THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND. WEDNESDAY EVENING . JUNE ' 17, 1914. -THE JOURNAL TRYING TO BLOCK THE WILSON PROGRAM . . - I ........ . - i" i ' i i w C . JACKBOX flMMl rjr evaaluc icept Monday and rrwrr Honday niomlnv at ill journal raua- las. Bnnartwy and YaaattU Mat, I'ortUad.Or. laiara at tbe pvatvlflo at fordaaS. O-. Cot wasaailaaluB Utrougb tfce . utl . cosd elaaa Biattar.' la.WCfHO.NKS Main TIM; Hal 9. All J 4DaBtnU raaebad by ibaae aumbara. Tali a , tlto atxratar what dapartagast r want. - 2 ttlU4.N AUVKHTUlKtt fcKfUMtlCWJATlVIt Dralamln A Kmnir r Mruaawteh Bkls. . fU fifth A.. H Vork; ISIS Pe"f lag.. Cbieactt. SelMcrlitlua lariua by malJ to any . aa uw Haifa state or Mauw. a - DAILY Ose j..,...5.ou i On sxMtb. -90 ? SUNDAY ! Os nw.; $2.30 I One moeth.. -23 DAILY AMD SCKDAY ! Oae ...... .17.30 L One Stoat.......! . ' - ' When You Go Away : '-llave The Journal sent to ,:your Summer address. My advlcs Is to consult the Uvea of other men as we would -A looking glass, and from tlienee fetch examples for our own Imitation. 63- VP IV A BALLOON T i HERB; are desperate efforts to stop President Wilson's legis lative program. ' . A Detroit automobile manufacturer sent out letters advising that newspapers friendly to" the Wilson administration be boy cotted by advertisers. - Illuminating facts respecting his action are pre sented in an article from the New York World on this page. Monday, President Wilson made disclosures on the subject. He presented copies of letters and telegrams sent out by trusts and their agents protesting against further progressive legislation. The recipients were advised ' to wire the president, , the senators, con gressmen and other figures of government urging adjournment of Congress without enactment of the anti-trust blllsj A statement in one letter is significant. It says: ;':- - ' - 'i Granting the petition of the Eastern railroads for a five per cent Increase in freight rates will do more for 'the prosperity and development of the country than all legislation against unlawful restraint of trade and monopoly. - " " - . ?." The incident recalls La Follette's exposure of the methods used by the railroads to influence public sentiment in favor of a rate increase. He presented to the senate letters, telegrams, petitions, newspaper editorials and news articles covering over 300- pages of this Congressional Record, all bent on making public sentiment for the rate increase. They incidentally showed that a mournful propor tion of the newspapers of the country are under railroad guidance, or subject to railroad Influence. There is not, the slightest doubt that an exactly similar propa ganda is being; directed against President Wilson's legislative program. Every influence known to special privilege which has long fat tened upon governmental favors, is being directed against the presi dent, ; against members of the senate, house and other officials. It is a concerted movement aided and abetted by standpat newspapers and standpat politicians in every part of the country. President Wilson boldly charges that In their desire to stop .his legislative program, the big corporations and combines are deliber ately trying to depress business conditions. In the letters sent out they advise, correspondents to -harp in their letters to the president about hard times and to have Congress adjourn so no more men will be "thrown idle." The president's exposures- direct attention, to the same kind of a cry that has been raised by standpat leaders in Oregon. They are cuckooing here the exact warwhoops raised by the trusts- and privi leged corporations. All there is of the president's anti-trust legislation is a bill for a trade commission which shall have power to investigate the busi ness of big corporations, make recommendations to the president and congress, and to make public, instances of lawlessness among them. Another bill makes guilt personal and provides that for illegiti mate or unlawful operations by trusts, the officials, upon conviction, shall be sent to the penitentiary. Still another bill forbids railroadc S THE Oregontan still balloon- lag? i Has it learned yet that the balloon Springfield with Captain Donaldson and Mr. Henderson are safe? While the Oregonian was selling on the streets this morning with out -a word of information from the missing aeronauts, The Journal extra was on : the thoroughfares with the news that the "Spring field" had landed near Blue Lake la. the Bull Run reserve, and both aeronauts were safe. Tnihnrrnw mornlnff nenrlv twn- ty-tour hours after The Journal from watering stock issues and directs that the proceeds of stock appeared with the facts, the pa- ana uoua issues euau lks uptui ivj me ueuem ui iue ruaui ana not tmn of h Orptrnnian 'will read' for - the . private benefit of dishonest, directors and managers. The penalty, on conviction, is a jau sentence. All that ' is proposed in the program is to make all business operate on the square. It is the kind of legislation for which the Republican masses and Democratic masses have, been clamoring for a dozen years. It is the legislation that standpat Republican leaders denied for a dozen, years, which denial resulted in the rise of the in surgent Republicans, and contributed largely to the great Republican Bplit of 1912. There is no, mistaking the purpose of the present onslaught on the Wilson program, whether it be in the state of Oregon or in the city of Washington. It is an assault upon all that Republican in surgency stood for, an assault upon all that democratic Democrats have stood for, an assault upon all that the Progressive masses