THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL. PORTLAND, MONDAY EVENING; AUGUST 25, . 1913. .. THEJOURNAK ' A3 !KDEPBNDE?T IKWBP4PK rj .Puhltobar J"Ututif vrrr TrulUR trirept KonJ and ry BTCt broraln. (t Tba Journal Ball. ' Ing. Rrndw.T and Yamhill w.. Hnrtlaad. Or. . urn-ad al tb MtHU at Him In m- Or, for , r,i.nnRiv inruusB i3 OJalut mwusi .aner. f:- IT I tLl.l-uuNKK Mat T1TS1 Horn. A-OM. so All department michrd by tlw noBbwj, n, tii m opwtwr wfriit 1ptrtmm Ton ! - JuMfclUN AUVfeiUTIcilNU KKf HtSliNTATI Vg Beajanihi Kaotoor Co., brunawlrk BulMla. , r Ui rlftn iMiiit, Kw Vvrk; IS 1'tapl . hulldliig. CbH-aro. . uucriiiuv Ivrius b mail or t 4a Uio Hulbril Statea or ktesicel DAILY Mu (U' ......U.UO I OM attbtk I SON DAT Out J-aar ...... .12.90 I Oar month t -28 DAILY AK SUXOAT On I'.J I IM moi.tb . But w all are men, In our own natures frail; and :.. capable Of -our. flesh, few are angels. jri, Shakespeare. ASTORIA'S RATE FIGHT HE! importance of Astoria's suit before .the Interstate Com merce Commission for common- point railroad rates on a par with, Seattle and Tacoma need not b 1 magnified. It Is not Astoria's fight alone; it is the Columbia ba sin's fight, and whatever advantages Astoria ,roty secure through a favor able decision, will be shared by Port land and every other city, village and farming community adjacent to the Columbia river. ' ; ; - The "cost of haul" principle, long Recognized by the commission, ' "should ' determine the suit In As toria's favor. There Is no excuse tor present discriminatory and pre ferential rates given Puget Sound k gainst the Columbia river. These rates are justifiable neither in law hor morals. They are relics of days Jvhen railroads were allowed to build Jjp one community at . the expense of another. There is no more justi fication -of discrimination- against a city than against an individual, and the commission has prohibited both sorts of .discrimination in many in- : stances . 1 ' ;' J Portland never has received the benefit of her natural advantages Jn rates. , The ' Washington railroad commission established rates to- Pu get Sound based on the mountain haul, which were lower than to Portland : on a .,' water-level haul. Hates to Portland were then fixed on ' the same basis as Sound rates, 'Although' there were no mountains Iq "Crosse . In other words, the moun tain rate has controlled the Portland rate. ' " ' ; But, Astoria, with higher ratea and ' water-level grades, still was left at . the mooth of the -Columbia practi cally marooned 80 far as rail traf fic ia concerned; "' , I It is not. material now that these "discriminatory rates r have long ex isted. Bat it ia material that Port land join with 'Astoria in her fight for equitable rates. ' 'The past had en obscured view of the problem; the present must Bee it in its true light Portland in former days de hied Astoria's claim to equitable J-ates, and while Portland was busy bpposlng that city's demands Seattle an! Tacoma f orgod ahead as ship ping points. It were better had Portland's energies been devoted to securing just rates as compared with Puget Sound. But that was an er tot of the past; the present necessity - 1b to secure -for the Columbia basin Tights to which it Is entitled. - Rates route traffic, and traffic Guilds up cities and farming dis tricts. Opening of the Panama ca , jial will mean little to the Colum bia Jiver if shippers are denied Use of the nearest seaport. They aye now denied use of the port of As- - torla because of preferential rates. They are denied ubo of the port of Portland, because much traffic hits been diverted to Puget Sound. It is a wrong against, not otly Port-t - iand, but the entire body of people v frhose natural outlet to the sea is felong the Columbia river. . The railroads -may object to hav ing their established-rate program disturbed. But if they fight the ' present; suit they will fight their pv-n interests, for it is not good business for a railroad to haul heavy loads over mountains when the loads could be hauled along water grades. The children's bureau' of the United States department of .labor recently issued a monograph- saying that 800,000 babies less than a year old die in America each year. Over 42 per cent of them die within one month of birth. Filth in various phases and forms la the direct cause of this army of babies being carried outflLJittle graves. Drunken fathers; diseased, undernourished and devitalized mothers; impure food, flies, dirt, neglect, poverty, ignorance, squalor, foul air, heat, cold, hunger and other allies' of filth out-Herod Herod in a slaughter of the innocents. If a baby is worth having it is worth saving. What can be said of a city that kills Its babies? And yet indifference to filth is kill ing them. Portland has an enviable reputation so far as baby slaughter is concerned, but so long as even one Portland child because of filth adds to the sum total of the na Uon's dead children, the local cam paign must continue. people do , expect soma immediate benefit, and they , are certain ' that benefits will be progressive. It