8 THE. OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, iFIUDAY EVEIIING. JUi 3' ,TI t C '.. ITVI IDM Al I culture and of a revived interest in L- ; JUU IA 1 N ALT W and 'preparation for Industries, AM !WDE?BNDENT NEWSPAPER ! which are being accomplished by c. a. jackson ...pnbtHh line joint work f the department, . . . . m . . . I local iu-irliaa on1 Inrt'lvln'itala vrvrj- aanaar anorninf at Tea journal Buna " tn. Broadway and Yaasfalll ta.. Portland.Or toird at ttw poetorftee at frm-tlaa. Or., for I transiolssloa tbroo(B Ua aUa a aacond ciaaa natter. MARRIED TEACHERS aKLarHONICS llaltt TITS; Hot a. A-40S1. All dapartsMoU reached by ibeaa aumbaca. Tall ua aparatvr wbat dapartmaat T want. s HOULD the fact that a woman is married disqualify her as a teacher? - Hhrtlllrl tha font- that Is . Buiamta a- Kaotnor Co.. BniMirtca Bids., married or single, or the lareer I -JSJ, Vbteaw." york; aW pu'V fact that she is efficient or inf- Subrlpttaa tarn, hr -all or t .or .4- "c,e Wiener DO tne real la U Called States of Isezico: 1 test. Of qualification? DAILY - ' ' r ' Who . mn.!! .U.1. t sondat I the securing of best results by the 0d ea.......s.6M ta axmu I . 1 least effort which also means the DAILY AND 8UKDAY On aar.......7.S0 I Ona oaootb f .S3 When You Go Away Have The Journal sent to your, Bummer address. Explore the dark recesses of ' the- mind. In the soul's honest .volume . read mankind, And own. In wise and simple, great and small. The same grand leading, prin ciple In all.; Churchill- SALVAGE THE" REMNANT least cost The class room is a training quarters for an output of best possible citizenship' and most self-reliant and self-supporting men and women. There' is no more important work. There is no work in. which efficiency stands for so much. There is no endeavor in which ef- a I fectlveness stands out so pre-emi nently as the beginning and end and all of fitness. Nor is there an activity in which a realization of the end and aim of school training is 60 much of a qualification. What Is there in married life that lessens a wo- 6fl man's comprehension of the ob jects and purposes of the school? What is there In married life that XlT THIMBLERIOGEHS should dulls a woman's sense of the re mi v.- tr to Uiridatnro T t I Buonsi uiiiLios mar rpsr imnn a has been the misfortune of cher? What is there in mar- Oregon that too many of rlfed life to make inefficient a wo- ' ihem' have been sent to that body Dia" who is naturally efficient? In the past. As a. matter of fact, the best ' .t Thimblerlggers in the legislature teacher is a teacher by birth. Her give away swamp lands. They eiiectiveness in the school room fritter away the public domain. By ' mouy a gin or nature subterranean legislation, tney anen- for sucn a teacner, is a mar- ate from the public, lands that in rlage certificate a death warrant? other; states are inalienable to the Is it not to some desree a testi people. monial of fitness? ; In 'this state, they have turned If marriage unfits a woman for over tidelands to railrotfis. They teaching, what about the man? voted away on the Willamette river submerged lands that by gift of the national government - were the people's for purposes of At Portland, the foreshore along the waterfront has Kone in heavy ' measure to uinuucr iu nuicu it. wa uuut: . would be illuminating even to a man with a mask, a dark lan ' tern and a 'jimmy, I LMTMI ATIXO TESTIMONY . N THE suit of the United States government at Chicago to dis solve the Cereal trust, " there was illuminating testimony as the railroads. Tho :. : I Z7 " ",v- IIUCUCV Ul V.U1UU1UKIIOU. I An innocent wharf-out fran- Company with the Quaker did not pretend to confer title. It f!j'rd th.at ,rm ll0.3' th.e date phone and telegraph there came a detlre" for " more rapid" transporta tion and locomotion: .The railroad was a great . ad vance upon, the wagon and team but its., movements were restricted ; to certain channels and directions. .The train .must run on a track and the passenger' In a measure loses his' Individuality and becomes a unit In the traveling whole. - ' - This was, overcome with the ad vent . of t the automobile : It has created new fields of industry. . It is bringing country and '-town together and is breaking down 'the barriers of class. 7 - : ' " With the automobile and auto truck has come the necessity for better roads. - The inconvenience to automobilista as they race over the country is the least of the ill consequences of bad roads. Far more important is ' the loss sustained, both by .city merchants and by farmers.' , no longer roar and bite,: his flesh Is, stripped from Ills' bones. .v -j ijo.' eiecuuoner at ains omg has applied the fatal current to 180 - victims -passing through the electric chair. , He has a . severe case of indigestion.' j After,- per forming his revolting : work ori ' so many; human beings, "how remark-: able that he is affected 'only .with indigestion! . , " " A FEV SMILES FZHThiEUT COMMENT AND NEVVS IN. BRIEF gloomy Jay a young- country- niai want to a. dentist to have a tooth "-extracted." Seeing the patj-ent's obvious nervousness, tile den 'Ust laaulred? i' "Would jron - Ilk gMT , .- Vould . I like 'gas? Of course I'd 1 k ? gtL" ex- nlnimixl " thai ; f rat a a noueeaoie reaiure in: tne nauv i pnt. "Do tou think rm mine to routine of the. newspaper office is J 5I?JTou. ?MHing out my teetfc In the at al V - a. " j . .. .rj'. .1 I iue fctubeuue ; vi. tl iuq political taa- 4 T.