THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL PORTLAND, FRIDAY EVENING, MAY.; 1 1S14. THE JOURNAL AW IKPKPENDKXT HEWBPAPEtt . 1 C m. j ackso." . .Pabllnher t'ubitahed avcrr aenlns (cirrpt Bandar) and . mi)i Sunday avirniaf it Tbe Joo rn I BulM- Inc. Broadway arid Yamhill t.. Portland, Or. Kotarvd at Uia po toff lea at Portland. Or., for traaamliatoa throngs tb matter -as aacood" . elaaa mattar. -if . VkUCPHONES afaln 7173; Howe. A.l. All .- department raarbad by rbtae: nambara. Tell iu oiM-(atur wbat aeparttnrat w wanx. I , ,..i.v v mil . . . . . ...a . . . . . .. - to-ajamtii Ktntnor Co., nronmwK-a 223 Hflb A.. Maw York I 1218 Peopla'a iiaa Bills -r Cblcafo. -; - Bobaertpt'loa twma by mall or to any ad . rcaa .la tflf Coltad states or Mesioa; -'- . DAILY ,-' r- Pne year.. ,,...15.00 On taoatb. ....... V ' NJNOAY r ' - poa year... ....$2.60 ( One toootb. .25 y - ,; DAILY AKI 8CMDAY , 'r0n year.... .$7.80 ( One month....... S .65 B -a Pride hath no other (lass To show Itself, but pride; for supple kneea - . i .Feed arrogance and are the . proud man's, fees. Shakespeare. '. A FUTILE PROGRAM A" GAIN criticizing Governor West because the 1913 legis lative machine rah state ap propriations .to ar total of 16,850,996.42, the Oregcaian says: But governors have a-ry large part in spending public money. They don't have to spend it merely because. It is appropriated. Jl ' How could a governor- stop it? What could he constitutionally do beyond exercise of the veto? ' The paying out of appropriated money is a matter of law. o It is a solemn legislative enactment. The secretary of tate issues the warrants as specified. ; No gover nor could stop him from doing it. The warrants go to the'state treas urer, and the treasurer pays. No governor could prevent the treas urer from, paying. There is not a governor In . the Vhlted States who could prevent a secretary of state from issuing warrants or stop la state treasurer from paying them. To attempt to do bo would! be to attempt to set : aside the 'constitution' etud the law. It would be Usurpation of authori ty! It would be grounds for im peachment. :There 'is, no way for the Ore gonian to overthrow- history. It cannot repeal the facts. West "tried to ? hold i the legislature within bounds. He used every expedient given him U the constitution.; He couldh t have blocked the . acts of the 1913 legislature with an army. The houe and senate machines that control leoTthe body were crazy. They lost all sense of their relation to the public and the state. , They were held together bypri t vat bills. There was the appro- prlatlon of . $1000 for Detective Carpenter, introduced by Upton, pasBed by both houses, vetoed by , the' governor, and passed by the machine over the veto with a whop. There were salary raises. There were Bwanipland bills, whfchJ cheated the school, children out of - thousands. ' - ' ' Not p. governor Irf the world could have, stopped ' the'' raids. ' Notlhing but a cataclysm of nature . or an act of Ood could liave inter fered with the headlong '' and" mad career of the legislative machine. Thepresentation of a veto wasthe signal for the gang to go to fit, and It invariably went. It was a Creat frolic, and . no body, enjoyed it from the distance better than the Oregdnian. It : never once protested. It--tackled every' time the gang scoredr vlt isneezed every time the machine took snuffy It chuckled jind crowea ana cavorted every time the gang landed on iuyeto. .- It seeks now to throw, the odium on WeBt. It has attempted ' many foolish things, such as the assem bly, pot never one leo 'hopelessly futile as thia ' ' .- . : j '31EXICO I5T J847 i " , ' THE possibility of sending a col umn of American troops from Vera Cruz to- Mexico City , ; makes -it 'worth while -to-" re call the march of General Wlnfield Scott from the coast to the capi tal in 1847. ! With 13.000 men he landed hear Vera Cruz on March 9,, nearly a "year arter war had. been declared. Two weeks after landing he cap- tured the city of Vera Cruz. On the 8th of April the advance of, hia. ; army under General Twigg began Ita march Into the interior by way of i Jalapa. There was no railroad at ; that time. Three miles from Plan del Rio on April 18 the bat tle of Cerro Gordo was fought on a field covering many miles and '. . - i- . , iiroaen oy mountains ana deep . chasms. It resulted In a disastrous defeat for the Mexicans at a cost to General Scott of only sixty-three , Kiuea., it cleared the whole wax to Puebla,. 150 miles distant, which L-Generali Worth" ocennlwri mv u ' The V advance, of General Scott ; ceased - here for'nearly three months during which time his army wa in a, poaition that would have been -fatal in the presence of an aggrea- , rive r enemy. The expiration of "charge of 4000 volunteers and, re . ducedi the effectives to 5000' men. It mad "it Impossible to keep open the cdmmunlcations save" by send- Ih,. V flUlr .t plfes under the protection of large detachments. ? . .' f When , General , Scott - finally started on . the march to Mexico ". City : In August heleft.' 1200 men at rueoia, or wnom eoo were un - able to' march, as a, garrison to protect 2500 men who were in the hospital; chiefly .because of dy sen- teryv i'He -et out " with a trifle of war; the other, the good unarl over . 