4 . THE "OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING,' AUGUST ' 24, 1913. THE JOURNAL K INDEPENDENT NBWSrAFB c a. Jackson .pubHs' fubllsbetr-wir swing t?"j awry Sander SMrnlng H Jrnal Ins. Broadway sad Yamhill .. W""' trsDsmlsslos tames the nails a ascend. MtlW. Tell tbe what den.rtmt w VttKION ADVKHXiaiNO KKrsy' a. , Benjamin Kratnor C. Brtt.w'c ttW'f. n.iK c-...w ... ifaar York! ISIS People S f . U..I1.M..M (MUM " eubscriiuiua Imm l m or w la ut usma states or mw . MKT Oh rar ......WOO I Ooe Matfei J US OAK On rr ...... .! ' DAILT AND IDKDAX On sear ......ST.SO I One BHeth $ M Circles are praised, not that abound Jn largeness, but the exactly round: So - life we praise, that floe excel Not in much time, but acting well. Waller. i. RAILROAD VALUATION ONE of the greatest tasks un dertaken by the federal gov ernment is the valuation of . . all railway lines in the United States under the direction of , the Interstate Commerce Commission. Some idea, of the magnitude of the work can be formed when It 18 real ized that there are in the United States 234,000 miles of railway, nearly fifty per cent of the world's mileage. Besides an appraisal of the physical elements there must be prepared a history of. all preceding ownership of the individual roads. This will undoubtedly be the largest part of the valuation for the reason that many records have been lost or destroyed and their restoration will be most difficult. In addition to this historical data there must be reported the original cost of con struction, the coBt of construction sow,' the cost of reproduction less de predation, franchise vaUies, if any, the going concern values and other intangible elements, carefully sepa rated , from the physical elements. A concentlon of the vastness of de tail involved" and the Important questions to arise after the valuation Is completed are suggested in an Interesting article In the August Review: of Reviews by Judson C. Welliver. " The estimates of time required to complete the work range from five - to ten years and the cost to tne govr ernment Is estimated all the way from ten to twenty millions. The expenses of the railway companies Will probably be as large as those of the government. A large , force of engineers, economists, property experts and accountants will be em ployed. In the preliminary work of or-i , ganlzatlon an issue has arisen as to public representation in the work of valuation. By some It is insisted ; that the Interstate commerce com- mission officials fn charge will oc cupy positions not unlike that of a " Judge. There will be expert counsel and testimony for the railroads, but there Is no provision for anybody to act as counsel and expert in the spe cific Interest of the public. An amendment to meet this condition is under consideration. One of the Important questions to be resolved after the ftna,l valua tlon is made is the use of the in formation. The law requires that the valua tion shall be prima facie evidence of the value of the property In all pro ceedings under the Interstate Com merce act and in Judicial determi nation of the enforcement and non enforcement of the orders of the Interstate Commerce Commission. ,It skillfully points out a way to force the contending interests to an issue on the actual value through a plan of protest, reexamination and revision but nowhere does it suggest what weight or significance shall at tach to, this value. Says Mr. Wel liver: Nobody knows today what the United States supreme court would do If a valuation thus made or made In any other manner were prescribed as the ; basis for making rates and regulations. ine court migui nauy ieiui w (Oppt It. It might discover a vast reser . ,voir of additional values In franchise j rights, going business and established t nrA will an A tha lilfA Th. IfltF Aava I not a word about these. It is framed i so canny tha,t the question will at length be put up to the courts to de ,clde Whether they want these elements - taken into account and whether they Will in any cane U-t value be made a 'basis or rates. I i An increased importance has been given-the valuation by the decision . i of the United States supreme court in the Minnesota rate case. In ef- feet this decision indicated that when a valuation had once been ' made, owners of the property there after would be entitled to rates ..i which would give them reasonable 5 returns on the value as found , Further it waji pointed out that the amount of the investment in the ' nrnnsrlr enillil not ha nanaaaarlUr . y . " - ,Jt , .... J taken as the measure of value. Bad investment might compel the owner !to bear loss. The rates would have to be based on the value, not on the j cost of the investment. This rule ! favors the railroads whose holdings in lands, terminals, etc., are worth 'more than cost ' " . The decision of the court In this j case would suggest a purpose to give weight and importance to the valuation. " ' , The question of 'unearned incre ment it another important problem rn m anlvorl fn ; whit