THE . OREGON DAILY JOURNAL PORTLAND, SATURDAY EVENING, APRIL 24. 1915. THE JOURNAL AIT WDtFUrDEKT NffWBPAPEB. a. JACKSON . .Publisher. Jrabllabad ararr areola (exrast Sunday) and rrerr Sunday morning at Th Journal Build ing, roadar and xamom ita., foruana. or. c tared at tha poatofflea at Portland. Or., for gaaaaaiaaia ncuaga ua malia aa aecou atir. CaXEPHOSe Hals T1T8J Home. a-6061. AU MfiroMtu mctM Br rteaa numbers. Tell u operator what department 70a Want. rOKElON AXVKRXI8IJ.O UEPRE8ENTAT1 VJB Houjamin at kntuif Co., Brunswick Bldi., 221 Mfta Are., Mew Igtk) UU Fmiilt'i ti mag., v-nicaj-o. Subacriptioa teraM br mall or to an ad- uraa u ma uaitea ' states a Jtexieoi DAILY. One yaar S. 00 I One month $ .SO SC3IDAX. On jear $2.60 I One month $ .25 DAILY AND SUNDAY. One ear ST .SO i One motto. S .S3 -a W uniformly think too well of urselve. Hut self-conceit 1 especially the mark of narrow minds. Great and noble natures are most free from it. -Seed. " 82- 6 LAUGHING AT OltEGON. THE laugh went around in the United States supreme court at Washington yesterday, when Oregon's position as re flected by the late legislature's no torious land grant resolution was presented. Oregon has been called the "fool of the. family.". The state was never placed in so foolish a light before the country as in yesterday's proceeding, when, by the subter ranean resolution slipped through in the dark by a legislative elique, this state was placed on record against the people and in favor of the railroad in the land grant suit. As time passes, it will be revealed that only , a very small group of legislators knew what was going on when the resolution was put through. Even Senator Kellaher, who was constantly on the alert for Joker legislation, did not discover the resolution, and did not even know that any such resolution had passed. Senator Langguth eays that he did not know of it, would have opposed it had he been aware that such ac tion, was contemplated, and that he thinks the grant lands ought to be forfeited. The fact that it was a mere resolution, and that resolu tions are usually of minor impor tance, and the further fact that the Joker section was burled deeply in a wilderness of words, made it easy for unsuspecting members to be de ceived. Finally, the measure was pur posely withheld until the closing hours of the session, when every thing was tense, when members were deeply concerned with billB for which they had been struggling for weeks, made it an easy matter for the knowing and cunning gen tlemen who were doing the rail roads' bidding to accomplish their coup. ..This was particularly true into the house, where the measure was passed at 3 o'clock in the morn ing of the forty-second day, after the body had been in continuous session for many weary hours. The one vote against the meas ure was by Representative Went worth, of Multnomah. The ab sentees in the senate were Miss Clarke, Day and Garland. In the house they were Blanchard, Card well, Forbes, W. O. Smith and Vawter. The resolution is a cunning stratagem. It poses as an effort to keep the grant lands under taxa tion. Its effect is to absolutely make Oregon appear, before the su preme court, as unfavorable to the government and on the side of the railroad. . It gives the supreme "court the distinct understanding that there is no sentiment in Ore gon for the government to win the suit. It is an excellent play, made at the psychological moment, when the case is just going to a hearing before the supreme court to line Oregon up on the side of the rail road. It is -action beyond parallel or comparison. No legislature in Ore gon ever went so far in betraying the people. No legislature in any state ever suffered itself to be led by crooked bosses into action so highhanded. HIS GREAT FAULT SECRETARY OF THE NAVY DANIELS is held up to ridi cule in the current North American Review as a totally Impossible official. The attempt to belittle the work of Secretary Daniels is only a phase of the attack being made upon him by the navy clique and the advo cates of ' a big armament. He has dared to lay hands upon some sa cred traditions and privileges of the navy clique, which" is almost a caste of aristocracy. On Its social side it is noted for snobbery. It has looked down upon - the army because its officers were educated at Annapolis. Many of the army officers came from the ranks and from civil life. Secretary Daniels would admit common sailors to the naval acad emy that they might qualify them selves for officers. He also believes in tree competition among con- THEY'RE ALL GOINC TO READ THE tractors for the. privilege of supply ing commissary stores. Th naval clique would limit it to a few fa vored dealers. . K : - By moving against ammunition and armament combines, by cutting down the price of projectiles and by saving $3,000,000 in the cost of materials for the battleship Arizona alone, Secretary Daniels has incurred the resentment of great interests. The main trouble with him is that : he Is neither a big navy maniac, nor a snob. MR. CANTIJOS'S OPPORTUNITY S' fATE HIGHWAY ENGINEER BOWLBY was removed be cause he couldn't agree with the contractors As a natural consequence, peo ple will obviously