6 . THE 'OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, , FRIDAY r EVENING, - JUNE 26, 1914. THE JOURNAL C JACKROM .nfellsliar a'utiil.bad avcry trnlnf (aieapt Bandar) sad ." arySundar morning at The Jonraal Bnlld - U. Broadway and YambiU ta. Portland. Or. tmarad at tba poatof flea at Portland. Or., (or ' trienictuloa tbroucli tfca axilla aa second alaaa as. t tar. !'"-" .. . . IfaXKrHuNU Mala T173; Hat. A-SV1.U Opart meet raarbad br ibeaa Dumbara. Tttt "tUa oprato what napartmeat- oi mit ICKk.ll. AUVKKl'iaiMU UtPHBKKNTATlVtl h'oj.mlo Keatoor Co, HrOoawlca Bid., m Hits Ae.. Nw Yorki 121 Peuola J .aa Bid,.. Cbloaso. .-..:..;'-. ubaorliiUoa tarnaa br Ball or ta a a aa Crasa to tla Coltad States . ktssiooi ' DAILY One rasr ..15.00 I On sont.....r..$ 0 - y, . suhdax ' floa jtaar. 12 AO I Una octb. ...... f - - , tA!LT AMD. BVXDAt. Ona jaar $7.60 I Ona roootb f .S3 When. You Go Away ' Have The Journal tent tp " " your Summer address. Caesar was no ready to for- " give that even Cicero, who wai .. by no means a constant frlenu ... to htm, relates, as a singular proof of his noble heart,. that ' he never used to forget any-" thing except the wrong' done -to him. Indeed, to pardon is a most beautiful rvenge; but to forget ' is still more . beau. tlful.- Petrarch. ; 65- Til K PRESIDENT'S SPEECH as-alUKSIDENT WILSON is right. IJ His speech to the. Virginia I editors yesterday, which apr wars on this page, is a won derful presentation of the case of business. It watf the speech of an honest and farighted man. It is clear, direct, aud convincing. In it. the, president takes the country into his coniidence. There has hen agitation in this country ajjalnst the methods of Big Busi ness for teh years. The - New Haven Railroad monstrosity shows why. The methods applied to it ' by Morgan and Rockefeller stag gered the country and proved that remedies must be applied. They showed that the people have been, right all these ten years in de manding remedies. ; As the president says, business Institutions that have been dishon est are affrighted with fear of what kind of. resentment the crooked things they have done may awaken in the public. They are in dread of the reckoning. ' But, there is no reason for hon est business to be alarmed. .It is not honest business that the new tniBt bills are to deal with. It is dishonest business, like the New lltiucn and to n n d rd a nf Klmilar in stances, and who in this country rlna nnr want dishonest business made honest? .' The cry of the crooks who have been wrecking railroads and plun dering' the people is "hard times." They are joined in it by .politicians for political purposes. It is a cry that can always do damage. Confi-i dence and credit are the life blood . of bu6inens, and confidence and credit can be talked away, as the New York World sajB, as easily as a woman's reputation. ' So far as honest business Is con cerned it haB been many years , since it was confronted with so lit- lin uiict-'riaiuiy. ivuu wa uuw what to expect under the tariff. . It knows that the new currency law makes honest business perfectly RBfiiro an far ua credit In rnnrprnpii. It knows that Wall Street cannot again produce a banking panic. - As President Wilson says, the ) proposals for trust legislation are In no sense radical. They have the sanction of men who understand this country and its business. The president Is net- running amuck. He is not playing the demagogue. He is not conducting a government of denunciation. He Is not fanning the flames of un- rest or popular passion. He is not y bullying -business, legitimate or il legitimate. In a careful, conserva tive process, he is quietly and sanely applying remedies for cor recting evil and wicked methods, and he is doing it as the friend of business and as the friend of the American people. v WRECKING --;A RAIIiROAD WfO BETTER illustration of the l imperative need of an . ef I 1 ficient law regulating the Is suance of railroad securities could be found than a recent an nouncement by the bondholders' and stockholders' committee of the Rock Island" railroad. They pro pose to reorganize the Rock Island lines "by "Wiping out $357,000,000 of watered stock. . 1 ' Before that railroad became the prey of exploiters it was prosper ous, ltd stock was selling at $168 a share when the building of a watery, structure:. above it was be gun. The Rock Island was wrecked by the holding company , scheme, and last Friday, when the -plan of reorganization Was announced, the common stock of the final holding company sold at 2 W and the pre ferred ' stock at 3. ,-' It is now proposed to eliminate ' the two holding companies and re ' turn . to the ; fundamental . railroad property,: the Chicago, Rock Island " & Pacific Railway Company. A member of one 'of the reorganizing committees Bald the plan Is an en tirely .new . method , of financing. but it is significant that hard headed business men see no. salva tion for the Rock Island property jexcept , through placing the com pany 0n a clean -basis of worth, dollar for dollar. . It Is admitted that the' Rock'lsl and was not wrecked by legislation, i It was wrecked by men who saw inrcrete Illustration of the same sort it an opportunity to use .control for tie Issuance of securities, not for the benefit of the road itself or its patrons, -. but. for the aggrandize ment of greed,, through stock-jobbing schemes which had not , even remote relation to the,-rallroad bus- ; It .Is td" prevent; recurrence of ruch financial wrecks that regula tion - of the-; Issuanceof "railroad ser curl ties by the,-. Interstate Com merce Commission' Is proposed in President? Wilson's bill