THE JOURNAL AS IHDIPENDEfT NEWSPAPER G. 8. JACKSON. . .Publisher Published trrrf evening zpt Sunday) U4 err soneay morclng at lit onrati mum inr. Bfwiwiy and Yamhill ., Portland, Or, Catered at tha poatoffice at Portland, Or., tot ., traoamlulon through th ualia aa aeeond elaaa natter. TELEPHONE Main ITS; Homa. A-051. All departmcnta reached by tiaa numbers. Tell , , me pparacor woai uaprtmaan yow wibv. FOREIOX ADTCBTISINO EPE8ENTATIV1 BenlacBta Kantnor Co.. Brunawtck Bids-. 25 Fifth At., New York.; 12U reepte'e Gag Bldg.. Chicago. - Bubacrlptlon ttrmi by wall or to any d amaa a nw united ouhi T1 1 TT.Y Oa year....... 85.00 On month I BTJJIDAI On rear $2.60 t On month. ..,... .23 DAILY AND BOKDAT One year. .. . . . -$7.SO One month .. .05 America asks nothing for her self bnt what she bu a right to ak for humanity itself. WOODROW vrw&QX. Free and fair discussion will ver be found the firmest friend of truth. O. Campbell. THE WADOO MOVE THERE vcan b nothing but commendation for the prompt I action of Secretary McAdoo in the cotton crisis. Cotton is always th object of assault by speculators.. As a prod uct, it is peculiarly adapted to the purposes of men who pull Jowa prices, rob the producers and then make huge profits by manipulation of markets. The process has often been 60 intolerable that there have been many threats of legislation to abolish the cotton exchanges. The action of the allies, in declar ing cotton contraband, even though accompanied by -a pledge by the British government ta protect the market, was action that the specu lators would have seized upon to demoralize the cotton market and lay the foundation for taking enor mous profits at the expense of the cotton producers. But, before they can make a move, Secretary McAdoo announces that 130,000,000 of government funds will at once be placed at the disposal of the fedaral reserve banks in the cotton states to be loaned through member banks at low Intel est rates and on reason able time to cotton farmers on their warehouse receipts. It is j Immediate and decisive notice to the -farmers that they can obtain money and hold their cotton in the j warehouses until such time as the market will be favorable. It puts! them in position in which they' will not be forced to sell to obtain money for payment of current ex penses or debts contracted in pro ducing the crop. A first effect will be to prevent the dumping of huge quantities of cotton on the market, the inevit able result of . which, would be to break the price.. It takes away from the speculators the club they would certainly have used to break the market and buy cotton at sac rifice figures, tt will save cotton Industry from what would have been a slump, with the producers and " workers reducvjd to extreme conditions of necessity. .It is a kind of policy never seen at Washington until the coming of VVoodrow Wilson. It Is exerciaa of the power of government to pro tect producers from the speculators and cotton gamblers. . - It Is example of government as It ought to he. ANOTHER COMPLICATION IT 18 declared" that 1000 tons, of cotton are used In explosives every day of the . war. 4 Cotton Is more Important than copper in the manufacture of explosives. For cotton, there Is no known substitute of equal ef fectiveness. The use qf a substi tute would require enlarging the chambers of the guns and altering the sights of rifles, an expedient which no belligerent could adopt in the' course of a great war. . It is claimed that two-thirds of the 'cotton used by Germany in making explosives Is received from the United States. A fifteen-Inch German, howlUer requires 400 -pounds of cotton In the explosive that discharges each shelL It Is Insisted that Germany and Austria use daily between 800 and 1000 tons of war cotton, The total supply of cotton on hand In Germany at the outbreak of the war is placed at 120,750 tons. Puring August, 1814, Ger many received 60,750 tons from the United States. It Is estimated that the German consumption of cotton - for explosives during the war has been 400,000 tons. '- The figures Imply that 225,000 toils have reached Germany through neutral countries, aid the statement Is that much of it Vent i through transhipment to Switzerland. - As Indicating the source of supply, the American shipments to Holland In creased from 34,130 bales In 1911 and-1912, to 486.820 In 1914-151 The American shipments to Den mark for the same period rose from 4100 to 35,860 bales,' to Nor- way from 13,080 to 101,100, to Sweden from 29,050 to 710,080. Great Britain claims that these Increases represent the true source of the German cotton supply for the manufacture of explosives, and It is for that reason" that the Lon don government has declared cot ton contraband. That action thrusts another complication upon the Washington government. America has an average exportable surplus of raw cotton totaling from $545, 000,000 to 1610,000.000, and Ger many and Austria are among our important customers. The Ameri can crop last year was 16 million bales against an estimated 12,000, 000 this year. In putting cotton on the con-; traband list. Great Britain declares, a purpose to take measures for! protecting the interests of Ameri can cotton farmera. How it will; be done, and what other complica tions are to be thrust upon Ameri ca by the Interminable conflicts of the war are among the great problems of this unparalleled time. THE LAWYERS 1 AWYKRS are no longer held in high repute .by the public," "was the' declara tion by