J-.. . p. , mKl A I vtek produced in Oregon, shipped to, In "a monopoly as complete as in- be remarked that if ever It becomes J HE JOU rlNrL-' GAnd Rapids, Michigan,, for manu-i genuity could device and as ef-s the plan to have, weather men in , ... m independent NBWtrAPKR ! lacture ana snipped uacK w urtr c. . jackwos ,.pohnh?r gon for the man who produced the : t'ubuiwHi uiii icxM-pi hnud.rt Bd ! lumber to buy. The cost, of. those 1 nLIKS?: I two freight hauls is an unnecessary ! 'i..i.r.a .1 ib iKMtotnc at Purtiood. or., ire? expense upon the., Oregon jman tnnaiaiMioa tonxigo uw j when the lumber ne proauces; cau home. fective as-" combined action could i this country suicide on account'of itxki'HuN F.s Min 717a, Hems. A-oM. All , maae into lurmture tb trntF whit -department toi wnt. OKt.tvN AOVKKTlSlSiU K I K 1C J AT IV K , twoj.nil. Kratnor Co- Brumwlck B1J.. 1U3 firth Ac N Vsrk; Ul I'eupl t " 0 rll.. Chtmlto. ' ' ; utaertpUou term br mall or u "7 : IftN ta Um United Btataa or Ma ilea: bAILT Oh M.oo i Oua moots... , SUNDAY Ooa rar $Z.SXi Ob month $ -2S DAILY AND SUNDAY One rtir I7 Ona roontf THE TOK10 RIOTS A make it." The significance of this decision does not lie In the court's defini tion of a trust. The statute under which the poultry dealers were con- faulty forecasts, ' there wilt be a heavy recruitment in the ranks of the unemployed. :. ; It Is possible to abate eighty per cent of the smoke nuisance if not more. Is there anybody In Portland who prefers the growing vlcted was enacted nearly half a century ago, but! this was the first conviction had under It in which a iail sentence was imDOsed. The smoky conditions to the purity and FTER the Tokio riots, . how aimnat court lield unanimously clarity of atmosphere which coufd absurd are the bewhiskered j that gufu i3 personal and that i be brought about? Why tolerate prophecies of a Japanese at-1 punishment by imprisonment is ( the nuisance when It will continue tack on the United j States. lawfuj -8 If ver this free people If this government itself Is ever demoralized. It will come from this Incessant human wriggle and struggle for wfflee, which In but R way to live without work. Abraham Lincoln. 63- K LINCOLN K Japan has all she can do to cq&- The Minnesota supreme court trol her awn subjects, let alone ; recently affirmed the conviction of overrun and reduce to slavery thelmik dealers who formed a trust people of America. The incomes of , for fixing prices.! But in that case high and low to Japan are taxed : no prison sentence was imposed, fifty per cent, to meet the finan-!The New York decision sets a prece cal obligations that are sequel O fent 1otn for juriesand for judges, the Russo-Japanese war. j It points the way for ridding the The alarmists who ululate about i consumine nubile of unlawful com- a Japanese invasion of (America every time an army "and navy ap propriation Is pending at Washing ington seek to gull the "American people. Their talk Is for the pur pose of bamboozling the j country into expenditure of more money to gun makers, armor plate fac tories, powder trusts and others binationj created to fix prices. Fines have been inefficient, but prison sentences should prove ef fective. - to become more and more intolerable? Coming to Portland five weeks ago with $600 in his pocket, Ed ward Eldrldge, a logger, died of delirium tremens yesterday. How few words It takes to tell the tale of the grimmest kind of tragedy! VINDICATED BRAHAM LINCOLN is a part of the ages. . The splendid f.-.c s of his , government career are imperishable. The. . ' ! rith8K,hl dvffe,ldC h 'n nf Japan. the riots reveal has al- for which he stood. :.re as endur-;mogt ,nsoUjble domestlc problems. Ing as the mountains i h countr the mili- No canvas is required to keep! -' n.if1Hw u. in- . the furrowed face familia in the 8lstJenc for an appropriation to . memory of his count:-ymen No , e.tabIJ8hment, ! statue of bronze or marble is need- vr-fjied neonla had re ed to visualize the Bhambllng ng-. . . , ,on . avfot n. T HERE used to be many dark ling hints i and accusing in sinuations by his Portland newspaper (critics about Gov ernor West and the state revolv ing fund. Thrilling headlines and sensational news stories were regu larly reeled off to . credulous readers. - Letters From the People It is all recalled by tho late deci sion of Judge Kelly at Salem In the ! sisted the plan to the extent of i suit by Attorney General Crawford The tremendous events of four it. "... ..,- .,t t r... , r... lect from them personally more than $16,000 alleged to be due the state from unlawful use of the re volving fund. Judge Kelly decided In favor of the governor and other mem- i j l l.,n'l"c cwi.ij ireiueuaouc ",""' drawn that a turmoil that shook the Justice and courage of a com-i .. . tn ,ta fnnr,Aatinrta TL.QCI manding man; wrote the name and w& ... fame of -the sixteenth prefiident in i upon the violent protest against the allot- everlastlDg characters scroll of time. ! No figure of history mofe power fully reflects ihe true American t M f I ..Unan.H n Via Amnvf- ,uea ;.. . rei '".T Li J', the verge of civil strife as a re- ' can IIIO iq a tsait-r i nai u uy wmviii ment of naval contracts to a Ger man firm, and were violent in the extreme. How could a nation, almost on (Communications sent to The Journal for prblicatkra In tola department abould d writ ten on only one side of (be paper, ebon Id not exceed SCO words In lenctb and must b ac companied by the name and address of the aender. If tbe writer coea not desire to bare the name published, be abould ao atate.) "Dlseusalon la the greateat of all reform ers. It rationalizes everything It touches. It rnha m-lneinl nf VII fslM