before Con gress. . The ' purpose- Is . to' protect legitimate" Investors- In stocks and bonds and' to ' prevent " further wrecking of American railroads by the exploiters. , The Rock Island's "history Is a terrible - tragedy not only In the railroad world,' but., also in the lives of many people who put their savings into the exploiters'-, hopper. There should be an ' end to such things. TIJE PROTOCOL HE signing of the protocol by the American and Huerta. en voys is V first great step to wards peace in Mexico. The capture of Zacatecas and San . Luis Potosl by Villa's vic torious army is another. Con fronted with the . certainty that Constitutionalist regiments will soon enter Mexico City unless ar ticles of peace be agreed to with the rebels, Huerta and his ad visers are in no position to be ex acting in terms or backward in consenting to what is already or dained as inevitable. With the great moral force of the United States and the A. B. C. mediators exerted for peace on the Constitutionalists, it is ifet im probable - that Carranza and Villa, even with the capture of Mexico City in full view, may consent to the program for a provisional gov ernment and a constitutional elec tion, especially since the Washing ton government demands that the provisional president shall be of Constitutionalist leanings. If they do, the Mexican, problem, with Its complexities and incongruities Is at 'the threshold of a solution, not by the bloody arbitrament of war, but on a basis of peace and honor for the United , States, the mediat ing nations and for all concerned. It is, of course, too early to ac cept the success of mediation as achieved. Agreement by the Huerta and Constitutionalist representa tives may not be reached. Flushed with ,their new triumphs in the field, possibly made drunk by the war spirit, the Constitutionalists may prefer a march on . Mexico City to such' terms as the Huerta envoys may concede. Against this are the ' confidence and faith the rebels have in the purpose and power of the Washington govern ment, and the moral suasion that the A. B. C. mediators should be able to exercige for an agreement and an honorable peace. In" any event, enough has been gained at Niagara to throw a new and splendid atmosphere of amity over all the nations of the West ern Hemisphere. The suspicion and distrust' with which Central and South Ameri can nations have always regarded the great republic has been swept away by the ideals which have been held up in President Wilson's policy as the true relation between the governments of this hemis phere. Our procedure with our torn and bleeding neighbor beyond the Rio Grande has not been with can- fjion and colonels and conflict and carnage and destruction and blood and dead men, but on lines In gen- tie consonance with the teachings i of the great Carpenter of Nazareth. SUGAR AND THE TARIFF RECENTLY published state ment shows the effect of the 25 per cent reduction in the duty on sugar. Since the new rates went into effect refiners selling price has averaged 3.819 cents per pound, as compared with an average price for the last ten years of 4.4 cents per pound. The statement says: A saving of .581 cent per pound is being effected by the reduced duty. .which figured on the amount of sugar consumed In the United States last year, namely, 3,743,139 long tons, or 8.384,631,360 pounds,-would be equal to $48,714,108. The .real benefit to the consumer will come in 1916, af ter which a further saving of some $100,000,000 per year will be effected. There was a time when cham pions of prohibitive tariff duties solemnly asserted that the foreign er paid the tax. That, claim is no longer made, but an equally falla cious argument is put forward. It runs something like this: ., When we put on a high tariff, we don't make prices any higher to the con sumer, but, we enable manufactur ers to pay higher wages; when we reduce the. tariff the .manufacturer is compelled either to shut up shop or; to reduce wages: -i-M...iuua.a.aNv,s re r guimug . tu uuueisiuuu me ia.ru i; they now realize; that - prohibitive duties are demanded, not for thn benefit of , labor or consumer, but to swell the profits of capital by limiting competition. And. the Con sumer pays - these excess profits, none of which goes Into the pock ets of' labor. ' ': ,.. The statement ; showing the di rect; relation between; sugar tariff duties and prices Is valuable. The American housewife is now saving nonrlv, tan flftft nnft voo nd will eventually save $150,000,000 which. formerly went into the pock- ets of augar baronsl' The state- ment Is valuable because It Is con- of thing which Is going on in many directions. LIKE PRIVATE BUSINESS HAVE often .wondered why the same principles which we have all found it necessary to apply in our private af I fairs ; cannot be applied to the pub lic's affairs," said Dr. C J. Smith in an address before the Park Rose Improvement club. - ij'Many a practical farmer and many a practical business man in Oregon is thinking the same thing. U Js the f thought that comes to every . man . .who, like Dr. Smith, has, had, by hard knocks, to make Ills .own r. way In the world. Dr. Smith said: . When, . at the beginning:, of a busi ness year, I come to consider my personal wants and the Improvements I would like to make. I find myself compelled to discriminate.