THE OREGON DAILY: JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SATURDAY EVENING, MARCH 21, 1914. THE JOURNAL wllre Pacific coast frozen salmon able to compete on better 'AH ' independent new spater terms wun tne Siberian iisn oe- . vubtfatM-r 1 cauee Its transportation In cold c. e. JACKHOM Ins. RmiHIwir and-Yamhill ata.. P.irtlsim. Or. 'tD(4 the poatofflea at Portland. Or., for transmission tkroof b tb . snails aa second, elssa matter, - - ; ' y., - . - ; iDbii.b.d aTr ..ni0, Me.t suna.n .nd f storage will be unbroken. Freight ery snnda nrnin at Tii journal Buiid-s rates on canned salmon and canned fruit will be cheaper by the canal than . by the r.way. of Tehuantepec. French exporters expect a large increase in their business with the Pacific coast, because thefr prod ucts will be relieved of the handi cap Incident to shipping to New York for ultimate distribution in the west. TELEPHONES Main 7178; Home, Jk-061. All . dfartiaata raaebed bf tbaa juunhara. Tu two operator wnmj orparrir-nt. r"n JVMEION ADTBKTIHINO RE PRK6B.NXAT I V JC " . Benjamin ' Kantnor C4-. Brunswick BW-. r1ft Ae.. Naw tortj 1218, Feople'a Oaa Blda:., Cblraro. ' 8ubarlDtlon tertaa It Ball or to anr ad-- araae la Ua tnltad Htataa or MaiJco: DAILY 'L 6m yaa,.....'.$5.00 (hi ott..',....-l 'SUNDAY i - On rw, IIK I Om motrtU ..... .28 . .. DAILY AND SyKOAT, V V Oaa rsar...,...f7-M I pa swath, f" The ublimity of wisdom is to do those things living, which are to be desired when dying. Jeremy Taylor. a-la-jaaW-'"5J MR. DEARBORN'S VIEW EORGE S. DEARBORN, presi f dent of the American-Ha IT waiian Steamship Company, said in Portland Thursday, that if American vessels in coast wise trade . are charged Panama canal tolls, the shippers will pay the tolls. ' It is a widely different state ment to that made by Mr. Wheel wright and others in - their in sistence that the remitted tolls will go into the pockets of steam ship owners. Mr. Dearborn's company is the 1 owner of the largest American coastwise line. It took no part before Congress in securing pas sage of the free tolls provision. President Dearborn said: FROM AMBUSH T HE Seattle Sun presents an interesting comment on the election of Hi Gill. It says: ' The mistake that Mr. Tren- holme's committee made waa In tak ing up a secret fund, instead of pass ing the hat In public and letting everybody know JUBt who were the contributors. In these days, tne puo lie ls suspicious of anything that savors of concealment In the polit ical game. It must be boldly fought in the open. There is no doubt of it. People ought to fear the political influ ence that skulks in the rear. Peo ple ought to be afraid and beware of the political game played from ambush. There is the proposed Albee BrewBter-Dieck recall. The gentle men back of it are in the habili ments of the highwayman. They wear masks and carry dark lan Urna Nnhniiv ran find out who they are. Nobody knows why they want Albee, Brewster and Dieck out of office. There is never any reason to conceal a good thing. There is never any reason for merit to shrink from the sunlight. Real worth never dodges the daylight. Whenever a recall campaign is .15 J0" !,..!; ch"rsre ,th amount j asiiamed 0f its leaders, it may be Will be added to the freight charges I ' mi uu w u no uuauBweiauiy pi uveu that Its leaders are ashamed of paid by shipper. Kemkted tolls will mean lower freight charge. Ixwer freight rates Will mean larger uie of the cana'l by shippers. Bigger cargoes will make it more possible to give till lower rates and still more ef fectively compete with transconti nental railroad traffic. It is the hipper who are to be served by I free tolls and through them the gen eral public, because lower freight rates mean lower cost to consumers. If free tolls are not to lower the freight rates why all this hulla baloo against free tolls? their recall. KILL THE FLY T HE City Council has been so licited by Mrs. F. S. Myers president of the Parent-Teach er Association, for a contrl bution of $100 with which to se cure literature on the fly and san itation to be distributed among the If the tolls are to go Into the'601001 children in connection with pockets; of steamship owners, why thla tremendous opposition by transcontinental railroads against free tolls? If free tolls are not to give low the "Swat the Fly" campaign. The destruction of the breeding places of flies is as important as the destruction of the flies them selves and the educational benefit freight rates to Oregon producers i arising from the circulation of au on wool, apples, livestock, lumber ! thentic information on the proper and other products in transit '. apposition or tne garbage can ana through the canal to Atlantic I refu8e heaP can not be computed ports, why all this, opposition for forty years by transcontinental roads to the building of an inter pceanlc canal? t It Is because American farmers, American lumber mills and their There is no better medium of circulating this preventive infor mation and getting it Into the home than the child from school in whom interest has been aroused A school girl is credited with a member. He probably expected fully that" Kings Height would be peopled and meet its obligations. But It was a gamble. ' , It wasv a game played and lost. 