8 "THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND. TUESDAY EVENING, JUNE 30; , 1914. "Tij t ' n I in KIA i . faource, a pjant that grows in South I Pi t. U.W J rlNrl ' America. It has few legitimate medical uses and though, a drug that is enchaining and destructive of the moral sense, its supply ought to be effectually restricted by vig orous governmental action. C. . JACKSON ..PnMfntivr t-iiliaad atary alB( (espt Maodarf aa4 ry SaaSar SBornlna- at Tba Journal Bnlld. . la. Bmidvir aad Yaaabllknta.. Portland. Or. a-stared at tbe poatofhcv at fnrtland. Or., for tnaawlMloo . Uroucb Us .mUi a leewn ' 'tfa. ' . aa-LKriioNKS - Mala tits; hoi v . ' vpartmania mcbad by ibaaa bo m bars. Tall tit parator what dpartnnt yon waet.- A1VKMT11N44 UKrICaHiTA'riV ttrnjamla kaatnor Co-, Bronawlcs Bld. Ut Mftb Ae.. Na Vb 2l Pew Bids. Chicago. . . :. abacrlOuai teraia by mall or t a a saV saa is tba ballad States aiailoo; - DAILY 'J'-'' Om aaf ..,.,..$5.00 I Ona aooatb. ......t M DNDAI Uasaar.......2.&0 I On psoctb. ....... . DAILY AKD SUNDAY a far.......7.'W I Ona lontb 8 .6 When You Go Away Have The Journal sent to your Summer address. SAVING THE COUNTItY. 0 to item of life cost ia the tremendous ( of land hogs are the greatest hand I charge the public has to pay In In- flatea iana vaiues. j.c rammes every community, and in the ag gregate Is an appalling, burden on those who work. Every time an added million is placed on the land value in Portland real estate, workers must begin at once witi. their hands to create more wealth with which to meet the increased drain, , while the landlords run . off to Europe to enjoy the fruits of the new values which, came to them without endeavor and as the com- High birth in rift of for--tune which should never chnl-; lenge esteem toward those who receive It, since It coats them neither study nor labor. Bruyere. F THE I1KTTKR WAY KANe'i FERDINAND played the game badly. He was an ardent militar ist. He applauded the mailed flat. - j , Bosnia and Herzegovina were an nexed to Austria by Torce. Francis Ferdinand as a towering figure in the aged emperor's court, was un questionably a commanding influ ence in contriving the annexation. It was government without the con sent of the governed, a principle that people under every sun are repudiating. Austria had the power to annex, but "the rattlesnake had its power to sting. The lawless bullet of the nineteen-year-old assassin violated the laws of society as Austria vio lated the laws of eternal justice in the annexation. ' There is a better way to govern than by the man on horseback. Humanism and justice are a better implement for ruling families than the sword and armed cans p. Woodrow Wilson's policy with men and nations is a better pol icy than that employed by Austria lA annexing Servian provinces and Servian peoples. t ' RMSBY McHARG is out - "save the, country." The-name is not unfamil iar Tn Oregon. This same Ormsby McHarg was in Oregon In the autumn of 1909 to "save the munltv's free eifL country." At that time the saving i - OTl Ka rt mutv process was to induce legislators ,n an community than to Inflate who had taken Statement .One to vjlloa , wllOT, rWa fa rnn. violate s their agreement '. with -the tinned riot of it. there follows al- wuyi u iiu Biamiure most invariably a reaction and a against Chamberlain who had re- Kuon- of Btagnation. It is al- ceived the people's indorsement for way8 a costly experience for those DCJl&lOr o1oniOT TriAana wVr vrora 'Hravrn i v, savruuv Aunuo w uv v v via " He failed in that errand. Not alnto the sneculative maelstrom. legislator was induced to Violate Thev ' bnv on an inflated market. his pledge, though McHarg used all prices .tumble, stagnation comes. mo tue6;iii tuu luiiuvuccni and unable to sell, they are forced known to inside politics. With all to pay taxes and interest on land wno naa taKen statement une, a that brings them no revenue. covenant was a covenant, and a The gafe rule for aU guch ,a t0 sacred pu flic promise was more to examine the assessment rolls be- be regarded than all of McHarg s fore they buy town lots or- other blandishments. ..nMi, ,.4 tv, ocboo. Bora' business is to know values. journeyed over the country in a and .In Multnomah conntv the as- leap now impeding progress, i It is suicidal, to the northwest's develop ment to hold land at abnormally high prices. Few desirable settlers buy and fewer are able to pay af ter .they have! bought. - Spokane is wise in attempting to bring the manless land and the landless man together. One intel ligent farmer settled upon land he can pay for Is worth, a dozen speculative deals in real estate that remains idle. - Under the same ownership, the Oregonian is against prohibition and the Telegram for prohibition. While directing its evening edition to advocate the dry cause, the Ore gonian stands by the cause of the wets and exhorts its wet friends to carry full page liquor ads, one of which appeared in this morning's issue of that family journal, illus trated with a life-sized black bot tle. Work 'em both ways is the favorite policy of that newspaper establishment which schemes to get a-comin' what it doesn't get a-goin'. A FEW SMILES Mr. Brown bad Just bad a telephone put In connecting bla office and house, and was very much pleased with It. I tell, you, th telephone Is a won derful thing-. I want you to dine with ms this evening, and I wUl n o 1 1 1 7 Mrs. Brown to expeoj you." Speaking through the phone "My friend Smith will dine with us this evening." Then " to his friend, ."Now listen and hear how plain her reply came back." Mrs. Brown's reply came back with startling distinctness. "Ask you friend Smith If he thinks we keep a hotel, . i ; , Jiff "Look at