- T ra nnrt this year build this barn or fence that field, because my means will not permit me to do everything at once. But ' the state's business is run on an entirely different plan.' - Ninety men - come to - the legislature, each charged with getting a certain ap propriation for his particular ' dis trict. Members do not realize that the general public cannot stand all these demands at once. The result all of the demands are pushed through and the next year we have a tax levy which makes us all won der where the end Is to be. . It is an accurate analysis. It Is a clear ' explanation of why the state's business is not conducted like a private business. An inves tigation of the record of almost any legislature will prove that Dr. Smith is right. The power to see what can be afforded and what cannot be af forded at the state capital is a splendid quality to have in the governor's office. A strictly busi ness administration by a business man, such as Dr. Smith has proven himself to be, is also an advan tageous combination to have in the executive chair. It is a good way to arrange for the state's business to be done on the same lines as private business. INLAND WATERWAYS T HE steamboat Je Fowler, car rying a party or tourists, re; cently made the river trip from Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, to St. Paul, Minnesota, a distance of 1940 miles. It was the first trip by a boat ever made, over that route In forty years and It re-established the fact that the Missis sippi river system still exists for traffic. When railway building began to boom river traffic suffered a? de cline. Cincinnati suddenly stood still in its development and the peo ple of that city sought to keep pace with Cleveland and Chicago, lake ports, by promoting a rail road. The Detroit News says: The people: of Cincinnati made a desperate struggle to regain the . su premacy ef their city by entering into the railway building competition. In 1869 the city started the enter prise which brought about the build ing of the Cincinnati Southern Rail way over a route of 338 miles to Chattanooga, including an expensive ! bridge across the Ohio. This road was operated by the city until the j ran or 1881, when it was leased to 1 !iiT..-,l -VTw f rT the Cincinnati, New Orleans & Texas Pacific Railway and became known as the Queen & Crescent. The cost of this venture was about $28,000,000, but it failed to accomplish the restoration of Cincinnati's commer cial importance. Cincinnati failed to re-establish herself as the Queen City of the West because her natural advan tages of water transportation were ignored. Chicago and Cleveland forged -ahead because they mado use of the great lakes. Even an Investment of $28,000,000 in a railroad availed Cincinnati little. For a generation railroad con struction has nlaftod out Inland wn. terways in contempt. Traffic has been diverted from natural to un natural routes. But recently there has been a wonderful recovery of appreciation of the real worth of navigable rivers. Our Inland waterways .are the people's natural regulators of rates and accommodations afforded traf fic. Cincinnati failed in; its effort to retain supremacy through the building of a railroad. That city's experience is a lesson for all com munities on the Columbia river. That waterway was designed foi use; it must be used if progress is to keep pace with opportunity. WHAT DOEST THOU HERE? I T IS now possible to talk over a telephone wire from San Francisco to New York. In the light of the electrical development of the past few years It does not seem Impossible that men will converse .with each other from different ends of the globe, without tne aid of wires, some day. Vho knows but that which we call mental telepathy is but wireless telephony and that one day it will be .within the power of any. one to project his thought to another per son, though the-world is between. When the telephone was first I - -s "lOMms two questions l win endeavor to brought into use it opened awon- do so. First, he says my statement derfnl new world to man He who heard the-first voice on the wire must have recalled that passage in Holy Writ: And a great and strong wind rent the mountains and brake in pieces the rocks before the Lord; but the -Lord Was not In 'the wind; and after the wind an earthquake, but the Lord was not in the earthquake;, and after the earthquake a f Ire but the Lord was not in the fire; and after the nre a still small voice. And It was SO When KlHfth heard It h mnr, his face in his mantle and went out aniS stood at the entering In of the I cave; and behold there came a voice unto him and said: What doest thou here? .Science Is constantly dispelling J the darkness and revealing new worlds that have been waiting through the ages . for man to - at tain the wisdom ' to ' see them and bring them, to his aid in gaining dominion over the heavens and the earth. . , GIVE ALL A DAY F THE creation of special day of observance and- holidays con tinues there will soon come a time when every, day Is a holi day and every school boy' will be satisfied. Not many -years ago there was only- Christmas, : New Years,' Washington's Birthday and the Fourth., of July. Now there is Mother's Day, Mckinley Day, Lin coln Day and about fifty others celebrated in the various states, of the union. : : It has been proposed that there shall be a Father's Day. In this connection a philosopher in Nef York state has suggested that a day should be set apart In which to give special recognition to each member of the family. He recom mends the following calendar and flower appropriate to each: January 19, Brother's Day; daisy. February 3. Sister's Day; orchid. March 10,-Grandpa's Day; Sweet Wil liam. April 12, Grandma's Day; Mignonette. June 13, Uncle's Day; Thyme. July 21. Maiden Aunt's J3ay; Bleeding Wert J August 6, Cousin's Day"; Dandelion. October 30, Baby's Day; Milkweed. November 4. Household Pet's Day; - catnip