THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL. PORTLAND. MONDAY EVENING. JUNE 23. 1914. THE JOURNAL AH Hpir.EXI)KWT SgWSHAPEB I JACKSON .Pnbllnher HbiMtM mvtrf twain tescept HaBdayi 'sad rjr Suada ojrulii at Ta Journal Bnild- t-m .'ls. BruaSwajr a4 VaattUU ta fort la ltd. Or. kaia rad at tba piuinoi at fnrUattd. . Uaaasrtaaloa tSrees tfea autat as aacoaJ claaa aiattar. . ., fcLltl'HONKS Mats TITS; Hv . A-SOSl. A.U departments robbed bj ifeeee namUar. J"U tit operator wbat aapartutfot foa wast. b.-njls kaawor Co- Hrvaawtek lUdg., U6 Hftb .Vi., .Nl Vtrti 1W r-lle a ' tea kids.? Cbteaco. ; ubavrlytiua laran bf Diatl e t u aOV draaa la LBa Uulted States or atsxlco; -- - DAILY - ' ' Om year 3.U Oat dob to.. S M . SUWDAT. . i Cm tar.......f3-M t " swats DAILY AMD SUNDAY V On ar $TJ I One atosta. ..:.. When You Go Away Have The Journal sent to your Summer address. There never was any party, faction, sect or cabal whatso evtr, in which the moat Ignor ant wera not the moat violent; for a bee ia not a busier ani mal than a blockhead. Pope. A GREAT ABSURDITY -a CVEUY city, town and hamlet in the Columbia basin should r be aroused over the hearing In the Astoria rate case to be- in in Portland next Monday There ought to be representatives from every locality and delegates from every farmers organization torsive testimony. There is violation of evey law of transportation in the present rate arrangement. In spite f the .known law thaj cost of hauil is a most important factor in fixing rates, that law is absolutely over looked in the present rates Thus, a locomotive will haul but ' eight loaded cars from the coium blaj basin over the mountains to Puoet Sound points, and will haul one hundred cars down the Colum bia to Portland and Astoria. It is ! an enormous difference in the cost of haul, but the freight rates are cents a ton higher to Astoria than to Tacoma and Seattle. It Is a 'discrimination in violation of very . traffic maxim, natural or " moral. The Increased charge caused by dragging loaded cars of wheat over ' the Cascade mountains to Puget 'Sound has to be paid by the pro ducers of the Columbia basin. If, Instead of being artificially fixed by man, the rates were regulated by the cost of haul, the charge down the Columbia! would be far lower, and the producers of the region would get the benefit. It Is a perfectly clear issue. It isfan Issue over which there can be no misunderstanding., For year and years, the people of the great producing areas of the Columbia basin have been paying excessive grain rates, and the whole in LINCOLN REPUBLICANISM HE republicanism of Abraham Lincoln did not hesitate to regu late big financial corporations. A great bill supported, and signed . ; by President Lincoln , provided for drastic regulation of the na tional banks of the United States, ' HOW strange that leaders wearing the badge of republicanism and, professing the republicanism of Lincoln should now be - fighting President Wilson's bills for- su pervising trusts and for regulating the issue of railroad securities! . - The : republicanism of Lincoln was " a people's republicanism. It J was a republicanism with a heart for mankind. Lincoln himself said God loved the common people for be made so many of them. ' l-:f Lincoln insisted in his time as president, that' the people should be protected against dishonest banking and dishonest bankers. .The bill he approved and signed as president permits no watering of bank stock. . : ;H ; ; v"e'; : - j'::r' 7 -'v ";i 1 V-N It provides strict supervision and every national . bank in the United States is investigated by a federal bank examiner twice a year. If a national bank is found to be crooked,T)r unsound, or dishonest, the government at once puts It out of business. If an official is found violating the law, he is convicted and sent to the penitentiary. That was Lincoln republicanism. But here is a" vociferous demand throughout the United States by standpat leaders that there must be no supervision by a government trade .'commission of the btg trusts as proposed by President Wilson. Tiiey demand that there shall be no regulation by the government of the issue of railroad, securities, and demand that President Wilson shall back down from his insistence that his bill for that purpose be passed. They demand that President Wilson's bill to jail trust mag nates when they violate the law, shall be withdrawn. , " . If there had been lawless trusts and . conscienceless stock water ing by railroads In Lincoln's tlme.there is not the slightest doubt about what his attitude would have been. He would hate demanded supervision and regulation by government, just as he demanded su pervision and regulation by government" of the national banks. - There is not the Slightest doubt that if Abraham Lincoln were president today, he would be demanding passage of bills similar to those President Wilson is urging upon" Congress. Standpat leaders to day are misrepresenting Lincoln republicanism. They have dragged Lincoln's party away' from its ancient moorings. They are dragging it away from the Republican masses; most of whom are Lincoln Re publicans still. '." ; ": The true place for those who believe In the principles of Lincoln is behind Woodrow Wilson in his great' fight for the kind of govern ment Abraham Lincoln 'stood for. Why should the capitalization of banks be regulated and the cap italization of railroads not be regulated? Why should the national banks be supervised by government and dishonest trusts not be supervised -by government? world's sympathy goes out to the Georgians, . who ' have suffered much, even though they have