3 THE OREGON DAILY, JOURNAL, PORTLAND, FRIDAY KVKN1NU, J AN UAKY 2, 1914: "Tf I r- ' f firs fv I A I 1 I ML 4 UwUnCINML. i ' AK IXIiKl'KXOBXT . NEWtd'At'Kn -,c. h. JU KwtM ...i-nhiHtwf 'like of which lies never been hith- t'ttblWueil over ' evening- 4x-nit fcumlajrt n.r ertO fanOttc4.'' " ' . "VS -i rrjr fttiftdar muriiitig at The Jim real Hullil- . , . . 1 - , twg. Brdwmy rnM VnnihlU 1'wtln wl.w. i V It the notes are USijri0U8, pOUe . . Entered t rtm jai(flc -at tortlfiud, Or'for pf . .tfccni ; cao 1)3 collected under ; ' J th1 New York lawSj! bat the TKufcj'iiuxK M.tu ?n:j? jhe. a-wu a makers jtnisht : be ; foreed to fight rcbKi kr tta uiimborK t-ii ia : the i courts. ' The borrowers th tiM-ratir what Awartwwt ym wio c .V . ! '- . r-' . , . ". ougiuxUoyKxatt'BkxTAt-ivfc'r HPt. to great; trouble and Benjamin & KentBor c Brunk expense ,in any event. Vi.a25- JCtftbi. JkTe York; 121. FBtj.k.-; -ft n ..(.,. ! g nam wag.; rirm. . , ( , xolman s conviction ana the Huhaertptio term br t any u- f tem ta the Catte f'uiM or Mi-iiw )iJi :i'"'i.:M:S i;-:f-. DAILY ' ' Otw . ..fi.su ne OKmUi . ; . . - TH.XDAY . ' One tW. : j One mmith..'.. Otm )ar.j .i.'. .T.?i One lnt. . . r,tt A gomo. men mov throuph life a band of music moves down ; tl street flinjrUijr out .pleasure onvry, side througli the a!f. to f vvtrry one far ami; near, t hat can JUten. Henry AVard Beechnr. it Its ueaija,: watek HE i twelfth death from typhoid; t fever Is- announced at Cen-! rtwlavWoBhlngton, .l I S iThe"epidemlo there Is die- scrlbed'as; the worst ever known in thej Pacific, Northwest.' Up to Jast! Sunday, there bad been 29X - -ases, Jl 6 suspects, and 11 deaths. ' v Another" death yesterday raises'She1 ; mortality to 12. Ae resistance ' to: lhy eiildemlc, 3600 persons have ; - received the first inoculation of . 'Inoculation has been given to 600. t The cause of the epidemic is .the city water supply. The city -water was used by all but six of Ihovfctftns.'. : It ft u.Qiped ffoni, ja wellwhich Is very near Skookum nuck creeu. a. stream that is In ted. t by f the filth from barns, lniues and other sources of germs thadiie its;battksl : . The epidemic .haa; already cost ... the pegpl Oi the town and county front of the same on Pnget Sound, more than would have been the j. defendant i claiming under a stat .tutiretosi of, iv gra vity water ays- , ute, and 1' plaintiff claiming the tent. A twenty-threo mile pip! right to use tha, waterfront .as a - lino vould bring to the place the ! pc,rt of his riparian or littoral 1 purest Uvaier from the streani la ; rights, but it was held that plain , ;si roreit reserve. i.tiff had no right, below ordinary It is i Impossible for coiuiuunities high water line which the stats ;'to lonser ignore or dispute thi cblm not cut oEf. and that the proveu. facts, of experience. It is,; 8tate com authorize whom it t (tempting fate l.nd inviting pejstl-1 WOuld, to use the water below or jlcnce for any community to te dinnry hitrh waterline. satisfied with an uncertain wafer j In another Washington case the v-;C.wPpJy '1' I nn.i'a riffhf ws nimilarlv con- s .' .W f ori an1 tnlllr 9ro Vio r.hlafJ milk are the chief , . means, for infection with typhoSX .j 1 uwiu". me iever pa- tients. the loss of time, the suf jfering. the anxiety, the bereave . 'inents arid all the countless Ills in l Ident to Centralia's epidemic can-1 ipnm ne statea in terms or dollars. r j , iney are tar .costlier man pure HJwatcr- Thev we a terrible warn- jng to cities and communiUes;was vahiable for a tom and boom everywhere. Eite. but it ; was held that the trial HCHOQU TEACHER'S HEALTH Pi rQRE AT safeguard against! illness among lAkf hora In th h?sln j, public school U,1.a u iv.., la -. w n u) site oiiuyi uoarti. " . ., ic . , , 4v,- wool, , 'Uhrougn a modification of the reg - Justice dhadwlck of thejvash. t.lation: governing absence on ac-!lnton 8Pe court further said U konnt of ilvdinposition. ! in the decision: . . -j , - i i T,. state has asserted title to the v Theimle allowing full pay when ' laTdhe l jtich the tide ebbs and .the . absence did not extend over flows, and Uspondent's title carries ; 'a period if three days has beeaMhem no farther than the Hne of Ranged tJ provide that pay shall; tl'1e-l 3 .&bo cllowe J only for three days txi r tlV relied vW by respondents: The !; Jv'Ilfc' BlOn.tll. lUaderAihe. Old rule the rule pertolnfna to the rights Inci- - :teacBer might be compelled to bernt to ownership of lands Blong -bSennthre.cSecutive days, re-j hr$t oSS j ?turn to school for a day and then 1 WRS before the court in the early ' tbe forced to be absent three days j case of Eisenbach vs. Hatfield. A n succession , again and not suN ' careful review of the authorities im- ;'" . i au xv, ! polled this conclusion: "The result '' I t i f g monthly: of our lnvcftlCTtion of the- authorl- l -v. 4-CBeck.-v - ( i ' ; tis leads us to the conclusion that i 7 The Change in the rule is not a riparian proprietors on the shor of "Wrkf teaCh6r' bUt VeV tae contrary, Is a. measure of; therein as an incident to their es- -liealth insurance. It Is a well .t tate. To hOM otherwise would bo kftown law in 1 therapeutics that I Au? he power of the state to f f those Insured scainst a loss nf d6rt wlth owa V9V7 , , :r7f "gainst, a loss oiymr deBm tot th pu1sij0 gooA ,,!rPy fall !I11 easier and remain ill tt the state cannot axsrclsa its con conger tham' those who have no stltnttonal rigrht to erect wharres ". 'such protection. v i , and other stniotares upon its pnhUo 't- vajtuuiuii i iui is wen understood.) . The determination to recover quickly is w help to re- cover, j Th lack of a need for qulcif recovery retards recovery, 1 ;It tt plainly obvious that In- Its oc.tlon ! the board . has done much for the benefit of the teacher In ..the.wajr xf conserving health. . - f :' THE JAIL CXTttE G OYERNOR GLYXN of New Yotk has before him a re markable illustration of the , Jail as an: efficient ourefor l at certain class of crimes. fiavM It, Tolman. Iking; of v'.th'v loan! sharks.