that foolish Mr. Baker," said one man to another, "out on. a rainy day like this without an um brella! Is he crazy T' "1 guess so," said his friend, hurriedly. Jjet s hurry on. I don't want to meet him." "Why not?" He may recoenlze It's his." more disreputable errand. Repudi ation st the pledge, ; would have covered these legislators with pub lic obloquy. It would have driven sessed value is about seventy-five per cent of what he considers the property really worth. From this, an intending purchaser can 'get a OUR SORRY FIGURE them into political and social ob- fairly accurate estimate of truo nvion. it wouia nave ruined tneir value of any property. reputations ror irutn ana veracity. It would have brought shame and humiliation upon their families. Yet for weeks and months Mc Harg labored among them, spread ing hia snares, luring them with promises, applying his wiles, and In a suit for $50,000 damages, brought by J. . E. Daigle against The Journal and tried oefore Judge Phelps yesterday, the jury awarded the plaintiff $1. The law firm of .Seitz & Clark conducted Daigle's case, and the presentation was so weak that The Journal offered no testimony.- The average suit against a newspaper for damages is an attempt to get something for nothing, and juries are quick to discover it. P' THE MEXICAN PROBLEM THE firBt step toward peace in Mexico has been taken, but the journey will be long. When the warring factions lay down their arms,' then will come the task of straightening out tangles affecting property rights. Here is a? specimen. ' - The Isle de Potreros lies in the -. Gulf r of - Mexico near Tamplco. Thomas A. Coleman? a Texas raneh er, bought it to establish a great truck ranch, and ror more than forty years it was his undisputed property. He had undertaken its development when the Tamplco oil ' wells began gushing. . The Pearson syndicate found that' the island would be a cbn- venient shipping place for oil. The , syndicate' went to Huerta, got a "concession" and " proceeded to build wharves and storage tanks on the island. Mr. Coleman pro- tested to Huerta and to our state J department at Washington, all to no effect. The Pearsons still have the island. ': There is said to be no question that Mr. Coleman bought the island ;from its owners, that he paid for It and held undisputed posses sion for forty years. Lawyers say there is no denying the Texan's . legal ownership and that if the law is enforced the Pearsons, in pite of the fact that they have spent more than $1,000,000 on the "Island, will lose their entire lnvest x lnent. .This is one of the cases, that Charge Q'Shaughncssy tried in. Vain .to have Huerta adjust. There Is 'said to be an almost endless num ber of other like cases that must ORTLAND cut a sorry figure in the Port Conference at Seattle. For once, there was brought striving by every artifice to break home to this city the meaning of them down and induce them to fal-1 the legislative skullduggery and sify the truth and abandon their court decisions by whichPthe fore pledges. It was an attempt to cor- shore at Portland is claimed by rupt men, to stultify manhood and private owners. San Francisco assassinate human Integrity. All has port charges on ship cargo of that McHarg accomplished was to ly one fourth the Portland induce a few members to protest charges. She has an ideal ter- against the system at the time they minal system, perfectly co-ordl- cast their votes for United States nated between water and rail senator. . ! transportation, and is complete Meanwhile, the pending ratifica- master of every facility for the tion by the legislature of the Cham- economical movement of freight berlain indorsement by the people over her publicly owned docks. . was a crisis in the movement for Los, Angeles is equally supreme direct election of senators. If Mc- In he port affairs, and in posi- Harg had succeeded tin breaking tion to make an alluring bid for down -enough legislators to have heavy ocean traffic from any part beaten Chamberlain, the country the world. Vancouver, British would have concluded that State- J Columbia, is in the same class with ment One was a failure. It would these California cities, and her have discouraged those ' who were modernized terminals with. every striving for direct election of gen-dock under public ownership and ator in other states. It would have I conducted by the public for the enormously handicapped the great benefit of the people make her one direct-election movement oT which of the great competitors for the Oregon was the acknowledged lead-1 world business to be developed by er, and would probably have en- the transformation of routes lncl- cpuraged congress not to submit dent to the final opening of the the direct-election amendment to Panama canal. the constitution. That is the way In contrast with these cities, Ormsby McHarg, whose -history -in I Portland with, her . waterfront un- Oregon is a wretched and a shame- der railroad and other private own less attempt to debauch . men . and ership, was a .humiliating spec politics, was trying to "save the tacle. She was a sight in such a country" in 1908. conference to arouse the indima- In 1914, he is writing letters tion of those who see the para- for the purpose of "bringing for- mount advantages other ports have mer Republicans back into the obtained by holding to their fore party." Those in Oregon who re- shore,, just as Portland should ceive his letters will remember his have done. infamous scheme in this state in 'There are measures pending be- 1908 and naturally look behind the fore the people of Oregon to res- scenes for a motive when Ormsby cue the Portland foreshore and McHarg is out to "save the coun- the . Oregon tidelands from