may take soma time for the country to get back on a basis of fairness and common honesty. Othe tariff laws must ba enacted before the millen lum Is reached,1 but the Underwood bill is heading us In the right direc tion. ' If the Galllngers and the Oronnas were as frank on -tariff matters as are the bill's sponsors, the reaction aries would be less tiresome, and perhaps less amusing. PATRICK CALHOUN THE CURRENCY BILL P' OLITICS makes strange bedfel lows, and so does the currency bill. The country Just tow Is treated to the spectacle of fiat money advocates fighting the pend ing Mil on the ground that It ia a bankers' measure, and at the same- time bankers represented at the Chi cago conference up in arms against the same bill on the ground that it does not meet their approval. The fiat money people have little claim for recognition, and the con ference bankers are equally without substantial ground upon which , to stand. These bankers object to "po litical" eontrol of the federal re serve board through appointment of Its members by the president. They wish control lodged with the bank ers. They also wish one great cen tral reserve bank instead of twelve regional banks as provided in the bill. No populist convention ever assembled engaged in more heated debate than did the bankers in Chi cago. - The president and friends of the bill in congress are upholding the cause of sound-banking in the face of flat money heresies. They should be supported, not harassed, by in telligent bankers. The president's firm stand against members of his own party is evidence that the bank ers' political control argument is not Bound nor1 convincing. The issu ance of money is a governmental function, and it should never be delegated to private individuals or private capital. The federal reserve board should be named by the pres ident, even though he Is a political officer, and the bankers' Insistence for places on the board is not hacked by sound doctrine. ' ,. The demand for elimination of the regional reserve banks Is out of harmony with the whole purpose of the bill. Our banking system should not center In one city, New York, as at present. Domination of New York by speculation has in times of stress dominated the entire country by Wall street gamblers, and legitimate business has been prostrated while the stock market's credit requirements were given first consideration. The Aldrich currency plan was approved unqualifiedly by the Na tional Bankers' convention of 1911, and last September the national con vention adopted a resolution to the effect that the bankers' association would cooperate with anybody and everybody In devising a proper bank ing system. Several of the pending bill's provisions now objected to by the bankers are identical with the Aldrich plan, which they approved unqualifiedly two years ago. The Glass-Owens bill may not be perfect in all details, but it em bodies sound principles of banking and statesmanship in ,. refusing to place control of money issuance in the hands of bankers. The insur rectionists at Chicago must not be allowed to secure a compromise on this vital point, even though they have wittingly or unwittingly allied themselves with fiat money advo cates In opposition to the bill. I T Is announced that the man agement of the United Railroads of San Francisco is to pass from the hands of Patrick Calhoun According to one report this fifty minion aoiiar corporation witn us two hundred and sixty odd miles of street railway has come under the control of the Flelschhacker syndi cate which- is largely interested in electric power In California and In this state. This report is not con firmed, but the change of manage ment of the system is unquestioned Coming on the eve of a special elec tion on the proposition to . Issue three and one half million dollars worth of bonds to build up a mu nicipal railway ayatem, the an THE HEALTH CITY THE TARIFF DEBATE I DR. MARCELLUS, city health of ficer, Is ambitious that Port land be known as the health a,. city. 'Such ambition is com mendable, for it looks toward hap . plneasv nd happiness Is a city's most prized -possession. In the . Health Bulletin, the department's monthly publication. Dr. Marcellus calls attention to Portland's natural Advantages of location, topography, llmate and water supply. He says everybody should Join In a cam paign for cleanliness, which must result n a lower death rate, Port land's record already being very close to the top. He says: -.Filth In more dangerous than thugs nd murderers in our midst. It kills mora people In the world than all the Wars combined. Therefore, the man who harbors filth la a public menace -tie more, so If he la a caterer to public wants. - ; Portland's death rate is only 8.59 per one thousand inhabitants. Among American, cities Portland is jecond only to, Seattle, and Dr. Mar rellus is not satisfied. He should not be satisfied until Portland as a health city is so far In advance of Other cities that there will be no. (lose comparison. - ' The health officer is right In say lug that filth kills more people