6 THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND. TUESDAY EVENING, JUNE 1C14. THE JOURNAL Alt INfr'RNPET HKWPAr.tt a Jackson . nhUee t'uUlivberi -Wcry evening teireiit Kand-jrr ery fvndar mornln at Toe Jourcal ft-sll-i-ln. RmxttmT and Ytil.HI ( I'nrtlan'l.nr. - l-aial-eil at lha ..if(lc at I'M-, laud. Vr.. (w ' traaviutealoa .tferuuga lb wtita second v saattef . " -. . -- - 1 KL Hu.NKS Mnln T73; Ut . A-aujl; Alt departsicnta Mm -had br ,bMi smobeia. Tell . tt atwraior waar department hb want. 1 oliHH., ADV&unINW UtPKKhMiili Benjamin At Ksutnor Co, BraBwi:k Bids.. SU Hft Avs., Ke Yrk( 121 Fsapiaa " baa Bid.. Ctiieaso. ; . kattarrlilHi laruia lijf nail V to an ad a draw in tba Uuiiad Ktatea or. Wastes J.;.; . - daily .;.--.. y; . . ,OM tar..... . .1.1. ii On antb,......l -50 SX'NbAY. ., - ' yar...... .12.50 i una ftontb .... DAILY AND St'NDAr ' . ,t ... .,..?. 0 I On owiotb...v.i When You Go Away Have The Journal -sent to your Summer address. TO THE ttO.SE A sunbeam warmod thee Into bloom; A zephyr's kiss thy blushes gave: The tears of evening shed perfume, ' And mom will bram upon lliy grave. How like to thee, UiOu tran fiient flower. The dom of all we love on earth; Beauty, like thee, but decks nn hour, Douy feeds on It from ite birth. -Bolm. IN OLIt AllUN.lA.VC'K been set forth- eTho silvery , gray appearance. Is probably due to, , air Cavities and not to destruction "of the. : pigment. . Hair pigment ' can only be destroyed by the most vig orous chemical .treatment. Dry hairs contain' more air. cells and 'therefore will; seem lighter in color than moist ones; but black hair ; may be vdried to the ntmost without becoming white. The hair of mummies dried through cenr turles still show their pigment pre cisely as do freah hairs,- - The explanation of the familiar color changes of the . hair' is prob ably to be found-not in a destruc tion of" pigment already . present, not- in any "bleaching of hairs al ready Tormed but rather in a com plete renewal Of the half. Pig mented hairs fall out and are re placed by .- unpfgnie&ted or" white ones. From all this we conclude that gray or white hair Is attributable to ; the formation of a new hair coat rather 1 than an alteration of the old one. Sometimes the pro cess of pigment formation may cease during the development of a hair. Ih that event the tip will remain pigmented though the base appears white. ' t A:FEW SMILES miles via the canal. The distance t the layman to decide? ; A Paris ! from New " York to Boston via physician says women are fast de- Nantucket Light is 402 miles. , It terloratln--physically owing .to will thus be seen that the economy J their exaggerated efforts, princl-j in distance Is very great. Lpally the intellectual efforts they Another ttdvantatro of the canal are making toward what they call Is the factor of safety. The dan-' emancipation. On the other hand f gers of the Cape Cod coast are a cmcago aressmaker asserts mat i well known and it is said to be a , American women , are ; becoming historical fact that had it not been more plump and more healthful on for the shoal waters of the7 coast account of the - prevailing dress, the Puritans would have" landed at .-Every man from his own viewpoint. Nrw .YnrV: ihnlr n-ts'lnal dentin ft-) ' . - . - . ' tlon. The -Mayfloweri: ran into rhe collapse of the Rapp divorce puts the windpipM in.wNationai Food breakera and he navlRtrr: dls-lcase not surprising. It all goes cou raged, turned back around Cape lu uemonstraie tnat a woman wno Cod and came to Plymouth The Cape Cod canal has no locks and canibe approached from each end without any influence of cur rent, enabling barges and tows to more nearl. approximate schedule tine. As soon as the canal Is opened to traffic its effect will be mo mentous on the vast tonnage, ir respective of the: shipping of New York and Boston, which is moving up and down, the -coast and which involves -5, 000 cratt each year. . EXECUTIVE INFLUENCE MIGHT IiE WORSE w NINE hundred million bushels is the estimated wheat crop of the United States for 1914. It Is almost half the world's yield of wheat. It is a - new rrpord for the United States. It Is 137,000,000 ImShcls more - than was ever grown in this coun try before in any one year. There hre also very large esti mates oi the .yield of oats and barley. In each the expectation is that the yield will be the second largest in the history of the country. In wheat there Is an added area of more than 4,000,000 acres, and -the quality is above, two per cent better than at the same time in 1913. The indicated yield of Vln ter wheat is 18.1; bushels per acre against 1 tSrG last year. The wheat yield of the United 'States for 1913 was, 7."3,233,000 .bushels; in 1912, .730,267,000; in "1011. B21, 338.000; In 1910, 635. 121,000; in 1909. 683,379,259; in 1908, 664,602,000; in 1907, 634, 087,000. Previous to 1907, the , largest .total was 748,460,218, in i9oi. The great wheat crop 1b also attended with heavy production in ' all linen on American farms. It is probable that the farm products . ; for 1914 will exceed the colossal iigures of last year when the American farmers produced more than ten billion dollars worth of . products. . It is an enormous contribution to the prosperity of the nation. The ruoney transactions involved In the marketing of this stupen dous output mean processes of ex change of .which there can be no measure. When the farmers are ' paid for these products and when they in turn square off. their an 'nual balances and make their in- vestments, it-moans a distribution ;ot wealth and prorits almost be yond calculation and entirely be yond the power or the imagina- tlou. In the midst of the