have stood for,-an assault, upon all the plain people of the country have watched for and waited for this dozen years. . It is a deliberate attempt, whether made in tho state of Oregon or in the city of Washington, to lead the Republican masses back to Aldricbism, Cannonism and Penroseism. It is a cunning strategy to But now . sleeping contemporary dupe the Republican masses and put the party back into the political trr'iSai.on'ofs tt,tfude i912- sp"1" wid penvthtt red"ced u to a rem- 'of the Kansas City Ill's Journey into nant . organization and left its regiments broken, shattered and de- the wilds, of the Cascade range was moralized. ' ! fntativ."ldtaaraf lla - Woodrow Wilson's program is an effort to correct In this nation If wis exactly oa of that sort! . . au buubcb uuuei mo reiRii jui wmcn me lew nave long of ;cvifients" of which the best news-j absorbed most or the wealth created by the toil of the many. It Is a patriotic endeavor, to prevent crimes of cunning by which a few get much for nothing. It is an aggressive movement to reconstruct the distribution of wealth so that it will no longer create colossal for tunes for privilege and no longer add to the ragged regiments of poverty". ' It is an honest president's struggle to make prosperity, not alone for the Rockefellers. Morgans. Carneelea. and other renAraiifinimna f ;wnicn tne uest newspaper neats are wealth, but prosperity for all the American people raaae ny me uregonian,. its Georgia farmers in 182 years have accumulated only $580,000,000. ' Wisconsin has "about 2 V4 times as many cattle as Georgia," but they are worth six times as much. She has 3 times as many dairy cattle, but -they give six times as j much .milk, Wisconsin raises and sells six times as, many, calves ana cattle, and her annual dairy prod ucts are eight times more valuable than Georgia's. The " home-raised milk supply in Wisconsin amounts to 196 gallons a year per inhabi tant; in Georgia it is only 2 9 gal lons. Butter produced - on the farms alone amounts to 32 pounds per inhabitant; In Georgia it is only 14 pounds a year. Wisconsin produces eggs amount ing to 20 dozen a year per inhabi tant; in Georgia the average Is only 7.5 " dozen. The annual per capita production of meat in Wis consin is 268 pounds; in Georgia it is 88 pounds. Wisconsin has a surplus of 270,000,000 pounds to sell;. Georgia has a deficit of 167, 000,000 pounds. , Diversified farming accounts for these startling comparisons. The Wisconsin farm is a manufacturing plant, turning off only the fin ished product wherever It is pos sible to do so. The Wisconsin farmer Is v not dependent upon one crop, the failure of which would leave him" hungry. No better argument for diversi fied farming was ever produced. The state which expects to reach its highest prosperity must us Its land for the production of pedi greed work stock, big beef cattle, high bred dairy cows, registered pigs. A FEW, SMILES The lecturer said- Impressively: "Every time I see a young roan com ing out of a sa loon, I want to ' go vp to that young man and aay: Turn right around young man; .you're going the wrong way." . Here is on that was told "by Con gressman William iW. Stacker of Mis souri the other evening when the con versation turned to the wonderful way of little wifey. . Some time ago Brown, who lives In a suburban burg. rushed Into the kitchen where moth-' er was bossing the preparation of the evening hash. In one of father's fists he was holding his other hand,, while a cussy expres sion was floating; over his features. "Where is that antiseptic salvo, Minnie?' he demanded almost rough ly. "That infernal parrot of yours has bitten a chunk out of my hand!" "What's - that, Jimmy?" exclaimed little wifey, with a look of great con cern. "Do you mean to say that he bit a piece all the way out of your hand?" "That's what he did," answered James. "Clean as a whistle. Where did you say that Balve was?" "Oh. Jimmy," returned wifey In a complaining voice. "I do wish you would be more careful. You know very well the bird dealer told me not to let that parrot taste meat under any circumstances." PERTINENT COMM ENT AN D NEWS IN BRIEF tSMALAi CHANGS OREGON SIDELIGHTS Spain will seem like the same old place, now that the . colonel has taken his departure. , All colleges and universities are hereby exhorted to please confer no degrees upon the thermometer. . . Mr. Led yard having stated that he waa not afraid of Mr. Morgan, does Mr. Mellen class him with Alexander the Great or with Ananias? a And even If the militants should scare King George Into suffragisra. there's Queen Mary to scare him into something so much worse. Those who are trying to block the Wilson program must be afraid it will get out on the main line when the wheat trains will be wanting the right of way. The look of superiority, not to say scorn, comes now to the face of the Oregonian formerly of the east, when he hears the native Oregonian talking about the "heat." If General Carranza would go and get a shave It might help everybody whose business it I to decide how they like the looks of him for presi dent of Mexico. a The nicnic season has arrived, and I with it the joke about the man who oiks uirv.il im cue leiliutj x?ui BIU.? people don't take piea to picnics any more, Where's the joke? Letters From the People lor tne nrai lime in tne paper ja.bo.ut. the landing of. J.ha balloon and. the safety , of Its . passengers. 