than ars. He is right in Insisting ttpcfn If anlineaa. , Think of the, defense less babies that are killed by filth. ft THE senate tariff debate were pot so tiresome it would be mlld- ,ly amusing at Intervals. The other day Senators Galllnger and Gronna secured Democratic admis sion that no claim is being made of certain and definite cuts in the cost of living through operation of the law when It goes Into effect. There fore, according to the Ga lingers and the Oronnas, the Underwood bill is admittedly a failure. Wheq the English reform bill was pending In parliament in 1882 Syd ney Smith admitted that nobody claimed the impossible for the act. People who expected an Immediate drop in the price of beer were doomed to disappointment That admission was used by opponents of the bill, and now the Galllngers and Gronnas are using similar Dem ocratic admissions as an argument for higher duties on butter and po tatoes. Suppose the cost of living does not fall Immediately and materially. Champions of the tariff bill have been frank about its Inability to accomplish the Impossible; they are claiming nothing except what may reasonably be anticipated. The pub lic recognizes evils of the present system of exorbitant tariffs, and the obstructionists are creating little Im pression upon the country in shout ing about small results claimed for the bill. , Nobody; expects, when the new laW goes into effect, an immediate halving of the - cost of livings But nouncement of the passing of Cal houn has a deep significance and marks the closing of one of the moat turbulent periods In the his tory of the street railroads of the Bay City. Patrick Calhoun is a strong per sonality and he has in his conduct of the affairs of the United Rail roads encountered the opposition of individuals, labor unions and popu lar sentiment for municipal rail roads, fostered to a great extent by the antagonism of the labor unions. The system was organized in 1902 by the merging of several compa nies. Among these were a number of cable roads and it was sought to electrify them. There was a strong public feeling' against this and authority to make the change ould not be obtained, from the city government. With the fire and earthquake of 1906 came Calhoun's opportunity. The city was In the bands of Abraham Ruef and Eugene Schmitz. Transportation was almost destroyed. A franchise to electrify the roads was obtained at a cost, as brought out in the celebrated graft trials, of a quarter of a mil lion dollars, paid to Ruef, Schmitz and supervisors. In the exposure Calhoun was In dicted among others, on the charge of bribery, but the indictment was afterwards quashed. Shortly after the fire came a strjke by the street railway em ployes. After a long and bitter fight this was broken by Calhoun and for the past six years - the roads have been operated on a non-union basis. ' While the feeling engendered by the strike was at its height of bit terness, a movement sprang up to make the Geary street line, whose franchise had expired, a municipal road. Calhoun fought to prevent this, but was forced to yield to pub llo sentiment . The policy of Calhoun was .the old policy of public service corpora tions toward the public, a policy that is fast passing away. His go ing will be followed by a bitter feel ing towards the United Railroads of San Francisco by the residents of that community. It great Influence tomorrow In the re sult of the bond election for munici pal roads. Washington that he' had "made"f. Governor Johnson of California, and the Japanese will "' now be able to place the responsibility where it bo- lengs. . ;:' Becoming familiar and. almost at ease with the critical aspect of the Mexican, situation, we fear that if it ceased to be I critical something serious might happen to somebody preferably Huerta. The life of a Tacoman who rolled over a cliff was saved by a stout shoestring, but not without a period of painful suspense. One ot the'' best indorsements yet heard of Mayor Gaynor. is that he has been -deserted by Tammany. PERTINENT .COMMENT AND, NEWS IN BRIEF SMALL CHANGE Th automobile is about as great a iir, as- a war. . - Thaw may not be lmian. hut be is a fool for not biding' whlla. , ' Utters From the People (Commnnltatiena ml ta Tha Inurnal for Dub, llcatlon In this department should be written on onlj one dot ot the paper, bould not exmed 800 words la lorif th, and nrait b aroompitDlPil by tbe nam and addrm of tha lender. It tb writer doe aot dealra to hare th nam pub Uabed, he ihould o itate.) k "Dlncowton la th areateat of all reformer. It rationallMl Tory(blo It toucbea. It rob principle of all fair aaootity and throw them bank on their reaaonablantw. If they hiT ao reuonableoeu It ruthlewlr crush them out of xUtnee, and act up It own conclusion la thalr atead." Woodrow Wtlaon. In Criticism of Gompers. Portland, Aug. 24.