.ii.iini,i i .' Ai'i'i i i ii inn hi : ' I, I VICIOUS NOISES MANY noises in Portland . are vicious because they are use less and avoidable. Noise, like smoke, was once consid ered a necessary evil. If not an ad ertleement of an active people, in a growing city; but progressive opin ion is fast banishing that fallacy. An Indianapolis committee has reported that eighty-five per cent of the noises in the vicinity of school buildings are capable of be ing abated. The committee urges' action to this end on the ground that, while schools with closed win dows .are unhealthful, continual noise is almost fatal to successful teaching or study. v What is true of schools is cor respondingly true. In a measure, of other institutions. Unnecessary noises are a handicap on living. They make-ill tempers, sour dispo sitions and Irritated people. They are a t y p e of viciousness that should be suppressed. Take the motorcycle rider as an illustration. Mounted on his ma chine, he goes tearing through the streets, his muffler wide open for no other reason than that he may become a one hundred per cent vio lator of the speed laws. It would be almost as merciful if he would assault people with his fists rather than with the noises that announce bis coming and. going. Nobody would think of allowing a boiler fac tory to fill all streets with Its nerve wrecking noises, and yet the motor C) diet has a boiler factory faded Into insignificance. A BETTER CLOTHES RESULT of the reduction of the tariff on wool will be an Increase of value in a suit of clothes. This is the general opinion of clothings manufacturers. ,ioe jiDmiaar pnee oi tne suit may sot be changed but " the suit will cootalu materials of better quality. - Say there is a reduction of twenty 1 per cent ik the. tariff. This would paean that the wpol and other ma terial in a suit now costing $12 would cost $9.60. " Instead of cut ting the prjco of the suit f?.4p the lasnufaetnrer, wUl add that ajnounf to "th "value if il material; giving the customer! a 'aultr for? 2:Vthat would cost $27,40 f at the present fricf ,.of.vinAtar'als..l:iMv'ifs;ifS'' In maintaining the" nominal price leaders actually stand. The instrumentalities of true so cialism are not the mob, the club' und the torch. Your true Socialist is not an admirer or side partner of the propagandist who Is an ene- -rHE COLUMBIA HIGHWAY w ORK Is- about to begin on the Portland - Hood River stretch of the Columbia highway. It is expected my of intelligent workers, an enemy that the program will be finished by of order,- an enemy of the law, an 1915." enemy of government, an enemy of It seems strange that after more reason, an enemy of peace and an than sixty years of occupation by enemy of the republic itself. T DROWNED HE drowning of two sisters ; when ,a canoe overturned in the Willamette river last night, Is a mournful occurrence. the white man, there is no means of going by' team or automobile from Portland to Hood River. Throughout most of the way there is a fair county road, but at Shell mountain there Is a link that a goat can hardly pass. There Is also a very good county road from Hood About a week ago in the same mver t0-The Dalles, vicinity, two young gins wno were thrown into the water by the -overi turning of their canOe,- saved them selves by swimming ashore. The widely different ending to these two pleasure parties is mostly at tributable to the fact that in the accident of a week ago both occu pants of the canoe were swimmers, The determination to build the new highway opens , up large pos sibilities for tourist travel through Eastern Oregon. No scenic route In the world would present attractions more splendid than a boulevard along the Columbia. If once the stretch to Hood River were completed and the whlln In laar nlcht'a vo wAv .iv.. of the two sTers nor thrS Ri t0 The Dalles escorts could swim. The two lives sacrificed last night are death's toll on boating by persons with no knowledge of how to save them selves from drowning. Few sports are perilous as canoe ing. A frail canoe capsizes with' a suddenness that gives no warning. Before venturing on such a pas time, there should be some knowl edge of bow to swim,, a knowledge rff' 'L!16 Pacific Highway. so-called, c REGULATING CAR FARES OMMISSIONER DALY has pro posed an ordinance requiring the streetcar company to sell six tickets for 25 cents. En forcement of such an ordinance would mean a fare of four and a sixth cents to people buying tickets. People not buying tickets would pay the regular, fare, five cents. The company now "sells fifty tickets for $2.25, a fare of four and a half cents. The-Daly ordinance would therefore mean an actual reduction of one third of a cent to people