- was recently senl;tocprisOd for six months after conviction of !! aavjing cnargea a vytim 200 per An. advance ! statement by the cent tnterest 4 on a' $ 1 0 loan I United SUtes : geological survey ; , Now Tollman's wife and eon are j places Alaska's 1 13 gold output attempting: to ' secure - the loanjtvt $15,450,000, as against $17. s'dark'a pardon, and as an induce-i 154.951 the preceding, year, nitmt they; have offered to burn There was a marked decrease half' a miUion dollm': worth of :i!ln copper production," and as the usurious notes, thus destroying all Alaska silver output Is largely ,'a written evidence of debts contract- :by-product of gold and copper min ed by mor than 20,000 men and jlng; the production of silver also woiqen who borrowed from Tol-.decreased. The territory has pro lan. It Is claimed by the loan,'duced mineral wealth to the value Ehark'B attorneys that the offer isilof $248,300,000: , Of this $22b bona .; fideCllnat Jnthe: vent of 200005 is gold, $l.580.ooo copi Tolmaa's ypaf donVnotattempt-wkl r per. $2,000,000 silver. $360,000 be made ; to ttecteven. mone tin, iea, loaned 'pn thnotes?;. - and . petroleum. Covernpr ; Glynn haa,v employed Copper mining, began in Alaska an 5 experMoexamiae.tbe "notes in- ltttli; and the total production submitted for inspection and CAl- ft about 116,000,000 .pounds, . binr diiatchea say jtha If ;na ; la'tbv The geological survey says there convinced. the offer is really -worth ; are several reasons for the de hile favorable" action- will bef crease of over $3,500,000 in, the ite uu tu appucauon xor par - on. , I It Is : an extraordinary . case. From one -point of view the", offer 1 may cl4S3el Httte more than bribe., but it It has that characi A- i . J ' . - ' . . "r. a '.. aw 1 ir is an auempi to cnue laeiiurnibues-iwo imru ui. m suw present etiort to secure Dis iree- Com have large sisalticance They prove that. the. Jail ia the place tanea of ' others. Tfi iall is a place in Which u&' men can iuedi late on their crimes and t&erc is" no Viler Crime than imposing ! fnrther misfortune upon the un- i fortunate. OCtt HANDICAP CALIFORNIA people own ' their I a I tidelandc. V Washington -people own . t. ( .i.. - i Oregon people do not. ! The seaport cities in the state ! south or us are not confronted J with private monopoly in meeting j the. merchant fleets of the world as they troop through the Panama i canal. The seairort cities in the state north of us are not embarrassed with private monopoly in sub- merged lands in bidding for world cosnmerce. But; Oregon is handicapped in the race for Panama canal trade by havinc tot jay more than $800 a front foot! for dock sites, of which i part is in actuality the people's ' own foreshor. The people's sovereign right toj pol-,jHidelands iln the state of Wash ; Ington is reported in Second Wash - - jjngton supreme court reports, j upland owner sued to enjoin t An the defendant from erecting a dock in firmea. it was In the case of the -. . j .1'.. .v.; Gray3 Harbor Boom Company vs. i Lownsdale,, 54 Washington. The plaintiff sned for the con demnation of certain property : along the lumptulips river. De- fendattt was-the adjacent upland owner and claimed special ' value ,, be$Qge 0f his water frontage hUr- P-tflin witnesses testified ,iitTi- noftnln wltnpRKPS testified court erred In admitting such tcs- 1 ' timony because "the right of main- Stream wi iuo " - ! incident or appurtenant to the ; nnlands." . j the consent iof adjoining; owners, it I Is oh-Ionsly deficient la the power M 4vipnat, which every o- ersmont - la proposltioa to which we canaot assent." But five members of the present Oregon supreme court held to the contrary, reversing former Oregon decisions in doing m. That is why, when Portland people wanted a ; dock site Ferd ' Reed ; got a commission, of more than $20,000 on the sale. . ALASKA IN 1013 (HE valued! Alaska's mineral Output in 1913 is estimated! at $18,900,000, as compared i with, i zi7,S3 1 in 1912. ; vaiue oi Aiasna-s mineral output as compared ;with the previous year. The most important of these is the condition Of tho placer toin - lug Industry.- which, in .pite of advances made In lode' mining, still A .. ' v A. A 1. X -J ' . . -aa-n.f 4 output. " hesn than .40 per cent of the placer gold . is produced by large plants, the balance Jeing still won from-the rich gravels that catt l profitably mined by hand methods. Marked flifctuation in the placer gold output is inevitable. : due to exhaustion r bonanzas and the diecoverV of new districts. Small operators are more dependent on the local water ; supply than are the tyrge plants, and under such conditiona noT stability of , placer gold prod uction can be expected. .There ' is no shortage of gold bearing graveis imAiasKa, out only Of deposits . which can be mined unaer ine present mgn cosi 01 oy oration. What i3 true of the placer, mines applies also 10 lode mkiljng except oa tidewater. -The coastal region is developing rapidly, but too marked progress can be . ex pected in the inland region until i a transportation System Js provided. M w . it ... ... A lion1 in Alaska during 1913. Of Ihe j 466 miles of track previously built only about 260 miles were operated. The high cost of fuel ancj a tax of $100 a mile,, upon ail operating lines are saia to nave. discouraged the railways, especial ly those which are but partly com pleted. , PAUL ORD T HERE was no i excuse for sightless Paul Ord to smash the great window .pane of a Portland department store. Xor was there excuse for the ceiebrators of New Years who broke his metal newa stand into fragments. All in the dark, as he is, the odds against the man are heavy. Trudging through the storm to his news stand at five a. m. with anticipations of a profitable day's