THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, - PORTLAND, THURSDAY EVENING. JUNE 11.,: 191. THE JOURNAL C Y JACKSON .PtlHT auillabt r veiling -ic-xeept Knndart abt . eaary HuatUy mnrnlns at The Journal BatUJ ' tag. Broadway and Ysmt.111 ta. Portland. Or. IraimiBtwkM tbrouzb thai luetic sa , second elaaa miinr, :' j ' ' ULk'HUMi-Mato 7173; Hoi . A-Ju3t. All " vartninta reached br .he gnmbera. Tell lb f-racr arbat fetrtmeti ou want. hoJmln ft Kentnor Co.. Brunswick Bide trt nftb Ae. Yorbi 121 CoW oaa bids.: Cbletco. ; " ' ' ' aUarrtpttoa tertna br mU O" to au d r la ta United State i or Mexico; Lilt I- - -. . -:- On tavr?.?.S" W I Co (DrtoOl. I" ,6f SUNDAY- Ob ..... .(3.&0 t ODa meet. -2 DAILY A5D SfSDA? . One ar $7.80 I On itinnrh When You Go Away Jlave.The Journal sent to : your Summer address. The rose In fairest when tla budding new. And hope In brightest when It dawns from fears; The rose In sweetest washed with morning dew. And love is loveliest 'when embalmed in tears. Scott. YESTKIt DAY'S PARADE F iEVV pageants So beautiful as yesterday's parade are rarely staged. The horses, the floats, the decorated vehicles. the flowers and the allegorical figures were ( a living picture of dreamland. It was a vision of beauty. It was fairyland approxi mated. Literal millions of flowers were used in producing the picture. jt was two miles and a half of blos soms wrought into a vision of love liness. Even the spectacular electrical pageant of other days was not of more surpassing beauty. .Only the Rosebud parade of today appeals so strongly to the artistic sense and visualizes bo perfectly the handi work of Hhose who Know how to please the vision and awaken the realization of loveliness. The festival as it unfolds its fea tures is a real festival. Its spirit Is the festival spirit. Its purpose of good will, relaxation and open house is better realised and better executed. ..The city is a jollier host and the guests better entertained than ever before. More than ever before, It, 'June time, rose time, good time rofnt lii accumulation where all In groups of 100 collectively with sensser of proportion ia lost, where stmt physical examination at a rate all the harmonies of life are for-j based , on the age : of each, was gotten, and in which everything, j recommended to employers, v Mu- even to life, .is sacrificed for the i nlcipal : ownership and operation sake: of the almighty dollar? How would it fare with the world if the end and aim,; of all mankind were money, money, money? .Fit KB TEXT BOOKS F is A TYPICAL CASE R EE text books In the Tort- land schools, public and prl j vate, would present inextri cable complications. The system would be "unsanitary. Rocks used over and over again by different ' children would be a nWanV of spreading: disease. " It is a contingency from which the poor man's child should be protected as well ; as the rich man's child. It would deprive the pupil of the pleasure . of owning his books. The consciousness that it was a public book and not the child's own book would take away the pleasure and delicate, senti ment that attaches to ownership. The fact that it was an old book and had been used by others would lessen the enthusiasm that goes with; childhood's contemplation i&t its own possessions. It would raise up difficulties in the distribution of books and in determining when the used "books should be cast aside that would be attended with discouragements to pupils and insuperable complexi ties for the teachers.. It would con vert ;the schools intoa riot of pro tents, complaints, accusations and disputes. It i would not be, as some think, the shifting of the burden of pro viding the books upon the rich. It would not be the so-called "tax payers" who. would pay all the bills. On the contrary, the rent payers rand small homeowners and the av erage men would come in for a full share of the burden. As1 taxes increase through such enterprises as free text books, the landlord simply adds tho-sum to his rents and collects the amount indirectly from hia 'tenant. The man in the rented house always pays the landlord's taxes when he pays the rent. - The wealthy have the power and know the ways of compelling aver age men to bear a large part of the cost of government. Poor people who vote for free text books will simply vote an added public burden on themselves and force upon their children the use qr books that are disease breeders. I yl-ava t4Ai1a,a1 fn Ka nnvkn And detrimental to the welfare of the community. On the subject of industrial training it was recommended that special and general training from the ; elementary to the highest stages should be a continuing ef fort as a duty to employes, stock holders and- the public. It was also suggested that attendance on training schools should be within the employer's and not the em ploye's time. The insistence by such a body that electric lighting should be on the basis of a monopoly will chal lenge attention. The acknowledg ment by the same body that there schooli 6noul De attendant public regu lation is significant. t The two proposals will awaken in the minds of many a query of whether or not the program does not point to ultimate public own ership. missionary at Tientsin, A FEW SMILES London says: Sanitation in unknown. Throughout the narrow" densely crowded streets ; ana courts of the city Is a moat, .the) A .traveler on a south, of England convenient receptacle of all manner j railway recently asked the guard of abominations, emptied once a year j whether, considering the apeed of the juv &v luu Kasun wnen mux umm train, . he might ' oe can do aone ty tne process; me ieim