'The facts recall, the late grandilor . ) truenr uoasung ot tne vregonian as ' In ft nWa rvli'. YftAl-flav it. J Anticipation of an Important event I n prrparai oi iu repuri 11 are eie i mextn in journalistic enterprise. "The , Or-galan - foresaw the likelihood tlmt .important news '-would develop J from the balloon . flight . of last . reHc- For that rason- rt uvnt a staff J wrTUr with one ot-tUe pHots. There J were- three othfcf. available places. Nobody, so far as We are - aWare. en J deavored to prevent tny , -otner nws- paper from sending a representative. . J r no other wa awake ; to the, op- . vorttinity. 'jsper beafs are male. But such ac- cldnUi never fall to the luck of the -fwipper whlrh has no forethought or is unwilling to undergo the ex 3enHe of inviting them. Twenty-four hours behind with .the news of the "Springfield! Is a part of that fine foresight "with nii?n,I?,InI.cat!?n" ent to T Journal for publication in this department ahould be wrlt- lJSS SJf on i,fe f PPer. houl(l not ?ZZ . ,a0? Jrords i length and must be ac companied by the name and address of the sender. If the writer does not desire to nave the name published, he should so state ) - MsniSion is the greatest of all reform ers. It rationalizes everything it touches. It robs principles of all falaa sanctity and throws them back on their reasonableness. If they bare no reasonableness, It ruthlessly crushes them out of existence and sets up Its own conclusions In their stead." Woodrow W li&on . "Well, sonny." said the patient druggist to the small boy. who had been hanging aoout the store for half an hour, eagerly eyeing the. candy counter, "do you want to buy some candy?" "Course I wanter but I can't mother sent me ter buy soap. jreference to The Journal as "the holding the looking glass to her newspaper which has no fore- lips "if that her breath will moist ,mougDt wouia nave tar weignuer or staIn the st0ne" reveals fhe application if the Oregonian had union of father and child in un deceived the news of the landing divided love .the "Springfield," as it had am- Cordelia, who loved her father. ; yle opportunity to do, and printed not with honeyed words, but ac- ;the story in this morning's edition, cording to her duty, was the stone Its failure to do so after its lhat the builders rejected. Hers blatant boasting places it in a Very ridiculous position. ' . ' Hereafter, when it goes balloon -lng about its news service, it should carry more ballast. was the loyalty upon which stands the happy home. A CHAMBERLAIN BILL THK LESSON OF LEAR .HP open air- reproduction of King Lear by the students of the University of Oregon is ft notable achievement In col lege dramatics. So far as known. It is the first attempt by college 'actors to render a play rarely in cluded In the repertoire of the pro ' fesdional actor. T HE Chamberlain bill for ex changing school sections scat tered througnout the Oregon forest reserves for equal areas of forest lands in a group acces sible to a railroad, has encountered trouble in the House at Washing ton. The plan was originated by Gov ernor West. Through his efforts, the 1913 legislature authorized the proposed exchange on the part of confiscation of personal property O'Sulllvan's Rejoinder. Portland, June 15. To the Editor of The Journal Regarding the so-called national anthem, "America, I find my remarks on the same have aroused the ire of the local Anglo-Saxons. Well, let's look at the matter another way. Let us suppose some talented American wrote a national anthem full of the sublimest sentiments, to the tune of "The Wearing rof the Green!" These very wearers of the Anglo yoke, under the guise of Americans, would be the very first to vigorously protest. But there can be no harm in chanting the air of "God Save the King," to express the bouI of true Americanism. So they believe, foolish ly. 1 maintain both the words and music of any country's national anthem should be the essence of that coun try's nationality; fancy "Rule Brit' tanla' sung to the music of some American - patriotic air w hose words represent vividly the fall of Britain's rule And, .exultation ovr that fall. Think you your loyal Britishers would yoaei with Anglo fervency? Moreover, why did" the Anglo-Saxon propaganda in this country use Its ut most endeavors to eliminate th third verse from our national anthem, "The esiar spangiea Banner?" That such an attempt was made is common knowledge. Perhaps they were more concerned over the words "hireling and slave- tnan "in God is our trust." of. all dramas. Its thema is filial Ingratitude and in all literature tnere Is no finer commentary on The Chamberlain bill confers au thority for the feeerai government to perform its part in making the the old c-omtnandment "Hnnnr thv . - , , .. . ... .. :r T transfers, xne Dili has tne sane- e KaiHd y mthaf.the "on of the forestry department. Rnr hath cnmmanrlorl tha,' that I h - .,,.. v , w 'a la a desirable arrangement be- thy' days may be crolortsed and that it may go" well with thee In the land which the Lord' thy God glveth thee." ;; . Whatever may be the dramatic value of the story of Lear the les son It teaches is a timely one in these days of loosening household relationships. ' The tragedy of be ing dependent upon others when . old Is vividly portrayed. The quar rel Over property and the division "of family, is one of every day life. . There are many Lears. Some . wait and. watch in charitable insti tutions, some are driven out in the v ctorm while, daughters spend their , substance, some are made to feel that they are a burden at home Cause it is constructive, tit is a plan that will take the scattered sections out of idleness and put them into immediate public use. Governor West is on the way to Washington to second the ef forts of the. Oregon delegation in pushing the measure through the House. If . the House should , beat the bill, it will do a very foolish and very indefensible thing. the use of it for purposes injurious to the public health or morals. If he had knowledge or notice he can not complain if, loss ensues when the law deals with the nuisance in a way reasonably necessary for its abatement. This part of the decision hits owners of property covered by a contract of conditional sale. A Minneapolis concern sought tb save furniture sold on the installment plan. But the court held that the furniture could properly, be con fiscated by the state, even in the face cf the' Minneapolis concern's, plea that when it sold the articles it had no knowledge of the uses to which- they would be put. The decision is of great moment, for it establishes, even more strongly than before, the legal fact that public morals and health are superior to rights in property or the right to extend a legitimate business into illegitimate channels. Lakeview now has a weed ordinance Under which the property of negligent owners may be cleaned up by the city and sold for charges. , . - Wheeler cittsens hav Just raised a 77-foot flagpole, and from it on July 4 they . will for the first time fly a flag of dimensions to match the pole. Colonel Clark Wood of the Weston Leader, who Is an expert In such mat ters, says those Alberta, oil wells "will have to do some tremendous gushing to keep ahead of the pro Gold Mill's council has prohibited firecrackers on the Fourth of July or any other day, and is protesting the local telephone company's resolve to reduce the previous Si-hour service to one terminating oaiiy at p. m. The United States commissioner at Silver Lak last week took fillncs on tracts aggregating 2441.4 acres, situ ated near that town. All but one were either "enlarged homesteads," or "ad ditional." amounting to the same thing. Seaside Signal: It is planned to dedicate the new streets In the various narta of th cltv on the Fourth. The company in charge of the street work ha Instructions to make the surfacing of Broadway a job to make themselves and the city proud, and if this is taken nit iieriouslv bv she comDany as by the city council an open-air dance will be given on the new street, with- music by the seasMe Dana. TRYING TO STOP THE WILSON PROGRAM 6ay our taxes will only be 92 cents extra each year if we bond our county for $860,000 for an automobile boule vard that we farmers cannot use. nut for the benefit of the people of Marion county that have not taken time to figure it out, I would like to submit the following figures: interest on $850,000 at $ per cent is $51,000 per year. For 20 years It is. $1,020,000. Interest for 20 years plus the prin cipal will be the enormous sum of $1,870,000, besides all the expensive repairs and ruined farm teams. Our teams would soon become useless, the same as your heavy city teams. It costs but little to build and repair our rock roads: besides, they last better than the paved ones. ONK WOMAN ' THAT IS WIDJE AWAKE. From the New York World. The letter on the subject of auto mobile advertising written by a De troit manufacturer attracts attention partly on account of- its spirit but chiefly because of the person to whom it Is addressed. In this missive it ts delicately hint ed that newspapers, favorable to the Wilson administration should be boy cotted by advertisers. Although the writer disavows any Intention to "pur chase or dictate" newspaper policy. It is plainly his purpose to bully jour nals that receive their ideas chiefly from the cash register. There are such newspapers. - Strange as it may appear, the letter was drawn out by a suggestion from Marshall Cushing, who has acted as a go-between for business and politics for many years. It was Cushing who as secretary of the National Maoufac turers' association, employed Colonel Mulhall In 1902-7 for "field work" in the Interest of the lobby at Washing' ton. It was under Cushirtg's direction that Colonel Mulhall went with men and money into the districts of con gressmen to defeat those who were hostile to the interests and to elect those who were friendly. It was Cushing who used Colonel Mulhall in various places as a strikebreaker. While the bulldoslng letter now at hand carries the name of an important manufacturer, it is otherwise char acteristio of Cushing himself. It con veys an idea without directly assum ing responsibility for It. Proof exists that Cushing did all of his lobbying at night. H wrote many letters, not one of which was signed. His Inter views were all secret. If Colonel Mul hall had not kept thousands of docu ments and made many notes, his story of the lobby's gumshoe processes could not have been substantiated as it was, t Owing to the publicity Inflicted upon him last summer by The World. Cush lng was under the painful necesstiy of removing his finely appointed bu reau of persuasion and Intimidation from Washington to New . York. He has no expectation of returning to the capital until political conditions under go a chanp We Infer from the De troit letter, .hrefore, that the great work of restoring the lobby and beat ing Wilson is already under way and that It la going on in the dark as usuaL IN EARLIER DAYS By Fred Lockley. THE NAKED TRUTH ABOUT FINANCE found in houses abated under the r,:"r 5' act, the court Bald that an owner j truth, in words, in music, In sentiment, of property has no vested or con-1 It. will forever remain such, Anglo stitutional right to use or allow ' A1nfrlcan mf s WU tfve up the i5uk iu me uuiiea states. It can't be done. If they had the cour age of their convictions they would confess that their hearts are in Britain and their