business in the sale of annual edi tions, it was a bitter disappoint ment when he found his; metal stand in ruins. ' On his Bjde is the paramount fact that he is not one of our un employed. " Though sightless, deaf and dumb, he was no petitioner for fj-ee lodgings, free meals and free support. Instead of being a healthy sup pliant for public bounty, he was, though maimed and marred, mak ing his own way and asking no favors, a self reliant and self sup porting man. With three of his most import ant senses almost or wholly gone, Ord deserved wide public respect forthe fact that he was not a mcndldant, but a man. It is past findrngr'out why there should be in mankind a spirit of meanness that was willing to wantonly do him harm. THE BUSINESS OUTLOOK I N' HIS annual review of business conditions throughout the na tion Henry Clews, New York" . banker, says the United States has entered upon a new era of great political, social and economic possibilities. " The year 1913 will go down into history as one of the most marked In social and political changes in several generations. ' The New York financier is opti mistic. Ke has observed no serious consequences growing out of ; the new tariff. Time is necessary for ascertaining Its full effect, i but thus far there is no cause for alarm.jin spite of the cry of wolf, wolf set up by interests which have been required to cut down profits?" ' . Mr. Clews ays the currency law is a big step forward in placing; the United States in the front rank of international financial leader ship. We are to have an elastic currency fitted to the' growing re quirements of the country, with the advantage of public control tp prevent abuse by private interests. Business Is now. assured of a cur f ency system which will prove a bulwark of safety in, time of emer gency. or panic. In the year Just closed the na tion's foreign trade grew at a tremendous rate. Exports for ten months Increased $13.0,000,000 over the 'same period last year. The exceg3 of exports over Im ports for the same period increased $185,00Oji00. This immensely strengtnEs our credit abroad, and "so will the new currency law, for Europe sets a higher value upon sound banking than does the United States." Railroad earnings for eleven pionths . were $849,000,000, com- pared v with $797,000,000 a year ago, showing that an increasing volume of ; traffic was maintained. Security issues fell off $519,000, 000.. imt the amount of new issues was large, exceeded only by 1 91 1 and 1912, Building operations showed , a decline, and", busioeas failures increased. But Mr. Clews says there is nothing to be gained from dwelling upon? the discour aging statistics. ' - There was. soma ' reaction, espe cially during the latter part of 1913, but today the business out look is more encouraging. . There is no oyer, productipn in any linf of industry . and hjns'ness should resume normal activity. The finan cial situation will :'be ' much Im proved by the new currency law, the banks are in generally good condition : and there is little over expansion outside of real estate in any direction. ' ; .. .. , : - Mr,. Clews says that in spite of all drawbacks there are. sufficient J changes for thebetter' to warrant a cheerful attitude toward the, new year. " , . - ". - r In -Woodburn', the saloons oper ated ? had ' no- screens, no ; back rooms, no lunches, no chairs and no tables.: The license was $1500 a year;Thre were tot two sa loons of which one earned a fair profit while the other; made too money.. The town .has gone dry four times and wet four. It is dry now and the" story is that the womens vote did It. The electric 5 train will begin service from Portland over the Mc Minnville sloop .January ,13. The fertility of the latfd and its capa-; bilitles ar to sustaining population make quick transit and easy con veniences of electric service an es sential in the Willamette valley. Letters From the People (Communication sent to The Journal for publication In thia deportment xhouM be writ ten M only oe aide of the paper, ahould not exceed .'iOO word in leggtb aad muat be -H.mpauied br tbe tutme aud addreaa of tae ender. If tbe writer does not desire to have the name published, he aboald so Mate.) "Dineawiion In the greatest of all reform ers, i it rationalises everything tt tonehes. it lobe principles of alt false sanctity and throws theai liack oh their reasonableness, if they have no reasonableness, it ruthlessly crushes them out of existence and sets up Its own conclusions in? their stead." Woodrow Wilson. Complains of Insolence. Portland, Jan. 2 To the Editor of The Journal Anyone not acquainted with the rotten politics carried ' on al most continually in this -.ountry, would not and could not but ieel that the country is -fast drifting 'n to the lines of the rotten klnedoms jf Europe. A reflection of this state of things is not to be seen in tjhe higher class officials of the government, but always in the -petty ten ar.d fifteen dollar a week government emploe. The overbearing of these men is in tolerable. It segms thpy want to give the impression that they are permitted to do a whole lot of things arbitrarily. Especially is this true of the clvi service employe. But nobody will be lieve this for a moment, berause the civil service has1 one characteristic, namely, exactness, and to such an ex tent is this one feature casried ou. that the result -is one of elaborate Study and most minute detril. Such responsibility accordingly would be too great for the men of fhat posi tion. .'f The stof fice; is an instance of this, and there also ere to be found men who have more insolence than becom ing modesty. I went there a vei short time ngo and csked for my mail. The nirbt cierk answered in this maa ner:". "Now. So and So" calling me by my last name "you have omc here migfity often lately.and you must c.