now taking advantage of the ticket sales. But the proposed ordinance has a larger significance than one third of a cent a ride. Comparatively few people buy fifty-tickets to se cure the fare reduction of one half of a cent. The great bulk of street car patrons pay full fare. The Daly ordinance would . make the lower fare an actuality. Many people might still pay full fare, but the greater number would' take advan tage of the tickets. ' The streetcar company; Is expect ed to oppose the regulation on the ground that Its enforcement would be confiscatory. The. only Question involved Is the Issue of reasonable ness, and on this issue there Is op portunity for much investigation and close figuring. " , If '. the Daly,, or dinance Is to be pushed it will be well for the city commissioners to ortlfy themselves with, figures that cannot be. ont1rov.erte4i-m: i m-sJ The way to regulate efficiently, to avoid lawsuits, defeats, and de lays, is to regulate after the foun dation has been laid thro ugh inves tigation and analysis. There should made modern, an enormous tourist business would be attracted. No road of similar length in the world would vie with it in beauty of scene and variety of wonders. It would be a route that would attract travelers from hundreds If not' thousands of miles away. . Completion of both stretches would quickly raise the Issue it Eastern rather' than Western Ore gon would not be the route for' the The dirt roads - of most of the Eastern Oregon counties are already sought by many travelers in preference to Western Oregon routes. Many tour ists even from Willamette valley, are shipping their machines to The Dalles, and proceeding thence south ward to Bend, Klamath and Crater Lake. . If to the Eastern, Oregon route there Is added the scenic boulevard along the Columbia, ' changes -will have to be made in Western Oregon highways north of Jackson county or the' main north and south route for tourists will be east of the Cas A Shanghai paper says that a beautiful hot weather custom ' ob tains In Japan, whereby the wife sits up all night fanning her hus band. , Here In America she's mora likely to sit up all night for an op portunity to fan him -with- a flat Iron.' ''v,-;j-';fjEi-;!;!j;, :';: An optimistic strap-hanger sug gests that perhaps the local trans portation trust' may have harvested enough nlckles from Sunday's neat-fleeing- crqwds to -patrons more streetcar in commission.; A Delaware grandame 'of ninety years has just passed away from eating huckleberry pie-whlch to our mind was a far happier ending than -to '"See Naples and ; die," as some rhapsodical poet advises. .., . Vacationist voyagers are Just now learning that ttha timaworn motor boat' joke Is less a Joke than a ma lignant reality. , t$x''-f' Kwhen an vndeflnabla o b J a c t whizzes by you in Portland, leaving- IConnonleaUaM aent to The ' Jctarnal ' far pnblleaUoo la tola depart mast afconM b- writ. 1b a pnlf eaa elde ef the paper, aheuld oot aiocad ,100 word la laofth aad neat be ae. compaaied tr the aasM) and addreae of tb aander. If the writer doce not daalra to feert the nao publlahtd. be aaould ao aUta.J The Purpose of the I. XT'. W. Portland, July 10. To the Editor of The Journal There 1 much excite ment and hysteria in Portland oyer the socalled v"I. W. W. trouble!" Knn ning through tt all la the groiaeat ig norance and prejudice and the excite ment of the people i taken advantage of to muxale those who preach doc trines unpopular with big business, in terests. , - What la supposed to have started It all T Why some immoderate street speak ers are charsed alth incendiary ut terances and of calling Governor Wert unpleasant , names, . One of tha lxrt land papers moet enraged aeatnst Iho I. W. W.' on account of this hat done far worse by, Governor west. It rrac- tically Charged ; him with mUapropri ating public funds, .and ha is reported to have brought1 a libel suit ata'net this defamer of his character. How Insignificant by iComparleon seems the mere calling of abusive names from a But this Immoderate street oratory served a a hamly excuse for ordering street speaking ; stopped, and thla Is the end that big business has long wished to accomplish: Such doctrines as those of single- tax and especially of socialism are very distasteful to capitalist Interests. -and they Attempted to restrict -free speech legally by pro posing a .measure giving the majror power to issue or refuse permits for etreet speaking. The people voted the measure down and ?t became necessary to go outside the law to restrict the J.reachings of unpopular doctrines. I nave no connection in any way with the I. W. W but believe In fair play and Intelligent treatment of a problem. . . Employers hate and fear the I. W. 