v.- THE OREGON BAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND", THURSDAYS EVENING. 1 NOVEMBER 27, 1913. SUSP! THEvJOURNAL 4W gy:iH:KTner kewwapeb ' It J.M U .' . - .If ''U"t" rt r.a rrrty gunriuir nmruliiK M H'hf journiil ni nlld- IwrMic.lwm- vt VnniHlfl !.. Portland or . trMMi.liulou lb rout h U um!l aa Mfcuod " - inr, t VhT.i-iT'l(Th 'in trl.f. . - - All detwrtimirta r-iiirl by 1htme onmt.r. ;"TII ih wraMr wtwif rtfnai-HrwtW yaw OMliM. APVKI1.1 ISINU Klil'ltMtiNTA'nvll ; HfiAiHitM A hMitiHir Co., Uruimwlr . 2X, Ittth ...owe. IV-pla- j Um H'ttMimt. Cliloacw. , .SuWrlcUuii 'litini! uy umil ur im r a)iu In tbc ( Iritrd tiutlm or Mrifctaw One Mar t.VK One month ao nit-mr On ,,ir COM t oik- di I -3 BAJI.Y AND SLNPAY Utt jaar . ...57.80 I H tuuwU To be a strong hand 111 the dark ,u another iii llio liiat of lleud, l ls A cup ot stiirigth to a liuiuu.ll in crisis of weakness, Ik to know the glory Of life Anonymous. ;i'K THANKS GIVE thanks unto the Lord. Forget not all his lienefits. Give thanks for the miracle - ' of harvest and motherhood. (Jive thanks for home where love .' and restful Maec abide, in whose windows the mother's light to guide the steps of the returning wander ing child ever shines, for lipine - where selfishness, envy ami discord i do not dwell (live thinks for joj fill reunion Of children and children's children -each forgetful of unrealized ambi tion and desire in the joy and sue .'otss of the other. Give tluuiks for the blessed mem ory of the old homestead, the never i fading, never dying remonibrauce ' of tie greeting of grand parent at the door, the old hallway, the old parlor and ft walnut sofa and cen ter table oii which rested the fam lly Bible with its clasp of gold, the fragrant scent of parlor and living room, the old kitchen Ironi wnicn :cme the rich savor of lurkey and mince pie. the white 'damasked din ing table heaped with the old ap lu'tizliie iilatrs. tin- holy quiet as grandfather invoked: ' Bo present nt our tablr, Lord: Be in r- it k i-v.m v win yf ndoril. VtfA un with hr.-Mil. ami itinnl (hut we Hay fi'H.xt in panidls.' witli tliee." f!ive tlianks for the memory of the hour of family communion, the singing of the old solids; the last good bye, the wave of farewell at the turn of the road to grandmother standing In the door, shadiiiR her dinv ees with her wasted hand. Gire thanks for the opportunity to work, to sow and to reaix, to re pay to one another the debt of benefit and mercies, merited and unmerited. - Gite thanks that we live In an age : of . progress and rapid com munication, in an age that acknowl edge "I am my brother's keeper", in an age that promotes the gener al welfare, in an ago that is has tening to a realization of the fath erhood of God and the brotherhood of man. Give thanks that we live in con stant sight of the mountains that inspire to higher ideals and civic and individual righteousness; that we sense the odor of resinous pine and fir: that we hear 'the music of the waves breaking on the shore of the sa. Give thanks that we live in a land of bountiful harvest, in t land where life may be full. Gire thanks that "we hae meat and can eat." For all these things let us give thanks to the Lord and forget not All hls'benefits. KliSTIXG A MKAT COMBINE HOW a meat trust was beaten at its own game at Nurem berg, Germany, is recounted in a consular report of No vemlier 18. . . Kaj y in j n 2 .the high prices .of. meat caused the city council to en courage the use of fish. The city purchased Ik 1,879 pounds and re tailed the fish at' actual cost. A central market was maintained, and later outlying markets were estab lished. Free weekly courses in the cooking of fish were established, a fish cook book was distributed and wives of worklngraen were especial ly Invited to take advantage of the Instruction. ' Meat prices had advanced from 32 to 44 cents a pound for a good piece of beef, with other prices In proportion. The city decided to buy meat and sell it to the people at cost, but at first deferred to the butchers' guild by offering lo sell through the regular dealers at .prices fixed by the city. . Moat prices suddenly dropped from 20 to 4 0 per cent, even before the first city meat appeared in the butcher shops. City meat was of fered at 4 M; t p 9 cents cheaper than that of. the regular dealers, but the butchers shoved it to the back ground or treated it as second class. After two months the city opened its own retail shops which now number is.'.. In. a year's time Nuremberg han dled 1,931. 454 pounds of beer, veal and pork, the aggregate purchase price being 30M96. This supply represented 14!8 cattle. 