aanctitr anu throws them back on tbelr reaaonablcnesa. If tbey nave do reasonableness. It ruthlessly crashes them out of existence and aeta up Its own conclusions iu their stead." Woodrow Wilson. A FEW SMILES j "I'm Introducing; a brand new inven tion a combined talking machine, car pet 8 weeper, and let ter opener," said the agent, stepping brisk- W ly Into an orrice. " "Got one already," answered the propri etor. "I'm married." ton 117 ms .S' .A. 1 mm Mrs. Suburbs Do you BtUl receive that' dreadful Mrs. Comealwus at your at homes? Mrs. Tiptop -Impossible to get her to take a hint. Do you know, when she called I never of fered her a chair. Mrs. Suburbs And what was the result? . Mrs. Tiptop Re suit? Why. the next time she came she brought a folding camp stool with her. Rural Credits for Oregon. Portland. Or., Feb. 12. To the Editor of The Journal The masses generally are looking with enthusiusm upon the state and interstate projects now going forward, both public and private,- such as the deepening of .the Columbia, the general improving of waterways and the building of hard surfaced highways, electric lines, pow er plants, municipal docks,, class A buildings and other utilities of modern life. The maintenance of all these. and the factories when they come, depends and rests mainly upon the land, or farms. The farm, opening of new farms, and "back to the soil," bers of the state board. In the should hence have first consideration decision Judge Kelly says "that i the pleadings disclose that no t A ctaiinsl rural rn1lf at'etam muct eim. . .VVb .SS AJSI.WV u. port perpetually these expensive proj- onlf rf mi'litorv hitrrtona nnrlpr-t7 j t 1. 1 j j . .t- ih. m.,ru.nf th uhln nfi" . ' - .uitmage nas oeen incurred anu . - --;take"an invasion or tne ncnest, . iaie. no nunian rreer an time Is more powerful in inspiring youth and maturity to the sub- . limer and more exalted outlcok and endeavor of life. I. When the Republic was at its: great crisiH, Lincoln, standing above the contending hosts, above the prejudices, above the senti- most resourceful and most power ful nation on the globe BIUTISH POLITICAL CRISIS w HEN King George opened the British parliament last Tuesday what will prob- that the state has not lost any thing." He adds: The contention that -the mere use. of the money (the state revolving ects now under way. We should build wisely. Canada in one year induced 140,000 farmers to migrate from the United States, not on account of its soil or its climate, but because of a plausible credit eranted thti homeseeker. cover- iunu; in Moiauon oi me wrnnicai ,ng a period of 20 years, on easy pay rule or law as to uie manner in i nlenta. at verv low interest for th which the use may be made would constitute an act which would en title the state to recover judgment against the officer so using the same, ably prove to be the most I without regard to the benefit which There Is a lad in a certain Scottish town who Is noted-for his shrewdness. The other day he was Bent by his fath- er to a neighboring public house with the following order: "Please send to our house 10 dozen of ale." Now, it .so happens that one of the pub lican's faults is a propensity to poke . his nose into other people's bireine'Ss, and so, when he had read the order, he could not help ejaculating: "Guid gracious, laddie, and what ever is yer fether gaun tae dae wi' sae muckle ale?" For a moment Johnnie was puzzled. knowing that his father wouldn't like him to exactly tell the truth. Then an Idea occurred to him and he quietly replied: "I'm no verra sure, but I thihk he's gaun tae mak' a cork frame and he'll need the corks." PERTINENT COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF S3IAIX CHANGE Common sense is a dlseas that la never fatal. The Secret of Success: Aim blo-h anH shoot often. To have no monev In norkft la tn pocket an affront. Trying to be rnntpnt with uhit a have' ia some trial. Love Is blind, b covers its sight after marriage. The only sure hinr ahnm o cure for anything is that it isn't. The homely girl can t afford to keep her domestic abilities under cover a a Some men I orrow trouble because they have heard that it drives men to uriiia. a a It takes an experienced summer girl to twist any old thing a man says into a proposal. . a Methuselah had a grudge against his wives, perhaps, and kept on living to beat them out of the insurance, a a When a man- places his bubble of greatness on exhibition there is al ways somebody who wants to stick a pin in it. OREGON SIDELIGHTS IN EARLIER DAYS liy Fred Lockleyj A committee of the. Grants Pass 1 My father and mother. CSiarks and Commercial club is pressing the mat- Kebccca Craft, came - to "Oregon in ter of having a geological survey made Kji" tv'ot r, , , , cf the DOtlfan quadrangle, which in-,U4a- ald erge PLltihri. Id eludes -the tiulice mining district. The f Salem. "Tlu'y both werb born in survey or the district including the Pennsylvania. They' reinu&d to'Vlr-" Kerby country will probably be , ged , gniA Ju children were horn. Frot Virgin'; Salem Statesman: Blind pigger at lliey moved to lllinoiF. thrive to Alis Kiifeene lir.-d 2lo and put mio jail ,ouri. where lliey stayed tinr vearsa for 20 days for making and selling , . y sl 57:XF prune brandy. Of which he had 20O.a,,a ,n ltlj came to iregoii. gallAns on hand. Serves him rlht. J "When my people flrnt caSie to Ore Any man who known no better use lor ; gon they oc-cupieil n j.g ealUi in Poik good prunes should be kept in Jail all j county where they ttavinl wttlr a man the time. (named Jack Junes, who ha,! taVen up AmusinK itself somewhat at the fX?rir f,iat " Pense of the people of Baker, the Pen- j " . 