'W. not because aa is ao foolishly charged that they are 'burns -that, won't- work nor let any one else work," but be cause-tfcey are members bribe most effective form' of labor organisation. They attack the system of unions that divide the workers of a great indus try Into innumerable - weak craft or ganizations and advocate instead, fa), dustrlal unionism "one big union. Some I,. W. W. may-be violent espec ially in their talk, but the record of the organization's bis; strikes has not been violent. On the other band much violence ha been committed against the I. W. W.'s by the employers and tne of rlcers or tne law. In Lawrence, .Mass., the mill owners planted the dynamite in the homes of the workers, imprisoned Ettor and Glo- vanhittt for months on a false murder charge and the police shamefully abused" men, women and children. In Patereon. N. J., the police have been guilty of the greatest brunllty against the I. w. W. and- strikers. Tha United States senate committee was told among other acts of lawlessness committed by tha . mine owners of West Virginia of the armored train with nine guards and machine guns that in the night shot up a camp of sleeping miners and their wives and children. Last year mobs of respecta ble citizens beat and deported I. W. W.'s from Hoqulam, -Raymond and Sun Diego. These brutal mobs were com posed, of the very law and order peo ple wno denounce tne ."w. w. for vio lent talk. When it comes to real "di rect action" and mob violence the re spectables so far hold the record. The latest example of - the respect for tho law is shown by the action of a mfib of business men; who drove Dr. Leach from Coos Bay; and the destruction o tne property or tne i. w. w. and so cialist locals in Seattle. Imagine,, if you can, such acts committed ly I. W. W.'s and Socialists against any business man's club. What a howl of rage would go up from the Atlantic to the Pacific In tha same capitalist tress that looks with calmness upon these late acts of violence committed against the workers. . Are the vlaw mad by the capitalist class to be obeyed by the workers but violated with Impunity by themselves? Suppose our newspapers show lea excitement about ', the . mote in , the workers' eye and take a look at the beam- in the eye of their , capitalist masters. - '..;',. -;.;.'. ,,.VY. M. PERTINENT COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF ciMALL CMA.NUM ' Now then,' Is It -t ,' i, , , e "Tommy" . Word .isn't saslly scared, even by. women. - -. T.:,,.t-;V'":vif .iv.- The tight of free speech, like most Others, has limitations. ' . . . . a - 1 ' Ambassador Wilson has come ..back, but may not go back. , Why don't the jailed agitators resort to a ' hunger atrtkeT" a With two new Judaea. Derhn.De the supieme court .an cau-h up. Mulhalt aeern wllllna- ta tall all ha knows, and It ia a "wholf lot." There is now llkelv to be a laraa In. ere be t business in the dog pound. . Whether or not these are' dog-days in ine oia Mense, iney are muzzled dog y. . j The tariff debata wbn't -incraaaa- the circulation or the vcongreaional Ree- ord mutih. . . . . O. yes. it'a auita warm hir, lama. times in midsummer, but never deadly; In the doa world It la tha aam all must suffer for tha faults or mlnlor. tunes of the few. , ..'. dency again. Colonel Roosevelt is bound to nave a bully time, anyway. A "constittitlonal" eeneral exDecta to capture Juarez soon, unless it was cap tured every week or two, Juarez wouldn't know. what to do with itself. . v ( . OREGON 1 ttlDELIUUTs) An effort will be made to keep jn operation the bualnesa college recently established at Marshfleld. . ,..-!,. '.r, '' i" r "S i f vs' '' if- :-!A ''' i ' Eugene Regtstert ' The Shasta Limited has now become a first elasa train. It takes passengers on tickets from Eu gene. ' . . ., The Canyon City Essie says condi tions are shaping themselves favorably for ''the beat county fair that has yet been witnessed by. the people of Urant county." , , Hlllsboro Argus: " Flood and heat In the east and middle -went will send many a man to Oregon next year that la, many a man who wishes to live where tneue extremes are unknown. Brownsville Times: It Is a noticeable faot that nearly every new sidewalk constructed ' In Brownsville this season la being made of cement. Apparently tne wooden 'walk Is a thing of the past The first cake of ice ever made In Newport was sold' at auction for 17.60. Thu Newport voirespohdent of the To ledo Leader aaya it '.