10,000 merf and abandoned tan of battlefields. The Post's cor the whole .route to Vera Cruz and respondent Is of the class of men his communications - with home, t who welcome calamity In the hope cutting loose completely from h Is .that It will divert attention from base. Then : came the battles ol what their greed is doing. .. The Contreras, Cherubusco, .Mollno del j other man knows that no army Is Rey and Chapultepec. On Septem-j properly equipped tor war without ber. 20 the! triumphant army, con- j an adequate supply of coffins. ' He siderably . depleted,; entered Mexico ! knows that even his greatest skill City and ended the war. ;' - 'cannot keep the coffins empty. He No one can forecast whether this knows something about the miser feat could , be repeated today in ies of war. a short time or not. If the Mexi-I , At Yale University the other cani should make a determined evening former i President Taf t resistance .they could ask for no ! said : "If war should come, it will better territory in which to fight, not be a trail oKglory it will be a territory of mountain fastnesses a trail of woe." where a- few H'aen. can check a. Mr Taft spoke the truth. Take thousand, a territory where the the glamor off of history and the beat of the , day is intense and the residuum,1 of - war Is dismally elo cold of the night severe. ; " quent woe. .. Battlefields testify to In Connection With the, march Of it- , Rtrl.krl 'homea ar flllArt with General Scott it is interesting to ; note that among his officers were Robert E. Lee, P. G. T. Beauregard, George B McClellan. Z. B." Tower, Isaac I. Stevens and J. G. Poster, j all of whom became distinguished commanders ' during the Civil war. NON-PARTISAN LEAGUES A. N' OW we have the. Non-partisan League. It has come into being, it says, 'to prevehtv tte enact ment of laws that prohibit the in vestment of capital in Oregon; to check the tendency to try out 'freak j" law in this state, and to investigate the- character and fit ness of, alj candidates for public office." " Nobody 'Will question the right of the Non-Partisan League to' ex ercise the functions thus set forth in- its announcement. As to whether or not it will have weight depends on. Its future perform ances. . It is confronted withs the, fact that the Oregon public is sus picious of organizations of' its kind. Ever since the days of the Ill fated - assembly, people Iteve been on their guard. They have a fear rf ftAltf flr a m Kim aVtArl r1naS'w n -a' w a di,nn t r,on0 tho a guidance. - The assembly backers assumed that plain i people did not know enough to select fit candidates for office. It assumes that a few gen tlemen were of superior intelli gence and the general run inferior. That suggestion aroused wide re sentment because it was a fallacy and the assembly was an unroarl ous fizzle. The experience Is of value. ' It may serve as a lamp 'to the Non partisan League. It will be a plain suggestion that not all the wisdom, patriotism and high , pur pose of Oregon is confined to as sociations, leagues and societies, and that with safety some confi dence may be had in the plain citi zen. . , All this means that leagues are Of value or no value exactly as their .works are squared with a broad respect for the collective in telligence and genuine avoidance of special interests in conflict with general welfare. , ' an -a -mi aaaaaaaaaaa RAILROAD FREIGHT RATES . '. ' s A CORPS of civil engineers fhas made a physical valuation . of the Lehigh Valley railroad. These experts, employed by the company itself, say It would cost $324,478,300 to reproduce the property. Edgar H. Boles, 1 the railroad's j general solicitor, sub mitted these figures to the Inter state , Commerce Commission, with the further statement that the road's ' capital stock and outstand ing bond issues, aggregate .$124,-! 000,000. These figures '-are being used as evidence that the rafrroads are not over capitalized, and that they are entitled to the five per cent In crease in freight rates which they as. Many newspapers as well as railroad officials assert that the financial fitness of the Lehigh . Valley -has been proved, that Its ! right to rates which return divi- dends on- the larger valuation has i been established. ; j It may be -that the Lehieh Vallv ! is capably, arid honestly , managed, and that It is not earning reason-! able dividends on a fair valuation t of Its property. Figures submitted - by the clyi engineers may be cor-! rect, hut it should be borne in mind that they were prepared by men employed by the railroad for use by the same railroad before the Interstate Commerce Commission. If the Lehigh Valley is not.arn- ing what it Bhouid. earn, because of inadequate freight raes. thati1 ;-measure -That paper railroad, unfortunately, is the vie- J A ' . tim of other rlads which. are not f mer?dfmenf; 1s i opposed to capably andthonestly managed. As the ?terat of the manwho pays an offset to this road's showing! Ireft,f- , i facts disclosed concerning the NewK 0A0n Initia"veit law adopted v in Haven system are conclusive. It 912 mV all household furni is unfortunate that th sheep must l"e ?romx t"fttln- ,?nfer that suffer with the oats 1 - 'law 80X116 Portlan residents whose , household furniture stood : on the A TRAIL TO "WOE f-1912 rolls at valuations of $8000 - '-i '-... "..' - -i to $16,000 are not required to pay THE : New York -Evening Post I -taxes on It. - The proposed amend "received a letter from a man iment limits their exemption to passing th: ugh the city. He j $100. Naturally," the man with . exulted over the outbreak of M00 worth of household furni- hbstilltles In Mexico, Jeered at President Wilson, and added: ! Cher jp! We' wont find time dnr- x72rXlJ".lx? roidVSo ii' mfgM bTwrr " - 1 ( The Measure is designed to en , At about the same' time this let-t;ourag "mall home owne. -It ter was wriUen the president of ', win not benefit the renter of a the International Surgical Assoc! a-1 ?urnlsbed apartment, : and neither tioB, in aession ai'Kuw Vnrv .n. t8 benefited by,the present law. We, who are brought into such closed contact with the dreadful miseries of 1 this poor human race find it more 1 ana more ailltcult to understand wav men do not employ their reasonIc powers to a good end by ceasing this!6111?' inder a law which received destruction of one another. ,- . . ue man represented