The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, July 15, 1914, Page 6, Image 6

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    THE OREGON DAILY - JOURNAL, ' PORTLAND, . WEDNESDAY , EVENING, JULY. 15, 1914.
G
IHt. JUUKINAL.
''' AS ' f yDCTBXPENT VEWBPAPXK..
,C. B. JACKSON
.Pubuaber
PohlUhed rrerr evening (except Sunday) and
vary Bandar morning- at The Journal Bulld
'i m. Broadway and Vamblll at., Portland, Or.
.Kotarcd at the poatolflce at Portland, Or., for
- tranamlafioa tkruuyb the tnaila as aocond
' elaas matter. . - ; '
TEbEPHONKH Main 7178; Uoma. A-0O61.AU
department! reached by tneaa Btunbara. aeu
we operaior wnai atpinmroi -. " -
V)k.ion aivhtisino behbksbntativb
- Banlamla Kcntnor Ce.. Bnuiawick Bid.,
So Ktrtn Are.. New Xork; 1218 - PeopWa
(tas Bid., Chicago. - .. .
- HbaerlpttoB terma bf 1na cr to any -address
la Ue United States or Mexico:
,(iM rear.....a,60i One wtb...f .8
. - - PAILV AKD SODAX
One rw.. . . . -IT-BO I On - Pt ' :
When YburGplway;
. Have The Journal sent to,
your Summer address. yf
w
"Better I the wrong with
Sincerity, rather than tho
right .with falsehood. Tupper.
WHY DID MORGAN DO IT?
f HY did the .ate J. P. Mor
gan do it? 1
Why did he and Rocke
feller and their associates.
In an effort to subjugate New Eng
land transportatlonally; plunder the
New Haven and bring on the awful
arraignment ' embodied in Monday's
report by the Interstate Commerce
Commission?
Who knows what Mr.- Morgan's
las( months of life were, confronted
as he was with practical certainty
that New Haven rascality . would
ed. JusticV Lurton'wasa Confed
erate soldier, and-, a good one , He
enlisted In a ' Tennessee " regiment
and ,waB " discharged because ,of ill
health. ."He ' reenlisted, was' . cap
tured, effected his escape, and
again enlisted In a regiment of cav
alry. He was with - Morgan in
Ohio on his famous rail. He was
again captured and sent to a. peni
tentiary until the close of the war
and was pardoned by President
Lincoln. ; '
.' AT. THE . LOCAL. RING SIDE
N'
O DOUBT' Commissioner
O'Hart is a great scrapper
under . Queensbury or any
other rules. . : ' , L
- But is it likely "that the fight
fans s would ' back him with their
money against so heavy an oppon
ent and bo skilled and foxy a boxer
as Commissioner de Holman?
-Mr. de nolman's right swings are
said to be" terrible. And he is
equally handy with his left. Sev
eral people on whom he has landed
were never found. Some ' of the
best posted of the ring experts are
convinced that ...Mr. de Holman
could easily prove himself " a new
and . dependable white man's hope.
These! things are mentioned as a
gentle suggestion to Commissioner
O'Hart not to go into the ring with
the big heavy weight - unless'- he
gets a handicap. ! ! One swing to
the; 'jaw; from de Holman's - left
might leave "Multnomah county
with only two commissioners, re
ducing the board to a tie, which
would bring county business to "a,
standstill. The fatal ending of the
mill might land de Holman in Jail,
after which it would be no longer
possible to use the campaign Rlogan
that 'this is a RepuMIcan yeari"
If Mr. O'Hart's feelings are such
be" resistedTohly by a man who has
had a ' long and severe training.
There should be two aviator "who 1
could alternate - at, me (wuwi, ; n
asserts. ' -, -'
Speaking from, his - own experi
ence, Mr. Beachey says:
On my longest flight of three hours
tho mental strain vai terrific .-What
will it be for tho man at the wheel,
when hoar after hour la reeled off,
when a man' eyeballs are burning
and aching in spite of serviceable gog-g-les,
when every? muscle Is strained
to the breaking point?" - . .. ,'
Ab to flights over land, though,
Mr. Beachey s Bays, the aeroplane
has been developed to that point
where it la a necessity, commercial
and otherwise, for the present and
future day man. It Is only a tdsa
ahead to the time when the aerial
express wllf be "no more a novelty
than ; overland limited trains , are
now. ' " - . -
The airman of today has every-
advice'la. "equally applicable In the i
Pacific Northwest. Everything In
dicates that for years to. come there j
will be good money in cattle rais
ing, it is a chance for the Oregon
farmer io rise to financial Inde
pendence. , .-'...
A FEW SMILES
PERTINENT COM M ENT AN D NEWS IN BRIEF
Through his press agent a Boston
man by , the name of Knowles. an
nounces that he will enter the Sis
kiyou woods ' In Josephine county,
naked and without weapons or
utensils ol any kind, will find food
and raiment as' did primitive man.
The venture will not add to the
world's knowledge and -the only
ones that can benefit are the ''Bos
ton ; man" and hla retainers wfro
will tell In the magazines how Jit
was' done. . . " '
-1
be exposed? Who- knows but bis
career, was shortened five years, or that tney cannot be controlled and
ten years; by the harrowing h t vht nnra
thoughts that his world-wide repu- weight de Holman might be ,in-
tauon as a Danger auu imuuuc. duced to try a go against both
was to do snaiiereB, Jfc uo -u Commissioners O'Hart and McLight-
Bhauerea, oy new nnveu " ner in the same rlne at th mfl
time.