further fic by absorbing dock charges on com petitive business, that only 15 per cent of traffic handled over Portland docks went to interior points; Portland was Ignored. No questions . were asked. Quoth they, 'We came here for information that would assist us. You have none to give. Tou have given away your port properties. You are not in the running. You belong to me cave age." Z. B. Z1EGLER. The letter by J. B. Ziegler rela tive to the Seattle Port Conference, on this page, is well worth reading. It shows something of the disad vantage under which Portland ia working in her efforts to develop as a port. Letters From the People try.1 UNCOMFORTABLE THRONES T HE assassination of Archduke Francis Ferdinand and his aggressions by private domination and private ownership. They are the tideland amendment and its accompanying bill. - Aside from a few who would make further aggressions unon Ferdinand wts 1 bitter, booted l"'-'' tie pa, Sap . ... v. . 0 both these measures bv the man nothing will be gained by teBt majoritlea tae his slaying. No permanent good the state ' ever 'can come from assassination. rpv,,, , . tt. t , Their passage is needed to put the futility of such killings. W S StSStSKSt ait,r fBif ,..'. inSf I,- aif.f..i. tIon maP wIth Calif of nla, . British In the abdication of King Peter of Bd ther reat com o i- ti. i .. liiwunoanua. oei viaf . xie tins aoanaonea tne throne to which he was elevated through the murder of King Alex ander in 1903. Peter and the mur dered .monarch, .belonged to rival families which had ruled Servla in turn for 10ft. years. Peter was in ueneva at tne time, Dut when a MAKING LAND AVAILABLE S POKANE'S chamber , of com merce arranged an immigra tion conference which was held in that city Monday and Tuesday Of this week. Tho nnrnnsa t. J....J i x .-I't.j - ' . . . - I - aujustea aur a government is j Dana, or conspirators assassinated of the conference Is to build un the set up In Mexico In view of such facts there is ro wonder that President Wilson . stood" firm in his refusal to recog j size Huerta, t notwithstanding that ' recognition was extended by Eu ropean governments. r THE COCAINE HABIT rN THE raiding of an Albiba pharmacy and 4he seizure of ten ' thousand dollars' worth f cocaine and ' morphine the pO- .. lice department believes it has . broken up a clearing house for v" death dealing drugs. . v Of the many drug nabits that of cocaine is said to be the most en ticing. " Unlike alcohol it does not J tirsL eiuiiiw! bu.u ineu stupety, j 'nor like opium 'merely soothe -and? J lapse into dreams. It stimulates t : .without stupefying, and after a! Jose the user finds the world brighter and more cheerful, feels that the physical powers are more ( vigorous and the mental faculties keener.. It Ives the forgetfulness4 that is.- not unconsciousness ? but r rather a renewal of hope and con . Jfidence. i In this does Its : great danger , lie- It is a habit that is spreading out from the edge- of the under e ,world to the fringe of ! the ' upper world where the two worlds come ' fin contact. ' - j ; It Is a poison whose manufae t ture and distribution ought not be hard to control. - It has but one i- - . - ' King, Alexander and Queen Draga, Inland EmDire through tho Peter , returned and was ultimately agemeht of desirable immigration recognized as king by Europe. and the placing of cheap but eood Europe sanctioned assassination I lands within easv reach nf lanri. wnen . tne great . powers recognized I hungry men riuerta in Mexico- He was no bet- Josenh Jacobs of Seattle rppntiv ter than the murderer of Francis told-members of the Pacific North- xuiuduu, auu jci uv was recog- west society of Engineers that nlzed. 'But Huerta's throne was the state of Washington's need is uuienaoie, even witn tne support, of state and federal cooperation in the Europe. develooment of aarricnltn ral Innrl Thrones will become more com- Mr. Jacobs said: rortabie wnen royalty ceases to dis- This state is not now nrenared to criminate between assassins. The I care for any considerable growth of government that even tacitly ap- - ai PZ??J?XT-500'?00 proves a Huerta or a King Peter ditch m the state, about 150,000 acrls need -expect little stability itself. are a present unoccupied and ready ior me immigrant, provided his - finan cial condition wil permit his taking up this character of land, practically an or wnicn is now in private owner- (Commanlcationa aeot to The Joornal for publication In thia department ahould ba writ ten on only ona aid of the paper, ahould not exceed 900 words in length and muat be ac companied by the name and addresa of the sender. - If the writer does not desire to have the name publiahed. ha should so state.) "Diseusalon is the greatest of aU reform era. It rationalises everything; it tonchea. It robs principles of aU falae aanctlty and throwa them back on their reasonableness. If they have no reasonableness, it ruthleasly crushes them oat of existence and sets up its own conclusions in their stead." Woodrow Wilson. t The Pacific Port Conference. Portland, June 29. To the Editor of The Journal The port conference at Seattle brought out a vast mass of in formation, most remarkable In de tails, which should have been In the common possession of the public long ago.' For instance, the seawall lots in San Francisco, though not taxable are appraised, and the rents are assessed on a 4 per cent basis of the appraised value. That makes the value of the seawall lots rented, and outside the constructed wharf and terminal sys tem $2,125,000. The total properties rented, capitalized at 4 per cent amounts to $15,000,000. and the est! mated value of all the public water front with the constructed terminal system Is 