'It was not legitimate. It swept away the earnings of many who 7 could not afford the toss; ; .There are people of slender means who. bought lota to which the company cannot gve deeds. It is from such people as well as from Mr. Wilcox that the guarantee of. $1299 ' Is paid on Kings Heights' water mains that only return $48 per annum. By the" record, can Mr." Wilcox claim to be an authority on water f in q fi rex f " JEROME'S ATTORNEY FEE T HIS interesting' claim against the state of New York has been filed with the proper department in the state house at Albany: William Travers Jerome, attorney fee, $26,000. Bernard Jacobs, Lancaster, New Hampshire, fee, $5000. Jacobs. Hall, Couture & Fitch, Mon treal. fee. J5000. Hector Vefret, Coatlcook, fee, 1500. Case Hargraln. Montreal, fee, 11000 Jacob Nicol, Sherbrook. fee, $900. The total is $38,400. It is the sum Jerome proposes to have ex pended in payment of lawyers in the proceedings to get Thaw from Canada back Into Matteawan. The claim has been approved by the attorney general. It raises the question, if after all, Jerome and not Thaw, is the really dangerous man to be at large. Twenty-fiva thousand for Jerome himself! Five thousand and other sums here and there to other law yers until the total is $38,400 for the capture and reincarceration in an insane prison of the man who really seems the sanest of the lot! Jerome's own monumental fee of $25,000 shows that it was not motives of high principle but a a great thirst for simoieons that makes , hlm active in pursuit of Thaw. It shows that the trials by hanging an Innocent man. It may seem Incredible that officers of the law of any city would do eueh a thing, but there have been Instances in other cities of similar persecutions.- -v- :V 1 It is a , serious thing- to tkaz ; a guilty man; to hang! the Innocent ur mo improved f gumy ; is legal murder. Frank, , should have j a fair trial.; There should be no revolting, ipublic. crime. Atlanta should .attend to his case first, and then. pass final judgment on the police. A FEW SMILES Letters From the. People tCotnraanicatlona sent- to Tba Journal for pctUcation Id tbla department aboold be writ tea aa only one aide of tba paper, aboeld not axceed 800 word in length and must be ae fompaulad bj tba name and address of -tba under. If tba writer 6oaa sot deaire to fcfive tba nam published, be should ao slxta.) "DlscaaaioB' la tba greatest of an reform ers. It ratlonaUaea eerjtbln It tonbes. It roba prlnciplea of all falaa eanctity , and throwa tbeia bark on tbeir reaaonableneaB. If tbey bare no reasonableness, it rntbleaatr erutbea tbem out of exlatenoa at J acta op Ita own conclusion to tbeir a lend." Woodrow WUaoa. . - Compensating Liquor Traffic. : Newport, Or., March 17. To the Ed itor of The Journal In The Journal last evening I found a very "Interest ing letter from Mrs. Dunlway setting forth her idea of one phase of the business side of the liquor question. One paragraph of her letter ia par ticularly interesting. She says: "It a petition were circulated with a reasonable compensation act to 'meet the destruction of property resulting tnererrom it might entitle the ques tion to a place on the ballot: but un til this is done the present propaganda is not square, and is not entitled to the votes of Justice loving people." Now we Prohibitionists are strictly a justice lovmsr Deonie. ana I asrree strictly with Mrs. Duniway on the question of compensation for destruc tion of property. If society destroys the property of the liquor Interests, directly or Indirectly, It should pay for it. And by the same logic, if the liquor Interests destroy the property of society, society should receive a Just compensation for all property so destroyed. Millions upon millions of property have been destroyed 'through railroad accidents, collisions, etc, caused by intoxicated engineers and switchmen. Richard La Qallicne, the poet, was talking in New York about the hard ships of a poet's lot. i 'I . "Poetry : Is popu lar." he said, '"but there's no money In it. Have you heard the latest about the well known" poet, Pindar Oadfjt ! "Mrs. O a I nudged her husband In the dead of night and , whispered: 'Pindar, wake up! There's burglars In the house!' " TVell. what of Itr said Pindar Oade, sleepily. 'Let them find out their mistake for themselves.!'" j , 1 In a certain neighborhood there ire sided an honest farmer who was hot easily swerved from the path of recti tude. He owned a horse which a cou ple of traders wished to posses. They called on the farmer and after some haggling gave him- his price and drove off with the prize. They had scarcely tone three miles when the horse dropped dead, In the road. Seeing the farmer a few days later, they approached him with: "What kind of a horse was that you sold us the other day?" "A good all around horse, sirs.1 ' "Yes, he was! He dropped down dead before wo got three miles from home." The farmer listened In open mouthed astonishment, and then ex claimed: "Upon my word of honor, gentlemen, he never done that way for me." McCall'a Magazine. PERTINENT COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF SMALL CHAXtiK Little white lies live long and pros per. . . - Perhaps poets may be born, but lairs are self-made. . If things fail to come your war. whv net go after them? Trusts sre like babies thev aro after everything in sight. Grafters ret into office when hon est men do their duty. A man's good opinion of himself isn't going to fool St. Peter. . The things we do not possess are what makes life worth living. a a If you want anything advertised without cost, tellltto a gossip. But it is impossible to tatch tin a. reputation so that the patches won't snow. a a It is the easiest thine in the worll to bear the aches of another man's corns. a Tomorrow never comes, but the morning after the night before always BUUWS up. a a It's as difficult for an ellarihla mon to dodge a young widow aa it is for him to understand women. a The young man in the parlor scene may lose sight of the girl's mother, but it doesn't follow that she has lost sight of him if there's a convenieut keyhole. OREGON blJJELlGHTS IN EARLIEgf DAYS ) j.