been blamed for many faults. . An attempt: is on in the ' United States to force progressive Repub licans to admit the error of their ways, after which standpatlsm will be thrust down their throats that is If they .do not resist.," Reaction was never so bold, and standpatlsm thought it misht have been-Judga. never so aggressive as now. wny else is it clamoring for President) A western newspaper man tells of Wdcnn Kt, 4... ik 1.1. ineno vos eauaa, wiw mora or "li .... I less aucceaa. a paper In an Iowa town. auu-irusi iegisiauoni, y I That ha was a-rrriT- . what dlsoouraa-ed by Near Vienna Saturday, a mill- tha lack of interest tary aeroplane and a dirigible bal- ""w """i"r"J" loon , crashed together in mid-air KkT; noiic which5 one wun a loss of nine lives. Recently I afternoon ' appeared near; Paris, two military aeroplanes on -the editorial page eration. By the canal route the same vessels will make the jour ney In about 20 days. On a basis of 65 dayB for the longer "route, the difference in time will be 45 days, which multiplied by $500 per day, for operating costs-only, gives $22,500, representing each ship's actual saving on each oner way trip. Mr. Mansfield points out that if Canadian ships can make the trip by Way of the canal In 20 days, they will be able to make two tripsJ-by"that route to one around Cape Horn, which will greatly in-1 crease the earning capacity of the vessels. Caaadians expect a large increase in . their shipping business to eastern markets, and the ocean carrying companies are preparing to handle the increase anticipated by the opening of the new all water route. of dressing the . skunk skin and removing any lingering odor has been Improyed year by year. Mean while the fur has been gaining popularity, principally because of the extreme scarcity of Russian sable. Therefore ? let- us not de spise the lowly- skunk, whose am bition is to "be unmolested while it steals a few chickens. MORE "DRY" TERRITORY A' JUSTICE A "GAME" S DR. WITHYCOMBE'S CANDOR LL or portions of fifteen northern Minnesota counties have been made "dry" by a decision of the United States Supreme Court. . That tribunal de cided last week that under a treaty creased cost to them caused by by which the Chippewa Indians fixing the rates on a mountain ceded their reservation to the haul, goes to benefit -middlemen United States in 1855 prohibition living on the shores of Puget against the sale of liquor is still Sound. effective. it Is an absurdity that ought to I ' Some of these counties are now end. I thickly populated, with no resident i Indians. But the Supreme Court held that the admission of Minne sota as a state did Tint renen.1 the T wiitixyuaiHjj, is io De treatv, The decision is hailed by I 1 cowmenaea ior ms iranKnesa. the urohthitionlst erftat vlr. He believes in a party as- to for thev ooint out that other aemoiy ior reconimeuums territory covered hv almUar trat. canuiuaiea to me voiera, ana ne leB take8 iu mogt of the central aoes noi nesnaie to say so. ne nd aonthprn rortlft et thm .tt thought the assembly a proper pro- including the larger part of Min- ceuure wuen u ws a canuiaaie i neapolis. xor governor in me wepuDucan The finding may be In the na state asseniDjy in txu. ana ne ture of a victory for prohibiUon, IUJUB.S ou tsuu. I but It 1b tint rnrlnolvo V.r He. Is by no means alone In his though it extends the "dry" area. view, mere are mouBanas in ure- there is. Question whether exten gon who have always distrusted the sion by such a means will accom,- airect primary. mere are otber plish much. Experience goes to tnousanas wno are still convinced I show that torohlbition. to he mat me principle of the assembly i fective, must be backed by the as piannea in iiu was an excel-1 peODle themselves. Northern Min lent means of eliminating objec-I nesota may be "dry" officiailv hut A I . a t a x m .. I . ' wouauie canaiaates. ro inese are it Drobablv will not h Aw soitini to oe aaaea stui otner thousands ly unless the people make It so. wno nave cnangea tneir minds from opposition to approval of the assembly since the great struggle over the issue in 1910. All over the state, there are newspapers censuring the direct primary now that have always fought for it In OUR SKUNK INDUSTRY A FEW SMILES She (to husband.' who baa armful of . bunaies; uooa heavensi - Jack! What are all those thin?: - Be Well I couldn't remember the thine you told me to-set so I got all. the i things J PERTINENT COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF -Burg-lara . ; entered 1 r our house last night. met headron in a similarly fatal collision. It seems strange that inlTo tha everiaatin ahama of thaVom all the vast expanse of the sky, I munlty, for those whose welfare we there is not sufficient snace for the hv labored, be it said, they got , I KAk(ata. M c- tCIAHj CHANQg "Aviatrlx" la aucb a nice word that the aport ought to become most popu lar among young; women. , a "- ;: Every time there la an electrical storm the old fashioned lightning; rod agent thinks of the glorious past. a a . Victor Herbert aays that this Is rap idly becoming a musical nation. And, Victor might add. a dancing nation. ' EuroPa Is now so busy with Its Bal kan troubles that It has no time to frame up a scorching criticism of our Mexican policy. Even yet a senatorial candidate might distinguish himself by 'doing his electioneering among the farmers from an aeroplane. By auotlna? a few nolo terms tha am bitious young mau can aat away im pressively with a profound Ignorance ox poio in tne average crowd. maneuvers of the air craft. They may file the recall -peti tions.- But after that, what?