purses in America. They may as wen save their money in s.U tempting tot impress their British na tionality on this land of the free and home of the brave, where It's a mat ter of sublime Indifference to the true American whether "God eaves the king" or What he does' with kings. No Anglo-man can begin "America" with these words, "My native country;" it Is not his native country; It is tho great American nation, built up with the brains, -blood, muscle and patriot ism of. all Europe. I also Bay, In truth, many of us could sing the first verse of "America" with more sincerity-if it read: THE SCHOOL ELECTION 0 ABATEMENT LAWS. M" INNESOTA'S Supreme Court last Friday declared that state's injunction and abate ment law. enacted for thn and ' their last days are days of suppression of disorderly houses, trouble. Filial ingratitude not to h constitutional. Th Wisinn ' only, breaks a commandment but has large importance, for it is an it crushes the spirit of home. Chil- other judicial declaration that a , idrett whose. parents, are in, the way person may surrender his right in untwist the strandsof the rope property by permitting it to be that binds society; Husbands and J used for immoral, purposes. . wives are divorced in the courts The Minnesota . law . provides for oa parents ana children are sepa-l the forfeiture and sale of all per orated .without legal process. Isonal nroDerty used in maintain. U The abtfse of parents is a com- ing the nuisance, the closing of f mon one. Lear "upon a wheel of premises in which the nuisance is Jlre with tears that scald like mol- carried on., and the imposition of ten lead" Is a too familiar figure, money, ' penalties . against persons shaking his ' fist'" At the participating in the 'nuisance. The .etorm clouds is a picture Of the court held that the act is a proper. ,60ul s desolation and sorrow. - Lear I exercise of police power. rcarrying dead .Cordelia in his arr-el - As to the law'a provision for NLY 581 persons voted for free text books. The vote against was 7209. It is a . vote that should prevent free text books from again becoming an issue in Portland. The real issue is low-priced text books. . Low priced text books and a great free public school system of definite and purposeful effi ciency are the program for a stronger and better citizenry. The vote for Dr. Alan Welch Smith was 6181 out of a total of 8116 with three candidates a-field. It is a vote of confidence highly complimentary to Dr. Smith. The school election challenges "My country, 'tis of thee. Brave land of liberty, To thee I sing. Land of my fathers pride To whale John Bull's hide, From every mountain side, God slam a king." . T., M. O'SIJIJrjTv'AN. The Attorney's Fee. Portland, June 17. To the Editor of The Journal I am obliged to call your attention to the fact that the at torney's fee asked for in foreclosing the mortgage given by O. A. Ploegstra and wife to . Carl Schlewe was $120. not $550; as published. The decree as presented to the judge called for $120, and I ask that you publish this letter, or make some statement of the error. Mr. Schiewe is certainly not to he blamed , for foreclosing a mortgage when he is called upon to pay large sums for taxes and insurance to pro tect the property. BEN IRWIN. In the Schiewe complaint Mr. )Irwln asked for $550 attorney's fee. After Colonel Wood had brought the matter to -- the court's attention and Judge Cleeton had reduced the fee to $25, Mr. Irwin changed the amount asked to $120. The Restraint of. Dogs. Portland,-Or.. June 17.. To the Ed itor of The- Journal- I consider It absurd to keep dogs chained. Chaining tends to make them worse. A- dog likes its freedom the same as the A RESIARKABLE CONTRAST commendatory remark on account little liberty he is harder to control, of the large number of taxnavers i Nothing can be better than the raux- wno went to the polls and denos-i1 orlnance eniorceo. j.nere ar too ited thpir hallnta . many nogs in., me cny, anyway, ana lieu ineir Daiioxa. 1. .hm.M t rnit.t a dog without a . muzzle, in Sellwood. snapped, at me and. caught my clothing.-. It may be fun for the dog, but the reverse for the wearer. Sup pose it had been a child's hand who knows the result? I contend that the muzzle ordinance Is the best, and it should be enforced to the last let ter. ."' -- 'j- " There should be plenty of drinking troughs W the streets, especially for the animals. OSBORNE YATES, r A' N ARTICLE in Home and Farmstead, illuminates the whole question of diversi fied farming. The prosperity of' Wisconsin' is compared with that of Georgia, and it is stated that in ninety years Wisconsin farmers have accumulated - wealth aggre gating $1,500,000,000, - wh lie Opposes Road. Bonds. ' Turner. Or., June 18. To the Editor cf Tbe Journal The Salem Statesman Criticises School System. Portland, June 13. To the Editor of The Joarnal.-T-One would think we were rearing children In Portland with sheeps' brains, , that all we can teach them is How, to grow cabbage, run. in cubators' and do -steam-fitting. If the child was or Is normal it should he able, to peruse and be taught grammar, mathematics, chem istry, geology, astronomy and botany. Knowledge of the above subjects Is useful if not essential to people In any or all the walks of life. If the state should teach the pupil to run an incubator, -or how to fit pipe, then "the state Should furnish the grownup pupil an Incubator to run, or; pipe to fit.