and dog f enneL We may have to revise" our cal -enaar. According to a news item from Philadelphia, Curator Jordan of Independence Hall has. In looking over the old records, made the discovery that the Dec laration of Independence was pro mulgated July 8 Instead of July 4 Letters From the People (Communications sent to The Journal for publication la this deDartment ahoaM ha writ. ten on only one side of the paper, should not exceed 800 words in length and must be ac companied by the name and address of the sender. It the writer does not desire to nave ine name published, ha should so state.) "DiscnsaioB Is the areateat of an reform. ers. : It ratlonaUzes everything It toacnes. It robs principles of aU false sanctity and throws them back on their reasonableness. If xney nare no reasonableness, . It ruthlessly crushes them oat of existence and sets up' Its own conclusions In their stead." Woodrow wuson. Arraigns Liquor Interests. Reedvllle, Or., June 25. To the Ed itor of The Journal The great trou ble with people is that you can't awake them to the realization of the fact that there is an ever present menace against humanity In th liquor traffic. Not until its shadows strike close home do we take notice. Our neighbor may have a member in his family who is going to ruin through liquor. The question arises, Is it our business to care? I think we should care, - The drunkard needs no flag tattooed on his hand. Excessive use of liquor has branded his face. Neither the lm becile stare of the drunkard nor the tiny flag tattooed on the hand will keep the unscrupulous hand of the ea loon man off his money The liquor men ; may organize to fight prohibition, but why don't they organize to place their business upon a plane of respectability? Naturally the. liquor traffic is found fighting its foes without, but what about its great est foe, within? Let them revel in fancied security but the hand Is surely writing their doom. They call upon their foes to re form them, and not to destroy. They ask for more regulations, when the . . , 3 . 3 i Elate is uireauy gruu.iiin& uoucr a uur- den of laws which are practically worthless as far as the saloon goes. The liquor traffic has never been founJ to make one attempt to cooper ate with the law. The people's choice, therefore, will be that It must be elim inated. O. E. FRANK. Sir. Bryan's Detractors. Lents, June 25. To the Editor of The Journal In its attack upon the Democratic administration the Re publican press has centered Its crit icism upon "grape juice" diplomacy and its author, Mr. Bryan. Mr. Bryan believes that the Mex icans are an unfortunate, oppressed people. He holds . that it is more worthy of the American nation to teach them than, to shoot them, and he thinks the principle of nationality more sacred than the desire of selfish American husiness Wen for commercial aggrandizement In Mexico. In . short, he places men before money. As to Colombia, Mr. Bryan did the right thing In proposing to make amends to her for a theft of her ter ritory. It is mainly due to the sel fish dishonesty of our government In the past that the South American re publics look on us with hatred and Jealousy. By conciliating Colombia and by adopting, a patient policy to wards Mexico Mr. Bryan has done much to promote good feeling among the American republics. . "Grape juice" diplomacy is an inno vation. It is an attempt to combine policy with principle in international affairs. Like all reforms, It is de cried and laughed at by the opponents of its originator. But like all good reforms, it probably will succeed. All lovers of true democracy- sincerely hope that it may succeed. It It does, Mr. Bryan will have accomplished much towards securing world peace the dream of humanists from time im memorial. HAROLD BURNETT. ; Mr. Huntington Answers. Lents, June 24. To the Editor of The Journal -E. W. Relhok ln his letter of June 13 says I did not at tempt to answer his questions. That is true. I only 'attempted to comment on that part, of his letter . In which he Intimated that the liquor Interest was responsible for our advanced civiliza tion, for h said it would -vanish If the liquor Interest were removed. How ever, as be has asked ms to answer that the administration of a dry stats or city costs less than a wet one, is not true. He says that when Salem went dry taxes went up three mills and when Albany went dry taxes went up one and one-half mills. Hs says that doesn't sound as If It were cheaper to De dry. . - I live In Portland. In February, 1918, I paid S 9.66 taxes on my home. In February, 1 9 1 4, I paid $19.41 on the same home and the same valuation ex actly and it wasn't very dry In Portland, either. Taxes were more than doubled. and the liquor interests don't blame the drys for It, either. Now If condi tions wers tne same in Baiem and Al bany as In Portland, taxes would -have gone up six mills if they had not gone dry, according to Mr. Relhok's" own argument.'. It Is a shame, he says, that when we need money we fall back on the saloon A FEW SMILES At a luncheon given In his honor at a local club recently .Cyril Scott told the following, which, came under his personal o b r v ac tion in . bis study of court rooms: , r An old offender. deemed Incorrigible, was on trial for i as sault with Intent to kllL WMle summing up, the Judge. In an attempt to soften the effect, of the sentence that ha felt compelled to lm ii a Vr ' Lf t4 no ?tl?tAi:?K& not be 'such I .t.cwuBt asuiut wig yuauuci, uui i was reaiiy sorry -xor mm ana wisnea i he could befrin1 Tiimr that it atrtnallv I hurt him very much to be obliged to I tell th ' culnrlt thar he must sfo to I J?