If,- to prevent interference by the
authorities, Mayor Albee could be
induced, to referee the match "on a
"Sunday afternoon, j the old town
- Dr. Smith, nominee for gover
nor, is ' right in his insistence that
the legislative system makes for ex-
thtng he needs to fight the lawa travagance and ' that" an -excellent
of gravity, and . any properly built way to offset this tendency , to
bi-plane which has a light powerful high taxes Is to have a governor
engine' is stable when, intelligently who is a business man and i who
handled. ' If the aeroplane upsets will conduct state business like la
or HdftB or the engine dies and the private business, giving to the peo-
airman v Js- .not asleep it may s De pie a business administration j by a
righted ..witii comparative ease. - In business man. A business gover
his recent flights Mr. Beachey nor with a business veto Is a splen-
claima to - have demonstrated that j did plan.
a bi-plane Is capable of feats that
saw a bird loon the - loon, do a
backward stiiral or- revolve like a ntt?!?? 7l!'
I rw.aiMVU Ml AAaifJ UOpBtlUlCUa UDIUU ffj Wr
top arid sail earthward, tail down? ten oa only od id o th ppr, noaid not
companled by the name and address of tna
aender. It the writer . does not deair to
A New Torker telle of - a visit he
made to Coney. Island for tho - pur
pose of showing a friend from Ar
Kansas tho sisrhts
of that famous re
sort. Now, the man
from the southwest
had never seen the
ocean. So, as he
stood gazing out
over - the surf tho
New Torker , main
tained a discreet silence while, tho in
lander should reflect noon tho sight
l.Well. said the host, after a suit
able Interval,, "at last you can say
that you have seen the ocean.
The Arkansas man gave a sigb of
disappointment. "Yes, X can, he re
plied, ."but it isn't anything like as
big as I thought it, was."
An old woman from tho remote high
lands was taken to Edinburgh, and
heard modern sing
ing in a church for
tho first time. 8 he
was asked by the
friend, who took her
what she thought of
tho music
"It's verra bonny.
verra bonny; but, oh.
war of spending tno
he asks in Popular Mechanics.
A few years ago the man who
would suggest, flying, across the At
lantic would: ; have had lis sanity.
questioned 'but so great has 5 been
bare the name published,' he should ao state.)
posures?
t What was in the mind of Mr.
Morgan when, with Mr. Rockefeller
' an their associates,1 he forced the
New. Haven into a scoundrelly' pol-
greatest banking' house in America;
"Discussion is the greatest ot tn reform
era. It ratlonailses eTarthlng it tooches. It
robe principles- of aU falaa sanctitr sad
thrawa lh.m Ka fiV a .hfl4 Mllnn.hl.nMl. t ,
the -progress that' now no one ' is I ther hare do reasonableness, It rnthlsssly
rash, enough, ta. predict that It will TnciuaioaV u st. waSSrsw
not be accomplished in the near wusoo. . , - -!
future. Professor Langley died a afT Durkee to RuthJ
broken Hearted, man . : yet; tnei Kewnert. Juiv l3. To the Editor of
creature of his invention .was' re- ,The Journal Under 4a to, of July. 7 A.
cently made to soar from ' the s. Ruth attempts to reply to my lot-
ground by Curtiss, one of his sue- ter of Juno Zl, replying to Mr. Bexen,
-- . who had .written: "The opponents. of
tV.., t: m4 Prohibition have shown "that nothing
Lieutenant Porte s attempt may ln the BiDl4) can t. construed aa com-
end in tragedy or fiasco but one manding total abstinence or favoring
of hla snftCAsanrfl will flv across the doctrine of prohibition.' In re-
ivs an awlu'
Sabbath,"
Senator Cummins was talking about
a notorious interlocking director.
- "This interlocking director, ho said,
"declares that If we
curb - his activities
the poor will suffer
terribly. I ask my
self, though, Is he
really speaking on be-1
half of the poor or
on his own behalf.
. "He- reminds me of
I . ASk III I
.1 11 . I 1 r
2 ' w
hrfVlrA- ill
I 17 1 II.
SXALU CHAXOB' ; i
Some rjrof its a net without rtia.
honor. . - .' ,. -
Manv a man falls to "ret there be
cause he never starts. -
- . .... - .. .. -: ' ,
A Wise man tnarns aemethina- ,n
time a fool blunders."
Boat rockers on the. sea of matri
mony deserve their fate. w
. 9 m .
The charity that: bes-lns at - home
also covers a lot of sins.
A arood woman mav be InTV hmi t
but she doesn't talk about others.
Make a blay for luck if von win.
nut rmerao ji is wore that pays.
A man Is known 'as ila mother's
son untiL.ho becomes his wife's hus
band. ' ,-
e , . v
Of course a married man can live
on less than a bachelor if his wife
takes, in washing.
Don't think because a rlrl'a cam.
plexlon i a dream that all dreams
are nanq,painted.
Occasionally a srirl marries a man
Just to keep him from hanging around
the-house every evening.
The rood die vounr. but occasion
ally an old hen shows up on, the bill
ot rare as a spring chicken.
w
The average married man w17V frank.
It admit that in the choic of av life
Dartner his wife's iudrment waa far
superior to nis own..
OREGON - SIDELIGHTS .
The Oresham - Outlook ; has moved
into new quarters' in the E. C. Lindsley
ones: Duiiding. just eompieieo.
.-
Salem Statesman: price of hogs up
again. Around cents.- Tho people of
the Willamette valley . should raise
more hogs. They, are. in fact. But
still more. ' . -
- ' . - -'
The maohinory for oxcavating in tho
city well at Eugene has been installed.
The dirt will bo dug -out by hand and
placed In buckets whloh will bo raised
and lowered by electricity. . .
Roseburg's now trafflo : ordinance
against "cutting corners" is t be en
forced to the letter, Marsnai wuiiams
says. Three trangressors were fined
in nominal sums, last Jdonday, as a
beginning. - ? .
A movement im An foot for the con
struction of a new bridge across- the
Willamette river at Salem to replace
the present bridge, which, it is claimed,
has become dangerous. Marlon and
Polk counties will act jointly.
sr. :
Enterprise Record Chieftain'. A
heavy rain fell in Enterprise Tuesday
rignt. wmio tno moon was sninmg
serenely over- the- mountains at the
southeast. This produced a beautiful
rainbow by moonlight, a rare spectacle.