allowed to alight and PERTINENT COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF BMAlali CHANGE r WHEN LAW IS AN ASS A A STORY that would have sup plied an excellent plot .for a Zola was told the other day before the-United States In dustrial Commissioners, who are in vestigating social conditions in New 'York City. Mrs. Mary Minora, not yet fif teen years old, clasping a six- nionths-old child to her-breast, re lated how she supportsd her hus band and child by working thirteen hours a day in her tenement rooms, doing finishing work on clothing. Some days she earns as much as sixty cents. She. said she had begun to do finishing work when" she was ten years old. Her husband and her father have both been out of work lor nine months. The women, of the family sup port them. Mrs. Minora's mother earns eighty cents a day. "We unfit! to jfet more money, over dollar a- day," said the child wife. "But now we don't eet so much for niary months. All of a sudden they tell us they . can't' pay so much and When we say, 'Why notr they say never mind, take the work or .leave it, we 'don't care. Other women' want it, If we don't. We take it." Mary and her parents came from 81clly ten years ago. When asked if she ever went to Coney Island, Central Park or the country for re creation, Mary answered: What do you take me for? I never fro way from New York. I don't go out nil day, becaufc 1 must work, and t nlKht, too, and 1 am too tired me irimnrrs -nre aone. X es, 1 W-ork all day Sunday.-too. A dramatic scene was enacted when the youthful mother was , tlven her $2 witness fee. ' She pressed her baby closer to her breast and smilingly dangled the money before it eyes. As 6he left the room a tense silence pre vailed. The case or Mary Minora is typ ical of the conditions which the omnitsKion was authorized by Con gress to investigate for the pur pose of determining the underlying causes of social unrest. It ia a dazzling example" of tenement sweat shop work. TT77 M A SALEM1TE REUNION ANY thousands of ex-Salem- ites are now residents of Portland, and next Satur day arternoon they are to fraternize In a basket picnic at the Oaks. It is to be a sort of family re union. From the days of Auld Lang Syne to the present, an un usual spirit of kindly relation has permeated the social atmosphere of Salem. From generation to gener ation It survived and radiated and felicitated, in spite of the pres ence of-the penitentiary, the insane asylum and the legislature. The political conflicts, the local acerbities, and the divisions of sen timent incident to all communi ties never seemed to extin guish the social friendships and amiable relations among the. people ot tne capital city. It has tended to make- Salemites wherever they meet or under whatever circum stances they are grouped, a people of mutual sympathies and neigh borly impulses. The gathering of the' Salem clans next Saturday afternoon, will be u uccauion tor an outpourins of LEGAL technicality is raised In the circuit court at Oregon City in the case of the men who are to be tried for con ducting the Friars' club. The technicality is to be used in case of conviction as a basis for an appeal to the supreme court. It is raised on the ground that Governor West first closed the place by martial law and then or dered an investigation. ; The Incident Illustrates one phase of why laws so often fail of enforcement. There is always a lawyer around with a technicality to protect such institutions as the Friar's Club. The technicality is injected into the case at the psy chological moment and its effect Is to often free the guilty. The process Is easy because in many courts, more attention Is paid Mo technicalities and high precedents than to the facts and justice. As Charles Carey, a prom inent Portland lawyer once said to an assemblage of lawyers: Under our code an elaborate sys tem of technical rules of pleading has grown up. Much time is wasted upon - demurrers and motiolis which are filed ln nearly every suit. Tech nical rules " which confine parties to definite issues are obstructions to ultimate Justice. Courts and lawyers now make justice a secondary con sideration. They proceed on the theory that the rules must be ad hered to, even though the result is to bring1 victory to the party who ought not to win, and they have built up fine theories of the law under which precedent ' must be followed to 'ab surd conclusions. . That is why President Taftsays "the administration of our criminal law is a disgrace." It is because civil authorities have not effectively dealt with Friar's clubs and Copperfields that Governor West used guardsmen. He did it because lawyers have often made the law an ass. pools, whose stench fills the air during the summer heat; and the myriads of graves, many of them with half burled coffins, upon the neighboring plains these and the like are the surroundings of a popu lation among which typhus and other Infectious diseases : are, of course. epidemie, but which has never known anything better.! . , Rev. W. P. Chalfant, an Ameri can missionary, says: In China, sanitation is simply Ig nored; what with filthy personal hab its, the absence of practical sewerage conditions, open cesspools and lack of quarantine measures against Infec tion, the wonder ia that any China men survive. When eggs produced under such conditions .are offered for sale in Portland, the consumer should be given a chance to know what he is buying. The law should bo re quire, it. The penalty for viola tions should be a term on the rock-pile. gather some flowers, The guard, ; how ever, had heard It be fore, and replied that flowers were not yet