-?ZV2Li-2 W ' - ....... - j i Asked if he had anything to say, the I condemned man replied: I "I am glad to know that you have 1 nAfhinff airains mo iArathmt very nice but it seem, to me that you are awfully "eyeless with other I peoples time, i i The railway train I had put in a tango I nlnvlner machine,. . I "Are . wa running On eastern Or Cen-I tral timer' asked a passenger. - I Neither," replied I lly; "ragtime." "Does your mother allow you to have two pieces or pie, w inter" asicea ms hostess. "No, ma'am." "Well, do you think she would like you to have two pieces here?" "Oh, she wouldn't care!' said Willie, confidently. "This Isn't her pie." Judge, The Ragtime Muse Solar Fancies. The sun in the sky Mounts ever so high. Breathing flame; bhoots his deadly darts or nre Down through roof. tree, dome and spire. Taking aim At mankind, who nearly boll And they quarrel at their toll Ana iney Bay tnat not in uoyie Is the game! Oh, 'tis only In our work That the heat stroke dangers lurk; For the sun. Shining down on farm and shop. Causes workingmen to drop One by one. 1 But on sports well, let it shine I It is joyous and benign And Its influence is fine For the fun! j So let toil and strife and woe Come with winter's ice and snow. As they should; ; Labor then no one deplores For one cannot play outdoors If one would; But in summer, careless, free From the bitter grind would be. Go a-playinsr, full of glee If we could! man to orovlda it Th ainn does not provide the money. The con- Burner rtavs the freieht. I Question No. 2: How will we raise that $900,000 which the liquor Interest supplies now, If Oregon goes dry? It is estimated that a man has to con-1 sume $100 worth of booze to contribute I VI of revenue. That means we must I consume 190.400,000 worth of booze to ( get that $900,000 of revenue. Instead I of putting that $90,000,000 over the I bar of a saloon, I would lew a tax I sufficient to raise it, and . keep the otner s 1,000,000 m the homes to buy food and clothing. I would remove the saloon, then the man who comes to Portland from the woods with $600 in his pocket today would not be relieved of it tomorrow by the saloon man and the next day be at the Gipsy Smith tabernacle among the unemployed mvuaanua iacmg siarvauon. J. HUNTINGTON. Mrs. Duniway Defines Issues. Portland, June 23. To the Editor of The Journal I am In receipt of calls, letters and telephone messages al- most dally, from women In whose In- terest I have toiled and struggled for . . ,, . : over 40 years. In an attempt to se- ure the ballot for them as a tool by which they might in time, be able to I elevate themselves above the condl- tlon of servitude, without salary, through which, alone they may become rnwds0 f drunkards. That many wives and mothers are today living In squalor, unuer Buujreuan to conditions tney never dreamed of when they took upon themselves the vows of "love, honor and. obey." Is a fact patent to many a discriminating observer who has 1arnd lvV- l,l .V-,. , " '" "r u " ieaa women into poverty. These words are not written In con- damnation of any husband who rises, 0 or has risen, above the laws inherited I miiiea evii a very ciear program, dis from barbario ages, who by industrv closed as far as possible In a general and frugality assists his wife to se- program, in Its particulars as well as cure a competence. But they are of- ln itB feneral features. And the ad fered for the woman who blames in- niinlstration proceeded to carry out toxicants (Insensate in themselves) for her failure to maintain her ritrht - ful status as a wife and mother in a home where her dally toil, while mothering and raising her family, snouid insure her suitable compensa tion. To lay the blame on "booze.1 insieau 01 me woruuessness of & husband who falls to provide for his family; or to seek the use of the! ballot to hide away temptations, with - oul wuicu no aon or any hod. 1, to 1 beg "the whoTe quesonmaD- ABIGAIL SCOTT DUNIWAT. To Pay for the Tariff. Portland. June 25. To the Editor of Ths Journal The Oregonian makes a great effort ln its Monday issue to shunt the present stagnation ln busi - ness over to "the Dresent adminiitra. tlon, because of the tariff, the Phillo- nine and Mexican lmbroslla. and th. hold-up whereby ons of the three rail- road subdivisions ln ths country Is not permitted to advance Its freight rate to guarantee a rats increase of $50.- 000.000 annually. f Not one of these matters affv. th. nrennnt business status in anv )rru It is a subterfuge i to hide the more 1 momentous and exigent policies of thef moniedl interests for' which ths Ore- gonian is pliant spokesman and apolo gist. Thomas Lawson in the Sunday Jour. nal criva the ritrht answer, nnttin.- th wam where It belongs arainat th. K.nV.n and Mllroad nurMlu in tlia country, who ars craftily behind a sin- ister campaign against the government. using contemptible methods, recently! exposed by senator j-a roiiette and ttw president, --. "-""f0- a deaiarnad and craftv vlllainv whioh vou ably denounced in your Sunday edition. I . . . We are assuming to save $50.000. 