- To tha Editor of Tha Journal .Tha contrast , of .Gom pers' leadership of the labor movement with that of th I. W. W. Is being very much considered now by tha average workman. Gompers has pulled down a nice blar salary aa president of tha Fed eration of Labor for over 25 years. For most of that time ha had been a stand pat Republican, and therefore not only has stood .for all the false teachings that implies, but ha has been very ac ceptable, not merely to the clique which has kept him in office, but to the very opponents of labor. At last a new king has come, for the present, in the form of tbe I. W. W. movement.' Compere aeea It. HI editorial in the American Federationist proves It. Qompera is a selfish conservative and unfit for true leadership. Tha I. W. W., while It may be born of the unwashed, has felt tha branding: Iron of poverty, and It is cer tainly more responsive to the awful in justices of our economic conditions than leaderahln which Uvea at the best hotels.. travel In Pullman coaches and hobnobs with the Mark Hannaa of finance, etc The Lawrence strike did some good. It helped Mr. Wllaon In his election to the presidency, and It will , help us to get wool on the free list in the new tariff law. The Journal can't object to that, surely. There are no "Impossible Ideals" in that. Mr. Gompers very well describes the conditions of the working people In his editorial aa "undernourishment In spare . No currency reform can reform the currency poverty ir some men s pockets. A noted automobile racer has retired; he wants to live years Instead of weeks or monms. - , :. , . - .. . ... .-.-;, ,': . Alter an carping; ana caviling, a great aeai or real retorm la all fields is DcJng erteutea. - a FrobabIy.lt ) only the exceptional person, and the fat on, who can safely auai.it in nun, sauna tor weens. And if the air isn't fresh enough In the country for children who live there. i coy micni oe sent to roruana, . v Of course, Bryrfn might : reduce his church and cjiarity expenses, but no one is going to advise him, to do so. .-' .;. How th cost of living will tumbl when cne can rid on th streetcars six times Instead ot five for 25 cents. ' ,. V '' All Tfimmany's many and long con tinued Inequities, are not a feather's weight of defense for Bulser, . if what he is charged with be true.y . ' It would be a brave ' higher eourt in a certain sons that, on a trivial tech nicality, would reverse the juet verdict and judgment in. tha Dlggs case. OREGON SIDELIGHTS IN EARLIER PAYS '; " '-;-;-.;. By Fred Lockloy. 1 "Every one in a while I run across a For a sloaran good enoua-fo for thn new I and lust municipality of Molalla the sraphio account of th fight with Indiana editor of the Fjoneer offers a year's t Table Rock. In Southern Oregon," subscription . . , said Judge WllUam M. Colvlg of Med With a school of whale off hor and tot?' ot th accounts, whiU mor plenty of summer girls on the beach, s interesting, have one fatal defect, th Signal says, Newport ia managing and that Is they are' lies. The.r wasn't to keen on th. map as, an attractive any fight at Table Rock. ; v resort. ' V -I -;; .'There-are not many people How alive Among articles sealed up la th cor- wo nave first hand knowledge ot th nerstona of the new Masonla bulldlna fact, thou arh n r n.cimm .Tntrann. at Tillamook were a package of local vllle. myself and one or two other are picture po.t cards and aom ourrent the B7, T UJJ booster literature. . , only onea I know, of who possess .... . personal knowledge of th matter, V ' Alhorr Masrara of Ralnm. who fr-a "I came to Orernn A3 vpura am. I dosen yeara ha traveled In-summer was born in Ray county, Missouri, on, iay,?hath September .,18, not fur from, the coition ainow.y " V - birthplace of-Jessr Jmer-W are al-" . WOt of an age. H was about a year Baker Herald: While the people back old when Z was bom. Jesse James earn . In bleeding Kansas hav, been closing of an excellent family. 7 Hi atep-fathr their places of business on account of aiid my father nraetiMiii mwttotn L th in heat, people in Baker county wr '5 t , medicine in the getting out their winter underwear. m? wn and thir offlcea wer al- Sjn a m mt tm aW 1 a ' . i ...uv Kjua dj aiae. . The Htuvtnn Mall has renorta of a I "We started for Oreeon on K. number, of surveyors at work on both 1161, We had 2 wagons. The one with nonlwTh men belong, but It presumes their ; " " n. presence mean another railroad in family traveled had two yoke. W ar Stayton, ' I rived In Oregon with the light wagon To make La Grande the best Ha-htedl?? a ?8t."v .f 'ur city in th north we.t, to insure con- lo naon me neavy. struetion of the Second street subway I wagon on the plains. , at a coat of considerably over 130,000, "Ther wer fiv children in our fam- 5n.lAlAru',h, th9 construction of a Jjlg tly who cam across th plains. My 1,260,000 gallon reservoir were improve- brother Judra Volnav rnM m., w ment , transaction of th city council rV ,JU?;" yoiny Colvig, Myea hr i uranila- at it lest regular es w tocmwiy county sit on. OREGON'S JUNIOR SENATOR Sam G. Blyth. In Saturday Evening Post. The gentleman who first enunciated that sterling axiom: "Many men, many minds," surely had th congress of the United States for his Inspiration, and concretely must have considered the senate thereof as