'P1"1' , ,of 1 Mo--they , .noved to tlletori Kast Oregonian xava: "Baker1 wnal aa called B.mcs inland 'has not yet learned the tan'so nnd does but is now callcd'0Yth .Mieni. not even wee the necessity of acquiring ( l was oorn .in w h j4 i& ttw tho grace In the new dances. Such village , oldest liousp in Siilem. in -jsi? Tho backwardness over there is surprising, (house is still standing. it, was l.uijt Possibly they would like 'Uiop thJibv J. R Mn'lnn., rn.m ir..&..i i,:.i... handkerchief.' " a a Roseburg Keview: Another fruit and vegetable season is rapidly ap proaching, and y t we hear nothing .definite as to the erection of a cannery at Roseburg or Kdenbower. Knough products are going to waste every year to pay for two or thie canneries. Can't something be done to prevent this loss being continued? HOW ST. PAUL TURNED BOND RETAILER VT W in recent vears ' no state would obtain by reason of . f . ! its use, is one with which this court e rule tor ire- ,-annot agree; and if the court is in mentalities of his day said, "we , tempestous session i shall nobly save or meanly lose the ' was begun. Home last Dcstvnope oi earin. i land Is the great issue ior deter- j error as to itsi knowledge of tbe i When he became president he! mlnation. but there' are other prob-! law- on this point, ail this court has was held In contempt by the South.! lems second .only, to it in im-! R2fl4f1hoi't lt.js, thi lliat 1-a . , . x , ' , , , , . ; v . i contended for, is; in direct contradlc- underrated by the North and East. ! poftance. ; . tion to the dictates of natural jus- and not even appreciated by hi3 , The navy, the South African de-jtice as applied to the affairs of men. cabinet. Yet he was not only one portations, the Welsh disestab-j The decision is a complete vin of the wisest, but one of "1 the Usnment bill, education, further : dication of the uses to which the shrewdest and most exalted of reform of the house of lords, state revolving fund was applied, mankind. It has been said of him ' plural voting and material changes i All the insinuations against the that, through the four years that in the land laws loom large in ; governor were false insinuations, the storm and strife of disunion the Asquith government's legisla-; All the intimations 'were false ln- Deat around mm, inougn ne was tive program. The task . clothed with almost absolute power, out for the Liberals Is to mapped , timations. hold to-j All the suggestions were false purchase of lands, buildings and equip ment. It was the "terms" that at tracted so many to the north. Count ing successes and failures, will Canada be ahead in the long run, in opening its lands by such methods? This ques tion, doubtless, could be answered best by Jim Hill, who years ago, for the . purpose of encouraging farming along the line of his railroad, furnished, free of charge, seed grain and thorough bred stock to many-farmers. The commission sent out by this government to investigate rural credits found Ireland's rural districts, lifted from the most wretched conditions, to be among the most prosperous on earth, through a system of liberal rural credits.- 'Oregon, with all her vast raw resources, is waiting' for the cultiva tor; yes, "waiting," because three or five years' .credit, and 1., 8 or 10 per cent money, means failure to thjj aver age borrower, because these lands are Mayor Hunt of Cincinnati said the other day of a notorious political'oss: "They who call this fellow honest have to stretch the truth a little. They have to stretch it like the old colored farmer of Paint Rock. This old farmer said to a young chap: "'Look heah, Calhoon, Ah don mln' youre eo'tin' inah gal Lillian, but Ah'd ruther yo' wouldn't come round mah house no mo'. " Time fo' de las' wot yo' whz heah, Calhoun, Ah missed a wathah bucket, and de las' time de bridle wuz gone, and now as Ah has use fo' de saddle, Ah'd ruther yo' wouldn' come roun' no mo'. 'Ah don't say you hain't honest, fo' Ah b'lieves. yo' is;, but slch cu'ls things happens w-hile yo s in de neighborhood; so, jes' ter please an ole man wot ain't enj'ytn de best er health, please don come round dis house no mo'.' " e never abused if. except on the , gether a precarious majority in KHKfl-nna . ... .u-if f cat to clear nd mak rd Bide of mercy. i the house of commons and thus ; tahi,shAR that th n e rtti J r a crop. Standing in the center and di-' avoid dissolution of parliament or j Horn, prP lining and r,r.ii,cti A system of liberal rural credits roMn.r all ntmpnlln frennpntlv in n? th rv,tnlcfo Cismg were unjust ana unjUStlfl- equal . to Canada's (Canadian Pacific his distracted countrymen in lan- At the last general election the i M t o.,,0.tt that ..nnt air.ioh a n h t iu , .tiI4-.. v., 1 . . The newspaper injustices to Os as musket balls, he led the nation winning 272 seats each. The Irish i wald West during the past three Railway), or half as liberal as Ireland has, would induce thousands of good men and women, who have some means and are willing, ready and anxious, to cai.ii. 1110 iiiou , u k u s . .V' though , the stupendous struggle : Nationalists won 84 seats and the I " - i state i pendent homes. This would relieve the that cost $2,000,000 a day in ; Laborites 42. These smaller par money and' that in dead, cost the j ties gave the Liberals a! majority North and South nearly half a of 126 on most general questions, million men. Among all in his ( But the situation may have changed day he stood alone. His was the , over night. maBter mind. He looked beyond j PrerhleT Botha by sanctioning the outlook of .other men, and saw , the deportation of labor disturbers the end. He was acquainted with from South Africa furnished occa miles and tears, was single