-should have brought lieoauae tuls is Juat' tha beglnnina of a grtat industry"; - .,0 . ' The Scio News aaks. ' "What kills a town T V and then answers: "It is when some poor, miserable, dwarfed soul tries to put It in his pocket. While it looks foolish, many good towns are" run Went Into the ground by Just euch people." v The editor of the Condon Times offers areward of $28 for information, that will lead to tha conviction of the mis creant that shot hie dog, and, In addi tion, ay editorially that ''the man who would shoot an inoffensive dog da-j serves a term In the state's prison," , BUCCANEER, MEILEN WORLD WITHOUT END Rebukes Both Side ; . Portland July 21. To the Editor of The Journal The recent display of force against the people was as un just, , as foolish,, as -.unnecessary, as have been for several years the ribald, vicious, treasonable tirades of the I. W, W, Publto sentiment doea not care so much as to, the method of suppress ing the I. W. W. as the accomplish ment of their suppression :. The latter organization has sown s the wind and is reaping the whirlwinds The trouble is that other people and natural rights must also share in. the harvest. ' ? ; " Persecution nnly feeds the I.,W. W. for the organisation to grow the faster, It is sheer folly to club and best them until they have aroused sympathy; and evolved martyrs.'-- .i-j.V-; ::.,- On the other . hand, the ' abuse ef the right of .free .speech has aroused a .strong resentment in tha. Hearts of many who havs rieardfthe -American flag derided and honorable men vilely assailed In t language . unfit for the lowest dive, all in the public streets, where youth" Zlatened eagerly. v This wave of violence oit tha part ef the police ' Is '4- returning one created, by the long continued, viola tion of lib erty patiently ,, extended to the orators of the violent stripe. It will pass, and afterward the good sense . of the' people- of- yortmnd will straighten out both, forma of anarch) that hav' been perpetrated upon, us., ' From tha Literary Digest. If it Is a comfort to anybody to feel that life will exist forever on our planet Instead of lasting only a few million year after ha is gone, he should by . all means read the address of a German scientist who holds out this hope to the race. The eternity, of matter has always been proclaimed by science, but she has denied the in definite existence of the particular groups and systems of matter that we find in our own universe. Klammarlon, In his "End of the World," enumerates many causes, any one of which, noting by Itself, would bring the present world to Its termination. It would seem to be only a question of Which should achieve Its end soonest. Now, however, comes Professor Qustav Jaumann of the Brunn Polytechnic school, Germany, and announces in an inaugural address on "Modern Views Of the End of the World," quite a different doctrine. The modern view, be asserts, 1s that the universe is stable. ' Disturbing forcs act only to call into being other op posing forces which will restore the balance of things. Loss of heat is balanced by the inflow of gravitational energy. These views, be tells us. are the consequences of new theories of gravitation whieh take Into account the faot that the gravitational Impulse re quires time - to travel through space. NeWton's law on thla v)ew holds exactly only for bodies ' at rest whereas our system is In motion. We read in a translation of Professor Jaumann's ad dress into French published In the Re vue Sclentlflque: "The anomalies of the field of gravi tation are compensated in cosmio space according to a law analogous to that which aoverna the irrezuiarmes or dis tribution of temperatures 'in - the mass of a conductor of heat. It is only for bodies at rest that Newton's law of effects at a distance follows exactly from tho differential lan of gravitation. The motions of the planets Involve dis turbances a kind of' accumulation, -so tmpeak.-of hc flel of gravUatloarTn. front of these bodies giving rise to new gravitational forces which - are added to the Newtonian forces, "Although very , small Indeed, these forces may be calculated with- great precision; the most important of them is in the direction of tha planet's mo tion and thus aids that motion. It In creases with the planet's, velocity and varies In inverse ratio to the distance from the sun. i. These new 1 gravita tional forces Introduce Into the move ments of the planets disturbances that may be .calculated without ' difficulty, and that determine the departures from Newton's law that have been noted above, such as abnormal accelerations, abnormal oscillations of the vertical, etc. Thus are explained all the peculiar ities of gravitation, which Newton's Jaw of action at a distance could not do. These new forces of gravitation, more over, give to the planetary system a physical stability of practically unlim ited extent. They preserve the. present