surmise that the engineer who has taken his place was selected to agree with the con tractors. This tendency is accentu ated by the Hood River contrac tor's letter in which he said of Bowlby: There is a general revolt among all the contractors engaged In this work, and we think we have the skid under him. The one man, who can extricate the state highway department from the suspicion that rests on it, is State Highway Engineer Cantine. It Is easily within his power to re establish the office of state highway engineer as an office worthy of the money the public expends upon it. The way to do it" is to follow the course of Engineer Bowlby and expose bridge graft whenever and wherever It appears, whether It be in double prices for steel or in ex tortionate prices for the work se cured through juggled specifica tions. The way to do it is for Mr. Cantine, out of the consideration that is due the engineering profes sion, to stand as the absolute and resolute representative of the pub lic in all contracts and defend the public 'With the same rigid and in flexible purpose that he would ap ply were the public work his own private work. By that course lie can remove' the suspicion that now rests upon the office of state highway en gineer. There is no danger to his position in the plan. Though En gineer Bowlby was removed for fol lowing that course, State Highway Engineer Cantine would not be re moved for it, because t$ose who removed Bowlby know riow that their act was an irreparable blun der. Upon Engineer Cantlne's conduct of his office depends its continu ance as a public position. The of fice was created to guard the pub lic by securing honest bridge .build ing and honest road construction. It was created for the purpose of getting honest bids on honest speci fications, bids and specifications open to all and fair for all. The j office is not maintained at pubic expferise to enable the North west Steel company to Impose bridge steel on county courts at double prices or to award contracts to some special bridge conipany on juggled .specifications. Engineer Cantine is embarrassed by the .suspicions that at present surround his position, but those suspicions convict him of. nothing. Not he, but the highway commis sion, Senator Day and the political contractors created those suspi cions. He alone can extricate the office, and the public should sus pend judgment ahd give him an op portunity to prove his reputation as an engineer and his efficiency as the people's representative in a public office. THE IMMIGRANT S' ECRETARY WILSON of the department of labor says now Is the time for solution of the Immigration problem. In an article In Harper's Weekly he ex presses the opinion that there will not be a big influx of immigrants when the European war ends. The number of new arrivals is only about one-third the normal, and therefore the United States for a number of years will be in a posi tion to make headway in. solving the alien and labor problems. The secretary insists that it Is the government's duty to "place" the immigrant whenever possible. It should be done not only for the immigrant's sake, but also- to pre vent congestion in the cities. The department of labor, cooperating with the postoffice and agriculture departments, is now doing the work of a national employment agency, but It should do more. Secretary Wilson says-American labor must be protected against some of the well-known abuses of unofficial labor exchanges. He wants all employment agencies en gaged in interstate dsiness placed under supervision of his depart ment. He would have the govern ment prevent exploitation of the man who works by the man who has more cunning and less con science. The secretary of labor .is espe cially interested In the European laborer who can meet the require ments of our immigration laws and whose experience In the old .world has been on the farm rather than In the factory. These are the im migrants the - United States needs, but, as Mr. Wilson ! says, U they should know ' In advance the real facts concerning their opportunities in' America. -c ' , Our immigration problem has been difficult because of mislead ing statements made by people in terested either in profits of the Im migrants transportation or profits derived from their exploitation after arrival. SIXTEEN LOST LIVES. F IVE hundred and twenty-nine chimneys burned out In Port land last year. The number in Los Angeles was thirteen. The year before in Los Angeles tt was six. The per centage of burned-out chimneys in Portland is higher than any other reported city in the country. ; Every chimney in which the ac cumulated soot bursts suddenly into flames is a menace to property and life. The sparks light on dry roofs, or elsewhere, and can at any moment start a disastrous confla gration. What Is worse, the super heat inside the chimney cracks the mortar, causes it to crumble, atid may be the never-explained cause of a future disastrous fire. The Portland fire department is engaged in a splendid fire-prevention movement. But it meets with only slight encouragement. The very people who are to be benefit ed are often hostile to the depart ment's anti-fire endeavor. Thus, in some of the