1250,000.000 The Oregonfan, deploring the loss of tax. revenue, if the Portland water front were public, should take note tbat the actual result of public owner ship of the San Francisco waterfront is a lease revenue of $593,000-, a les sening of port charges on ship and cargo to one quarter what It is In Portland,' an Ideal terminal system. perfectly coordinated and everybody. Including San Francisco shippers, happy, Perhaps this has something to do with the trend of traffic lines to San Francisco instead of Portland. Per haps it has something to do with the establishment of San Francisco as the financial metropolis of the Pacific coast. Los Angeles, which won in the San Pedro harbor decision retaining its constitutional title to the foreshore. owns most of its terminal properties. There are, however, extensive private docks, but as Mr. Qordon of the port board said, "We completely control all the docks and regulate all the port business. "We fix maximum arid mini mum charges and direct the develop ment of port construction." The Port of Seattle while having an immense advantage over Portland, In that the outer aone of the foreshore. 800 feet wide has been retained and made Inalienable by the fitate and in that she has - reacquired by purchaso beside extensive :- waterfront lots and has invested $6,500,000 in port docks, is yet in a subordinate position to the great " railway systems converging there, which dominate by the power of their rail distributive system, their more extensive terminal properties, and their overpowering political power. They have there also, the railway this umbrella. PERTINENT COMMENT. AND NEWS IN BRIEF tfMAlila CHANGE From a No-License Town. Portland, June 27. To the Editor of The Journal The Multnomah county publicity bureau is In receipt of a com munication from the mayor of Cam bridge, Mass., giving facts of Interest to your readers. It is well known that Cambridge Is a commercial and manufacturing cen ter or importance, as well as an edu cational center. For 26 years they have adhered to the no license plan. Mayor Barry says: 'Our population in 1886 was about 59,000; in 1913 it was estimated at 110,000; valuation in 1885, $59,445,670 in 1913, $117,186,400. In 1886 there was deposited in the savings banks $6,506,934; In 191Y about four times ! times as much as in 1886, with three times the number of deposi tors. The number of school children i attending school in 1886 was 9631; in 1913, about 16,000, of whom more than 2000 were In the high school. This shows a marked increase in the num ber of children privileged, by reason of Improved conditions f the homes', to continue their ; education In the higher grades. "Some good people contend that the no license policy keeps business men from coming to the city, but figures compiled in 1912 seem to refute this argument. During the two years pre ceding 1912 there have located in this city over 20new concerns, representing various industries. It appears these new concerns employ about 2000 per sons, with a payroll of over $1,000,000, and have expended for suitable build ings to carry on their Industry In this city over $400,000. j "We have it from business men who have recently come, to Cambridge that one of the principal things that at tracted them was the fact that Cam bridge Is well established as a- no-11-cense city. "Notwithstanding we are a city bur dened with exempted property to the amount of $40,801,905, and that we are heavily burdened by taxation for river and maintenance of the same, yet our tax rate of $20.40 per thousand is considered reasonable. On the whole, the people seem contented any happy. The law Is- enforced, and we are of opinion that conditions are vastly bet ter under no-Ucense than under license, and there does not seem to be any like lihood that we will return to the open saloon policy at any time in the near future." PUBLICITY BUREAU W. CTT. U. By Mrs. L. H. Additon. ' War on the cocaine evil calls for no mediation. - ,: ; Unscrambling June weather is an other Impossibility. . Policewomen In "plain clothes" should have no terrors for evil doers. The plain - clothes . would distinguish them. That hundred years of peace be tween this country and Britain is so leasing that another of the same will e welcome. Buffrarettes destrnvl n utaHnn nwar Wrexham. Wales, showing that the spelling makes no difference when wreckers are in earnest. About this time of the year one's last year's Panama arouses among ob servers the suspicion that one has robbed some deserving dray horse. Any time the scientists produce a practicable apparatus to disperse fogs they will be able to do a land office business with the ship owners. - By remaining In the air ' 18 hours a German aviator has demonstrated that1 the aeroplane has utilitarian as well as hippodroming possibilities. This country uses about 45,000.000, 000 feet of lumber eery year, and the record will be somrSing to be proud of when we grow irtannuch timber an nually as we cut down. One may assume then, on the au thority of George W. Perkins, that the Harvester company directorate was so good that no admixture what ever could make it any better. This constitutes a unique record. Last year's cotton crop ' proves to have been a record breaker, but In view of the fact that the- principal product Of cotton is (lnhHth nw awakens no great enthusiasm at the time or tne summer solstice. , - OREGON STOELIGHTS The Drewsey union high school la to be continued. The News says last term waa a decided success so far aa the advancement of the pupils ras con cerned. - ; - The new Carnegie library at Klam ath Falls will be completed through out and ready for occupancy tn Mix weeks according to the foreman tt charge of the work. Kv. if