in ' 6ion for the Unionists to work heart, and direct as light. "HeU,Don the Laborites in parliament. was tne grandest figure of the , The attempt is being made to market block? Iiercest uwii war. V He Is one of the gentlest raemor ies of our world. THE DOLPH BLOCK T i overcrowded towns and cities and drive poverty, "high cost of living" and idleness way down to the setting sun. I a icaoiui ticua lur opening up raw George Creel In Everybody's. Like everything else connected wfth American municipalities, the great idea came to St. Paul in the most haphazard manner imaginable. The recent sum mer witnessed a financial drought that set the officials to gasping like strand ed fish. Money had to be had! But the market was in a slump, and even if the bond sales could be made, there was the certainty that the securities would not bring par. Major Handy, the comptroller, hap pened to mention his trouble to W. C. Colver. just arrived from Cleveland to assume editorial direction of a chain of papers. Colver, raising one hand on high with ceremonial impress! veness. fell to digging in his papers with the other. What he resurrected were his notes of a financial plan for cities that Tom Johnson had talked out to him In the days of the Cleveland struggle. It was at a time when the preat lighter for equal Justice looked for Im mediate municipal ownership of the street railways, or, as a flank attack. the erection of a municipal lighting plant. But where to get the money? Since the lords of finance, as usual, had .announced savage hostility to any Bond Issue for such purposes. some other "way must be found. From the first Tom Johnson's thought clung to the fact that the aggregate cash sav- ngs of the people constitute the larg est amount of real money in the coun try. Massed in savings banks ami In- suranceenmpanies, the hoards of the humble many make the ocean of credit upon which the mighty few launch their vast enterprises. posed bond issues, and then resell them to the people In small sums? This was t lie idea that Colver spread out before Comptroller Handy, who. with Treasurer Karnsworth and Mayor Keller, constituted the sinking fund committee of St. Paul. After looking It over from every angle, the three of ficials decided to take the plunge. Quite gingerly several small bond Is sues were bought in, and the partici pating certificates printed brought around the horn. t"Vivij years after my parents lived h.jf It was purchased by Judge K. V. Jioise. w ho remodeled It. ;,' 4- "On. January 6. 1817. my mother had twin children. 1 am -one of rh twins. .My twin sister died when she was a baby. My mother hud "Hot ex pected twins and had made clothes for cnly one hahy. There was no store j nearer than Oiegon City, -She Kent .there and got some calico and flannel and fortunately Mrs. Pringle. w ho "w as siayine with us. had some Imhv clothes w hich she gave my-' mother. "The Pringles came in 'lSr4 6. O. M. Pringle, who now lives Mv Portland, was 14 years old when he-came. My r'.ster. Kmmaline. who Imd been-born in Virginia, was 11 years old. As chil dren will, they fell in ve luit, as children rarely do. lliey rWhained con stant to each other und when he was 22 and she 19. they w ei e ipiari led. "On the plains peoiilesjiot to know each other w otnierrull v !-well. M v I grandmother. Sarah lergCt; came w ith Although scarcely three days wers my father and mother 'and walked allowed for publicity, there was a bar- across the plains. WatKOii-i lelm. wh gain counter rush- the moment the now lives on Cottage strr-c t here in doors opened. ISefore tlie close of tho i Halem, was a loy then, find walked first day the committee began buying across the plains wlth jrny grand more bonds, and also invested $350,000 mother. They were inseparable hum. or the city s 4 . per cent tax levy cer tificates. There was ample need for these pur chases, as the first three days saw the sale of $140,000 worth of the $10 rlips and $83,000 of the tax levy cer tificates. By December 1, more than SI. 000,000 of the former-and $2,400. 000 of the latter had been sold over the treasurer's counter, making n total of three and a half millions-of the obligation of St. Paul sold to citizens in four months. According to latent ftdvices, the average dally sale $5000. WASTING Til Kilt ENKIKJY c OMPARINO production, 'popu-'i'bfing;'ma;ie blame the British i operations t an be begun on the " nrotn lor tnr Tro novo n I In rr AS c I ? a . !. HE committee recommends the Hands in Oregon would be 25 year loans, nurchase of the Dolnh blnek-1 bearing 4 per cent interest, the annual for an miditoT-lnTr, I interest to be paid only for the first ----- 7"" "" " jfive years, and for the expiring 20 cosi oi iO.UUU. years the interest and 5 per cent of the Why the Dolph block at' $175,- ! principal, annually., thereby liquidating rne loan at tne end or that period. This is a fair comparison of credit obtained for the flotation of many corporate enterprises of much less Importance than the farm. - Would it be a proper function of the state to lend its credit, or support, if mat support can be given without loss shlng a.' rural and quickly untangle their mix-ups. but vehicles cannot theirs. No signal is required of vehicles as they approach a crossing. This signal should by all means be required, es pecially when vehicles desire to turn to the right at street crossings. In that case, they should be compelled, when possible, to drive the left hand side of. the vehicle to the center of the street as the turn is made, and return to the curb as soon as possible. A sane and a Just requirement would be to limit the speed of vehicles of all , kinds except street cars at street crossing; to the