theatres objection is offered to Inspection. Yet the very announcement that there is regular fire inspection of the theatres heightens publio con fidence in the safety of the play houses and increases attendance. In the theatres -the firemen sometimes found exits blockaded by paraphernalia, advertising signs. trunks and other articles. There was smoking, with inflammable materials close at hand. Fire ex tinguishers were found which had not been tested in several years, and which were in such condition that they could not be used. It Is worth thousands of dollars to the theatres for the firemen to keep up the inspection of the play houses, and It is worth a great deal more to the Portland public. The very conditions the firemen have found, and the very opposition they have encountered at some of the playhouses are the very reasons why the inspection should be con tinued. Five hundred and twenty-nine burning chimneys in Portland against thirteen in Losr Angeles last year are some indication of the carelessness of Portland respecting fires. The sixteen lives that are the blood roll of Portland fires last year are other proof of our reck- lessness. The anti-fire movement by the I Portland fire department is timely. But the firemen cannot do all. Why not everybody join in the effort and rescue' Portland from its annual fire waste, a waste from which could be saved enough to hard surface 70 miles of roads every year? THE POLISH JEWS S' EVEN million Poles, of whom 2,000,000 are Jews, are in dire need of food. This statement, made in Londpn by 'Herrmann Laundau, a Jewish philanthropist, shows conditions bad enough. But th t 13 not all. The Jews are even poorer than the Gentiles because of the boycott against the Jews in parts of Poland before the x beginning of the war, which impoverished thousands who otherwise would have been able to provide for their families. Political and religious prejudice against the Jews also renders their condition worse In parts of Poland evacuated by the Germans many Jews are liv ing on potato peels ana garoa&e ieii by the enemy. The statement is made that the citizens' committee at Warsaw is the only large agency for afford ing relief to refugees. Although the membership of this committee consists of four Jews and six Gen tlleB, it has been impossible to em ploy workers who would deal fairly with the Jews. Common misfortune usually unites all, people in one brother hood. But it seems that in devas tated Poland religious prejudice and race hatred still flourich. The starving Jew is not accorded con sideration due a brute animal, much less a human. Persecution still goes on with gaunt famine stalking through the land. OX WEARING WHITE. T HE Manufacturers' Record, discussing the shortage of German dye materials, asks: "What are the cotton mills that make colored goods to do?" The suggestion is that Americans dress in white. Cannot the people of this country make answer by deciding to use only white goods? It is not a matter of life and death that one must have red, green, blue or pink shirts, skirts, socks, stockings, collars, cuffs, cur tains, overlids, or ribbons. ' Commenting on this suggestion, the St. Louis Globe-Democrat ob serves that white is the emblem of SUNDAY JOURNAL peace, and we can make a virtue of necessity. ,-" : One hundred million people all at tired In white should have a wonder ful nsvchlo effect. I Dress i a more com polling In the spiritual world than we may nave realized. , f Hair tne mriu ence of religious fraternities lies in their fixed design of garmenture. and the church has rfecognized this fact from t the earliest monastic orders to the Salvation Army: The Manufacturers Record of fered its suggestion to safeguard the manufacturers of fabrics and to prevent possible deprivation and suffering by workers in the mills It has an economic object in view, whereas the Globe-Democrat adds the weight of higfher idealism. It is probable I that the dye sit nation is not as serious as has been painted, but should the worst come to. the worst, a nation in white would keen the mills going. And it would also keeR the laundries busy The work of. reducing the grade on Broadway, near the east ap proach to the bridge, is described in a news article as "preliminary" to paving the street from the bridge to Union avenue. "Preliminary" steps for paving Broadway were first begun in August, 1905, and with varying diligence have been contin ued ever since. The .bridge was two years old Thursday, the opening having taken place April 22, 1913, and it is little-used because all the "preliminaries" for hard surfacing the street have not yet been com pleted. THE JOURNAL national! EDITORIAL THE CASH COST OF WAR ; Br david starr Jordan Chancellor, Leland Standford Jr. University. THIS war begai, according to Fro feBsor Rlchet's calculation, at a cost of $50,000,000 per day. Rlchet's calculation in 1912 was an underestimate as to expenses on the sea and in the air. These with the growing scarcity of bread and shrap nel, the equipment of automobiles and the unparal leled ruin of cities have raised this cost to $70,000,000 per day. This again takes no count of the waste of men and horses, less costly than the