viIiibHah ; ' shall a railroad eara returns? Shall the railroads . owning; Jaada ,who value hag been increasing with the Ize these increased values and then make rates to earn returns on them? "It is at this point," con tinues Mr. Welliver, "that the chief potential effect of the valuation on rates will be felt. What will the courts say about lt?.rWhat will be the public policy of the country?" DR. BRIGGS r HE recent death of the Rev erend Charles Augustus Briggs caused but little comment. -A world intent on the present did not recall that, a few years since, he was the chief personality in a religious controversy in the Persbyterian church that reached to the foundation of that fortress of Calvinism. The controversy in volved a movement known as the Higher Criticism, one of the prod ucts of a realistic age. As a professor in the Union Theo logical Seminary, Dr. Briggs attract ed national attention by his views on the inspiration of the scrip tures. He asserted with all the great force of his broad scholarship that errors might have existed tn the original text of the Bible, that Moses was not the author of the Pentateuch, that the processes of re- rinmntlmi Ytpnri tn tha world to come, that sanctlfication is not com-! plete at death and that reason is equally with the church a founda tion of divine authority, apart from the scriptures. He was bitterly assailed and called a heretic by those who can-j ' churches, not realize that creeds are but. , ... changing forms of expression of the religious nature In man, which alone is permanent, those who worship the symbol instead of the object sym bolized, those who believe the last word in the formulation of creed has -been said, those who have little j if any interest in historical origin, i those who regard it blasphemous to : - i x a i a tiv Increasing knowledge, those who are intolerant of the opinion of others. Dr. Briggs was supported bj his , Blrong propaganda working toward associates in the seminary and when j that end and whlle ,t ,8 encounter brought to trial for his alleged he- L opp08it0n because some mem retical views was acquitted by his be of other chlircnea fear they are presbytery. to be assimilated rather than an- An appeaj was taken by nts op - ponents to the General Assembly and they were numerous enough to bring about his suspension. The refusal of the seminary to remove him from his professorship created a schism in the church. The later years of his life were .characterized by an appeal for the union of all Christian churches to 1C1UUIO IUO UIUV.AC1 ICS ui ine ecu turies of the last words of Christ to his apostle "Peace I leave with you. My peace I give upon you." In striking contrast to the storm aroused by Dr. Briggs is an-incident that occurred shortly before his death. Four graduates of Union Theological seminary were accepted for ordination in the Presbyterian ministry, notwithstanding their doubts on such cardinal points of doctrine as the literal interpretation of the virgin birth and the phy sical death of Lazarus. One of these four was the son of Dr. Van Dyke I will not stand the test of higher who stated in their behalf that a! musical or literary criticism, but it belief in the old fundamentals of Us not probable that church goers orthodoxy was not essential to Christian faith. He denounced the new attempt to exalt the letter above the spirit in Judging the fit ness of men for the Christian pul pit This incident and the lightly heralded passing of Dr. Briggs are reminders of a lack of interest in theological controversy todsv as onmnorot tirin, vootoov ii compared with yesterday. It reveals stick. Their success does not de the liberalizing tendency that thejpend entirely upon appeal to the Higher Criticism wrought. It shows (cultured. that excommunication has no ter-1 Any hymn that Is popular with ror for the studious. It proves that the hetrodoxy of today may become the orthodoxy of tomorrow. It dem- lonstrates that the rule of reason Is to be followed, that language Is in - adequate, that words lose their iginal meaning in new environment, that interpreters unconsciously color thjelr interpretation and that the only tests of creed are reason. Christian experience, and the Holy Scriptures as well as church do cision. THE BEST 8ELLEK T ilIE Bible continues to be the I best seller. Other nublica-1 tlons may be boosted Hnu ' boomed, but this one book, old(poBG of religlouB BOng ls to stir the and yet new at every turning of the leaves, holds precedence, as it. should. The China agency of the Ameri can Bible society reports Issues for tbe first six months of 1913 of nearly one million Bibles, Testa ments and portions of the Scrip tures, and there are yet two depots to report. It is expected that two million copies will be distributed in China this year One need not be a church mem-1 ber, or even a believer, to under- stand the Bible's popularity. Mere-1 ly as literature It holds front rank among books. Its style Is unap- proacnaoie, its stimulus to thought unsurpassed. Men and