- : ! nothing." Harper's Magazine. Letters From the People Deacba . Skinner Well, our pastor received a call to a church in Oshkosh and says,: he'll go there. -i Deacon Grabber Huh! That's what comes o' raising his salary last year. He's saved up enough for railroad tickets. (Communleatknia an publication in tMa department ahould be writ, ten on only one aide of tne paper, ahould sot exceed 30O words in length and moat be ac companied by tne name and tddrtit' of tne aenuer. If tha rit,r rin ni mIm , 1 jt -. - T-i-.k.vm bas the nam, pubued. h. .noma - sute.) dlnner. wi,, talking ibout a certain "Diacoaaion ia tbe areateat of all reform- I antiquated railroad. era. It rattonallzea everything it touches. It I "It's manager," he i-J"1?. mJ2 .f1' "etity and gaid, seems almost as tbey bars no reaaonableneaa. it rnthleaalr I aosuru KM tne lar- cruKhea them ont of existence and seta ap Ira mer. own eonciuaions. an tneir ateaa." wouurow i A rarmar uvea Wilson. . . va mm avusja ygfavaai-a" Mrs. Duniway Issues an Appeal. JYiI Portland, June 22. To the Editor throuarri tha. di.triet. oi -xne journal Letters are reaching I There was 6na train a day and It me almost daily xrora my disappointed I stopped at the farmers station on slg- sisters or perhaps X should say I naU m a . .M - . I : ' aaugniers, aa almost ail or me writers -Tt 3c?w are younger than I all of whom ex press concern that the activity of Im ported prohibition agltatora - will arouse such organised opposition to their enfranchisement as made It lm- The farmer one day set the signal and the train drew up. But be did not climb aboard. " "Well, get on! shouted the con ductor. "Get on, can't yer Excuse me,' said tha farmer. 1 possible to win the ballot In Oregon, fn'.. rOUl W&nJ WnfiViincrfArt TaUn 4-411 T am- V-a.l'' . mm w w s.vjk uviv acknowledged mother of the 'suffrage 1 1' HT'T:'. ".L,1: mAVmsnt In thu, atataa hai iwt. " " ftr'm - ---f - I Tua vlt, showinsr men that women, aa voters. were not Intending to make laws to I them? "What he la looking for Is the PEAKING before a San Fran Cisco church society, JudgeB Dunne and Crothers of that city said justice- has degener ated into a game. It is a game to be umpired, not with respect to the fundamentals of right and wrong, but according to technical points raised by attorneys. Judge Crothers placed the blame largely upon inexpert lawyers. It may be true that attorneys not ex perienced in the law are respon sible for many rulings which" the ordinary person classes as tech' meal, yet if these two California urists are correct in their, state ment that justice has degenerated into a game, a large share of . the fault lies with the judges them selves. One great trouble with the courts is that they have drifted into a habit of placing the technically right above the morally wrong. Precedent governs to an extent that threatens the courts.' Because of precedent it is possible for a canny objection filed by a technical law yer to grow into a large "principle" of law. The objection, innocent looking enough at its Inception, grows by accretion until It be comes a bar to justice itself. If justice is a game. Its umpires could profitably study the rules of most sports. There the general tendency is to simplify the rules so that the best man will be re turned winner. Among sportsmen the man who wins on a technl cality is not recognized as cham pion. Why should a judge be less efficient than the. referee of a prise fight? deprive them (the men) of their per sonal liberties. ""We; are being overrun with im ported ' prohibition orators," writes a friend from Nevada, "and they are alt boasting that Anna 8 haw, the great leader of the National Woman Suf single dime or nickel of the temperate drinker, of course. He would make a good living off that sort of custom ers. Naturally, too, he will be watchful of the men : Just ready to become drunkards, and when his booze gets f rage association, is the head lecturer j them over the line, he will hasten to of the W. C. T. U.. and that all men direct them to the nearest tattooer. need to do is to vote for woman suf-I Perhaps some :; wives who watch fraire to make Nevada, drv " Another I their husbands come home later, un letter is from Montana, where another steadier and with less money left each equal suffrage campaign is pending, week, will long for the happy day where the conditions are r similar to hen he can be tattooed with the tiny those of Nevada, whose writer says: s- nd h can forever rest assured "Our learal voters are watehin Ore- that saloonkeeper will dare to eon. Waahineton and Idaho, where a I him another drink.' prohibiUon war Is In action, and 1 n "P we, should think Of. have It from good authority that the ihouh' . Thi 18 ,ra"r h,ard on Uncl success ot our suffrage campaign de- f1?110 m iB hi" s'snature, and pends entirely upon the conservative hat on a man hand would say votes of women in states where men "".V" "' ha riv.n worn tha Miiint -jr.nrtv." y. not the only one responsible. While I sincerely regret the reign 1 woul fnly, 8U"t1OM improve of terror of a social character that nn' ? Pla: That would be to prompts such wrUera to withhold their J00 he na .n iJ0110 mt names from puhUcktion, I cannot, In " tltro A t. w-t"? view of the persecution I have borne ; In the past from the fanaticism of pro- - "7" T hibition arftators. blama them for Mr. Relhok's Questions. avoiding a similar ordeal. If t were! Eagle Creek, Or., June 1. To the not for the physical infirmities of my Editor of The Journal Replying to E. eightieth year, I would gladly heed J W; Relhok's two questions, "How wlU thr Macedonian crir for Personal