F THE OREGON DAILY. JOURNAL, PORTLAND, TUESDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 3, 1914. pit C ' I r"" Iff) K I A 1 ' "plahds and - rich low land could I Pit. JUUK N ML' not be reached. These lands are - . . - - m m f A. aw istirrKSDByT wrwHPAfKn wen adapted to dairying ana iron c. m. iJki KBQM , .fnMfir raining and. when made accessible tabiimhrlt every fTulls tapt bomlajri t , will ( yield large profits tO the htt- myrr.u.?Ln and;nan; ,ln ; addition there are Katrj Ht ik vtrfrw t i-octim. or- (waloiiK. the Columbia river coru- iw2"'t lb,UU" tu u'u ','ou', manding Bites for suburban homes KucvZse.1h iiia; hmlUiK brought almofet within the nrnim mriieii by ibew Dumber, tell 'boundary of Portland by a'igooa the trmttn mlmt rtofrtpwut r' emit. road Way ' '"' aoujaarfa Kauinor c.. Britck ma.. . In the abolishment or the oia ?2? J.'i Vorl,i wasteful - system of road making u.ZlZ' rr r r and the adoption of a .system of Kute-flnlo trims br nail . or Ui nor d-t . J foe uuHea kuim er uexice; j bfvi m it l v ui;nvi in v m. vvnit; nan tagen a long step hi auvaute. : DAILY bm tr.,.....$t.m 1 On month.. . . VCNDAT Uu yvar....,..fC.CX 1 -One tnnnth.. . DAILY AMD SUNDAY. Ou fernt. , 97.0U Out itwtitK.. i The ronKnrf of pur lives Is Hi "Wilr prtf of the im;erf ty ro ,or hearts. Owrn Eliot. WH(J CJOVKRNH A.ME1UCAV ' its fast disaiipearing timber ...$ . i will be made to contribute towards i' lin llrl irt w llio riSndu ttnlvini? in a t OV "B " great measure the- problem of the jm IU)U Vf I A I i "J ' A .. 4 . . 1, ...111 I. A j A ptJiiuaiiem ruu, k win in; i found by the people of Columbia, is a good Investment and will pay for itself out of the Increased prop jerty valuation it will create. same logic. It is government's duty to protect the children in states , where they are not given adequate consideration. Such a law would prevent Industries from going Into states which permit the exploitation of children. The child problem has been dif ficult of 'solution because It has been impossible to get forty-eight states to enact Identical legislation. Under the laws of commerce, the standard of the least humane 1 the standard ot all, for the prod ucts of chiTtr labor are shipped from a few 'into many states. The Palmer bill seeks to establish a common rule such as was estab lished for food products. , action,5 why don't ' they all get be: hind the Borah-, bill which has al ready passed the senate, is pend ing -.before the house, and is a goo measure?" Why don't they! A FEW SMILES v "Oh, Mr. Smitn!'' cried the young ladv. as she greeted her caller. "So you have been mak ing friends with FIH Kx-President Taft is annoyed by the newspaper ominents on! his hlo!,fkn doou'?.? thlnk thirty-five pairs of breeches which vveit' ys"a i d Mr. have been cut down in sixe to meet Smith, grimly, "it his reduced bulk. Tire Kansas don't believe has City As T j OTTAWA yesterday, ex- 'reajdent Taft declared that the .British are absolutely Ten on the free tolls Issue. ! He held that the exemption to A liAWYEP.'K THICK T HKRK was no way for Judge llean to grant the. of fleers of the Inland Development Com pany a new trial. It was ab- Atnericau ships in the coastwise,' surd for Attorneys Fulton and trade Is equivalent to a subsidy Bowerman to ask a new trial. The asd that Qrsat Britain and other motion for a' new trial was nations can (meet the United States: en illuminating example of what "on the qual terms" of the treaty J Charles H. Carey referred to when by granting subsidies to their own ( he said to an assembly of lawyers skips. (in Portland: " That is exac tly what Oreat Brlt-: '.Much thus i atl -n dfcniurrern sin is Anlne at Himr with Vnr ?ti 1411,1 "tlon which are fllftd in nearly am s doing at rjuer witu tier own , fy mit Tel.hnU.a, ruleH that sliips and the language of the Suez r)nP PHrtl'n to definite issues are ob- lonn to tiltimute Juttuce. courts er now make justice a sec- treaty is absolutely the same lan-i mru tionj cuace as the HHV-Panncfifotr auuMawy guage as the Ilay-Pauncefpte treaty, tinder which ureat Britain! pntlury ;oneideration. At the trial, the officers of the vojin . iv rtmKnu. I. vuuh - OOTnl,anv wpre convicted on each Panama. How can Croat Britain ! com.pan,ys were c. onl Ba . t,JlZ 4 t I . ,,. , ! of the five counts. The testimony , . i, . I of forest rangers showed that the free tolls . at Panama -when, as . t , , . T , . ds1j . i, t , . .. Inland Development officers sola owner of that canal, she practices , , i . , , . . - n .i ' S. ir'B fruit lands a section of land on ..... . the crest of Mount Ashland. An- bdo pennii every oiner nation to ., . . . . . a .if. i other tract was on the summit of ":.Vr.C:"" ,M ..Jthe highest part of the Siskiyou ill i ii . i ijvi v , lire lunn I yji uiu ships in our own coastwise trade Is entirely our own affair. British ships cr.nnot engage in American coastwise trade. Thfy are forbid den from doing so by our naviga tion laws. Britain has no more business in trying to regulate our 1 1... AUm. AMWnanr mountains. A third was on the Bummlt of the Blue mountains, 7600 feet high, and covered with two feet of snow on May IB. These tracts were advertised as first class fruit lands in a pam phlet circulated among its buyers we would have in trying to regu- tbe late British navigation of Thames. It is absurd to contend that the ' United States has not the right to fix the terms upon which an Ameri- ' . can vessel carrying cargo from New Tork or New Orleans to Portland or Tacoma may pass through the Panama canal. It, is absurd to' hold that under any obligation ; Of moral or statute law, national It was proven in court that the defendants began business with no . capital. They had an oral con ' tract for 40,000 acres of land at K KK1 OUU WATEK PURE -' . ; '. A' . . f-ir-a Journal thinks he has just Uu. e , V . , J "Zii grounas ior compiami,. aua auua l)Ue of me and Iwi Kc,ms to watlt that it is a pretty howdydo if a other." Ladies' Home Journal. citizen cannot have a few acres of wearing apparel trimmed out of his wardrobe without the fact be ing commented on all over the t country. $60 and, estimating that it was worth $7.