- Hy Fred Lckley. At the meeting of Monraouth grange' n- T. . mr held March 14. 30 new members were JT ""LV" "wjcnins. a ron- admitted. i -, t ",uneer- Vn tneiapring of 1849 a j company or us rrorc3 Alassuchusetts The Sheridan Sun iDnetri to be the ! ft Boston on the fert?r 'Aru,ilan' for first paper in Oregon to j mention the ' the Golden Gate. 'VVtL spent 70 days dandelion for the season jof 14. ; trying to go through? the Straft of - A concert at Marshfleldu earlr In the .. WhUe. wr.!W'l waa an- week under the direction f ladles In- V," ,VT , n jroor orjI'?y n"r the. terested in public library promotion ""' oi tn street we noticed on netted S8& for the fund, j I on ot the Islands of the Terra Del I Fuego group what seemVd to be a larg A well dug at considerable expense 1 cave. A few of us decided to do a to supply the schools at L'matllla has little exploring. : so taking one of the been condemned by the state board of .hip s boats! ii mS to tvl health, following detection of river , !V- A r,owf5 to th i'nd seepage. j r""r and after sf hard climowe reached the a a 1 cave. The mouth of cave was an- A unique postal passing through the ' Irregular slsed opening ! large enough Dallas poatoffice last Wedensday, the for our brig to sail. into, but it nar Itemiser says, mas one written on a rowed rapidly. ;We made our way to - ?AVr,''.'.,1 ..V7'.5rwi th 'nd f the cave. iVch was of ba- Cottage Grove leader, has been made In the form of a ðlo arch. The King of Tompkins apples that archway had been rafafully cut and plc.!e,i4.0 '.I trees in his orch- sealed up With I slabs It rock with a newspapers. TALES OF TRAVELERS AND OTHERS - By Herbert Corey. His friends have Just heard whv James Francis Dwyer Is coming home. uwyer is an Australian by birth at a gabfest in! a 11 wnl ol ncnon Decause ne can- Washington clubl no1 neiP nas Been a neaencomb- tr sna a peuaier oi cniioiain lotion and a stowaway. He came to New York in the steerage, licked a man who Efficiency was the topic that Was being discussed Auto accidents and losses by destruc- and retrials, the prosecutions and tlon of life and property are of dally persecutions of Thaw are not so "enc- .in iimnc at . . . . bottom or the ocean with her entire much .a campaign for justice as a carg0 and most of her passeneers. said campaign for attorney services at to be the result of drink. Whole farms $25,000 and other sums per. and business properties have been Tt ia nnfnrfiiTiBtn that TJpw Vnrlr vy orunsarau. aomes are it is umonunaie tnat xsew ioii dagtrn,a m.nhrMii i riAhonr-v. or has not a newspaper to properly prisons aro overflowing with criminals ! act minimised, "but do you really think expose this use of courts and legal as results of the liquor traffic, and processes for mere commercialism. thlJi at "? expense of society. " o. svwiii w a.j .M.ia uo vv aictjt, BUD would do if she were a Prohibitionist, in these words: "I would make my plea with due when Congressman John G. Rothermel of Rpadtno' was re minded of the dec- cnauengea nis ngnt to carry a spear laration of an es- ln the chorus, and managed to get fat teemed Darty named I on an average wage of 60 cents a day, James. i He didn't know anything about the The aforesaid panic of 190? because he didn't have a James attended ! a I penny to spare for a newspaper. He circus some time since, where one of was a conductor on the street railways . i . . . . 1 1 1 . . . . . F . .. tne Dig leatures or tne snow was. a "ere wucn ne iirst Degan to write beautiful lion tamer. Entering the stories. ring, followed by - the Hon, the fair I A few months ago he cried for a charmer placed a lump of sugar be- I while on the pier and said good-bye to tween her pretty lips, wblcb the lion a lot of choking friends, and started took from her with his teeth. Instantly on a tour around the world. He James sat upright and began to take thought he might never come back. notice. Wherever ln Australia he waa born "Great stunt, all right" he loudly I wanted him to run for parliament, now shouted to the performer, "but I can that he has grown famous, and the do it, too!" I owner of a string of Australian news- 'Of course, scornfully replied the naners wanted him to tk editorial giri, wno didn't appreciate having her i charge of them. Money and honors were hanging on the antipodean tree OUR NORTHERN NEIGHBOR you car? "Most assuredly," was the prompt ejoinder of James, "just as well as I the lion." E VIDENCE is accumulating regard to all sides of the condition as that friendly and business re- ?aZfii ana wouia meet ine latlonB between Canada and And then she roes on to olead oniv the United States are emi- for the liquor interests not a aviiahi nehtly satisfactory. The flow of ?? tne side of the homes of Oregon, emigration across the boundary S2uS ton1et "con" line has reached a point when dltlons as they . exist," fairly and each country gains about what it squarely. loses, the figures for 1913 indi- rr; "S"' ,1 wouM "ay: eating that the movement of peo- nest convenience, either in person or pie corresponds in many respects ny your attorney, to settle with so- with the movement between dif- clety for 016 destruction of property ferent states ln this ronntrv caused by your business. We are will- ierent states in mis country. iaie to tak oveP vfl We are buying in larger pro- tones, allowing run value, as part portion from Canada than In for- payment; giving yon time to pay bal- iito uuo, securea Dy mortgage on your homes. Early settlement Is ad- of the earth. The toll of $1.20 per ton on the ships net register means an average tax of about 60 cents per ton accrues to us by. reason of the use Of belong out here any longer. I'm com ine canai on coast to coast crrinr i will be In the neighborhood of $25 per ton. as railroad freights from the At lantic to the Pacific and vice versa now average $30 per ton; there will be no difficulty in procuring transporta tion by the water route for $4.50 to s per ton mer years, and- there will be in creased buying as a result of the new tariff law. 