4r, calves and C303 swine, the greater portion of which was imported from Bel gium, ilolland and Denmark. Retail prices include all elements of cost, ' such as freight, preserva tion expense of handling, rent, fix tures, and allowame to salesmen. Beef-was retailed at a uniforjn aver- SAVprit" of 1 g cents ' per pou nd , ' veal and pork at 1 7 to rents. K-!tfJIttlchm. maintained price M t 6 W tents higher on ordinary cuts and SVi to 11 rents higher on choice cuts. These differences in prices are said to represent profits of the butchers, tor the city mRrkets pay all legitimate expenses. The mu n id pal markets have been so sue cessftil (hnt Nuremberg will con tinne them indefinitely. The city had a imputation in 1910 of 3:12,539. A X K.IK mob p JUTLAND ought never to hold another school -meeting like that at the Armory. It was not a deliberative as sembly. It was mostly pandemoni um. It was a meeting of estimable gentlemen and ladies, but neverthe less a mob. 1 here could be notbiiiK more Nor of a archaic. Nor more chaotic, less deliberative. Nor more travesty on sane government. The proceedings were not a mat ter of decorous discussion. No mo tion was adopted aB a result of dig nified debate. No decision reached by the assemblage was consequent i to information elicited In the course) of tho meeting. About every gentleman present knew exactly what he wanted be fore he went there. In a general way almost everybody was intoler ant of everybody else. Ill calmer moments most of those who shouted and hissed when speakers were try ins,' to he heard will be more or less regreiful of the evening's perform - am e. Turbulence, passion and the wild hurrahs of prolonged disorder are an unusual place in which , to stage the action that spends $2,250,000 of the people's money. It is not often that so great a sum is levied on the property of a community by a near riot. The most extraordi nary thing about It. Isa that a meet ing in the interest of education should bo so emphatically non-edu cational. llowevor. It was hardly the actors I and actrrsses, but the system that is at fault. The former are to be commended for their Interest in ; affairs educational. It is a splen-1 did sign when so many are con-' cerned about the schools, it is commendable spirit when they are of the bankers will he distinctly ob so willing to spend money on i servable, and the actions of tlneir schools. I allies on the floor will be seen by But tho system is exactly thelall the co.intry. Though the bluff- thijig to forward just such bedlam is the Armory riot when, there is vast, interest by the people. It forces the citizens and citizenesses to degenerate Into a showing of ; mtniliers rather than a showing of reason. That is the secret of why; the Armory meeting was pande-f monium. It is an unanswerable reason for! providing a better plan. A PIA'CKKD KAlfJtOAl) N AKLEGED tendency to leg A islate the property of liie haves over to the have-nots Is assigned by Judge Fenton ! as a reason why railroads have dif-' ficulty in floating bonds. j How about the plundering of tbe St. Louis & San Francisco railroad?: The looting of that system by tho' officials and managers is more ef- fective ia discouraging investments ' ica to Investigate the slaughtering in American railroad securities than industry. This expert returned and I.? all the regulative legislation of irt ported that Argentina meat is all time. high grade, that its exportation to The system was driven into hank-'the United States should he encour rtiptcy by the plunderbund that aged. controlled it. It appeared iB the! Hut the meat trust was busy in testimony before the Interstate Com- j the meantime. Standing on the as merce Commission that its officials titrtion that high prices were due and their friends cleaned up profits entirely to limited supply of cattle, of $7,000,000 by buying or building the trust contracted for all the re connecting lines and selling them j frigerator space in -vessels plying to the company. As individuals, i between North and South America, the looters built and bought lines, j With these contracts signed, sealed and as officers and directing heads and delivered, the trust again had of the company bought the proper-; control of the meat situation. It ties from tbomselves as individuals ; was announced that prices would and made the company foot the mot fall, that the new tariff law bills. As the company's officers v ould not result in a l6ver cost of they bled the company to the tune : living. ' of $T,00O.O00. tor themselves as in- j :AUoriie,y' ''General McKeynOIds dividuals. and as a result of these ( proposes to test, the trust's ability and other dizzy transactions sent) under the law to corner, not only the line into the bankrupt court. native meat, but also the entire What, must lie the thoughts of .available supply in South America, thp French investors who took $2S.