-t this out." I was . uoth insulted and surprised, not knowing what in. the world he was aiming at. Then, after flinging tt.'s insult at me, he explained that the. general delivery was only f o; transients and not for those living in the city. 1 replied that I ! did not know this before. "Well;" he replied, with his usual insolence, 'you know it now." So much for the politeness of the civil service. But of course, "civil" in this case docs not meat', "polite." Now, how is a man to receive h' mail, if he Is one night in r 25 cent rooming house, another night in a 10 cent bed, and perhaps another night in a mission room on the chairs. Predatory wealth and the power that goes with graft and roobery r.re surely forcing us poor people who are indus trious along the wrong lines. Into the most abject misery and destitution as may be seen from even the little inci dent that i have related. I THOMAS FARMER. Handling the . Turbulent. Portland, Jan. 2. To the Editor of The Journal The proposed plan of Sheriff Word and Chief of Police Clark to handle the unemployed situation Is, in my opinion, deplorable. How does Mr. Word know these 2000 unemployed will not work? I think it would be more sensible to first give them a chance. No doubt thefc-e are tome up desirables among themi but tne only way Jto weed them out is to first give them an opportunity to labors It wilt be time enough to talk rockpile after we have given them- a square deal. I witnessed the arrest of those who dis turbed the religious meeting on the street on Christmas day, and '.he sen tencing by Judge Stevenson, but the utterances made by those concerned :n the arrest. I think, were a mistake. The large man In citizen; cjpthei who ;was leading the two young men away to prison, said to the squad of police.as they entered the crowd: "Give them the clubs. That j is what those fellows need. They want to g td jail." And afterward I heard him say. to another man: "I told the po lice what to do to them, and ithey did it." I Now, I doubt the wisdom of such an inhuman program, especially: at thl critical time. I think it would show more magnanimity on the part of those in power, to first be sure thsy do the rig!:t thing by these ; eople, be fore adopting such an inhuman pro cedure. These men may have behind them th power vested in them as chief officers, and they may abuse this power by beatln the people ,up witb clubs, instead of giving them a chance to earn bread, but I do not think they will have one single , kind reart wit i .them or one . particle of human sym pathy from the people of thlr city. Judge Stevenson is right, .and the commissioners stem to be making a struggle to help the people, but I be lieve that in the final analysis of our dilemma Governor West will prove to be the man of the hour. ' W. H. -JoACK. Christmas Tour for Waifs. Portland, Jan. 2. To the Editor of The Journal Few hearts, if spy, were made more happy Christmas day than the little waifs of the Children's Home, who were given an auto ride through the courtesy of the Tyrrell Sightseeing company, to the Barnes circus grounds, a permit having been obtained to have the youngsters shown the animals. The children numbered 85. and the attend ants' were loaded in the three large sightseeing cars at 10 o'clock a. m.. and amid the blowing of horns and hearty caeera proceeded op their way to the Barnes winter quarters. All along the way the children were greet ed with friendly smiles and flourish ing, hands. Occasionally a passing car would salute the men who in their noble work were casting a ray of sun shine into the lives -of these homeless tots. Arriving on the circus ground tae children were escorted through sev eral buildings. Each trainer vied with the other in the effort to entertain the youngsters. Much enthusiasm was manifested in the building where the elephants were kept, the trainer taking much pains to show, how easy It wet to make these animals perform,-while the children's delight knew no bound a they watched the seals eat and per form. .With many words of praise to tbe trainers the happy group departed, arriving at the home at 1 p. m., each - ... ? one calling tb simple word Thanks" as they alighted from the- auto. : "You may choose your word like a connoisur, i . ' . : And polish it up with art, ! But the word that wuye ajid' stirs an-1 stays -.i , Is .the word tha,t coms from tjf . nesrc.- These worthy gentlemen deserve much praise for their most aenerou act They have ' set an example other Denevolent people to roilow. lA SUBSCRIBER. Governmeat Ownership, Pendleton, Or., Jan. J-To the Edi tor of The Journal The proposoal 'xt ;he postmaster general .for govern ment purchase and operation of the telephone and telegraph lines arouses anew an old but always Interesting subject, and that official probably, re flects the views of a much larger pro portion of the people that the metro politan newspapers, .now la opposi tion, realize. Upon a free vote of the entire, population of the 'country I have a notion that the proposition would carry . nearly two to one Personally, the writer favors the prlnk cjple Involved, but there Is a quest tion whether at this Juncture there are not other fields of government ownership calling ' more loudly for departmental action. We can get along very well for many years yefc under present telephone and- , tele-; graphic conditions, with proper rate; regulation, but Is It not for the in i est of the people that the govern ment take over .the coal mines and oil deposits, things In which every liome is Interested in some way? The natural : productions of earth, necesy sary to all mankind, surely Provi dence never . intended to be monop olized. Coal prices are exorbitant, and in the great cities almost pro hibitive - to the poor. The housewife is paying too much for the kerosene for her humble lamp, and the In creasing army of -automoUilists and gasoline users are paying an unnat ural und unnecessary