average speed of the pedestrian, say, three or four miles per hour. The idea of compelling the pedes trian by stringent law to cross the street only at crossings and at right angles to the street Is very good, and should be made law, by all means. Then the street between the crossings belongs to the vehicles, as it should, and the crossing, as it should, to both pedestrians and vehicles. We must remember that both classes of travelers have their rights and each should respect the rights of the 000 in preference to the city-owned market block? There is nracti- blame the Asquith government for j cally no difference in their geogra- Botha's acts, in spite of the fact phy. If the Dolph block is a fa that South Africa is a self govern- vorable site, so Is the market block. ing colony. Asquith cannot dis- ' in Bueh a status, whv snpnrl I ciPHne Botha. Yet the attempt is) $175,000 for the Dolph block when ?ia i the T state, by estabii lation and railway traffic in the United States, the Iron , ur,, es Age says the future has some) Much depends upon the Labor- large problems for solution. The I Ite's attitude. Should they go in city-owned block without a dollar of outlay? Nobody claims that the market block will bring a figure approximating the cost of the Dolph block, even if It can be law- ; : .i":" ,::rMl Serais would.lose the working fully sold? classes of commodities increased! TlZ !? thehose of commons, j lf it cannot be lawfully sold and much faster than population. . Between 1890 and 1910 popula tion grew from 63,000;000 -ta 9,3',- , It would mean the fall of Asquith's j the proceeds be applied to the ministry and probably an appeal to the country. Dissolution before passage of the AAA ADA hnrlno V.o oo J ' ""... :,,." xr-i. l iiii. ' 1M'5 hWne rule bill is one of the de ton mileage of railways increased LT,i .. from 65.000.000.000 to 225,000.- ffA, f tlfM Union sts' Evey 000.000. While population was JSnl ?L i . r ,. . pulled to bring this about, but it r IK ? Wa " almost Impossible that - the nage per mile was Increasing 400iTKi 0,.i mt. In 1890 a ton of freight tti- rr.u- ; uiuuuiois, 1 ue Asquiiu ministry per cent was hauled 1032 miles for each 'person in the United States, while In" 1910 a ton was hauled 2742 mlleB for each person. In the two decades, 1890-1910, the production of pig iron in creased 350 per cent, and the coal output grew 340 per cent. Be tween 1889 and 1912 freight ton- - hage of the Sault Ste. Marie canal grew- from 7,400,000 to 71,000, 000 tons, an Increase of 960 per cent In 23 years. 'Statistics show that while popu 'lation has increased for a term of years at the average rate of 1.5 per. cent annually, production and traffic have grown -at a rate that - can hardly be explained by in creased demand for food, shelter : and clothing. Production's figures may be ex has done much for labor, and promised more. But British poli tics is largely a game j and a gamble. ! Dolph purchase, where will the city land with its auditorium , enter prise? And if not. wherein will the city profit by taking over a block that pays large taxes instead of using a block on which no tax Is collected? - credit system, to help our people sus tain all lints of Industry? THOMAS J. HAMMER. A T MAKING GUILT, PERSONAL I HE appellate division of New York's supreme couri has de cided that 13 members of a live poultry trust must pay fines of $500 each and serve three months in the penitentiary. The decision makes history, for it is said to be the first lnstanie in the United States where jail sentences for violation of anti-trust laws have been' affirmed on appeal. The poultry dealers were . tried and convicted in 1911 of having violated the state anti-trust law. It was proved that they, conspired - - - - - CU plained by the fact that jnany I to create and maintain a monopoly things which were luxuries in 1890 : were necessities In 1910.- This statement also accounts in some degree!; for Increased traffic. Bufr the figures go to prove that the American people are wasting much of their energy lit permitting the things they produce and use to be hauled, over long -distances. . Freight- tonnage must necessar ily increase faster than population, but there is no reason .why, by way of illustration, the lumber used In a piece of furniture should for control of New York City's live! poultry supply and that they arbi trarily fixed prices. ' The combination controlled 90 per cent of the poultry! shipped to New York. So effective was the pool that competition was de stroyed and prices were fixed week ly. Independent dealers were cut off from supplies when possible, or In case that could not be -done the pool started markets for under selling the independents. The court found , that these methods resulted More than a dozen lumber and shingle "mills j in Southwestern Washington, -which have been idle most of the winter, are arranging to resume i operations. Reports from an inquiry;!)