out, it being early In the year. . But the passenger was quite unabashed. "It's all right, guard." said he; "I've got a few packets of seeds!" Bom men are unable to believe a word they say. ' ' - IV It takes a very wise woman to lis ten when she can't talk. Femininity Is one of the problems that scientists cannot solve. A poor workman always considers himself superior to his Job. Poverty Is a crime only when It pro vides one with prison fare. Women can see through each other and yet they are not all slender. Cupid Is wise. lie leads the couple to the -altar and then quits the game From the fruit dealer we get our "What's Alibert do- Jams and from the wet goods dealer Two men who had formerly lived in the Eame town met after a number ot years and entered into conversation. "Did all your boys turn out well, Jim?" askedl one of them. "Yes. Indeed they did." Letters From the People (Communication aent to The journal for publication in this department should be writ ten on only one cld ot the paper, anould not exceed K00 words in lengab and must be ac companied by tb name and addrera of the sender. If the writer doea not desire to hays the name published, he should so state.) "Discussion is the greatest of all reform ers. It rationalises everything it touches. It robs principles of all false sanctity and throws them back on their reasontbleneas. If they haye no reasonableness, it ruthlessly crushes them out of existence and sets up its own conclusions in their stead." Woodrow Wilson. ing." "He's. trying to dis cover a new germ," replied the father. "And Bob?" "Oh, Bob Is trying his hand at a newspaper an' beln editor," was the old gentleman's reply. "And Charlie what's he at?" "He's an actor. All the time talkln' about elevatln' the stage." "Andswhat are you doing, Jim. now that all your boys 'are away?" asked the old friend. "Well," answered the old man, "I'm a-supportin' of AJbert an' Bob, an' Charlie." National Monthly. we get our Jlmjams. Many a man makes a strenuous .ef fort to recognise his duty so that he will be in a position to dodge tt. When an American heiress declines to tie up with a nobleman It may be that she considers herself too rich for his blood. Better a woman with rosy cheeks than a men with a rosy nose. OREGON SIDELIGHTS IN EARLIER DAYS By FreiJ Ixtckley. Rnsebura- has taken advanced rrotind to the cleanup movement, with an ordi ance to enforce -weed cutting under penalty of a city Hen on neglected property." ' Gresham'a hard surface street 1m- ? movements are up in the air, accord -ng to the Outlook, which says there Is a strong prortanimy that nothing win re done tnis year toward improving them. Baker Democrat: There was no need for a Baker county wool sales date this year. Producer and buyer got together earlier than the date and the product was sold at a top notch price. a The Albany school board Is consider ing the adoption of the "Junior hlKh school plan.' and has decided the high school building quextion. In favor of a structure to cost not over 150.000 and to be completed by September 1, 1915. ' In comollmeiitary mood, the Kugene Ouard savs Portland with Its roses "is this week the cynosure of all loyal Oregon eyes," and that only the flag Itself "will be more conspicuous at the Run Francisco fair than that piece of Oregon fir." a "The new rule adopted by three of the four banks In this city to close at noon Saturdays," says the Aatorlan. "Is an excellent one; it brings the husiness here to a modern level with the syg Do you know how the dandelion came to Oregont When the pioneers came to the Wil lamette valley In the early '40s thert was no red clover or white clover or. dandelions or many other plants and weeds and flowers which we now see on all sides. Dr. Terry Prettymnn, one of, Port land's rioneer physicians, is the god father of the dandelion in Oregon, lie was born In 1796 In Delaware, and ar- , rived on Christmas day, 1S25. to a native daughter of Delaware. At Bal-' ttmore there was a medical college called the Botanic Medical nrhooL Here he studied medicine and became a botanical doctor, whose only med icines were made of herbs and barks and plants, in 139 he moved to Mis souri and In the spring of 1S47 he with his family started for Orecon. He took tip a donation land claim in what is now Kast Portland and built a log cabin at what is now the head of Hawthorne avenue. He needed dandelions In the practice of his pro fession, but was unable to find any. After a year's unsuccessful search lie sent back to Missouri and secure-. 1 some seed, which he planted in his garden and carefully tended. How X"??" .irS""rt-1". .ey throve Is attested 'by march Astoria has started.'' tn WAR AND THE MASSES Sees Ruin in Prohibition. Gervais, Or., June 9. To the Editor of The Journal The fur is flying up the country. Every farmer is a raging lion, and his wife is as mad as a wet hen. They are awakening to the fact that lamb-like prohibition is a wolf in sheep's clothing, seeking whom it may devour. The people whom the i hop growers thought Christian are publicly announcing their plans for destruction. Some ministers are egging them on. The same was true of the south. They say we of the north are to have our property confiscated as was that south. Our united north and south will whip back into line the - seven southern and two northern prohibition states that have seceded from our union. They are sneak thieves, prof iting by the sale of their wheat, corn and potatoes for liquor, the same as other states, locally robbing of reve nues and establishing lawless blind pigs. Kansas sells her corn for Bour bon whiskey, while she slurs Oregon