'Canada is also increasing her purchases from the United States, Tecent figures show ing that since 1909, vised." E. W. DURKEE. employes. American consumers and hang started the fly crusade and American workers are going to get school children have even been the benefits from free tolls that this moat active agents in carrying on great clamor is raised for repeal of , tbe war- the tolls provision. , Where is the fly born? In filth rWhere does he go? Into the PENSION LEGISLATION I kitchen and the dining room . : r i What does he do there? He walks a BILL, providing pensions for on the bread, the meat, the veget A widows and minor children ables and the fruit. He is fond of Spanish war veterans, has of sweets and his favorite drink is ueen reported iavor.Diy Dy iuo mim pucuer or tne Dany s doi the house of representatives' com-; tie. He delights in Dipping from mlttee on pensions. It provides , the baby's moist lips and in re that fell women who marry veterans turn generously leaves the bac- before the bill becomes a law ehall teria of disease that be has gath- Rvalue of $180,026,550 and importa- llkes and what he believes is of no vm riigiuie as oeneucianes. i u uu bis ieei ana wings. This proposed legislation ia cans-! Where are the greatest number lag much comment. The Chicago of typhoid rase3? Where there Post says pensions are all right ! are most flies. Where are there when rightly applied. But that ! most flies? Where there is most paper asks v,hy a widow whose j filth. ment let him consider the rates of cargo carriage Just instituted between this port and Hongkong, at $2.50 per Disagreeing With Mr. Murphy. Portland. March 20. To the Editor .. of The Journal J. Hennessey Murphy wiieu vhji- had a verv lone- letter in th Tn... adian imports were at a minimum, day's Journal entitled "The Third purchases from the United States Home Rule Bill." Mr. Murphy speaks have steadily outdistanced pur- or ttie conduct of the men of Ulster cor, las a gigantic bluff; and of their threat in iu uanaaa lmponea gooas Murphy Is 6000 miles from Ireland. from the United States to the and is at liberty to believe what he husband served three mouths in the army should receive a pension unless her husband's death came Why should we kill the fly? Because he may kill us. How shall we sill the fly? Kill as the result of his service. In, him with a screen paddle, kero what way, asks the Post, does her sene oil or sticky paper. Kill the case differ from that of any other ! fly in any way, but kill the fly widow In the land? The nation should show grati tude to men who risk their lives la" the country's service. That gratitude should extend to his , widow who participated in his sacrifice. But it is doubtful wheth er the woman who marries a man subsequent to his military service ' should have any claim upon the government in the event of his death. Pension legislation should fol low a program of essential justice. But there is no occasion for fur-.- ther extending the system for pnre- ly sentimental or political" reasons. Destroy "all filth about the house and yard. AS A WATER FINANCIER T ton. The difference In distance from road muddle, on appointment of Presi- Portland to New York via the canal. d,ent Wilson. He nrougni ana rrom rprtiand to Hongkong, is "TTZ "sVi iri oniy some zsrr miles, and Is, I believe, ln our favor between our home norta. inereiore, as a result of benefit to us, the canal will be such colossal im portance financially that the caterwaul over 60 cents looks extremely ridifcu- lous to me, and a matter of smallest consequence. We are going to revel In a $25 lightening of the burden of trans portation, and that overshadows trivial F1LNCE AND THE CANAL E HEODORE B. WILCOX re cently joined the water meter controversy. He said: i ne water department can today reduce the flat rate to fifty cents without installing meters, and still have sufficient revenue to take care of Itself. It is doubtful if Mr. Wilcox is a real authority on the water bus iness. At least, ln his term as member ,of the water board things happened to cloud his adminis tration with doubt. There, - for instance, - was the transaction in which lare-a malnn RENCH streamship companies wefe installed at public expense in nave not yei negun prepara- the Kings Heights addition ln tions for taking advantage of which Mr. Wilcox- was. a large llw s-um vauai. nui stockholder. As a financial In United States Consul Osborne at vestment for the water depart Havre says in Consular and Trade ment, it was a poser. Reports that many importers and j Thus, the 10 and 12 inch mains exporters are looking" forward to with reservoir and other expenses the canal opening as an opportu-: cost $21,650, to say nothing of the nity to extend commerce with the ; pumping expense. There was the , racmc coast. j usual guarantee that the lnvest- Mr. Osborne's report is of ment ln the mains would return a especial interest to people, in the revenue of six