-.. - aW b 'CZ1XLU CIIANGB THE COLIjEGE GRADUATE I The testimony showed that oat meal rose $1 per barrel following the merger of the Great Wester nJ with tne realities of life. Count- I J i I rAmrianv t- V a fk 1. I T IS now the season of tjie year when the satirist takes pleas ure in poking fun , at the col lege graduate who, in long syl labled words and rhetorical phrases is about toJlaunch upon the world solutions of enduring problems. Why rob the graduate of his hopefulness that he will go forth to conquer and subdue? Why tell him that his road will be hot and dusty and that he will encounter realities that are cold and stern? Why not say to him instead: Better the sorriest citizen thinking he can take hold of life and that his faint epark of free will can burn holes through the thicket, than a worldful of orderly persons of regu lar habits and contented mien. Bather wlldnesa than that men should find this a, locked world where all the returns are in. Better, absurd mites strutting over large landscapes, than such a flatness- of cheery slaves taking orders from their betters. Better a petty race should strive vainly than accept its own littleness. If it is doomed to futility let it, at leasts live as If all the roads to victory were open, Let us be glad that the col lege graduate can see all roads leading to his castle of desire. It Is wiser to tear down the castle than to accept defeat. Effort is finer than resignation and peril is safer than despair in routine. The world is full of hopes. Num berless obscure, men deal manfully did ate since the primaries. -As the i hen-said of the rooster, "He don't come around like he useter." Or I as Francois- Villous asked, "Where I are th snows of yester year.' What is the counlaT 'coming to? It? ""7 vIfw.v wicsea government experts are ini "Yes. the inner sanctuary : of the J. P Morgan temple1 of banking and en "My hUSbaUd ll dlU nf tha mint stubborn men in the world." He can't . h., any mom itiihhnrn man mine. - "Oh. yes. , I'm eure ! he must be.. Yea terday I bad an en gagement to meet! WelL It was near-. ly 430 when I cot! there, and be won't a OREGON i SIDELIGHTS Letters From the People gaged In the nefarious business Of admit yet that the rest he e:ot while examining tne books with, refer-l&e was waiting did him good.' ence to the wreck of the New Haven: . I salaried men. sDecial agents of various insurance companies, using the usual Pickpockets secured valuables tactics-f business In this city, acting and money in the crowds attend- decreed that in certain residence dls- lng tne Astoria celebration lastltricts (in every case those occupied by Wednesdav. Thev am innin:a I the poorer classes) the rate shall ar- rmttinr that k- t V1"1" oe increasea x cenis per 7i i " 1 lU13 "UOD I 10, and using as s pretext for the raiiiai.. I Increase the churrA of IniulMiuatA nro tectlon against fire given by the city. This high-handed proceeding was never even inspired by the fire companies at tneirnome orrices. and is not linnnlmn o,tinn it. r 4 Ka lOOBmnnlMHAnft t m. v.nM.i 1 1. . . i . . . iiMtrVC. i- .1.77 . S Z - - - una oiucsi lire insurance com- azeeed. 800 words in length and moat be a- goverend by the action, denouncing- It eotnpanied i by the ame and addreaa -ot tAa as discriminatory and unjust,' which. Is .".A " wmar ooea sot oeaire tta mild indictment. puouanea. ae puouia ao siaia-r Now. u a. Kmnll hnm vn -nA "Dtacoraioo la th c)t t .11 M.n. I Policy holder (defenseless, as most era. it rationalises eTerrtblna it tooohee. It I small bome owners are. and this robs principles of all falsa aaoctitr and bunch of sharps 'find safety In this uT'al ye" ' s,int"tb,t.iI,f knowledge. I would like to know what awn ooncluaiooa la tawlr atead." Waedrav about it. It will be easy to tell what wusoa. I things It will not do. If tha insurance f . t rT ... . . I laws of this state place its people at Kansas Feeble Minded. 1 he mercy of a few despots. It Is high Portland, June 5. To the Editor of I time these men where shorn of their The Journal On Mav 21. J. Sanr power. Such a matter as this no in Fox, in The Journal, said: "Mr. I tU?C JfonmlJ8sior"w should arbitrate. i 1 simple statute that could not be Jug. U)'"J puseession or me zacts. f gleu. JOHN SMITH. Governor Hodges of Kansas writes me." Then, in order to emphasize his pos But . the best policy; la- one t bat Is paid up. . s .- .. - ' .. Most et us could do a lot of work while trylnr to dodge it, v .v ; -- ..:f-.(; ,. , e , , ;, . Teara are often more effective than the most eloquent words. .- r, , ' ' ' : . . - ,,-c: -.;. ': ;,. Ifa easier to Induce a man, to ac cept a favor than, take a Joke. . 