other material of war and not necessar ily to be replaced. Chancellor Jordan. All thl is piled on top of "the end- Jess caravan of ciphers' ($27,000,000,- 000) which represented the accumulat ed and unpaid war debt of the nine teenth century. Yves Guyot, the French economist, es,tiniates that the first six months of war cost western Europe in cash $5,400,000,000, to which should be added further destruction estimated at $ll,600.000,00j, making a total of $17, 000,000,000. Edgar Crammond of Lon don, another high authority, estimates the eash cost of a year of war, to August 1, 1915, at $17,000,000,000, while other losses will mount up to make a grand total of $46,000,000,000. Mr. Crammond estimates that the cost to Great Britain for a year of war will reach $3,600,000,000. This sum is about equivalent to the ac cumulated war debt of Great Britain for a hundred years before the war. The war debt of Germany (includ ing Prussia) and also that of Austria before the war, was about the same, a No one can have any eonceptlon of what $. J 000,000,000 may be. It Is four times all the coin In the world. If this sum were measured out in $20 gold pieces and they were placed side by side on the railway track, on each rail, they would line with gold every line from New York to the Pacific ocean, the two Cana dian lines included. There would be enough left to cover each rail of the Siberian railway, from Vladivostok to Petrograd. There would still re main ; sufficient to rehabititate Bel gium and to buy the whole of Tur key, at her own valuation, wiping her finally from the map. Or we may figure in some other fashion. The average working man in America earns $518 per year. It would take ninety million years' work to pay the cost of the war; or ninety million American laborers might pay i off in one year if all his living expenses were paid. i a The cost of a year of the great war 1 a little more than the esti mated value of all the property of the United States west of the Mis sissippi river. It is nearly equal to the total value of all -the property in Germany ($48,000,000,000) as es timated in 190S. The whole Russian empire ($35,000,000,000) could have been bought for a less sum before the war began. It could be had. on a cash sale, more cheaply now. This sum would have pai'd for all the property in Italy ($13,000,000,000); Japan ($10,000,000,000); Holland ($5, 000.000,000); Belgium ($7,000,000,000); Spain ($6,000,000,000), and Portugal ($2,500,000,000). It is three times the entire yearly earnings 4n wages and salaries of the people of tha United States ($15,500,000,000). Taking the net profits of over-seas trade j as stated by the Hamburg- TOMORROW AND American company a year ago, the strongest In the - world, and estlmat ing the rest, we have something like this: During the "dry war"V the net earnings of the German mercantile fleet were about one-third the cost of the navy supposed to protect it. It would take seventy years of trade. on the scale of the last year before the war, to repay Germany's ex penses for a year of war. To make good all the war losses of Europe would require about one hundred and fifty years of the over-seas trading profits of the world. War Is there fore' death to trade, and the com merce of the World is on of the main agencies of civilization. if , The cost of this war would pay the national debts of all the nations in the world at the time tha war broke out, and this aggregate sum of $45,000,000,000 for the world was, all accumnlated in the criminal stupidity of the wars of the nineteenth century. If all the farms, farming lands and factories of the United States were wiped out of existence, the cost of tliis war would more than replace them. If all the personal and real property of half our nation were de stroyed, or if an earthquake of in credible . dimensions should shake down- every house from the Atlantic to the Pacific, the waste would be less than that involved in this war. And an elemental catastrophe leaves behind it no costly legacy of hate. Copyright 1915. An Amateur Farmer's Joys. Walter A. Dyer in Suburban Life. The name Pisgah bothered me a lit tle with a haunting recollection of Moses, who went up from the plains of Moab to the top of Pisgah that is over against Jericho. And the Lord showed him all the Promised Land, but he could not go over thither. Necessity keeps me still apart from my Promised Land five eixths of the time, and in my despondent moments I sometimes wonder if I shall ever completely pos sess It, and it possess mo. But I have at least tasted of its milk and honey, and know them to be good. And in my more hopeful moods the Pride of ownership sweeps over me with overwhelming force. As I pass unnoticed and jostled through city streets, it helps me to hold my head up to remember that off there to the northeast there are broad acres that are mine a white house with a man sized fireplace; a barn, a horse, a cow, a heifer calf, and a few hundred downy chicks apple trees and tasseled corn stone walls, a trout brook, and a crystal spring a rounded hill whereon grow feathery pines elms and ruaples and stalwart hickories laurel and shad bush and blue f lag woodchucka. Chipmunks, and