-lHe has announced that the trust's 000,000 of the bonds of the com-' contracts with shipowners will be pany shortly before the suspension? taken into the courts. He lays down How long, after hearing of this ' the proposition that no monopoly: exploit in American railroad finance, will it be until these plucked French. Investors will want more American railroad securities? If the railroads seek to know- why there is regulation, and tight money for railroad securities, they ' will find the answer in a long list of bankrupt lines and exploited in-; vestors, the last ease of which is the wreck of the St. Louis "& San Francisco. THE BONIMNt. AMENDMENT 0 N ,11'I.Y 31 last a tolal of $6 0S,94 0 had beep transferred fro tn tho city's general fund to the improvement bond in terest fund. The greater portion of mviir -o m-o.cu iu tertj&l payments ' on improvement bonds. I no city was obliged, that, five cents or twenty-five for one Its credit mlht be saved, to pay; dollar, and requiring sale of tickets Interest which delinquent property , by all conductors. It. is approxi owners should have paid. , I niately the action in Portland, where The Journal has printed articles explaining the necessity of this transfer of funds. Data-secured at the auditor's office shows that de linquents are confined largely to land speculators. The a'verago home owner and the average busi ness man is not delinquent in bis payments to the city. The speculator uses thp city's credit without attempting to- lultill his obligation promptly.) lie bonds property for . improvements, not even paying interest 011 the bonds. He, allows the city to carry tho en- tire financial burden incident to Improvements, trusting to his abll - Ity to sell before the city;;: can en- forte payment. unaer tne present system tne - j speculator pays no penalty for mis-'given him? - 1 use or the city's credit. The nianj , - - 1 w ho navs nromiitlv has no advan- Detecting a fox stealing into his Itage over tho man who waits ten years before paying a dollar on lm - proveinents on which he has had t lie benefit all that time. The syB - 1 1 in is wronc. it i.lncen a nremliim on delinquency, and the premium Is paid from the city treasury. The proposed amendment will remedy this defect. If the amend ment is adopted tho speculator will have the option of paying when pay ments are duo or of having a pen alty charced asainst him. He will not be able, without cost, to have the city lierpfinanee him a number of yourB. The present bonding system Is defective in many ways, but no de fect is so glaring as tho loophole through which speculators escape imvlnB- for whnr lhv apt whpn thev KPt (( - fun IJ.iXK KRS'- GAMK T HERE is more than one way to defeat banking and currency reform. The present plan is delay and confusion. The big bankers bluffed and bedeviled the senate committee into disagreement. The 1 con fusion so brought about is a first step for defeat of currency re form. The division In tho committee Is a case of treachery to the public in terest. The pursuit of the disa greement on the floor of the senate is equally sinister. It is exactly as the phalanx of big bankers would have it. The opposition to the adminis tration bill has been coquetting with the central bauk idea. Not a mem ber of congress who becomes prom- inent in advocacy of that plan will ever be re-elected. Xo present 'member of the body at Washington was elected on that issue. Hamulv. the fight has finally reached the open floor of the sen- a!ate. In that open forum the game 'mg and bulldozing representatives (,t vVall Street did succeed in dead- locking the committee, it cannot lone deadlock the onen senate. It lias been a mistake that the senate did not act promptly as did the house. It is disheartening that there should be so much delay in Informing a svstem that shelters so many abuses. There is general agreement that our crazy-quilt cur- rency system is a great national wrong, antj there is national disap pointment when a senate committee in its weakness is lured away from its manifest duty. SOl'TH AMEIUCAN MEAT T HE tariff was taken off meat importations for the purpose of making meat cheaper in the United States. The govern ment sent an expert to South Amer- i has the right, legal or moral, to fix prices arbitrarily. It is time that trust methods be tested in the courts. .Mr. Sic Roy- noltls is probably right in saying ; that tho meat trust's contracts wit I shipowners are contrary to law. It i not conceivable that law sanctions power in the hands of a few men to withhold food from the hungry. I The attorney general's declara-: tion for a fight to a finish with the: meat trust is encouraging. The j American people have long thought I that laws were sufficient, if theyj were only invoked. Yesterday at Olympla, the Wash-1 ington Public Service Commission I Ordered the Seattle Electric Com- ju-.jiaiiy in rsmuiiMi uu lis surei. rail- : wavs. a rate of six fares for twenty-! the city commission has ordered a lnl, en 'l 1',0fa,l'y general and , . t . , . ! obtain nil the information possible on six for p, quarter rate. There isjtne subject. ' threat- that the Portland company j' andkkw stu.TZ CHAMBERS. will appeal the order to the. Oregon Railway Commission, a plan that, for Its standing in public sentiment, the company would better abandon. , -ttt H There is not the slightest, doulit of Commissioner Brewster's purpose "p ,"v.""7lt "t-trer" In ,. it, ,i. ,.n i 4i. .L....ilrton- 1,le latest to make the claim mj ueufi ov -tu- -wouiiopai j of Janitor Chamberlain. The'(!.hnge to cohimission