helD. we raise the $900,000 which is at pres- but there is one avenue yet open to nt -paid into the public treasury by m. thanks, to the liberty and iuatlce I the liquor traffic, of Oregon annually?" loving spirit of the Oregon press andjand "w11 we care for the unem- OKBOON SIDELIGHTS With a S00.000.000 bushel cron of wneat in prospect, uncle earn may presently think it about time to ret pick to tne xuti pouna ioax ox oreaa. a a Senator Lewis la'aald ta hiva shad tne James ' part of his name. How ever, tne possibilities of -Jim" are no more dreadful than "Ham." if thereto! tay ms motive. a a ReoorK. of Biota. Intriarua and at tempted Aaaaainatlon in tha Citv . of Mexico Indicate that General Huerta oas iia neauiy ior tne millions ne is said to have acquired. a Ia a man nacaaaarilv bias whn ha will refuse to strain his neck In order to iook at an terODlana fliaht. but will display symptoms of eagerness and ex citement over a dog rightT The Register proudly exclaims that when It conies to putting ugene on the map. the Radiators ana in sani tary Oirla have little to learn, . Talent is making preparations for a Fourth of July celebration, and as one attraction will have a greased out law pig, that la asua to be th wuoest swine la Oregon. . a . a ; The Juntura Times has called upon its readers for a plebiscite on the Question of a new county to be formed rom territory In western Malheur and eastern Harney. a The Jackson county court has signed a contract for the services of M. P. Henderson ot the University of Wis consin as plant pathologist, to succeed Professor P. J. O'Oara- a a - Lane county will pay approximately $6000 more In salariea for school teach ers next year than during the school year Just closed. The average month ly Balary, city and county, la 15. a a Fossil having had constructed a new reservoir, is now having the old cne put in order. Thia will give the city a total water capacity of S25.000 gallons, and rire protection, the Jour nal says, "surpassed by no town of Its size in the state." a a Dor story In Rosebura- Review "Rosebura has a dog which, from all appearances, actually enjoys moving pictures. This canine belongs to George Slooer. Each night that Mr. Sloper attends one of these shows "UdV his ralturui pet, is on band. The dog occuplea a seat the same as his master. Although having no defi nite way of knowing. Mr. ISloper be lieves the dog enjoys the pictures as well aa the average person In attend ance at the shows.". "THE FOUNDATIONS OF CONFIDENCE" . From the Omaha World Herald. The Springfield Republican calls at tention to "one very Important cause of the unsatisfactory buslnesa condi tion wnich cannot be hidden by any amount of denunciation of politics and demagogism." It Is a cause which Colonel Roosevelt did not men- tion when he heaped blame on the Democratic administration at "Wash ington, it is a cause seldom If ever alluded to by politicians and business men who charge "hostile" and "threat ening" legislation with the responsi bility for business distress. "Corpor ate finance and and corporate man agement In; this country." says the Republican, bluntly, "are directly re sponsible for very much of the public distrust and lack of confidence which mak a forward movement In- Ameri can business so hesitant at this time." IN EARLIER DAYS By Fred Lockley. . And tne Republican summons as a convincing witness the "Railway Age Gazette," a very conservative publi cation that no one could accuse of un friendliness to the large financial and corporate interests. The Gasette speaks out in meeting In this candid fashion: - "The New Haven Is not the only railway that has been Mellenised. and such revelations as have been made regarding the financial management of some reads are enough to shake public confidence In railroad man agement in this country. The situa tion Is worse than that. They are enough to shake the foundatlona of the confidence of the people of this and other countries In the financial management of all kinds of business concerns In America, for the men dl rectly vesponslble for the mismanage' ment of railroads are as largely In terested ; and as potent in manufac turing, mining and other industries as they are in the railroad business. "The great danger is that the dis closures regarding the conduct of the Mellens, the Yoakum a and the rest of their like wlu cause the passage of more radical legislation than the con dltlons Justify. If excessively dras tic legislation shall be passed, we trust that there will be no hypocriti cal walling from. Wall street about ignorant publlo hostility toward rail ways and about the public being mis led by demagogs. The buccaneers In Wall atreet and the fools and cowards in Wall street, who let the buccaneers work their wills, are the chief authors of such legislation. It Is a toss-up whether the demagogs or the high binders of finance are doing the more to bring all the details of business under the regulation of public offi cials. Eugene V. Debs, Morris Hill quit and Upton Sinclair think that they are the real leaders of the so cialist movement In this country. They take themselves too seriously. The real leaders of socialism in this coun. try are such men as Charles S. Mel len, B. F. Yoakum and the directors of the New Haven. Frisco and other roads, who are too crooked, cowardly, indolent or incapable to perform the duties ef their positions." "If people are looking for bottom causes of present business conditions," remarks tha Republican, "they should not overlook elements ef that char acter." ' Who can gainsay It? Who can won der if those hundreds of thousands Of people who save their