women read li for culture's If not for religion's sake, and there la no better teacher. But culture cannot be acquired through reading the Bible without also building up morals. The time Is gone when carping, criticism on the book was popular. It ls now being read with better understand ing. There ls general . acceptance of the fact that-history recorded in the Old Testament wag not written for the purpose of perpetuating a tandard of life; people are taking guidance from the New Testament. And b wcJjOagtoWingbeUer be cause- of It lng civilize the world. ' Reading the book Is not so much a command of religon in the common acceptance of the term as it Is a duty one owes to self. If man or woman reads the book understandlngly and follows its teachings conscientiously there will be little occasion for studying other laws. Tho Bible is a com plete and reliable compendium on living. MERGING THE CHURCHES C ANADA has taken a decided step in the general movement for merging the churches. The Presbyterian synod recently ! voted overwhelmingly for union wlth the Methodists and Con grega- tlonalists, the. two latter bodies hav ing already taken similar action. The Presbyterian church In Canada has sflown greater signs of activity, and It Is significant that its new vigor is to be used' In Christian union rather than In denominational amsion. The Chicago Tribune says several factors entered Into this movement to assure success. None of the three Canadian churches is subdi vided as in the United States and elsewhere. Another factor is that the two sects of Presbyterians in Scotland, the United Free church and the Established church, have lurled their doctrinal differences of centuries' and are already moving toward union. A third reason is the recent settlement of western Canada 1 DQIUOID IIOTQ all CflU UUllCU locally. Episcopalians across the border are also looking toward union with other denominations. The Church Unity League is active in behalf of Buch a movement in spite of pro tests from eastern bishops. ' In the United States there are signs of willingness for union ! n m nn nr riinn rv- I n n 4 1 n n (1 aiinrtAOAl T a ill u 11(5 urjuuuiiuaiiuuo duj;udgu vvr be antagonistic to each other. The PrntftdtBnr TTnlannnftl rhnrrh hn a nexed( the movement Is making practical progress. It is certain the old lines of cleavage are being ob literated. The time is approaching when denominationallsm will not de fine Christianity. When that time comes the Church will mean a hig fighting machine that- will win battles by eheer 8trength and force of urnbers THE OLD HYMNS T HE National Association of Or ganists has attacked the old time church hymn and is de manding a drastic revision of the song books. Many of the hymns are said to be crude and much of the music cheap. The charge is not new, and neither is the proposal for discard ing a large proportion of the hymns. It is undoubtedly true that the ; books contain many songs which would sanction revision for the especial benefit of the musically educated. Church music, above all else, should carry appeal to the ordinary person. Religious songs are not in tended, first of all, to be literary masterpieces; they would not be ef fective were their merits measured alone by the higher critic's yard-! a the masses has some Quality which appeala to common humanity. rV may be imperfect as to form, but it scrveB a most useful purpose. Many pe0pio needing Balvation cannot.be or-jreacnecj through the classics, music . or literature; they appreciate some- thing of a cruder sort. There is no quarrel with the or ganists except on this point: Churches mtiBt be popular to at tract all people. Therefore music should not be selected to meet the taste of only the Intellectual. It does not follow that music should have no high standard, but in fix- lnr It full fvnstrtern tlnn miiot hn ,. n .u t v.- M. given all luc co. 11 iuuov i mamhurofl that thfl essential nnr-1 emotions, rather than win the crit ic's approval. XO IDEE DHEAM s ECRETARY BRYAN is the tar get for sarcasm because of his world peace program, and yet Congressman Young of North Dakota recently illustrated the fact that the plan is no idle dream. He j called attention to, the Anglo-Aineri- can agreement, now nearly a cen tury old. for disarmament on the great lakes. Cities and. towns have been per mitted to grow up around these in land seas without the least fear of destruction by a hostile naval force. Chicago, Detroit, Toronto and Mon- treat have been fearless without a single dollar Invested in land fenses. Peaceful pursuits have prospered unhampered by militar ism, in spite of the fact that tbe in ternational agreement could be ab rogated by , either party on oix months' notice. But the 'agreement has remained In' force; a century has proved that two nations can live In peace without guardianship of the mailed fist. .The sophistry of war Is discussed by the London Nation- drawing Illustration Ja tbe Balkan conflicts. History again tixsw&t:2iBnii lpe3aaiesu. i. ii ' . m bad cement,1 