ner cent, or 11299 .Pacific Northwest. He says that per annum. The Income is $4 per shipping and commercial interests j month or $48 per annum;' about oi Jtiavre appreciate aavantages one twenty-sixth of what Mr. WI1 ,i f m ,,.. ..r... consequence to the people of the Brlt- tions from Great Britain totalled ,sh IaleB but this ?a fact that wlu iu,t)8i,!). in iis American admit of no successful contradiction. goods aggregating $455,322,535 In that neither the prime minister of value were sold to Canadians, as England, nor his cabinet, nor the Lib- j v m eral party, nor the Irish Nationalists. Great Britain aggregating $138,- the men of Ulster as a bluff, nor treat 7bl,ob8. Tne Vancouver sun calls tnexr threat or rebellion as a joke, attATittnn tft tho fnrt that sinr-n trio Mr. Murphy goes on to say: "Dur- r00rvHv00 r.ama r.t r,w la l" PMl n PUD11C SpeeCh- v. . . -v l,. Mr. Asnu th hasi mnniMlv Canadian trade with the United clared that he will make no conces- States has Increased 100 per cent, Isions regarding the vital principles of compared with a 45 per cent ln- tz rrpa? ln the United Klntrdnm'H YVUCM mr- uuo grants to tne crease in tne unitea K.ingaom s whole provInce or uiater, by a special figures, and an increase of 68 per vote of the people, the right to stay cent in tne traae witn an otner m tne imperial parliament at west- countries, minster, and to keep out of the Irish If lower tariff duties: result n 1 Parliament at uuDiin. is not that a ii lower tanii auues result m .,-, inv.lvi. fw, Canadians seeking a market In Uipies of the bill? What has John the United States for their prod-1 Redmond said many times on that ucts, Americans should not lose very pomtr ctrht t, to 1 Again Mr. Murphy, declares: "In . . . fucumuj i jg27 the Orangemen conspired to de are one oi our oest customers. nose William iv. to nut the nuk ' which 'the canal will aff6rd them. but the steamship companies are v awaiting initiative action by com petitors. " France, according to Mr. Os borne, expects to benefit from the canal through direct Importation of Pacific coast lumber. He says a large Increase in this trade may be expected. Many other products . which are now handicapped in the French market by reason of high prices produced by indirect ship , ment will benefit by the new foutei y Oregon and Washington' hpi-'les will be purchased In greater quan- cox's company guaranteed to Mr. ,Wllcox!s water board. The Kings "Heights Company has become hopelessly Involved. Its doom is believed to be in sight. a bond has, held, it so far to pay ment of the guaranteed $1299 per year nut what will, happen when the end comes to the company with its actual income from water rent als of $4 per month? I -.- Of course, as member of 7 the water board. Mr. Wilcox expected that he would be safe in using the water resources In aiding tho Kings Heights company, of which he was ATLANTA'S MURDER. CASE L Cumberland on the throne, et, etc. Can Mr. Murphy explain how the Orangemen could conspire to depose EO M. FRANK is under sen- Zw Av D,ea .YE & " ! . . l VH tUO t vav. itisoui X V UiU UU tenue oi ueatn at Atlanta ior succeed to the throne until some years the murder of a girl employed I after 1827. The inaccuracy of this in his factory. The Georgia statement may haip us to form an pnnrf hna affirmorl tho P"B s supreme to the statement "imme ilUtslv Inorin e, it nsmalv "Tn 1BCO conviction, and Frank will han,g they threatened. If the church dises April n unless a. popular aemana tabiishment act were passed, to dis- that he be given a new trial ia crown' the Queen, and kick her crown EXBntpd ' i "o tne isoyne. Sjiuuicu. I M,. vr,l, ha si nssrlAotsvt. finish The case has features which are I me iast sentence of his letter. He of general interest. In six or says: "In both cases they laid down seven months Atlanta had fifteen when the hour arrived to make good murders, and in no case was the criminal found. There was an outcry against .the police depart ment, and the situation, so far f was it? I their threats. Will Mr. Murphy kindly tell us what i It was that thfv laid rlnwn? Waa It their hats, or their shlllalahs, tor . what PHILO JUNIUS. as the police were concerned, was desperate.' Then came the murder of Mary Phagan, and .Frank ad- Tolls and' Freight Rates Portland, Or., March 21. To the Edl tor of The Journal I think you are mitted having been the last known I supersensitive over the abrogation : of nerson to talk with her. I the toll exemption, asked for by Presi . Tt, - r.,y4.j I dent Wilson,. inasmuch as the reason "" wu""cu for its reversal appears to have been principally .on the evtuence of a incorporated in the Hay-Pauncefote negro who told four separate treaty In innocent guise. In a way that stories to the police. , Corrobo- It would hardly appear of momenC ;In rative testimony was given by wit- ".K nesses who later) made affidavit canal; but Uncle Sam in framing a tnat tney testuiea unaer auress. i law giving a rebate or 6 per cqnt rrom Atlanta, la convinced that while tarirt on an goods orougnt rrom for Prov r,r o ttoi rr.i, VrtB in American bottoms, great , " ' " iy disgruntled all the other nations muster In the supreme court, yet I bf the earth, and this later reprisal is the accused man, whether guilty I one of the evidences, quite to be ex or i innonetit. wan rrnvlrtrl Viv n I Pected. .. ' r wave pf indignation rather than by yobocannotdlsrt sober facts. - j . - nor twisted into any semblance of jus No wonder Atlanta is agitated tif icatlon jfor the toll exemption. And over, th fatv of Frank . if th U is a matter , of such immateriality neonle