&0 an acre, they figured oiit an air-castle profit of $60,000 and it was on this margin that stock was issued. The manner in which the stock was handed around among the promoters and the considerations given in ex- N ACT of Congress expressly forbids trespass on the Bull Hun Reserve, whether on roads, trails or other ave nues. The measure was passed In 1904 as a means of safeguarding the purity and permanency of Portland's water supply. So long as that statute remains on the books, and it Bhould never be re pealed, it Is Idle to talk about building a road through the Bull Run Reserve. It is claimed that the proposed Hood River road through Lojo pass would result1 to a greater or less extent,- In polluting Bull Run wa ter, that it would tend to make a pleasure resort in the vicinity of Bull Run lakeland that it would add to the danger of destruction by fire of the Bull Run Reserve forest with consequent weakening of the conservation of the water shed. It Is further urged that the road would cut off the water sup ply from the Clear Pork and Lost creek which Portland will have need of. in the' not distant future. ? Whatever may be the merits of this contention, it is better to err on the side of safety. A quarter of a million people are dependent on Bull Run water, and in time there will be: half a million, then a million human, beings whose re liance for health and life will be upon the waters that issue from the Bull Run Reserve. In any controversy with - the welfare of all these people on one side of the balance and the convenience of a few people over a certain roadway on the other, there can be but one decision the waters of the Re serve must be kept unpolluted; no step should be permitted that can in the slightest impair the purity of Portland's water supply. It .Jay Greej "I had a ride In my cousin's automobile while I was up f the city Aaron Allred "Te did? .How'd seem?" Jay Green "Wa-al, It felt a good deal like fullln into a mighty deep I 1 4511 1 " 1 1 The brief of Max Cohen, whose case is to be heard in the Court of Anneals In San Francisco this' week, insists among other conten- j well, only ye dropped straight ahead Hons that the convicted Portland v lawyer .is - me vicnui ul a ..j mr.e you complain of a sore lip." , Why not tell the Court of , thruat." said the regimental doctor Appeals that Cohen is an angel j looking at hi report, us the last' mpm- witi wings and a halo? What a travesty i some of the stuff put forth in the sanctuaries ot justice! Texas has thirteen candidates for governor, and though Texas has three times the area and four i inflamed times the population, Oregon, from j "You had better not strain it iu the ber of the tick pa rade stepped up. ."Yes, lr;" terribly sore!" answered the bandsman, huskily. The doctor exam ined him carefully. 'Yes. it is rather said he PERTINENT COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF tha way in which executive timber Is yielding to the pressure of the band. I shall strike you off duty for a week; come to me again at the end nt tliut tim nnd in t h int-:ritil rnrrln people, will soon skin her to death j with eait and water." in the number. Of gubernatorial! At the end of the week back came lightning rods. A notable feature of the plat forms of gubernatorial candidates this year is their great length. Let them go It, however; it's election year and the people are fully re signed and prepared to stand al most anything. Letters From the People (Commuoicfttlons nt to The Journal for publication In thla department thould b writ ten on only one lde of the paper, should not esceed 300 words in length and must be ac companied by the name mud address of tbe sender. If the Writer ooea Dot desire to have the name published, he should so state.) "Discussion is tbe greatest ot all reform era. It rationalizes eTcrytlilni; it touches. It robs principles of all tulie sanctity and throws them back on 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. the bandsman unite recovered "That's good." said the doctor. "You're fit for duty again now, bo you can return to your work today. By the way, what is your Instrument?" "The side drutn, Pir!" answered Tom my, without tni riicKer or an eyena. Causes of Distress. St. Johns, Or., Feb. 3. To the Editor of The Journal With Interest I have read numerous letters recently pub lished in The Journal, wherein rea sons were assigned why the "army of the unemployed" and crime are ram pant in the land. I herewith present for The Journal 6f I am told," fcald a beautiful woman to a dub of a nan In Bratenahl the other day, "tht my lovely cousin, Miss .x.., nas made a . deep impression on you." Is Miss X your cousin?" burbled the dub excitedly. "Indeed, she did. She is one of the loveliest girls I ever met. J'll tell you Just what kind of a hit she made with me. I met her at the Dashes' dinner, and she sat on the other side of me, and I. talked with her the whole time, and I can't even remember who "my dinner partner was." "I thought not," said the beautiful woman, dryly. "I was your dinner partner." SMALL CHANGE A little. SHOW Htorm or- tn rinomi'l inake a hard winter. i The annual scricss iif big-eRg stories has begun corning in. Ah, now come tl !td little Feb ruary, with two holidays. The bi hataehalliiits are attracting a lot of attention already. There has ben Rood roads talk only lous enough; now for action. Tlie ftprinjr crop of gubernatorial candidates will be embarrassingly large. TcrhapH oonKrctJs could dr nn better than to Ket Secretary Vane to fix up a iew janu iuw?, aim pass tnem. If tlie oworld i, and lonjr has been. growniK netier. what a touirli ol place it must have been some centuries ago. A river bar is a thing to be fouitht and conquered. Ho is a saloon bar. Home people regard the letral bar simi larly. 