000 to the people ln our revised tariff. PERTINENT COMMENT tUIAL&i CHANGE However, if England had carried off the baseball championship that would have been different. f . John Bull might learn something to Ms advantage by studying the way the suffrage question Is handled over here. In calling justice a mere "game" Judge Dunne of California must have meant that the game was "blind man's bluff." oaa place to live in li it would snovel on the snow. People who are complaining that the 0081 of living has not gone down seem to have forgotten the once plutocratic lvui now Droietarian earsr. a Peering deep into the tenebrous gloom of oblivion one discerns the shad- owy lorm or cnanceiior uay or syra- wh bou' u m- Forsrettfhr politics for awhile. ttie citizens or tnis country would ao wen to read the nresident's tribute to the flag and then sing what they know of America. .Another hard feature has been added 7 tv,. trnriitlnnnl flhrnuinl luck' in the demand of a puritanical genera tlon that ha prove all his picturesque assertions. k.CI ICUU WUglCBBUiCU CIQ B.U W W anxious about th condition of their rx-tlitir.nl fni,i n t hnmf but thev need not worry if they have been doing tneir auty in wasmngton. CONSTITUTIONAL FREEDOM FOR BUSINESS Washington, D. C., June 26. Proph esying a business revival unprece dented in the history of America once the administration's anti-trust pro gram is enacted Into law, President Wilson, In an address delivered yes terday in the White House Deiore a delegation of Virginia editors and Intended for a. nation wide audience, discussed the constitutional freedom for business in full as follows: I think is is appropriate. In receiv ing you, to say just a word or two in assistance of your judgment about the existing conditions. You are largely ..V mi responsible for the state of public opinion. You furnish the publlo with Information, and In your editorials you furnish It with the Interpretation of that Information. We are in -the presence of a business situation which is variously interpreted. . "Here In Washington, through the bureau of commerce and other instru mentalities that are at our disposal, and through a correspondence which comes in to us from all parts of the nation, we are perhaps in a position to judge of the actual condition of busi ness better than those can judge who are at any other single point in the country; and I want to say to you that as a matter of fact the signs of a very strong business revival are becoming more and more evident from day to day. "I want to suggest this to you: Busi ness has been in a feverish and appre hensive condition in this country for more man iu years; I win not stop to Plnt out the time at which it began uo pprenenaive, uui auring more than 10 yr business has been tna object of sharp criticism In the United States, a criticism growing In volume ana growing in particularity; ana as natural consequence as the volume or criticism has increased business has been trrowlng more and more anxioua. Business men have acted as soma men do who fear they will have to undergo an operation and who are not sure that when they get on the table the oper- ation will not be a capital operation, I "As a matter of fact, as the dlagno- sis has progressed it has become more and more evident that no capital op- eration was necessary; that at the most a minor operation was neces- sary to remove admitted distemper and evils. The treatment Is to be const!- tutlonal rather than surelcal. affactln , nKlfa it? lit srist 1 1 wiIaK Vat.. ViAan tilll-tf 111 17Yi,a nn all Vaitai I admitted that there are rrocesse of I business br have been processes of I business In this country which ought to be corrected, but the correction has been postponed and in proportion to lne , T V. . m creased the fever of apprehension, I "There is nothing more fatal to busi ness than to be kept guessing from month to month and from year to year. whether something serious Is going to hPPn ,t( u, or not n vht in par- i1hCIUn1gardoSe.BO,Tt S mVble" the. proPecU of Hn0 of bur. ness unless you know what the year is going to bring rorth. Nothing is more unfair, nothing has been declared by business men to be more harmful 1 1 . " ' 10 Keep tnem auessing. ,llTb1. e8ln w,ent on. he. air was 1 "'A 'r years and more. Then came an admln- istratlon which for the first time had I a definite program of constructive cor I rectlon, not of destructive correction. but f constructive correction of ad- lDls program. I "First" there wan the tariff, and busl ne8s "-bivered. 'We don't like to go the water looks cold.' But when the tariff had been passed It was found BOSWELUS REPORT By John M. Osklson. 1 James Boswell drank eagerly of the wisdom poured out by Dr. Johnson on fl1 '.ubJevCtV on ?M ,d thrt" , ""'"l" i epcan. lyuu- rjww wui a aeoi-narassca llf wa" h!!) I lsoswu na handed on ln his won- I derful "life" of Johnson some of the I Desl tnrirt talks l vs read. To Bos- wel1 ne - I "Whatever, you have, spend less frugality is not .only tne basis . of 1 Quiet but of beneficence. Get" as much Peace of mind as you can, and keep with,n your Income, and you won't g0 far wrong." AO oarrisier namea oimpson, ur . I Johnson wrote I "Small debts are like small shot I they are rattling on every side and can scarcely be escaped without a 'und. Great debts are like cannon, OI 1000 no,8 DUl 111119 oanger. iou - 1 D1U'1- """""" preparea w ais charge petty debts that you may have leisure, with security, to struggle with i tho rest.' Again Dr. Johnson wrote to Bos- I Well: "Do not accustom, yourself to con- But note how anxious the Oregonian i and lts sllles pray for a freight ad vance of $53,000,000 for one of ths three rsllroad systems, which If per I mitted must equally be . given to eacn lof,the other two. Thus One freight - 1 increase of $150,000,000 Imposed against the people, as against a sal- AND 'NEWS IN BRIEF OREGON SIDELIGHTS nri.v . .-..i .. .fft.l ance ana si, teacoers empioyea in am city schools; Eugene s expenoiture in I Bit 02 r0""1 w ""'I j . . I Baker's new publlo library Is five I VaAra old and In that time has tTOWnltA from 000 volume to 754. Tha an-J nlversary was celebrated by UmJlT i hnnltlAra laaa Raturdav nivtit I I X m thai result of a membershln eon- 1 memoers. iai nun cainuma ur B. Gould won over J. A. Kastes' team with SS members to it. .