chickadees all mine,, mine! Letters From the People (Communication sent to The Journal for publication in thin department should be writ ten on only one side of the paper, should not exceed 300 words in length aud must be ac companied by the came and addresa of the aender. If the writer dx-es not deslra to have the name published, he should so state.) "'Dlscusslon is the crertpst of ail reformers. It rationalizes everything it touches, it robs principles of all false panctiry and throws -them back on their reasonabletieHs. If they hare do reasonableness, it ruthiesalr crushes them oat of existence and seta up its own cencluslons In their stead." Wood row Wilaon. Oregon Building at P. P. I. E. San Francisco, April 19. To the Ed itor of The Jotirnal. Some time ago I read in one of the Portland papers a criticism about the interior arrange ment of the Oregon building. Exposi tion officials are more than ordinarily busy men, but after reading this criti cism I took the opportunity of paying a visit to the Oregon building to see for myself the work that had been done by the Oregon commission. As a re sult of careful investigation I am able to say that he trust reposed in the commission has been well placed. The problem of filling so large a space has been successfully worked out The building and its exhibits attract a great number of visitors, and I made it my business to ask a number how they were impressed by what they had seen. Without exception the answers were favorable. The exhibits of photographs, the moving picture display of Oregon ac tivities and resources, and the entire arrangement of the building constitutes a splendid advertisement for the state of Oregon. The balance sheets showing how the money has been expended demonstrate that the commission hn hon o a nomical as possible. As far as I airt concerned, knowing the extraordinary cost of everything connected with an exposition, the results accomplished in the Oregon building for the amount of money are little short of marvel ous. The luncheons being served by the home economic class of the college of agriculture attract numerous visitors and have won for the college and the Oregon building many expressions of praise. The officials and attendants in charge are always present and are eager and willing to show visitors about. D. O. LIVELY, Chief of Department of Livestock. irrannHnar The Ragtime Muse . Weak Woman. This morning when I left for town. My wife announced that she'd come down To match some fabric for a gown But she was feeling badly, so She'd take me with her, if I'd go. "I'll go," I said, and did not doubt That she was right in going out And I am getting rather stout. My wife, you see, is weak and frail. And she's been looking very pale. She seemed so delicate that I Set out with her resolved to try To help her find what she would buy; I fondly hoped I would not meet My business friend upon the street. We went to many shops; I stood While she compared the poor and good Until my feet seemed made of wood; With hpr I limped through miles of aisles While women gazed at me with smiles. At last I paused with aching head, Turned to my wife and weakly said: "Have mercy, dear, I'm nearly dead!" 'Oh, very well," she said, "my pet; Just go on home I'm not through yet!" ENJOY IT. ARE YOU PERTINENT COMMENT SMALL CHANGE! After a lie has prevailed some men call it the truth. a . A mr.n may be old mough to know better, but too old to do It. a a Noah played a great game. He draw pairs and got a full house. Matrimonially speaking, a baseball catcher isn't always a catch.. e .. a It requires lots of nerve to tell a man things he ought to know. a If you are fixed for life the insur ance agent will fix you for death, a a The best evening ties are thoi that keep married men a home af trr dark. A man always feels contemptible when he lets a girl kiss him gainst his will. a a ----- "In union there is strength" -so a meek and lowly man with a strenuous wife says. '.' Never do a thing gratis today that someone is likely to pay you to do tomorrow. a Women grow old for the want of somebody to tell them they look as young as ever. , - am tha -norie who work with a will after doctors go ahead anjJ prepare the way. If a man doesn't repeat the cute things his baby says its a sign that ite has no baby. If you' want a large bill for small change all you have to do isconsult a doctor. e . a . i - On trouble with most of our 'bril liant thoughts Is that they were origi nal with the ancient thinkers. a a A woman always saves her husband a err eat -deal of money by not buying still more things that she doesn't need. WW Great ancestors always shou'd strive to leave something for male descend ants to live on. Their wives may not be strong enough to get out -ana earn a living. IGNOBLE Fmm th Mertford Mail-Tribune. The telegraphic news from the capi tal of the nation tell us that the of ficials of the department of Justice are a little shocked at the appearance in Washington of the attorney general of Oregon, armed with a resolution or the Oregon legislature directing him to intervene in the suit of the govern ment against the Oregon & California Railroad company in the Interest of the railroad. The