4 In an encounter between a police man and a robber, it is a pltv if the policenutn doesn't aim right and shoot rirst. It won't be long till all able-bodied men can find .employment, but there win always oe many out or employ ment. One high chool Is going to teach journalism. How many of the pupils can fepell or read correctly, or ' can learn to do so? TJkelv enough mativ of those refu gees at Fort Wins, being fed better than ever before, are glad tlioy had to run from Ojinaga. Talk of even the best of laws that have been or will be passed materially lessening the coat of living is mostly buncombe. It is a hlgh-cost-of-living time. OREGON SIDELIGHTS I The Myrtlo Point Knlerprise thinks It strange, "considering the need Of desirable title, that sonieon has not written av ragtime song around 'Ban- lion-by-the-Sea.' " , Cornet Band, the American Bays, ajhow that Mummer will have a creditable miiKleal organisation this summer. Nothing is said about ragtime, how ever. .. ' . - . IN EARLIER DAY? By Fred Xockley. Fifty-eight ear Ko.the - paper i were full of controversial discussion 1 about the death of reo-peo-inox-inox. ' tho head thief of the vlla Wallas. In ! ".those days therv were liO good Indi-j The renearsals of lrof. Alexander's aha but dead ones and the Pam-rs ad- vised the settlers ami snhliers to kill the Indiana first and find oA if they were friendly Indians after they were dead. ; "h . The Journal re-enly ; published an account of the death of th noted Wal la Walla chieftain which tfought forth : the following letter: . Jj - Freeinont Station, Seattle, Wash.' To the iMitor or The .JMuriml Dear Sir: I notice uu article' (T-m rerent Ik. sue of The Journal, bv Vred Lockley, St. Helens Mist: In' l.'nifcn county logs ar assessed for about tS8 while li: i!latsop county the value placed on them is 2. Might be a profitable ven ture for some enterprising man to visit Clatsop and buy canines for shipment to Union. ' - From the way Jefferson ladles are registering it 'doesn't look to th Ke- iew ii many xi mem wern vppunni i in reiemiico to th Vlliii.o- of i -hiuf to equal suffraxe They are all In rco-peo-mox-mox S As I was favor of good roads or improvements i ' It 'VM - w ' of any description, the Itevfew further j "I IT " u"."'8 or -tr,7' Breat t hUf ........ noB niiieu. j -would like tu tell how it was as I sw It. There were six Indians we held prisotirm and there were li guards We. stnrte,! me i oucuet river up Itie Vat):i in the fays. Kditor "Young, formerly of the Sun flower state, nays in the Cxxiuille Sen tinel: "Ha vina seen the worst that the weather ever does to this section Walla river on December in last Sunday's storm, the Sentinel morning, and we had a running fight man is still glad he is here. B,ut those till about 3 o'clock, when the Indiana gusts were forcible reminders of for- made a determined stand and were uirr irnvxa mi muw. u wii'k u not ror us, HO the colonel , ' . ' . , . , 'told the guards to tie the Indians and During the late meteorological un- six of us guard them and tbe other pleasantness Morrow county was a six go Into the battle, tho Indians r phelter in a time of storm, according fused to he tld so we ent r-word to to the Ileppner Gazette Times, which the colonel they wouldn't he ti-d and Fays: "Morrow county Is certainly a j he said If they wouldn't be tied to favored .spot. Storms of wind and j shoot them. - , rain nave neen raging in omer pans vve Doys began to or rue siaie ana aiong ine riim inis week but the weather here has been balmy and pleasant." Powell Butte ( 'orrespondenc lled inond Hub: Bend is ciowintV over Hedmoiiii because Governor West on his recent visit appeared In the former t not killed He tried toil get un so a tntv,. i.. u hlr nihil. In tUa ..u..; 1 .i. 1 .l "i A' ? !"' .., ...... v. r....... ....... ij Bum mm in one 11 m n.-i.u i.v.n killed and bite, a Imiv IK nr,nur, tn k li . , and one IndlanV not reo-4ieo-mox-inox. . drew a dirk knife from hfe Ugglnc and began to strike right inu left. Jlle cut ote man over the eVe and a man bv the inline of' Mllrhtl - fmrrim Ihe Itidls.n on Ih- hed a 3rd killed him l'eo-iK.o-niox-mox was nHol down hut " latter li,e wore a flannel shirt. We're satisfied in our minds had the gov ernor paid I'ovyell -Butte a visit he would have eonte togged out In a Prince Albert, silk hat and leathers, in which case poth towns would have had our sympathy. TAX REFORM IN WESTERN CANADA uouuual i I ... tlA l nnatilula or International. Great Britain j " hould have the right to say what! f, moat amazing story of -dizzy iiiiauv.c. terms should or should not be We own the we own thel pa,d " n bJ'er! 8 "FT Pictures of other lands were hip; we own the ports; we owa the canal zone; we own everything Incident to the transaction. fjnder such a status, if Great Britain has a right to fix our tolls, she baa a right to fix tolls on the Mississippi. If she has that right, the Ameri- ing