- traffic officials of the Oregon-Yv'ashington Railway & Navigation Company are that there will be a ylgorous revival of the mill industry. How can mills remain idle when by the tariff and currency bills. Industry has been i liberated and credit and finance emancipated? j Professor Harcourt of the On tario Agricultural college says the high cost of. living can be reduced by eating more cheese and less meat and eggs. jHo says one pound of cheese Is eqjual In food value to two pounds pf beef, or 15 eggs or one gallon j of xmilk. Please pass tne cneese:, Indorsing "Hopgrower." Gervais. Or., Feb. 11. To the Edlto of The Journal I have noticed a splendid letter y a hopgrower of In dependence; also the criticisms. One writer said th hopgrower dared not sign his name. That was shallow, for no hopgrower is ashamed of his or her name. I fcave counted many names of fine people on the south end of French prairie who grow hops, and the money paid tor labor, averaging $6000 fo; every 40 acres, would amount to about $380,000. and in the entire community I do not know of one drunkard. In my entire , crowd of hopplckers last year not one drank to excess. All my ramny, t am proud to say, are appre ciated for their temperance principles Still, I am not radical. The Cascade mountains have always obstructed our view. They are es tablished. The sale of liquor all my life has been established. Its misuse is to be- regrett-ed, and looked after. xne misiortune or & iew, Deyond re call, should not destroy a great in dustry. If people are foolish enough to tumble over the mountain, should the Cascades be leveled? Tou can not stop a running river. You must show it where to flow. Make laws and teach temperance. ELLA M. FINNEY. It has been discovered that danc ing ' the tango produces water on the knee. It also gives men the tango stoop and " the tango hump. It also produces paresis. But none of these disasters seems to scare anybody. The Traffic Ordinance. Portland. Feb. 11. To the Editor of The Journal It is Interesting to note the- audacity of the Portland Automo bile club in presenting such a traffic ordinance. This ordinance should not be passed, because it classes pedes trians as vehicles, losing sight of the fact 'that tens of thousands of pedes trians to tens of automobiles use the streets. Why should we Inconvenience the masses who have to use the slow way of walking to get f ronj place to place, for the benefit of the few using the automobile, that Is '-allowed to make 15 miles per hour? 'Walking al ways has been and always- will be the principal means of locomotion on our streets. -If It were willfulness on the ther. C. C. L. Joseph Walt, who catrje with my parents acrosti the j.lniiis. , sUirto.l tho first furnltuic factory in lln. Ilo married Sarah, my oideFtj sister. lie died 4 years a tro and my'lMer mar ried Fahrltus A. Smith, wfliani 'rafl. my brother. Im Kl years otU. lie lives with his dniK'it.-r. ,m "I was not the rirst; vhitv child torn In Salem, hut my mother I. it. I the first twins l.orn in Salini. tJtorse H'llman, who now lives 1. Salt 1-iiUe City, was birn in Salem : five : rs Is ! before my birth. His si,-Vr. M;iry llolman, ns horn three , yearn before line and Myra Holrmm, wftn ui'.n a!s- Of. course the plan has met With tip- born in Salem, is a ye;ir -oUisr, Hum I position. The savlncs banks don't : ni. She later became Mr. J. II. Al ii, nor are the public utility magnates i bert. Olivr Ucers. win.: live- two Pleased with something that notnls a 1 nixirs from iny home her, wan le.rn How to tap this enormous reservoir of cash? How rescue the people's money for the people's use? Quite obviously, local assimilation of a bond issue de manded three things: bonds in no lar ger denomination than the average savings bank deposits; their sale over a counter just like Witter ana eURs: and the right to cash them without no tice or loss of interest. Kven then, however;' the city could not be ex pected to twiddle its thumbs while waiting, for a' quarter million bond'ls-. sue to be swallowed in $10 bites. Some benevolent middleman was necessary. and the final Johnson answer was the sinking fund committee. This municipal body, created to ac cumulate funds to pay the interest on the city's .indebtedness and to retire bonds at maturity, has broad discre tionary powers with regard to invest ments. Instead of letting this grow ing mass of money lie in banks at a low rate of interest, why not have the pinking fund committee buy the pro way to municipal ownership. Litiga- I'on was tnrcateneo anil every one ex pected a suit or injunction proceeding that Is, every one but the members .f the"s!nklng fiHid committee. Not toi nothing had these shrewd gentle two years bef-ne I was. Aimer l.ew t, -who was born here : SaU'iu mid who still livs here, is just mv' c. "In coming ai rt:t-.s the '.plains Htt!' groups of iiiiijiciilxl firifiilics wTc formed. Such a group was f'.rim-d men inserted the following paragraph . w hen my people came nei.iss, Tie under the word "Conditions" on th-' neitns. me Mariiuams niur uie i mils back of each pari Iclpatlng certificate: I ink together. Alfr.nl n. Maraiiam, ... ... i .. i .... , i. i .... ti........... i . lie slnKlng iuiki committee reserves "" "- 'i.pm i.-.i- laial, hail learncl the i:1I-IiiI tn.le the right to recall, discharge, and can cel this certificate upon payment of principal and interest up to the date of letirement." A simple as effective! If any cer tificate holder should pf Into court, the committee can merely mail him a check ul rcill bla ert I f iesi it t rai l rn ri., i had two little boys with my brother in-law. lr. Watt. I have often It-aid my faftler av th.it his wife was the most unfailingly t;ood nature.! woman awd tin- mt raiiable' V"m;m he vc"- saw. Her jfather and mothei.-anmS alotiu w ith mem. .(liver, Aiire.i .