tribute to' tho Standard Oil company. Every coal mine and every' oil well ought to be restored to' the government, and the products assured the people at sub stantial cost. The price to be paid would not be greater, probably, than that requisite to buy the telephone oh ol.T.h. linn. A small Drofit u. aa V'-vBu'a , - I charged, the oil refiners and handlers of by-products would soon pay c the purchase price In any event. STEPHEN A. "Who Is My Neighbor?" Portland, Or., Jan, 2. To the Editor of The Journal In the great city of Portland I have found only three nlnrea that will answer for the Good Samaritan. One of these places is the J Portland Commons, one is jrisgan home and one -Is the Pentecost Mis sion. The first place let me have a suit of clothes, the second let me have a dollar and the third lets me have a heme when I am there. These are nelarhbors." for they have done what the Bible tells all of us to do, and when we do that we are . Christians. There is no other way to make one only that way. It Is right to show kindness on Christmas day, but we need It Just the same In January and February .and.. March. Seme will say we could not no ma. Yes we can. The city of Portland now could let every man have work If it were not any more than to pick up sticks. It would be work, and the poor could get something out of It to live on If they were paid for It But then we forget It and go around ask ing who our neighbor is. He Is not very far off. it we will look for him. He is anywhere that you find a man that needs work. That is me one the Bible says Is your neighbor. O. E. SHI RE Y. Plans for Aid of Unemployed. St. Johns, Or., Jan. S.To the Editor of The Journal Please give space in your paper for a few lines from a working man. There are 000 men idle In Portland. Are there 6000 people In Portland who will take one man each and keep him for three months, taking him to a hoarding house or to his home, or lend him the money to help him until he can get a Job. the man to pay the money back as soon as he can? If this does not suit the people of Portland, there Is one more plan: Are there 6000 people In Portland ,tiat will give $50 each to help those men until they can earn the money and pay It back? I will give mine. I will not give any alms. This is a loan to be paid back. This would be about 1300,000. I would name about 12 or 25 men to take charge of this, giving them the full power to act. When I say men, I mean men and women In need of help. If the people of Port land have a better plan than this lat them bring It forward; It will suit me. Any clan to better the times. TIMOTHY SEXTON. Business Inconsistency. Portland, Jan. 1. To the Editor of The Journal Can you Imagine any thing more Inconsistent than your morning competitor. Just think. The kindly Mr. Pittook is president of tha bank at Sixth and Morrison streets and this bank ordered fixtures for Us new. quarters from a Milwaukee -concern without even a figure from tb local firms, all fully equipped for this class of work. Again, Mr. PlttoCV Is building a residence, the furnishings of which were ordered In the east. Note these transactions; then not that clear across the top. of page 10 of 'the Oregonlan of December 29 ap peared these lines. In large trpe: "The Oregonian's Home Industry Page Support the State That Supports You." I say he. Is a mossback of the worst variety. No wonder our local mer chants suffer, and even after spend ing their good money for adevrtislng in hla theet THOS. BOYLAN. An Original Journal Man. Portland, Jan. 2. To the Editor of The Journal I have not missed one single Issue of your valuable paper since its first publlcaton, and I aw a subscriber for the dally at this time. I have been reading recently In The Journal of the depredations of chicken thieves and would like you to publish my experience In that line. On the Friday night before Christmas I lost about $35 worth of chickens. Mr. 8am- mons.'an old veteran, and his son,' lost. about the same. Mr. Reeves, an old man who came here In 1849, I think, and Mrs. Thurston, on the Canyon road, were both losers at the same time. I am 73 years old the 25th of March. Mr.. Sammons will 'be 71 years of age on April 5. Mr. Reeves 75 or 7. All of us live at Cedar Mill, Wash. Co., Or, D. C. BURTON. Esperance Clark . Defended. Moatavilla, Or- Jan. i. To the Ed itor, of The Journal The neighbor who made- UP that false story of Es perance Clark running' oft to Rocky Butte to . shoqt " herself ought to be had up fo llbel.V It Is' not the first time she' has tried to ruin the girl's character. - Esperance did run away from home Christmas day. but she merely went to friends In Monta villa. Tbe girl Is very hot tempered, but she Is not crasy to try and kill herself. MRS. GEOJ2GINA M. CIARK. v . -v r- '4- - - . . ,: . PERTINENT COMMENT AND lEWS IN BRIEF j; . S3IAIJL CHAXGE . j OIuiCON' SIDELIGHTS Seattle is a fine. hie. nrorreslv city, but it is pretty wen up in a corner. ' .. ;.' -; . , Borne big good things done in 1911; bigger and better -ones will be done intii4. IThe problem of the unemployed eon. frents1 all other large cities as well as Portland. ' flcerns that almost xtverv coniild. erabie Job done for the public needs investigating soon -afterward t most be admitted that the trade in i skates and hand sleds Is seldom vt r brisk In western Oregon.. . ! . " . (jrent bargain prices on7 liquor also. In to-be dry towns; bapy bargains for buyers, though, at any price. I i . .7 . . lUncoIn Beachey is doing great stujnts in the air. It won't be Ion till we will all bemourning 3Nr him, Two men fought a duel for a 'girl, and both were hilled, immediately after which she t)er up to a third and less roojlish "feller." . It is complained that our navy is notj; keeping up with the navies of Great Britain and Germanv. abut is this necjessary? In several important re spektsthe United States is a,"diffei entff Country. " 11 j Of the :'muitltude of societies of all imaginable kinds, one recently organ Uedi for the promotiqn of longevity seems to be or.e of the best.