Its president In his opening address before the San Francisco Bar Association. It depends. There are lawyers and lawyers. ' Ex-President Taft holds up to view a lawyer of ideals, and that kind of lawyer is not in ill repute. Mr. Taft described him in an ad dress at Williams College in 1914. He said: The code of ethics of the American Bar Association and that formulated by other bar-association and by great lawyer who have written on the sub ject repudiate any View that the law yer Is bound by professional rules to make himself the Instrument of plain injustice. Mr. Taft added that "the law yers ought to be first and fore most, the peacemakers of society." He declared that the lawyer of ideals prevents a great volume of litigation "by the wise, beneficent, useful counsel," to intending liti gants who are turned from their purpose of going into court. There are such lawyers, and their influence amid the conflicts and antagonisms of society is most wholesome. It is unfortunate that their field of usefulness and .their services to their clients are ob scured by the lawyers of lower moral standards who accept their license to practice as a commission for piratical activities in and out of the courts. They are the lawyers who prac tice barratry and champerty. They are the, practitioners who "'skim along the borderline and keep out of the penitentiary most of the time "by their witB and by the unusual privileges that the .courts lavish upon them. Unhappily, they do most to fix the reputation of the profession, a profession that by Its code of ethics i and by the performances of lawyers of ideals is one of the most hon orable of callings. The wonder Is that great bar as sociations, like those in session in Portland this week do not take measures to protect the profession against its pirates and pettifoggers, who are without manners or morals. JUSTICE HUGHES JUSTICE HUGHES of the United States Supreme Court has defi nitely eliminated himself as a presidential possibility. In a letter to former Governor Stokes of New Jersey he makes it clear that even if nominated, he would not accept. The letter throws a strong light upon his conception of obligations resting upon the justice of the na tion's great high court. The text of the letter has not been made public, but it is said Justice Hughes restated what he said when it was attempted in 1912 to present him as a get-together candidate. He then said no man who accepted a place on the su preme bench should thereafter be come a candidate for public office. He feared the effect on the court should its members be ambitious to occupy the White House. The declination was placed on the high ideal of preserving the court's independence of partisan politics. He made the great po litical renunciation when he accept ed appointment to the court. To his mind, this meant complete de votion to- judicial work, paying no heed to politicians or to party necessities. In his attitude. Justice Hughes increases public confidence In the nation's highest court, and presents a Judicial Ideal well worthy of contemplation. THE BULGARIAN IN BULGARIA there Is a national proverb that the Bulgar on his ox cart pursues the hare and overtakes it. This national characteristic is now being mani fested in the attitude of the na tion In the present .war. In an interesting article T. Loth rop Stoddard, a writer familiar with International politics, calls modern Bulgaria "on of the most extraordinary phenomena of human history." Less than forty years ago the Bulgarians: 'were wretched serfs, exploited to .the limit of hu man endurance and triply slaves, slaves of Turkish militarism, Greek ecclesiastielsm " and Russian pan Slavism. , This siayerf has ow been abol- ." , , . . . a j Ished and a great spirit of nation - alism has been developed, one that looks forward to the reunion of the whole Bulgarian race from the Black tea to the Albanian moun tains and from the Danube river to the Aegean sea. - - . A few years ago the nation saw Its way to the realization of this but the dream was shattered by the great powers. The Bulgarians sub mitted and waited for better. days; These -better, days now seem to them to be at hand. : Five centuries of subjugation has not killed national consciousness. The Bulgarians are normally classed as Slavs, They are only partly eo.. The primitive Bulgari ans were an : Asiatic people of Turanian stock who conquered the early Slavs south of the Danube in the seventh century. 'Less nu merous than those they subjugated they soon became absorbed, losing their native speech and peculiar identity. They stamped upon the new folk traits which set it apart in the category of the Slav peoples. The Slay Is an idealist. - The . Bul garian Is practical. . He is . pos sessed of a- dogged plodding nature, frugal to the point of avarice.. He ls not a sentimentalist and what ever side he takes in the contest he will always-keep his eye on the hare. MR. SPARKMAJTS STATEMENT T HE work of The Journal In 4i leading the movement for the improvement of ' the rivers and harbors of the Oregon coast and Columbia basin Is known to the Rivers and Har bors committee of the House," said Judge Sparkman, chairman of the Rivers and Harbors committee, while in Portland last week. He added : When a community has a newspa per devoted to progress and public welfare aa we know The Journal to be, that community Is favored. It has a friend that means mUWi to welfare and progress. Judge Sparkman is a busy man of big affairs. He is