- ., . .. .-'" -' .. :
Harney county farmers will hold a
"Round-up" at tho experiment station,
AurusT 8. and a business holiday at
Burns is proposed, so that the towns
people may enjoy the event, which will
have picnic and other . highly festal
features. -
IN EARLIER DAYS
By Fred Loekley.
PANAMA DISCLOSURES
a man who stopped in terriflo indigna
tion at sight of a group of boys ston
ing a bird that was tied to a tree by
TOU SCOundrelSI , XOU plUlOSS I VBlt w" u"eu y Jjuaan nciaon roxn-
LI1 iweu. general counsel ana lODpyist ox
scoundrels l' cried the man.
'And ho took the bird up in his
hand and placed It in his bosom ten
derly.
"The next day at tho office ho was
heard to remark with a chuckle:
"By gosh, you know, broiled robin
on toast isn't -half had!'
the Atlantic.
CONCERNING EXEMPTIONS
he was looked upon as an honest
man; he stood on the pinnacle of
fame as the greatest financier in
the world. Why then did he im
peril his name by this stupendous
New England rascality?
He did not need money,, for he
was many millionaires in one. , He
did not need power:' for he had
the managers draw
of gate money.
down oodles
THEIR VIEW OP GOLF
THE
to
for
golfer in his fanatic zeal'
ply to this I quoted: ."Wine Is a mock
er, strong drink a brawler, and who
soever erreth thereby is not wise."
"Be not among wlnebibbers, for the
drunkard shall come to poverty." "Who
EFORE the state are two Diana hath woe? Who hath sorrow? Who
nnmntinn I hath contentions? who. nam com
. , A plaining? Who hath wonnda without
One is' the , present house- caus7 -vviio hath, redness of eyes?"
hold "furniture exemption. The answer is plain and positive.
The other is the proposed $1500 I namely: They that tarry long at the
homes exemption. - i wine, xney mat, go to, sees mixea
The first is now ln use. It ex-
b:
wine."
to convert the non-golfer by empts aU the household furniture piy
in every horned and the more fur
niture the householder has, the
greater is his exemption. Vice
to me: . "I will ignore his first
three quotations' from the Bible,
they deal only with drunkenness, and
about that there is no controversy
He proceeds to enlighten . me-on my
fourth and fifth citations. Fourth
"Look hot thou upon the wine when
It is . red, when it glvetn its color in
the cup, when it goeth down emooui-
ly. At the last it bitoth like a ser
pent And stingeth like an adder" This
is really a twofold command, not alone
that we should not drink, but that we
should not. evenTlook at the wine, with
its ibeautiful color, for -fear -of. yield
ing to temptation. It needs no con
struction, it? commands' total" abstin
ence and " substantiates ' tho doctrine
of Drohibitlon.
V I looked in' vain for tho light ' that
Mr. Ruth suggests. I need on my fourth
forever talking golf and ex
plaining how he missed a
short putt at the fourteenth hole
poTer aTmoV suffif te
-.-.. a rT-annoi tAmin!nn nver L t . ...x, " 1'" Jin the home, the smaller is the
the financial and . business , world ls mbre surprising is that the at- J?fnl?!07
of the United States. tack haa first-been mad in le. man in the cheap cottage
He had all of wealth and nover i,B, . least iavorea
Men who navA Inn? rpstrnlnAd I i. ,
towered far above every other tytmM -t-"---r ww
fifiancier in the mastership of bus- o il ZZiZXZ f'
mesa;: ' ' His ; figure - stood in bold wrlt ..Mlf .VV? t: .nT. Tt !or"e iI r ?
k v. ' . a i r art ium sa D-nriKm --it i a a ivq w- a mw - . . m . - . . a
Christendom. . There- was scarcely Vth A mn writ lsa lurniture., ,iivestocBV
1 .v.. 'JBeiriBn old men writes another. machinery, orchard , trees . vines.
urea means am not naye tne power ,t0. tne, lQa0n Times says 'v"golf ing-of : win. , -when
to grant. . ; ,- - . , .,1, ,,f j,.1- . " - it; s-iv eth -its color in th cup, when
.. He'.was'ln position, had he n-: S, d"fJUlt -.Wch provmerita:t)ft...iii -en-l underhe H rfoveth itself arlghC hoT-wiii under-
eratea , auierenuy, to nave . wnuen I on - t
5iBi f!."0 -V7"Z People.-C Seine allowance must ;be Tit f a ndkentai- that ' if tbaW " ."W
f . : - m tnr nTiTTiiT'a'sj ann rim wnn t net ins
least bit" drunk, either." But this sug
gestion fails to enlighten, me., I fully
" According to another diatribe everv taxnaver There' Rhoiilfl ,nt I understand-ithe wlsdoTft of the injunc
:the .economic-objecUon to golf is ritS.Sof'r l Iz.J'A
that it keeps alive d many people Uan. and a $50 exemption for an-TVn VerVday mr.vh"
wno wouia ,oe oetter aeaa." nth or man. Mm amnio nroof of the wisdom ot the
But for these criticisms, there is Vet, that Is xaitlv what harw Biblical injunction. i -
MIA nnanswornhla 'Txmnnoa- TKai I ' i ; -i . '.T- - ' . B.!W.,DURKBa
-v-.v., neiiB unaer ma. creHent eifitimnon
. . - - . . .1 .