- Future generations are likelv to rise un and call it blessed, especially if they can live j under better conditions than pre vail; now. . - ; NEW YEAR'S DAY IN Israel Katz, in American Magazine. Oyer in the little Ghetto town of Russia where I was born, the Christian ,Newi Year was a day of fear and dread for us Jews. I remember how ""they" used to march on New Year's Payh through the streets of our town arryihg the holy Images of the Greek hutch to dip .them in the river while t J ... X .IU IV. . 1 "r" u" " i" " ' " iBlirc Ji m order and reverence. We boys used to watch that procession from the dis tance with tear in our hearts and a feeling of strangeness and oppression upon our young souls, for we were strangers in our native land, foreign ers and outcasts In a land where oar forefathers had lived for generations. Not bne of us dared show 'himself upon the streets on such occasions. And here I was among people who call themselves Christians, and yet I i welcome eyes everywhere. In I was taken in as one of them, for the first time in, my young E felt no fear when the bells of fabt. Arid life Trjnly church began to ring the old year put and ring the new year in. 1 j t knew very little of New Year's resolutions then,, for was not it "their" New Year, and what had I to do with this outside world of my Christian enemies. But as I stood there with my I head "bare' and with tears in my eyes while the bells rang midnight, a resolution began -to grow within my hearty a resolution that was not made consciously and in cold reason as most resolutions are made, one that sprang up Jthin me spontaneously, one born out of the welcome which I .had re ceived for the first time from the out side jjworld the Christians. I resolved then and there to show to this Christian world that love, lib w at Cheer For 1914? By John M. Oskison. On result of the runaway tendency among those of us who handle money Whether In big masses oft capital, or In thL form of a restricted allowance ha sj been that in the past year we have (begun to know the meaning of thrift! j Th year of 1913 was one of read--Justmnt in points of view by the men and itmen who handle money. They have begun to learn that it Is not de sirable I to spend more than is taken la and 1J13 was a year for bringing home this lesson to the carelessly ex travagant. Thrjpugh the year, the greatest bankers." organization in the country kept ii its campaign for the proraul gatloifiof the Idea of thrift In Us simplest form the building up of a savings! account. The bankers used I he reminded him of It, and Gene said their local Influence In every way pos-lh,. would think It over. Nevt day In Sible, land the national organization j "Sharps and Flats" appeared the fol prosetfuted a publicity campaign which j lowing paragraph: I reached far and wide. "William E. Curtis, the dlstln- Toward the end of the year was bornl ruished Washington correspondent. the Ajtnerican Society for Thrift, a so- clety ftvhich uses the portrait of Ben-1 lamln l Franklin in all of Us literaturt and tikis quotation from the maxims of "Piior Richard": - "Tia hard for an empty bag to stand fiupright." It was this society which announced a competition unwns .i...- dren Ji the country- for the best def- Inlttoiii of -thrift and for the best 200 word f story illustrating individual thrift. H And more than 2000 children- in high schools ana primary acuooia sent either definitions or stories. It was a Pennsylvania high school girl who won the prize for the best def inition", i This is what she wrote: "Thrift Is management of one 8 af fairs in such a manner that the value of one's possessions is being constant ly increased." ahr arfrt who called . thrift "the rllDsed virtue," said in-her definition that while economy signifies saving, thrift "signifies 'both saving and in creasing deflnUion of thrift which we have undertaken, as a legacy from 1913. to make known to our people. And we; find ourselves In a receptive mood. t r vi an Vri as Biz as an Ant If man were much larger or mucn cate that this may re the cause, also, smaller than he Is he could. not have of some railroads' troubles.; While accomplished many of the most lm- the' Interstate Cogimerce commission portant feats of civilization, says - a i was engaged last March , with the In wrlter ih the World Magazine. For I vestigatlon of thta, banker managed man by his stature,, is Just the right ! corporation, 'the directors met in New size to make the best use of every- i York to consider its necessities. Their thing around him. In an article in dinner cost the company J1J.50 Per La. Nature Georges Claude points tout j person; each luncheon averaged 86.15 some of the reasons- f or this. J per person. The New Haven has Just If man! were the size of an ant.' for passed Its dividend after an unbroken example, he could hav mad none of dividend record of more than 40 years, the machines with which he has con- During all that time the New Haven niiereck the world. The dimensions ot ...h n.rhtnM as he could hav built would condemn them to uselessnees, as the surfaces upon which friction must take place would b out of all proportion to the volume, of the ap paratus, j ' Such a man could not make a oai i v,at wmiU float In the air. Th .leltcracv iof the materials he would have to -iemploy would prevent this, for when a certain . point of tenuous ness i paased the gas diffuses quick ly through the. envelope. He could not build ships that would woss the .on nr! float on any large, body ; of water, because the dimensions of such,! vessel woeja nave Be""r to th length and height of th waves "A white Christmas may be all right In it pmee,-- says tne Eugene Regis ter, 'put the Oregon kind certainly bat