government was to secure efficiency. . But, in toe ease of this man who has been In the position fourteen years, the city j cannot well afford to turn its back on him at 72. If Me la not strong (enough to be a janitor, is there hot a less chiiuhs itB mi - I poultry yard, a Vermont farmer took careful aim at the intruaer and fired. He was pained, when the smoke cleared away, to" find that he had missed the maiauaer and killed his best rooster; He was not unlike tho Wisconsin hunter who fired at what he thought was a deer and hit a passing trolley car. rtrtl,, fi, tin,.,. olnna 1fiSH hflft !WU1 IVMJ1 IIURO nniv. the Portland school levy been above six mius. xNever oeiore in iubiuij has It been 7.5 mills. The nearest was 6.6 In 1905, when property was assessed at a much lower level than now. It cannot be denied that we are becoming riotously uproar ious in our support of schools. A shot fired point blank at a col ored gentleman's body failed to draw blood, it was found that he had pn, one overcoat, one under coat', one vest, one dress shirt and three undershirts. Here Is an ad vantage In wearing one's whole trousseau. If you are at a loss what Christ mas remembrance to give her, and if you want It to be both highly ac ceptable and expensive, give her an egg. Letters From the People (Comiuaniritlnnt tent to Tb Joarml for pub. Ilmtlon lu this deimrtnient nhonld Ix written on only otie ulile of the puper. nbould not exceed .100 words In lonRth mid must be eeoinpnled br (be name and addreM of the lender. If tn writer does not Jt-alre to bare Uie HOM pub lished, he thould no stute.) "PIscimKlmi U the srtU't of all reformer. It rationality evervtbhS It touctaea. It roha principle of all fnlno aanetlty and tbrowt them back no their reuauuablrumH. If tbey bar no reasonable:!!'. It nithle!T eruabea them out of exigence uini cu tin its own conclusions In their atead." Woodruw Wilson. An Advocate of "Oregon Iry". Now-port, Or., Nov. :l. To the Kdi tor of The Journal With interest I have read Mr. Walker's letter in The Journal. I. Ike him, I witnessed tae debusing and damning Influence of rum in my youth. I hated it then. Later on, when I saw Its terrible destruction among my brave comrades, 1 hated it more Intensely than ever. My hatred continues to increase. Like Mr. Walker, 1 was a Republican and voted in 1860 and 18G4 for Lincoln. For that, my pride is still unbounded. For nearly 50 years we have mourned the death of our most beloved president, murdered by a drink-crazed villain. Tho reason why Oregou failed to go dry In 1S8T. as given by 1. H. Amos, namely, that the National Liq uor Dealers' organisation told the Re publican leaders in Oregon that if they allowed the state to go dry they would defeat that party's presidential candidate, is, no doubt, the truth. But I Wish to add a little early history, showing bow that party became the tool of the traffic. The liquor dealers planned to entrap the Kepubllcan party in the '60s. When the Repub lican party called its national con vention to meet in Philadelphia, June fi, 1S72, the liciuor dealers arranged for their annuaJ convention In New York, on the same date, near enough, you notice, to he in touch, yet distant enough to avoid suspicion. Those liq ual dealers wrote a plank for the Kepubllcan platform, which became the sixteenth and known as the Raster resolution. Herman Raster wrote it and took it to Philadelphia and It was presented to the platform com mittee by the dealers' attorney, Sena tor Quay. In explanation of It, Ras ter soon after said: "I wrote the sixteenth plank of the Philadelphia platform, and it was adopted by the platform committee with the full and explicit understanding that the pur pose was the discountenancing of all so-called temperance and Sunday laws, and that Sunday, the day- on which rhristiatis hold their prayer meetings, is no better than any other day." Here was a solemn pledge made by the great national Republican party in exchange for the liquor vote. Noto a few results: In November that year, 1S72, Horace Greely was defeated for president by 76.1,000 votes and died broken hearted in 20 days. His dis astrous defeat was in perfect harmony with the party 8 pledge snd In payment for the Raster resolution. Four years later the Democratic: party, having grown wise to tho power of the liq uor vote, adopted1, b-lr "no- snmptnary law" plank and nominated Samuel j. Tilden. acceptable to the liquor deal ers. Neither General nor Mrs. Hayes was acceptable to them. The result was that the great Republican ma jority of 76.'