J- uo'.f . evry man 10 1 measure. Thus, there, is in Port- PnbUc Market.
u, lUB uuu a land one Instance rot household fur- Portland, July lB-To the Editor ot
when he kissed his cow. , nittit-ft thAt- waa taiAH at ti unftl The Journal Your editorial in Mon-
ZLl,J -J day's Journal en tlUed "Pride 1 and
ises an enormous fascination land, .made, by clearing, .ditching stand the wisdom of. tho BiblicaV in
thousands. of dull Witted and rlrftinin?" f ' junction and the reason for the ad-
had-the power and means to iriakB ' S in" ' !Jt Ianaa'entel at if there
the 'naUon rtng witl ' plaudits to Ja ase fof. racial-preju- isto be exemption at ail. it should,
his name.' Until this New Haven' ' ,L" ' 1 T .1 2. ' &8 far Possible, apply, equally: to
scandal,- it was , BtlU ., within his
riacu; " in r aultUnjr" the world, to
lay ; at ; the feet of his kinsmen a
fameandJ fortune to make . them
, envied by mankind
; But he failed." The great struc
ture of fame that he was a life
time in. building, is shattered at a
single blow. For his kinsmen
there ia nothing but shame, sorrow
- and4 humiliation. v
4 How oould there be a more pow
; erfui-'wanilng to the billionaires
and millionaires who still survive?
Why -.an' they ask themselves,
BRIDGE BONDS VALTO
iHB Interstate Bridge bonds are
valid. The Oregon Supreme
ftrpnamt " aremntlAn it I nay Journal ciiuubu jrnuv mux
present exemption oi l t, nn.nr. ia
furniture was passed, but which Bon hava the exnerlenees of the ciUes
Is not assessed at all anow. .' The I mentioned for our own city, whloh at
owner enjoys ; an exemption', ot 11x6 preeit time is i oxpenmenung with
Court so declared in a decis- i;B0 under; the present plan, reading the article, and similar ones on
tnn vahv 4. 1 while many -a man. because he has I former occasions, ospoolaiiy of Los
ewu r ooiici ua m axa lud a. a a nu u i v i ,- -.- i - - - . . .
. aa the world la asking - Itself, the suit brought by Mr. Stoppenbach to only worth or furniture, - gets ..22 H
Ltteat question, why did Morgan test the validity of the bonds. xemptlontof only $50.; - f fSLSUSli&
MO ltf
'A
,. : ,
JT8TICE IXRTOJf
rUSTICH LURTON. Who H!fd
.j I Sunday at Atlantic City, was
' the fourth Confederate vet-
y eran named for the United
States Supreme Court. His death
is a distinct loss to. the country be
cause Of his characteras a man
and his attainments as a Jurist. : It
Tf im waii .m. n.i.u.. -ai - it is not an enuitaoie Dian. nie I ,.nn t in mini i nuh.
the bridge should now be pushed. ltL "1 5J,l?
Nobody knows so Well what it will - y r " - ."taure auu ae-
mean to the regions and cities t-"?: Z
ffA S 4 . . i A. aa ,
fectert u! thn whrt ,Ava .Ai r " wiu De on me wovember bal-
the banks at Vancouver" ' and ot' and lht way l. vote f " 18
watched the nresent tedious T.rr,.- " a opposite, ryes.
of crossing the river.
Beyond the bridge from Portland
is Vancouver and back of Vancou
ver ls Clarke county, one of the
erves to .again call1 attention -to V -n T ,
v. .v.r.t.. lloors. Beyond Clarke county la
AN OPPORTUNITY IN BEEP
, OINCIDENT with the govern
ment report . of a bumper
crop ; came - an announcement
of an Increase in the price bf
business men in a certain section of
the city the grocer, of course, ex
centedthe leading- spirit In the
whooclner being a dry goods merchant-
Then comes the farmer with his hogs
and sheen to the public ' market, and
the -butcher uncorks the only ' part of
a hog wasted ty a Chicago packer
the squeal. The trinity is oompietea
when tho fish vender puts In an ap-f
pearance without a licence, but per-
haps they were hybrids and ho raised
them In an incubator - and the fish
warden couldn't touch him. When-
no one howled but the grocer, tho
otner great back country that I ka rht,o-A v-i.. .v.. f a-. vnnn. man
. . cj . "v. m I. I ' - r
vaj. urucn oi me unitea states vjiM -. i. 7 ..t t I
cult Court ,he and Judgw:Xtirton Jiwr2n
-wAa--MiiM.,A. , .7t-." hawk and the traiL I ' ; ; - I nfrirWl
rit, tmW tj.ij-i 1 The bridge will she
sidered appointing his old Colleague J JS' JLS IJi? T8!11186: beef 88 while the supply has
to the hation'a highest! tribunal he !i"vf: " wilK be. civ.lU diminished.: -Naturally, they, say.
Cattle are scarce. Packer t
a notable I the neonlft fire flat In t lust at, mhA I
- a r -- o ,jv.v fc.kj u. I
From tho Salt Lake Tribune.
Tho Now Tork World continues its
revelations concerning tho conspiracy
which led up to Roosevelt's "taking"
the Isthmus. Letters and testimony
reveal that when president, Mr. Roose-
tho Panama Canal company, to Indorse
and foment a revolution in Panama.
The canal company was interested to
tho extent of the $40,000,000 Which it
could receive only through tho signing
of a treaty by Colombia or by a revo
lution Which would set up an Independ
ent republic
After reading tho detailed dlsclos-
! nres,! on ls amazed that - President
i Roosevelt ' ever , should have bragged
Recently I fell into ' conversation
with Joslah Beal. ot Hiilsboro, who for "
a.unnre score years and ten. has
lived In Oregon. WM bom , jcosi
osku county. Indiana in 1837." said Air."
-"- uiava.es me 77 years old. -
When 1 was a little tad not over four
?et!?.ol- wo went to Mlssourt. When
1 was 10 years old that was in tho
2,r,? "MttZZL Oregon. ,
: ma cnance to get
an educaUon when I was little, that
tney ao nowadays. I wasn't graduated
from anywhere not even from the
primary grade so my spelling Isn't al
ways according to Hoyle. I am pretty l.
apt to take short cuts when it comes
to spelling. If you called the roll on
my words, some of the letters would
turn. up missing and unaccounted for.
but if Webster spells them one way
and I another. I bear no malice, nor
hOjUl no grudge against Webster.
"Wo started for Oregon from Upper '
Grand river. ln the northwest corner of
the state not far from the Iowa line.
We crossed the Missouri river at St.