the company's property, -a fact that was admitted in open court by the defendants. The accused represented that they had deeds to 40,000 acres of land in escrow in the Lumbernrens Bank but Mr. Dukehart.i escrow agent of that In stitution, testified on, oath that the eon nrDQMonf t.h,.l,l .hUi. i unuMeiureu i " " " ja kiivt viw UI1VU1U tVUUlV'UlV 1 1 I of the company. It was proven at the trial that tAl the land the ever ownea was zauu favor of King' George and the American Congress resign in favor of the British Parliament. ' I comPay -- acres. I The company gave a free lot at I Klamath FallB along with each EDUCATION AN1 FARMING T HE department of agriculture land sale and represented to the says that education and bust-! purchaser that the lot was worth ness methods are big factors ; all the money paid for the land In successful farming. Their ' Importance has been shown by a series ot investigations in the states of. Indiana, Illinois and Iowa, where statistics were gathered from 620 farms, of which -273 were operated by owners and 247, . by tenants. The Investigations showed that ; farmers- with a high school educa tion make nearly double the aver age Income of those with merely a common school training. Those who .start earliest make the most profits. Many farmers with very At the trial the defendants ad mitted that the lots were more than two and a half miles from Klamath Falls and behind high hills, and that - they cost $2.39 apiece A more flagrant abuse of the incorporation function is rarely at tempted. A more brazen assault on the real function of a court of justice is farely made than was the effort to get a second trial in a case so completely proven. In tlie motion for a new trial there is full explanation of why little schooling succeed, but the i Lawyer Fulton recently staged in bulletin says these same men would' full view of the Jury his pyrotech- yaa H t ii o tuhiilfltAii pnntpnta fir ft is idle to argue that there ; reDort of the department of commerce would bo no danger of pollution, and labor, for a specified district and Wherever human beings go they entitled. "Immediate Causes of Dis- rrv. iress. ine laouiaiea siaiemcm neio , ..111 1 . ..u .. v.. plan speculators will soon let go. If assessors assessed unimproved land at its worth no one would need exemp tion, and I don't see how we are going to make him do any different under the proposed exemption act. After all, it's a .pretty, hard propo sition t fill a pocket with a big hole in the bottom Of It, and that's our plight, J. L. EDMISTON. The Care of the Unemployed. spread germ life. The very fact " -Tented r BuUeUn of The i si.Gr' Ffb' - !? that a road is to be built in Bureau of labor. No. 79. November. 1 Close proximity to Bull Kun lake 1908, page 905, published and approved what became of. the man with thi is to permit people to journey nyine government, ana is as iouw8. smallpox(?) who was the means of through the Reserve and about the remnbr Tnt b'TmSiate t"? uZ' TrLelfV? J' Rnot whence Portland water comes, causes of distress: i 6eet. It seems strange that one per- T fa Qvlnmafif that thft nlfln is full of peril to Portland, and that Cause. 1 tha road ought not to be built. White. RATES AND REBATES E Accident Blindness Fam- Per- uies.i sons. Negro. ASTERN railroads are asking Rt0nnfamily! authority to increase their Incarceration ratesi five per cent. The re- lnSJ?5K?cy of quest is based on a showing Intemperance that cost of operation has increased .7 e",pi more, proportionately, than reve- Lack of employ- mma hill thla cftntonHriTi urnc o-lron l ment, old age 17 5 6 26 12 196 170 85 21 16 126 77 821 Fam ilies.! 38 4 55 201 1 1 18 11 10 659 1 1 1 7 40 1 4 355 Per sons son could be the means of creating such havoc in the lives of a thousand people and then drop bo suddenly into obscurity. We will begin to think it was. a ruse, after all, if we don't get If. v dvihw 'ty - i V. . jr bvvjii. a v'10 . i ri . x utuiu- K3,,vw,A nakvii VAeo IB closely and insist on uncensored re 24 1 ports daily. It may mean cause for future self-protection if he b.ad the dis- 22 241 831 3 2 26 5.3 2,505 ! do better If they had the oppor tunity or further training. . The department seeks1 to impress upon agriculturists that agricul ture Is a business the same as any other Industry. Successful farm ing la an ; individual economic! prouiem. ilia iarm aoes not pro-: vide work, the pay nilist be cor respondingy low. The farmer may have sufficient area and grow the right kind of crops, .and yet not be -successful, owing to the poor quality of his entire business. Such farms 'are j unprofitable largely through ignorance or indifference on the part of the operator. Under good management they fcan gen erally be made successful.; The bulletin has been issued in ; connection wjth the department's campaign for; increasing the farm er's efficiency. He is the nation's great producer, and upon his ef ; forts much ' of the country's pros perity depends. Proper organiza tion of well selected farm enter prises to:' permit the maximum use of men, horses aod machinery lies at the foundation of success. " nic performance for contempt pro ceedings against The Journal. It was a lawyer's trick to cheat justice. A CHILD LABOR BILL ene.ss II 31 a severe jolt by an Interstate Com- Loss by fire 2 8 jn,i;n i.n I Loss or income iUCICO KU11I1U1301VU "cuoiuu ICLOK. I f-nm week in wnich It was neia tnat tne Loss of money railroads have not discontinued 'the N?e, $0 rters practice 01 giving reDaies. old age The commission found that mil- O1of; a n lions of dollars are paid annually Severe weather to great industrial trusts of the g,111? reast by railroad systems in the i trxvm nt allowoneoa foe a-rvonlnl oar. Total 452 1,860 731 . 