money and are anxious to Invest It safely and profit ably are timorous when they read about the "buccaneer" management of large corporation properties? Per haps, if the truth were known, they are even more afraid of dishonest managers who plunder the corpora tions than they are of the "radical" lawmakers wno want to take Steps to Insure their honest management. During' the Cayuse war I was with a scouting party sent out to locate the Indiana" said Sot, Durbln. a plo- ner of H4S, -who lives at Salem. Bill SUllwell. Nate Olney. IsJah Matbeny. tayself and about 2d mora :: composed this scouting party. - "vim (viu uuria toward immi grant Springs when we ran across a ' party of Indians with their squaws. ' They started off at their best speed and some of our men began shooting at them. Bill SUllwell and 1 took i . after one of the Indians, Bill and I were well mounted. The Indian had' a good horse, too. We ran the Indian ' about a quarter of a mile as hard as we could go, but being afraid he would lead -us into ambush I stopped and -hollered to Bill Stlllweil to come on back. Ha wouldn't do IV thousrh. and - ran the Indian right Into the Indian camp. r - T rode back to where we were V camped and told the others that a big party or Indiana were camped nearby. -We concluded that Bill had been killed " or captured, so we fell back to rejoin our troops and to report having come In touch with Indians. - vs e took up a canyon., and when .; we had gone a mile or so the Indians were on all sides of us rolling rocks. . down on us. We traveled all night down the Deschutes and arrived at our main camp about daylight. We re- ' ported meeting the Indians and hav ing lost Bill Stllwell. . ; "Col. Gllllsm ordered the troops to move forward against the Indians. , As we were about ready to' move BUI Stlllweil. with his long Missouri gun ' over his shoulder, torne Into camp. He wss given a bite 4t eat and fur nished with s new horse, and we Started back to , Emigrant Springe. He told me he ran right Into a the Indian camp and the Indians chased him. He got back to whertour scout ing party had been, but we were gone. He started down the Deschutes ' for -th main camp. .He found, the only way to get away was to abandon his -horse and take' to the rough rocky ridges, where the Indian horses could not follow. The Indians dismounted and came after him afoot. - but Bill could travel faster with his shoes over the rough lava rock than the Indians could in their moccasins, so he fa-caped. "Our whole party started for Buck Hollow, where the Indlsns were. Gil liam divided his command so that part of them would strike Buck Hollow, and the others go down tha canyon. . where the. two parties would Join later. "Pretty soon our party ran across the Indians. They met- us on the canyon side. We counted off the men to hold the horses, and the rest of us went afoot up the hill. The' Indians held their ground for awhile. They were above us, and shooting with the.- ' old Hudson - Bay muskeia, .thry over shot us. They had but few lead bullets. They had gotten the endsate rods , from abandonel emigrant wagons, and filing them into pieces about an inch long, used them for bullets. These bullets, made out ot the end. ate rods, made ah awful funny sound, as they came bussing and whining over our heads. - "One of our men waa shot In the hip. We killed a few Indians and captured a lot or their horses and stock. The Indiana were mostly Deschutes, Cay- uses and John Days. J WHEN INVESTORS GO TO SCHOOL THE GEORGIANS R iliE despised skunk annually brings about $3,000,000 to trappers of the United States. It stands second In Import the past. The Journal has seen noanc nly to the mdskrat among condition to warrant the chance of our fur-bearing animals. These sentiment, but is perfectly frank toj'1?01"68 taken from a bulletin re admit that such a change has taken ceny issued by the department place. Strength will be ivn the or agriculture, go to show that view by the definite stand taken bv I nothing was ever created in vain Dr. Withycombe. He is no noliti- Aitnougn bkuuk iur is not very cal .weathercock, blown hither, and I Popular in America, Europeans yon. by every wind, and his hon-lfaTr if because it wears well and est expression of his opinion as-the! ha8 a lustre which makes It rival gubernatorial nominee of a great I ltle Kussian sable' in appearance. party, wllljive weight and charac-1 The value of a single animal 'b ter to thevview, and add to tha I "'a ranged from 25 cents to $5.50 popularity of the idea. ' in December, 113, and usually I runs higher. CANADA AND THE CANAIi I Liondon is a great market for American skunk skins', in isrr RIT1SH COLUMBIA ports ex-1 the exportation V that city were. peci u gain material aavan-1 18.000 skins, while In lflii over tages because of the Panama I 2,000,000 were exported. The canal. Consul General Mans- above facts will Interest tha firm. ueia - at Vancouver aava in -Trada am Kt tM tn . . ' - bw, wwb.Hicivvio a'iUUUVr BUtlC" and Consular Tteporta that the J ment in the bulletin which may ; oara oi iraae ot mat city nas stir the imagination of milady. compietea investigations as to tne I It is officially stated that while comparative cost of carrying cargo I only a small percentage of skunk mrougn tne canai , ana- around skins are now. dressed and made un Bouth America. , lin this country, we have received It is shown "by the" report that I in years past a laree number nf 6n the basis of the present canal J them back after they were made up von rate a steamer oi tne average i abroad. "Many American ladles size will have to pay $3000 to I who " would scorn to wear a iknn V ei.uuu ior- passage tnrougntnei sun nave been proud of their Im- waterway.