great abun dance yielded to the nation by our . farmers, the year 1914 is certain - - to be a season of. abounding na I tlonal prosperity. HAT if the clouds do lower and ; the , heavens gently weep, it might be worse" It might be snowing as it was in Paris yesterday when two and' a half Inches fell on the 'Avenue Des Champs Elysees and j the thermometer stood a few de I grees above freezing. Again tbTe heat might be over powering as it was in New York, where one death and many- pros trations occurred, or in St. Louis, where the thermometer reached 95 degrees, or In Chicago where three deaths, directly due to the' heat, were reported. Mount Hood, like Mount Lassen, might be sending out a column of steam 700 feet high. Tornadoes might be devastating as in Minnesota, Wisconsin andXhe Dakotas, overturning barns and 6mall buildings and interrupting wire communication. " What then if we do have to carry an umbrella to the corena uon of the Queen. What if it should happen to sprinkle, it might ne worse. 1NDUSTKIAL ELECTRICITY T WHY HAIK HltOWS CiKAY - '"V NE by one all our most cher- I 1 Ithed traditions are falling l uciore the attack of cold and analytical science. Krom generation to generation : it has been-firmly believed that ' , man's hair turns white from fright m a single night. Now comes the uournai or the American Medical I 1 Association saying that a careful I study of the reputed instances on whiCh this belief was founded prove them to be mythical. It seems that the popular story that Marie Antoinette grew gray during the night after she was condemned to be executed is only one of the fairy tales we- hear every day. While It is true her hair was gray at death her 1 biographers record that it had been gray long before. It is suggested that possibly' the change in the color of her hair - while iu prison was due to the ; fact that she did not have access io nair ayes ana other toilet - preparations. ' The task of finding, an illuml- , natlng account of the factors which may moauy or determine the ; growth of hair will usually he a vain one says the medical Journal. Experimental studies in this field t caa not be readily conducted on .man. Certain facts though are , matters of common observation The beard grows anew after shav Ing. It also grows more rapidly - in summer man in winter." . If the pigment which produces thV natural color of the hair, is : lacking the hairs present a gray ' or white appearance. The silvery j color may further be due to the presence or more or less air, in . the balr. 1 ' ' To account for the blanching of 't the hair, the. familiar accompani ment of old age and a phenomenon i which frequently ?. begins befor . v middle, age,, various views . ,have HOMAS" EDISON recently de clared ; that only twenty-five per cent of the problems of electricity have been solved. Thirty years ago electrical de vices were playthingB of the'phy sical laboratory. It was said then that the cost of producing the elec tric current was so great that the electric light would never be prac tical and that the electric motor could never be used in commerce. Today the boys of thirty years ago are telephoning across the con tinent and sending wireless com- munications over the waters. They are riding to and from business on electric Etreetcars, reading, by electric lights, Newspapers printed Dy electric power. Some are even traveling about in automobiles pro pel iea uy electric batteries. In the opinion of Edison and Prank J. Spraguej father of the electric street railway, the next great development in. industrial electricity is the electrification of main trunk nne railroads. Nearly an terminals have made, or are about to make the change and plans are being made In suburban traffic all over the country to aoanaon locomotives entirely Charles Francis Brush, who in vented the ;aic dynamo and larnn predicts that within a few years ordinances will be passed prohib iting norse drawn vehicles from crowded city streets. Only elec tric trucks twice as fast and with four times the capacity will be al lowed to operate, he says. Charles Proteus Steinmetz. con suiting engineer of the General Electric Company, looks forward to the time when the better paid workers in the cities will live in the suburbs and ride to and from their work in electric automobiles, me urst cost of which will not ex ceed $500, and which can be oper ate", ior not more than $10 a month. When the progress of the nant few years is considered, all these predictions do not seem unreason The man; who has an automr.hliN and is worrying about an advance in tne price o gasoline should take neart. The man who has not an'nntn. mobile for like reasons should not grow discouraged but begitf to save like Schumann-Helnk,. has beefl a good mother, to eight or nine chil dren, cannot be an immoral wo man.. She only made a mistake in marrying an unmorarman. The common expression "laughed out of court" has been literally in terpreted In the case of Schumann Heink's husband. It may be some day that people will learn not to write foolish letters. ' Johnny, out to Sinner, thrice refused chicken ra ry. of which he was very fond. His hoetess, who fcd added macaroni to the gravy, finally said: "Why, ; I thought you liked chicken gravy t'r- : "1 do sometimes." replied Johnny, "but my mamma never Magazine. . -roresBor. what .has - become of Tom Appleton? . Wasn't he studying nm in ciug last year 7 "Ah, yes! AnDle- ton, poop fellow! a fine student,1, but absent minded in -the use of chemi cals very. Thai THE menace of the presidential office is the subject of an ar tide by Senator Cummins of Iowa in the New York Inde pendent, . Using President Wilson as an