!, 000 against Oroely in 1872 was turned into a Democrat le maiority for Tlldon of :.M.H5, though Hayes was counted in by an electoral com mission. K. W. DURKEE. I-'or Free Text Books. Lents. Nov. ST. -To the Kditor of The Journal Though I have no school children of my own, I am Interested in lhe.ii- education and I concur with S. S. shoemaker, that the public schools should really be free schools. I was clerk and trustee of school dis trict No. 56 of .Spokane county, Wash ington, from ISO! to 1300, and from 1S02 to 11107. The laws of that state permit ted pehool districts to vole for or against free tex tbooks, a t general elections, and of course most districts took advan tage of it. Then the state supplied the hooks, such as the teachers called for, free of cost. I believe textbooks can lie purchased from a district's general fund, by petition or "by a SDecial tax election called for that purpose. Home- i times my board called special elections to vote and levy extra taxes upon the property of the district to replenish the jsiinni lunu inn) ntii munpv was : urgently needed from the general' fund ror immediate use. Technical!)- speak im. - H ' not difficult to carry out. l believe the state oueht to Himnlv textbooks to the schools, and there may lie some state, laws that would be help ful to districts. I won). suggest writ ing to the county and state school miper- K. A Matthieu, Constable. Portland, Or., Nov. 25. To the Editor of The Journal The undersigned has bi-en watching tho papers recently with kooiI ileal of mterohl as one person fter another has assorted his claim -M Tr.c!e i- rank Nichols of l.airtlnw Crook jounty, Vtyolwas elected sheriff of Polk county the first Monday In Jun, 184. He will have, to take a .second place, however, and give the honor to Francois Xavler Matthieu, who PERTINENT COMMENT SMALL CH AA'GK To pet soaked invent in watered tock. Beauty that rubs off Isn't even akin deep. Muri'laR HomotlmeH opens the eyes of blind people. Wore thltiKu come to those, who do n vaii rr inem. It takea the better half to see tho worst tide of a man. And occasionally thexxtoctor Is more dangerous than the disease. AVork hv anv other name, wouldn't make a hit with lazy people. . . . It Is never too lute to blame the other fellow for your mistakes. But the man with money to burn may not love, tho Killed of smoke. A rolling stone gathers no moss, but it's a smooth one just the name. Only the man who has more dollars than sense can afford to be sarcastic, Green la a popular color at present, but no girl should be green with envy. A uli'l with a fare as pretty as a picture may be spoiled by an ugly frame of ml lid. He's an unusual man who doesn't love hlmnclf any more than lie loves his neighbor. A girl as apt to marry a man too old for her uh a widow is to marry one too young for her. A man who knows how to do one IhlnK rlht may try to prove It by doing something rlwe wrong. Kvery time you ee a woman headed downtown ehe in either going to t dry goods store or to the dentist. Many a woman who owns a dozen ultra-fHKhionable skirts hasn't one that la fit to wear on the streets. THE MAN WHO DAMMED THE MISSISSIPPI From the. American Magazine. Twenty years or more ago an ambi tious youth walked Into the private of fice of George Horton, a western struc tural engineer. He was fresh from high school, where his boyish thoughts had been full ef bridges, engineering plants und power dams. This had developed In him a passion for mathematics and blue prints. He told Horton in Just about to many words that be wauled a Job. Kvon that was mure a formality than anything else, for the boy bad gone into the office firmly convinced that he was going to get it. Horton told him that buiflness was light, and that if any changes were made In the force he woarld lay off men rather than take them on "Now, Mr. Horton," was the answer, "I came here to go to work for you. Where shall I hang my hat?" Horton decided that, dull as business had been, he could afford to give a boy of that caliber aa opportunity. It was confidence and determination that won for Hugh Lincoln Cooper in Horton a office, and lt has been these same factors that have enabled him. while still in his forties, to harness the Mississippi river at Keokuk. Iowa, and by means of a $27,000,000 power devel opment dam, a concrete monolith from the Illinois to the Iowa shore, to de velop' iOO.OOO horsepower, 0 per cent of which is furnishing tho current for the public utilities Of St Louis, 143 miles to the south. Hugh L, Cooper did not need, a tech nical school to prepare him for his work. And the manner in which ho-., financed the Keokuk project Is the best illustra tion of the dogged perseverance that has won for him success throughout. He had Jm;t completed' unusual ' power plants In the east when he heard of Keokuk. One of tliem was at Niagara, where Lord Kxlvln and other British scientists laughed when be spoke of driving a tunnel under the center of the Horseshoe falls. Cooper Ignored their protests, went ahead and 'carried his blue print plan to complete success. Then he looked to the Mississippi. was elected constable at Champoeg for the entire Oregon territory on May J, 1843. Besides, he made good on his Job. A "blind pigger" set up a still In Cham poeg. Marlon county, and made "blue ruin," as H was called, out of Hudson Bay company's molasses. Mr. Matthieu caught the man, destroyed his plant and warned him not to attempt to man ufacture the vile, stuff again. A lew months