hopgrowers who sell hops for beer. Nation wide prohibition is a dreadful calamity. It Is worse than, war. Weigh every word I Bay. It undermines the foundation of existence. It is the worst robbery the world ever knew. If pro hibition succeeds it will confiscate 700,000,000 of California property. Oregon has 2000 hopgrowers, with $25,- 000,000 capital invested, crop value 5,000,000 a year, $55,000,000 of eastern and foreign money paid to hopgrowers and to labor and hopplckers. , All this will be cut off. Oregon's 4000 acres of loganberries, with its world's record for fruit, the great eastern Oregon grain fields, our vast acreage of po tatoes, 114,500,000 bushels of grain and 44,800,000 gallons of molasses used for liquor and $2,000,000,000 spent for i i loud anl foolish I r 1 I larks during a I f t part of thel' ?r II II . As the train fTVtf ed Hanwell Lu- fT I asylum he re-i-.sL 1 For a Dry Oregon. Hood River, June 10. To the Editor of The Journal We vote for a dry liquor, an estimated $24,000,000,000 j Oregon because we know the "liquor lions from corporations and Individuals iraiiic" is wrong because we have sub- m order to ngnten tne Durams oi uo T MONEY, MONEY it-jiruKAKiLl deserting treat ment by a specialist for the cancer in his jaw, a rich New Yorker has come to Spokane to fight a divorce suit brought by a ib wire. . The- specialist protested, but the patient was so much concerned with saving his property that he Imperils his life in abandoning for the. time, the radium treatment from which a cure was hoped for, The inroads of the disease on his 'Jaw and throat are such that his voice was husky and his . answers sometimes Inaudible while civine testimony. v ' ' A heavy owner of property in New York and Spokane, what is the commercialized state of mind In a man who risks his life to pre vent the woman who probably itaared "with him the burdens of accumulation,', from getting , a por tion of the property ? As . men grow richer is 'there a FOR WOMAN SUFFRAGE D EVBLOPMENTS yesterday at the biennial session of the General Federation of Wo men's Clubs at Chicago In dicate that the federation will give an Indorsement to woman suffrage. This prediction is based on the fact that a disposition was shown by a majority of the delegates not to limit the general discussion of any topic. Opposition to .the ballot 'for wo men comes principally from the Southern delegates. They are the only obstacle in the way of the federation's general indorsement. They are in the minority, however, since thirty-four of the States rep resented hav either arlnntri full good humor, rollicking fun, flow ! or partial suffrage for women, or world wide production and labor all goes down beneath the prohibition hammer. Prohibiting hops cripples the cotton. twine, sulphur, burlap, hop and grain sack markets. Our world's production is wisely bal anced now. Let it alone. of soul, an unbottling of wit and tne renewal of friendships a gen eration oid. There will be a calling back of the eniaodes anri recollections of other davs. a restoration of figures almost for gotten in the mists of passing time uu a aengnttul re-baptism of old associations in a pleasing reunion of the present with the past. ELECTRICIAN'S STANDARDS T A ITS convention bi cently in Philadelphia, the National Electric Light As sociation outlined for ft i a 000 members the stand of the as sociation upon questions of corporation-policy, general relations with the employes of the industry andthe public at large. , Gratification was exnrpRRAri thot so little conflict exists between the views or tne association and those of the various public service com missions. In this regard it is reported: We have held rnn,t.i..ti.. .y, UP . trii en! have made some advance In that direction It is Interesting to recall that the suffrage question, which prom ises to be the absorbing issue of the present convention was rarely heard of when the federation was organized twenty-two years ago The suffragist of that day was an entirely different person from the present type. Club women in the beginning did not care for suf frage but the clubs have educated them continually. The woman of today who is the best suffragist is a trained club worker. Twenty-two years ago the feder ation confined itself to club life and management. Today it dis cusses all public activities of in terest to women. CHINESE EGGS I N NO market place in Portland Is there a sign announcing that Chinese eggs are on sale. It is nevertheless the fact that Chinese eegs are beina sold - " ' 3 - v"-vn ivai rii i ,. se eentrai stations is The fact that no dealer offers them meaning ot th. ZV7 th bst as Chinese eggs is proof that the oly privately owned and operated T hn t ! consumer is buying them as fresh nminvin nuKii. ' i . , . . . American eggs, a reason ior tne secrecy is that consumers would not be likely to buy Chinese eggs at any price. The unsanitary con ditions under which Chinese eggs are produced are the chief reason It is also a reason why no dealer should be permitted to sell Chinese eggs without full knowledge on the part of the consumer as to what he is buying. , i It is said that chickens are the scavengers of China. In the half closed graves, according to Dr. Den- Prom the Chicago Record Herald. Russia has had a series of prosper- and annoyed I ous years wnicn writers on wona pon tics are celebrating as if tne. soie od Ject of production were war. There has been a remarkable growth in the ordinary revenues of the country, but revenue, of course, implies taxation, and a large part of what is taken out of production by taxation is going to the military account. From 1907 to 1913 the military and naval expendi tures increased by rfearly $170,000. 