fact that these officials are sur prised goes to prove they are unac quainted with our governor, our legis lature or Senator Day or Senator Lair Thompson. The people of Oregon will doubtless be shocked, too, at the news but if the election should be held again tomorrow, would doubtless reelect the tsame bunch if they would ask It. The people of Oregon have , for so long a time been betrayed and sold out by their officials that it has become almost a fixed habit with them to elect those that they know will prove treacherous. If by accident they elect an honest man, they afterwards show their repentance by succeeding him with a grafter or a jackass. Many dirty stunts have been perpe trated by the legislatures of this state in the past, in relation to. the state lands and state finances, but there was some plausible excuse, but this last piece of chicanery la the cap sheaf of political thievery and mendacity. The fact Is that it was passed in the closing hours of the session, and the vast majority of those who voted for it did not know its purport. Granted that it is a valid excuse, what about the grafters, rogues and thieve who pressed It for passage after its defeat? Who peddled the information that the attorney general wanted it passed? Every member of the legislature that voted for the resolution ought at once to petition the governor for an extra session of the legislature in order that the resolution might be repealed and the perpetrators of this infamous pro ceeding discovered and exposed. Nothing less should satisfy those numbers who have been Imposed upon, and nothing less will satisfy the peo ple of the state. a The government undertook this suit against the railroad at the Instance of the people of this state. The legisla ture of 1907 passed a memorial asking the federal government to take action. It was a political-issue in the state. And now as the case is about to be submitted the attorney general of Ore gon is virtually Instructed to inter vene in beTialf of the railroad. No wonde.r mcia.ls at Washing- lon are snocaea. xne language is ae- ficient in words to express the- honest disgust any rational man would feel at such an attitude. The excuse of the resolution is that the lands will not be ALPHABET OF By John M. Oskison. The energetic head of the school savings bank movement in this coun try (Mrs. S. L. Oberholtzer, 2113 Tioga street, Philadelphia) has compiled a cluster of maxims well worth having. It is arranged aipnaDeticaiiy, Degin ninjr with "A crooked stick will have a crooked hadow" and ending with "Zeal without knowledge is lire with out light." On the eight pages of the attrac tively printed leaflet are many old friends of the thrift preachers, and many new ones. New to me, that is; and I am elad to have tha collection. We like to get a meaning crowded into a few worda We instinctively hate the diffuse and long winded. Manv a loud - commencement sermon has contained no more wisdom than is' summed up in half a dozen short maxims: -A handful of common sense ; Is worth a bushel of learning"; "a man know no more to any purpose than he practice"; "a rolling stone gather no moss"; "a small sum may serve a great purpose"; "a whole bushel of wheat i made up of single grains"; "a wise man will make more opportu nities than he. finds." . All these out of the "A" section of this little collection! And so it goes "by ignorance we make mistakes and by mistakes we learn"; "charity well regulated begins at home"; "deed are fruit, words are leaves"; "early to bed, early to rise, makes a man healthy, wealthy and wise"; "fortune help them that help themselves"; "God will AMONG THEM? AND NEWS IN BRIEF OREGON SIDELIGHTS Ashland's council .has ordered the renovation of the city's street sign system, by the restoring or -replacing of all defaced or obliterated signs. a The merchants of Cotiag Grove hav signed an agreement to close up on Thursday afternoons of each week so everyone can go to the ball game. Washington county great spelling contest will take place at illllaboro Sat urday, May 1. It is expected that at least 1000 pupils will be present. May Day exercises will be given by the Hillsboro schools. a e Grants Pass Courier: Grants Pass Is just now entertaining the delegates from the southern Oregon counties to the Presbytery. This community Is e-a.tntnar asima. filattnctlon aa a Dlace for conventions. encampments. district meeting!, etc., and the people here should miss no opportunity to make our guest glad they came and anxious to oome again. Vancouver Columbian: Multnomah county poor farm under the direction of the Oregon Agricultural college, is now self -supporting, caring for 303 in mates. Registered: stock of all kinds has been substituted for the scrubs formerly kept, with a corresponding Increase in the output of milk, butter, eggs and meat. .The value of scientific farming la becoming yearly more ap parent. ' y In headlines ih Spokesman says Redmond is "clean as a hound' tooth." and in the story particularizes as fol lows: "The result of this campaign can easily, be seen in the clean up pearance of all parts of Redmond in the business section, the 'residence sec tion and the outskirts of the city as well