- ; , ' I ported black; marten or Alaska i .mer. instead steamers new mate I sable, wnich was merely the A mart. the run from Vancouver ,to New! can skunk - fur more attractively ? a a ' a a aa I - . ' " , xors in 6d to u days, under a 1 labeled." daUv cost of $500 to $500 for op B However, it is said, the process USSIA is about to dispossess the Georgians, who for un counted years have lived on the southern slopes of the Caucasus range. They must aban don their homes to make room for ,100,000 Russian soldiers, who will use the Georgian .towns for bar racks and the fields for training camps. The Georgians are to be scat tered and lost as a race. Russia nas aecreea. tne ena or a peo ple who trace their ancestry in tradition back' to the great-grand sou of Japheth, son of Noah, and who fought 2000 years for inde pendence. , ' The Georgian race, which rep resents the oldest elements of civ ilization in the Caucasus. Is distin guished by excellent mental qual ities and Is especially, noted for personal courage and a passionate love of music; Georgian : women have been world-famous for their beauty and Georgian men for their fine athletic bodies. Christianity Was brought to this little country early in the fourth century by missionaries of Con stantlne the Great. The people be come fanatical in their allegiance to the. Greek church, and it was this fanaticism that led to -the downfall ot their kingdom. The Persians began a war upon, them in the eighteenth century and when. the v aid of Russia's "Christian army was - asked against the . infi dels it was 1 given and Russia an nexed Georgia. Since 1801 what were once a prou,d, ; free people have been subjects of the. Czar, 'j- Now the Czar proposes to scat ter them like the dead ! leaves of autumn. It may not be an event ot paramount Importance, -tmt the By John M. Osklson. Assume that you are one of the of Oregon's manly men who gave us ployed, who are deprived of their live- j country's thrifty ones; you lay by a the ballot, and that is an opportunity j Uhood by prohibition T" I wish to say:! certain amount of money every year. to aDDeal to my enfranchised daugh- " lllUUI "uw ueing auiu mm uumuuu tavnUuS juur .ut ters to consider the situation in Mon- a "nount ln ess of the expense it plus confronts you. -tana and Nevada, where, by sidestep- adds sovernment through Increasing Suppose you acknowledge to your plng the present prohibition craxe now crlme; lawlessness, etc.. and that ex- self that you knew nothing about the nmntne ramoant here, vou may neip I - ----. . ouc, ,u. v.w.u, ruoiung reiujJdUl uwt, Ju J .F u-orfl nth,, ,THIUI nf trncrnriont i ... , U. ' What kana US. fT a8 wMch wouid othwlse "have to be con- youTott; get good InstructionT " .i, .rJc I tributed by society at large, through a Kecently I received the literature of With yourselves. I trrtiv fair- and annnhla. tax it I i.-.t !,. ,.v.. , ABIGAIL. SCOTT DUNIWAY. I . . .- .nh " I T" XTS " , t ZlZ . . ... ... . i-tMi in a rvririHnnn I w cuui,uuw mH in tne outline oi ins course ior Automobiles in a Comparison. t DBlieve thft nauor traffic is supposed i,.rv invtnr. rot Kft. Portland, June 22. To the Editor Of I to be contributing this disproportion-1 in that outline I found 37 headings. The Journal Reading Onlooker s I ate share to the expenses of govern-! constituting so many "lessons" for the "hard times" letter ia Friday'a Journal I ment, though I myself do not know -tudent. The list began with a discus left me undecided as to whether he was I whether it is oriot It is as unfair, I, ion of miscellaneous forms of lnvest- a dealer m snoes or preaa; out. no one jr so, as we snouid legislate that ment. went Into the history of lnvest- could make a mistake about his party ri.halred people, or fat men should ment securities, took up mortgages, life affiliations. He is plainly a Prohibl- pay double tax rates, and It la. If true, Inisurance. stock, and markets, short- tionist. His discovery that the auto- hut on more example of the way ln term note and corporation paper, mobile has caused the "present deplor- which wealth baa been contriving to -Tjaranteed securities ' able conditions" and the fact, that he make poverty beat- the tax burdens There wera six lessons on bonds blames the machine, not tne man, i these many centuries.' For all taxes 1 ,Quir,- th.m ,,n in . m.n-mi av and classes rum as a .u on oommoaiues are smixea to tne con- then gttlng down to specific Issues; i cial edubation? tha wool Prohibitionist. He has dls-1 lumtr. Labor la the srreat consumer. I covered the cause, and of course he The land tax, the income taxi and does not blame the man who Joy rides the inheritance tax are the only taxes ln the evil. If that is so, then and commits other . offenses against which the economists say are not 1 us stop the war on the white slave tociety; that wouldn't be consistent shifted to consumers. Tha working traae ana just cnarge mem a Aign with prohibition. The remedy is to man pays all other taxes in" the last license. abolish : the automobile. It doesn't analysis, but these taxes come out of Some say the foreigner would not matter that men and women who can the share of production secured by the stand for prohibition. Who Is running afford it enjoy their automobile rldo capitalist, and he cannot wiggle out of this country, anyway? If the foreign- and never travel too fast; neither does them. er does not like our laws, let him go it matter that the machine is vary , I am Inclined to think that the liquor back wrier ne oeiongs. we can get necessary to others; some