5 ., . Don't, you feel sorry for a married man who talks In hie sleep? , v v Most men would be ashamed ' to preach half what they practise. . When nature stores a lot of brains behind a pretty face watch out:,':. - ,' Some men will do more for a cheap cigar than tney win for a dollar. . Those who win success by practice haven't time to do much preaching. No man ever lived long enough to understand why hie neighbors dis like him. If the average man could only, sell the advice he glvee away it would keep him busy counting his coin. a 'Breathes there a woman with soul so dead that she can resist reading an article on "How to Be Beautiful"? less unknown women suffer and love. Order gains on chaos. merely granted the adjacent owner the right to build a wharf from bis property out to deep water so boajs could touch measure of the merger, to 1911, the two companies had the same prices per , barrel In the week following the raer- But another innocent-appearing er' the pflce of he Qker Oats 1 . " I Com nan V Inffoauorl fmm a on -. was slipped through the I" T" :7 . v-v legislature of 1872. It seemed as ' 1 u-..mi. . aullelefls rr a snrlne kmh. Tt wnm 1 1 ne lestimony recalls that the smile of the just and sported uereai wanuiaciurer wxo recently the crown and halo of the puri- COI!lmitted su,cI(ie left an estate fled, it did not pretend to confer f8"100 &0,ooo,ooo. .accumu- " title. - But it broke the gfbund for. the I lated in a . period of less than I twenty-five -years. Very heavy t. 1 i 1 . act of 1874. For thimblerigging " v , 'wu ea om ine 4u . . o & dining tables of the American N WHAT seems an incredibly short 'time, the disaster to the Empress of Ireland has passed into forgetfulness. In only a few days, the appalling occur rences of the fatal night with its loss of nearly a thousand lives have practically ceased to come to the surface in the drag of the world for the day's news. Yet the loss of life has been ex ceeded by only four marine disas- leglslation the act of tS74 was worthy, of Its origin. It attempted to grant title to upland owners or to "purchaser or purchasers' from such owner or sucji adjacent lands or some previous owner thereof as the caHe may. be." The very lan guage was proof of the skuldug gery But the job went through people. LEASE THE HALT IiAKES W HY not convert a problem into a process? Why not apply the leasing system to the valuable salt and other deposits in Abert and Sum- Its mer lakes? 6266 self-possessed Oregonians? The ve men the powe to spend their figures will be found on page 84, bul- A .m ... inception was the granting of a It, is probable that there are mere privilege. Its end was an men who would take tne proper absolute attempt to convey title ties .on a lease, subject to wise with a scatter-gun verbiage that and beneficial terms mat tha .tfo has given upland owners a tonia- would - impose. One expert has hawk claim to title. already explained that on such a For these lands at Portland, plan, a fit royalty could be paid now worth millions, not a penny the state, the product could be was paid, t For this great public sold lower than the usual figures, inheritance smuggled .into private that labor could be given better " -"-j "6;d uiuugir man iu going wages in the in- twelve . years of legislative skul- dustry, that there could be pro duggery, the people never got a vision for an eight-hour working n V u day' aDd tnat there would still But the scheme was so rank that be ample profit for the operator auer anotner legislative steal in Many benefits would come from lilt' the law was reIealed in such a plan. There would be no , w. (chance for over-capitalization of iucanwuiiei mere is a remnant the business and the usual payment of waterfront on which upland of dividends on watered stock, a owners did not perfect their fran- nroeess that i artrt chise by utilizing the wharf-out the cost of living and contributing 't VJ TegG At Salem there was enormously to the severity of the Wlin in secretary or state average man's struggle for sur- VVednesaay, a constitutional amend- vival. ment and an initiative bill, which There would be an assured reve undertalroa to . . , . . iu.. isuiDnui hub 10 tne siaie ror many years, to the people. It is a movement or until the deposits should be to also restore to the people di- exhausted. There would be the f verted tidelands alone the coast, benefits to the i!w j . " CiupiuCU 111 i. . e?deavor to do the little proper working hours and in bet- " r" uuu lu .ngnt a great ier wages man are now naid in public wrong. INDUSTRIAL IRELAND 1 N NO countrv in th wo, UU8mesB v"" r,."r nnated values created - - w wmv ucu uiauo t IX agricultural and industrial edu cation than In Ireland. Better farmingrv better business tne same Industry. There would be the further advantage of the product sold to the public on a strictly business basis, without the by over capitalization and the bogus dlvi dend3 drawn on stock consisting entirely 01 liction. T . . and better living, the watchwords r. r UI? ' "oaa 3"stIce of Sir Horace PfunketL. are beine ..ttmyutauo.11 ana cor- realized. rdUoa Jomjery. it is plan for me siate to get its just dues, for tne workers to get real workers' rewards and for the consumers "of the product to be guaranteed per iod protection. .When the work. Was begun in 1889 there were only two or three technical schools in the Emerald Isle. Now there, are fifty or sixty. These are managed by local com mittees. - v- In ,1889 there were about 2000 pupils in Industrial and technical classes. Ten years later there were 65,609 young people enrolled under the schemes for technical Instruction. Today every county In Ireland has a plant for technical Instruction. That of Cork; may be taken as typical. It Includes ad vanced evening classes, day trade preparatory classes, technical classes and scholarships for girls, iomestlc economy day classes, in itructlon In manual work, etc. On ill sides Is testimony to the happy results of a regeneration of agri- I GREAT MARINE DISASTERS The Brownsville Times with Its issue Of May 29 entered its twenty-sixth ywLr- V--'-.;'--: y Baker's mlllmen claim an annual ca pacity of 76.000.000 feet f lumber, and that the Industry occasions a daily expenditure or fizoo. At pni w of production,- J60.000.000 must oe pent to cut Baker's remaining timber. "Washington county's financial con- Altlnn ai.vii th HlllsihorO AX TUB, compares more man iotiy wvi ti..