the- ghouls lt losses in blood and treas- ure are not all, for while the pub lic mind is diverted from, problems affecting human welfare at home, greed gets a new foothold and the fight to dislodge it must be started anew. PROHIBITING TIPS A LONG suffering public will heartily commend the Cali fornia Railroad Commission for Its order directing abol ishment of tips In Pullman cars. ' The , order Is to take effect In thirty days. The commission ' says In Its report that, "it' certainly is a commentary on modern business methods ; that a company as rich and powerful as this one should stoop to: the' disreputable practice to which ft resorts." . The report is a scathing indict ment of the company . Among other, things, the commission 'de clares the company forces its em ployes to depend upon the charity of the traveling public for living wage. Pullman officials were criti cized for testifying that $27.50 Is an adequate-wage .for"a sleeping car porter The Pullman company is one of !the richest corporations in Ameri itable. . In forcing its employes 'to depend for living pay. -upon public generosity, it debauches manhood and adds to the great army of mendicants. No practice so under-mines-Hhe self respect of men as does tip taking.?; The prohibition of tipping on the Pullman system ought to come from the federal government under Interstate commerce provisions. VANCOUVER'S WATERFRONT V ANCOUVER, British Colum bia, is anxious to develop its waterfront property. .,. The port commissioners are tak ing up the matter with dominian authorities at Ottawa and ' the Question to be decided s whether the waterfront shall bef Bold out right or leased for a terfa of years. Strong pressure is belig brought to bear in favor of actual sale, on the theory that . such ay program will insure improvements5; of a per manent and more expensive nature. The Sun takes issue with people who are urging absolute alienation of the public's title, admitting that such a program might bring 'env porary advantages, but saying: We have to consider the position the city would be in when its great stretch on the front of the harbor has been alienated for all time from public' ownership. With the growth of the city !rr population and cont merclal activity, all this property will eventually be of incalculable value; and regarding tha alienation of the waterfront from that point of view We can scarcely, rid ourselves of . the conviction that by its sale we should be robbing the generations to follow us of their proper heritage. Surely we should not be justified in dispos ing of it regardless of the interests! of the citizens of thefuture any more than of those of "the present. The Sun is right. Portland is hating experience, with alienated waterfront. The p'eople's property, given into private ' hands . Ostensibly for development in the Interest of commerce. Is now a 'paramount Prooiem. private ownership of the waterfront has not materially ''aided commerce, and now when Portland wishes to use its 'great waterway the eItJr Is required to purchase, at exorbitant prices, property which tne courts say once belonged to tne People 'and was disposed of for notl"ng. CLOUDING THE ISSUE r N THE. interest 6f fairness It is proper to say that the- Oregon Jan is attempting to. cloud the issue ' governing the !$1500 ex- ture is opposedlfo a measure which gives him no advantage over the man with only- $1500 worth of he longings la his. home. . ; 11 wl11 not ihjure the average home owner, for the" exemptions it provides will be Iareelv offset bv ! . - . . '- property which is no,W ex- the united support' of the very peo- i pie who now oppose this measure. One trouble with our ; tax laws Is that they are 100 per cent effi cient against the average man arid woefully deficient in reaching the man ,of means. The latter finds no difficulty in securing -exempt ttons, while ; all thej average man has Is 'in plain view of the .asses sors. i:C i' - We have- had ond millionaire wedding without days' and days of; newspaper exploitation of the epi sode. In the simDllcltv of his nun- . tlals, as well as in some , other f "Who knows r be finished up. This things, young Yincent Astor has dear chiW may one day become er givenv , gUmpes . oft' an intelll- ? aHngptiin! uttf2 gence usually -missing in the sons , BlbU tbt may one 4y become an w iae laie incn. Both. roT the lat ier sua, ior tne escape, from a truckling exploitation of the details of . an ostentatious ' wedding, wp' may be thankful. - lCn,J?on,5,ton- "ent The Journal tot PObUcatlon In tnis department abould be writ " 5 SSy on 'ds of the paper, abould not exceed 300 word in length and moat be ac companied -by tbe name and addceaa of the aender. It the writer doe .not deaire to bare the name j pubUabed. he should ao etate.) - "Dtacaaalcui ta 'the Kreateat of all reform' Jt ratlonUea eTerythlng lt toachea. It robe prlnclplea of all false eanctity and throws Uwaa back on their reasonableneaa. II they bar no reaaonableneaa. It ratbleaalr cnuhea them out of ezlatence and seta up lta own eoncluaiona in theic atead." Woodrow WUaon. - I . -.. ; liquor Defenses Challenged. Shedds, Or, April 29. To the Elditor of The Journal I was reared In - a section of our country that Is noted for its chivalry toward women. . I dislike to sharply disagree with wom en, but there are two - who write to your columns that are so different from what we expect of . woman, and Who write things so out of place, that cannot refrain from saying some things entirely opposite. I refer to MrS. Duniway and Ella M. Finney. Both are advocating the use of intoxi cating liquor, I suspect that' if either would see a i drunken husband or son come . reeling home and with abusive, language and vile oaths berate them, and with some punitive instrument inflict upon them- injury, they would at least