how violence breeds mutual suspicion, ; rivalry,- conten tion and open strife. The great pow. ers who bad encouraged the "war of freedom" later ylewsd the spec tacle with horror. They condemned the strife, but almltted their ina bility to intervene, while one of them, at least; urged on the fight lng. In primitive days wars were car rled on to devour an enemy, to seize women, herds, lands, and later to live 'parasltlcally upon the conquered. Cattle stealing and rapine are no longer tolerated in "civilized" warfare, but we still annex territory, for the occupants cannot be killed advantageously. Indemnities are poor compensation for the waste of war. There are no gains to replace advantages won by the primitive conqueror. Then why does war survive? M. Novlkow, the Russian pacifist, says in reality civilized people to day conduct wars simply because their savage ancestors did so of old. From sheer spiritual laziness accustomed habits have not been abandoned. Then, because war with out any motive is revolting, theories are built upon theories to Justify it The fact is that arms manufac turers and financiers, the only bene ficiaries of armaments and wars, and a barbarian sentiment classing fighting as the best of sports, are di rectly responsible for militarism. Tne profit takers applaud sophists who profess to find scientific and ethical vindication of war. They say war Is the school of discipline, self sacrifice and all the manly vir tues. But as a matter of fact there is no Justification of brutality, and war Is little else. War was once carried on for plain, intelligible ends the primi tive man was not a hypocrite. To day war has the same ends in view, but the hypocrite is in command. That Is why Mr. Bryan's world's peace plan may be slow in securing general approval. And yet the plan has been a success for a century on the great lakes. WAY STATIONS TO DEATH T HE September Metropolitan contains an article by John S. Reed, a Portland young man, telling what he saw and heard in the PaterBon, New Jersey, Jail. He was a prisoner there four days last April because of his arrest whije investigating the silkworkers' strike. His offense consisted in watching the picket line in front of the silk mills. Mr. Reed does not complain of his arrest and conviction, but he draws a terrible impeachment of so ciety that permits Jails to be used as way stations to death. Jails house the petty criminals, the drunk and disorderlies, the little thieves, the weak outlaws of society, who have neither courage nor strength to commit state prison offenses. They also Bhelter the big criminals on their way to penitentiaries. All are thrown together, and in the Pa terson Jail all were kept in filth and crime breeding conditions that broke down what .little character was left in the prisoners. It cannot be that the 1 Larson Jail is typical of American Jails, al though Mr. Reed says it is. It is unbelievable that in many Jails boys Just starting in criminal paths and it cn who have long traveled crime's road, are forced by society to live like beasts. It Is to be hoped ' 1 pVt.' imioseu upon, raierBon s jau Via jfa Daai1. mwr -v s A J a I birds" could not be reproduced from facts gathered at many other jails. But the Paterson Illustra tion ls typical In one respect. All jails are proof that we have not yet learned how to treat peo ple whom society ls forced to con fine. They are evidence that we are not yet awake to the inhumani ties we practice In the name of law. No class of people stand in greater need of individual attention than those charged with crime. And yet society complacently sees them thrown Indiscriminately into Jail, where crime feeds upon crime and degradation breeds destuction. A great indictment against the Jail, even the clean, wholesome Jail, is the fact that It forces the prison er Into ' Idleness. It saps ms . I strength, destroys his ambition and breaks down his manhood princi pally because of enforced idleness. The attempt ls being jnade to sepa rate prisoners according to age, but there must be a way provided for giving the prisoners some sort of useful employment. Law must be gin the prisoner's schooling before he reaches the penitentiary. A county jail, says Mr. Reed, ls a plaoe that takes In weak men and turns them out weaker. It dilutes what little manhood they have left. Most prisoners know they are wrong and the law right, but the jail fixes the belief they always will be wrong. It ls not sufficient for so ciety to say It feeds its prisoners well- and keeps them warm and clean. Whefi law takes charge of a man, young or old, society as sumes Jarge responsibility .for him de-jThat responsibility ls not discharged by merely confining him. :l Music hath charms, and ajnote of optimism will soon be heard to emanate from Gotham, now that Portland ls sending Its firemen's band to that hitherto benighted and discordant burg. : The Canadians were considerably terse Id Informing Thaw, that he is an undesirable citizen, when they might hare 'urialifled ' any number AISCHROLATREIA By Dr. Frank1 Crane. (Copyright. 