1 f ATrml rt Art T 1c O nlntH BlWUlin Mie large manufacturing piants are That the of tobacco in early not required to pay demurrage childhood is a great factor in arresting charsres aKsessed acainat small bus- normal, mental, moral and religious de i rrv, .nmmi.;nn ti,r veiopmeni is now generally tinuwi, ana 1 "- accepted, and that this check in normal ttnaugeiucuio "hu iuc n uois alc development during childhood leads unlawful, tor they amount to a later in life to numerous vices and vi Dreference in favor of the trusts, clous habits that often develop into Great manufacturing corpora-' rVttlr r7v rTnments r tions having industrial railroads the' little ones. we need more up to connecting their plants with trunk date methods of instructing the dull. lines may no lonier be exempt If the state would take hold of the ffbm demurrage charges. The com- ong-ested condition In cities by mission says such exemptions are aasisting persons of good intentions to noihing less than unlawful rebates, a country home, along New England ,,si, aeei.o tbA hanoflt rxt thai and Australian metnoos, tne army or the unempioyea wuuia siuvy wiimici ease, -and if not it will clear up a mys. tery. . I would like to ask what the good churcn people are doing in this emer gency. The only thing I have seen in the'papvrs so far are accounts of St. Patrick' Catholic church, where the good j women prepared an appetizing dinner for 150 needy men, and also St. Stephens, that have served one big supper and mean to continue it weekly until! the. municipal authorities find worki for alL Now theso are obscure churches to me. Those I hear most 12 about are the White Temple, First 1,081 j Presbyterian, First Methodist, etc. I ' ! haven't seen where these rich churches were I doing a thing except the First A A PROGRESSIVE COUNTY OLUMBIA county has joined the ranks of progress. Ily a good margin that county Voted yesterday for a svstem of modern highways. There was opposition and, curiously enough BILL prepared by . the na tional child labor committee has been Introduced into the house by Congressman Pal mer of Pennsylvania. It forbids the interstate shipment of com modities produced in quarries, mines or factories where children work more than eight hours a day or before the hour of seven. o'clock in the morning or arter seven in the evening. The bill proposes to apply the principle on which the drug and food act is based, that law "having established standards which must be met before drugs and food can be shipped from one state into an other. It is said that President Wilson takes a keen interest in the bill, this statement finding sub stantiation In the fact that the measure is backed by one of the president's closest political friends. Various state pure food laws were Ineffective until congress took action under its power tp reg ulate Interstate commerce. ,4 The federal law says that a state which falls to enforce restrictions against the manufacture of tainted goods cannot ship them into another state. The law is based on sound industries themselves and give them "undue, unlawful and unrea sonable" advantages over competi tors.1 , The decision is one of the most important in many years. It comes and the problem of success in life be solved for many. v. c. LK.vv.ia John T. McRoy in Harper's Weekly. Widespread interest has recently developed concerning the application of single tax in western Canada. Its success Is one of the bases of a con certed effort to untax industry in-scw York. It has inspired many a single tax prediction in electorlal campnignri last year in Missouri and Oregon Wherever tlie initiative Is in force the United States has had Bingle tax or quasi-single tax campaigns. It would not be too much to say that Canadian experience is the scource from which these hopes have come. Western Canada seems to show that taxation may become a subject of hope and absorbing Interest to the mass, of men. It demonstrates truths to thu practical man who despises "theory" and "hypotheses." While no batty inferences can be draWn from such a consideration, yet one thins is clearly evident that northwestern -Canada possesses some attractions which the United States does riot. The contention which is constantly made, that this progress has mainly as Its cause the taxation of land values and non-taxation of Im provements, is the conception that we are now to analyze. The country is tnainly agricultural. save in .British Columbia Where lum ber, mining and fisheries predominate. However, there is fruit growing in the Frjizer River basin. In view of the insistent assertions of Taussig and other orthodox economists that the single tax would work better in towns than In the country, it Is interesting that a rural community has' been t ie first largely to apply Henry George's teachings. The production of grain Is the great est industry of the Canadian north west. There is, however, a consider able amount of cattle raising. Dis tances between towns are large, and the farm life Is of that lonely American type which will no doubt make for Individualism of the most pronounced type. provements of any and all kinds are excluded from taxation. The provin cial taxes, whether personal property. Income or poll, still exist. The value of land Is taxed more heavily in proportion as It la kept out of use. A lot held for speculation la discriminated against by a higher rate. In Alberta and Saskatchewan land value taxation Is compulsory throughout the provinces. Neither Im provements