intelligent, discriminating and aggressive. He looks deeply and keenly into every matter bearing upon the great river and harbor work, In which ho exercises a commanding leader ship. It Is his own high qualities, and his powers for service that have given him tie headship of a great congressional committee, To his words here quoted, he added the following significant sentence: Next to the favorable recommenda tions of the United States engineers, the Rivers and Harbors committee of the House and Congress, too, are encouraged In making appropriations by the spirit, the spirit, I say, of the men of the communities whose Interests are affected by the improve ments. .... Judge Sparkman means that if the spirit of the communities is co-operative and appreciative, there is encouragement for the commit tee to continue in the endeavor to open the rivers and deepen the harbors. If the men and institu tions in the communities show a disposition to aid the committee rather than barrass It -by unjust criticisms, the natural result is a desire by the' committee to for ward the improvements in which the community is interested. The Journal. has always believed in the high purpose of the Rivers and Harbors committee, .rather than In the coar-e criticisms which Senator Burton and his kind have hurled against - it. It has always believed "that aid from. Congress for the great improvements needed on the Oregon coast and in the Co lumbia basin was obtainable through a constructive co-operation with the Rivers and Harbors com mittee rather than through a de structive and unjust campaign of denouncing the committee as a "pork-barrel" distributor. The appreciation of this course and its helpfulness to Portland and the Oregon country is attested In Chairman Sparkman's generous tes timonial to The Journal, Woman suffrage leaders in New York propose a one-day strike by their" Sisters employed in indus tries as proof that woman occupies an important place outside the home. If the strike is called It may be that many of the women will occupy places outside of in dustries. The Macon Telegraph threatens that if the press outside of Georgia does not stop criticising the Frank lynching, the people of Georgia will begin a boycott of all Jews In the state, which might lead to vio lence. Surely Georgia is misrep resented by her mobs and mob advocates. Boss Barnes, of New York, says EHhu Root can be nominated for president on the Republican ticket without the slightest effort, if he wants to be. But perhaps Mr. Root is too smart to take a nomi nation tendered by men of the Barnes type. "', . Congress is to be asked for , an appropriation to ; establish , a fash ion center, with a . suitable build ing, in Washington, where the beet J designers of the country will be Jocatea. . ine iaea is to promote distinctly national styles. :The bureau of plant industry has produced tobacco plants In ' which the : percentage of nicotine Is re duced from 3.5 to 1.31. ? The prob able purpose is to offset a big art gument against 'smoking. Senator Henry Cabot Lodge says he .has known Secretary "of State Lansing for years ; and . that he la a most accomplished international j lawyer. There is mueh evidence that Senator, Lodge ia unusually correct In his views. ' Representatives of the American Rose society want VPortland' to es tablish a municipal : rose garden.. They, should - come in June, when jail Portland Is what they suggest. A Berlin report saya Russia is facing bankruptcy. That Is be lievable, and it is also believable that the other belligerents will soon face the same thing unless the waste ' of resources ends. - FORECASTING STRENGTH OF G. 0. P. CANDIDATES Br Cart Smith. NCERTAINTT deadlock. I I These are the words that most aptly describe the Republican national convention of 1916 so far as "it can be' brought Into .vision at this day. While all 'figuring is sub ject to a wide percentage of possible error, and unforeseen events , may change th course of prophecy. It nevertheless possible to assign strength of varying degree to the prospective candidates, and . from this to Indicate what is likely to happen. - The next convention will be com posed of about 978 voting delegates, excluding the mix delegates from Ha waii, Porto Rico and the Philippines, who will hot have the right to Vote. Th, exact . number cannot be stated. because of the change in the basis of apportionment, under which the rep resentation of the southern states and of a few northern states will be re duced. The 1912 convention consisted of 1078 delegates, equivalent to two dele gates for each senator and representa tlve in congress. The new rules award four delegatea-at-large to each state. two delegates for every congressman elected at large from a state, one ad ditional delegate for? ach congres sjonal district, and asecond delegate for each district wherein thj Repub lican candidal for congress in 1914 received 7500 or - more votes, or in which the " vote "for any Republican elector" in the presidential election of 1908 equalled that figure. Working this out mathematically, the representation of a few districts is left in doubt, because of inacces sibility of necessary figures. Sub ject to possible slight correction, the vote in the next convention will be distributed as folows, compared with 1912: 1916. 1918 Alabama . . ... 16 Arkansas 16 Arizona . 6 California j 2 Colorado f. ....... 10 Connecticut , 1 Delaware - Florida 8 24 18 26 10 14 .. 6 12 ; 28 Georgia . x IB Idaho s 7 80 ts - 20 26 8 Illinois . Indiana . . Iowa . . Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine E8 .80 . . . A1 . 86 9. J 20 26 20 12 16 36 80 24 20 36 8 16 6 8 28 -8 80 " 84 10 48 20 10 76 10 18 10 ' 24 40 8 8 24 14 14 26 2 . 2 6 2 . 2 12 18 Maryland . . Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota . .. Mississippi 15 SO ' ......... , ........ ,f . 24 It 86 8 ' 8 87 21 10 Missouri .- . Montana Nebraska . .. ...... Nevada ... ........ New Hampshire New Jersey" . . New Mexico . . ... New York , . North Carolina . . . North Dakota , . i .... . Ohio , 48 Oklahoma . Oregon . . ...... Pennsylvania . , Rhode Island .. South Carolina . South Dakota . . Tennessee . Texas Utah . .- Vermont . . .... Virginia . . .... Washington . . . 20 ; io .. 76 . .. 10, 11 ...... JO 81 It West Virginia . . ...-.i.Ullf- Wisconsin . . '?'Zf' Wyoming . . v 9." Alaska 2 Dist. of Columbir 2 Hawaii , 2 Philippines i. 3 Porto Rico 2 Without vote. Making a speculative and arbitrary assignment of delegates on the basis of what seems most likely to happen, here are "some of the results: Senator "Weeks, of Massachusetts, is expected to have the support of the New England states, practically a solid vote. Awarding all of them to him, he will hav 7. Assuming New York takes up Elihu Root, he will doubtless secure nearly all of that 'state. Adding to this strength the v states of New Jersey, Delaware and Maryland, Root would have 187. . ' - Pensylvanl may be conceded to Knox, 76 votes; Indiana to Fairbanks, 30; Illinois to Congressman Mann, 67; Ohio to exiSenator Burton, -48; , Iowa to Cummins, 26; Michigan to Senator Smith, 80; Nebraska to Norria, 16. Supposing Wisconsin sends its . dele gation for La. Follettav one more,', lie would "have a nucleus of 26 votes. 4 Borah, of Idaho, - for the purpose of this calculation, may be figured ' as having the Rocky mountain aAd Paci fic coast states under his wing, also Alaska, a total of 110 votes. Allojir anc should perhaps be made for Borah strength in the south, where he is. thought to have built some fine fences, If ana fourth -of . the south is added, Borah is Increased to 180. The ether candidates who would be xpeeted to develop the .... greatest strength In the southern states " are Root. Burton and Fairbanks. It will be observed that the unassigned votes are in two large blocks, one consist ing of ' the southern states, the other of . . the ' Important middle western state of Kansas, Minnesota. Missouri, Oklahoma and the pakotas, the, with West Virginia and the District of Co lumbiaj having a total of J86 dele gates. Who will secure the bulk ' of the middle 'west and the 'south? This is the unsolvabl enigma, but from in dlcations of today it appeavs that no one candidate will secure preponder ating strength' In these sections. So. if this unplaced vote Is fairly well distributed," the calculator Is brought back to the - same proportionate strength a shown by the speculative figures, as follows: I Weeks 87, Root 187. Borah 160 Knox 7 6-Fairbanks 80, Mann 67, Bur- ton 48. Cummins 26, Smith 30, Nor rls 18, La, Follette 2. This would leave 285 votes" to be accounted for, and to be apportioned. as It now appears, among the can didates named without greatly increas ing the advantage , of any one over the other. It would seemingly spell a long period of balloting, a slow process of weeding out those least available, and the chance for one of those surprises that sometimes de velop from deadlocks, such as "the nomination of Garfield in 1880 by the Republicans, and of Bryan in 1896 by the Democrats. The nearest parallel to the present situation in the Republican party re verts to 1888, when there was a large field of candidates, with no one far enough in the lead to make predic tions safe. The leaders then were Sherman, Gresham, Depew, Alger, Har rison and Allison in the order named Blaine, McKinley and Foraker were feared as "dark horses." Harrison started with 80 votes and won on the eighth ballot, all but Sherman and Alger by that time having been prac tically eliminated. The presidential primaries will be numerous enough next year to. "make it possible on convention day to set down a much larger number of dele gates for the various candidates than was possible in 1888. but unless the signs are much awry there will be as much uncertainty as to the name of the nominee as there was in that historic year. Tonce Over BT RXX LAMPMAM LAST night I put on my wnue vest that I used to wear to dances in North Dakota years and years ago -before I was married and went to the lawn fete for the mem bers of the 'Oregon and Washington Bar associations at the Waverley club. but before I went we had to find all the buttons. and found all but one. ' and I went anyway. efAnd I felt terribly alone in that legal wuaerness. Tintil I found Dean Collins the jongleur. - . . . " and thenwe were both all right and felt less- like a German colo nel who's been asked out to have a good time at a French war college. (And Judge Anderson of Baker was ther. smoking a "Flynh's Triumph." which is made in Baker. and which .with the. golf links is considered evidence of Baker s kultur, . JAnd the - judge offered one to Kernel Emmet Callahan. who took It and smelled of it and put it in his pocket and patted the pocket and twlrl-ea his cane. -- and said "The idea of a cigar like that being made In Baker." TAhd then he tried. to get nearer to the stage where Josie Flynn and her lady minstrels were laughing tnemseives sick. at the jOkes. Roger SInnott and