- Appeal to loyal Salemltes, In the Statesman: "The summer resorts are chirking up. Pretty rood summer re- 2n? mair -f,. "tm mfuSiSl will remain at home till after the Cherry Fair and the Chautauqua.- . Marshfleld Record: .This newspaper wants to see the Grants Pass-Crescent . . . . i a . n I City rmiiroaa compie.ea in m. succs0xui i way because, if It in, it will prove to I that they are not shadow-chasing when I but In those daya the word 'heredl ihey.v?!an. efc rom Roseburg to tary was an unknown word; It was I Condon Times:, -The railroad com- for a. stuffv old thins: desisned bv Mr. I Noah when he built the ark. Our nice I k!? ?lCh ?S.Bh?3.an.. t il Heppner line. Perhaps the changa Is I only temporary, ana tne company may I sena up -a nice new car in in near iu- i ture. that the readjustment was possible without any serious disturbance what- eTf.r- ,'n. men 8ad' T1"1 n of rouei. v eiii ws are giaa 10 gei mat i oemna us and it wasn't bad after an.-1 Then came th .currency reform. I You remember with what resistance, I With What criticism. With What SVB- I tcmatic holding back, a large body of I canKers in tnis country met Ui pro- I posais or that reform, and you know I now, immediately after its passage, I they recognized Its benefit and its I beneficence, and moreover since the I passage of that reform bankers throughout the United States have been congratulating themselves that it was possible to carry out this srreat reform uDon sensible and solid llnea. . "Then w advanced to tha, trust t-o- gram, and again the tarns dread, the same hesitation, the aamei urgency that th thinor ahnuld ha, rmttnnnmA It will not be postponed; It will not be postponed, because we ar the friends of business. We know what ws are doing; we purpose to" do it under ad- ty,- - a . enou.h to obtain th- ad-lc of man --u v a-flbv w-it as ivi luuaii who understand the business of tha . i . . . mi ... J , SHU - M.UU i r Uin III- UlUl is going to be exactly what the effect of the currency reform was. a sens, of relief and of seourlty. "Because when the program is fln - Ished. it is finished; the interrogation points are rubbed off the slate; busl- ness is given its constitution of free- dom and bidden go forward under that coMiuuuon. Alia just so soon as it gets that leave and freedom thers will bs a boom of business in- this country sucn as we have never witnessed In the United States. I, as a friend of business and a servant of the country, would .not dare stop In this program and bring on another long- period of agitation. Agl- tatlon longer continued would bs fatal to the business of this country, and If this program Is delayed there will come agitation with every letter in the word a capital letter. The choice is a sober and sensible program now com- pleted or months upon months of additional conjecture and danger. I. for one, could not ask this country to excuse a policy which subjected busl- ness to longer continued sgltstion and uncertainty; and, therefore, I am sure that it is beginning to be evident to the whole press of this country and a constructive program Is at last not only to be proposed, but completed, and that when It 1. completed business can successrui adjustment. . T. . ' "I cannot g-t rest If you send me to bed wondering what Is going to hap - pen to me ln the morning; but If you neiia mo to urn nuuwinR- wmi ,no I Portland He drove the stocic over course of business is to be tomorrow I ,,,. , Portland we loaded our morning. I can rest. How much better is cenun juiuw iu ma men iDfBgeu in nusinessT "It Is a matter of conscience as well ss a matter of large publlo policy to uo wnai vjiib congreai i am now cer - tain is going to do, finish the pro- gram. And I do not think that It is going to take a very long time. I be- lieve that the temper of those engaged in this great thing is admirable, that the various elements, sometimes In an- tagonlsm, ln the congress of the United States are drawing together and that we shall witness an early statesman- like result for which we shall all hiv. abundant reason to be thankful." In the course of the day ths presl- wool and making quilts ana oiqer dent had received a letter signed by household equipment. We were mar Champ Clark of the house and all the ried on March 4. 1854. I was Just n.nivrall nran.(lv,a . If I- over 14 Vears Old. I Started hOUBS- sourl, pledging him their support in hl rammlrn trrr antl-tmat 1r1l.tn and promising they would remain In . " Washington until the program was fin- lshed. He replied expressing thanks i - i. . i - " ' OF JOHNSON ON DEBT eider debt only as an Inconvenience; ii. . cuamiif. 11 it d flrmt Cre DOt to 68 ln ny KUtn'" debt.1 I liks that distinction Johnson made between the rattling, worrying, snd mounding hail of small debts and tha less dangerous booming of the cannon of biz debt. d own rr r1(frr V bearing bills 'of $5 or $10 mill make life miserable, though you can continue to live amvtv ln rltv hn& x.Ki burden Is staggering in slse. Thus my family's share of the debt bnrdn of Vca Vorlr ltv ai nA mtm t. tm ahnil I $1300. yet it does not seem to be one of the things worth worrying about. But if I owed $1300 to a dozen or so trades- nen of New Tork city X know that should realize very soon what It means to "sink into the quagmires of debt." Most of the bigger debts ars In curred only after careful consideration of the chances of repayment; you in cur them In the reasonable hop that you will not only be able to repay, but also, to make something