and now Redmond citizen can point with pride to their town as the cleanest looking city in central Ore gon, if not in the whole state." Indignant warning posted by the Moro Observer: "The management of the Observer has succeeded this week in- having moved from th common dumping- hole back of this office a mess of filthy rubbish dumped against the back of our building. We give warning now, without further parlev, that If the marshal and city authori ties allow such a thing to again hap pen we will call in the state board of health and close it up by legal pro cess." PERFIDY subject to taxation If the government wins. - Any excuse Is good enough for the railroad company, but the claim that the people would loss if th govern ment wins, because th lands might be exempt from taxation, 1 fallacious. Most of the lands In controversy are In the southern part of Douglas county and In Josephine and Jackson counties and lie almost wholly In a mineral belt. Mining in this section in almost at a standstill-because of the ownership by the railroad of every alternate section. It needs no argument to convince one that mining is next to impossible where the miner is surrounded- on four sides of every square mile by land he cannot acquire title to Or an easement across. That is the situation in the mineral belt. Far better to have the mineral lands In a forest reserve than to have each section surrounded on four sides by the Southern Pacific company. There is a goodly portion of lands along the railroad that can, of course, be thrown open for settlement or sale, and such would support many families who would Improve lands that .are now withheld from settlement or improve ment, i The tax question was not raised by the people affected, but has been in vented undoubtedly by some Bollcltoys railroad attache. That this contempti ble scheme was Imposed upon the leg islature make one profoundly wish that every resolution as well as every law was subject to the referendum. Better a freak state than a rotten borough, manipulated by corporation corruptionists. The governor of, this state had no veto power over the reso lution, but as chief executive he can. now that the dishonest methods used to pass It and the dishonesty of its purpose have been exposed, call the legislature together and give them an opportunity fo repudiate It. If he will not do this, the people should appeal to the attorney general to disregard the resolution and assist the govern ment In the principal suit. According to the assistant attorney general, the hand was that of the tax payer, but the voice Is that of the Southern Pacific. Mr. Van Winkle say the resolution was drawn at the request of Senator Day. This shows that the resolution was Introduced and intended for the purpose of aiding the Southern Pacific. What Is $500,000 tax money dis tributed among 18 counties compared to the release of the mineral and agri cultural land from railroad ownership? Even if the amount was $5,000,000, the people would gladly give it to learn that a giant corporation is not above the law and the courts. THRIFT MAXIMS provide, but a good bundle of straw will not be amiss." Tablet wisdom for the thrifty what is gathered in the pamphlet is meant to appeal especially to boys and girls. Young people like little bullets . of truth that hit hard and quickly. They help to set a standard of efficiency in statement that Is worth establishing. "We've got into the habit, as we have grown older, of dismissing maxims as 'chestnuts,' old laws, end mildewed wisdom. Thrift maxim have gone into th discard with the rest. Since "Poor Richard" we have drifted into a chaos of talk and prac tice concerning personal finance. Send for the collection of Mrs. Ober holtzer. It will give you a fresh view of the power of the few right word fitly spoken. His Preference. From Judge. "I may hurt your feelings, but I am going to tell you the plain truth and "Good day!" Interrupted J. Fuller Gloom. "I never listen to anything but compliments." - Oratorical Assistance. From Washington Star. -Lady,'' said Plodding Pet, "do you want any wood chopped?" "Yes." " ..- "Well, if you'll gimme my dinner, I'll hang around an' give yer husband an' yer two grown sons an eloquent dis course oh how wrong It- 1 of 'em not to turn in an' do delr duty." 5 CENTS THE COPY "TV 1 IM CAJttT DATS" By Fre Lookler. SpaotaJ Staff Wrltaa ei "' " ; Tha Journal. ... The first boat to turn a wheel on the upper Columbia was the Colonel Wright. The Colonel Wright ws built at the mouth of tho Deschutes river by ft. ft. Thompson and K. F. Coe and was launched. October S. tS68. Thompson Coe had a government contract to carry government supplies to Fort Walla Walla. The rate from Celilo to Walla Walk was $100 per ton. " When the steamer was launched ,they reduced the rate to $80 a ton and made three trips a week .between Celilo and Waliula. Her first trip was mad in April, 1S9. and a passenger from Walla Walla, could make the trip to Portland in 30 hoiirs by making immediate connections with the steamers in the middle and lower rivers. In May of that year the Colonel Wright made a trip up the Snake river, going about 50 miles above its mouth. Captain Leonard White