Illustration, he makes a discrimi nating distinction between influ ence and power. He conceives the influence of the presidential office over the authority of -Congress to be a public danger. While conceding the right of the judiciary to nullify legislative acts Letters From the People Tommnuicatioua ent to The Journal for piiblhmtioi In this department shoiilil be writ ten on only one side or the paper, should not exceed .5W words in length and mimt be ac companled bf the bhus and adrtren of the' aeiider. . It the writer does not desire to naTe tbe uaae published, he ahouid o atate.) .'J'1IKt,M,IB' ta ,he Kreatest of an reform era. It tatlonallaea everyUiIng It touches. It robs principles of all fale sanctity and thPowathein back on their reasonableness. If they have no reasonableness. . it ruthlessly crushes then) out of existence ami sets up Its own conclusions iu their stead." Woodiw n ilson. Governors on Prohibition. Portland, June 8. To the Editor or The Journal We have heard diverse opinions as to the prosperity or fail ure, of states under prohibition. It discoloration on the ceiling- notice It? "Tea." "That's Tom." "I'm not i sur prised. I always thought Tom would mane nis mark If he got Sv chance." While playing wfth a pair of shear nttle Laura severed one of the pret- or nejr golden curls. "My deaf child, why did you do that?" asked j Aunt Mary, who came to call soon after ward. "I wanted 'em so 1 could take 'ern'ofT and hang 'em on the bureau," explained the little girl. just line mamma does.' PERTINENT. COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF : dMALL CHANGS ;-, - . I Human nature xeta a man'ue'a a. Judge of hie neighbor. , ; - . The only--cheap thlna that satisfies giddy woman is a compliment. ; -V. Every lime She loses 98 cents ah worries a dollar's worth. , . . , 4 -- : Unleia a . man keeoa movlnr h world will soon leave him in the lurch. - ; .. - -y ' ' . f Never Judge a married man rt ttia actions when he la away from home. .4 And many a horse has been badly raced because money talked to tbe joiatjr. i ! ! If It wasn't for the weather lota of people would have no excuse for talk ing, t . Sometimes a girl does a young man a great favor by. Jilting him.- . With the exception of chocolate caramels there Is nothing sweeter to a girl than loves young dream, . It Is well to jnake a good start and it is also well to remember that it Is the finish that- really counts. ' ' A man may never realise what It is to be disappointed In love until after he has been led to the altar by the female of his choice. : OUgGON ' SIDELIGHTS "rtet-mleton at the approaching school election will vote on the question, of free-text books. - ; : .. . . , , . : ' . The stone work on the new packing plant on the outskirts of Burns is completed and the News says it will take but a short time now to get the plant In operation. Condon' council has decided that the Jim Hill mustard must be eradi- and the marshal has been Instructed to prompt property owners accord- Ingly. - Weather report In Burns Times-Herald- Prairie .City correspondence: "A little snow fell at Prairie City Thurs day, it waa welcome but was about six month too late for last winter and six months too early for next winter. Bumpter American: A story drifts In from the Greenhorns of the recov ering of $73 In gold from one pan ot dirt. IJttle comment and no excite ment has been caused by the story, as Bi:ch find are not uncommon In tbe Ureenhorn district. This lust find was made by Bam Kershaw, who several years atro was one of tne discovereia of the Famous pocket taken from tuo Belmont claim near ureennorn. Progress of lllllsboro as measured. in terms cf modern transportation, by the Independent: "With two elec tric lines running on almost a street car sctiedule and local and visilins IN EARLIER DAYS By Fred IxwkUy. Senator Cummins holds that by Uuto&T H' virtue of its potentialities the of flee of president is capable of ex ercising an .influence in directing legislation which, if foreseen by the fathers of the government, would have been rejected. In order to remedy this condi tion Senator Cummins implies that our constitutional government should be reconstructed. . It might be well to suggest to the senator that domination by the executive , is permitted only by men who play politics and who do not think for themselves. There can be no dangerous influence un less there are men that want to be influenced. What is needed Is not a presi dent with' less backbone but con gressmen with more backbone. WEIGHT OF SOCLS A PHYSICIAN of Haverhill. Massachusetts, claims that he has succeeded in weighing a soul. The process consisted in marking the change in the weight of a dying man's body when death occurred. . The difference was found to be three fourths of an ounce. . .'''V '!;- : j .. This ascertainment ' does not seem to have any practical' value. Souls, like brains,, vary so much In An old soldier, on leaving the army, wrote to hi colonel in the following terms : , "Sir After what 1 have suffered, tell the army to go to grass." Imagine his aston ishment on receiving a reply in the usual official' manner: 'Or- Ann -1. n-n-. w.iii "!J.T',m,"al.nes-. governor of j gestions or Inquiries as to movement mkt77 ine oanaers and econo- ot troops must be entered on army V,, ! h tate have only to look, form 123 X. Y. Z.. a copy of Which I . , r" 4-H lo "na tnt, witn am inclosing, Tours, etc. " ii'uiuuu ui omy aoout 742,000 peo ple, we have assets in our 48 savings um.iih, trust companies and 37 1 introduced at recent hearings on na tional constitutional prohibition. William nan and building associations amounting to $165,784,505, or an average of about $224 for every inhabitant of the state, which is something of an argument that prohibition does prohibit. In our state, 225,159 people have deposits an nually In our savings banks averaging $401. The gain in our savings banks annually for the last 10 years has been about $6,500,000, running from $4,000,000 to $11,000,000 each year." Lock Craige, governor of North Carolina, said: "Total revenues from, all sources during 1908. the last year during yhich whisky was sold under license, were $2,866,439.62. During the year 1913, the last year under prohi bition, the total receipts from all sources were $4,297,000. North Caro lina in all her history has never known a period of greater prosperity than that through which she haB passed since prohibition was adopted." L. B. Hanna, governor of North Dakota, testifies: "We have practical ly no poor houses in the state. Out of 50 counties, 44 have none at all, and in the other six the poor houses are really more what might be called coun ty hospitals, where some sick old peo ple can be cared for." He further states that a recent Brewers' Tear Book shows the number, of gallons per capita of intoxicating- drinks con sumed lp, 1911 in North Daketa was nothing. It is represented in their quality that it only Creates new perplexities. There liave been souls ' Dook y tw0' ciphers. This is not. of so heavy that the course of nations urse, strictly true, as there is some has been changed. Their weight cannot be computed. On the other hand there are souls that are grossly estimated, even at three quarters of an ounce, souls that are born shriveled and keep on shrinking. The problem is not to ascertain the weight of souls so much as It is , to nourish and enlarge souls, a work that has kept religion and philosophy busy for centuries. liquor used, but the amount used is so small that the cipher comes nearer rep resenting it than any other 'number possibly eould. - MRS. ti. H. ADDITON. peoplewould rake in the coin from the travel, and the farmers would pay the bilfs. If they want to eliminate Hood River, and take scow passage up the Columbia, let them go to It. The tax payers Of Hood River county are stag gering under the loads they are carry ing now, and It will cost $8800 per year to maintain that $75,000 road;and we don't want It at the present time. O. M. DEWITT. i . ' ' CITY DWELLERS A' money to buy the coming cheap electric car. C AN IMPORTANT CANAL OINCIDENT with the' comple tion or tne Panama canal is the opening of the Cape Cod canal.; This connects the wa ters of ; Massachusetts bay with tsuzzaro s bay. By July the Cane Cod canal r will be , navigable for vessels drawing not over twelve feet and by August It is expected to have ft depth of fifteen feet. While the Cape Cod canal is much less in magnitude than the Panama canal yet it is of great importance to the shipping induB try. from New York to Boston. It is eight miles long and will-cost $12,000,000, being a private en terprise. ' ; This cut of, eight miles reduces the length of I the water journey from New. York to Boston from 326 juiles via Pollock Rip to 260 CCORDINO to a bulletin Is sued by the Census Bureau 39,700,000 of the people of the United States are living in cities and 69,100,000 are living outside cities at present. In the term' cities is included everything above ,8000 population- The proportion of city dwellers is larger in New England than in any part of the country, being five to two, or 4,830,000 living in cities and 2.130,000 outside of cities. The proportion of rural popula tion in New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania is somewhat larger i 1 ... w- . - T man in iew England, .notwith standing the enormous concentra tion of people around : New . York City and Philadelphia. The fig ures for these throe states are 13,- 500,000 Jn cities to 7,400,000 in the country. . In the states from Ohio to Wis consin, whicn a generation ago were considered agricultural, the city dwellers - and the country dwellers are now about equal. In all the territory south of the Ohio and west of the Mississippi the rural population Is far in ex cess. In the three states bordering on the Pacific the city population again becomes? prominent and tho proportion of urbanita to frurallte is about equal, i ; ' On the other hand there are thousands Of towns and villages scattered all over the country with from 1000 to 8000; population Which have public water supplies, lighting systems", paved streets and other advantages of city life. The trend r of population from the farms to the towns and vil lages during the past quarter cen tury has been as notable as the growth of th large- cities. If J;hen a comparison were made between those 'who live on" farms and those who' are living la either Maine Farmers and Prohibition. Nehalern, June 6. TO the. Editor of The Journal I noticed a recent asser tion that the- farmers of Maine would not vote for the repeal ot the prohib itory law in that state. The assertion is correct to a certain extent, and there-Is a "reason. A long time ago prohibition got a very- good start in Puritanic New England. Every state tried it. Most of them became sick of the theory right away and repealed the law. ' In Maine, along about 1884, there was a feeling of discontent. The fire broke out red hot when, some fel low discovered that a man could and would get drunk on apple cider, and the officer began ' to pinch the farm ers. There Was an awful howl from all over rural Maine. The overthrow of the prohibitory law was imminent. The prohibitionists saw there was only one way of fixing the curse upon the state and that was by getting it Into the constitution. But how was this to be