E. Wilson of London, On tario, who has been engaged in evan gelistic work In Oregon for some time has accepted a call to the pastorate of the First Baptist church of Browns- . ... Mart of the Wlllarolna Times has leased that newspaper to Henry T. win.v fnrmriv in on arce or tne tjti- fayette Visitor, owned by Mr. Hart Hu nntr fWunntinued. Mr. Hart will devote himself exclusively to farming. Hermlston Herald: Wner to spend the hot weather periotl has certainly r-aiiMMt no concern this year about Her mlston. One could net ask for a more ideal summer climate than we are en- Joying, e Dramatic note in Newberg Enter prise: "If Harriet Beecher Stowe could have looked into that tent Saturday nisrht when -tJneie Toms uaoin- was teinsr nresented to a Newberg audience so large that many additional seats had to be erected, with still many per sons left standing, he would have been surprised, and probably amased. if not astonished ana aiscouragea. Latest boost for the Oreg6n Climate, frnm Krfitor Younsr of the Coauille SentlneL formerly of Kansas: "Our Kansas friends, who have recently been sweltering at a temperature of 10S desrrees. will be Interested in learn in a- that we kent our heating stove running all last Sunday because we needed It; though It was bright sun shine out or aoore ana not at u un comfortable there." IN EARLIER DAYS By Fred Lockley. MONTEZUMA'S PROPHECY From the Omaha World-Herald. I Was Lew Wallace inspired when he wrote the prophecy of Monteiuma In the "Fair God"? Those familiar with the tory will remember that Monte zuma was a prisoner In the hands of Cortes, whose intention was to bring him before the people to order them to open the . market and forbid the war. The captive monarch had just received through his daughter mes sage from Guatamosin and the Aztec chieftains asking him to die that Anahuac might live and the prophecy is Included in his reply asking Ouata- raozin to shoot him when he appeared before the people In obedience to the command of Cortes. The prophecy reads in part: "To the world I have bid farewell. A shadow creeps upon me, darkening all without,, but brightening all with in; and in the brightness lo, my peo ple and their future. .' "The long, lonar cycles--two. four. eight pass away, and I see the tribes newly risen, like the trodden grass, and In their midst a priesthood and a cross. An age of battles move, and lo! the cross but not the priests; in their stead freedom and God. "I know, the children of the Aztec, crushed now, will live and move after ages of wrong suffered by them, and will rise up and take their place a place of splendor amongst the 'death less nations of the earth. Cherish tne words, O Tula; repeat them often; make them an utterance of the peo ple, a sacred tradition; let them go down with the generations, one of which will, at last, rightly Interpret the meaning of the words freedom and God,. '-now dark to my understanding; and then, not till then, will be the new birth and new career." t : ' . ' This tradition Is prevalent among the peons to this day, they believing that when Montezuma comes again Mexico will be free. Just as the tradi tion has been prevalent among the Greeks for centuries that when Con stantino and Sophia sit upon the throne of Greece the Christian flag will fly over the great church of St. Sophia Constantino and Sophia are now the rulers of- Greece and the rest of the tradition Is in a fair way to be verified. ' Consider the superior economic con dition of the Aztecs, with its efficient cultivation of. the soil and the beauty of Us gardens rivaling those of Baby lon; Its great forests ruthlessly de stroyed and their young emperor hung like a dog on a trumped up charge in the gloomy wilderness of Honduras by Cortes, with their poetry still rank ing In our classics, robbed of their lands, reduced to slavery and hopeless ignorance by their conquerors and the savage laws they left- One can scarcely conceive that the wretched peon Is a descendant of this gifted peo ple. Yet George Bancroft, the histo rian, before both houses of congress in 1866, In his memorial address on the "Life and Character of Abraham Lincoln," predicted "Mexico will rise again" and another Montezuma will come to restore to his people the bless ing of education, prosperity and lib erty, where, under the inspiration of freedom and God, they will take a place of splendor amongst the death less nations of the earth. All the evidences are pointing to the nearby coming of the days of the regeneration when the Jew and thu Hellene, and mayhap . the Aztec, re lieved of the oppression of thotr con querors, will rank among the lead ers of the world. WOMEN NEED TO LEARN ABOUT FINANCE THE COST , OF INFLATION E VERY time more water Is In- ship, and therefore not available for jectea into the capital Of a Purchase at low prices or easy terms, trust, the people 'have to pay Chairman Inslnger of the Spok interest and profits on the ane Chamber of Commerce says the water. Every time a million or ADIana empire needs more people two otfnew capital stock on a rail- wno wil1 make small tracts of land road is.created out of thin air, the more Productive. The purpose Is people in higher freight rates have to attract , homeseekers that have to pay interest and profits on the been Soing to, Canada in the past air. ' ' . few years. Mr. Inslnger says: - Everv time inflation i adder! hv ' These' people are not -going to pay every time mnauon is aaaed by fancy prJcea for .hlgh ..prIced land. we speculative promoters to the value want them to know that when all of land, the landlord gets interest things are considered they can get and profit on the fiction and the la.nd ln tb.' Inland Empire just as tenant, and through the