-,i,i. , lnre-M. Thin la some OOU olation, anyway, -In this era of high taxation. . . . - ; ,.- Seven girls and 41 boys are in the manual training class of the Hood Rin u7h hnai. mil at a recent exhibit ot craf tsnuuship it waa thought by some-that the girls had outdone the Doys; at ail ; eyenis, ins ir w was fully equal. . Ttrmlnton Herald: Hermiaton con tributed a large number of roses to pniitnn fnr th sciiool commence ment exercises. They were sent as the compliments of the Umatilla project. Tune was when we could not have sent a spear or grass ana not o long Ago. either. Speaking of the proposed division of Crook county, the Bend Bulletin says: "The county Is too large. Its admin titration in cnstlv from the mere rea son of its size. Its different sections hiv iitn In common. Why not make three counties of It, Crook, Jefferson and Deschutes" PRESIDENT WILSON SAYS "NO" IN EARLIER DAYS 1XX I n 1 LockJey. A Taxpayers' Protest. Portland. June S To th Rdltor of session of facts, he adds:. "Since Mr. Th. .To.. mat vinr I shoV sone of the of nucH followlne ouotation from Oovirnor high taxes t108 ot which the peo Hodges will show the real faets to I Pie ar complaining, ah a taxpayer. anyone who wants to know them." I and a man wno is da"y In contact Then h nrornii1.q to mint. I wiia tne people or fortiana. I am oninions from lh TCarHa fr.r-nnr I compelled to listen to their story of and finally gets down to one state- h,g1i taxes- 1 wish to sho some of ment of fact when he says: "The I1"" causes ox tne nign cost or living, proportion of only one feeble minded Beginning with the incoming of this person to every 3000 self-possessed so-called commission government. I which I always opposed, for it is much for rare' intelligence." (The governor eas,elr, for flv Persons to spend, th credits this condition to prohibition!.. J'c", lu" " .r Ior lner This is a good illustration of how ' ' U"'T ! . 1 .opl",on lo com" much reliance can be placed on pro- "ue 01 ursl lems 01 interest hibition staUstics- As a matter of ls the ,rlov,0 of Commissioner Daly. It fact, Kansas had on January 1, 1910. ppffred'h? thought , the people of nniv on rhi. rr,ir,iri 6,rn o Portland did not know enough to pay 4026 self-possessed Kansans a much I ""' " better showing than claimed by the i" w . ,Z " Btem BLm Benl governor. If prohibition is responsible f not,c ma" to er of water fnr. oTi-lnt. tiIH T C.n. l unio an uu jjbjt . X lll, sill H.U- ger Fox and his oracle credit license t?"11?' cBt tlle,?0,ilaot From the Omaha World Herald, i The. officials of various manufac turing organizations who went to President Wilson with their petition that all anti-trust legislation be sus pended pending investigation by a trade commission, got precisely such a reply as they must have known in advance they would get. It was "No," plainly and emphatically. But it was, at the same time, a polite no. a rea sonable no, and, to men whose minds are open to conviction, a convincing no. It was. furthermore, the only answer it was possible for the president to make. Any other answer would have made him a president forsworn and faithless. And the ultimate effect of that faithlessness, upon the temper and conscience of the country, would have been a molten lava wave ot radi calism, destructive rather than con structive, its spirit that of bitterness rather than of rational reform. Since 188S the issue presented by the problems of trusts and monopolies has been, fundamentally, the issue on which every presidential campaign has been fought, and practically every con Rressional campaign. Free sliver and Imperialism were ephemeral issues. Tariff reform itself was an Issue prin cipally because it was one aspect of the trust Issue. But in every campaign wherever th dividing line has been drawn between Indurated and selfish conservatism on the one hand and an enllghtend radicalism on the other, the trust issue has largely determined who should stand on the one side of that line and who on the other. Missouri's one feeble minded to every. Portland $80,000 to have told them .1.1. Al 1 J 1 ma CA1 tmlfuunou Micumipluna i, dviijuhiiS KLivy a-i U.vJ smew. Ulin cense Colorado's onefeeble minded to w their taxes. Daly added every 13.486 self-possessed Colorado- u"uk,"' . . V, t . . . ans, license: Washington's one feeble to ' ? ! 1.,oftn,fwo',iTr,ien ters in 100 years. Among these i -n-. ' fi.n M men could handle It easily, was tho lnsa nf th Wve. RhnnB nmn-. na fhi, minno to onr : But tn people "delegated to these and other vessels at St, Thomas in the great hurricane of October 29, 1867, when 1000 persons perished. Another was the burning of the excursion steamer General Slocum in East River, New York, June 15, under the old" system six additional Before the i1 of universal reading, -.