forms of planetary orbits, not only in spite of the considerable resistances due to friction with the cosmio ether, but despite hug accidental disturbances. If a perturbation of this nature, due, for Instance, to the passage, near the solar system, or a fixed star at hish sneed. should completely change the form of . . )i.Mc,a v. ki,,, C119, lien iari... tlonal forces would Introduce Into the elements pt the orbits such variations that the orbits would return exactly td their present stable forms. Far from being fatal - to - us, the fractional re sistance of the cosmic ether would ap pear only as a factor destined to give stability to the planetary orbits. The greater this resistance Is, tha more con siderable art the new gravitational forces and the more obstinately will the orbit preserve their shapes, . despite all disturbances. There can be no fur ther question of the planets' falling into the sun. Instead of being unstable, In stead of tending toward a mora or lass distant destruction, the planetary sys tem tnu rmas itseir estaonsnea ror a period which, estimated by notions of time that we are able to conceive, may be regarded as eternal.1' . Our mayor will discover easier ways of hanrtllnar crowds than riding them down like sheep, and our sheriff will discover he has plenty of work cut out for him In apprehending real crim inals and ridding the town of real crooks. There Is an enorradus field here for his valiant army. The streets are primarily for traf fic, but they do riot need to be closed entirely to meetings, else we shall have a dictatorship that will grow by what It feeds upon until liberty is strangled. Meanwhile there is : reo enough In the American nag or m, ami atara enough in it without hunt ing a vision of more beneath a pollcw man's club. This red flag waving lr- ritates the American ciusen. wny wava It? . We have power in our own hands- In ' Oregon,, ana yioieni urn breeds violence, why talk roily and seek trouble for trouble's sake? We have the recall and can use It If need. Streetcar Service in Portland. Portland. July 0 To the Editor of The Journal There is no reason why the residents of Portland snouia not have cheaper, streetcar rates. Whan , I first cams to Portland I was told -the car companies charged five cents for each ride, unless we bought books of 60 tickets for 2.tt. Those books are sold at' the office-which makes a person los lots of time and spend one or two tick ets to go to the office for . the book. There are many who would rather pay five cents, fare than bother With the 1 i. Thn amin there are many whd can't "afford to expend ti6 at one time for street, car tickets. . ' : : - ' In many of tne cities 1 uave Deen in, the car companies sell six tickets, and in some, sight ucaeia iot a quarter. The Portland Railway. Llgttt t Power company should be compelled to give the people of Portland -cheaper rates. If they would there would be more people using the cam and the company would loss nothing. : .... The working man must struggle too hard as-H is to keep out of debt f We should get together and try to make his burden as Ught for him as we can. I hope Commissioner Daly will put this ordinance through, and that this con.- mission council wm see tnn mis or dinance Is put into effect. ' J Common 8eVse ' in- School Book.' Portland, July 31. To tha Editor of The Journal It has become apparent from the actions of the members of the ttv aohool 1 board that they Intend to continue, for another year at least, the ( list of textbooks in use for the past six years. Evidently this is to be done in deference to the new superintendent I who Is just now gathering up the reins of his administration s and, considered as a whole, is a very wise and sane so lution of the problems - that confront him. -C'. -h v -v-::;, V,';; ,, But the members ef tha board and the superintendent seem to navs overlooked one point that needs particular atten tion at once. Teachers and parents all over the city realise that the lnstruc ion In arithmetic - In - the Portland schools has been seriously handicapped for several years .through the lack of a suitable, text in tne. nanae os ; the pupils, it.-:'! '-,,'ii'-;, t "'-"i'i''.:':'l. (Under the forihsf state law Portland was compelled to use a. series of text feooks adopted by a state board of text book commissioners, v The text adopted for arithmetic six years ago proved alt most at once that it was .not suited to it would seriously cripple instruction In this branch to continue its use.' 80 the superintendent, with the aid and co operation of his corps of teachers, de veloped a system which has been . in use evW since. This system has demon strated that It Is much superior to the present text. . . - ' i '.'