desist from publicly advocat ing the pernicious traffic. They aeem to favor teaching and training for temperance. That is what the public schools and I religious schools have been doing for a number."" of years. thanks to the W. C. T. U-, which, more than any other Institution,. has put into the school curriculum textbooks teach-1 ing the effects of Intoxicants on the human system, with the result that boys and girls so taught, are now be ing voters, see the only way to keep drunkenness away is to take away the drunk producing' agent. A few days ago- Mrs. Duniway said in one of her communications, "Lib erty is the Cure fdr all evil." If that is true she would be a great, benefac tor At she Would get the keys to the penitentiaries, jails and asylums, un- iocr. meir ooors- -a.no. turn loose to personal liberty" all the inmates. I fancy her delight in coWirte the phrase would be lessened when she saw ail these people, turned loose . tsua M. Finney must think she has hit upon a happy, logical sentence when she Winds up her letters by saying, vote wet, for order, law en rorcement and , temperance." Whv I doesn't "She answer , my request some time ago by giving us when, where and' by whom such an. p.nri v,i achieved because a wet regime ruled? tier expression makes fne think of a parrot, which, having learned to Imi tate a sound, repeats It over andjver, whether or not it Has any meaning or sense. No, a I wet regime is as far from order, Jaw enforcement and tem perance as sin-la from riehteonsn and purity. The llauor traffic doomed, anch should be. As to ."property rights." thet-n is no vested property right in the liquor traffic, only a licensed privilege, to be taken away at any time it is abused. C Mi F. V - ' ' j The Perpetual Assembly. Portland. April 80. To the ICditni nt The Journal A neroetual sAmhiv has been formed by some patriotic gen tlemen who are going to tell the com mon mut ,just who to vote for and what measures to affirm. How kind and thoughtful these patriots are I Just, go to sleep, fellow citizens; we will do the rest. When i election day comes round simply take, a copy of the sample ballot . we will mark for you. and vote accordingly. . -: . Assuming that Ihis bunch, of Datrinta in the Northwest Bank "building know all that is to be known and. are ndt swayed by personal, vested or special interests, how lon will they h, that way? Will it not be necessary, before many moons, for some other patriotic body to form to inves.tlgate them? a body of patriots assembled four years ago and proceeded to tell us "Just where' to head in at." Did we head? Af,k Jay Bowerman and a few others. At one time several patriotic organ izations warned us against passing the employers' liability act, but if car ried in every precinct in the state. Now , we are to have a perpetual as sembly always On the Job. - Who pays the rent? Why should anybody pay it? What measures giving better' and more democratic government In Oregon havo any of, the members of ', this , letters from the people " v ...wu M advocated ror tne weirare or the Jni yUW72 , irUeoP1f0reSon- It is bad enough for them as to-a man or a measure? If v Mu.nm w T O rnfirU g i a CIQ om r I V nAAn a a cirri I iney can -oeiiver tne goods- tusy now ' , . , i as Tammany and as tiherou- a, a i as Aammany and as ireacnerous as a i Perpetual t assemblies in quarters telling the Oregon citizen what to do with his ballot! Fall in V,r,rTr line, all "you , who do not use your brains a minute a' year. v f ALFRED D. CRlDGE, Scripture Quoted Against , Drink.' ' Boring; Or., April 29. To the Eidtor of The Journal Ella M. Finney .says prohibition should not be taught in general church or school. When- we place ourselves with the you ugr at the opening of life, deep concern fills us. Words of earnest argument and warn ing counsel rather than of ' congratula tion rise to our llpsv - Thera: is many a poor Creature now crawling through life, miserable himself and the bauqe of sorrows to others, who might 'have lifted up his head and. prospered, had he known that liquor has contributed more to the moral, intellectual - and material deterioration , of the people' and, has brought more misery' to de-jaa fenseless women and children than any ether .agency In the history of man kind, I know that the grave -swallows daily, -iy; scores." drunkards, everyone of whom though lie was safe. while he was : forming ; his appetite. It vls the part of prudence and wise trustee Chip , to 'protect life against evea the possibility of any further deterioration where alcohol may be responsible for it. v' - U. - r So many glaring errors, are .made in the use of quotations that it is well for us to quote ' the words of Paul. A FEW SMILES With a great sense of awe and Im portance the young- couple1 atopd In front "of the parson,: the new; bafcy comlortaDiy iiumper in in It mother's arms." , ' Evidently with an Idea of improving the occasion,, the new curate ;saw vflt to launch Into a genUe homily n tbcnHaai w mistrtnii nta.tlfrman. - The ' little mother's eyea had gradu ally grown rounder and rounder. "What name did you aayr said the par5oiw;--'".--'?'?i'"'.