done? The farmers were dis satisfied with the law because it pre vented them from selling their cider. Cider contains 8 to 10 per cent of al cohol; more than beer and as much as wine. The farmers were in a majority. Someone put the argument uf this way: "The farmers must be permitted to sell their cider. Cider Is intoxi-' eating, but we must have the farmers. Let them sell their cider. Shut out the rest of the drinks. Give the farmer a monopoly." Every farmer swore by the new prohibitory law. Then the framers Of this new Joke on the people of Maine went up and down the state crying against beer and for more cider, and cider it has been ever since. Any farmer can go down Into thfe cellar and get drunk, and it does not cost him a cent. After a boy has done a few. successful turns with the cider barrel, he i ready for any thing a city blind pig affords, from carbolic acid to blue vitriols Cider does not possess one single quality to recommend it to anyone. It is manu factured In the most unsanitary sur rounding and ia reeking with flies and eerms while it matures. v But It has tied the farmers up to prohibition, ; and that Is all the pro hibitionist want. am. j. t-vnuw. Protests a Road Bond Plan. Hood River, Or., June . To the Ed itor ot The Journal That Hood River bond Issue of $76,000 for the Columbia River Highway we voted down for the reason that our valley roads are badly in need of improving, and the majority of the farmers are gong t vote "no" on any bond Issue or special tax that comes up. ' ' - -j . -i - At one of our meeting we were In formed by one. of the oldest resident of the valley, who has built-bridges from The Dalles to Portland, that there was a road built from TheDalies to Cascade Locks for $19,000; and at the. same meeting ! we were told by Thomas Lacy that there was only a mile and a half Of the route that- was Cities or villages, the total jiopula- not passable" at present with, a team tlon living where they have atfvan- an,f -waf?L.anf, !n,y J!"'8 l four tages of community life would s be Lake it a fair road, and they want In excess of the census estimate of - $76,000 for that. I believe the people nearly 40,000,000 city dwellers. at Cascade. Locks should have a decent - -: ; j road -out but this thing of making a TTrr 7 , i boulevard for Portland iriotoristaJ am V W hen, -doctors; disagree how Is ! not in favor of. The garage-and betel a Climate and Its Effects. ' Prom Reedy's Mirror. May not this truth, if established. also account for the fact that even among, the i human race, monogamy I most prevails in temperate climes, where the conditions of life are fairly wen balanced; that polygamy appears mostly among the races of tropical climes, where the tendency is to pro- auce an exeess of females, while poly andry is seen only in cold and barren regions where- the conditions of life are so hard that the males far outnum ber the females. . My conclusions from these premises are that nature is Jealous of her per petuity; that she Is insistent that life, ana aounaant lire, snail persist every where within her domain. Tet she is Just, and has bo arranged her law of division of the sexes that where there is lack of food or happiness, - there shall not appear an overabundance of life. In that regard, therefore, Mal thu may be tight; that Is, that- the tendency of nature is to produce such abundant life that there will be a ten dency to, "press upon the mean of subsistence." That is, she may go the limit, but never beyond the limit. . It will readily be seen that in a com munity where the female Is born in greater number of individuals than the male, the population of such commun ity will more rapidlymultiply than In a like community where a majority o: Offspring are males. in. all animal creation and perhaps even in the vegetable, if we could see it all. It has always been the rule that the female shall receive the most care ful protection,; since the perpetuity of the race is only conserved in that way So we See .that, instead of It being gal lantry, as some of us men seem to claim, it is merely a wise provision of nature establishing this as one of the innate attributes of the male sex. Now, it lias been shown that where the means of subsistence are abund ant, there the, female will outnumber the. male. Where conditions of life are hard and food scarce the male will outnumber the female. I apply this fact to the mind as Well as to physical life. That is, where happiness Is most the rule, chiefly among adult-females, there will be a tendency to produce the female, while ; If sorrow mostly pre vails, the tendency will be the re Verse. 4 There is a beautiful philosophy in this .fact. That is. that the "sterner sex. appears in greater number where stern conditions exist, while the gent ler sex" is born where happier clrcum stances prevail. There Is : Nothing New. From the Omaha World-Herald. It is said that Robert Louis Steven ton was once -reeding a book and sud denly slapped his face with it. When asked what so excited him, he replied "I have Just come across a sentence Identical with a thought of my own expressed in the identical language that I used In my last publication. The book was Very old, but Bteven son had never seen it until he took It un that morning. The fact Is, tha all Of the fundamental truths are old, although men' often think that they are expressing something new. When Tolfltoy said that "the rich will do anything for the poor except to get off their "backs he doubtless though he was uttering a new thought, but it had many time been uttered before Tolstoy wrote the words.' Lincoln made almost exactly tne same remark. Many a farmer following the plow In the