later the fellow started another still. Matthieu put him out of business a second time, and as a parting Injunc tion said: "Now, you get out of this country to stay. If you are caught set ting up a still again, I will hang you!" That was the last of the miscreant. GEORGK H. HIMKS. Slovenly Reading. From the Cincinnati Times Star. "There is too much slovenly reading matter," remarks Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler of New York, who thinks modem literary taste and appreciation atrophied. The president of Columbia points to the famous old lawyers of the colonial per iod as examples of fine minds nourished and developed on a few good books. These scholarly Americans, the doc tor says, had .only a limited number of volumes at their command, but each volume was a masterpiece in Its clads and left a deep Influence upon the reader. Dr. Butler ia quite right, but he over looks the fact that these famous old colonial lawyers lived in an epoch when leisure and the opportunity to rumlnato lovingly over a classic line or a poetu simile, were more in evidence than tbey are in 1913- Today wo take a running iurnn at our library shelves und fee' ourselves fortunate if we are able to liang on for a scant hour or two. We have only time to partially absorb tn purity and beauty of style of the old writers. Wc do not reflect, we cram. We carry the quick lunch habit Into oi'r arm chairs, mu uie ieun.ims ueen the deterioration of both taste and ca paeltv for the finer flavors. Dickens, Thackeray, Balzac, Meredith, Lamb, Eliot, the simple historians like Wceins, are pushed aside as we grab hurriedly for Rex Beach, R, II. Davis and other chroniclers of the frantic present. We do not even read Mark Twain a truly terrlble sir, of omission.. The multiplication of mere books tJ day is not ' encouraging. 'It Is destroy ing the incentive to tj)W, careful read ing. The new movement for "fewer an.l better new books" is all right so far as It goes, but it should not be allowed to hide the fact that the grand old writers are still standing light at our indiffer ent finger tips. A Warning to Lawyers, From The, New York Globe. Tho appellate division of the supreme court,, after careful consideration of tlve case of Charles H. Herbst, an attorney up on charges -uf professional miscon duct, has ilectded that youth and Inex perience will not hereafter be accepted as an xcuse when a lawyer appropri ates , to. his owti" use trioley belonging to a client But the court apparently does nut, think It right to . give tlfts AND NEWS IN BRIEF OREGON SIDELIGHTS The'Medford Sun admonishes those who are, probing the hiali cost of eggs to oe catena ana not uroaa any vi me precious things. Baker -county's commlsKioners ara considering a propoHltlon for Joint ac tion on the nurt of Baker and Grant counties .tor employing a farm expert KohmII Journal: James McKay of Trail fork Is preparing to take a trio back home to hoinl WCotland. on which he la to start about December 1. with the expectation of returning Via the Panama canal about April 1. Tillamook Herald: Howard Casey, at one time county treasurer of this coun tyr in iu tho city viuUing at the home of hi sister. Mrs. Henry W oolfe. Mr. Casey is at present engaged ua light house keeper at l'olnt No Point, Wash. it ha been fight years since he was In Tillamook. Viewing the attempt of the State Bar asHociation to get the court fees re duced in the United States district court for Oregon, tho Dallas Observer Is pleased to conceive a great hope, whence It exclaims: "TIUnK of It lawyers lin ing up to reduce fees. Who will say that this crld is not getting better?" The University of Oregon sopho mores, st ine r uanct to tin sriven ue- iwmtw H, wRl drink punch from sani tary cups. "Tins,- says tne feugene Register, "ia a death blow to the. 'bugs' that in the past have lurked on the odge of the drinking cup ready to Jump onto the lips of the fair sex. Paraffin cupa will be furnished for all those tak ing punch, and they will he contained in attractive nickel holders." At Astoria 30 years ago Hunday, ns iiPIM-nis mini the Astorlan s reminis cence column, it waa rumored that a newspaper waa to he published in an offii ithovu Krank Parker's grocery. the 'chamber of commerce had voted a memorial asking the forfeiture of the Astoria land grant, and a company was being incorporated to hnlld a narrow irnuce railroad from linker a bay to Grays Harbor by Shoalwater bay. An article In an engineering publica tion bad attracted his attention and he decided to go to Keokuk to investigate. He made the trip, saw, and was con vinced. The waters of the Mississippi held the power, running unchecked toward the gull', and Keokuk felt that in Cooper it had found the man to carry out the hopes of many years past. But tho most difficult problem of all re mained unsolved how to get the money. Cooper's lowest estimate was $0,000,000. To finance It as a local proposition was out of the question, and Cooper could not handle it alone, although he did spend before the