-!' i ' f '-. - , 4Jb a timid whisper came the apolo getic reply: . L- -Jemim Ann,ssirlw 1 A railroad -engineer . was boasting abou t tbe speed of his engine. '. "Why," he said, "once when I had a new fireman with me on run 88 he asked me in a 3 surprised way if that wasn't a rather Jong white fence beside the line, "'White fence!' says I with a roar of laughter. That's no White fence. That's milestones." Holding a glass of -clear honey in his - right hand, father observed im pressively: " "It cost the little bees many a weary trip to fill this with sweetness from the flowers." Little Laura, who p- J had been listening j closely, exclaimed with great earnest ness: "Wouldn't it have been too bad if one of them had dropped the glass I" Judge.' Let 8 do him the Justice to clothe his thought in his own worUal "Be riot drunk;with. wine, wherein is excess; but be filled with the spirit; speak ing to yourselves in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing and making melody your heart to the Lord." This same Paul preached, "Touch not, taste not, handle not." It is writ ten. "Be not among wine bibbers." "Woe to them that drink wine in bo wis." -"'Can a bird fall in a snare where, no gin- is?" "Neither be idol aters, as were some of them; as it is written, The people sat down to eat and arink, and rose up to play." "Ye have planted vineyards, but ye shall not drink wine of them. And in all vine yards shall be wailing for I will pass through them, saith the Lord." MAY GILTNER. , Ancient Wine, Modern Booze. ' Elgin, Or., April 29. To the Editor of The Journal I " have read the com ments of "Subscriber" on the excerpts recently published Over my. signature in your paper, and they are but a repetition of the twaddle pf the anti prohibitionists. It fires with Jiorror the hearts of these people to so much as mention drunkenness. Yet', who is ,... tj ,..! , . t pferate" citizen who "took a little wine for his stomach's sake?" And how frdely these people, without regard' for bis teachings, quote Jesus and the Bible; but they never explain that the wine of biblical times was free from tha ilicimi(9la anA fljliiltoratfAna fit th. . debauching concoctions of today. These , ..... - . . . I wrttpra n tlpmnt to tiATocr th, mlnrt nr. the reader by reference to -the fluid our Savior - served .at the wedding feast, which was the creation of his own pure and tender heart. I wish our anti-prohibition friends would tell us of a few of the benefits Intoxicants have bestowed upon hu manity. What community has been benefited " by liquor? Whose family has been made happier because one or moro of Its members is a drunkard, or even a "moderate" drinker? What re- spectable citizen proudly boasts of ' IS j membership in a settlement of "booz- the difficulties of the other. The army ers?" Who is made better, wiser or i knows and admits that the public has more prosperous by the consumption ' a right to know what the1 troops are of liquor In either small or excessive i doing. The newspapers know apd ad quantities? Who wins greater aff ec- I mit that -there may be times when th tion, or genuine love because he drinks intoxicants? Occasionally a man will tell me that "a drink does not hurt me." but that is not the question. Does It do him good? Is lie fetter prepared to solve the world's problem's and fight Its bat tles because he drinks liquor? Truth is, alcohol dwarfs the Intellect, cooks the brain, shrivels the heart, disrupts families, ' assassinates . character, breeds pauperism, feeds the prisons, destroys .virtue, fattens corruption and is the minion of Satan. As I -travel over this state I hear the doom of the saloon-, pronounced by the lips of earnest men and women everywhere!. An I am not ashamed to write my. name, and to say I will do all I can to end its life. H. S. HARCOURT. From the Circulator's Standpoint. Portland, May 1. To the Editor of The JournaVWhen 'a man like Jona-" than Bourne announces himself- op posed to petitions being, circulated he turns turtle upon the very nrinclDlea . . . ... l J " l.Ij,.. V-i Z. ' When candidates for governor and at when candidates for governor and at torn 8. respectively, com, -out , i ... work, free, it is high time to call a halt. Thei writer has been informed that petitions are being circulated for the above named offices, and that two or three favorite picked circulators are out getting the cream, while a score or more who follow the same business in Portland are froze out. : - It .does seem as if there was an or ganized effort being made to kill the business. The organization, if there be such,, la composed of office-seeking politicians 'who evidently do not care Whether we are able to eat and pay rent or not" However, I will say, as an experienced circulator, ? that ' . no measure has ever been submitted to the people of thfs state and f doubt if any other) where such measure was success fully launched upon a free basis. You may say this is a knock,, but it is not k intended as such, but in reality Is meant to boost for the circulators who a class of workera'are as much en titled- to pay for their services as any other class of toilers. : ; . Of course, big interests are against petitions, as the measures are all cal culated to make better laws for our state. The Initiative, referendum and recall are all a part of the Oregon sys tem: and are educational Jo the voters. This 'very -system puts Oregon to-the front as one of the most, progressive states in the Union, So let us live and let live, and not be killed off by a few selfish exploiting - and office-seeking politicians, - - A BOYCOTTED. PERTINENT COMMENT KHALI CUANGB Whv tiot Rooaevelt fnr nsM,nl (vf Mexico?: ; . - The 'Red Cross Is always readv to perform Us noble work. , . 6 ., ... . .. J, ... ... . iVor once Vera Crux is behaving it self, like civilized town. , - INow th campaign - will wax warm and the political pot will bile furiously. sLoolc it that registration total and for one thing be ashamed of Oregon. . U " i ': - " -- - ! 5 Oregon can boast of many things. nflt tint irvf- ita vnt oit-b Mt.t..tAM .. 1 1 -? i.- : - .a 4 iWhateVer-else ta not done, keep that Alaska steamship line going and well supported.. . 5 . - fi- :: a o - i - iWhat 'a crushing disappointment it would be to many if there would be no war, after all - - . - j. ..-. -. 