- when the- print ; press was still but a dream aad the public library was un- thought of, tuen like Frolsart traveled, from castle to castle and from village . to village gathering th chronicles of those who had served In the crusades or who had traveled in search ot ad venture in far countries. ,ln those days a book was a treasure, for It meant the labor of years to print it character by character by hand on vellum. Monks and priests and rulers and thos who were . wealthy might have a book or two. but tb common people had to depend upon the story by word of mouth, la those days a good story teller was always sure of an audience and he was always a welcome guest. In those far-off days most men lived and died without going 10 leagues from their native village, so the man who had been in foreign parts was sur of an audience. Today in Portland we can find men who have been In every world port and in many a port that ls little known to th world at large. A day or two ago I met a Scotchman on the street who during his lusty youth was a soldier of fortune. He fought with th Boers in South Africa. He has fought In South America and' Mexico. He has seen service in India. You can hardly men tion a place on the map where he has not had a look in. Ilecently I met a white haired, gray bearded Knglisb inan. As we sat before his fireplace he told me of his world wanderings. He was an Jlllclt diamond buyer in . the Klmberly district, a barkeeper' on th ilond In South Africa. He had beeu the servant of a titled Englishman wliose. passion was the hunting of big faith with the people on the trust I game. He had gone with Mm after question would be as suicidal as it was I tigers In India, as well as big gam for the- Republican party when, undoriln Africa. He had shipped berore the Tart. It broke faith' on the tariff ques-1 mast, left his ship in Australia arid tlon. And eventually it would b high- I wandered over Australia and New Zea- ly damaging to the business and pros-I land. He had been one of the early oeritv of the country. Th Judgment I tampders to the Klondike, where he and cnnaclencA of the country have de. I had mined, traded and gambled. H elded that steps must b taken to I was Diown up by a premature Diast in sharklA the cunninar of monopoly, to los-l (Jnppie itmk. a nis lire n na ter free business, and to restore com-J heard and answered the call of the notitiv (.onditionn. If thoa stens are I other side of the world. not taken hv the nartv and by the ad-1 A few weeks ago I visited, at his ministration pledged to take them, then home her In Portland William Hardy, iu. .in k t.uon itor h om other I who was with Commodore Perry-when And the lonerer the de- I "- wpeuwu iu inn naiiviis bi administration lay beyond th point of reasonable de liberation tb more like seven-league strides will be the steps when finally they are taken at the compulsion of a people who demand industrial and busi ness freedom, and who will not endup a plutocratic overlordshtp. It may be said in all frankness- that the steps now proposed in congress are not seven-league strides. They are world 60 years ago. A few days later I sat on a park bench and listened to Chris Evans who, by, the way. is an old United States cavalryman -and Civil war veteran, tell roe how he and Sontag were bunted like wild beasts In the mountains of California. One could fill columns with -the nrmes of men now living in Portland -who have seen tho passing of the old west, men who have been a part of the one time frontier, men like Colonel moderate, not radical They are being onoe a expre.s taken cautiously, rather than aggres- . d hen slvely in a spirit that Is tremely d an(J . cn.iu vi u""" y:,V ", I horse meant death from an Indian ar- tne counirj, via aim nine. l"l-r, row or from th bullet of a highway man. If books were abolished 1 her Is on money as they wished to. Now the letin 119, except for Oregon, and those :"""7""'""' mav be obtained from the institution I 7r, ..Tirr l-Z . for feeble minded at sal em. already receiving more than they are earning. What they should do ls to later date than d'haIg!t !?!.ml . Thfse ,nen ouiu in uieir ueuicii ctituiis ueiure eieJ If Mr. ITox cares to claim that his figures were for a r. 1 1Q1A T xm - 111 o TM.lr cri fr.11 iQrtJ with an nrrovtmaf fH lna k. i. kki I t'on that they were in favor of econ " " ' " . UUBBUUlUUg ma IttVilO, lie Jivuairi, I . .1. l of 1000 lives, and a third was the won't care to admit that Kansas has """r" "V, " " loss of the KIckemaru off the. Jap-! dropped .from one to 4026 m two or taxpayer. La. T. BEXEN anese coast September 28, 1912, in which the number of the lost totaled 1000. i Prohibition vs. Personal Liberty. The other and greatest sea trag edy of the century was the sinking On the Right to Prohibit. La Grande, Or., June 3. To the Ed- x-oriittnu, uu " t', f May 25 an article appeared against The Journal The curse of humanity 1 wi.,tt K VmVwi. has tu , . ".7h prohibition, written by Osborne Yates. bT StUa tn o?ii- ooT He says prohibition does not prohibit. ? ht "llh&??J?Z We have laws against murder, larceny of the Titahic, April 14y 1912, ir" nfV.1n.lv nrml- nT4-aa n oolHr;A nriAU . . 