tenant, the country" .ln,'"T otoBrt.t th? public Jhas to pay the Increaise. The - land question . is of para- One great secret of the high cost mount Importance int the Pacific ofj living is the great charge -the northwest. It is imperative that people are paying on inflated se- fertile acres be made available to curitiesJ It amounts -to a billion the men who will uee them?; Spec dollars a year. An even greater ulative prices based upon the greed absorption of dock charges question in its acute stages as well as many other harassing questions at points of contact between- the development of the public and private terminal sys tems. Commissioner Bridges, the most ar dent advocate of the public side of the contention on the board is kept in a state of nervous tension by these counter currents, and It really seems that the development of ports should be allowed to proceed on public lines, unrestricted by private control of pub lic easements. . - The factors, of optimism ln the con ference were the men from San Fran Cisco, Los Angeles and Vancouver, B. C They derided Seattle and Portland as having no control of their ports and wanting to fix uniform charges with those ports in public control. They said they were willing to do It for the ceneral benefit accruing to tne coast commerce, but that as Mr. McLeay of the port board of Vancouver put it, You. gentlemen, have no port, xou don't own your properties nor control the charges. Tou want to make uni form charges with us, and talk of a free port. How would you maintain a free port? (Free port meaning ne charges against the ship). We are ln a position td maintain a free port, but do not believe ln that alluring fiction. We own 90 miles of waterfront. Every foot of that frontage used below high water line is leased to users at 1 cent per square foot, at three quarters of a cent and some at lower rates, No ship leaves our harbor except with clearance . papers, showing she has paid all dues, etc Af ter M r. Hegard t's paper Was- read telling "off our' new docks, their size. that we paid over -one half of an available $2,600,000 fund for two sites, that we had difficulty getting neces sary rail connections, that the - rail roads owned half our waterfront, that they controlled the movement of traf Equal Suffrage versus. Prohibition Portland, June 30. To the Editor of The Journal It seems to me an as tounding proposition . which Mrs. Dun lway makes to her sisters or daugh ters, as she terms them that they should vote to perpetuate the saloon evil in Oregon, as an Inducement for men ln other states to vote for equal suffrage. In all past campaigns for equal suffrage, who have been more faithful and consistent in its support than the temperance elemenf? The liquor Interests have steadily opposed It and will continue to do so. Every well Informed person knows that women, as a class, in thia country are opposed to the saloon and its influence, and what assurance will the good women of Oregon have that tbey will not alienate more votes than they will gain, by stultifying themselves and voting wet? The liquor men- are too shrewd to be caught by such a sub terfuge, and after prohibition is beat en the suffrage cause will have gained nothing, and the saloon men will turn around and laugh in the faces of the innocents, thus affording another dem onstration of the truth of the master's saying that "the I children of thia world are wiser ln their generation than the children of light." - In the meantime It might be Inter esting to know who some of these good suffragists are who are bringing pressure to bear upon Mrs. Duniway co stop the temperance agitation in Ore gon. In the absence of such knowl edge I would suggest that she have printed a stock form of answer to all such. Informing them tbat only a pestiferous "minority" of the women with "one idea" are engaged in thia agitation, and that' after all, there is really no danger of prohibition's being adopted In thia state. . J. G. GARRETSON. v8, you. t y jonn At. oslson. If you take the word of the few in telligent women who have become in terested . in banking, what the aver age woman needs to know about fi nance are the very, rudiments of It. She needs to be taught to write a check, balance a bankbook, and keep a record of the money she spends. Countless generations of women who took no thought at all of the problems of finance stand behind the average woman. Her mind must grope to get straight the simplest facts concern ing the laws of finance. Men, long trained to meet the financial demands of the family and of the community, find it hard to explain to the average woman what they know about money and Its uses and possibilities. The man doesn't often try, and when he does try, he is -often discouraged be fore he succeeds. I read the other day the experiences ,of one woman who is now in charge of the woman s department of a city bank. She said: "In my own case. It took me a long time to understand the nature of se curities, for example. It was my brother who Instructed me in stocks and bonds. At first he was Impatient because I couldn't comprehend. 'But I'v already told you that!' he would protest. I know you did.' I would answer, 'and now you'll have to tell me again. Maybe you'll have to tell me again after that.' "What my brother told me seemed clear enough at the time he said it. but when be got away and I tried to remember it or reason it out, I was in a fog. But be was patient; he did repeat over and over, with the clear est explanations he could use, the matters I was confused about! "When he saw that at last I was getting a grip on the facts he went on willingly; he became proud of my capacity for understanding what lies behind finance ln principle and practice-Learning to use money (whether ln banka or ln Investments) with intelli gence la the next atep for women. They can get help from the average banker If they will but ask for it. The Day of Decision. Trfnta. June . 