1A man whose profession is war can not be expected to - sympathize' much with efforts for universal interna tional peace. Nb one hopes for the extinction of his occupation. . v ; . . Roosevelt Wants peace only if it Is a -"righteous" peace. But each side al ways claims to be righteous, while the . other is wicked. An umpire, to decide, IS: needed. ., ... ! . " H " " - I ";'"' ! , . What ; a terribJe disappointment to many aspiring and gallant souls it will be If the swords and guns are not need ed, and ttiey are sent back to ply the homely implements of peace.. The saying that where the American flag is once raised there It must and shall remain perpetually may sound well for Fourth of July buncomb, but there is no sense in it. The flag came down in Cuba and probably will, after Having served its purpose, in Mexico. UNCLE SAM'S MILITARY CENSORSHIP From the New Tork Evening , Post. There are many things about the army of the United States in better shape today than they were 16 years ago, when hostilities with Spain made popular the word "preparedness" as the lack of that quality caused so much talk about its desirability 'n tim of war. , The business of moving troops has been learned, partly from . tho lesson of the transport blunders incidental to getting to Cuba at the outset of the war of 1898, principally from the o lng and coming of many regiments to and from the Philippines in the course of the 16 intervening years. The art of keeping those troops well under all sorts of climatic and foreign-service conditions has been so far perfected that the disease scourge of the Spanish war camps seems now to have been a thing of the middle ages, not of 1898. And another improvement, of pri mary importance to the public and the army alike, has 'been, made in the ar, rangements whereby the millions who stay at home may know what the thou, sands at the front are accomplishing, or failing to accomplish. In 1898 the status of the war' cor respondent was poorly defined. There was no carefully worked out censor ship system anS no adequate control by the army governing the character ,and the qualifications of the men sent to report its movements. Besides the regularly accredited newspaper1 and press service representatives, ' there were. In every camp, at every head quarters, the freelance adventurers and news tipsters, responsible to no body, always a nuisance, and some times a menace to the men in the field. One commanding general was slapped on the face by a' "correspond ent" who did not approve of his meth od of conducting sncampalgn. . Another journalist" used the seat of war as he osi effectively sensational scene T rtt- Vila f.u..H.." n-f n a "rescue" of a heroine from a papier-mache .Spanish dungeon as an exclusive bit of heroics for his paper. There Is no likelihood of things like this happening In Mexico, should the censorship rules now In force Jtre put to the test of a war 1n that country. These rules were worked out long be fore any Buch war was contemplated, and have the approval of the army and the press. They were formulated by army men and newspaper men, co operating in a spirit of give and take. each group recognizing the rights and affairs of the army cannot be made public without danger to . Itself and aid to tbe enemy. That sums up all there is to any need of a censorship at alL SIZING UP SOUTH AMERICAN INVESTMENTS By John M. Oskison. The other day I suggested that the investor who, wants to find out about chances to put' his money to work In South America would do well to write to the state department at Washington and ask questions. A better source, and! one I should have mentioned at that time, is the Pan-American Union with headquar ters in Washington, lta director gen eral is John Barrett, an American who knows more than any other American I can name about-, South America. He is directly aria deeply interested in making the moneyed citizens . of the two Americas better known to one an other. Letters sent to theFan-Amer- ican Union, , Washington, will get., in- : -,Vl,i As an example, from the section of commerce of the foreign affairs de partment of Chill, in the letter was ex- pressed the desire to aid North Ameri- can Investors in any possible way to : r,nA nivi nnnnrhmirin. i rvin Pointed Paragraphs Life is nearly all desire and regret. It takes a sensible woman to gen erate silence; 1 . ' - -' A man may ; marry for money, and woman for alimony. Many a man puts hie foot In tt when he asks a woman' for ber han It Is sometimes easier for a poor man .to be good than contented. .- It Is easier , to hear a lot than it Is to raise the money to pay for one. If a. man' has a good digestion he attributes it to bis good sense in eat ing.,, : .- -. . - ' - - '- t ? ; ' Retribution is something: "t we feel sure will eventually overtake . our neighbors, We say just as mean things about other aa they, do about bs, but, of course, that la altogether different, A 'woman's: matrimonial "experience seldom causes her ' to advise - her daughter to marry a map patterned after her father., . . " ANp tEWS IN BRIEF OREGON SlDELlGUfS.' The little but lively city of Flor ence is soon to begin the hardsurfao ine 'of its cnnciDal streets, and ex perimenting is now in progress, '.v. Rev. A. S. Donat of CadlUae, Mictw has accepted the call of the Riverside Congregational church of Hood River and i. expected to arrive about -May IS. v. - - r-.