1 . . TJI(Jnl llkow I " ' v . r . nana. an ' u'u : cense mat wrrupts. '""'"" y an(J robbery, but still these go on. I an Iceberg, with 1517 Of her com- enas wnen encrocu , d t tnink M Yates would . h th pany. interests. W se Pfobltory laws to ,awa repeil1 Among other great sea tragedies ! the f irt and last word in clvillza-1 . . . , , t. , . , , , . . I " ca. a ip.iit. w uciiauu vkiicia w. were tne rnncess Alice, suns, m i uon until we u their liberty." I would ask. What Is 1 T'-.l, " tlil and Interest- comsion in the Thames river, people of the United Every, day the Or.fty temuer ii, wuu a loss 01 iuu; TOioinB- them off our statute books, and SLlT JZ.ltr.'Z 11 ; man and woman is reveaieo as com - the ErtOgrul foundered Off the Jap- refraining to enact new ones? Mur, n, -w" V", i ZJSZ JS2?" anese coast September 19, 1890, der, theft, arson, rape, mayhem, tres- when w. agaociata ourselves Into a Mr. "Wilson was elected on a platform nledalng himself and the admtniutra tion to certain specific acts of legisla tion bearing on the trust issue. It was not alone the Baltimore" platform that pledged him. He was pledged, as well bv the spirit of the platforms of 1908 of 1904. of 1900. of 1896. He was pledged by platforms adopted ty his party, not once, but repeatedly, in verv state In the union. He. was pledged by his own utterances and the utterances of Democratic speakers and newspapers from coast to coast. It Is not a new issue. It is not an Issue as to which the Democratic part? needs a commission to make up Its mind for it. It ls an issue long since decided by the party and decided, on the Democratic side, by the people In the last election. For the Democratic party to break- earnest desire of the president to do now what he and his party ar pledged to do. what the people are resolved ,n PortIaiKl mho would haV nr. long Job as a teller of tales. The stories he tellB ar of absorbing interest ana tr.ough true are morn interesting by far than fiction. Salmon Brown is the man to whom I refer. He Is the son ot John Brown of Harpers Ferry and with his father he took imrt In th shall be done, but to do it with the least possible upsetting or nusmes. And to this newspaper It seems that common sense and the enlightened sel flfchness of business men would impel them to do what th president asked "to sunDort. rather than oppose, tho moderate processes of reform." lelay 1 w.rr.r ..tH between means uncertainty Just as surely as It ,,,, ,.tixcllB f Kansas and Missouri In means delay. It means continued and tn ity. Increasing agitation. It means the Another Portlandcr who has sen arousing, rather than the lulling, or nlBtory ,n ttl. making Is Erneet W. passion and prejudice. It means post- rnt. "My people came from Kent, al- poning tho operation until it will be though I was born In Calcutta on major, not minor, surgery. And It Aprn ;o, 1857. WhH my father win means that the patient. In th mean- , th inai,,,, c.vn aervlce,"' sal.l Mr.' while, apprehensive and assailed, can- jyMt. "My grandfather, Wlltlam Dent, not be expected to Improve In general was the founder of the Dent mlaaton condition. The way best to promote near Calcutta. For noma years In th that full and abounding prosperity al- so' he was chief Justice 1n India. My ready In sight; the way to stabilise godfathers were Charles O. "Oordon. business conditions; the way perman- tnen a young lieutenant. In th royal ently to restor confidence. Is the way engineers' survey In India, afterwards the president points out. th way to known - as 'Chinese' Gordon for his which he and his party stand pledged apiendld work in putting down the "moderately and soberly" how to Tarplng rebellion In Chins, and James write into law "the moderate processes I Brooke, whoac father, like my own. of reform." WATCH FOR "THE REWARD OF THRIFT!" By John M. Osklson. Within the nexA. f ew months a mo tion picture film YAtltled "T;ie Reward of Thrift." will be shown throughout th country. It has been prepared un der the direction of the savings bank section of the American Bankers' as sociation as part of that body's cam paign to encourage thrift. I haven't seen the film, but I am willing to say that it will be well worth seeing. You see, this matter of being thrifty ls on that can be loss 540; the Utopia sunk off Gib raltar in collision, March 17, 1891, with a loss of 574; the Norge, stranded off Rockall reef, June 25, 1894, with a loss of 600; La Bourgosne, lost in collision In the North Atlantic, July 4, 1898, with a loss of 571; the Japanese battleship Mikasa, blown up, Sep tember 12, 1909, with a loss of 699, and the White Star liner At lantic, wrecked off Nova Scotia, November 23, 1873, with 574 lives lost. With her known loss at 960 per sons, over whom the chill waters closed as her huge bulk went oos TvVilto ulaverv selllne whiskv to I . " ' - " - government, dui we gain oiner anu Indians, opium cocaine all are pro- liberties. This ls the funda- hibited, yet daily we read of infrac- mantal prlncip1 of any democratic tions of laws governing same. Tfiou government, or any government, so far shalt not" has resounded down the aa tQat conC(rneL Anarchy ls the ages to us. and still must remain our only alleged "government- that lets Ideal construed In Its broadest sense, each lndlvi(iual do Just what he pleases. Thou shalt not be permitted to wrong ,rrespective of hl3 neighbor. If thy fellow man.- Drug fiends and thls ig wnat Mr Yates wishes, then he drunkards are not made in a day; they snoui,j preach anarchy, which would become such only after their will pow- be promulgating the Idea that all the er has been destroyed, and very few peopia couid a0 what they wanted escape after such habits are formed. riTliL as much as; they pleased, steal All unnatural habits necessarily tend wnat tney wanted,; and run over their toward vitiation of will power and neighbors if they chose to. Anarchy bodily functions; enslavement of all Jg "want of government, a state of so- faculties is the natural sequence. Bane- clety -ih individuals do what they f ul drugs and narcotics such as opium piease with Impunity." Christ did not and aleohol simpiy musi do prouiuucu. i teach this, but taught "love thy neigh ing Into some substantial reward. In any city, on almost any spring or fall day you may find a moving van backed up to the entrance of some flat house. Hunt up th man or wo man who is superintending the load ing, and ask: "Where ar you going?" The an swer will be: "Going to live In the suburbs no more rent, better air, better schools:' Then ask: "How have you been able to buy a house in the suburbs? When I got married." th answer will be, "I joined a building and loan association. That was rivo years ago. I've paid enough In now to justiry jtj t chttrgf, of tht) flnn in moving; In another five years, 1 11 j f. -. rt . n .... 