early nineties Imagined that he had discovered some new principle in economics and ' went to the . next Farmers' Alliance meeting and ex rdolted the discovery with all his na tive eloquence; Many times afterward h found that the same thing had been aaid by Mill, Ricardo or some other economist in j a much more forcible way than he xould utter 4t. If men AitniA nniv inherit an education the constant restatement of truth would not be necessary, ut -unrortunatel every generation must be educated anew and the: old truths are as new to them as when first uttered. They are the foundation on which society rests. Whenever ., abanaonea, distress is sure to follow and the foundation must be . repaired and the structure rebuilt,, using to a great extent the old material. Just a all the new build, inga that are; going up in , the world are using practically the same ma terials with which the pyramid were Constructed. The' latest statement is - - i i ' -i From the Tacoma Ledger. As long as young blood runs 'hot. there will be a readiness and willing ness to pay the tolls that Mars ex acts as the price of wars. The cost reckoned afterwards. We talk a great deal about the cost of war, but few of us realise what it actually means until we are confronted by the actual figures and these are staggering. Going back to the wars that have occurred in the time of recorded his tory, is estimated by an expert in the library of congress that wars and their direct -results have collected an esiii mated toll ot 15,000,000,000 lives, nine times the present population of the world. Six million men were killed in the 20 years of the Napoleonic wars alone. Of these Lafayette said 3.000,- 000 were Frenchmen, the very flower of the youth and virility of the nation. Look at Napoleon's wonderful army of 600,000 men, the flnest that ever stood In line, which set out for Mos cow, and then at the pitiful remnant of 20,000 frostbitten, . famished' spec ter who staggered back over the bridge of Korno the following Decem ber. The average stature of the Frenchman decreased two inches after the Napoleonic era, and after 100 years one of the greatest problems of France still Is a decreasing population, ! The most reliable Civil war statis tics show. a loss of 350,000 men of the Union armies and 150,000 Confederates. WHAT WARS HAVE COST ' "Some people eeem" to think the fall a railroad official has to do is to -s4 tight, hold on to his Job and draw his salary,- said William McMurray r w ecntly. "Why. a railroad 'man ha U work , harder than anybody else te make good. He not only has to please the people that pay him his salary. . but he must plead the people that help to make the eivldends. If yod think It is an easy job to please the traveling public, you don't know, that's all - Just as an instance, some time ago I was In charge of a apecial train . carrying a noted prima donna to ait engagement in New Orleans. Someone happened to mention having -.ured a fine Mexican hairless dog in El Paso. She at once sent tor me and told me to wire ahead to our agent there and tell him to buy a Mexican hairless dog and have it at the der-ot. I did to. When we got to El Paso my distin guished passenger wassail anxiety to see her dog. The Southern Pacific agent met me and told'nie he had been unable to find a hairless dog for nale. I told the prima donna. She aaid: Very well; we will stay here till ha does. She told her manager he would nor- sing a note till sh got her hairles dog. It was the one great de sire or her life, i-ier manager said: Gu OUt Mllrf tt n iir TV AI1V cutomobi lists forming an almost Von-'price, and iT you, can't buy one, steal jtant procession Hiiisboro is tasting one, I started out with our agent In desperation. Suddenly we ctaw a dog of the right shape, only it had hair. Our local agent said. 'Kid. what will you lake for your dog? I'll give you . five dollars.' The boy callad. his dog and handed hi in over, grabbed the money and ran. We took the dog Into a barber shop. 'What will you charge mu to shave thin doT our local agent said. The barber wanted to throw via both out, but finally connented t have-the dog for $5. We hurried baik. gave the prima donna the hairiest! dog and the special got under way. I heard later that the prima donna wan furi ous, when- her hairless dog became as bristly as a porcupine and she gate' It to her maid." Carl Gray, formerly president of the Seattle. Portland A Southern, told n: this story along the same lines: "I once was stationed at Wichita, Kansas. What wa now know as Okla homa was at that time known as the Cherokee strp. -The country south Of the ioys of metropolitan lifn and th.i agile skip from curb to curb dodglmt electric and honk honk cars en route has replaced the leisurely saunter that was once the fashion." Include the property and slave losses of the south, nor the pensions paid since the conflict The last Mexican war cost us $100,000,000 and the Span ish war $362,101,900. The cost In life. in sorrow, in the destruction of effi cient human beings, cannot be Includ ed in mere tabulation. But the coun try feels it in Us impaired vitality and in the deeper shadows which are thrown upon thousands of lives. The great powers or the world are staggering toward bankruptcy under their war debts. Seventy cents of every dollar spent by our government goes for war purposes; 'Our naval ap propriation in 1887 was one tenth what Considering the economic side, the wars in which the United States, has engaged from the Revolution to this time have cost the country in dollars expended for military and naval oper ations a grand total of $ll.S96,S85,40s The Civil war alone cost ua over $10, 00,000,000. and