-'-' The legislature of ISIS passed a-law permitting, Portland to adopt textbooks for its schools independent of the action of tha . state board and , everyone felt that the city board would do something at once to relieve the teachers and pu pils from this embarrassment. Two courses are open to the. board. .Either they may adopt the present system,, which has appeared in textbook form, has been adopted by the .state for six years, and Is endorsed by prominent ed. ncators everywhere. Or they may throw tha subject open and select at least a better and more modern text than the one the pupils are now compelled to waste money buying. ' ' If efficiency Is to be the watchword ef the new administration, no better starting point than this can be found. It means- much to the' pupils of this city whether they are compelled to labor along under "this ridiculous misfit for another year or are given an opportuni ty to secure the benefit of a course where Instruction and text shall go hand in hand., p. b, P. Horseplay." ,"'''' In Kansas City the other night some of the youthful and exuberant members: of a church captured a bridegroom, who! was IncldenUlly a deacon,. led him Into! a convenient wood tied him to a tree and left him there until daylight. Then they playfully ' devastated tits young couple's apartments creating consider able havoc and driving the bride into acute hysteria from which she will be long In recovering. - a'his Is net repeated to prove that Kansas City Is a bad place in which to live. .. For, . aside from its pillory of a union depot. Its miserable winters and unbearable summers, Kansas City Is all right. The incident is recited as evi dence that the village outup lias thus far escaped the fool killer. - This sample of half-baked humorist Is Indigenous to. weddings, r Formerly he contented himself with "charlvaring" the newly married pain In the e-oori old days he was treated to wedding- cke, J Ice cream or bird shot whichever was handy. Now he "whitecaps" the bridge room, deooratea the baggage with ribbon 1 and placards, wrecks the new dovecota. t labels the wreckage with hideous sign and unprintable sentiments, frlchtens the bride into premature wrinkles and gray hair, perpetrates-an assortment of atrocities and goes free. - - 1 Neighborhoods and- small communi ties are Infested with this merry wag and .large cities are not immune. He is first cousin to the man who racks the boat and next of kin to the wit who yslJs VFlre!" in a theatre. iMust Go Through the Motions, . From Tit-Bita ' Customer I .say, Mr. Barber, I don't hear your aclssors at work on my hal.r Barber (apologetically) . There is very little hair on your head, Sir. , ' 5 Customer That, makes no difference, t pay my money, and I want you to rams ine scissors on tne bald place, just the same as If I had hair on it. From the' San Francisco Bulletin. 1 Thu report of ' the Interstate . com- J meres commission, covering its inveati-v gatlon t Into the financial transactions', of the so-called Mellen system,.: reads! more like a choice- work of fiction otl the Dick Turpin order than a narrative, of modern business. The document is very voluminous, but .on account of its I great local interest 1a published inf ulll In the New England papers. t The ambition of Charles Ss Mellen y was to establish an absolute ando auto-a cratio monopoly . s of the - tremendous transportation business 1 of the' - New England v states. i $0 far as the steam roads wore concerned he4 was success- fvU Hs gained opntrol of the two Till- roads, ', the New york,'?'New;Baven -v & "? Nartford and the Ejstoni Maine,-which a control the traffic of tft reiflon, and with their otudit proceeded to wreck or abr-oro every competitor, The trol-r leys came along with immense mlleaga He bought thm," regardless of prlca Competition by sea' was treated In the " same way. Profitable lines ware bought up a'iu the service 'reduced - or aban- doned altogether, - Two fine ateanieira , bought for 4900,000 were sent' to the, scrap pile and realfzed . MO.VOO. The' Harvard and Yale were sent to the Pa- clfto coaat :,.''; All this time Mellen1 was' playing, ducks and drakes with the money right- ' fully belonging to. the stockholders of ' tha two . principal railroads. - On this point the luncuaae of the commisslou . is delightfully precise.. In spite of a system of bookkeeping' characterised, as "inherently vlclous.whloh beclouds all transactions."; rthe .commission has difficulty in arriving at startling facts. , in a aeai ior Knoae. istana iroueya.