Fred Behrens and .WiU Shaffer had fixed up for them to spring. jAnd Josie said the jokes re minded her of the shells used by the Russian army. and the other end lady asked why. J and Josie said "You can get 'em oyer all right but they don't as phyxiate." . - JAnd Josie '-' said Roarer's and Fred's and -Will's stuff gave her a new idea- altogether of what is funny. and the other end-lady asked Josie what the idea was. J But Josie wouldn't tell. because - she said the Idea wasn't funny at all. - fJAnd then she. got off on of jttoger s Desi.. and led the laughter herself. and nobody followed except Roger. - and Fred Behrends. ' andWill Shaffer, -which was per agreement. T But Fred told mv of f ta nn side that a gfat deal of Roger's and ' Will's stuff was so rotten that Josie would be a bear if she could put ' It over. . JAnd a little later Roger told m all the Jokes for Josie. because Fred ' and Will didn't get the idea of this .minstrel stuff. and rigbt after that Z met Will Shaffer who's from Seattle and he said he was glad to meet me and I said the same and he said: r "LISTEN I'm glad I wrote as many or too joaes as i aid because otherwise there would ' be nothing here tonight simply nothing 1 to laugirat." - . Letters From the People "OmmunIcatiOB sent .to The lonrtul (i publication ia thia department abeule be writ, tan on only eo aid of tba mdu. thouM not exceed Sttfi word in length and msit b te. eompamea vr me utiot ana address of the acudor. if tbe writer does sot desire to bf tbe uaase published, he tbeald o state.) . It rationalises everything' it toocbes. it robs principles of aU faiae sanctity and tbrews tbam reasonableness, it rotfUeaalr -crushes them oat et exlatesce and seta op its own eoaciosfons ta tasir teU" Waodiew WUaon. Juries and Verdicts. San Francisco, Aug. 23. To the Edi tor of The JournaL Ex-Governor B la- ton of Georgia declared ' In an inter view here) the other day that Leo M. Frank was convicted by the perjured testimony or a arunaen negro, i wish now to call attention to the. legal and judicial system which perpetrates murder in the nam of Justice. . . Juries are instructed to cither oen i Vict or aequit a person accused, ae- PERTINENT COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF SMALL CHANGE Chicago Post: Add to the hyphenates the latest trouble makers Mexican Americans. " Boston Globe: Speaking of hyphen ated citizenship what's the matter witn Xankee-American? i Pittsburg Press : .Things to worry about: What will the kaiser call Petrograd If he captures it? Atlanta Constitution; "God la still with us," says the kaiser. "Same here," is the word from the allies. Somebody is headed for tbe Ananias club. Omaha World Herald: - Those aero planes flying about Fremont county had better be careful and not run into any of those tall cornfields. Bt. Paul Dispatch: It Is reassuring to learn that President Yuan bhi Kal. in proposing to proclaim himself em peror, is not guided solely by the voice of the Lord. Ohio State Journal: ' The feminine devotion to the crochet needle, though incomprehensible . to men, ought to make them happy, seeing it muks the women happy, Chicago Herald-: The secretary of the Taxpayers'- alliance says property own ers must be represented directly in the spending of public money. What's the matter with voting? m - Kansas City Times: The marvelous system of-German railroads carries the German troops wherever they want to go. Yet Germany's. internal commerce goes on with evidently little disturb ance. Why? Because Germany's mar velous system of improved rivers and canals is there to do the work. THE KAISER'S GREAT STRATEGIC CANAL From a Bulletin of the National GeO- graphic Society. Built up around the deep pockt of "the Kieler Foehrde, a narrow arm of the Baltic sea that cuts ita way back into the province of Holstein, the old city of Kiel lies well shielded from all hostile attack and centrally plaoed for the use of the fleet, either upon the open ocean or upon the in land sea. This ancient , port city is headquarters for German sea strength, the first naval station of the empire, the point from which the orders have been issued directing the unequal duel between the ships of the . kaiser and the fleets of Britain. The great war harbor of Kiel is one of the finest and most powerful ly protected harbors in the world. The sea arm, whose base is enclosed by the port, has a narrow entrance and a long, irregular surface. The en trance and "the . strategic points along the bank are heavily fortified. Fort Falkenstein and Fort Stosch guard the narrows about three and one-half miles ; above the town. Flanking the northern termination of the new Kiel suburbs, the Kaiser Wilhelm canal, a triumph of patience and engineering, cuts its way into the sheltered bay. By means of this canal Kiel Is in close communication with the North sea, and units of tbe 'kaiser's navy can be transferred rapidly and safely from the war theatre of the open ocean to that of the Baltic The Kaiser Wilhelm canal, or the Baltic ship canal, is the product of an idea which ripened through cen turies, Projects for connecting the Baltic and North sea . by - a water route' through the northern peninsula .which should avoid the dangerous voyage around jutiana, were consia ered spasmodically from 1800 on,, but It remained to the military necessi ties of a great 'empire to bring about the realization of this advantageous waterway for trade. Any number of bashful beginnings of the projected way were made before