- i The fact Is there are approximately I 1000 occupations, and whatever one learns concerning any one is liable to be forgotten before tbe pupil " finds someone to furnish employment at that job, or before he accumulates wealth to engage in such occupation. About free text books to private schools, I am considering about start ing an academy. Would you vote for my pupils to have books furnished them at the state's expense? P. W. B. The Last of the Barons. From the Omaha World Herald. J. Pierpont Morgan is in his grave. With all the outcry that had been raised against him he died respected and respectable. Now, when it is im possible for him to protect himself against the truth, the truth Is coming out to play bavoo with his fame and name. Even were he alive, however, and in the zenith of his power, the chances are strong that he would be powerless to prevent the truth coming to light. Mortal hands, no more than dead hands, can stop the mills of the gods. The lesson, be sure, will not be with out its effect on those who would fol low in the Morgan footsteps. There Is not a financier In New York or In the country; there Is not a banker or speculator who has been mismanaging a railroad "for what there, was in it for himself or for his gang, but will be troubled by the picture of Mellen on the witness stand. Mellen was one of the ablest and most successful of prac tical railroad men, become an under ling and weak tool Jn the hands or his banker board of directors. Just as he has refused to keep silent and take upon his own shoulders the whole bur den of shame and punishment, so might other men : similarly circum stanced be expected to do. And the scrutiny of the public, the scrutiny of boards and commissions, the scrutiny of departments of justice, into the de tails of railroad management is De- coming Increasingly more penetrating and Intelligent. ; xne tnings mat a Morgan could do In comparative se curity and with ' serene mind, only a few years ago, no Morgan could do to day without taking desperate chances. There is more than one Wall street board of directors, we Imagine, sadly resolving that the Jig is up. and that It would be foolhardy to risk the crea tion of another Mellen- in tneir own households. The sun of railroad piracy Is set- tine:. The sun of honest management and of a technically as well as finan cially-efficient management under a real public supervision .is rising. Rich Prison 'Fare. From the Baltimore Star. These are days when "the prisoner pent" is being cheered up and ca tered to In a way that leaves out of consideration entirely the "purpose all sublime of making the punishment fit the crime." If New York's ex ample is followed by other cities in the matter of Jail accommodations, 39 days or even six months behind the bars may come to be regarded by those who are careless about minding the statutes, as only a temporary seclusion from the stress and worry of a. too strenuous existence. New York's main Jail palace, mis called the Tombs, ! now supplies to the incarcerated, who have a cash re serve to .their credit, "all the luxuries of a Broadway lobster palace."- The quotation is from the headlines of a New York newspaper and the descrip tion of the "brand new white enameled kitchen," and of the luxurious bill of fare from which those In durance may By John M. Osklnson. Lately, twot men whose words are worth listening to have spoken of the public's attitude toward bankers, big business and finance. One is Eugene L. Richards, New York state superin tendent of banks, and the other Is Judge Gary, head of the steel trust Mr. Richards also quoted a third com mentator, Frank A. Vanderlip, presi dent of the country's biggest bank. "A hysteria of criticism" is what both Mr. Vanderlip and Mr. Richards call the volume of news and comment which Is carried In the newspapers and urged upon state legislatures and con gress by the people's representatives. "Sham" Is Mr. Richards' word; he ap plied it to the vices ana alarms ex posed In the papers, as well as to the "radicals." "socialists" ana - reiorm ers" who are preaching- against big business and finance. Mr. Gary was far more temperate and hopeful. He was able to see a well defined sentiment to give busi ness, even big business, a fair chance.' He thought that the candidate for of fice who would rise and utter such sentiments Just now would be support ed by the people. A significant thing was said by Mr. Richards In his talk to the savings bank men of New. York state: "If every banker within the sound of my voice would make a personal effort during the next year ts give the real facts and methods of finance to the journalists of his acquaintance, a sur prising change could be effected In publicity. If such organised effort Is continued for a few years both men and things will h clad in truth, naked and unashamed." ' The "naked truth' about finance Is something which you and I would dearly love to see adopted as a cos tume by big business and finance. No newspaper in the country of real In fluence would reject the truth about these matters in favor of sensational lies, if only they could get the truth! What big business and finance have not yet realised Is that you and I are coming to have closer and closer re lations with them as workers and In vestors. Our newspapers know this, and our representatives In congress ?nd the legislatures know It The time has passed when the wrecking of a railroad concerns only a small group of rich men. We don't want to be "hysterical" in talking about big business 1 and finance; yet we shall continue to seem so until we learn how to get at the unclothed truth. It rests largely with the leaders of. business and finance themselves to step out of the class of the dark -woman with the mysterious past choose, bears out the declaration of the headline. There are seven