unquestlon- traffic does add to the expenses of along without him. F. H. USHIJR. ably do spend money on automobiles government all that it contributes In and gasoline when they cannot afford taxes, and more also; but, if not. let us Branding Drunkards. it. and without doubt the automobile i eitner eliminate it or treat it rainy. I Portland. June 20. To the Editor of has broken up several homes and! The answer to the other question no I -rt,- im.i t . rr. ih vn m. caused many heartaches, therefore pro- j one can make him understand unless t.. u- t.ttoo a drunkard. Dut hibit its manufacture and sale. If 98 he digs It Out of bis own mind. If half Fi""'y- if V?" - lni k-'J-ii per -cent of the men ''who use auto-1 tne people should turn gamblers. evf-I" " " " " mobiles keep strictly wthln the rules denUy but half as much goods ce-uld I It won't be- shown- enough on the of decency and good citizenship, that! be produced; and so, with the percent-1 hand; let it be en the forehead or makes no -, difference; the Z per cent I age of the people Who do not labor. Yet I cheek, so all. can see w wnat aeptns oi must be-saved from themselves. The I the same auestlon would be asked, and j degradation, the wearer has reduced fact that the' srohlbltion of the manu-lis asked in less Intelligent countries t himself. Cain was marked aa a mur- facture and sale of automobllesvwould when It is proposed to close gambling derer; let the sot be branded, it ruin thousands of families and throw business and resorts. , may be that the very idea of such deg- hundreds of thousandSout of work As a matter of fact, luxuries ot radatioh will have the moral effect of and bring distress and. misery in Its other aorta will replace the offerings reforming him to temperance, to avoid wake, makes no difference; a few have of the gin palace to the extent which the shame that would be brought on abused the use of a good thing, and It the drinker's Income will afford them, his family for all timer" It would be must go. Down with the urse. Even after, more fully supplying himself, and even worse than, drunkenness to them, if the 2 per cent go up in balloons and dependents with necessariea, than . Hop raising Is a legitimate industry, Joy ride still worse, we will have the could be the cause before. and helps support many a prohibition- satisfaction of passing prohibitory CHESTER L. CHAMBERS. 1st; and it is pot the cause of drunken- legVsl&tlOn. - D. H. P. ROBINSON. ; ness, as they would make it out to be. " Observations on Prohibition. Let them fight for enforcement of the - The tattooed Hand. . Houlton, Or, June !. To the Edl- Hquor laws,, the manufacture of pure . Portland. June 22. To the Editor tor of The Journal The -liquor busl- wines and foods, enforce high license, of Th Journal That little flag to be ness Is one of the most debasing and nd hve local option laws, and they tattooed, on the drunkard's hand Is it is a shame that our boys and will do more to right a wrong than the the cutfst idea yet for removing the girls have to be .reared In the midst way tney ar ooing. Let them &o Uttle drawbacks of the liquor traf- f such environments. It is esti- cats temperance, and have it taught In fic. It is just' about jterfeov if it mated that $2.000.00.0aa is spent each th achoois. churches and homes, and can be worked. Let us uke our imag- rear in the United States for booze, their cause will then "'JPP1 inatlon, now, , and try and picture the How -ranch more sensible it would.be t Osborne YATES, men lining up to have their bands If that vast .amount were spent for """ . tattooed r a goodry line, aven ln sober feed and clothing. No Tears for the . Dying. Portland, extending far down the Antis aay no one has the right to (From-the Detroit News.) street, each . man with his certificate I say What a man shall eat or drink, but I - There has never been any excuse of drunkardship, like a graduate's di-) society has arifht. When a man makes I for the existence of express companies, plom a. Occasionally one breaks out! a publlo nuisance of anything society I The express enterprise is the. out- of line and gets a place nearer the has the right Ho stop 1C It Is con-1 growth of a demand for fast freight tattooer ln his eagerness to be on the tended that the liquor traffic is a service, a special service which should drink immune list. ; :. legitimate business, and that- people (have been furnished by the railroads ! now, imagine again. Fancy the! cannot uve without it. iz that is so, I at slightly increased rates over reg earnest faced aaloonist. carefully ex-1 then let . us throw away all licenses I ular service. amining the hands of each customer, I and Import duUean and let averyone I In the early days of the growth of ere he supplies - him. Na man can I make it that wants to. But we all I transportation, certain railroad heads stiok bis hand into bis pocket, or put know the tree by its fruits, and the I recognized this need and planned to It behind him or into a sling;, and tool fruits ot the saloon are evil; therefore I give the needed service. But at about him. See him make the rounds of I it must CO, and go it will. I that time new ideas of high finance that bunch of men -waiting to treat, Let us all wake up. and put the 1 la railroading began to keep pace with the solicitude Of a fatherl : traf f lc out of existence. I with the new Ideaav-aan the giving of wnat rares ne ror aouars from I - some people say . mm license win I service. - A few 6T vthe chosen saw nine lessons followed, showing how to analyse and compare railroad, traction. lighting, gas, water, telephone, Indus trial and Irrigation, real