ar convinced thatth nn-1 that it should not cloii. a moment people are convincea tnat tDe po-lof frtctional difference between our licer sought . to Justify, themselves i selvca, and the other maritime powers for him and the tree was shaking. But the other day he was mousing around for adventure ln Colombo, Ceylon, and he saw a steamer at the pier. So he just engaged a cabin right there. "I couldn't stand it any longer," he announced In a cable that had been written in affectionate don't-glve-a- damnedness about the cost. "I don't American dtisena who have Just re turned from a trip aoroad may be rec ognized at any hotel. You' tell 'em by their language. After having come in contact with our nice new tariff law they prove that tourists and truck If anyone is skeptical of this state- drfver r brtnir.,k unJer ,thelr k,m8- Air. viiauieai a. olockb iviui mcu Ecuador recently. He has been arbi trating the usual South American rail saltic formation. At the end of the J. Hardy Crow of Lorane, according ' cav n opening in th rock had been to tne eating were picked n., V1!?, ?.?S ort of a stucco formation something that" pirt of the count7y: " Th. quality Uk Um wn,cn l8 Plerid over the of the fruit. If anything, seemed to be opening. Just to one side and above Improved by this all-winter treatment, the sealed archway there waa a small . . . -. j opening, possibly 10 11 feet from. tJ kpJi-.? the J?cho?8. of ?alem j the floor of the cave. , One of the tall above the fifth grade will write a ... ,,,k.J k-.,.i hi..i composition dealing with the fly prob. i !"A. f. ,.Ur nifmo, brctd, h,m"e,5 lem. according to a plan outlined by ln,t the rock wall and the rest of Superintendent Kunts. The best two u climbed on his shoulders, scrambled from each room wijl be put at the up on the ledge, then ' reached down disposal or tne committee on riy cam- and lifted him up. We all crawled into E-ifnf A,'-5:ommeC?5,al$IubUnd the opening and found ourselves In a ' Vie81 wm be ered to the cav, tnat t win neVer-forget if I live to be as old as Methuselah. Hundreds of stalactites wth their metallic color ing gleamed on all sides junti! the cave seemed like a very Fairyland. We ex plored it for Homo rllHtiinro lint finally cigars from Porto Rico. The law : came to a deep cleft voich" sr-emed to states that Porto Hican cigars may be i lead down to the very center of thi Imported free of duty in lots of 6000. earth. In any event when we dropped or more. His 80,000 cigars got In free, pieces of lime or broken i pieces of But he had to pay on the 705. The stalactite you could count 12 or 15 raise real orators out ln Cincinnati . before they struck and for nearly a though ln strict Justice It must be ad- minute after you could har them roll mltted that they sputter. Jordan ng and bounefng on their way down Holmes of Chicago returned from Lon- ward. W, came back to where the don with an evening suit. Clothes are 'other opening had been.stopped up. dutiable at 85 per cent. "in those days the -straits-were not 'But this suit, said the official, used much. We decided some pirate "has braid to port and starboard on . crew had hidden thir booty In this the 'pants. So that they .become em-j rave and pealed It un. HVe wont back broldered, goods. The rate on en-; to the ship full of thefidea of return broldered goods Is 60 per cent." i ing with tools and tearing out the m- In his calmer moments -Mr. Holmes sonry. A favorable breeze had coma will regret his characterization of our up In the meanwhile "and tho captain, new tariff law. As the customs ln- anxious to take adva'Tttage of It. told spector said, there was no reason to us that we would hav'jour trouble for consider it a personal matter. i our pains aod that-we 'bud better make J the best of the breeee ami lose no more Every now and then one content time, so we never went back. There plates the New York courts in action has never been a time ijlnce then when and, then one goes away wagging I have thought of it.V and I gut-H I his tread. There is the case of John have thought of it fl)CM .time, that I Supper, for example. Ijust Octobef have not regretted thjaf we Jld not go Mr. Supper was put upon by one back and investigate -life old walled op Charles Graff. Mr. Graff not only ex- cave." , , ' pressed a desire to kill Mr. Supper, but, unlike the ordinary New Yorker of vocal wrath, undertodk to make good. So that Mr. Supper reached around behind his person and shot Mr. Graff with one of the 'ordinary four dollar nickel plated guns until Mr. Graff died. tn K loWrV: all vou have Supper was tried the other day, and1 to do is be foolish. ii the Jury unanimously gladly, in fact j.J held that Supper was perfectly Jus-! Ignorance of thejjlsw ecutes no tifled in killing Graff. Then the long man unlens he has m jjull. arm of the law reached out and ; ; grabbed Mr. Supper, and he was con-j The world will forgive a man al victed on the charge of having hi his , moBt any old thing sei:ept failure, possession one lethal weapon, to wit. aj ;?! cast iron revolver. And he was sent I The pessimist hasi;k chronic case to tne pemiemmry lur wi c i or inaigesiion. - t cause he had an Implement with wnicn featfiers. made bv some Jungle Indian. "We'll have to destroy mat, saia the customs officials. "See law ln re th ImDOrtatton of feathers. So Mr. Steers made aisjoimea vocai noises, but thev burned the headdress A Cincinnati man Imported 30,705 it Pointed Paragraphs The man who hesitates may find it too late to act. - i j 1 he did a deed of which the law had Just found him Innocent. ; So you needn't wonder at discover ing that there