-nv declares, the sum of $13,(00,000 was given away for nothing." This is fur-. ' ther alluded to, as an impressive ; "ob- I 4am, l.unn in hllt fining !' . Tn anntliap' . deal 112,000.000 vanished Into thin air." The sum of $3,000,000 was apparently i "given away" to J. L. Billhead and asso- elates.. Only once in Its report does the commission, resort to, the soft pedal. That is when it refers to-the expendl-V-ture .ot $100,000 to "mold opinion" dur ing a certain session of the Connecticut legislature. This kind of "molding" Is "' sometimes called by a harsher ' name." Altogether, the commission figures .out that the stockholders of the two big. roads are poorer by something like $100,000,000 through Mellen's. vicious ac tivities. Yet so vast is tha legitimate, business of the New York, New Haven A Hartford and the Boston & Maine,-, railroads that, the commission says; "in spite of continued mismanagement and utter fiscal recklessness, their solvency Is not impaired." - - This, of course, is good news.' It is . better news that Mr. Mellen has retired) from the management of tne lines ne has controlled and will probably spend . the balance of his days in the dignified -and graceful enjoyment of the extreme- ly large fortune he has acquired. - Will Mr. Mellen suffer any legal in convenience because of his misconduct? ; Why, of course not, Mr. Mellen wasn't) tempted to steal a bam or hold out $10 , of his employer's money to tide over sickness In bis family. In that case ha would be uut behind the bars. But-. . even In these dsys a loot of $200,000,000 Is unusual and Impressive. It commands at once tha respectful regard of society and the law. Pointed Paragraphs if a man has too much money it's no task at all for him to acquire more. , Ona way to avoid a quarrel la to be absent at the psychological moment. iBetween'",twe evils it ' 1st bettor te marry for inoney lhan for a dianse w. v'v. , . ; , : iThe enterprlaltag summer girl hss no; use for the young man who wastes his- time kissing her hand. - A -aiieeessf u'l financier is one! whoin- everybody, claims to have known when he didn't have a dollar to his name. m m. - r . 1 According to statistics, one woman 1n a thousand can open a telegram' with ' as little emotion as opening .a can of corn. V Ta a man who is getting small 'sal- ary and has a large family to support, home is the dearest place on earth. t.f j . -.' Electrification of Railroads. From ihe Philadelphia Telegraph, ' The public may perhaps wonder why the electrification of railroads does not proceed more rapidly and why It is confined to what may be called sub urban zones. . The answer is purely, an economic one: Electric engines and cleo trie power are- more expensive than steam engines and steam power. And electric power t must be always suffi cient to meet the "peak of the load'1 at any given moment or else every tractive unit In Its none becomes dead ;V whereas, under a steam transportation: system each engine is Its own power house and can' more or 'less conserve Its energy until needed, a-, . , , ' , Thus, electrlo traction Is profitably oosaible chiefly when and where traf fic Is both large and uniform. This la generally true of suburban localities, which,, term is. however, elastic enough to cover a multitude-of; miles from' tha terminal. With increasing communal growth in our most populous urban cen ters.' electrification . ef "' transportation facilities wHl be the ultimate and In- yltatle iresuic rnew xora ias enjoyea Oils form of suburban' haulage, and Philadelphia Is soon to see It Installed on the main line division, On the score of freedom from smoke -and -gas' alone, electric traction; la much to be desired within city limits. ) From the New Orleans Picayune. Man, a a v, .t,,l.. kl n . MM w . the needs of the teachers Tiers and, that threshold Of - success. . - - Raffles ReappearSi C . ,',,1 , , i' v 1 THIS CONGENIAL RASCAL ' . . IR WITH ITS. AOA1N. In a series of five storl(fs, K, ... W. jHornung resenu Kaxrics,; the moat celebrated- criminal 4 veharacter In modern fiction, in some new and startling. Advenk: ' The first story In the series, . "Out of Paradise," -will appear:,-; in THE SUNDAY JOURNAL ; 1 1 magazine for next Sunday. Tht' . rest of tlve stories will be puu ? lished as follows: .j ,v ' 1 THE CHEST OFSILVER " i August' 3' v ,;, : X,; l 1 THE REST CORK ' . August 10 . ff? l " V' ' THE1 CfttM rNOL0 O I8T8' . CLUB August 17: A THIEF IN THE NIOHT : "' t August i-'i CZ' . ' I These stories ' of . , fictitious O l criminal, adventure make de-v' lightful . midsummer- reading.. Read the flft. story and .you 1 c ' will want to read them all, , :' it .-''V'i-V. , ,V Th'eSundayJourrlai; ; :"'.fiX:-f.'- t : n,r- ...... .... .jf.;f.a.---.f;..-;,..,.v..',..r. . "i ; rAi.;i1X' .iv,'"., ...'.. r... . J - 4 J.,..i: 1 I ,...r.,..,,..,....,J. .(...-. ... ......