that estimate doe not it is today. Since the war with Spain ,u, ttna. iin. u a . . ,..,. i.,,nt., we have spent. $700,000,000 more on PArajue In those day. Quail and prai the navy than is necessary to pay otf He chickens, wild turkeys and deer tne national oeot purely a war aeoi, by the way. Our army appropriation has increased four times in-14 years. were plentiful lalong the Walnut and Salt Fork and the Arkansas river. With my 45-7o under my arm. 1 wn walking up the trail toward a. deer lick when I met an Indian, who t a i ' "PPed me and told me to Veep a good or loou : lookout for a very larjre. cougar that Viil h nai1 tracked Into the vicinity of the In England alone last year there were 1,086, "07 paupers people de pending for every mouthful of and stitch of clothing on charity. aer me nusn oia ae periHion om i 6rr ,lrk n ,n in.,..i 12.000,000 people are entitled to this Bund0wn there Was a flurry of snow, public charity to permit them to end As Jusk Came on I became chilled th,r liv8 J-fny- the one and I atnrtf .1 up the trail Yet England continues to persist in . for camp j XxSxAn l sorie fiir when l what she calls the "two-power stand- j heard a snapping of twig in the brush . .. . . . .7 " i oy me eiae or tne trail, and out stepped navies of her two most formidable op- Ish outlay of Germany. France and the United States. The efforts of one na tion to increase its strength are Imme diately neutralised by the similar ef fort of other countries. It ia well to have these facta and figure in mind when Jingoes denounce President Wilson for hi patient deter mination to keep us out of another war with Mexico. the cougar. It was too dark to see It ponents this in the face ot the fever-,j distinctly, but it was the largest cou gar I had ever seen. We both stoppe I In our tracks and looked at each other. 1 was shaking like a leaf. 1 ralaed my gun and the front sight began wavu.c ! circles around that cougar" head. I GOVERNMENT'S RAILWAY FINANCING BILL By John M. Osklson. One of three bills now before con gress Is designed to put the control of railway financing In the hands of the Interstate Commerce commission. If passed, it will require the roads to se cure the sanction Of that body for tne Issue of stocks and bonds. Two set of interests are concerned vitally, the people Served by the roads and the Investors. Railway men gen erally oppose any plan to put tbe con trol of financing in government hand. They say that it will result In cur tailing railroad extensions and . im provements. Investors, however, ought to pray for such legislation, for tbe simple reason that it will help to save their Investments. Her is the situation: Railroad men are primarily inter ested in building up "systems," in opening up new territory, creating traffic where none existed before. They have the pioneering spirit. As long a they can get the money, they will spend it to build and develop. They shut their eyes to the question. "Will auch extensions pay?" Investors who listen to the optimis tic talk of the railroad men are led to buy a road's stocks and bond on a false basis; they do nof think Of their purchase as speculations of a pe culiarly hazardous kind, which they are. They believe they are putting their money where it will be safe and earn a fair return. A a matter of faot, their money Is not safe; it 1 an axiom ot Ameri can railway experience that every road must pass through bankruptcy; and not a few of them have been plunged Into that gloomy state more than once. A very large share of the unwise borrowing and unjustified stock Issue wonld have been prevented by the Interstate Commerce commission If It had ponsesned the power which the new bill proposes to give it. The new bill la In line with the bills which have become laws in a number of states those which put tho control of the financing of public util ity companies in the hands of com missions. Such state laws have worked well, and you hear very little protest against them either by the companies or by the bankers who are charged with the duty of raising money for their support and exten that the great block of stone in the pyramids which have so puzxled archl. tects and builder are simply cement blocks, and a superior cement to that used in the great buildings now being erected. Solomon was pretty nearly right when- be said 'there is nothing new under the sun. "Music Hath Charms." From the Philadelphia Telegraph. . Honorable Robert McKenty gave a "matinee musicale" on the afternoon Of Monday last at his spacious stone residence. Twenty-first street and Fair mount avenue. It was a great success. It was attended by over 1400 guests, who thoroughly enjoyed tbe efforts of tho talented artists engaged by their .host to provide for their entertainment. The program wa long ana varied, and was composed of classic and popu lar, serious and humorous Selections, ehieflv of the ballad variety. Mem bers of the Orpheus sooiety supplied the vocal talent and it is safe to say they have seldom sung to a more ap preciative audience. The concert wa a sort of experi ment. It wa not that the selections were futurist; they were strictly or thodox and not a little ehopworn. It was not that the audience was ultra critical. It wa decidedly the reverse, almost low-brow tn fact. The experi ment waa ia quite another direction; it concerned the vindication of humane man's belief In the truth of the old adage, "Music hath charms to soothe the savage breast." Warden "Bob" McKenty na scored again with his "matinee musicale" at the Eastern penitentiary. -'Music proved that its charms were potent enough to disarm nearly 1500 prisoner and their guards who mingled freely with visit or