differ ent kinds of fish, 17 varieties of meat and poultry, five salads, 11 soups and a menu card of fruits, pastries, deserts and other things, including choice brands of cigars, that constitute the Tombs restaurant one among the best In all Gotham town. . Those who may prefer to regard themselves as guesta of the town will be given somewhat humbler fare, but plenty of It. With the inauguration of the swell restaurant service, no prisoner will be permitted to receive food from outside. Food from, outside sometimes contains such Impurities as saws and files. It is proposed that ho such adulterants shall get Into the foods prepared in the new sanitary res taurant. Useless Court Decisions. From the Chicago Record-Herald. John Baesett Moore, professor and authority on International law, has been lecturing on uniformity In legis lation and judicial decisions. His ar raignment of the present chaotic con dition of affairs was as scathing as that of eminent practitioners who have daily experience with the case system. What we must face in this country is "a legal chaos buttressed with shapeless mass of digest and index." The reporting of cases is thoroughly commercialized, and "day by day. month by month, there is poured forth jipon a gurgling, sputtering bar a tur gid stream of Judicial decisions. Petty cases, local cases, cases .Involv ing no new question, decisions on the way to reversal everything is report ed without rhyme or reason, discrim ination or mental profit Why. asks Moore, rely on volumes of unassimil ated cases, instead of on principles as illustrated and aDDlied in a few really important and well reasoned opinions? Why Indeed? What magic Js there In reports? After alt somewhere, some time, the dust covered lawyers must strike an opinion In which there is original thinking, the application of a principle. Why not.Tgnore tbe hun dreds of obscure cases and peal at once to the one that stands Out and shines as a light in the darkness? The. bar is enslaved and debauched oy cases and a movement back to simplicity, to principle, to Independent thinking is a crying necessity. Blake Bad Memory Jailable. Frbra the Philadelphia Public Ledger. . Burned books figure prominently In the collapsn of the New Haven railroad. Oakleigh Thorne testified that the of. flclal records of an $8,000,000 stock transfer were destroyed two years ago. In the general shuffle of getting two trolley lines shifted front one owner to another $1,032,000 disappeared entirely Mr. Thorne, who acted as agent, cannot recall what became of this money, The fact that only $1,000,000 had been spent on one of the two. trolley roads and tbe fact that the other was virtually nothing . but proves that $8,900,000 was a tidy prlc for the New Haven to pay. Mr. Thorne suggests that Tammany politicians were "interested" in the trolley roads and bad to be "seen." Mislaying $1,000,000 so that It can not be found ought to be impossible In any corporation. Mr. Prouty has said that $12,000,000 of New Haven cash ap pears to have gone Into thin air. Who got this money?' Certainly not the unfortunate stock holders of New Haven, whose shares are worth today but a third of their former value. But somebody got It. and the courts must find out who and lay a finger upon that man or set of men. Forgetting $1,000,000 here and there in the management of a corporation ought to be made a crime that leads straight to a cell. Nearly every great railroad collapse In the past 16 years has been due to personal greed of a very few men snd out of which they made fortunes while the other bond and share owners got oothlnjg but a heavy loss. The way to stop this is to make it a crime to forget $1,000,000, as It has been forgotten In the New Haven case. Few pioneers are better known than Ezra Meeker. I have Just returned from a trln with him falls, Thors heights and Gordon falls and it is hard to biiev that a man . who has the go in him that ..Ezra V Meeker has is 84 years old. In climb- lng up a steep trait I offered htm a helping hand. "Don't you worry about Aie. ht M "hAln imKsw.. la - old and needs help. I am a heap sight tKMi am TS T " j wu s to a a jvu ajc-cvA , sanw kaU Itlai 1a m. W.a I- " fc a U0 V IC SI C S IIV VT . ' During a few moments of leisure Mr. Meeker told me of his trip by o tenm hatlr nv., th. 1 A t ra I Ka k ,4 first seen C2 -ears ago. When I came lw 1852." said Mr. Meeker, "I had been married soms- .uiuk over a year, we started when our baby was a few weeks old. Fifty two was the big year. It seemed as if all the world was on the move. be lieve you could travel from the Mis souri river westward for 500 mile an never be out of sight of an emigrant wagon. Hundreds of teams were stretched out7 in line, the teams and tne loose stock kicking up the flour like dust which, seen from some near by hilltop, looked like a moving cloud and experienced from the midst of the cioua seemed like a choking fog. 1 fl M Wat, wa nn1ll.4 .kl.h iuo kvuic u i vnuiera ipai leu w many (raves on the plains that year. Grass was short, which necessi tated herding the oxen a mnnlileraMa distance from camp. Soon the owners or the overloaded wagons began to throw the heavier furniture away. As their cattle got gaunt from the long forced marches they threw feath er beds, extra blankets and pro visions away. I have s.en sacks of flour and big piles of sides of bacon stacked np at the side of the road. Often a family with two wagons would lose some of their oxen. They would then sort over the loads of the two wagons and save bnt one wagon load, leaving their extra wagon. "About 200 miles to the westward of the Missouri river my brother got