27. To the Editor of The Journal The question before the people is very short and simple Just Booze or Bread. I have got in touch with a good many homes and I know that wherever a nickel or a dime goes into the saloonkeeper's till from a workingman's wage it means the wife and children have not enough Jto eat. Pleas for personal . liberty, the poor shop man and the impoverished sa loonkeeper will not make anybody vote wet. w The Democratic party has the chance of its life to be the party of the people and give them-good,' clean law enforcing government. Let the Ore gonian be the paper to . decide for booze instead ' of bread but why don't the others stand for bread? . Oregon is. going dry so let all hurry up and decide whether they are going to vote ior Dreaa not oooze. PHKBE HAMMER. The Scientific ! Boneyard. Tillamook, Or., June 29. -Td"; the Editor of The Journal -The- fltp- Dant tone adopted i by thee-writer of the editorial in Friday's Oregonian- en titled -j"The Scientific Boneyard" Is hardly ln keeping with the dignity one might expect of a newspaper of standing when discussing such a sub ject. It Is such sneering at science that is responsible for the confusion and skepticism of the public regarding subjects of vital importance to them. and which paves the way for fakers of all sorts who deny the facts estab lished by scientific research. The reading public gets most of Its in formation concerning such matters from the public press and it is much to be regretted that this Information should be presented to them ln a way calculated to Inspire contempt for scientific truths rather than the re spect which they deserve. M. D. Applauds Wilson. Waldo, Or., June 25. To the Editor of The Journal Your editorial in The Journal of June 23, "The Crisis," is correct, and should give courage to the spirit which justified the Ameri can revolution.- This same crisis as you describe it, led President McKlnley around by the nose, bluffed Roosevelt from his stand for the people and made a bag of cheese of Taft; but Wilson is of dif ferent material, comes at a different time and la backed by a stronger and more determined public sentiment. A READER. Tr& Portland Way. From the Coeur d'Alene (Idaho) Pressv "When going to the fair, come through Oregon, and see the big state, not the big city," is-the way Port land has of putting It. How differ ent from some other cities located ln eastern Washington laying claim .to three states as "their territory." in cluding aU industries within a radius of 309 miles. That Is not the only thing ln which Portland shows her bigness .and -spirit of fairness. It Is found among -her business men, espe cially the jobbers of machinery and mercnanaise. -. They furnish a high grade of goods and sell at prices that more than compete with other citle3 much nearer the inland empire's ter northern Idaho, Washington and Ore gon with their goods and selling them for less money than closer competi tors and It is becoming common to see Portland goods on the shelves .f merchants ln this section. It will be a great benefit to not only the home merchant, but the consumer, when they are free from the domination of a jobbers' trust which takes all the profit and keeps its victims unJer Its power. Portland offers a market which will' give relief and the mer chants ought to take advantage of the opportunity to trade In that city. They can save money and be Independent. Organized Labor's Case. From The Public. Prejudice against labor organizations Is by no means confined to monopo listic quarters. Even many workers for social justice, who realize that ex isting conditions are unfair, withhold their sympathy. They find cause for this In the mslconduct of individuals connected with trade unions and In en forcement by the organization of un just and tyr&nlcal regulations. Tbat such evils ezlst is undeniable, but their existence ia more an Indictment of the system that forces laborers to organize for self-protection than of the labor organizations. So long as the number of jobs is lers than the number of men anxious to fill them, so long must It be to the Interest of la borers to organize. To make such an organization even partially effective, some If not all of the apparently ab surd and certainly oppressive rules are necessary. Industrial warfare is incapable of refinement as military warfare. Labor organizations can be rendered unnecessary for the protec tion of labor only through abolition of monopoly of natural opportunities If that were done there wsuld be joba open to all and laborers could get their entire product without organisation. fAa long as monopoly of nature's re sources is suiowra iu e&iei tmuvrvim will be driven to organize and to do much that is unethical in sejf defense These facts must be borne in mind In Whether It is Mrs. Brbwn'a chicken : plea or Salmon Brown's reminiscences . - that are the attraction it would ba ' hard to say, but certain it la X always 5 looked forward with great pleasure to my occasional visits to the - Brown , home. .1 met Salmon Brown, first at Salem more than 20 years ago. For aome years past he has been living at Montavllla. -, Salmon Brown is the last surviving- ; son of John Brown, whose body Ilea "a-moulderlng in the grave," but - whose soul "goes marching on." Sal- - mon Brown is much like the pictures of his father, John Brow of Har njtra Verrv. "Mv ,mih ink. j . - . 