1911, by Frank Crane.) By Dr. Frank Crone. . Alscnrolatreia la a rw1 timA Ku Frederic Harrison, and Ms definition Of it la "tha vnrihln' r th. ..i.. Mty, and the brutal." " , rv.6 human soul has Its lawa a "ira ma mw nr. h. him. k.. Keed the body enough alcohol and you win get delirium tremens.', Feed the ?..ul.10uan nual emotion, and cul tivate:, a With lntrnanrflr.n mnA ..... get aisehrolatfeia. , .rHmefotl"m bd' but emotional egotism is poison. i . The best part of life 8 feeling, but molt HWMy8.th,'bwt tnln8" tht most liable to ekcess. Beyond a cer tain point enthusiasm becomes mad ness, love becomes perversion, and the til .t J Deauty becomes the taste for Even In religious" emotion this is true. Ah Chnrlo. w t? ,., suallty." nmiaoie to toxic emotion is work, accomplishment, activity. Where one bas no task, nn i vi. ii me iaie class that is tlie dangerous class, because having no work the soul gives itself over to ararun ror new aanantinna Thi. 1. v.. , uinT opium, cocaine, or wiiiBjiry. Tlfe first buds of naaslnn in th i ire .tne most exquisitely beautiful of all human experience. Give yourself over to the pursuit of passion, however, and your end will be-ttnrmost horTTbTe vuiiure cunceivaole. Cubism and Futurism in art are the results of unrestrained love of beauty: they are that hldpnnsnaaa inr .hi..h egoistic emotional drunkenness leads. After awhile the art drunkard finds no oa.iaiuiwun in tn simplicities of nai ture; nothing, but the distorted can arouss him, just as after awhile the Victim of alcohnliam ha. rn to.,. ueer or nonest wine, but must have - - v i.nva Avi auKiiiuie, mescal, or vodka. It was because at the .m..i..i... danger of pleasure when followed sole ly, that the Puritans sought to pro hiblt it. But the master word of moral- i f. proniDition; it Is self .control. Life needs love, beauty, laughter, and i.r,.J"ea8ure or ""ions! inebriation- niwioui xnese the soul hardens. Yet with these, and without self-control, the soul fevers and decays. The law of life is not "NeVer!" It is "Never too much!" This was the motto of Socrates. A good example of the ruin of over emotionalism Is found in the poet Baudelaire. He gave himself up to feeling and to analyzing the emotions of his inner life. Typical of his phil osophy are these words from one of his Qrose-poems: "One must ever be drunken. Every, thing Is in that it is the only question. In order not to feel the horrible burden of Time that Is breaking your shoul ders, bending you earthwards, you must be ceaseleeBly drunken. "But with what? With' wine, poe try, or virtue, as you will only intox icate yourself; and if sometimes, on the steps of a palace, on the Kreen sward of a grave, or in the mournful solitude of your room, you wake to find Die Intoxication diminished or vanisneu, aifB or the wind, or the wave, or the star, or the bird, or the clock . . . ask what time it is; and the wind, wave, star, bird, and clock will tell you: 'It is time to be drunkpn 1 Lest you should be the martyred slaves of Time, be ceaselessly drunken! With Wine, poetry, or virtue, as you will." The life of Baudelaire went out in the impotence of despair, the agony of self-torture. His beauty worship fin ished In aischrolatreia. His sterile genius left nothing to mankind. Compare his sentiment with that of another man who gave as his life motive: "I must work the works of him that sent me, while It is day; for the night cometh when no man can woik." The life of this man has h.n a fountain of inexhausted passion for a inousanu years. NEWS FORECAST FOR THE COMING WEEK Washington, D. C, Aug. 2S. The Hague, the capital city of the' Nether lands, will be the scene of an event of world wide Interest Friday, when cere monies will be held in dedication of the Palace of Peace. The palace was erected with a 11,500.000 donation from Andrew Carnegie and ls to be the home and headquarters of the International permanent court of arbitration. The dedication ceremonies wU be attended by official representatives of the lead ing nations of the world. An event that will mark an epoch In the industrial development of a large section of the middle west will be the dedication of the great power dam that has been built across tne Mis sissippi river at Keokuk, Iowa. The dam Is nearly a mile In length and Is surpassed In size only by the great ! Nile river dam at Assouan. It Is de signed to furnish cheap and abundant electrical power to cities and towns throughout Illinois, lows, and Missouri. At the end of the week New York will welcome a most distinguished vis itor In the person of Viscount Haldane, Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain. Lord Haldane Is to visit America in response to an Invitation to deliver an address before the convention of the KATE BARNARD (From the Chicago Record Herald.) Kate Barnard, or "Kate," as she Is known to every man, woman and child In Oklahoma, far away from home and the friends she knows so well. Is ill and suffering from a general