for an hour in the prison corridor with formal discipline thrown to ihe winds and naught but a common ele mental emotion of the better kind hold ing all tn voluntary submission to the best' of U; kinds of restraint self maatery, their word Of honor and re gard for the man whose humanity and wisdom have won thla .unique tribute from his quondam guests. This experiment In humane penology was a severe one and fraught With in finite possibilities of danger, consid ering the weak morality and low men tality tompoelng Warden -Bob'" so cial material.' It astonishing success only strengthens belief in the efficacy of humane' treatment to .do -it heal ing work among the socially sick. In cidentally it suggests the use of music as an agent of incalculable value and Immeasurable Influence as a solvent of many a difficult social problem other than of a merely penological character. Life Savers. An English policeman entered the house of a publican one morning and Informed him that It would be neces sary to hold an inquest there in the afternoon. ., Now the landlord bad a great objee tlon to anything of the kind, and said: "Oh, I can t be troubled with inquest In my house. Here, what'U you have to drlnkr Robert said he'd have a drop of Scotch, which he did. "Have a cigar, too." said the hdst. After the consumption of two Scotches and cigar the constable said he thought he could get the inquest held somewhere else, but a he wa leaving the landlord remarked: "By the way. who are they going to hold the inquest on?" "No one a I know of now," said the man in blue; "but it 'ud 'a' been on me If I hadn't had these drinks an' smokea. L- . The Ragtime Muse was afraid to wound it, for I didn't want any ml. up with a wounded cou gar, so I decided that the next time the front, slsiit wobbled Into lint- with . lis head I would pull the trigger. Sud. fenly 1 heard a lot more crackling in ihe brush. My leg were too weak lo nun, bu i siuwa as it 1 were aniiioreu there till $ or 14 little pigs rrivout o the brush to their mother. My Imagi nation and the dusk had turned that gt.unt. mti-l-wvered old sow Irto - a crtrUchlne; cougar. "Speaking of wild animals," contin ued Mr. Gray, "one of our paisenger trains In Missouri, a few year ago. had a little bad luck with a freight ttaln. Nobody was hurt, but several of the box cars wt-re wrecked. One of our trarflc official happened to be on the passenger train, so he took imme diate charge, lie ticked up a bra he-man- lantern, and as he hurried down the track toward the wrecked rrelght h- saw a man in uniform skulking al a fence corner. Thinking It wa one of the train crew, he called out: 'Here, you! Come out of that. I want you to take a message to the next station.' 'I ren'l go, sir,' the man nald, '1 am holding some of our . stock that got lo se in the wrecked ram.' IJo ahead, . . . . n hcw iiini tii niuvit uoti 4 gel bwm. What kind of stock I It. anywayT the railroad man asked.' Lions, air it was our clrcu train you ran into.' the man answered. "Stay right where yon are; I'll take the message myself.- If very important, so I will have to hurry, and for Lord's sake don't let those linn get away from you" the railroad offi cial called out over hi shoulder as he printed down the track." - The Scotch are very canny.' John M ftcott, general passenger agent of th Southern Pacific, In no exception. Recently a man Interested hi a small way 1n politics, and more Important In hi own eye than in any one' else, wrote Mr. Boott a letter aettlnst forth the renson why he should have a pas. Mr. Scott wrote a very diplomatic not and said h would find hi request an swered in the following refereiu-eff in the Bible. The re.Mp.ent of Mr. Scott' letter -lost no time looking them up. Here they are: Numbers. x :l: "In Ihoea days there Were no passes." Mark.-kii:30: "Thla generation shall not pas." Judge. 111:28: "Suffer not a man to pea." Isaiah. xxxv;15: "None shall ever pass." Jiahtin, 1:1a: "The f eked shall no In Adland. . Against pale, lemon colored ekles. Shot through with flame of scarlet fire, I ee a purple city rise. The city of the Tvransing Lyre! j is vn.iens an advertise ; On every dome and roof and antra.' Tbe sun at evening1 and at mom Peep through a net of lordly height That advertises "Breakfast Corn" Or other cereal delight. The wind I made to blow a horn: . They harness! tip the moon by night! And tbey have rearranged the stars The constellations move about To advertise 6 cent cigar. .The? name of which the atars apell Vut. fThough this the floor of heaven mar. - ins pian a unique oeyond all doubt. They u-ve the mountain and the sea. They ue ther1ver and the plain To advertise their wares. Vou see. Their, only thought ia sordid gain. " It would not do for you and me- Such things would cauae us grief and pain! more pass. Number. xx:lt: "Thou fehalt not puss." "Jeremiah. v:J2: "Though they roar, yet thev nhall not pa." Jonah, :3: "So he ptd hie fare and went." - ' . An Ancient Kandwlcli : From Everybody' Magazine. A tourist "doing" one of the many old Inns of England had ordered tea and a sandwich. The waiter waa bor ing her with bis tiresome description of the historic connection of eafh piece of furniture.-and the legend sur rounding every article in the house. - - "So every thing in thla house has a legend connected with It." she le marktd When he paued. "Well, do tell me about t his -H(4nt old ham sand- ! wich." - --T The Sunday Journal The Great Home Newspaper, . consists' of -? , : Five news sections rep!et wltn -Illustrated feature x . U ; Illustrated magazine of quality.. Woman's section of i Are merit. Pictorial new supplement. Superb comic sectioa. . - - 5 Cents the Copy f.