Joe. In those days the country west of
"-v uuw uraana was called the
Indian territory. The old trail though
in 1847 It was not the deeply-worn
trail tho emigrants of the fifties
found went through what Is now
Nebraska, Wyoming. Idaho and Ore
gon. This road or the Oregon trail as
it was called, had been traveled the
year before by the Mormons going out
to the Great Salt Lake and three years
later It was used by the '4crs on their
way to the newly discovered roid dia-.
gings of California. The mind of a boy
of 10 is keenly alive to Impressions
and tho impressions of our 2000-mile
I trip across the plains are still vivid.
yve saw our first buffalo shortly after
passing the forks of the Platte and we"
saw thousands of the great shaggy,
awkward-looking brutes as well as
thousands of clean limbed graceful
antelopes during the next few weeks.
I will never forget my first taste of
buffalo meat. We thought It a won
derful treat after our bacon and salt
meat. From the Platte to the Rocky
mountains we were never without buf
falo or antelope meat. At Fort Hall
we met a man named Hall a cousin fit
have a largo .foreign element, but
would Mrs. Dunlway advise the wo
men of Oregon,' with their American I a,bout acquiring tho canal rone ln tho
ideas to exercise their new found privl- way ho did, and yet we find him not
lege at tho .behest of that foreign only boasting about the achievement.
element? T I but piously applauding tho purity of
with au respect to jura, uuniways his own acts. In his article on "How
80 years and her tour sons, I will say I tho United States acquired tho right
I also am the mother of four stalwart to dig tho Panama canal," published in
sons. They are all voting against 1 tho Outlook -on October 7. 1911, Mr.
tho saloon, aa also two sons-in-iaw. i Roosevelt wrote
am thanking tho heavenly father I -"it must be a matter of pride to
every day for the many "young eman-1 arvery honest American, proud of the
clpators," tho Christian sndeavorers, i a-ood name of his country, that the
Epworta leaguers, and other members I acquisition of tho canal and tho bulld-
01 young people s unions, ana sor tu i inr of the canal, in au tneir aetaiia,
the ..other agencies for tho battle I were as far from scandal aa tho public
against King Alcohol. I acts of .George Washington and Abra
MRS. M. A. coonGH. I ham Lincoln. very action
taken waa not only proper, but waa
A Cross Fire In the Battle.' .learned out In accordance with tho
t . nn. rr- t.iIt.- wta tna I nianesx. lines i ana bmmi iuuiu v
rM4, f Th. jArn,i t hiv, bean I nubile and governmental ethics. '
watching the inky carnage between Tho United State has many honor
tho saloon and antisaLoon forces in able chapters In Its hlstopy. but no
trnur ittor iTrtim ih Peonie." and mora honorable chapter than that
have become so Interested that I here-1 which tells of tho way in which our
by advance to tho firing line with a right to dig tno rsnama canai to
few autreestlona to tho combatants. - I secured.'
saloon army for sweet liberty's sake. Less than a month beroro tne t'ana
Klla M, Finney haa enlisted because ma revolution President Roosevelt - re
she raises hops. A. ' S.- Ruth is will- eelved Bnnau-Varllla at the -Whito
ing to fight with the Bacchanals be House On October 9. 1108, - and 'they
cause "prohibition don't prohibit " ana I aiseussea tno Manama, wwuuuu. iu
ttm ia afraid it will. Thev. are shoot- aeent-of tho now Panama Canal com-
ing into their.own ranks. ; pany.Jeft - tho jjrosldent'a private of-
Binoe there-ls as much; liquor con- fice, to quote . Bunau-Varilla'o : own
sumed in-dry territory as there is in words, "finally In possession of an tho
wet, why not hunt, up Ella M. and element necessary for action, and
explain to her that It will take as I with the certainty that ix revoiu-
'much hops," grain and grapes to make I tlon were to generate now, conditions
a certain amount of boose in.. Oregon I favorable to tho acquisition of the
after it: goes dry as before, and she I canal son b-r tho United States, PTeal
will aeei that prohibition can not-hurt! dent Roosevelt -would Immediately
her business, and she can set out more I seise the oonortanlty.
hops, quit "searching the Scriptures."! On the day -, following this visit.
and be happy. President Roosevelt wrote a letter to
The substituting of tho "blind Digs. 1 Dr. Albert Shaw, editor of the- Araeri-
tho "speak easiee.'' -the "holes in the ran Review of Reviews. In the light
wall"" and tho "bootlegging joints for I of history, it is obvious that the presl-
the saloons, will aaa to instead or roo i dent was preparing an alibi ror him
of "personal liberty," while tho cranks I Baif t n this letter. He told Mr. Shaw
who would curtail right are only that he would be delighted 'It Panama
making It easier to procure these rich I were an Independent state, "or If it
blessings. I made itself so at this moment;, but fnr
It is-given up by all those who hare I m. o ear so publicly would amount, to
Biuaiea tne mauer snai u inioxicaung
liquor were used only in moderation
and all the laws governing the sale of
booze were enforced the consumption
Of intoxicants would be reduced one-
half. This would mean a money loss
of ' 1900,000,000,000 In her own pre
cinct, according to her late figures. .It
would half ruin tho hop,- grain am
grape industries, it .would, rob us ot
tho instigation of a revolt, and there
fore I cannot say it. '
- , e e - '
Tho latest publication in tho New
Tork World .contains . documentary
proof that the revolution at tho is
thmus was engineered ln this coun
try; that President , Roosevelt placed
himself and his groat office at tho dis
posal of the lobbyists who planned it;
that with his consent they used his
authority to intimidate Colombia; that
the revolution was so . carefully ar-
rangeu that tho story of it was told t my brother-in-law, Noah Hall, on his
monina di ore it iook piaco; mat ne I way dack to the states from Oregon.
revoiuuon wae woraea out oy means
of spies.
cypher dispatches and go-
betweens, and .that . when everything
was ln readiness, a show of force by
tho United States war vessels was all
that was required to finish the purloin
ing of a state from Colombia.