nervous break down. Bhe is on a farm near Middle ton, N. Y., and It is said her condition ls serious. The state of Oklahoma long has been noted for Its picturesque characters, but in all the west probably there is no par son better known for his or her work than Kate Barnard, who but a few years ago she Is now only SO was the daughter of a struggling farmer In Nebraska, and had never known a mother's love and care. Her mother died the day she was born. Miss 'Bar nard Is to Oklahoma what Jane Addams has been to Chicago, and her whole Ufa has been given to assisting the poof and unfortunate, in lightening their burdens by kindly acts of charity. Miss Barnard la commissioner of char ities and corrections of Oklahoma, but this is not all. She la also an Inspector of mines and. prisons and asylums, al ways seeking to assist the afflicted and unhappy. Little has she thought of her own health, working long hours in ah effort to solve some problem of reform for the benefit of mankind, and finally, under great strain, forced for a time to give up her labors and seek quiet and rest in a New York hamlet Miss Barnard was born In Nebraska, the daughter of parents who had gone from the south In search of a livelihood in the far west She was sent back south to be cared for by relatives, but when only a slip pf a girl was returned west and put on, the land her father bad claimed, to hold the homestead while h -sought to make a meager live' llhood by working in a near-by city. Buffering JJroro poverty and loneliness Inspired In '.'the bright-eyed, dark-haired little child warm sympathy for the American Bar Association at Montreal Before .proceeding trf Montreal he WtlJ spend several days In New York and vicinity and will visit West Point and otner piaces or interest. The bar association meeting tn Won treal will be preceded by the annual conference of the commissioners on Uniform State Laws, which will begin its sessions Tuesday. There will also bfe a conference of the Judiciary com. mittee of the bar association, which will be addressed Saturday by former President William H. Taft. . ... The sixth annual conference of gov. rnnri will asanmbla In Colorado Springs Tuesday for a session of five' days. The function of tne ,conierenee la to bring the stats governors together yearly for an exchange of views on subjects of general Importance, the pro motion of greater uniformity In state legislation, and the attainment of greater efficiency in the state admin istration. All the leading nations, all the states of -the Union, many American colleges and universities, and various other prominent educational, scientific, med ical and hygenic institutions and or iranisattons will be represented ftt th Fourth International Congress on School Hygiene, which will begin In Buffalo Monday and continue through the week. This will be the first meeting of tho organisation in America. As Us name Indicates, ths object of the organisa tion is to promote the health of school children. In addition to the programme of addresses and discussions there will bo displayed a scientific exhibit Illus trating the most notable achievements of the last few years in school hygiene. Cornell University, at Ithaca, N. Y., will be-the meeting place of another notable International gathering or tne week. This will be the Eighth Inter national Congress of Students. The con gress is a body of undergraduates from the leading universities of North and South America and of the principal countries of Europe. Its objects are to create a closer international under standing among students of all nations and to consider the problems common to students In every country. After strangely neglecting its most famous son for many years, the little city of Franklin, N. H., will on Thurs day pay a real honor to the memory of Daniel Webster. The occasion will mark the completion and dedication of the rehabilitated birthplace of the fa mous statesman. Memorial addresses are expected to be made by Senator Hoke Smith of Georgia, and Job K, , Hedges of New York. Another observance of historical In terest will be the celebration on Wed nesday of the1- centennial anniversary of the battle of Chrysler's Farm. This engagement of the war of 1812 occurred on the Canadian side of the St. Law rence, below Ogdensburg. between 1600 Americans under General Boyd, and 1600 British troops under Colonel Mor rison. The centennial celebration will be held at the scene of the battle and will be participated In' by prominent public men and a number of militia organizations of the Dominion. Letters From the People (CommuiitCHtlons tent to The Journal for pub lien Hon tn this department tboulu be written on oolj- one slda of the paper, nuouiu not exreea DUO words In lengtn. and inuat Iw at-eoniuanM br Ibe name and addrena of Ina aender. If tbe writer ion not desire to bar lo name pub. Itsbcd. bs should so state. 'DlMusalnn Is the STfatent of all reformer It rotlouallaes e-rytblng it touches. It 'otis principles of all (sir sanctlt.r and throus I hem oa.es un tneir ressonuuieness. 