000. Moreover, It Is said that the an nual expenditures henceforward should exceed 100,000,000 pounds, which is but little less than $500,000,000. In one world politics article we are told of a growing estrangement be- will show that they realize that there tween Russia and Germany and there must be a constant educational, policy is a long dissertation on the relative carried out in order to maintain their strength of the two countries. Why business. In our great cities the they should fight each other is not policy of trade expansion that has been made clear, but there Is a painful ef carried out by the breweries has con- fort to explain. The writer elaborates sisted largely in a campaign of mis- on the . following: "The Russians education of the immigrant and the could make excellent usa of the east boys and girls. em provinces of Germany, and of the We don't need to constantly educate harbors of Koenigsberg and Dantzlg. people in orde to maintain the desire Germany, on the other hand, woald not for bread, meat or other necessaries, desire to acquire part of Russian Po- That is only true in the case of some- land, for she has already more Poles In a Great Western railway car riage, on the way up to London, a youth had disturbed tne other passengers by rem grea journey. pass natic marked: "I often think how nice the asylum looks from the railway." "Some day," growled an old gentle- i man, "you .will probably have occa sion to remark bow nice the railway looks from the asylum." who own them. He does not Bee how the citizens of the conquering notion are benefited by the extension of their country's boundaries. They do not take the lands and the conquered peo ple do not become their slaves. But it seems that there is a diplomacy which stands behind the exporter of capital and "the struggle for a balance of power lias its motive and its im petus largely In this singular modern 'relationship between the state and fi nance." War, then, is an agency for the pro motion of the export o'f capital. The Industrial classes pay taxes In hun dreds of millions In order that finan cial speculations may be made by the promoters and gambling syndicates, with the backing of big armies and navies. This may not be far from the truth, but there is no apparent reason why it should arouse the taxpayers to a frenzy of enthusiasm. than she wants. On the other hand, she could, no doubt, make excellent use of the Baltic provinces of Russia." But what is meant by "the Russians" In the firBt case and by "Germany" in the second? thing for which there is no natural de mand. Alcoholic drinks come in this class. Professor Partridge, Ph. D. (Yale), made extensive lnvestigaticms of ths habits and conditions of alcoholics. H investigated hundreds of cases In prisons and hospitals for Inebriates. I Another authority on world politics The great majority testified that as questions the gain to be derived from soon as they were put under conditions seising occupied lands and the people where they knew they could not get liquor the appetite left them. But as soon as .they were released and saw saloons it returned. This makes psychologists believe that the alco holic appetite is pyschic rather than physical. J. K. NEAL, The hard working people of one In dustrial nation have 'more in common with their brethren of another Indus trial nation than they have with the promoters and the syndicates and the diplomatists. They could not displace their brethren if they would by a shifting of boundaries. And their In cidental gains by capitalistic ventures among inferior races in thinly popu lated countries are negligible by com parison with their war burdens. Where do the masses come in on this war game? How is it to their in terest that the nations should always millions 6f their smiling golden faces seen in every lawn and vacant lot. ev ery country lun.; and woodland path throughout the valley. In talking with his son. H. W. Preat tyman, a day or two ago. he told me many interesting facts about his father. "I have been In Oregon for the past 7 years," said Mr. Prettyman. "I was 8 years old when we started for Oretron in the .spring of 1847. "There were nearly 6000 Immigrants on the rond in 1 & 4 7. so grass was short. Our wagon train stopped at Waillatpu to rest a few days, and whfle wo were there Dr. Whitman hired some of our number to stay and' work for him. Among others were MIms Bewley and her brother, Crock ett Bewley. He was o help at car penter work and Miss Bewley was to teach. Yon know what happened with in a few weeks. Dr. and Mrs. Whit man and many of the others with them were murdered. Miss Bewley was taken to the lodge of Five Crows, where she stayed till ransomed by Peter Skeen Ogdeu. the chief factor of the Hudson's Bay company, who rescued- all of the survivors of the Whit man party and brought them down the Columbia In batteaux to Van couver. Several years later I atood beside Miss Bewley at Oregon City and watched SheriTf Joe Meek hang five of the murderers Tilonkaikt, Tama has, Klokamas. Isaiacholakis and Kla masumpkin. "When we got to Oregon In the fall of 1847 father started to look the country over for a good location. Il went up tb the Puget sound country, but aTter looking the whole country over for nearly two years he selected Portland, as he thought It was apt to ACTUAL SHIFTING OF COUNTRY'S WEALTH By John M. Oskison. In this country we do not merely talk about taking from the rich -and giving it to the less fortunate; we actually do It. For Instance, through recent Income tax laws we have taken