its advantages." . The Cornelius Tribune closed the old year with a denunciation, of the Spug. traUing him or her "a Sychophant: Picayune;- an Undecylenlo Glebe." ! The organization of a University of Oregon club at Hooil River will be completed in the April vacation.. Pre liminary e.eps were taken at a meeting last Monday. The editor of the Salem Journal hates M 1. V- . ) 1 . I . It. .mi,a Ka )aVK -a rt irtlwl n tr Anl airain but he' complains they are doing-it so slowly that "one is forced to think they are taking patterns after the way an ed itor's bank account Increases." Salem Statesman: Subscriptions to the stock of the -coffee club have bei coming in very slowly, much lo thv discredit of Salem. It Is noteworthy of the Salem spirit that this proposi tion is not hurried through, and the institution put to running at a time wfceq. it is most needed. Th cof re club s not necessarily a dry tow.i proposition. It is good for any citv that has poor people. A luen that deserves a name consist ing of a letter of the alphabet and a numeral of at least three figures, Ijko those O. A. C. fowls, is thus honor ably mentioned by the Cottage Gro-ie Leader: "Mrs. S. B. Mores has a faith ful bfcldy 11 years old. which -Js still so vi-orus thut ?he can hutdly be pointed out in a flock of last sprlns's pullets. She still persists in? laying a lot ef eggs rvery year besides hatch ing and caring for a brood of chick ens." TWO COUNTRIES erty, and Justice are never wasted even when given to a Jew. I re solved to take advantage of all oppor tunities offered to me for education and advancement so that I might be come In time a 'worthy citizen of this great country, my country. . The next few days were hard. The wolf had to be kept from the door, but the little spare time and money were used in getting an education. Every new book I bought was like a dear child to me and I used to sit late at night reading lovingly. At last the great day come, and my heart was filled with Joy and happiness as I began my college, career, deter mined to continue the struggle with eagerness. All barriers, I thought, must disappear before this iron will of the Russian Jewish boy resolved on getting the education, denied to htm in the land of oppression. And two years ago, on a June morn ing, there was no happier and prouder young map in the whole world than I as I walked up on the platform of the college of the city of New York to receive my diploma at the hands of a Christian, now no longer a stranger to me but a fellow citizen who gave me his wishes of love and affection and told me to go out Into the world as a son of the great metropolis of our country and carry the torch of education, culture, and rnM citizen ship among my fellow citizens. I knew then that a' great part of my resolution had been carried out, and I hope to God that till the end of my days I shall continue to live in the spirit of that resolution and work for the good of my adopted country, which is even dearer to me than If my ances tors had been of those who landed at Plymouth Rock. as to make certain the Immediate swamping of the tiny craft. He could not even produce great hpat, because the external surface-of his furnaces would b so large In proportion to their volume that most of the heat would be lost. This would cut him off from S& the chemistry that Involves high temperatures, and therefore from metallurgy and me chanics.. But a change-in the size of human beings would not make their exist ence Impossible, nor would It pre clude a high civilization. This, how ever, would be a very different civili sation from ours, perhaps one evolved from some such primitive beginnings as those of the ants.f Stories of Gene Field. From the Chicago Inter-Ocean! William E. Curtis, the well known correspondent who died two years ego, once loaned Field $50 In Kansas City. Many years later In Chicago ; was in the city yesterday looking after some of his permanent Investments." Kansas city, wnere ne lived xor a time. Is still redolent with Field mem. orles. George Gaston of that city .was proprietor of a cafe and bar whither gathered the choice spirits of the town. This man fairly worshiped Field, who was prone to run up ac , counts that he could not square with ready cash. A little squib or a poem. 1 however would serve to - wipe the slate clean and the poet's credit was as good as ever. Once a simple Christ mas poem that Field wrete so touched he heart of the cafe proprietor that he erased a debt of more than 1100 and handed Gene a receipted bill for the amount. "I understand, then, said Field, "that this acount Is paid." "It Is," was the reply.. "Well," said the irrepressible Field, "Is it not customary In Missouri when one gentleman pays another gentle man in full that the latter always sets up Wine?" Directors' Appetites. From Harper's Weekly. James J. Hill declared that our dif ficulty In making: both ends meet Is due largely to the cost of high living. Recent Nw Haven disclosures lndi i has been preeminently a widows' ana 1 orphans investment, nan tne stock: holders are women. More than 10,000 of th stockholders are presumably of small means, for they own only from one to ten shares each. It would be interesting to compare their luncheon and dinner , menus with those which the directors enjoyea ai in srocx- t holders expense, . Welletdey Kcort's. - t From Llpptncott's. "Well. I'll tell you this." said the college man, "Wellesley in a match factory."