. The New. Tork World maintains that
there is no evidence to show that Co
lombia ever attempted to blackmail the
I remember Chimnev Rock and in
dependence Rock well, for I scrambled
all over the latter rock. Another thing
that impressed Independence Rock on
my mind la the fact that It Is in th
Prickly Pear country and, as I waa
barefooted, I had to walk wtth a lot ot
care to prevent getting the needle-like
spines in my fret. The spines were
nearly an inch long and when one got
United States. It was compelled to re- J into your foot and broke oft it had to
Ject tho Hay-Herran treaty because
It did not conform with the constitu
tion of Colombia. - The position of Co
lombia was that tho canal and railroad
company would have to pay Colombia
Just compensation for the right to
transfer their concessions to the
United States.
Secretary John Ha William Nelson
Cromwell and Or. Herran, envoy ot
Colombia, were tho only ones present
ln Secretary Hay's private residence
on 'the evening of January 22, ltos,
when the treaty was signed. At that
time a cablegram was on the way to
Mr. Herran commanding him not t
fester out.
"Beyond the Sweetwater we entered
a deep rocky canyon. The walla were
so close together that at noon it was
dark and gloomy.
"We struck the Snake river at a
point where we had to carry the water
up-steep bluffs for drinking and cook,
ing purposes. I remember one camp
we made when I carried water over
half a mile and it got pretty heavy be
fore I got to camp. We thought our
troubles would be over when we got
to Fort Boise but we changed our
minds whxn w atrnrlc lh rtiirnt rlv.n
land Powder river country. Rough
ran
tlon was planned, and ho Informed his
government that President Roosevelt
would' assume "a hostile" attitude
which would consist, in favoring in
directly a revolution in Panama." He
declared In a letter to tho Colombian
foreign 'minister' that - "the - warning
that I gave relative to tho probable
future., attitude,, of the' president 1
founded , on threatening : statements
which ho has uttered ln private con
versation and which by Indirect means
have come to my knowledge." In this
letter Dr. Herran adds: ."Special-reference
la made to tho promptness with
which the independence ot our depart
ment -of Panama will ' bo recognised.
President Roosevelt la a decided parti
san of tho Panama route, and hopes to
begin tho excavation of the canal dur
ing his administration."
The revelations contain many other
details In corroboration of tho main
accusation that Roosevelt did every
thing in his power to promote tho rev
olution short of publicly indorsing it.
LETS GET-READY FOR THIS CONGRESS!
, By John M. Osklson. ?
Will you Join my regiment ef 'sav
ers? '
X want to organise a big' force to go
Tntawiatlnnal fina-roa Af Thrift.
,SLZL lP.8"0rifi .ltl which i to bo hold (if present plan.
would be tho means of throwing' half
ot tho men and women who are en
gaged in the liquor business and its
allied industries out of employment.
go through) at tho San Francisco fair
ln 1916. Wom sOl go as delegates. '
Of course, we ll have to pay our own
If lt-ia true, as one. man reeantlv 1 war. It would bo ridiculous, wouidnT
wrote, that "for every saloon put out lit, for a delegate to a -mini congress
of business by the prohibitionist to reiy upon some ciuo or oinerorgam-
there will be five "bllna ol lolnts sation to put up nis expenses! uso
trite war mil A o-iva awmnlaVTnaint ta tvina I we'll have to begin to save.
as many people as does tho open sa-1 ' Depending upon Where wo live,, it
loon system. . ' r-- , -i going io cost. u ui, ivra , ,u
t likn tn a a-nnd -fia-hr iu )fi I to 8.500 to attend . that ' congress and
the wet soldiers take for their battle we've only got about a year to save
erv "Prflhthltlnn won't tiMlillHf" aiul tAt fflOStr. Ana .a a no very muon
then make all their plans and argu
ments from tho standpoint that it will
prohibit. It look like child' play.
: JARVIS EMIGH.
the fact that the South is furnish
- o w.w. w uuv.vu a ucol UUU1JCI....A. . . . I w - i - - - - .... i r . . . . .
' wbuivb an easier acceBS to Portland 1.111 v- .- i undUturbed but wnen tno Dutcner
-n..WH.w.'- than the; old .ferry that Is miZ7 r,
- the bench of the United, States Cir- att, ur !? ome days the butcher is said to be an early a stand m front of his door tM i.li
socks, bo began to see a new ugnt
And so it ia with all of us. We are
great philanthropists, but Uo often at
the expense of some one eiae. .
To my mind the reason these ln-t
tltutions fail ls that there is a place
. .1.1 -.m v::r :v:r::r wawon instead of an outlived reiic. whn ha :: XT"
Lurton ,was a Democrat and a' Con- rj , . 7. ""V0 Ior" tne supply, prices are bound, to
federateeteran. oe a rt TheTe BpDarenUy op.
as maae onvthe president's ludir- U--- --"":t,xl "u- ponumty . ior tne grower of befef
ment-that his forrner kssoH-tA wo-rou' m"u BLttOU1... The Louisville
disappointed if there were not - thou
sand who were aoio to noia up ineir
hand when the time come and say:
"Sure. I'm all ready to go; I've got
tho money ln the savings bank to pay
1 tho expenses of myself, the wife, and
tho kids; give tho word and 111 hike!"
When that time comes 1 11 want to
look around over this regiment of
thrifty saver with upraised, nana
and say a few word. Something like
these, perhaps: -J.
"Friend, it aoesn 1 maae me eai
roent that his former associate was
eminently fitted for the place.
7 As a Jurist-Judge Lurton blared
the way for other judges. The
Federal Heporter. showB - that he
participated . in, more Important
cases arising under the Sherman
PTJTPLYING THE BIRDS'
r
Courier Journal
says;. KKn-";5v .