some & mil stantial proof that most of the wretch edness experienced by the people can be traced to the licensed grogshop. What makes the arraignment against prohibition so lame is the fact that our enemies are continually ignoring the If all the world were a saloon, pro- re&l objects for which we are striving. hibition Is worse. The law is to blame, and not the saloon! Vote wet, for en forced law, order and temperance-. ELLA M. FINNEY. The Scriptures and Drink. Portland, June 9. To the Editor of The Journal While Mr. GolJapp In his letter In The Journal, June 4, takes exceptions to some of my scripture There is nothing which prohibits bet ter than prohibition and with the necessary weapons placed in the hands of its friends the law will be enforced. One writer says if prohibition is right w'e would have had it long ago. We whose Incomes were smaller; reduction In tariff ' rates has helped to redis tribute this burden. Again, the parcel post law has turned over to the people millions of profit, formerly earned by the express companies and paid out in dividends to owners of their stock. Through state laws, the public serv ice corporations, street railways, gas and electric lighting companies, wa ter and power companies have been compelled to reduce rates and thus di vert from stock and bona noiaers agitation which preceded the abolition of slavery. The Louisiana lottery flour ished for years before it was subdued, and so with all great evils. must be conceded I made no Btatement would vote for the exie?mi- , u UU1"""" W4 l"c ' nation of the saloon not one would of abstinence that were commanded , liye for 24 hour8. The church ha8 been be examined, and dare say that others have not forgotten the long period of earnings which they used to count on These earnings mount Into the millions every year. Since the Interstate commerce torn- ha arraved aealnst one another aa if they were angry dogs spoiling for a ! be tne hea.l or navigation on tne river. flsht? He took up a donation land claim three miles back trom tne river on m? east side. He cut a trail from Uncle Jimmy Stevens' ferry to his claim. He died on March 27, 1S72. and m.v mother died, about two years later, on Dec. 26, 1874. There were 10 children In our family, but when mother died only four were alive. Father sold part of his place for $:r0 an acre. The rest was divided at mother's death be- ' tween the four of us. My brothers sold their shares oT the .C6tatt when the value had pone up to $500 n acre. 1 kept mine 1 had , scree, wnicli 1 mission was given the power, in 1906, to fix rates on the railroads there has been a shrinkage of over three bil lions In the market value of railroad securities. As one railroad operator points out, this shrinkage amount td more than the assessed valuation of real and personal property, lnclud inr public service corporations. In the ! ."Tr: C0am"-Bi" kept arm I have sold most of It at a ana, x 1 ' 1 1 1 1 (i, uruiia biiu ouuiii uiru- , Una combined. This shrinkage, due. the I railroad people say, to the govern- ii'tm s control over raiea, inn lin-aui 1 ... ... 1 ., ,.....-, r tv.l u- loss principally to moneyed Investors. ! in I Ka.-ha.-l undcrvott of loU Shippers and passengers have been the;counl- 1 Hjriui good price. 1 still own rour acres 01 the orielnal claim at Kast Fifty-fifth nowadays have it easief than my father did. 1 have known mm to ride clear down 1 to Roseburg on horseback to attend a patient."" The Ragtime Miise references hearing on drunkenness it crclse control of an Inherent right of the people. TVint t o n v attemnt on. th nart of I expected the references to , sieeping but now js waking up to its the state to convey title would only act great power. If 40 years ago it had I as a revocable permit, good oniy until Mr. Goldapp the scripture facta that he mentions. My remarks about and references to abstinence were directly in reply to Mr. Yates, refuting his assertion that the Bible 'nowhere" commanded It. who did so found just as readily 'as did j ha(1 the Bplr'lt of progression that has repealed. And yet we have newspa- actuated the W. C. T. U. there would pers and courts, gravely stating that not have been so much need of that "undisputed title held by upland claim great organization which has grown to ants for 60 years cannot now be dla b a power in the country and will turbed." x continue to be until we have a genera- t think you err In quoting the act of i Lion or cican ana Dure citizens, xi re-1,07.1 n.v ...... , v. The references to abstinence were not ; quires years to repair religious as well Btate hall Bubmerged land, on the tZTlXri ..,,! vw, m, t I as P""ci" D'uu"t . Willamette," without also quoting with -....t.li r, in. a jl j vv e una uuaer 1.11c rulings 01 uui ou- disagree with some of Mr. Goldapp's preme court that the saloon has no Inherent right to live, because it 4s an institution which defies and destroys - . . . 1 . 1. 1 I " ana renaers inoo who ..aB . nun18 constitutional law Is Inalienable state cannot abdicate it. It statements and submit proof and comment. His contention that the Bible "never In a single instance condemns drink ing" cannot be sustained, as Is shown ly two of my references. Proverbs mane influence. 