the construc tion of the present canal was under taken by the first German emperor. Kaiser Wilhelm I laid the foundation stone Of the canal in 1887. and the mostly avenue was formally declared open by the present emperor in cording to the preponderance of "ju dicial evidence' There Is not a law yer or a Judge who can define Judicial evidence, or distinguish Between evi dence" and proof of guilt or innocence. The various civil and criminal codes prescribe as a legal proposition that "proof is the effect of evidence." In other words, proof is the effect pro duced in the minds of a jury regarding anv Quantity or quality of evidence in a given trial. So, what is proof to one mind is not proof to another. When a jury disagrees there Is "proof" and "no proof." It all depends upon the mental make up of the juror, ugiw a. grow many or tnem regara. ieuniuny against the accused as proof of his sruiit. The average Juror is not a deep niwhftinirist- 7w of them would : know what the word means, yet life and death depend upon psychology. Then comes the prosecuting attorney to play upon the emotions or tnese ar. biters of life and death, Th prosecut ini, uttornev seeks only to obtain a donviction. The emotion of suostan- tial Justice" finds no aouung puce in his soul. If he can secure the convic tion of an innocent man upon perjurea testimony of a loathsome creatur !thmit character or conscience, e feels he has won a great victory. , After Frank had been "conviciea. stated that he believed the negro (bis ?oas ." marxet today is client) was himself the murderer of Inferior stuff and shrinks after It has v.r, Phaean This statement created! been worn a short time, and that on ..n.,tinn amonar lawyer and caused n.. -f them to rate volubly about "legal ethics." A number of "leading attorneys' gave yvi"tv hot n attorney who knows that his own client is guilty of a crime for which an innocent man i to o put io death should keep silent, and pre .. inviolate the sacred confidence existing between attorney and client' INDEX OF ADVANCING TIDE OF PROSPERITY From th Philadelphia Ledger. Reports coming to this market from many points in th .- south this week show increasing indus trial activity is general there. On 1. particular points out that New Or- leans now na pim i" - municipally owned grain. elva tor i . i- M.,niv nf more than 1.- 000,000 bushels and estjmated to T . ... . ..nn AAA a . tl a fi AA wm cost Between 000. ! Another report in connection ,i,k sis rtrleana states that a company with an authorized cap ital of 8600.000 has been organised ! to, build large cold storage plants and warehouses.. The Arkansas Fertilizer company, of Argenta, Ark., will build a 190,000 sulphuric acid plant and the Tulsa Boiler company, - of West Tulsa, Okla., will build a 260.000 plant for mak ing boilers and tanks. The Black River Cypress ; Lumber company, of Sardinia, B. CV has organised with a capital of 2260,000 to build a mill with a capacity of 20.000, 000 feet per year. OKLOON NinKUaUTS The Indianans of Newberg will hold their annual picnic Saturday, August 28. m The Lincoln Countr Leader observes that Toledo is the only town, in , the county that can boast a - merry-go-round. Papers that report the progress of the wave of gypsy migration down the Willamette valley note a decided fall ing off in the fortune-telling patron age. - . '". : A new lungmotor recently purchased by public subscription has arrived at Seaside. The machine will be kept in the office of the city marshal, in read iness for instant use. A number of business men will be taught to use the machine. ' - Ashland Tidings: A report of the Crater lake tourist travel shows that this year is breaking all records. Up to Auaruat 8 the total number of tour ists was 5276, the number of tutomo-' Dlles lOoS,, - Alleging an Increasing popularity of Tillamook coast resorts, the Newberg Graphic says; "We note that the New port Review is telling the people who have, interests at Newport that they will be compelled to get busy and make necessary improvements -if they hop to hold their own with other at tractive beach resorts." ' Monroe Leader: The Russian colony that purchased 100O acres of land over in Lfnn county two or three year ago and got "stung" with a lot of worth less ground, now has an agent over in Lane county looking for another tract. Had they had the gumption to Come to Monroe in the first place they would have had no trouble. We have the "garden epof of the valley. The original canal has been exten sively improved. The canal crosses the peninsula from Holtenaii, jyst beyond the north ern suburbs of Kiel, to Bmnsbettel, at the mouth of the Elbe, at sea level. the locks, at either end merely serving to neutralize the tides. It is 80 miles long, with a depth of more than 30 feet and a width sufficient to pass the largest men of war. A Steamer takes between eight and nine hours to pass through the canal, thus bring ing the advance German naval base at Heligoland within easy reach of the Kiel headquarters. The whole way at night is .lighted by electric ity. The first cost of th Baltic ship canal was $39,000,000. Other millions have been expended in its Improve meat Regular steamer excursion serv ice was maintained here before the war, but the .voyag offered little of Interest besides steep banks and here and thte spiritless scenery. . Great imperial docks, arsenals and navy yards are located at Kiel,- as are also admiralty headquarters and the imperial naval academy. Foreign ers were not admitted