There never was a time in the hls-
f or everything, - and . these . so-called
public markets are but socialistic
apery, lacking th fundamental prinr
clples of socialism. The average .cus
tomer is a. fair-minded J person and
does not believe in gplng to one place
for a head of cabbage, to another for
a bit of corned beef and to a third for
a can f pepper, 'i. ney win continue
N CONNECTION. With the pro-1 ing waa more remunerative than at 1 r for the same reason that theyi buy
t act upauu; lilKUl , aCrOSS I u.v t u.iu w Lime 1 m r m wua uo.. " " j
the Atlantic hv n.nn WDea lna peopi or tho south could I Tunny" for-the youngsters, xne -tw
fS .LIeutenant engage in the industry, with such as-jciety and the ad for the .ladles, and
JrOne. lalU CO 111 aHeaCnV. U. Vnll I actifa,. At HiAAoea 4a .- a. I v II , .vaIUU. aa wall ATI A than
law than any other-member of the known.' aviator, sees no result other period of an ascending scale of prices, sports and other new for-tho rest of
federal courts. The first great ;de- than tragedy or fiasco He would Tne South ls th most promising field us, all in one place.1 And; it Is busi
cislon Interpreting the anU-truBt act not attempt it himself, he says, t nturl meat'supply?" producia ness- - 7& H. PEERI
,7." 'Z": v. ' ior one minion dollars.. FoP ten years or more the coun- These Voters for Prohibition.'
ui -iuo iiruuu court, one reason given oy Mf. .BeaebeT I KAr tw t,.- ; n-ior i-To -the Editor
and was concurred in by Mr. Lur- that the flight is 'not feasible is wttf, ,i,ttrt of The Journal in the pioneer state
ton. ' The decision was affirmed the mental strain on the aviator fwV t. , Zt .ka.' T of Maine the Republican party at its
by the Supreme Court and its ef- Drivin a machine i 2 IaL?!Wi n.0t 0n y W .planted itself on tto two issue.
... Ati.- Ia .'" u luo- tjuiieu outies, uui: inroygn-rot ; abolition ana rpromoiuon. &y
?Vw waa mmm UiBBUlTB HUH 1J. B.1.1C3 J I I t-ttJIT - f I rill r-TM nVCaT ISTIfl 1 fe t . a r- -a- a I .'...- nr AAA a.VA41kj
, .r... " - . . r--- n- out me wona. mere is every m-
na?.i"! S'5 ieTe, lMn Irom dving,it an dication that prices will-be inaln-
13 2-1 t lilfQ,ial i01. "me .7er th9 tainedr therefore the farmer who
V i'rT1 01 .. vaia ' jef ur,M ier' 1 vul 01 BI5Ql ot lana' T1yInS has beef to eell will reap the re
is an ; inspiration, proof , that men I over .an endless expanse of oo.pnnlw.rH -
jWho are ready fight ior what there comes a sense' of loneliness,! 'The Louisville paper talked hard
wiry ining. is right are to be rust-i a feeling or-helplessness which canlsen to Southern fm.r. n it.
Letter Carriers' Pensions.
Forest Grove, Or . July 14. To the
Editor ot The Journal in The Jour
nai or juiy 1 there is mention or a
letter carriers pension.' Why should
they have pensions? why should wo
not all have pensions, farmer ln par
ticular,' who are tho real , producers?
'OTrta.t hv, thsttoi rnrrlrni - dnn. that
they should be voted a pension at 1 made 4 an enormously false claim or
tho aarly ago of 6B years? They have I that they have enormously cneated tn
had steady work, a regular salary I - assessor and tax collector. - And
which never failed while they were now a state official with whom X have
able and willing to work and they are just conversed Informs me I am right
not exposed any more than tho farmer at both ends of. my premise; that
and many other working people are there ia not $700,000,000, nor half of
to tho weather, nor subject to tho fall- J it, at stake in the game, and that tho
uro of crops as is the farmer. Let assessor's book' show much lea than
tho letter carrier save, a th rest of I a-ren thin sum a return from owners
us working people do, from the earn-1 f liquor Interests property. It this
tag of nis younger a ays, and not I statement plain onougnr
grind down th already overburdened I . And she ask why T want prohlbl-
taxpayers to help out a few publlo Ition if only 300.000 of Oregon's citlxens
official already well paid. Why workl are drinker. I want prohibition If
tho many , to death to benefit a fewT I there were but 200 drinkers in my
J - . - - N. R- : I (t.u. ' T want it en that the nresent
number will not b increased. I want
California' Liquor Taxes. . lit so that tho youth of today, my now
Sacramento; Cat, I July 14 To' the yung brother and now young sisters.
v-dM,, rh janrnai i winn,r i t I will not become drunkaro - rouowing
can hop XUa M. Finney will read this I leir maturity, and I want it becausi
letter correcUy. . I have written that! the saloon transacts th only legalised
majority of over 22.000 prohibition was
adopted as part of the, -organic 'law.
In. 1884, after SO yars: trial, it iwa
again submitted to a vote of the peo
ple and became a part of the con
stitution of the state by a majority of
nearly 50,000. We do t not thinkV a
majority of. the men in Oregon favor
the legalized, ealoon. . . It ,ls . true We
- .-. ijj ' r-.i " -1
the combined liquor Interests of Call
fornia, which includes beer, the va
rious concoctions in tho whiskey fam
ily and tho win production of Cali
fornia, pay into the revenue of this
state less than 9S.eoo.000 of the $63,-
business in the world that would do
mo a kindness' to take my money and
then ret us to deliver to me th goods
X have paid for. - - ' - -
If an outlaw proposition from be
ginning to end, and it annually puts
anniM ti... i nut f business mora man ivv ixsrsons
W V VU V V e aai ai t r r asu-a a g aviavl. MUU avw ,
yet these same Interests claimed the for Yory on prohiblUon would deprive
ruination ot 9700.000.000 worth of prop- I t occupauon.
art If nrohihition rrvaJld In rll.i' . . H. 8. HARCOURT.