nor. personal property Is in any way taxed. Provincial taxes In small degree remain. In Manitoba, land is practically the basis of agri cultural taxation.5 Stock, Implements, etc.. are not taxed. In Winnipeg the assessment of buildings is only two thirds that of the land. others were or su years old. was saved- I tell you It Was a hot time fna lltlle nrhil f ! exiieefetl tt, ., u,..m ...... ... ' patent shot. It Is a shame the way our boys mutilated the chiefs body after lie was killed. One of the surgeons cut ofrthe chief's ears and put them in a bottle or alcohol' as a tropby. Allow me to add that I don't think bow that our colonel ought to' have kept the chlt and the other Indians as prisoners. They came to us under A 'flag of truce and according to all the rules of war ought to have been allowed to go back to their wigwams. MAUION PHILLIPS, Indian war veteran." Th causes leadltiK up to' the Indian war of 1855 are not we.ll understood. History lias much to say about the war itself, but you. will" jnd but brief mention of the ral reason that led to the Indians taking to the warpath. Oeorge Collier Hobbinw,' one of the early day busfReVs men of Portland, and at one time, mayor of Portland, 1n , speakintatf the matter some years ago said: . "Congress made an appropriation-to build a military wagon rjiad from'-the" headwaters of the M Issturl trlver to the Columbia river. ThJ construction or this military waaron t'Oad was un- There can be no doubt that this policy has Immensely increased the Quantity and quality of improvements. J tier the charge of Lleutenjim John Mul Building in the towns and country is ' len. The Indians were employed In out of all proportion to the growth of population. Medicine Hat had a 400 per cent Increase in 1912. Edmon ton adopted the pure land value tax In 1912. 'The figures for buildings were $10,250.G2 for 1912 against $2,197.92-) for 191.1. Towns of 30,000 Inhabitants gathering cattle for thi workmen as well as for the military" '.escort. The Indians called the 'bull whackers' or teamsters, 'Gee-haw-whoa-buck' men. "Governor Stevens of Washington territory was ex-offlcio superintendent of Indian affairs. lie appointed two show as much progress In buildings of the teamster who h4d . worked un- -Taxes and Exemptions, McEwen. Or.. Jan. 31. To the Editor of The Journal I am In favor v of free e'reuiHtlon of initiative petitions. If at a time when the railroads are free, then only meritorious measures rlpmandlns a. substantial rate in- will Bucceed. I have in mind a t cent ...ji... ,L-x j.. nasseneer fare for Oregon, and I ven crease, it muicaiS uiai tie ran- f"re j can make u go on its merit if roada can increase their income j can ujg up traveling expenses. The millions of dollars . through econo- reason it has cost so much to initiate rnies of operation and especially laws has been the tact roar mioi , , , , . . , ,, them were uncalled for. I am also op- through abandonment of. a policy posed to any iaw being made by the which gives large shippers materi- legislature , without , being referred to al advantages over those not SO the people, and my reason is that the (.vftH legislature is made up mostly of law- Idvuieu. . . i.,.r t nn fir oerson to These favors ta- the trusts have j niak' raws for the general good of so- imposed a heavy tax on transpor-1 ciety. They can't tell half the time tntinn Thp National Tube Com-1 what their own making means. i tation. Tne national i uDe torn- a uule strange that though pany, a suDSiaiary oi tne unuea j al, w-ealth comes through agriculture States Steel Corporation, profited j and miriing,: first, yet these interests to the extent Of $425,000 in .1911. have practically no say in tne making Sickness leads In the above, and lack! y,annt fnr tha R,.rv plllh nnH the hungry men, on a false tip, gathered to participate of it and were lgnomin iously dispersed by the police upon the request of the committee in cnarge. I am afraid after this crucial time somej of the churches will stand In as unenviable a position as eome of tbe town of the valley, chief among which is Albany. This town showed the most mercBesa inhumanitaVfan side, unless It was Hillsboro. The report from there! reads: "Though the marcher have ia place of shelter tonight, they had nio food, and with the police guard ing' the doors and refusing to let the soliciting committee go out they will get nothing until morning. "The soliciting committee started out afoon after arrival but the police returned them to the old engine house. They made no show of resistance when ordered back." Which latter fact show their spirit is pretty well broken. I wonder if they maintain a humane society at Albany? Think : of men marching all day in driving rain, cold, wet and hungry, and then locking them up without a bite to maintain haat in their bodies, until morning, and then grudgingly giving them sandwiches and coffee and threatening to turn the fire hose on them if they did -not leave instantly. I have seen a report since that one of the firemen was ais chareed for not lending his aid to This exceeded the ientire operating expense of the plant's railway for that year. Three railroads in 1912 returned more than $2,200, 000 to Industrial lines. There is no most of it tame from localities which will benefit most from good public policy; it is government' roads. ' 1 duty to protect the health of the Columbia county is one of the 1 people against the greed of men richest in the fetate but its develop- who would .grow rich on impure ment has been long retarded by j food. th lack of good roads. Its fertile 1 The Palmer bill is backed bv the and