is a preferred class ln the New York courts. If you Just stab your mother, or set fire to an apart ment house, you may Jog along for months in the Tombs -which is a not ably smelly and unpleasant prison without being placed on trial. But If you're caught packing a gun you get Into the preferred class and are tried at once. Can you beat it? TRAINING TO. SEE NEED OF ECONOMY When a man fallpiin business he begins to look arouidjfor a political Job. y; A man never looks: bftter than when he Is looking for siQther man who owes htm money, J A girl who is cbJjfnmy with her mother can manags! to get along pretty well without jftj Miaperon. It takes a young widow to convince a man that he Is mjak'lng love to Jier when she is doing r the love mak ing herself. f s Dt John M. Osklson. luxnartation to Woman Voters. ' Within the last year two big firms Reedville, Or., March 19. To the of merchants dealing ln men's clothes Editor of The Journal I hope the in New York city have gone Into women voters of Oregon will not I bankruDtcv: and a huge department heed the advice or arguments of Mrs. store ln the same city which catered Duniway in behalf of a trafflo which I to the buyers of small and cheap Items the country is coming to look unon aa I has struck the rocks. menace Jto society. I hone, whan ThM failures have been attributen they come to vote, that they will con- to a radical falling off of the demand suit their own conscience; that they for moderate priced men's clothes, will put their family interests and and the enforced economy among the their neighbors' famllv lntaraata shnvs ware earners of the city of "New York. the liqoor interests; that their hearts I They are the logical aftermath of a will go out to those who, through period or business aeprcBBiun wmu tne saencv or thla nwrni inffl n i i tust now enainK. liquor, have fallen by the wayside; I In the same period, I did not hear that they will think of the ruin of any failures among the big stores liauor is dallv inflic.tinar nnnn hrr.on I which denend chiefly upon the patron- ity. May they think that there are I age of women who are of the families other things In this world worth of salaried men and business proprte- strmng xor besides material things; I tors, in otner woiua, wui u that we can't keep on buildlna- this I arled man and business man did cut down on his expenditures for clothes, his wife and daughter did not. Now, if the woman is serious In her desire to line up with the man eco nomically and politically she must learn to recognize as promptly a e structure of earthly wealth at the ex yeiiBc t me moral cnaracter or a race. It Is true that Interests must suffer which are Innocent. Yet. we must not go back; we must run the enemy out. The saloon brines nothlna but trouble to a community. I I th lavn. when most people are where you see a saloon you alwaVa I atrivtnar to sret all they can and tnen will find a Jail. In case of atrikos. f vuninr all thev ret. not even looking elections, of war, or any event which at their less fortunate brothers and in some way. excites the populace, the 1 sisters who fall by tne waysiae, nor saioon is iorcea to ciose. Ask your-1 raising a helping nana i me nis. self the reason of It. Their record I it is a favor ami a pleasure to meet is a reproach to our boasted civil Im. I a mon iuc George M. Brown, a friend lion, it nas Decome a deformity On I to those who were Tnenaies. the body of our social fabric, a cruel a friend to those who toll for their cross on tne snouiders or a peaple. We I dally bread. .hnll -.a . V. n . Ml . I ' . . . . busu-jiui unit iur iiuanciai rea-1 nr M. Rrown'D great ngnt on sans we cannot dispense with th a. , na.tinn in hi district is liquor traffic but rather let us feel I vnnvn n over Ores'on. and even wb wb ii u our amy to posterity i Governor West, wno was opposea po lo cleanse the land of this law defying I utlcally praised him for this work, octopus. O. E. FRANK, i wn Oeoree M. Brown is not busy In court or ln his office he is always found at home with his estimable Sosehure. Or.. ' Marr-h 10 f ti. anil lnvelv children. He is a Editor of the Journal Them -, I rrwi n?nn and a home man. many candidates for many offices to The writer speaks from knowledge be filled this year by i the voters Of in all of the above. There can be no Oregon. There are several candidates mistake if the good citizens of Oregon for attorney general. One of them Is elect him to the position he Is eml- u.e Honorable George M. Brown Of nently qualified to ;iui attorney ;: itoseDure. wno nas in th tint ni.r.i ne nreeon . The Ragtime Muse Revolutionary Policy. She ought to be prepared Women are disappointing creatures, and contract the expend!- One can't depend on them at all. s. hnm, aj rnadllv as the Ami yet they're necessary features e home as readily as e of lh terrestrial, bouncing ball. the need for practicing economy in those periods . when business halts. Her opportunity is to make the home her business and run it in business principles to expand an tures of the . , . , kji Linn trained head or a commercial Dusinens T,.