estate and steamship securities. A lesson was devoted to choosing the most desirable securities among the classes"'dl8cussed, one on choosing the best corporation out of a class. Municipal bonds, savings bank invest ments and government bonds were all taken up; then followed four lessons on watching investments and the markets. Defaults snd reorganisations were tak en up, and also ""crises and depres sions," and the course ended with a general review. This is a first rate list of subjects for the Investor to study. If he cares seriously to make himself familiar with the science. I don't imagine that subjects like these are highly exciting to the average man. They are not for light reading. Still, I do Orlnk more men with surplus dollars to handle ought to give some such course a try. why let the bankers monopolise rinan- "New troops were coming up ithe river all the time to Join CoL Glllram, so he decided to start for the Uma tllla country. Our troops had not gone very far before we ran into the In dians. There were more Cayuse In dians opposed to us than we had troops, but we pressed steadily for ward In spite of the Indiana-firing at us from rocks and hiding places. Lieut. Chas. McKay killed Gray Kagle . and shot Five Crows In- the arm, shattering the .bone. We killed eight of the Cayuse Indians and wounded . five, and we .hd five - of our men woundedT including Lleut.-Col. Waters, Green McDonald, of Linn- county; Jason Wheeler, of Albany, who was shot through the fleshy part , of the - thighs, and .two other men. The In dians retreated, and early next morn ing we started out to Overtake them. We got to the Umatilla river that night, the night of the I5th of Feb ruary. The Indians were eampeo not very far from ua. we could hear tneir tom-toms and their war dancing all nig he . Stlccas and other Cayuse Chiefs sent in word to Col. Gilliam offering to make peace and deliver the mur derers of Dr. Whitman and the others killed at the Whitman ma-nacre. We had peace commissioners with us, but not hearing from McBean or Father Brouillet, to whom Col. ttlluam naa written, the commissioners decided not to have any talk with the Indians until thev reached Walla Walla. On the night of- the Zitb we reached the Walla Walla river." that by organizing a distinct corpora tion to render the added service, the profits could be kept In fewer bands. SO' the express companies were born to live so long as the public would tolerate the parasitical growth on the railroad business. There was never a time when the railroads couldn't have performed the functions assumed by the express companies, but so long as the publlo waa willing, the insiders reaped the benefits. - The establishment of a government parcel post was the one thing needed to put a stop to the express hold up. It was a competition which is practically amounting to confiscation. Ordinarily one might feel some qualms when be beard the wail of a fellow man whose bread had been taken from his mouth by confisca tion. No such sentiment rises In the American breast at the prediction of express officials that the time is near at hand when all express companies will go out of business. They bad no business in tne nrst place that ahould not have been at tended to . either by the railroads or the people. Mexico's First Constitution. From the San Francisco Bulletin. In September, 1812. a congress of Mexican revolutionists, meeting' In the city of Cbilpanclngo. In the state of Guerrero, drew up the first constitu tion of Mexico. By this instrument the suffrage waa extended to every male inhabitant of Mexico over 1 years of age, the liberty of the press waa gxiaranteeo, a noYeminrai -wim distinct iudiclal. executive and legls lative departments, was established, personal taxation was abolished, and taxation on capital put in its stead, and the .initiative waa made a regular Instrument of government. Th men who drew up this censtlto tion represented the peons Of Mexico, whom we have been taught to regard aa hopelessly Incapable of self-govern ment. It failed not because of the po litical, Incapacity of the peons, but be cause a huge- army sent across . the ocean by the king of Spain to aid the neoole'a oDoressors crushed out in a ea of blood one of the most heroic revolutions recorded in history, - The Ragtime Musa Honeymoon B ligations. Oh, shall It be the mountains. Or shall It be the sea. Or do you choose In foreign' lands .. .. 1. . . hall - I do nbi care for mountains. The sea I much. too wei. In foreign lands. there are oemanas Ot speecn mat can o wti. Then shall we seek a city That wa have never seen. Or ele some pleasant village . And mere romp on iua Nay, noisy Is the city. A vlliatce is too sun. But anywhere else you may care . To go, my love, wiii. . Then let us take the trolley And see a picture enow. And for the flat save money Wall need a lot. TOO know. Oh. mention not the trolley i- The movies wiaae me weep. I've been misled; i will not wed A man who la so cheap! Popular Science. The eggs of the ostrich are bow in cubated successfully. Artificial limbs were used lh Egypt. as early as 700 B- C, The strength or tne tnoiviouai nairs- : Is increased by frequent cutting, but' not their number. - - . , ; One Mississippi river scheme-proposed to prevent the recurring floods of that stream contemplates a Job of exesvating BOO times larger than that, of the Panama cansL. The Sunday Journal The Great Home Newspaper, consists ot Five news sections replete wltn Illustrated feature V . Illustrated magazine of quality. Woman's section of tare merit. Pictorial news supplement. Superb ..comic section. . . 5 Cents the Copy