overheated chasing buffalo snd upon drinking some stagnant water he became seriously 111. Every one thought he had cholera. Our little party of four wagons stayed with him ror four days till he was able to travel. During the four, days that we were pulled out to the side of the road we counted over 1S00 wagons that pasM us. We estimated that about 8000 peo ple were in the 1600 wagons and about 35,000 head of storK. counting the ox teams and droves of loose stock. "No one will ever know the num ber of deaths from cholera during the emigration of 1852. We met if wagons going back to Iowa and Illinois in which there were no men, all of them having died of cholera. We passed hundreds of newly-mad graves. II is conservatively estimated that no less than 6000 people dud during the big emigration of 1802. "I arrived in Portland on October 1, 1853. I soon moved up to the Puget sound country. I -cured 500 acres of land and started the town of Puysllup. We planted hops, increasing the acre age earh year till we had over 600 acres In hops. At that time we were the largest hop growers and the largest hop exporters In the Cnited Ktates. At one time I had three trainloads on the road en route to Ivondnn. D1J you get that? Not three carloads, hut three trainloads of hop. In addition to shipping our owu crops we bought; hops from all our neighbors for ' shipment. I bought one year the i rop of almoit that entire district, paying 11 cents a fnw It At t)i (im. 1 fnnt mrtvf the hops I advanced oiio-bnif tt- mon ey, or 5 ',4 cents a pound. Along came the hop louao that ear and ruined the crop. I had more than 8&0.000 paid out on hop contracts. It wiped Tne out. The sheriff ilosed me out snd I lt my big ranch. To recoup my fortune I went to Dawson, soing in 'on the Dyea trail. All I came out with was the experience. "les, that was a wonderful trip to me, rtvtsltlng the old' Oregon trail. 1 located more than a thousand section line ' crossings. I helped erect 27 markers In the form of monuments on the old trail. Now there are more than 40. I traveled at times on the old trail where It had been worn down by th thousand of emiK?ant wagons tilt It was 16 feet deep. That sounds like sn exaggeration, but It Is an actual fact. The loose sand hid been blown out and succeeding wagons would wear it down till it was a deep cut tike a railroad grade. "The state authorities of Waahlng ton have engaged me to go Into the state building st the Panama-Pacll w exposition to advertise our state. In cidentally in tny lecture I show over a thousand feet of Portland's Rose Festival film which will give a lot .of publicity to your beautiful Rose Fes tival. We are all a part of the orig inal Oregon country and what helps one state will help the oth-r. for Ore gon and Washington are one In th.r interests." The Origin of "Gringo.' From tbe Chicago Post Since Interest turned to Mexico there has been much newspaper discussion as to the origin of the word "Oringo," used by the Mexicans in speaking of the foreigner. The most frequently ad vanced theory is tbat It was derived from the first two words of tbe old song. 'Ureen Grow the Rushes, O!" that is said to have been a popular vocal ex ercise with American soldiers In the Mexicain war. Others have attempted to see in it a Mexican adaptation of "Yankee" surely a far-fetched Idea. But a correspondent of the New York Sun offers an explanation that seems to us to dispose of all others snd to remove the question from ths realm of debate. He says "Qringo" Is Castilllan Spanish, a variation of the word "Grlego," meaning Greek. It Is used In the literature of Spain in reference to unknown tongues, the speech of for eigners, or as a synonym for that which is unintelligible. The writer quotes from Antonio Flores and Breton de los Herrercs, Spanish authors, in support of this view. But tho most convincing evidence Is furnished by tbe dictionary of tbe Royal Spanish acad emy, where ths word is thus defined: "Oiingo, noun, masculine; Grlego (or Greek): In popular or familiar phrase, 'hablar en Gringo to talk Greek, to speak In an unintelligible language." That ought to settle It. But how did the word "Greaser" originate as applied to Mexicans? The Ragtime Muse Kfeping Sweet. High up on that ol' dead tree. Smack ag'ln that thunderhead Eits a limp wing crow, and he Croaks "I wan, I'm nearly dead ; Croaks and croaks and 'pears to say, "It's too mortal hot to live. If I could change it some Ol way. I dunno scurctly what I'd give. ' Down here, 'roun each fiowerirr limb, Zums and dps a hunimin' bird. Act In' as if heat to him Was the unbeknownext word. If he thinks o' heat st all, I'll Jes' bet he thinks It's made For to grow trees big and tall With flowers bloom in' In the shade. Course you'll say that crows is- crows. Ant caln't be nothin' elo instead, Mebbe so; but me 1 grow TUtnkln' brains inside my head. And I take my choice right now HUmmin' bird is what I'd be; Comes the days, no matter how,. , Beln' glad's the job for me! Cholly When I was a boy, yoo, kqow, the doctor said if I didn't. stop smoking cigarettes I would becoms feeble-mlndfd. , Miss Keen Well, why didnt you stop? Honest. First Visitor (during debate in the house of representatives) -What do you think of the currency question? - Second Visitor Blest If I know any mors about It thsn those fellows down franchise on the floor! -. . - The Sunday Journal"! .The Great Home Newspaper, consist pf. , Five news sections replete prHA Illustrated feature?. ' . .. .. , ., u. Illustrated magazine of quality. Woman's section of iars. merit. Pictorial news, supplement , Superb comic section. '. . 5 Cents the Copy 0 . A