th real, underlying, baslo plot for th pronouncement. Hurdling gracefully over th obtrusive thought that mind, aa ojbserved in fre quent congressional instances, i purely a relatlv trm. has t ever occurred to you that the greatest mushroom expert of th northwest now Inhabit tha sen ate, wearing one of th two togas al' lotted to Oregon and bearing th neat little name of Harry Lane not Henry Lane, or Hank Lane or Heinle Lane, but Harry? Feasibly not, but such Is th fact. Harry Lane Is the greatest mushroom expert of the northwest, and a dashing daredevil of a mushroom ex pert at that, for h often traces to their fungusy lair in the giaaea aeout rot land mushrooms that many another might think were not mushroom at all, and eats 'em, thus taking his life in his fungus, so to apeak and ao far h has eacaped. So far he ha escaped: On many a .w av .nff Af I Tf am T in. hm rm rlc (H Domes, me airmncu, ijuiigiy i back to town things that were the veri est caricatures of mushrooms, and stewed them, and smacked his Hp over them, while th neighbors stood poised ready to hustle for th ambulance, the stomach pump, the undertaker and the reporters to tell what a useful and ef ficient putdlo citlsen he was was do you get that? But on each occasion Harry ha had the laugh on them and the mushrooms in him, and for this rea son he has com to be known aa U greatest mushroom expert in the north west. those who "live In dark, squalid and fetid rooms called homes." Before Gomper led th lbor move ment things could not have been worse. Why doesn't Gomper atop thiT Th I. W. W. propose an economic change. Gompers 1 satisfied with his job, and tha salary. He talk qf the working people "having their sense of justice inflamed." For a labor leader, wouldn't that Jar you? Doesn't he know that the return to labor, In productive em ployments. Is but one-fifth of the pro duct? How can you Inflame their sense a 4uaH wVian It la aivatr Inflamed bv such an enormous wrong-T A" Harry Lane I a doctor, too, thus Gomper talks of constructive leader- impinging on on of Old Doc Galllnger Rhlr. imnlvlne- that ha la of that tvrj. claim to lam as n onty pnyaician in Let u test that by the faot. Som th senate. h wlU handy to hav years ago the dock laborers of th port j round whenvr on of th tariff or of New York and New Jersey were un- i ator 1 overcome by th heat, or aom organised, and consequently their right , fiend In human form put something were abused. Frequently the boss steve-. besides egg and milk in th egg and dor compelled their men to work from milk he take for refreshment and I 30 minute to two hours overtime dally carried gasping from tb room. Mor- without any compensation, and at thai over. Harry Lao has been superintend same time th state of New York had ! nt of an Insan asylum, but there la on It statute book an eight hour law. Those conditions remained until on day an unknown Irishman from Liverpool, England, named Edward McHugh, cam to America to organise the International Dock Laborers' union. no need to dwell upon that end of it, for few man are responsible for thlr actions and thought when th tempera ture I 106 In Washington, and they ars talking about a chemical schedule or a corrupt plan for rediscountlng commer- Under 'the most difficult conditions j clej paper at a regional reserv bank without th impairment of the national credit. Anyhow, Harry Lan stttled all that. imaginable, by th method of street peaking from barrel and boxes, and though very often arrested by th po- may have a!,lce' he .ueceeded In organising 60,000 few aay, ,np h- Ma e0tn9 0f . . J.. T2A ;w I th enat h observed: "Huh. I know !La8" .;rae,i "LV"t !all about those fellow In there. I ustd mem- ptua uvm ,i,v in gw inn , K an nvlnm vnu IrnAW alone. When McHugh had all th dirty L1.19?" "1"! .Uw,f.W: ETHICS IN SCHOOLS I N HIS "Education of Tomorrow," Arland D. Week urges the teach ing of broad morals in public schools. He would not confine ethical instruction within narrow limits. Indicated by general under standing of the term morals, hut would have children taught the prin ciples of production and distribu tion, making economics a part of the child's technical training, of course not forgetting the academic fundamentals. There ia virtue in Mr. Week's sug gestion that boys and girls be told early in life it is Immoral to be a parasite. Production is a necessary antecedent to consumption, and there is established ground for claiming it is socially Immoral for a person to consume what another produces without giving in return one's own product in equal value. This type of Immorality is respon sible for most of the political and industrial troubles how worrying people. There is great need for .advanc ing the cause of morals. President Wilson has undertaken the task In legislation. Much of the opposition he encounters is because men along In years do not learn readily. They should have been taught ethics early In life and thus prevented, in later years, from becoming stumbling blocks in the way of- Justice., But our understanding of morals is broadening. A few years have re corded wonderful advancement in the ability and disposition to Care fully distinguish between right and wrong--not merely between some forms of right and some formi of wrong. America is advancing because the country Is becoming educated ethically. Mr. Week's suggestion that tSls education start In the pub lic schools Is worth a trial. As John Llnd is still very much alive, the reports of his death at the hands of an assassin were presum bjyvexaggerated. , ..'