4 ..K " 1 " " . own my .iuiibv vuw .itui. was In the Indian civil servlc. Jasies Brooke was knighted ami as Sir James Broolte becam rajah of Sarawak In Borneo and put down piracy among tho Malays and Dayaks in the Malayan archipelago. "When I was about two years old my father resigned from the Indian civil service and went to Hongkong of Dent it Ac Co. was founded by my grandfather's brother. Instead of heartlessly talking of doing away with the unfit, we should be weepiog for tne many warm-hearted, brainy, high-strung young men of genius who are being destroyed, not Wives, mothers and children have bor as thyself." ahd that we are our by !nat depravity, nor a taste for knelt in prayer to uoa in tne cnurcnes i Drothers keeper. So I, for one. Intend j n.ni wianir tlmp.n to th rum-I . . 1. 1 1. j . x v. i "i"OTO ""wuu seller, and now tney are going io brother, Mr. Yates. stands in tne filth Dlace amone the mmi that which they are entitled to I t .im that if wa can make laws marine aisasters or tne century. ; protection ior mr . . "7" wnicn say tnat a Danenoer snaii not , mate poison to whip up the lower isrirs. uuiunj o""-' "v - i eeil a orinK to a oruiia.cn iuaii we vu ' . . j a . .....)-t-fa.ir? - I . . . . . . . . . uinjiv "VATtTTi" fan, dui sne outs ,Cn.i... say ne snaii not d in possession or it. liquor, but by the solicitations of the false friend beckoning at every street corner In the guise of a social club. and offering a perfectly lawful, legitl- A' SPEED A FACTOR N THE automobile races at In dianapolis the other day the jwinner drove his car 500 miles in six nours. It has always been man's de sire to geiS over the ground swiftly ana speea has become a factor, to be reckoned with in daily life. Speed is the measure of prog ress. The present generation has advanced beyond the past in go far as.Mt can cover more ground and do more work in the same period of time. . With-the advent of the tele- LTHOTJGH the directors of1 the New Haven railroad sometimes scolded after the, late J. P. Morgan had left one of their meetings, none of them had the nerve to oppose him open ly, testified James Elton, a mem ber of the New Haven board, yes terday in the Interstate Commerce Commission's Investigation of the road's financial affairs. President Mellen has admitted that he was afraid of the master mind of "Big Business," who never consulted anybody and merely is sued orders that had to be car ried out. Mellen was only a mes senger boy and the directors hiy scolded. - These revelations simply show that the tyrant to other men is simply the serf to the man above him.; The moret overbearing the petty official is to his subordinates the more cringing he . is to the 'master mind." ., When the lion is dead and can ! liquor traffic, and hence her attitude j arinit jt, give it away, or have any- toward it. The writer win guaranie thing to do with it. to make a Prohibitionist of Mrs. Dunl- E. "W. EASTMAN. way In one short hour If accorded a prlvat interview. I Liquor and the "Unfit. Prohibition is not aavovayeo. - Portland Or.. June 4To th Editor panacea for all Ills, but to eliminate a Journal The "survival of tho tare, rjercentag of them. This it has I ... . . . . . ! n . accomplished in other m astounding ever put forth by intelll- torn away In the anguish of seeing a In Oregon. A. J. MAKl krt. . ..n .i. v, n mr, ! loved on ruined, mind and nodv. nature and paralyze the higher. If we must do away with our "un fit." let us begin at the cradle; let men have "personal liberty" to sell dirty, diseased milk at a good high license, of course and thus save mothers of weakly children the trouble of rearing them. Not so many hearts will be en twined In love with theirs, only to be rent and. seemingly humane men I loved on ruined, mind and body. and women, in defense of a seductive! CARRIE L. PLATT. evil. The Fir Insurance Raise. Lents, Or., June 5. To the Editor whose sons and daughters do they of The Journal When big business wanf to hand over because they are wants money, for any reason or none, weajc or thoughtless, to the saloon's the decree goes forth, the screws are BOliCitations and their final destruc- tlghtened a bit, and the blood of tb Mon? m() are tne unfit thy ar so people drips enough faster to suit Its read t Jeave t tnf) continuous, open, needs, and there is none to say it lawful temptation? i nav,-' . ... Some of the weaklings ,who have This administration calls th at- . . , f . -ai fair,fir.r. o tendantpaln "psychological," the pres. f"' .? foi w.rl wni. ,- .mnt dinner ail Manor, to their own . undoing, wer to r..mn,v. till, .nd th aituation Alexander the Great, who died at 33 is no end ainusinff to people whose drnkfn debauch, celebrating a position and income ar assured and victory trying- to ! surpass his other ample. The 'never ending succession "" inems iu wvuuniaun, om- of business and professional "grafts." smith, Byron, .Burns, our own Edgar all very respectable and usually well Allen Toe, Just beginning- to scintil- withln th law (made by business to late In the f Intellectual world; Jack suit its purposes), causa most of the j London, whose escape by th ekin of trouble of most of the people, and for this teeth- he tens of in "John Barley some incomprehensible reason . they I corn. seem to Ilk it. I And. there are hundreds more of this And now we are presented with I type of weaklings. : only weak in being the latest treatment to exact more, and I easily led by their friendships, " who always more, from the poor. A fewwait into th nets spread for gain. Further Information Wanted. . Portland. June 4. To th Editor of The Journal I saw in the Sunday Journal recently an article from a farmer's wife who had cured . herself of consumption, and -who said she took concentrated pine, glycerine and whis ky for her lungs. Now, could you ask her for the recipe?. I mean, what quantities of each did she us and now often did she take it? . K. W. C. Panama-Pacific. Portland. Or June 4. To'th Editor of ' The Journal Kindly tell me, through your columns, who has charge of the Oregon exhibit at the San Fran cisco fair. INQUIRER. (Address Geotge M. Hyland, room 12, Commercial Club building, Portland. He 1s the representative of th Panama-Pacific commission. That horn (you can go ana get a i c, ,-., i .n, it .-ni. ,ni took on photograph of it. If you like) Is th4 map of Borneo you will se a definite reward of thrift; thos rovlnc named Detit nrovinc. It healthier and better educated chil-1 waa named after 81r Alfred Dent, who dren who are going to grow up oui foUnded the British North Borneo in that suburb (ana can n pnow oornoany. which was chartered by act rrSDhed. tOO) ar mighty real re- I of n.rliamsnt Mv nennl mrm nIU wards of thrift. Very likely, too you weJJ known in Borneo. India and will be able to get contrasting pnoio- China. My aunt married Sir Colin graphs showing iirst in job wil,c" Campbell, which relates us by mar- Mr Thrirty wan neio wnen n rtag with the Argyles and fetuaria. beiran to save and tne , niace n nao I wnv,v.r whii in a mrmw tk. 1 ni.,,. after he moved from the nerve rack-n. .' - , man Anm stmir ing, crowded, and distracting hive I not' wno he u related to. that really or th city. I counts. For it Is as true as anytning in tn -r iiv al Nonrknnr m.nA rhanat world that men wlta Jobs to glv arjuntll wa four or flv years old, looking for workers who sleep well. I wn rn T WaH ant homai to V.rtmimnA 4n vnoee nere r .uau,, -u M educated. Knocking around th are on the balance, wno own ana i worid one picks up many odd bit of lev their homes. , I knowledge. I sneak TamI and Hln- Oh. thevrewarus OI mnii can D I duntanl in auloltlon o stoma Kotfar pictured all right! So watch for that I known languages. I worked In th film when it is put on ana go to tea business for the firm of William. It. 1 J. At IL Thomoson. 2S Minclnr Lane. London, and before I was of age I went to work for Dodd Ac Co. in For mosa. That was my introduction to a business that took me all over th world and in which I was mixed up with pirates, revolutions, shipwrecks as Aaa tMa-ai I mm 4 maMamI 1 aA aV 1 . . . . . m a I "A vasvaavaias vvs IllVIUVUksl AAaaVa UfaUTII f aaAU an fAsrVtArTB Vrir-V" I A1llasf I a. a . t . The Ragtime Muse Ballade of Nameless Worth. Wreathe with the chaplet each excel lone hrov. Tomorrow may serve for th purpose. 'tis true. But better it is to attend to It now, The sage and the nero wnn iam w The Song of Songs. TC band may sound a martial strain; sue nurn may eca to arowo to orumsi - endow. The sky may echo th refrain Our statesmen we prals and lament I xhat aays "Th conquaring her when they die; 1 comes.'' . So let us discover and honor, some- I TfMS battl hymn of mirhtr streaa now. I K . v. - . t . , - i . .v.. .i.t I '""7 " ni aurrv oorae. i" neroiuo iir wuw v". i But, Just th name. w nauet confess. .v. . Iv. ,k. ir-t r ong oT-aongs ts. a uo yvci, viae j.v -- - too. Home." Washington Star.. A measur of prals w all freely Tou-r "Home. Sweet Horns" ls mirhtr The eager Inventor of nuisance new, , I jt always makaa t"i taaroron Th man. who doe. something to up- " ff'J-t tlr. XfL' All f eU aIaud and to the w. l i. W glorify som when we scarcely know why; One woman we seek that th kne w mav bow Th heroin fair who Invented the pie! How sweet is its comfort for m and for you! When fed on that dainty w fear . not a row; With courage in crises each breast 'twill Imbue Oh, who would go hack on th pi of his frau! Pray, have w not given you reasons enow? Again do we plead with a tear and a - sign. Go, gather her leaves from th laurel its oougn. The beorlne who Invented th pie! L'ENVOI. ' Princess! ,To you fullest honors we To find I you and crown yon we'll ne er cease to try. Until you are found and w raise a cticer-r-wow : - Tb heroin fair who Invented plel Stand up and veil to beat th nr Tour "Home. Sweet Horn" deserves our praise. But how folks cheer at -Dixl- Land!" From the Los AogIes Express.' The Sunday Journal Ths Great , Horns Newspaper, consists of . FIvt news sections replete with Illustrated featorsi. - Illustrated raagatins of q uall ty. .Woman's section of rirs merit. Pictorial news supplement.' Superb comic section. " . ' .5 Cents the Copy