-v iM,.k clatltv f logic. shifts the weight of Jils omigatlons And they are disobedient, too; according to the ease or difficulty of Despite our labors pedagogic, financing them. " , They do Just what,they choose to do! Complete .ignorance of the business ..,. J , tuam you're supposed to look after is actu- . -1 nf foV us W thCm ally made a merit by a laTge propor- And hlgU Bffalrs-r-tey should not tion or tne wives or America, sua i know them the husbands are at any! rate com plaisant. There Is a pernicious the ory in many communities that it is somehow cheapening to think of .the domestic establishment as a business. "I'll go shabby and worry my head off. but I won't let the women of my family know that I'm straining every nerve to make -ends meet!" go says the dear chivalrous husband. If you can find it ln your heart to blame -the Such subjects we iWuld not discuss.. They want the baHot; when they've won it. t't They'll raise our.bwn resounding shout 2'.; (What shall we dot when Ihey have done It?) : "We're going to str th rascals out!'r . We thyj could i not be knew that trunt1 Kreely to roam lifs larger walk! women of that man's household you TlfeyTl Wnd lrVJre we'r, dls can go further than I can. What I, gusted do see Is that this man is foolish and short-sighted. George Jf. Brown's Candidacy. years been one of the most able and fearless prosecutors in the state. He has convicted some 40 murderers and Prohibitionist States Purposes. n i. -Mnrr-h IK. To the Editor a host of criminals for less crimes, all of The journal. In answer to B. F. b" 'n. mere p,vtnn' article on proniDition lex me are many men ln Oregon today who are now good citizens who once stood before the bar of Justice where George m. srown naa asaea the court to sub pend sentence to give them a chance to regain their manhood and standing In the society of good, honest citizens. Every one of the men for whom he say; In the 59 years he has lived 'he surely ought to have his eyes opened to the everlasting curse of the open saloon. But there are "none so blind as those who will, not see." , Wa oresume in th places men tioned, they also have laws prohibit ei. . . 11 -E,.. itJS X:LrZ:i roker1 We Tnow 'thev term implies. are. Should they be repealed on -that account! muruer, nicijr uu ci,, other crimes committed may be traced. ssaa wgp vrr ssa- m. j si jtisi s aaa a M U s r . - ties, the goo citizens ln speaking Of I !n two thirds of the cases, to the ln- George Al. Brown call htm "Georee." I nuenco oi and all take pride ln speaking of his great ability as an attorney and his Nothing, It seems, will stop a man from getting alcohol in one form or magnetic personality ia winning and I another after he has formed the dead holding friends in all walks of life. I lv habit, I have known of men lear None is so poor or so humble that I Ing- their families in sickness and George M. Brown has not stormed and I want, not caring for the laws of God made friends with him, and he is talor mtn, so long ag -they got . their friend in everjT sense of the term. In I drinks. These men are often good men when not under the Influence of drinks. ! Mr. Prohibitionist, mind, 'you' arrs not working alone to keep whisky from the poor drunkard, who j will drink "red Ink" If nothing stronger Is handy, but we are working for the boys who are the men to be. If thej cursed sa loon is not on every corner; those boys are not going to form the liquor habit. There s no reforming the saloon. It can't be done. The only remedy is to Precisely as thev think and talk! The art of poIitli-M Inradlna. They'll work Its rii without ruth. Intentions openly paroling. And telling all t W fihamelef s truth! Children's HCliatter. I "Now Thomas." satd Jhe teacher to a small pupil ln the prjisary class, "can you tell me what mo's, Is?" "Yes. ma'am," replied the little fel- low; "It's something ithat stone does not gathej." rolling Small Edgar was looking out at the f.lllnir anntrflBVAa a nA turnlns' in falsi put it out forever, and with God's help fatne, ad; "Papa, 'l can remember we are doing It. The old1 soaks will get their booze, but God save the boys. aa. iu. t. when we didn't have any X he year snow." - ' "When was that, ' Edgar," asked his father. , "Why, last summer, wss the reply. White Slavery Portland. March 18. To the Editor of The Journal "Truthseeker" says ln Sunday's Oregonlan that the white slave pictures exaggerate. If Truth- seeker" reads the papers and Observes I'm proud of it- federal court proceedings he will know. Little Joe. "But why Little Joe. "Papa says you sre self made man. At4 you?" Homely Caller. "Yes, my boy. and you didn't that the situation is serious. A recent ' pick out a fashionabl pattern?" Instance: A degenerate married an un- - i protected girl from Salem, took her to j "Now, Elsie." saidihe teacher, to a an apparently respectable hotel and small pupil.' "can ya tell me what had a": number quite a number of memory is?" f "cousins" call on her. She ran away. "Yes. ma'am," replfed Elsie. "Mem He followed her to another hotel and ' ory Is the thing people use when they demanded' that she "earn" j money for j want to forget what they don't want him. I I to remember." K The federal courts of this ' district have found over SO men guilty of white slavery in about two years. If "Truthseeker" will reveal his identity, either through general delivery or the press, the writer will "show" him a few Instances of white slavery. L. W. CERVTJS. Invokes Mayors Protection. Portland. March 21. To the Editor of The Journal Please allow me to say a few words In regard to that crowd that stands at the doors of th courthouse, stopping everybody th.t eomes out after registering, to sign some petition for some politician. Why doesn't Mayor Albee stop; It? Wb-t is It but a case for the corrupt prac tice act, pure and simple?;- - w- - - . F, JONES. - - The- Sunday Journal The Great ' Home Newspaper, consists jof Five newsAsectlong replete with Illustrated features. Illustrated magazine of quality. Woman's section, of rare merit. - f i Pictorial news supplement. Superb comic section. 5 Cents th Copy ;