. ',' -; , -vJ,'. Rudolph Sprockets announced be fore a. senatorial 7: commission . at ,v- '.:..',-' ' :r " ':.-:, work done Gompers Jumped In and stole the organization. This is evidently what he mean by "constructive leadership." JAS. R. BROWN. But I that is neither here nor there; and may. hap he didn't say It, as perchance he did. What boots It? A Widow Asks Questions. Portland, Aug. 2S, 1918. To th Ed itor of The Journal On the subject of paying the water bills three months in advance T would like to have a word. I am a widow and my son gets very small wages; so low I can't pay three months in advance, even If I wanted to do sor for I am also a renter and for more rea son than on a person will sometimes have to move. If one ha paid that far in advance, what could one do? I don't believe one could get the money back: anyway, not without a great deal of time and trouble. Do you think in law they could compel one to pay that way? If one had paid In advance a month and still offered to do so, could they shut the water off if one rafuued to pay any farther In advance? Now for another question: Why does the pure food lawr'allow butrhera and other dealers to sell fowls with the en trails and crop still In? When the law was passed in Idaho they were all warned not to sell fowls In that condi tion, and after several were fined they uuit It We had a good health officer There, I not the pure food law the same all over the United States? There certainly Is nothing pure or healthful In a fowl In the condition described. Besides, the crop or craw TVelgha from three-quarters of a Pound to on rtAiinft and the entrails another half pound so that is throwing money into the garbage pall with a vengeance. We did not have to pay as much a pound for chicken " 'W" n laano as we do her, either. . a SUBSCRIBER, Multnomah's Game of Bridge. Portland, Or., Aug. 23. To the Editor of Th Journal When a new tax or bond Issue Is proposed, w naturally ak: Can we afford tt7 On the pro portion of a bond issue of 12,000.000 for a bridge over the Columbia, we may have to face the problem of paying our shar of 6 per cent on that amount. We can hardly assume that the bridge tolls will yield that amount th first year It is opened to traffic. It can be as sumed that even the flret year the tolls will amount to 11 00.000 abov expenses That would be 6 per cent. Our Clark county (Wahlngton) friends estimated this from th profits of tb Vanoouver ferry. I hav watched th development of traffic across the Columbia for 27 years. From my ob. srvntlon, I am confident that only about half of tht traffic passed over tne ferry. . Much' come by river and railroad that would com by wagon or trolley, which would come by bridge if It wer made convenient and reason ably cheap. ,In a few year the "tax payers of Multnomah county Will not only be relieved from paying" Interest on tbe brldg bonds, but in less than a fen. Lane is a native Oregotolan. The first lime he appeared before th public was in 1S87, when he wa mad superintend ent of th stats hospital for the nsan at Salem. Lane was and is a Democrat, and he was selected for hW post by Gov ernor Pennoyer, also a Democrat, whose greatest claim to fame is that upon anj oocasion nevremarKea narsniy io in late Grover Cleveland, .at the moment president of the United States, that if Mr. Clvland would mind bis own busi ness he, Pennoyer, would do the same.' Lane didn't hold himself aloof at the asylum. He visited all the patients and found out about them. He discovered a man, quite craxy on various matter, but Ban on th matter of sustenance, who told him a lot of things about the food famished by th state for the pa tients. This man became th food ex pert for tha musnroom expert twin souls, so to speak. The result of It was that Lane made so vociferous a protest - that he and Governor Pennoyer had a most eXclama. tory warfare about th matter, and Lanequit and Went back to th practice of medicin. ,:' " This was in 1901. Along In 1905 they sort of '.wished- the nomination for mayor of Portland on Lane.. H didn't particularly-want it, being concerned Judge of Josephfn county. ' Another brother, Judg George W, Colvig, lives In Grants Pas. My nistr, Mrs. A. -A, Emery, lives in Ashland. I Uv in Mad ford, and my other brother, John Lewis with hi Inve.tlgation. of mushrooms ? bjr h IndUnJ!; ' and other scientific subjeots, but h got cnlff ' scouts. There wer five In it, ano ne aratea tne patriarcnat Georg H. Williams, who had bn at th Indian, four- of th party wr torny general in on of the Grant eabt- killed. net and was the grand old man of Ore "We arrived