- a a . . - Before the city council of Klamath Falls there Is a resolution to provide for recasting the city's street nomen clature. Among other changes, Taddy street is to become Roosevelt street. ' . - - . i "The Coos Bay cities, says' the Marshfield Record, "are not booming, but they are enjoying a healthy growth. We are . having no business failures here and the cities are being built up in a substantial manner." i : . , a ' - I To quench the thirst of the Eugene Coffee club patrons during the past 11-months more than 2,240 pounds of coffee have been used, and this re duced to liquid form has made 123,000 cups. of the steaming brew. And this la but, one of the many staples in the club's bill of fare. V "Thes are some times in Josephine county," says the Grant's Pass Cour ier, "with the railroad bond case final lyy determined in favor of the city. Irrigation seemingly taking definite shape, the mines returning a volume of wealth and the Almeda disbursing 120.000 to Its creditors." The work Of removing all the cot tages at the fair grounds at Salem i from the grove to the new camp K rounds to tne soutn has Deen started by the fair association. A number of those who have cottages are choos Ing new locations and others are pre paring ro Duua on tne new ground a. But every reputable newspaper in the country recognizes the fact that thai Is ample and is willing to act accord ingly. ) Whatever? the papers and their rep resentatives! in the field may lose in the way of liberty to do as they please is more than offset by the better stand. ing the correspondents will have with the army, by the greater facilitiej there will be for transmitting reliablu news over the wires, and by the saving or the public from the distortion of facts for th sake of sensations. Every correspondent must be an ef ficiftnt, rSptable working member of his i profession, vouched for by his paper, a4dj ithat voucher must be backed by? ft bond for S2000 which wUl be forfait;!? the correspondent violates the rules of the censor or misbehaves in any other way. After that prelim tnary the correspondent must take the military oath of loyalty, and then he will get his pass, which entitles him to all the privileges of an officer of the army, including- transportation. tentage, radons, medical care, and the use or a horse. He must wear clothes of the renula tion olive-drab of the army officer's uniform and wear a white arm band with a red letter C to indicate his status at a glance to every man in the army. Furthermore, he must carry a pass signed by the secretary of war and tbe general commanding, the arrry ,u iuo xibiu mm aiso Deanng njs own signature and photograph. Although the censorship is primarily intended to stop untrue or dangerous ana unapproved matter from going to the press, it will be in force, if need be, against evepr private letter, every photographio plate or film, sent from within the lines of the army. The correspondent may carry a small hand camera, but ho professional pho tographers or men with motlon-picr ture machines will be allowed within the lines. Official Photogranhera be longing to Ahe army will do the trig picture taklfeg,5 and copies 'of their work will beNsold.-No code words, no words or groups of words suggesting a aouoie meaning, tiii be allowed in any letter or dlspattSh, whether for the press or an individual. ' Should such words be found fy the army officer acting, as a cehsor he will suppress the communication altogether, no matter how harmless and innocent it may be, or letthe would-be sender rewrite IL So if any homesick, young lovers or miaoie-aged dads ind themselves fol lowing tha United States flag into tbe Mexican country, let them be pre pared to forego the usual indulgence of such in the use of code words of the heart and family fireside, and to send (Some their declarations of af rections and longing to get back in terms of the plainest English. go into lumbering, since Chili has 77.000 square miles of virgin forest within 126 miles of the eea coast; good farm lands sell for from $3 to $30 an acije; the letter pointed anut that Chill Js tbe California of South America n far as fruit raising is concerned; some big modern hotels are needed in the cities of Chili and capital is sought to develop the" country's hydraulic nower ("for lighting and other purposes.. imo aouot, by the time tho Panama canal is ready, the Pan-American Union Mill be equipped to answer most any question me snrewd investor is likely to -ask. hef ore, actually putting his money into a South American enter prise. . This is my opportunity to utter an emphatic warning: Don't give up your money to the promoter of any South American company before-' consulting the most conservative and hardest- headed banker you can find! Also, ask the. Pan-American Union about the chances for profit in - tbe country and in the business the com. pany proposes to undertake! The Ragtime Muse Divided Destinies. "I loved vou aces and aires aaro And you were my heart's one desire, But we were not a plane you know," Said Thomas unto Maria. "Though I Was a cat and you were a - cat. My love for you vainly I nursed. For you. In your third life, knew very wen mat I then was but having my first! "J. loved you long and I loved you well. . I loved you to desperation. So Into a cistern I hopefully fell . To gain one reincarnation. My sul:iie i-aln my will did not gain, Alas, that ao cruel Is fate! You were swifter than I. as I learned to my pain; i ' 'To my second life) then you had v ; eignt." "I am gaining at last! You yet may be - mine; . -. ; Z Five lives I have lived since X met -- you; .". -But you woe is met are on No. -And sadly I fear I won't get youl f' On. will you 5 cot wait till 1 catch up, my dear? . . . - Each life I'm a little bit nigher; If you will. I wilt shuffle off one lit. - ' right here!" . - Said a nomas unto Maria. IN EARLIER DAYS i By edrLockley. "If th old time prospectors and miners had thought there was gold at the North Pole it. would bav beeu discovered ;long ago," said Dr.: C. ,H. Raffferty of East Portland.. i . . ' "While 1 was at Oroflno Nathan No- land and ': myself grubstaked 'Poker Woods of Hillsboro t "go Into a newly nincoTena -aistricr. . ana. siaae ciainja for us. He staked four of the richest Claims ;bn Lost Gulch for ua .