11 mrj bava no reasonableness it ruthlessly crushes them out of nlstence, and seta up lta own couvlusloua lu their stead." Woodrow Wilson, Another Sanitarium Protest. Portland, Or., Aug. 23. To the Kdltor of The Journal I have two children who play, with others, in the vicinity of the site of the proposed tuberculosis sanitarium at East Twenty-eighth and Tibbetts streets. To me, it seems in credible that our city officials should permit a thing of this- kind to bs locat ed within 600 feet of one of the largest public schools of Portland, where nun dreds of children will pass the place every day. Several residences Join the site. We have saved our money for years and have put it all Into our homes, and we have to pay heavy taxes and assess ments every year, and I should think we could have a little protection from the city to stop this tuberculosis sanl tarlum, for the health of our children and ourselves, and for the value of our property. I hope more will Join In the protest in this cause. MRS. MYERS. Lands Were Confiscated. Multnomah. Or., Aug. 23. To th Editor of The Journal While not wish ing to take sides one toay or the other in regard to the letters or J. ta. Jonn son against Socialism, I would like o challenge one of his main statements, that lands were not confiscated as the result of the Revolutloary war. As n matter of fact, the whole colonies were confiscated from their former owners, the king of England, etc. Specifically, the estates of Tories were confiscated by wholesale and they themselves driven from the country. (See John FlBke's Critical Period of American History, page 120.) The truth of It Is that there never has yet been a step made In human liberty without "confiscating" or deny ing some ancient privilege. II. DENLINQER. OF OKLAHOMA the poor. Later she was sent to a con vent and then taught a country school, and finally went to Oklahoma City to keep house for her father. Her first, opportunity to gain a wider knowledge of the world and Its people was when she was selected from a list of more than (00 applicants to attend the St. Louis exposition in charge of an Oklahoma exhibit, Then she received a similar offer to go to Portland, . but already had mapped out and made plans for her life's work. She went back home, inserted an advertisement in the news papers snd soon had in her possession clothing and food enough to feed and clothe more than 400 poor and destitute children. This attracted the attention of several charity organisations and they combined under the name of the United Provident association and elect ed Miss Barnard matron and provided an Income of $800 a month for her dis bursement. Seeking a wider field, the brave little woman organised the unem ployed and soon was finding work for many of the needy. She became identi fied with the American Federation 'of Labor, was made a delegate to the State Federation of Labor and also given a seat, in the trades council. It was while matron of the charity organisation that Miss. Barnard became a controlling spirit in the political life of Oklahoma City, - She was the only person who could vote the slum element independently of the saloon, and, If need bs, against the saloon. She made her first publte speech at a convention where were gathered the representative of the Farmers' union, the State Federa tion of Labor and railroad orders. Her plea was for ths insertion of a. cum. pulsory education and anti-child labor section tn the new constitution. She toured the state advocating her two pet hobbles and soon became known as a power In politics as well as a ohampion for theNSjaustf-tvt lUJt-jjoo-Aadjioiwv. IN EARLIER DAYS By Fred tockley. On June Mollis, In Newark, N.' J., there was born to Mr. and Mrs. James Tlchenor a son whom, they christened William. James Tlchenor was a deacon In the Presbyterian Churchy If the vista of the years could have been--unrolled and' if James and Abbia Tlchenor could" have looked at the unrolling screen of their son's future" there would have been Consternation and surprise. Probably it 'is fortunate that we can not look at pur child in Its cradle and see the record of the unborn years. The call of the sea was in their boy's blood and 'when Will was In his early teens he ran away to sea making several voyages to foreign ports. After some years as -a deep water sailor he became mate at the age of 18 of a steamer on ths Mississippi river in 1J31. Before he was 20 years old he was married. He moved to Indiana in 1635. Some years after his marriage he was converted and became a minister of the Christian church. He and Colonel. E. D. Baker, who later wrote his name large in Oregon's history, preached on the same circuit in Illinois. In 1848 he wus elected as a aenatpr from Edgar county Illinois, to the state senate but upon the news of the discovery of gold in Cali fornia he resigned from the senate and , started for California. Hundreds of vessels had been aban doned in the harbor at San Francisco, their owners and crew having