31:4-5 reads: "It is not for kings to" drink wine, nor for princes strong drink: lest they drink, and forget the law, and pervert the Judgment of any of the afflicted." Isaiah 6:22, 23 (R. V.) reads: "Woe unto them that are to do with it in the matter of its sup port, indifferent as to moral and hu- JULIA A. HUNT. Waterfront Acts Examined. Banks, Or., June 10. To the Editor of The Journal I am glad to see that y?u "I givillS,due ?wbU5,1,t!r!? able to defeat the public's Just and le- gal claims, as they have been secured it the subjection to publio use for com merce and navigation as decided by our courts (the recent dock decision excepted), and which by American con- The can give an adjacent owner title good against other private users, bat not good Lgalnst the public. It is only by what appears to be a conspiracy to suppress this side of the law, that Oregon claimants nave been of 1878 repealing the alleged water- mighty to drink wine, and men of ! wfbnt grant of 1874. I have been ding strength to mingle strong drink; that; ing that repeal Into the ears of legls Justify the wicked for a bribe, and j lators. courts, state and city officials take away the righteousness of the j and the public now for two years, righteous from him!" I w.hiie bv others It has been Ignored. These texts say "drink," not "drunk- j in my brief flied with the legislative MllMiH." Is tha.t rlp.lr? T Vl a rA lu 1 1. P la., cA.alAn havlnv think It will be argued that drunken-j the matter in charge, and with the su- W. and the imuienaDuuy or tne states nesa is implied, since no king, prince i preme court and published in The u,e n navigable waters up to ordin or court of ficial .that had been drink- j journal, I gave seven reasons why the high water mark, the repeal of 18, S In other states Including; California, and Washington. The act of 1874 having been repealed, and the courts having unanimously, up to 1913. held that there is no land in Portland harbor to which It could ap- ber.eficiaries. Investors who go on the theory that the rich are in control and that their Investments will always be safe guarded by the controlling rich would do well to study the history of stocks and bonds of the companies affected bv 1Hsl!it. nn An a nntlon wr am surposed to worship the dollar, but In It IKiesn't Kem Right. practice our lawmakers respect It less It r(.any la very droll; than anything else ! Ten miles of roadway smooth and 1 flat Beneath our flying car may roll, and a good husband, but he does not I N() wor)j r praise; at last, a hole make much money. He hasn't the ed-i Aha: Oho! We notice that! ucation she has, so she helps, and by ! so doing her children can have a few I Through fifty years of married Ufa of the pleasures of life, such as music, j A pair may live without a "pat; whlrh ,ha wa Henlori Hoe mnnov nil scarcely IOOK Hi " goes to buy a home and for the up keep of that horn. I know two single women who teach and when school closes they have not a cent. It is all spent for dresa and theatres. They never go to school to learn how to be better teachers or to progress In their calling. Which uses the money to the best advantage the mother trying to rear two good citizens, or the frivolous girls? In conclusion. I believe a mother comes as near knowing the child-heart and child-need as some single women, A MOTHER. Ing sufficiently to become -drunken act of 1874 was invalid. would be physically able to sit In judg-! 1. it was an amendment to the act ment. it is made plain that wine and I for the sale of swamp and tide lands. strong arink responsibility. ment, relieve mm of his conscience tide nor swamp lands. and cloud his sense of right doing. 2. The alleged grant not contained In the second quotation strong men in the title to the act. and mighty men are specified. Will 1 3. The alleged gTant. applying to the Taw, while the acts or 1874-6 are killed utterly, and can not be reenacted will disqualify a man forlour courts have already correctly held the supreme court and the adjacent . destroy his good judg- j that the shores of the harbor ar, not owners claim ot title died with those 11 1JUUUC Property to render service, it must be regu lated by some public authority. Anv effort to establish or continue an un regulated monopoly would not be in accord with the trend of, public opin ion. I Monopoly in public service can only be justified on the ground that some advantages accrue therefrom to the public The necessity of fair rates and satisfactory service to the public is 'emphasized. With regard to regulation and control of public service companies by statute the association went on it-vuiu at, nrm m the belief that if nis, a Chinese missionary, they such companies are to be con- have access to dead human bodies, trolled they are entitled to look, to They feed from open cesspools in the state for protection from com- which is the filth from the human petition. jbody and from all other-sources of Industrial insurance of employes, ' pollution. Rev. Jonathan Lees, someone contend that the weak are exempted from the effect of strong drink? The result Is just as far reaching. Let the strong and the mighty, either in mind or body, place strong drink among their habits and they will be weakened in the practice in addition to laying themselves liable to an ultimate life of drunkenness, ' R. M. SPEKLMON. The Appetite' for Liquor. Buena Vista, Or., June J.--To the Editor of The Journal Another word In regard to the "demand and supply" contention: Even though it is ad mitted that there Is no "inherent"" de sire in humanity for intoxicants, It may be said that anyhow we find many people today with the appetite, re gardless of how they acquired it, and that prohibition will not work because Ot this fact in other words, tht the present demand calls for a supply. 'Mr, Newman in hia letter distinctly im plied that the saloons exist today, be cause there Is a demand for liquors. Even- this is only partly true. An ex amination of the utterances of those at the head of the great distillery and brewery organizations in this country certain rivers only. Is dlacrlmatory and class legislation In that'll seeks to con fer special favora upon arbitrarily se lected beneficiaries. 