In Portland oh October 6, gon. Tb city oounoil was Republican 1561. and Lan had his troubles. He wanted "My father was born In eesburr, to quit at th end of his term, but the Va. His father was born in Paris.' When Democrats renominated him and he waa my grandfather cam from Franc he reelecfsd. Th third Urn they tried-It Anglaslsed our nam. It had been Col- h flatly refused. Vlgne, so he dropped th W -when h He waa an lntereating mayor. Tbe cam to Virginia. My mother was bom municipal government of Portland never , Htf0rd. Conn. My father and lacked for excitement while h was in mother met ln 0n, wh.ra moth O n ft I SWA aVaT afe fAII Vnff SMl Wn 9 M affa Mr aa Mm hai"ll -v O X V a lit, 14 X tvJ mr I rQ aa tannhfnat aa at I. a 1 Taa.1 r T of the executive boards, and raoit of eadv .d mv father rVtSli them reatgnd. H had th town stlrr.d ?!.'. " 7 th r&iM1 bs lift all Ik il-rte Da(w -.ntHMi 1. f rtf-tlr I w . a ' H Vw v va , w ww an ax one day and went out and knocked x?m " m roruana s eeny a hoi In the wall of the old Marquam rnsrehsnt. and my father cam from Grand theatre, then Portland's leading the same part of Virginia, so when w playhouse. It wa so easy he chopped m to Oregon Tom Carter met u at various other hole In tha walls and Csscad Rapids and brought our family floors of thla temple of Thspis, and down to Portland on th steamer Lot finally" ordered the place closed aa un- Whltcomb. My father cam with th safe, much to the disgust of many lead-- thre oxen and the 'wagon over th ing eitlsens. Also he secured a couple mountain trail, of sharp pointed ateel rods, and he had "Mr. Carter took us to bia horn. I a way of Journeying out along newly remember h took all of us children to paved treet and jabbing holes her nli ,tor, and gay, each of ui hat an(1 and titer Just to see If th pavements a mi, et shoes tEI'iinS ? tnMHl0"'. tirst chW I attended was her this lin of investigation incensed the . ..,.. , IV ,. , ,., T, " navin.- . wi.k k... ,B Portland, In th fall of 61. It wa it secured a lot of good pavements for " bT a man named Stephen Out Portlands house. we moved Into the hous ext to At th end of Lan's second term aa Tom Dwyer. He had his newspaper of- mayor the people said of him: "H's rlc 111 hi hous. .My brother and eocentrlo. but h'a honest." and Lane frank i,all bad the job once a week of grinned and began practicing medicin I running the hand press to print th again. He wa a doctor from 1901 until I Oregonlan. If I remember correctly 1912, when he went Into th prlmarl Urfy ran off 200 or S00 copies each week. as a candidate for senator. As our best "In th spring of "63 father took th classical author would nvr say, h gold f,vr, and with on light wagon had a cinch. Ther were running for and oxen we startd for th mtnss of fndan'Jt0 n!"n,f,UUr " southern Oregon. About il mil, .outh i?vePdn? .nUabhnt"nA Pror: of Ros.burg th. oxn pUy4 out and th h,m on rasa laaax stas Thu. wa. th. greate.t mu.hroom ex- hlm Titl tor e,a,m- At ny rat pert of the northwest nrolaeted in in tha father went ahead and proved, up on it. senate, and he 1. there now, just a 11 wta near Cany on vt 11. There waa a curious a. in his earlier day. when h Indian village, on on comer of the inquired into th Oregon brand of Piace, so w children soon learned Cht- fungu. and punched the hole, in tha nook. Portland paving. "i think it wa. on th tenth of Oc- somsbody told him one that thara tober. 18KS. that mv brother and I came wa. considerable jobbery In Indian af. ln from hunting th cow and saw a rairs down at tb capital, and when th whit hors covered with blood stand- ;.'.ll.-lfP.1lOPtvtton. bU1 cmm up ,op " hy th front door ef our log cabin, repassage in the extra ses.lon of con- w hurried Into th hous to see what Jrlalna? bin ?Jn. it.li VV.ld th5 w" the matter. W. found father with Sssertiin. ;oVo'th ll'J1' .nd i kntf working on a man lying on S?ens who wa. in cha? of Sf. bm'Jo th ',oor' wnU thw WM uTln our when it seamed If Senator flton. WM B,U RU8,ll and ha nafl bu!- would take off one of "hi. .111. 1st wound. He told ua that th In- nd hurl it at Harry. Which would aIn naiJ hrokn out and killed Weaver, hav been a bldeou. hurl, and not at all nl PrtD,r. and a lot of other .ettlers in accordance with the tradition. between Canyonvlll and Jacksonville. conventions of the greatest deliberative and around Grant Pas. Russell stayed legislative lorum in the world. I all winter witn us. ratner patcned him up, and he got well and ia alive t He One during a Japanese fen Asm nn tV. I IIvab at Anhliinfl coast Harry came to bat with the in- "My father and J. C Fullertcn. th lll, Jl: t0r . ,enel of oon- father of Judge Fullwton of R9seburg. IVrtJP t.Vtl:e?'1,jr of the war ae- anothr settler.' eomblned te hire a K mm f fc'Jt "L" were taoner' Th.y built a log sehoolhouse pSftUnS" wlthWVirwWtok" LS !.mr and Y? Sam Strong as leacher. when the yellow narll ah.n .;,. LTI Anay Pul nlm unaer oonas nor. to get the City of Roses' It is not ranort-.i 5runlc durlnK tM rour mong school, what th senator desired ?o do about Ha mnX eUh,r' thouKh ,atsr a,e'1 this alarming state of affair, but it la of al,r,uni tremens. Our next teacher quite probable he had a plan for wel. wa" a mllA an1 ,noffen8lva.'Httl Jw. coming the yellow narll hn.r,t.hi ..1 named Isldor Choyn.kl. 