to the docks and yards.. Many thousands of visit ors regularly a-ttended Kleler Woche (Kiel Week), the great German re gatta held each year during the lat ter part of June. This regatta was an event of first Importance in the world of international sport, and yachts from all nations Interested in water sports were annually entered in" its famous races. The yacht Ho- henzollern, housing the emperor and the imperial family, was each year the central 'point of the gay, rich, cosmopolitan throng of sportsmen. - - Kiel i one of the oldest towns In Holstein. The' older parts of the town are badly built, having twisted, narrow, indifferently paved - streets and being flanked by gnarled, time tortured buildings. The new town, however, is filled with handsome structures, afid is well planned. The city has grown in every way. Indus trially, commercially, socially, artis tically, since becoming naval head quarters for the empire and of the greatest sport event upon the German sport calendar. - . There Is an insistent -demand among jurists and lawyers of conscience in America for a reform in judicial proy ceaure. just wnat they propose to do is not clear, yet the fact they are seek ing reform is encouraging to the laity. Personally I helieve the elements of law and judicial procedure should be taught in our public schools. It should be divested of the garb of pro fessionalism.. Knowing the law and the consequences of its violation, men would be less likely to transgress it, and a vast horde of non-producing par asites would be compelled to go to work. GEORGE W, DIXON. Criticising Clothes; Portland, Aug. 19. To the Editor of The Journal Being a mere man but nevertheless a careful observer of all new and xtraOrdinary conditions that arise from time to time in the course of human progress and evolution, I am therefore moved to ask of Dam Fash ion this pertinent question: Why do ail th women wear short skirts? Old or young, tall or short, fat or thin in every case nowadays the skirt is hav ing a hard time. trying to reach the ankles. All thia is bewildering to t,he ordinary man. A friend of mine ex plained that the material for dress account of the war American women have been unable to send away for better fabries -and have therefore had to content themselves with the com modities at home. Whenever I go to the Oaks or attend a high class Portland theatre I am not surprised to find th chorus girl with the lower extremity of her skirt a foot or se above the ankles, but in times like these a very similar scene is not uncommon, on the street of our city every day. W men do not object to this In the least it is all right in. Itself but what does bother us is how to readily recognize who's who. In time gone by girls have always dressed according to their age, and older maidens were at tired In costumes best suited to their years; but now ''the old order changeth and giveth plac to new." . All dress In skirts just as though not one was a day over "sweet sixteen.". - This, I ay, is confusing to th average mas culine mind, especially to that of the masher.- I saw a fellow on th street the other day approach a neatly dressed ypung maiden who, as usual, was wearing a very abort gown. She was standing on the corner waiting for a jitney with her back toward her ad mirer. A nice aay, mti one," re marked the young fellow airily. Where upon the object of his attention .di rected a swift, piecing gaze in his di rection and looked him over steadily for a moment. It was his grandmother In one of those short skirts. - v ; This is merely one Instance of many of its kind, but it alone ought to b sufficient cause to set the women of Portland to thinking and lead,, them to adopt some regulatftn of dress whereby men- will b abl to iatin guisb, b they 1 or jc. i. wrioht. iai fcAELY XiAXt" Writer "- ' ? Journal. ON CHRISTMAS day, 1887, In th village of St. Louis, on" th bank of the Willamette, Captain Fran-, els Menes started on hi last voyage. His death removed from Oregon, on of its picturesque and adventuroua characters. . In 1817 Oapiain Menea, in command of the French ship Morning Star, brought to Oregon Bishop Ulam h- . ett with 10 priests, 7 nuus, a brothers and a cargo of goods for the use of the Catholic churches of Oregon. , On his second voyage to Oregon in th' summer of lS4, hi8 vessel, the Morn- ing Star, met with a serious misad venture at thr mouth of the Columbia. Captain Menes decided to settle in ' Oregon." u H settled at Oregonf City, where he lived until 1653, when he moved to St. Louis, on French Prairie. Hi first mate, Kugene La Forest, also decided to stay ashore, and settled at 7 Oregon City. Many yearjLago, in speaking of th wreck of the Morning Star, Mr. La Forest said: In December, 1841, we left Havre ' de Grace, and reached the Columbia river bar about the middle of July, 184K. VVe remained outaiae the .bar seven days, waiting for a pilot. . No pilot could be obtained and by th advice of the captain of an American brig, who informed us that Mr. Reeve, the bar pilot, had been drowned in th bay of San Francisco, it was' agreed that both vessels should cross ther bar as Boon aa the wind was favorable. Captain Menes, having crossed one before, consented to go ahead, : whil '. the other vesnel should follow; but 111 doing so In, took the wrong direction, for the channel had changed sinue 1S4T, and the Morning Star was badly used for nine hours on the bar, wltli very heavy weather against us. Th Amer ican brig which had been in our wake