work was under way over $100,000 of his own money. It is even said that when actual construction work began he was $500 in debt- Cooper went east, and before he re ceived one favorable answer be, had been shown out of the offices of 68 capi talists. The strange part of It Is that when he found men who would listen. they were not Americans, and when the project finally had been financed, 65 per cent of the stock was held by foreign era. Cue man was In doubt whether the power could be sold as a paying proposition after It had been developed. Cooper waa positive that St. Louis alone would give contracts large enough to warrant the undertaking. The financier still was skeptical. In order to settle the argument Cooper went to St. Louis, mid before one bucket of concrete had gone Into the work he had contracted for the sale of 60,000 horsepower to the Mound City. At that point the engi neers who bad studied th situation begun to shako their heads. They told their chief that a turbine whoeL could no i te found that would prove success ful under conditions at Keokuk. It tl.ero isn t a turbine wheel on the market that we can use," was Coop er'a answer, "wo will build, one to fit our needs. You men come Into my office and we'll work this out together. They diifc. ,-and today 39 of these wheel'!, of entirely new design, "built to meet the peculiar conditions in the river at ICeokuk, are developing tremendous horsepower under conditions that are the wonder of the engineering world. rule what may be called ex post facto effect. So it does not disbar Herbst, who misappropriated merely suspends for two years his right to practice law. That it may not be said that the honorable court Is being misrepresented we quote from its decision aa follows: 'Under tho circumstances of this case we have concluded that instead of the extreme penalty of disbarment we will suspend the respondent from practice for two years, with the distinct inti mation, however, that tne excuse of youth and inexperience will not be re ceived in the future as an excuse for misappropriation of moneys received by an attorney to be held by him for the uso of his client." ... Let all lawxerstaka notice.. Hereafter they -cannot steal the moneys nf thetr client and hope to get off by pleading you tli and inexperience. The court gives warning that in the future it will as sume that a man who Is able to pass a bar examination knows enough about the law to be aware that larceny is a e rime. There is no suggestion that the appel late division intended to be humorous in the utterance quoted above. It ad moniKhes in the most solemn manner. Yet "lot in a long time has literature of legal humor been more enriched. Mileage and Discontent. From the Tacoma Tribune. Discontent is claiming the house of congress for its own. The members are grumbling over the senate's delay of the currency bill and are finding fault with each other. They want to go home. Congressman Fowler of Illinois. dlscusNing tho situation in a speech the other day, said: "Mr. Speaker, we have stayed here until the leader of thi majority, Mr. I'nderwood, lias become afflicted with senatorialltis, and he cannot be here. We have stayed here until the minority leader on thel'rogressive side, Mr. Mur dock. Is seriously afflicted with a fever ish attack of chautauqualogis, and he does -not want to bo here. Wo have stayed here until the minority leader on the Republican side, Mr. Mann, has be come afflicted itli a lingering type of that dreadful disease, filibusteroids, and be is anxious to leave for treatment. In fact, Mr. Speaker, the entire member ship of this house is now suffering with an attack of prolongtermltls." Congressman Thomas . of Kentucky was more frank about it. "I want my mileage," he declared, "and so do, my creditors. I am from a Kepubllcaii dis trict and it takes money to get people to vote right in my district." Congress allows each member 20 cents a mile each way, to and from his home, for every session. That perquisite runs into a nice lot of easy money for,mem bers w.ho live a considerable distance from the "national capital. ..President -Jlj wuson nas Feiuseu to sancuon wn b Journmeht Of the special session and, the senate committee has agreed to let tne special session run Into the regular. Der camber session.' v That means the mettle bers will lose their, mileage. It's enough to make a thrifty congressman discon tented and peevish. . IN EARLIER DAYS By Fred Lot-idey. .; "our family moved from Portland to The Dalles In the fall of 1862," said Captain William P; Gray, one of the pioneer steamboat men ot the Columbia river. "We lived In , The Dalle that winter Father launched hlj steamboat, the Caseadllla, in December, 1862.' Next spring we took the Caseadllla up to Lewlston, plying on the Clearwater and the Snake rivers. We carried wood from Lapwal and lumber from Asotin to Lewlston. "That Spring father had trouble with A. Klmmell; his -purser. He found out that the purser was not turning! in all the money. Father put him off the