'W boya feeding It toadstool. In.tead of mush- knocked him out in two months. He room., to the consequent discomfort and was a tlrald mt,e 'allow. He w.i the death of the Invaders. And Harry Is the 'ather of Fighting Jo Choynsklj th -?t,y-WJ10 know.' tn Ptrreroua fungi pfix. fighter, when he .ee. there. Doublet that glide "Our next by you eratlon the great bridge will Bay for itself. Years ago I copied, as a law student. the contracts for th first brldg over the Ohio, river at Cincinnati. Th sub scribers for-th stock ln that enter, prla then thought they war .Inking their money for . the public good. Now you .will have to pay a premium for the stock in anyi of the Ohio bridges. And so It will b her. . - It 1. financial faith which movta mountains, THOMAS M. ANDERSON.- A Working Woman's View. jportland, Aug. 28. 1913. To the Ed itor of Th Journal I see muoh In your paper concerning woman's work ing hours and wages. I am a working woman and am proud of It. and I, think if wa could be let alone we would be better off. How ar you going to bet ter conditions for aom without mak ing It worse for othersT We ar liable to b driven into whit slavery by too little rathr than by too much work. I am making my 12 a day. If the hour are cut down my pay will be cut too, or I Will have to go altogether. If I want to work nobody has a .right h say 1 shan't. , -, ' . ;..:", And Saturday evening Is i the1 only time a working person has to shop and enjoy the beSutiful . things displayed In th store. Let the store, open later, if necesssrv, Saturday morning. ' , A WORKING WOMAN.1 YOUft MONEY By John M. Osklson. glide "Our next teacher was a young' east erner, who had com out Wst to die of consumption, but who had become cured In crossing the plains. HI. name was Rufu. Mailory. later destined to mak hi. mark ln Oregon, politic. Ho was succeeded by a young German, Bin ger Hermann, who also cat a wide swath in politics. Blnger Hermann had Pointed Paragraphs One of th oldest and most widely a wonderfully persuasive w.y With us, experienced dealers in bonds In this and w wer soon his firm friends. country mad this statement recently: "A 1,ttlfl after thftt 1 enlatid n Com- "Ovr a period of years money safely Pany C, First Oregon cavalry, but that Invested has. not produced an in,,... la another and a lonarer story." - Inftm- r.l,. .-.w-.-.v .v.m... nnfifuoic tiviLi mm nign as may bs obtained at present," And then this paragraph wa added: "It therefore teems logical to advise the investing nubile to tair. .v.nt... of these favorable rates for a. r,rin,t I Not even a woman ever liked' all her of years rather than to seek perhaps a relatives. susnwy mgner return for a shorter tlm." ' Most of a man's illusion, eora out Among borrower. thr la strong com- w,to hJ ha'r- t ; petition just now. In one group you . ' ..' will find corporation, f railroad an in. If you ar looking for m light Job dustrial) offering short term notes SFPty t the gas works. ,. $ a yielding better than 6 per cent. Tn th. I . 1 other group you ar beginning- to find I Mal,y a man puts his footiin lt when corporations principally railroaded nf. I h attempt to stand on -hlsi dignity. . farina- hla. Ic.u.i 1st , . s . ... I ' and mor) bonds oh a yield basis of very close to 6 per cent. For the Investor, who seek saf.tv along with hi. reasonably good return, in- question remains .jo. flecldaj Can I make more by buying the notes which will b nald 1st from on. tn fiv v.a or by taking on-,th long term bond many a family tree springs (therefrom, wnich yieias close to s per cent, and la I j; . likely to hav ,a considerable Increase I Wrt know some men who seem to or price wmm credit condition ar know everytnmg inat isn i wprtn Know easier?. ;.. - . I lng. ... i -,- It la put up to him to judge whether ' ,'.', or not-the market for; the- long term I And' it might ba well U remember Issue, ha. reached the botonw if it I tha,t ino man 1. any better than you has. hla decision will not ho hj n I aimuM he. " -- ' ' 4 . h-- k Honesty may be th best .policy, but there ar a lot of men from Missouri. "'.-'. i' l ' H Is a smart man who only makes mistakes at the other fellow's expense. -: , ' 5 -f . Money Is the root of alj evil and has, hi. decision will not be hard to .bould be. maxe ne win tax tn jong term Issues. If hs thinks that t will take another yea,, or. two,. or three; to reach bottom, be, can ' get better "pay for the use of his moneyvfroni the issuer, of the short term notes, and when they mature hla money can then h hlftd. V ; , personally. I should look Into th lona trm bonds. . Whn a bachelor makes up bis mtnd to get married all ha ha. to do is , to stop dodging. ' .; ;;; , z 1 ""' ''' ' ".' '.' ''' ' ' '"Young' people used to set ".out tor a ':. life's Journey' on th sea of matrimony' now many of them are satisfied wlta a abort excursion trip. J it.