gone to the gold fields. Captain Tlchenor was able to secure at trifling cost tho schooner Jacob Rlvson. He spent the winter of 'iS-'S aboard his schooner cruising the coast of Lower California and northern Mexico. In the spring of I860 he was given the command of tho full rigged brig Emily Farnham, plying on the run between San Francisco and Astoria. In March, 1S51, he was given command of tho steamer Sea Gull, a strongly built ves sel of over 400 tons, which -had the run from San Francisco to Portland and intermediate points. In April, 1861, Governor Qalnes Is sued, In tne name of the territory of Oregon, an appointment to Captain Tlch enor as a pilot of the Columbia river bar. This was the second pilot's com. mission Issued, Captain White having received the first. The freight rate from San Francisco to Portland was about 375 a ton. The cost of first class passage from San Francisco to Portland was $80. The wonderfully rich mines of south ern Oregon Induced Captain Tlchenor to. establish a supply point on the coast so that freight could be brought up from San Francisco, landed at the near est coast point and carried overland by pack train to the mines. Port Orford seemed to offer the closest and most satisfactory route, so on June 9, 1861, Captain Tlchenor secured nine men 'n Portland-to go to Port Orford as the first contingent of a colony to found a town at Port Orford. The nine men after a battle with the Indians In which 23 Indians were killed at what ls now known as Battle Rock, escaped to the settlements on the Umpqua river. Captain Tlchenor In writing of the affair says: "Ths report of the sup posed death of the nine men caused much feeling. There wss very little difficulty In finding volunteers to go up the coast ,as it cost them nothing and the streets of San Francisco were thronged with destitute idlers willing to go anywhere so long as their want was supplied. We reached port Or ford July 14, 1861, with 67 men under the command of James 8. Gamble. Two block houses were erected and plans were made for a permanent settlement The ship proceeded upon herAoyage to Portland where I bought six horses, some hogs and provisions and engaged W. O. T'Vault, who had been recom mended highly by Colonel Phil Kearney, an' old school mate of mine at Newark. N. J. I filed my notification and set tler's oath at Surveyor General Pres ton's office in Oregon City. On July 26, 1861, the shin sailed on her return voyage. "On arriving at Port Orford it was found necessary to send 14 of tho most desperate and Insubordinate of the men back to San Francisco." On her return trip from Portland the steamer brought Dr. Anson Dart, tho superintendent of Indian affairs for Oregon territory, accompanied by Dr. Spalding and Rev. Parrlsh, two mis sionaries with Dr. Marcus Whitman, who had been killed by the Indians st the Whitman mission. Lieutenant Why- man, from Major Hathaway's commanl at Astoria with a detachment of troops and the mountain howitzer, was also aboard. Shortly after the arrival of the In dian commissioner and his party at Port Orford, W. Q. T'Vault, who had been sent out by Captain Tlchenor In charge of a party to survey a road from Port Orford to the southern Oregon mines, arrived clad in the fragments of his shirt and told of the attack on his party by the Indians and the killing of five of his men. Rev. Parish accom panied by two Indian interpreters, went to the mouth of the Coqullle to inves tigate the cause of the 'attack on T'Vault's party. He Interviewed the Indians making the attack and on the way back to Port Orford, accompanied by Sa-qua-ml the chief, Rev. Mr. Parrlsh was killed. The Columbia and Sea Oull were char tered to bring Colonel Casey with his cavalry 'and artillery to Port Orford. Company C of the First Dragoons, wa brought up In the Sea Gull from Ben ecla. Lieutenant 8toneman, who later became governor of California, attacked the Indians at their ctnp on the Co qullle river and killed a large number of. them with the howitzer and the rlflo fire of his troops. On January 28. 1862, the Sea Gull was wrecked while crossing the Hum boldt bar, Captain Tlchenor saved all of his passengers, however. Captain Tlchenor brought his family to Port Orford on May , 1862, and in 1888 he quit the sea ant) lived in -Port Orford till his death on July, 28, 1887. For any years his son. J. B. Tlchenor and family lived In Salem. Two of his grandsons live in Portland, one being a city detective and the other an em ploye of the P. R., L. A P. Company. . i i Pointed Paragraphs Isn't it queer how little a bigot IsT Nothing prospers ilk the grafter for a time. a a The less account a dog Is the mora a woman likes It. a a Many a girl who thinks she Is pretty . is unable to prove It. ' Before riving advice to a woman find out; what brand she wants, or a man . either, ' . ..' .. ' 1 vi-'.v,. : v The' more things you attempt to do the fewer you will accomplish.1 s - - -:'' . ', Jl woman is awfully disappointed whe4tftrirorat auspicloof fall t come r l.r ..i.....".'U-4-.