administration. of our laws?. And all because of a bunch-of parasites called lawyers, wno proauce noining but strife and have to be taken care of. We have tiad tax laws galore, and I don't see that we hav helped matters a bit over the conditions of - 20 years reason why the ago. I don't know what the law pro- railroads should be permitted to do Posed by Mr. Crldg s contains .other , -,, i - . . . ,. I than the $1500 exemption, but to my. indirectly what they cannot do di- J Tlt would not be mv'ch improVe- rectly. Keuaies are Tor bidden by ment over the present. The assessor law. The law should be applied, j the man to go after. He is the one tnai says vnai a piece ui property is Carl J. Peterson, a homesteader, tliat , Just as god should pay writing from Roseburg, says in I the same tax, whether improved or not, The Journal: "Lafferty has a bill I &nd aU lan(J of the """e character, r I whether timoer or omerwise, snouii for the homesteaders. Congress-1 Alsk. t.A,aUM w timh man Sinnott has a bill for the on it, it is not less valuable. For homesteaders. And now Mr. Haw-1 example, if a piece of farm land is Ipv has--a bill for the noor home-1 wo"th J30 per acre, a piece of timber ley nas--a ma iortne poor nome-i,and that Joins it is worth $30 plus uifBueis. uw li mej waui iu gen the timber. If you assess on this this outrage. A. J. S. Questions Concerning Whiskey. Portland, Feb. 2. To the Editor of slhe Journal In a large whiskey ad vertisement in the Sunday morning Oiegonian the statements are made that "whiskey is the greatest medi cine ever invented" arid that it is "tne only medicine ever invented that has been proved! io proious uumou Will someone who has investigated, - h w a. chemist or pnysician, kind ly inform me If this statement Is true, and state whit Ingredients in whiskey possess such medicinal and curative properties? Will someone inform me in what way it'jjrolongs or preserves life? r PERPLEXED. That the region Is developed abnor mally is due largely to the alluring appeals of the railroads and land speculators. On account of this, theie is an 'agitation for pure single tax In order to eliminate land speculation and let northwest Canada grow ac cording to its true capabilities. Taxation In western Canada Is rnore largely under the control of cities and towns than in any state of the Ameri can Union. By demonstrating the merit of a certain system, a town be comes the center of a" host of nearby imitators. These in turn tend to spread their workable policy over the province. By exempting improve ments, for. instance, a town encouraged Industry and aommerce which was an advantage, and other towns were forced to adopt the same policy. In British Columbia, for local pur poses all of the large cities nd towns such as Vancouver, Victoria and Prince Rupert, tax land valuta only. Inl and improvements as American cities of 200,000 population. The exemption from taxation of business has resulted der Lieutenant Mullen ti the wag-on road, to office, appointing one of them, J Bolan. as sub-Indi5n iiRtnt with In Industries equipping and Improving t headquarters at what is now Wt iiat- tneir plants to the highest degree, cheo. Shortly after his-appointment. Stores are not afraid of being penal- I the Indians sent a delegation toT'athe.-. ized for erecting commodious build- ; rondoga, a Catholic mUsJonary. ask ings. It has also reduced the cost of I jng him to ue his Influence to have doing business, thus affording an ini- j Bolen removed. -They . said' their proved service for the same .money to squaws and young' women were afraid me consumer, wnne tne towns will j to go out picking huckleberries as have to slacken "this rate of growth , jjolen had assaulted several of the one fact seems to be Indisputable. It , young Indian women, is that unwise taxation : has been j "'Why does the Ore.fet Father at shown to have more effect in check- Washington Insult us fry sending a ing building, farm improvements, and ! "fjre-haw-whoa-buck" iiiln to be over business than is commonly supposed, j us? our young worprn ire afraid to And western Canada bas proven that j leave camp while he Ilea In wait for by not penalizing industry, it can tha better develop and the more effectu ally serve the people. The poor man them, they said. J "Father Pondoga writH' to Bishop Blanchet t Fort Vancouver. Bishop who buys a lot in the United States ; nianehet renorted it to Ijovernor tte and improves, finds himself con- I vpnK. rtovernor Stevens Wrote to Agent fronted by an increased tax. In west- ' uoian telling him of the chargf-s and ern Canada this amount every year is saved. A single case will serve to show the meritorious effect of exempting stock asking for an explanation". "Bolan called the chiefs together and said, "If you try to make.'me any more, trouble I. will have the soldiers come1 nn hern and punish you. The "chiefs and personal property In that section. , railed their people together and held- A man owning zu.iruo neaa or cattlo I council A delegation; was sent to. in Canada toldj a questioner that ho Would have been taxed one, dollar a head or $20,000 in an American state. That a paving Is' effected to the con- Father Pondoga asking hlm to send word to Oovernor Stevens, that If the agent was not remove! Within 30 days ' U pb wniild kill him. ii sumer by untaxing business stock Is -Governor Htevens seit word that clear. The situation almost tempts , ne coui(j not take actio without more one m my mai me oeneiicence or ex- ; information ' Shortly ater inis an- emption of industry has, been proved. Perhaps its success may not be so marked 1- older and more