passed us at about COO yards distance. She struck bottom in several places,, but was able to go on, as she drew only six or seven feet of water, while the Morning Star drew 16 feet. W lost all the Morning Star's small life boats while attempting to lowef them, at which time one man was drowned. The keel worked loose from the stern -and the rudder' was lost, which left the vessel uncontrollable; but through I'rpvidence interceding in our behalf and through the courage of the captain and the crew, the chip wag brought into Baker's bay with tour feet oR wa ter in our hold. Most of the pump were broken and it was well nlgn impossible to keep her afloat; but with the courage and skill of Captain Menes and the rew. and through the aid of Mr. Latta, a river pilot, who i brought to our aid a number of In dians, and with constant pumping and boiling, we reached a place of rafety. . We built a box rudder, with which . we succeeded in steering the vessel up the river tj Portland, landing where the Allen & Lewis warehouse now stands. Hern we Hiieceeded in paving the cargo. The hull v.uu sold to Couoll anij Flanders, who sold it to Charles-. Hutchins. who burned her for the. iron;' and copper. , - - ; - - In view of" the fact that the trip" from the mouth of the 'Columbia river ., to Han Francisco can now be made' in safety, luxury and upeed, it is interest ing to recall travel by steam 40 yea&s or so ago. . On November &. 187 . pretty much all of Portland turned out to see the steamer John L. Stephens, which had bern given up as lost at sea. While en route from San Fran cisco to Portland, the vessel ran into, a storm off the coast of northern Cali fornia, which continued With unabated : severity from Sunday: mornintf to Wednesday: night. The seas lrd"a com pletely over the ship, carrying away ; theguards, wlteelhouse and damaging, the cabins: ' The hatchway wert wrenched loose arid the galley snd steerage were flooded. The steerage, passengers were quartered 'in the ea- loon and dining room. She worked her way northward, and the following Tuesday -she ley outside the bar at Astoria. For six d'ys and nights Cap tain . Floyd did not leave ahe bridge. The bar was "mountains high," so Captatn. Floyd, lay outside till the storm blew itself out, then crossed the bar and canie up the river to Portland unannounced. ' ' Captain It, S. Floyd was an -Old tlm Pacific coast mariner, haying been tnaster of the Active, plying .between f Portland and Victoria, and later having commanded the Oriflame. Still later he wa8 master of the John L. Stephens. After retiring from the sea he had V charge of the "Lick Trust." and for years devoted all of his. energy to th construction of the 3 inch Lick tele scope at the Mount Hamilton, observa tory In California, for which James Li.k left 7fcu,000. Some of the passengers who mad! tho trip on the John L. Stephens ii yours ago are still with us. Thi psa- , sengers presented Captain Floyd with a. testimonial, which rtaas as follows: On iloaid Steai.iblilp John L. Stsphens, Off Columbia itiver, weanesuay Morning, November IS, 1871. I, Whereas. Hecotrnicfng the perils and dangers nt the i;it lew days which we nave undergone, and the able anl skillful management of the said-steam- . ship during a severe and trying storm (commencing on Sunday morning, No vember i ., j nil lasting - until Wednes day morrows, November 15 off the our most excellent and devoted officer ami crew, who bv their prompt action and attention to duty have safely con trolled and brougnt the said ateamsnip with its passengers through the above described Btorrn; now we. m iinasr signed pa&fcngerB, lio e '. nd most heartily do we, affix our neme to tb following resolution: . . ReKolved, That our thanks be, and. aro hereby given to our most noble, . brave and kind hearted captain, H, M. : Floyd for the unclfnching ouiage and' devoiedness to duty displayed by him -in times of severe trial .and danger; for his abl and skillful management of our smer during such a storm; not seeking any rest-1 Trom Sunday morning until Wednesday morning, but ever standing at his post. And further are hereby given to th pilot. Daniel f Oraham, for piloting us safely into the port of Astoria; also, the several rncnes, and the crew, for their unflinch ing courage and prompt obedience to orders. (Signed.) Oeorge P. Ibrie. 8. i. Holmes. B. P. CardweU, L. Hulin, Richard H. Wise, T, D. Henderson.-Mrs. George P. Ibrie, Ms. M. BU Holmes. Mrs. Abble Card- well, Mrs. J. Lufkin, Mrs. rranei Winch, Miss A.- Loomia. Mrs. M, W. Smith, Mrs. Lucy A. Forbes, Mrs, Bet tie L. Jackson, Emily C. Fllkin. W. H. Roberts, Mts M, C. Shumand. Samuel Aekley. I C. Millard. William Wood bury, France Livingston, A. P. Stew art, m K. fope. i . .v . jacKnon, j. n. Pllkln, Henry VV. Winche, Eugene C. Ubin. T, j. joooyear. nanes r-. Brown. A. F. Forbes, James Forces, James Cameron. L. B. Elliott, H. Fair man, M. Wise. L. C. Henrlchsen, A. R. VanHouten, Willi m H. Drake, 11. W. Boyce. Iteuben Loveridge. Mr. Llnl McNary. Miss A. K. Richards, Mr. A. R. VanHouten. Mrs. Kate S. Wise, Mrs. D. B. Boyce, Mr. Klia Ainsa. Decadence Everywhere. : From the New York Olob. No, people are not nearly so rugged a they wer Aalf a century ago Frex. a brakeman down state, fell under th wheels of hi train, and a contempor ary reports; "Hi head was cut off. He died instantly." . Oil, Say -Not So, From the Cincinnati Times Star. Most of the eugenlsts w have seen have been physically pretty uncon vincing. . -:' '' ' : - - -