-; When the news of the discovery of . the new: camp afterwards called Florence came to Oroflno it cleaned the town like a devastating- plague. Everybody started for the new diggings. Winter ' had set in. -The stampeders to the new diggings gathered at a ' place called White Bird, , 16 j miles from the new strike. Of this distance tilne miles was a steady, grinding climb up . the mountains.:- The" snow on the upper range was over 20 feet deep. All. horses and mules ' had . to be left -at White Bird. The men went! in afoot on snow, shoes. 1 The - saloonkeepers paid fabulous prices to have their "wet goods" carried In, Gamblers; and bar keepers,' miners and storekeepers went over the , range ore .snow shoes, .Pro Visions were scare, and flour aold for a dollar a pound with other supplies in proportion. , . -r .: ,1'- "By spring Florence bad a popuja tion of over , 10.000 men and .one lone woman. As soon as the trails opened there was a rush of the feminine con tingent for the new camp. Noiand, or 'Spiffy as he was always called, 'Poker Woods and myself had win tered In the Willamette valley. ;W'e left Hillsboro as soon as spring opened up and went to our claims on Lost Gluch. Wsj found upon our arrival they had been jumped and over $70; 000 In gold had already been c levied up-from them. There was nothing to do but to make the best of it, which we did. - - . t - "Florence lives more vividly in the memory of most of the old-time miners than almost any other western mining camp. Men lived with more abandon there, and with less restraint than in almost any other camp. Shortly after our arrival I went into a saloon.' kept In a. large tent. Th bar was in the corner and the sides of the tent and the other three corners were ocipied by various games. As I walked to ward, the bar suddenly two men dis agreeing over a game sprang up and began emptying their guns 4 at each other. The minute the guns began to talk we all remembered urgent errands elsewhere. No one waited' to ,; go utruusii ine aour, a score or dowio knives and dirks were pulled and with qtrslash we went through the walls of the ..tent as though theyf were paper. I passed that tent next morning and it certainly didn't lack for ventilation;. It ''was cut into ribbons. - .' "At Florence I became acquainted with a powerful halfbreel Indian named William . Black. He always carried in his belt a heavy butcher's cleaver. It was the wickedest weapon you ever saw. He. used it to cut trails and he always -kept it sharp.--.He referred to It facetiously as his sword," We went into a tent saloon and gam Ming house one evening and j Bill de cided he would try his luck at.'Chuck-a-luck.'' Bill had a buckBklni poke of gold dust. He laid it on a jcard and said, '1 11 bet luvlf a dollar.' He won and the .dealer threw him 4 60 -Cent piece. A dispute arose and the dealer said, 'Hand back that money.' Bill said 'I won it. I'll keep it.' The dealer drew a long, razor bladed Idlrk and made a lunge for Bill. It Just missed me and Bill dodged or. Ije wiuld have been cut open. Without a quiver of nervousness Bill raised hiif - cleaver and said, 'Put up your dirk or I'll eplif you wide open.' The dealer saw that a second's delay would Jmean his death so he dropped his dtrk. Bill laid down his butcher's cleaver on the . table where he eould get it Instantly and said, 'Start upyour game. I'm Turkey Bill, from old YamhiitT never worked and I never will. - Come on, , boys, put down your dust, the more you put down the less you'll take, up. Chuck-a-luck. The game went, on. - "A few mornings later I passed the 'dead house' and saw the bodies of four men there. I stopped and ex amined them. They all had soft white hands and were well dressed. They were gamblers who "Had been shot during, the night for running a crooked game. The miners killing the : gam blers were arrested and tried..' Tne Jury consisted of over a thousand miners who had knocked off work to see fair play. They brought In a ver dict of 'Justifiable homicide' and the miners were turned loose. "A miner 'and a gambler got In a dispute and the miner knocked the gambler down. The saloon men and gamblers bad a pretty, strongs-pull with the officials, .so they arrested the miner and threw him In Jail; A dele gation of about a hundred miners cams to where a number of us Oregon mea were camped: They asked for volun teers to break the. jail door down and rescue the miner.7 A friend ; of mlnn, J. Band Sanburn, said, 'I'll, do it. You fellows come along with your ' guns ready. I'll take a crowbar 'and an ax and pry the Jail door oft If anybody- interferes with me shoot hirm dead.' We carried out the program, liberated the miner and) then to clean up the job in good ehaee we went te the saloon- where the gambler was employed, put a rope around -his neck, took him to the edge of town and gave him 10 minutes, to get out of range of our guns. He was still run ning the last we, sew, of him. "My uncle had come pr to Florence. Shortly after his arrival a. VtieW dis covery was reported, o be "urged me to go and investigate it and If good stake claims for both of us. We hud three horses and a mule. I left the horses with my uncle and loading my docile friend who had no hope-of pos terity'! started for Buffalo , Hump, the scene of the new strike." ! . Interesting. '. From the YoungstOwn Telegram. When Johnny-had finished residing his Sunday school leaflet he said to father: ; I "Isn't it too bad it was so long ago that Jonah was swallowed by . the whaler' . j '"Why is that, my son?" queried the father. ' "Oh. If it would happen" now, the son replied, "everybody csuld-See it is the movies." . ' i . 1 The Sunday Journal Tbe Great Home Newspaper, - . - consists of . . . . - Five news sections . deplete with Illustrated featufei. "- .".' .'' ...... t . .. -. Illustrated "magazine of quality. Woman's section of rare, merit. -Pictorial news supplement. ? , Superb comic sectfoa. " ' - - 5 Cents the, Copy X