boanTnd told Tlm what he thought of men who were crooked. What he told him was plenty. Shortly after thu purser had been put ashore, we were laid up cleaning the boilers. The Casca ding was a half deck boat. Father was lying on hla back on a pile of cordwood repairing the steering wheel ropes. I was in the cabin aft and looking out I saw Klmmell take an axe from the wood block and start towards father, whose head was toward him. Father had both hands in the air Bpliclng a rope. Klm mell drew bauk the axe and aa he brought it down to split father's head open, I Jumped for him. I had no timer to do anything but to launch myself at him. I struck him like a battering rain in the back and shoulders. The axe's blow waa deflected and the axe missed father's head. It also overbalanced Klmmell and he fell overboard. Klm mell, wild with anger, clambered ashore, pulled a pistol from hfe pocket and be gan shooting at us. The first shot he fired struck me in the hand, cutting the flesh on my third and fourth fingers. The second shot struck me In the foot. I did the only thing possible under the circumstances. I ran down the gang plank and etopplng, I plckfd up several rocks and threw them at him as I closed In on him. By good fortune I hit him with one of the rocks, In the stomach. and knocked him breathless. He grabbed; his stomach with both hands. I closed in on him nd hit him in the chin. The blow knocked him down and I took fhe pistol away. Some of the crew came ashore, tied him up and turned him over to the authorities at The Dallea. "father was always a peaceful man when It came to the law. He said he: was able to settle his own troubles. In fact, he never had a lawsuit in his life. When the trial. came, father refused to appear against him, so he was turned loose. "Klmmell bought a sailboat. It got loose from the bank at Celtlo and went over the falls. Klmmell could hav readily got ashore but he had money in the cabin and while trying to recover the money the boat went over the falls and Klmmell was drowned. "Father sold the Caseadllla in the ummer of 1863." YOUR MONEY By John M. Osklson. I have a friend, a retired preacjier of 74, a fine, sane, enthusiastic old man who loves to get out Into the rough, open places as well as I do. He and I were riding, Indian file, across the rocky, hills of Arizona when 1 asked him this question: "Doctor, did you ever work' out a plan for setting aside a part of your salary while you were active in the ministry?" Ho whipped up hie tired horse, and when he was close enough to make me hear, he told me of the method he had worked out to" insure himself against going to a retired ministers' home to end his daysT I wish I could repeat here all of what he said it was fco sound and .sane a discourse on the functions of saving; but there Is not room. Briefly, the preachers plan was this: At the time his first child was born, he went to, the treasurer of his church and had a talk about endow ment insurance. It was decided be tween tliem that the preacher should take out a policy maturing In SO years, the premium on which would amount to $50 a year. Knowing that he could not save the amount (for the demands on the purse of a generous man on a small salary would never leave a sur plus), the preacher stipulated that the treasurer should provide the IBO for tho premium on the policy every year. Ten years later the preacher was transferred to a bigger church In an other city. By this time his family had Increased In site and he concluded he ought to have more Insurance. So be had a conference with the treasurer of the new church and arranged to. double the amount of endowment In surance he carried. The total premium payment then amounted, to $110 a year.' Year after year tnls Insurance waa carried. Premium payments ceased long before the preacher retired, at the lifio TV,- T,ncir xiwt ximrarnTni'inB preacher had sufficient income from tho endowment policies to ljve comfortably in his own home and go out and see some of the world. His simple plan had served hiin well. e - a n-1. - i. a . i .. . - i.. Pointed Paragraphs i Be sure you are wrong then don't do It. Most men who. talk well talk too much. The easiest way to catch a flirt Is not tn -try. A man Is known by his lawyer and woman is known by her doctor. It's always surprising how much deeper a bolef of rtcbt is after one gets into it. If you have to walk, distance doesn't lend enchantment to the view- After a man has expressed his views he may wish he had patronized a slow freight. ' It take! a 'woman w ho can afford to dress as if she. had a fine figure to imagine that Bhe has. While placing hirtvself In the hands of his friends, the candidate should place his pocketbook there also If ha expects to come under the wire first. SUNDAY FEATURES The Sunday Journal Magazine offers these compelling feV 4 tures for women readers each Sunday: Patterns for the homo dress maker. Suggestions for the needle woman. tjl Hints on honie economy. -Talks on health and beauty. Sunday Journal. Magazine ;;;