4. The land held conveyed Is nav igable water needed for commerce and navigation, consequently Inalienable under federal law and the state consti tution. acts. You concede too much-by admitting that private title has been perfected under these dead acts to any part of our harbor. The court's decision may be supreme on the application of an existing act, but it certainly can not enact a law nor reenact a repealed and mummified one. J. B. ZIEGLER. A Mother Writes of Teachers. Portland. June 10. To the Editor of The Journal Why all this .discus- 6 The state a title is only as sorer- sion regaruing in eiuyvyuicHi. ui mr- eign trustee for the people. It has no rd teachers in our schools? Do the fee aimple title to convey. schools exist for the pupils, or for, the 6. The act was repealed in 1878. teachers?- Must we retain single probacy in consistence with the In- WOmL. h0WeV,1 nJ5 V"-' ferpretaVn of the law by the Oregon rrytenrernale:7oVa,,Atrue courts. 7. Contrary to public policy to make a free grant of public property which can be beneficially used by the pub lic. In the dock decision of last sum mer reversing the Oregon law as es tablished up to that time, . the court teachers, whether married or single? Why can't we adopt a broad policy, as many eastern cities have, and get tha nes t and noblest teachers. I know a aingle teacher who boasts that there ia no God, and ridicules ail religions, yet she teaches year after year. How many mothers want tneir quotes the Chicago water front cases, J children under such teachers? very analogous to our own, but omits one teacher wrote that married to quote that decision that a re- teachers, teach only for "pin morwy." epeal of a similar legislative grant Now that is unjust and untrue, about in Iillinois was upheld by the some, at least, whom I know. One of United States supreme court as a my friends who ia a teacher, is the no-valid- exercise of a ; sovereign and blest, truest of women, and does her Inalienable duty of the state, to ex-'work well. Sh haa two little children Alcohol and Crime. Nchalem, Or., June 8. To the Editor of Th Journal If those who are as serting that alcohol causes murder want to find the real cause for this crime against society let them stop guessing and get down to the real facts. Let them follow their dally paper, clip out the first hundred mur ders reported and list the causes, and they will find that no more than two per cent or the murders are due to alcohol in any shape, and one of those two will have been committed In dry territory. I have tried this for a long time; examined a few more than 900 mur ders so report-d and have never found more than two per cent. The rela tions between man and woman, loye and Jealousy, have caused more than 57 per cent and a good percentage of the others are due to similar causes In. which liquor has no part. The same will apply to cases of suicide. The percentage In divorces Is some greater, but the state of Maine shows a ereatr-r percentage of divorces for Intoxication tha any license atate In the Union. A little investigation for oneself In these matters will put a quietus upon the rabid and groundless assertions of those who are blindly seeking to force others into tbelr narrow conception of morality by legislation. SAM J. COTTON. But let there show a shade of strife Aha! Oho! We notice that! Our neighbor drudges day by d ay At evening stnoxes within Ma rial. He's but a dismal dog. we say; He has a fight and rtina away Aha! Oho! We notice thatl Now let some diamond artist pound The pill .300 with hia bat Or swing a winning homer round, Sav once a week oh. Joyful sound. Aha! Oho! We notice that! In Vaseball one good. PJn clever play r the mat; Ti,.. t, in life'' Oh. nav! We boost the Jinx the livelong day Aha! Oho! We notle that. Major Albee'a "Ticket." Astoria, Or., June 9. To the Editor of The Journal On what ticket was Mayor Albee elected mayor of Port land? Kindly answer through The Journal. A. GRESHAM. Under the preferential system em ployed in that election, the names Of all candidates for mayor were printed In one list, with no designation what ever to Indicate partisanship. Under the New Law. From the Christian Register. "Miss Frocks haa bought a blrdlesa hat." said Mrs; Cuinso. "It might be called an audobonnet, might U notr' asked Mrs. Cawkar. y . Khudou of Twl light. Bv Delia Kmerald Jewell. Sweet shadows of twilight! How ca'yi your repose! -How bl.st to the toiler thla hour f release. While the dewdmp fall soft in the h.-art of the rose And -vesper Is heard, with Its whla- pT of pfure. As round us the many hued halo is shed. The . bright, fleeting momenta lend tribute to this. How dear are the living! How neat are the dead! Earth seems like a bower In the Harden of Bliss. We look through Ihe twilight for thoae we have lost; Praro broods In all heart as day changes to night: And happy in all of life's battles wa'va crossed. Sweet peace comes at last, with her garland of while. y Sweet shadows of twilight! How dear la your thrill! What tee:it!f'il thoughts you have brought us untold; When the shadows have turned, and the evening grows still. There is youth in our hearts which can never grow old. Grants Pass. Or.. June . 1J14. . ' -y. The Sunday Journal The Great Home Newspaper, consists ot Five news sections replete wlta Illustrated feature . Illustrated magazine of quality. Woman's section of rare merle Plctorif.i news supplement. Superb comic section. 5 Cents the Copy ; K