- "That quite true," assented the girl. "At Wellesley wc mako the heads, but we get the sticks from Harvard." - IN EARLIER.DAYSV Uy ed LOckleyv, Somewhere I have ; heard the ex preseion: "Said the' mouse to the ele phant, Who ar p shovingr.iyery much on a par With . this is 'the thought of San Francisco asking per- i. mission of Oregon City- to Incorpo rate. In the recorder's, office at Ore- a gon City the official map of San Francisco Is dulyiTecordexl. ' - V , When It was desired to ineorporste San Francisco, the; only United States district- court on the. coast was . t Oregon 'City, consequently Oregon City was the point' at which the map of San Francisco had to be recorded., it lu vullnw nn1 fratil antf old. Ia the corner of tjie mop -Is the legend. "Of ficial map of San S-Yanclseo. mad by William Ai. Eddy.tCS ' E.. drawn by Alex. ZackerxowskJ Mcx-Votlsh offi cer), copy for reeorSd'In the clerk's of fice of the United . States district court of Oregon." Across the back of the map is indorsed: "Filed In the clerk s office -at Oretslpn City this first day of February. -A. .D-18S0. Ueorge U Curry, Clerk, by 8.' Holland, dep uty." - , i -v On the" map is shown Montgomery Fort. The Batteryj Sansome- street, Montgomery street; Kearney, Dupoht, Powell. Mason, Taylor and other t streets so familiar to the forty-niners. E. P. Dedman. the .county recorder, is planning to have; the frail and yel lowed map, mounted On-linen eloth so that It will not erumble away. It should be exhibited - in the Oregon building at the P4 nam a-Pacific, fair. -Very feW people know that Oregon City is the godmother of San Fran cisco. I " ' ' ' ' Another Interesting document to T seen in the county recorder's office at Oregon City Is the original map Of Oswego, riled by j C. Trulllnger. the proprietor pf the Ijwo. It was filed for record oif January 18, 1867. by J. M. Bacon. the recorder. The Oregon Iron company's holdings are shown, as well as Furnace street, Durham Plare, Slate street. Leonard street. Green street, Ladd - street, " Wilbur , street and several others. Among the other interesting-documents is a map of Mlhvaukle. filed on Jiint- 21; 18C5: Canemah, filed;" on Sep tember 16. 18C6; Canby, filed On Au gust S. 1870; New ErS. filed January 7, 1876; the town of Sellwood, filed on July 14, 1882; the map ot Robertson- was filed on March 1884. Marshfleld, which has almost passed from the memory of man, was filed on April D. 1870. Rockland was .filed on February 1. 1870. Cuttlngsvllle was- filed on Arrlt 18, 1867. Moil interesting of all, however. Is "the original map of Oregon City. It i.iiin tii it nreclan end clerkly hand and Is signed by John McLough lln. The raver on which it is written Js yellowid wlfch age. It has been moupted on linen cloth nr.d where the folds ore the paper has cracked. In the right hand corner is an old-fesh' lont-d wax 'seal. In those days, when they wrote "Witness my hand and seal" the seal was not a little pen drawn screll. hut was a" masslva af fair of re wax with a real seal at tached. It was recorded In the fol- " lowing languajte: -Oregon territory, ClHoknmas county, lie It rememoeri that on tMs second day of December, In the year of our I.nrd one thousanu elKht hundred and 'JJiV. persona -iy auDeared befoVe me Francis 8. Hol- lsnif, clerk of "the prol ate court of Clacknmas county. In Orcfron terri tory, the above named John Mclaugh lin. With whom 1 am personally ac quainted, and acknowledged the sign ing bt the above and foregoing Instru ment for the purpose herein men tioned. Witness my hand and the seal of my office, the day and year above mentioned. F. ' 8. -Holland, clerk." Indorsed across the back or the map are the words, "Kerordea jan uary 7. 181. F. S. Iloaand, clerk of probate." In the map 1 shown the Island occupied by the Oregon Milling company, i The title or? the map de scribes It t the .map and plan of Ore gon 'City, though we have long since, ceased to refer to maps and r'sni,T" we now say map 'and plat. Though the writing is faded. It can still be . read- It reads ae follows: "This, the original plat. Is on a scale of IR0 feet to the inch. 8o much of the town as lies between Washing ton streetf and the: river was sur veyed in the spring of 1844 by Jess Applegate. The remainder of th town, from block numbered 83 to I7f, r..i..i. -a, am aiirvvd . by Robert R. Short in the autumn ef 1H. AU streets except Sixth street are wide and cross each other at right i. R!th street Is 60 feet Wtd on the hill or cliff and at the' rtyer cut Is only about 3 reel wie m iut r . ftt Ail lota in that part- i v " . .... - - - - of the town.-surveyed by Jesse, Apple- mm mm' aT i its i t On gate are at least oo ii irvm -, feet back. -The alleys In this part of the town are ten feet wide. All lota In that part of the town surveyea oy en. n shnrt rs 61 feet front and 106 feet back. Th alleys In this part of the town are ze reei wia. xh: numbered 6, 40, loz ana J3 ar pont ile squares. : "That part of th town set apart by red lines' has been donated to th probate Judges of Clackamas county In trust and upon conditions specified in the deed conveying It. ' Th space between the edge of the bluffs in blocks 83, 82. 37. 30. 73. 74, 75, 7t, is donated for a promenade for th Inhabitants pf -Oregon City. A1J streets, alleys and scares are do- ' nated to the city corporation for thv public, th streets to b forever kept up, the squares to be enclosed " if Aw,m tA vnMtJfnt All f.rrv etvftta pre reserved along the entire front of , me town, dunn aicuvukiuhi, - . T H r. Vioral.v r tri I f v t Vi ? th. .luMr. plat,' representing the town of Ore go ni . i a T. n m. . liy, is correct. rv. xv. onun, our veyor." , Pointed Paragraphs j Only very young "men understand, women. . . "- v -i The richer a man is the i richer he wants to be. Most worryn wouldn't want their Own way, If they could hav It. ' ."' It's difficult for the average man t live up to .the opinion he has of him self. : j , ' - . : A heavywelg'ht sweetheart 'work havoc with the freshly tailored cresses In a young man's trousers. --. V The Sunday Journal The Sunday Journal's colBrnna are supplemented by a variety of new reviewa and Illustrated feature thmt command attention. .VV, This big paper ft complete) tmi five newa sections, i2fag' magazine and comic, section. 5 Cents the Copy " J