-vi nrtiiia in s wire. ShxHook care or ion form of government, and J w '"' W;,H H'1'le.l Lhe Klmrdif leatlon and effi-' uork- n'ul hr u tturi IIUW II JI1M ..! um- Olive Mamuani'had 12 th)l- its ointment. The city has adopted the tw' 1':vs- '"! .." . .7 commission form of eovernment. and ". was trlpplwl. and all of . th i-nder th clenrleu of this plan the Johnson Idea Is scheduled for the very fullest possi ble development. If St. Paul, with' Its JlO-cash - on - demand-certificates, can find It possible to be financed entirely by its own citizenship, thus keeping In- j terest in local circulation, why can't ! other cities do it? And If cities, why not states? ur, in the last analysis, why can't the national debt be ab sorbed In the self same fashion? BIG INVESTORS' MONEY RETURNS Homesteaders Testify. Elk City, Or., Feb. 10. To the Editor of The Journal Congressman Hawley wants information 'to' 'help secure changes in the law, prepared by hlro. Can a man clear 1!0 acres In three ears without hiring extra labor or buy- ng expensive machinery or explosives? We say he cannot.' In this county there are from 26 to 75 large old growth fir stumps, with the logs that used to be on them, on each acre, and a man cannot get rid of one of them short of $5 worth of hard labor. Besides, there s any amount of underbrush to get rid of. There is no market in which to sell anything we raise, and if there were there is not one homesteader in 20 that could get his stuff out, on ac count of the roads. The man that takes up a homestead has to make his own road to his homestead. Win tne Dili prepareu meet ine aii- ficulties? It would help largely. In answer to the question, "Have you any suggestions. . ior. . rurwier amendment?" we answer that the gov ernment ought to support a home steader until he could support him self. We say that when a poor man and His family go .into the woods and dlgut a home where it Is worth. $100 to get an acre in cultivation, and mean- while are not allowed any mail facili ties, the government ought to support them while they are at it. and then give them gold medals when final proof Is made. W. H. UAmr.U GEORGE .M. DEVENPORT. R. U CALKINS. T. J. DANIEL. Homesteaders. part of" working girls, clerks . and laDorers. in general to persist in walk ing; instead, of riding in $4000 cars, I In this valley, and therefore do not For Good Oregon Roads. Crabtree, Or., Feb. 10. To the Edi tor of The Journal I have noticed In your valuable paper the agitation con cerning good roads. To obtain good roads in this valley the important step for the public Is. first, select a compe tent roadman. The greatest drawback in this, as in other states, is the road supervisor who is absolutely incompe tent. The community which has the right to elect a road supervisor ought to observe closely the following in electing him: Is he a progressive, erefeetic man. on his own farm? Is he an honest tiller of his own soil? Is he willing to study and learn the most progressive, up td date methods of farming, dairying, or stock-raising? If all these three characteristics are r.otlceable In the man. then and then only are the voters justified to cast their votes for that man. I am an eastern 'man.' only one year By John M. Osklson. (Copyright. 1914. by J. G. Lloyd.) We poor goats who have only a few hundred dollars a year to In vest are called lucky if we get S per cent: but the nien with minions io handle the Lord only knows how much they get!" For the man who said that to me the other day I had been saving a flrst-of-the-year statement of one of the big Insurance companies, and I called his attention to that part of it which dealt with the company s investments for the year 1913. Last year that company invested $41,740,459; it w as certainly a-Dig handler of money, and it has a thor oughly organized force of experts to hunt out good and safe investments. What did they find In a year which was particularly favorable for bar gain hunters? Here Is the answer: Bonds of United biates ana Cana dian municipalities and states to the amount of $8,421,095, and bought to yield 4.S7 per cent. Foreign state and municipal bonds to -the. amount of. $7,149,471, .to yield 4.40 per cent. in per vun. never ruf fled no matter how trying the circum stances. drc-n and lf any plmieef : w-oylan de serves commendation she certainly does, for with her gn4 ! nature and good management, she was 'able to make a happy home life, as long as she lived. J "This old bookcase which you are writing Is made of ttlaple and oak ami was made by :4r Watt, my J brother-in-law, way bark In the t'fs. He had a little furniture; factory here I in Salem whre he madjV iMvikeases, I sideboards, tables, bureaus and chairs. He made more chairs Jfcliari anything Railroad bonds to the amount of . else, as there was mor demand for $9,856,651, to yield 5 per cent. (them. They were matt of oak or loans on business property to the maple and the seats Were nwile of amount of $15,189,078, which return laced rawhide. My fathtjf, seeing that 5.58 per cent on the money. (there was no tannery l Salem and Iians on farms to tho amount of that leather was hard CTagct and high $920,8R5. to return 5.50 per cent. ; priced, started a tannery! on what in Miscellaneous bonds to the amount snow Fourteenth street, between Che of $203,277. to pay 4.88 per cent j meketa and Center. I in remember Of all the assets of this huce enm-!" a ! Kir seeing tirfe vats filled nled nt the end wltn f,r lark for tannlnft tho leather. While 1 was sini a cuinriwe inoveo i a farm In the Waldo hljlii." - pany (which amour turn or 4.54 per cent was being j received at the time the report was i made. i A further analysis made bv this company shows that It gets 2 4 per cent for Its cash -in bank, 4.19 per cent on its foreign government and municipal bonds, 4.27 per cent op Its railroad bonds. 4.36 per cent on Its Owned real estate, and 4.97 per cent The RagtimelMuse Old School lit). In retrospect I find d-ight; My school days I witit joy recall. Those days, Just now, mv-ih very bright, itui then thev were noclhrleht at all! on Its mortgage loans. Including farm Indeed. I thought them fe-adly dark, mortgages. This covers the com- So fl.llc1 wlln hardnip. toil and pany s main assets, and represents Its j Whl. . ' ,.h rrentlUous lark return on investments made over a; nunfr fearsome threat of direful iuiik neiien 01 years. 