1 I MAGAZINE SECTION THREE I L 1 i ! jL I MAGAZINE SECTION THREE I PORTLAND, OREGON, SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 2 J, IW . .TiBjfclltiBBjj, 'jj v t . HHI BK fcBtl I If 1 IT j aaaa this yean fTTl HEt costliest blessing that the world enjoys U Peace. No person knows what the various nations of the earth, constantly eyeing each other in watchful sus picion, like bulldogs in leash, pay for the maintenance of peace through preparedness of war. There are sources of great ex penditure that are not publicly known. But for their armies and navies alone eight of the principal Powers are spending this year the enormous total of $ 1,380,8 59,374- It is difficult to grasp the meaning of such gigantic figures. Diverted to the channels of commerce, one year's cost of peace would build the Panama Canal five times over, with enough left to operate the waterway nearly seventy years. At the average income of an American family this amount would support for the year almost the combined population of P. nA Witmntin nr nf New VMHBSBSJM Una; it would keep in much greater CQmrt -Wan met ,inV the mnvh 'tneA toiulation of the Netmrl r 1 t r- nf Rrltrium i n A fZreeee. UT VI MWM.W9mr.w w f ,L J..r.,t'. r.f tUlr rVi' Arm an At iHI trie cuHiwiiun is .r..i mpnwf -PKIHVH agriculture me xTCUtC3' ulc& ' i"S5i TtQswT irjr fiVAf waronj spend in the.aggregate somWmg more than one intra me cost or tne fmi bwkj, y Staggering under this enormous load, thet allv additir to it. Each year witnesses a rreate armament of nations. In i8qo( only sixteen . . 1 ir o i. BOO - : I. ut- low ttMJ pjOO,000,J5U. 1 uuuy Pi m J ,L. AMMiii rntf nf inrreme F.urOUe JUfrt. J A urwwr w rnn if m estimated, will be stiendint $10, preserve its peace and insure seeming good will . IN 1903 tMHInited fiutcfl had arisen to be the fjwatest exporting nation on the globe- I W to foreign buyera producta of it fielda, minee and factoriee to the value of $1,892,231,000. Yet all thia industry of its farmers, miners, mechanics and artiaana resulted in but little more than enough to keep the armies of the world ready to fly at esch other's throats, the navies manned and flAll the steel and iron producta that the generous bosom of the earth yields in their primitive form in one year would not pay the cost of maintaining peace quite eighteen months. The entire cotton output of the globe would hardly do it. America's bulwark and boast are ita agricultural resources. No other nation is so blessed. All the cotton and cotton fabric it pro duced, together with all the ther agricultural producta exported 111 1906 would have fallen over $800,000,000 short of paying the annual bill of the eight greatest nations for their armies and navies. Such is the cost of peace. odLiL it But it isn't a stationary cost. lake the poor mans family, it ""fieven of the great nations France, Great Britain, Austria, Ungate.. Germany, IV'WSbO1890 laud and naval arms a grand total of VM- By 1898 these figurea had grown to 1'M'"X,an.d. i JUW 163 889 Figuree for Japan are not included, as they aro not avS'able I for the Earlier periods, slthough they are included m the irrand total for eight nations this yesr.) In"eaed cost, then, during the first eight-year period was eSSoO. or an average of $309,450 a year For the second eight yesr period the increase was $329,609,716, an average of $41,188,614 a year. The heavy drain upon the rewurces of nations is shown by the fact that this average annual increase within the lsst eight yesrs has been within a few miUion dollars of the entire export trade of Norway, much larger than that of any South American country except Brwil and ChiSe and the Argentine, and more than the cost of main- tuininir the public schools of New York. . taming iue - .u:- U,.truH:inn in Austria 1-rarer man me uui ui . and ItalT combined is this annual increase in the expense of national armament. In fact, the voted to the development of agriculture in six of the na iou. concerned is only aboutj?. 000.000 greater than thu, A member of the English Parliament point, to thew nmires as the most powerful argument in favor of national dSarmJmeut and a general 'W?,3S Europe is stsggering under it. fearful load of aoldier. and "USn1&' "the mflitary ofTuropV wm represented by f k waa $Y00 000,000; in 1905 it was nearly $1,500,000,000. "Should it continue to increase at the present rate, in 1916 It wUl be $2 ,000,006.000, and in 1945 it will amount to M 600 000,000, which will mean national annihilation for Eur-Tthe resource, of the.peopje wUl not increase in l'r0,lSa0,'triving to keep iU head above water a princi pal Power of the earth la re sponsible ff the terrlflo debt of France, amounting to nearly . $6,000,000,000. l b. immensity of this sum is Jit ficult to graap. The authorif. quoted abewe .tate. that If 1' were converted into 100-scu pisses a sou is tlxt 1 centr-there would be needed to carry it 82.000 carts, heavily laden, and drawn by three horse, .ack- , , But with it. Continental neighbor, and England oon- ljm tmA V is continu- . nd for the s ago, the ten years men. am stantly arHing to their navies and the efficiency of their arrnie., France must do likewise. Her greatest strain has been in mainiafning her place aa the aecond naval Power. In 1890 she spent $39,207,560 upon marine protection; eight years later this drain on' her purse had grown to $57,391,889, and the present year witnessed a demand for $65,007,443. Germany has been even more lavish in her orders for new vessels and equipments and in maintaining the navy. In Jt8$Q her naval budget was $8,658,720; in 1898 it had jumped to $29,(80f. Wi laa year was $80,216,916. .J. "The influence ot navies on tne rate 01 nations ifsnefan pwm year by year, states a recem annual 01 me umwu a no nation, whatever has been its military power or position, can ngnt as a great worm nation ume the mi. , . "Vnr uhm nf mnna. this strerurth is more others. To England it is life. But, no matter what falls behind in the raoe for naval aupremacy, it fi race for greatness. Ttii. ovnlaina mhr imi of the OTeat nations. 838,015 on their navies fc 1890had increaaed thi. 1898, and to $508,1941519 this year. ' One would imagine that such enormously in upon one branch of national defense ana age mu hn mnnla nf tViA various countries to St the people of the world Power, take great pride i navies to maae or Le adieu Ge enthusiastic wor of naval educati man Navy Le purpose in 898 X ortv men are headquarter. furnishing mf increase the naval growth So it oconle of pire, millio a sesoosst, tively rec dreamed, o mm mm 11 mall."WaBtw f 1 W . "MMnaVRflaRBSaH 1 I nr