was in command. Ha was paid 500 a month, as he had proved wonderfully success ful in taking his boat into unknown and untraveled waters. When Captain White began' hU ca reer on the Willamette river, Albany was the head of steamboat navigation Captain White became the popular hero of Corvallls by takii.er his boat there. II was given n oiflcUl wel come by the city officials and pre sented with block of land. Not only was Captain White the flria man to take a Bteamboat to Corvallls. but In 1855, whlje in command of the Phoenix, he went as far up the Willamette us Ilarrisbuig. Later ho took the Clinton out on, her maiden voyage and .cele brated the ev-nt by going still farther upstream to Kugene. Captain White was the first man to take a steamer to Lewlston. Captain K. W. itaua-h- tnau was pilot on the Colonel. Wright and he Is to share the honors with Captain W. P. Gray .at the formal opening of the Colilo canal. The Colonel Wright was 110 feet long, 21 feet beam and had a five foot hold. She made her laxt trip In 1865, That summer she was broken up and hr engines put in a steamer owned by Joseph Kellogg. The Colonel Wright made a fortune for her owners. On March 27, 1862, she took in -$2625 for passenger tickets on the uprlver trip. On her next up trip, two days later, she took In $2446. On April. 11. 186a, the Okanogan took ih for uprlvr fares, $3540; April 25, $3630; May 11. $2145; May 17, $2265,' Muy 26, $6616. The Tenino, also owned by the O. ST N. company, took In on Us uprlver trip on April 22. $3232; April 27, $32S; April 29. $2596; May 5, $6780; May 13, $10,945. In addition to this there was the very large profit from freight, meals, staterooms and drinks, besides the down river business, which amount ed, for passenger fares alone, to from $1600 to $4000 a trip. On one trip during this season the Tenino took In over $18,000 for freight In addition to the passenger business. ' - It in interesting In this connection to glance back at the very beginning of the steamboat nus!nenH. A year after Fulton had launched his first steamer, Claremont, oh the IIudKOti river in 1808, Nicholas RooHovelt, granduncle of Theodore -Koosevelt, d cided to put, steamboats on tho inland rivers, lie was a member of the firm of Fulton, Livingstone and Itoosavelt, of New York city. He moved to I'ltt- burg. Pa., where he. built the steam boat New Orleans. It ; was 116 fet long with a 20 foot beam and its-cylinder had a diameter of 34 Inches. Hhm was schooner shaped, Iter prow beinf long and narrow. Tito wheel was astern. In addition to steam power she carried two masts and had' a bow sprit. She had two cabins, the forward one for men and the one abaft for women. Its portholes were square and the vessel was painted robin's egg blue. She started from Pittsburg on October 30, 1811. Nicholas Roosevelt was. mar ried shortly beforo the vessel Was launched and in spite of the protects 4 of his friends "on the danger, of such a foolhardy undertaking, Tie took charge of the boat, acting an its pilot. His brldo went along and was bade a tearful farewell by her- relatives anl friends, who never expected to see her again. - Cincinnati was reached In two days. At Louisville, Ky., the people heard the hiss of the steam and saw the glar of the fire in the boiler, room and fled to the hills, many believing the cornet then appearing, to the consternation of the superstitious, had dropped into the Ohio. u The next day Mr. Rooaevclt and his bride were tendered a reception. The boat reached New Orleans on the day before Christmas. 1811. She started on her regular run from New Orleans to Natchez. Her schedule was one trip each three weeks between New Or leans and Natchez. She cost $38.00.) to build and the first year's profits amounted to over $20,000. She was wrecked on July 13, 1814, on a snag two miles below Baton Rouge. Th first steamship to crows the At lantic was the Savannah.. The Savan nah was 100 feet long, 350 tdns bur den and was built by Francis Pickett In New York city In 1818. She was a full-rigged ship and was fitted with Ide paddle wheels which were un shipped and fastened on de.ck when ever the weather - was rough. Kho salted from Savannah on May 20, 1819. In command of Captain Steven Rogers. he reached Liverpool on June 20. She used her paddles 16 days out of the 30. She was overtaken In midocean by the British cutter "Kite," who, seeing the smoke from her stack, supposed she was on fire and -came to rescue her passenger. She visited St. Peters burg. Copenhagen' and Stockholm, where she created tremendous Interest. People would look at her but could not be induced to tempt fat by taking passage on her, so her engines were removed and she was converted Into a sailing packet and plied between Sa vannah and New York city. Wanted It JMled On. From London Opinion. "Why didn't you enjoy th party, Harry? Didn't you hava enough to eat?" Young Hopeful: "Oh, yes; but there' no fun in having Just enough." . Proving an Alibi. - From the Philadelphia Ledger. "Who killed Cock Robin V asked the Coroner. "Not I," said the Sparrow. "I haven't had my auto for nearly a week." EVERYWHERE .a . m - rr -a- - . , a nv r -ts ar r . r isrt m. . v . r - m -. - sr rm at sr