1. Brown's second wife," said halmon , Brown on a recent Sunday afternoon. -"My father was a good deal like these old patriarchs of Biblej times and he had a patriarchal family. My mother had U children, while father's first wife bad seven, so J am one of John -Brown's 20 children. I was born on October i, 1834, at Hudson. Ohio. "The first recollection I have was when I was about ,2H years old. Mother was heating water lh a big brass kettle. . It was cold outdoors ' and' the steam had collected on the.: -wlndowa I was rubbing my finger along the glass and was delighted" with the squeaking noise it made. Father came in and heard roe say something of which he did not ap- : prove. Turning e me he said in a very stern voice: 'What did you eayr :f It frightened me so that I not only forgot what I had said, but I waa too frightened to speak. He asked me again, and as I only shook my head. we etni Drotner Jason to the swamp to cut aome basket willow switches. Bv that time I had thought of the word and gotten my voice back, so t told him. but I got my whipping neverthe less. I remember that my sister Ruth : stroked the welts that had been made on my back and legs with the switch, and tried to comfort me. Father was a believer in the Bible, and while he was a loving father, yet he waa a just ' one, and did not believe ln sparing the rod lest he spoil the child. "When I was three years old . w moved from Hudson to Franklin. The Ohio and Pennsylvania canal had Just been finished. My mother was very much worried for fear some of the , children would fall in the canal and be drowned,' so father told Jason, who was 13 years older than myself, to .' taxe us-an down to the canal and teach, ua to swim. Our tannery waa a quar- ' ter of a mile from the canal. Jason' took Watson, who waa about a year older than myself, and threw him into tne canal, professedly to teach him ' to swim, but really to scare him ao ha would not go near the canaL Watson, Instead of striking out for the shore, sank and did not come up. Jason In stantly dove off the bank and got him' " out. For some reason It greatly amuaed me ao I laughed. Jason said, 'We wil see If you are a better swim mer than Watson.' so he threw me in. ; I was about three- years old. and X can remember how terrified I was when I struck the water. It seemed to me mm If I would never atop sinking. My eyea were wide open, and aa I tried t cry out a long stream of beautiful bubbles began rising from my mouth " to the surface. Frightened as I was I was fascinated by those bubbles. I do not remember how I got out. but suppose Jason must have jumped In and brought me out- In any event, this rough but effective treatment kept -Watson - and myself away from the canal. "It is strange the things that will stay in a child's mind. My father lost his property through dividing up the old Haymaker farm into small tracts. Being unable to make the payments as " agreed, he assigned his property to his creditors. 'We moved to Richfield, south of Cleveland, where father ran some farms for Captain Oviatt. There waa a tannery near there, and on Saturda night they used to draw the water from the pond near the tannery. TCe had to economise In every way, so we used to get the turtles from the pond when the water was drawn off, and for the v next day or two we lived on turtles. "Little things that seemed of no lm- - portance at the time, for some un known reason, will stand out In one'a memory all the rest of one's life. When I was about four years old I waa pass- ing by 'Minor's stable, when the stable man caught me up and puf me on a big spirited stallion's back, and I can re- member ray feelings of mixed fear and ' pleasure. - 'After running Captain Oviatt S farms for a year or two, father became a partner of Colonel Simon Perkins, of Akron, Ohio. Perkins, who knew fathee well, wanted him to run tha place foe him. Father offered to put in his own work and that of his three grown aona . for 1628 a year; or. he would work for half the Increase of the stock. Colonel Perkins decided to accept the lattes. proposition, and father's share the first year amounted to more than flbOO. They ran a fine grade of Saxony sheep, . also blooded Merlnon. I remember they sold one of their lambs to William B. Ladd, the president of the Agricultural society of Ohio, for $100. lather waa . a natural genius with sheep. "They say a good Collie dog can tell every she-p in his master's flock. My father had this same sixth sense, ao ha could Instantly tell one of hia own sheep. To most people all sheep looM alike, but to father 'every sheep had Its own peculiar characteristics.; in those days the wool buyers had It all their own way and paid whatever they pleased to the farmers for their wool. ' Father conceived the idea of organizing a wool warehouse. Wool at that tlmeT"-' In particular the fine Saxony wool, brought a good price. In the spring of 184 my father sold his assorted wool , at from 24 cents to fl.20 for the best grades. . "In 1848 my father, with Cofonel Simon Perkins, became a cemmlialon. wool merchant at Springfield, Maeat. 4 They not only graded the wool, but they ezported it. They charged two cents a pound for sorting, grading and selling. The trouble had been In the past that the wool growers, like Jhelt sheep. . had been fleeced by the wool -buyers, who paid them for their best grades at the price of the lowr grades. The wool buyer then stted the wool . and made the profit which should have ' belonged to the wool grower ; ritory. Portland jobbers are invading judging the labor unions' case. . -J The Sunday Journal j Tha Great Home Newspaper, j consist of. . 1 Five new sections replete with j illustrated features , j Illustrated magazine of quality, j Woman's section gt rara merit. Pictorial newa supplement. ' . Superb comic section, 5 Cents' the Copy