staid com munities, but no. one can any, longer afford to neglect a propos'tion that has beyond all question "made good", in the region where It has been tried.' No party and no bodypf men In Can ada has agitated for a return to the old system. LOOKING HALF A YEAR AHEAD By John M. Oskison. With the actual arrival of this new year a great volume of forecast wai loosed upon the country by financial and business leaders. You have, no doubt, read much of it in the papers. You must know, from what you have read, that the vast majority of the Too many demands were made for capital to be used in developing new enterprises, wnere u was inevitable that some risk was involved. People generally grew afraid to put their money in bonds and stocks; and the natural result was that the prices of bonds and stocks fell far below a nor- other Outrage occurred Hupon one oT Ihe Indian girls. The indlans killed Bolan. mutilated him d burned up his dead body. r ' "Troops were sent outi-to punish the Indians. They were defekhed and many of the soldiers were kril1- Oregon was asked to rf ise volunteers and at once raised a regiment. Te Wenatchce Indians sent runners t.ll the ColurrN bia river tribes. mst ig whonr rose, Runnf-rs were also setftfr the Klamath Indiana and the souhti tribes also rose end the war was ofi." new year predictions have-been optim- , mal level. - llOLl. jl iiavd nraiu aiiu w eoq 1 1 CI III Modest Mr. Lafferty. Portland. Feb. 1. To the Kditor Of Tbe Journal In front of a photo graphic establishment in Washington, is a large panel containing pictures of the entire membership of te house of representatives. All- are plain head and shoulder portraits, with the ex ception; of that of young Abraham Walter tfferty of Oregon, who ap pears! In the center of the collection with k silk hat, coat thrown over his arm. and a jaunty cane. Thus one gets' the impression that he Is the pro istic. If I should attempt lo.maae a composite record of the hundreds of well reasoned comments as to what the year 1914 has In store for the man With money to Invest, I should think of It as something like this: The, people have been a little more cautiouj and conservative In business (In the spending of money) than the actual condition Justified. They have accumulated a surplus of money available for Investment, and they have readjusted very considerably theif habits of living they have learned to live within their incomes. No panic has come. Tariff and cur rency legislation have been enacted without causing any widespread fright or protest. The insurance companies and the banks had a good year in 1913. showing that people generally. n fidence in the country's future. It was only in that form of busi ness in which speculation plays a part that exceptional depression occurred. The Ragtime ; Muse tl.e leaders in finance and business in dictates that within six months you and I will have lost most of our fear to invest; within that period you and I and the rest 'of our Americans will be spending more than ever before. And when that condition is known business will Increase; the bonds and stocks of the great corporations (the rail roads wbich haul the things we oae, and the manufacturers who make them) will assume a- greater attrac tiveness. It is said that, the securities market feels a coming change In business con ditions from four to six months ahead of the- time when people generally know that a change has come. Ho If these. New Year prophets are right, prices of good bonds and -stocks i are going to gOup within a very short ; time. Io you think the optimists are ! right? As an investor you ought to j decide that point right away! . i Suburbanite' Fancy. When Gabriel blows his trumpet. I hope he blows it Joud Because I'll have to httriip It . Through that commuter crowd! I hope he blows it early; It gives one needles. pain To raise a hurly t-irly And then to miss the-tralnl Th code I'll surely know it, If it's like that In town. To go up, twice he'H blow It;. One toot means "goipk down! And for my rolls and gutter I hope they'll let me" wait. , Or r-ross words I might utter There at the pearly ugate: I often sit and ponder ? On what 1 ought to wear; I hate to go well, vonder. So clad that all will stare. I'm not sure where I'm going; However, at the worst. There's comfort still In knowing 'Twill not be Ixnesomehrirst! nrietor of the whole outfit. A stranirer passing down the avenue a few days ago, paused in front of the picture a moment and Inquired: , it a minstrel yeT The Journal's Figures Convince. From the Newberg F.nterprise. Enshrouded in gloom though Oregon maye on account of the efreet of tha new tariff on the wool industry, it ap pears, according V the statistics printed by The Oregon Journal, that last year's Oregon egg crop was of the value cf lfc.750.000 while the wool product was worth only 2.700.i00. Tbe Oregonian should thank Ood and take courage. All is not lost. Pointed Paragraphs Most of the golden opportunities offered you will not stand the acid test.'- . There are several undesirable brands of trust, but trusting to luck Is as un satisfactory as feny. It sometimes happens- that frlrj who has narrowly escaped matrimony Is to be congratulated. ' v i it men were as" perfect as 'their wive expect them to be, the monotony of married life would be debilitating. The Sunday Journal Consisting of - Comprehensive news report. : Weekly review from mauy field. j "Taried feature invitingly pre-.f : sented. 1 . . ; j Department for woman and the home. . t An attractive magazine. 1. An irresistible comic ' I ,i - o 'The great liottie newKper. ; 5 Cents the Jfcopy