A.ila "And T -m 1 A that ri ntmm taa
000,000 worth of property in this tat I ' ' v AVIlaolr ae Deliverer.
pay as little a $2,000,000 in taxes, sol Portland, July IS. To the Editor ot
it 4 evident the liquor Interests -hare Tho Journal Many people are amazed
sign the treaty, a treaty which Mr. rocky 'aM wound around through
Roosevelt afterward told congress had ! 'n,on"' "'n th rfad.lwa".hl'5h
been "entered Into at tho urgent .ollci-1 "'I nd ' hfr tlm
tatlon of tho peopl. of Colombia. .'.7!
During the summer of 1102 Dr. Her. I r..I, "ui XI Atr(ZZ
n awoke to th fact that a revolu- .n2akln travel alttUs ,
uaiiaci wus.
"From the top of the Blue mountain
We looked upon the green and beauti
ful Grande Rondo vailey. Where we not
down into the valley we found tne
grass was from belly high to shoulder
high to our oxen:ln all directions we
saw Indian ponies. There were, thou
sands of thm. man v of them beinar
calico horses or pintos. We camped at
about where LA Grande now la. We
had a hard pull over the mountains.
Wo made camp near where the town of
Pendleton was built 20 years or so lat
er, w stopped for day at the mouth
of the Columbia river to bury Hall, We
dug a grave for bim in the sand Jut
west of tho mouth of the L'maulla
where it flows into the Columbia. We
kept on down the river, campinc tnree
miles west of the Methodist mission
at the Dalles near what was called
Crate' Point. The son of old man
Crate 1 a mounted policeman in Port
land now. We had to lay here whits,
the men cut down the trees and sawed
out plank to make flat boats. Mr.
Bolan,who" was with us, was a ship's
carpenter, and, as he had his chest of
tool along, w soon bad some good
flat boats. Wo children thought it
was a picnic at first to go out and e-et
pltoh from th tree to use on the fist
boats to make them water tight, but it
took such a powerful lot of pitch that
It soon ceased to bo fun. We took the
wagon to pieces and loaded them with
Our freight on th flat boats. The
cattle w drove down the Indian trail
to the Cascades. Hero we put the wa- .
goes together and made a five-mile
portage while tho Indians took our
flat boat through tho rapids.
"Wi met John Waymlre at the Cas
cades. II bad brought some supplies
up th run to sell to the immigrants.
A soon a he sold all the goods Fath
er hired him to take our family in his
boat to Portland. We stayed with the
Waymlre in their log cabin in Port
land until our wagons and cattle got
hero. Wo moved out to tho north
place till after harvest ln 1141 when
we took up a place near Forest Orove.
"Tho people who came tn 117, are
getting tolerable scarce and when I.
call the roll of my boyhood friends, I -find
mighty few of them here to an
swer to their names."
Light a Ghost,
Comparing the stage conveniences of
ti r.r..nt d with the makeshift
existing a generation ago. Robert Man.
tell tells of the Inconveniences of -hi
early experience ss the ghost la "Kara
let." ' -"One
night I was playing the part -of
the ghost," he says, "and as I was not
very certain of myself the stag man-
ager had the lamps turned down un
usually low. As a matter of fact, they
were so low that while I was on th
stage they went out Of course, they
had tn be llarhted again, and the stase
manager sent out a stage hand to de
it. I had to remain wnere i was. ana
the ghost's funeral lines were recited,
whle a man ln civilian clothes slowly
and painstakingly made his way across
the darkened stage, lighting the lamps
aa ho went"
difference to. me whether you're out
to that-' congress' -or . not; you'r al
ready don your part 'in making th
great movement for thrift a popular
reality. - If you can afford th tlm
to go to Ban Francisco on a vacation,
go by all roeaaa Oo to tho meetings
of that congress, and tf you have a
suggestion which you think 1 worth
making to tho rest raise your hand
and, say, that I commissioned you to
spout r ',.'.-- ', 'v. .
"It, however, you'd athr use your
savings la soro other-way ,to
strengthen your place tn the shop, to
help pay for a home, or to insure your,
self against th pinch which is apt to
come at a period of unemployment
I'm with you heart and soul, in make
your exouses to th fair management
by .letter." - - .
X hope that tho plan proposed by
Mr. Straus, president of the American
Society for Thrift, for- holding th
congress will go through, Xf a gov
ernment appropriation is really need
ed I hope bo will get it Thrift needs
the advertising such a congress can
give It in tM country And if it hap
pens that ! can't get there myself X
want to be able to send a lot of sub
stitutes. Tell me you'll join my regi
ment of savers! " : . .
at -the wonderful advancement of soc
ialism. A long as the money continu
es to flow into the hands of the few,
and they show such oppressive and
dominating power, the onward march
of socialism may be looked for.': Xf the
Wilson administration-, succeeds in
checking the power of tho money kings
it Will check th rapid growth of soc
ialism. Those that are eoclalsistlcally
Inclined should realize that such a
radical chauge as socialism can not
be brought about -in a moment. Xf It
could be - It would revolutionise ' our
whol industrial system and create tho
worst panic the world over saw. -Tho
Wilson administration Is at tho bottom
of the ladder of socialism, and if al
lowed to exist it will climb Uo th lad
der step by step. When it has reached
the tpp, liberty, oouallty and - right
eousness will reign.?
. Many of the unthinking are opposed
to--progressive Ideas and principle.
Political ignorance has kept u 1n con
tinued Industrial slavery. It has
caused tho existence of the I. W.'W..
who hav no principle but revolution.
Tho great Industrial masses ar strug
gling for equal right under tho heavy
yoke of : oppression. The long dura
tion of oppression creates- a revolu
tionary spirit, and that spirit will
continue to .grow until the power of
money i subdued.
- - ; " EDWIJC A. .LJNSCOTT. ,
The Sunday Journal
The Great Horn Newspaper,
consist of . . ' .
Fire news sections replete wita
illustrated feature.
Illustrated magazine of quality.
Woman's section of ior merit.
Pictorial nfws supplement. ,
Superb coml section. -
;5.Cents the'Copy