1 doom W So. If you're getting as much as I M 5 per-cent on a safe investment of ' Those dear old days'. I'ltglad they're your money you're doing better than ( r"t, this group of experts have been able to do with millions to put to work. road, plow It and scrape It to. the mid dle of the road. This would give the middle of the road a rise of four to five feet, and by narrowing the road would give it the proper drainage. To insure still better, drainage, have on each side of the road a ditch from three to four feet deep, according to the .ground worked, wfth some tiling from 20 to 40 yards apart, two feet uf.der and across the main road -proper, to drain off any water which may happen to "stand In the center of the road. I would begin working the road ill the spring time. This would In sure a hard middle surface before fall. Finally, there should be a strict law preventing heavier loads than 1000 pounds as soon as the rainy season opens. Renew work every year, and within five years we will have roads equal to those in any eastern state. GEORGE E. SCHUYLEMAN. But they were bet ter. i .anyhow No. I am no iconoclast 1 Than children in th -iwchnols have now. :f Few were tlie lessons, few the books That then were contie$. The child todav '! Incidental, if Fannie Ifarley will visit a Sunday school next Sunday she will learn the Importance of "These things ' HaB doz-ns. and hp sewrfand cook bjiuuiu ye nave uone anu not leu ine And Piakf s a study oi 3)ls play, others, undone." The $20,000,000 Is' . i;f- probably not out of proportion to what'1 Some spinster with a !lrfty dom the Instructs him daily j. through week. 1 And nightrf a'nd Sundays .rt his home More useful knowjedse bids' him seek. Oh. were I now a boy at -o1. So piiided, trained, uijpvhipped, un- frt . S- then this law would be just. 4 I find nothing In the proposed ordi nance to compel a, vehicle , to stop at a street crossing, where, a traffic patrolman is stationed, unless it is signaled to"-do so, ' 1 The result would be about the same as having no one I at all to control traf f lo at these con In Japan, the head of the weather bureau killed himself because he failed to forecast the recent. earth quake and volcanic eruption. In J no spirit of censoriousness; it may Jested cornars. Pedestrians can easily want to criticise roadmaking; still there are so many gross mistakes made in road building- that I am constrained to point out some of them, such as in competent supervisors; roads too wid for proper drainage; absolute lack of proper drainage on the sides of roads: work don too late in tbe-season." I would take six feet on each aide oi th A Critic Criticised. Portland. Feb. It. To the Editor of The Journal I have read Fannie Har ley's letter In The Journal of-February 9, in which she criticises the churches of this country for giving $20,000,000 for foreign missions. Criticism is a great , power for true progress end should .not be resented, lut digested; and often the residue returned to the critics will enlighten and help them and others. ' . This critic fails to see the distinc tion between "Christianity" and "re ligion:" She refers to modem religion as being nothing more than civiliza tion etc. While what she says is in cluded In Christianity, it Is not its primary purpose but is -the result of the churches are doing at home for re lief work and general betterment, much of which Is done In too superfi cial and temporary a way. - But it Is true. If the true, self deny ing spirit of Christianity prevailed in tne rnurcnes- wnat Fannie iiaricv ri. 1 ire-. sires, and even more, would take place. I I'd uualify as Just a fowl modern religion or no modern religion! j .A'LruJ! CL Individuals, homes and state would be f l protected from the ravaging nd Pointort Paraaanh; greed of somewhat religious but up- rOinieO rTZgn rhristian nowprs. und several tlmr-a ' 1 i 12.1 000 000 could be sent to forelirn . Only a woman who b&ln love will lands for the sjime purpose, birfildes. I ' P t" man who 'Jij- socially be Fannie Harfey- should come in and , neath her. look out- AL1CE" REICH EN. I The first time a girl tr engaged s!v ; Is afraid that other raijj will try to Prrrtiihitlon in Kansas. Portland. Or., Feb. 11. To the Edi- fl"? ,tn,,n.r ,,ut thsecond time r of The Journal Amonir the letters "h afra,J thy won , SUNDAY FEATURES tor from the -people In The Journal1 I re cently saw where some one made the assertion that in spite of prohibition in Kansas the poorhouses and jails are full. Maybe the following editorial from the Walla Walla Bulletin of October 10, 1312, w.irinterest some: "The fetate of Kansas has only 612 paupers within Its confines, according to a report just filed by the state board of 'control. Twenty-eight county farms have no inmates at all. There are -53 counties of the state having no prisoners under sentence, and 34 with ho prisoners at all of any kind In their Ma its. Tbe statistics show a remark- the power of the gospel and is sec-j able atfenc of .r!?ne and poverty in j ondary to the comma ra or jesus: w a eiaie uwi more man i,vu.uuv j vo intn 1l the world and preach the I people. On . the face of It, we are im- I gospel to every creature." . Christian- j pressed that It Is ut a bad showing.' ity has to do with tae' eternal welfare (for a prohibition state to make.' of humanity; the temporal benefit Is I 8. I 1 The Sunday Journal. Magazine offers these compelling fea tures for women' reader each Sandayr. ji- Patterna for the hone drcoa- maker. -j- Baggestions for tke needle ' woman. .- 'J. Hints on home economy. . Talks on health andUlaat7V Sunday Jotirral Magazine . i ( -