out of ths use of ths borrowed sum. Ths little debts pile up with astonishing persistency and you know that no permanent profit has come from what they represent. Keep clear of ths small debts. vage of $50,000,000 in ths tariff. Is the psnacea offered us by the Ore- gonias clientele as naturally the tar iff reduction must be put ifi opposi tion to ths freight Increase against the whole population. This Is a fine Hi lustration of monopoly methods. CHAS. CHURCH, IN EARLIER DAYS By Fred Lockley. "CandidatM for office whose chief- w wu Swu aMAv ana gooa nanasnaJters can no longer leotad since women have taken a . hand in the election and election of officials." declared Dr. Owena-Adalr m. i .f,,r," " -- rantOn. - . '"Women are tha principal suffsrare 1 mm Kt lawa t i- k uu Luflir uiuiuun who bti ruinm - . b' wk vicious men. whose moral stamina has been sapped by liquor sold to them with the consent and by the approval of our government. "In the '80s I spent over $5000 for the abolition of tha liquor traffic X hoP to live to see the day when it. ,lkl -i. ... K- f,. , BlT,.wl" i-,, rto otth! past. In 1S8J X delivered my first S2-nrtwTl ThA JI? Lrance" Ui?r wa ftt th. nd P -u iywmieu wm state superintendent of hereditary It was In the appendix of Web- who t evila muit ha andurad. If they would get in and work a Uttle " cou,d cul'd Plac. of balng . . J T v - , " . x " uu If there la a determination to do a thing, and you will bend every en ergy toward accomplishing your pur pose, you can do it. When I was a girl X was a born tomboy. Diana, my sister, was Just my opposite. Diana was married when she was y 14 years old to John Hobsoa. Her daughter married sx- Senator C W. .Fulton. -w. settled on Clatson Plains, in th wlntar orIS4X. Out chine Tar - education in thoa jlava u ntt slim. Mr mother tievtr learned ta rmA r lt. and T did not laar-n until after mv first boy was born. When I was 12 years Id a teacher named Beaufort came Into our dls- trict. I do not believe I havs ever loved anyone before or sines as X loved him. He boarded at our house. I Hs only taught a short term, so X did - I not have a chance to learn much rtad- . I ing or writing; but hs taught me to be thoughtful, unselfish and consider I ate of others' Interests. He taught I me how to lump, now to use tne lasso I and all about the ears of a horse, and - I tnese were ins tmngs tnat x carto I most about. "la those days nons of the man or young fellows had any use for a man who w" ne&t- JJt teacher was exceedingly careful of his dress. They joked him about being unable to work i . , - . . . . ll ne nnaiiy saia mat- ns couia aig TZnSP.ZZ I Clatsoo Plains. They all thought this 1 . VI (--11 K tAA r ,nV a nnraT of 1100 which thev i?1. P"?J v' v!,- -.t.!! raised, and then hs bet his watch and all of his other possessions against' I V..... - - . V, sn.V a- nn .in TK tf 1 .,, hu.h.i. of nnt. toes tha m0Bt thAt anyons hsd dug and 8tacked In a day. so hs said hs wouid Aig that amount in it hours, On what is now Joslah West's farm. which was then owned by Mr. Jswett, I thpr was a bir notato field. Wora I went all over Clatsop Plains about I the bet, so everyone within s day or I two's travel was there. He laid aside I his Spanish scarf, his coat snd vest and boots, and put on Indian xnoeea- sins, and stepped Into the potato field. Hs had eut the handle of his hoe off until It wss only two or thres feet long. Straddling the rows of potatoes, with his hoe be began dig- 1 a-ing them, Hs never missed a mo- I tion. Hs seemed to work almost lias I clockwork. Long before his 10 hours were up ns ihaa nis bo ousneis oi potatoes dug and stacked. This was the first time that ths people In Clst- "Op Plains had ever seen potatoes dug wrtn a short bandied hoe. Within a wnn no one u t. ... other way. When my teacher left my ntr,r bro.J MVT lied at the ages of 1J or 1$. My sister Diana, who was called ths "ciatsVp" PUin. was no! .-t .,-. r-n f inss. father decided to leave his 40 acres on Clatsop !-,., .. .. too .mall a. nlare. 1 .. m, nm. for his cattle. He bulu a Urge scow snd we went t I nn..M.iona in two warons. Ws i gtartra out Tor KOSCDUrg. In woavc 1 now South Portland ths roads I throua-h the heavy timber were sl- j most lmpsssable. X was 1$ years old, 1 end a natural nor se woman, suia n- I derstood stork, so my brother Flam end I had charge of driving tne horses and cattle. Father took op a. claim on the banks of the Umpque liver. Just opposite Aaron Rofl place, or ln what is now called West Roseburg. He built a ferry, which hs operated, carrying travelers to and from Roseburg. Daring the winter of I 18S1. I became engaged to LA oranos I Hill. I put In a busy winter caraing keeping with four quilts, four sheets. I four pillow cases, four towels, two I . . . , i . n-1 1 A -- t. I xaDiecioine i- 1 om V"Zmi i'Vt-J.Jd life on U" u. tn"r.J?ad. 't't' Vf 1 i t latann fiains aim u cruia in I . . . . . 1. .... wh h pocKCL,. aula iv n ,vi., " ...... went to Roseburg, hs was worth $20,000. When I was married moth ers never told their daughters any- m.A t th.v hannanaA to sat a v.,t.i huahnnd. aa manv of them did. )t waB considered a saa aispensatio I of Providence, and they let It go at that." . ; Pointed Paragraphs I Kind words snd bsld heads never I dye. I I Never say die. Expire sounds more I classy. I Silence Is the wisest srgument ef Ian ignorant man. I 1 1 Dreaming sweet dreams comes ss I natural to a girl as a fly to a bald 1 head. The Sunday Journal. The Great Home Newspaper. consist of Five news sections replete 'with Illustrated featurex Illustrated magazine of quality. Woman's section of tire merit. Pictorial news supplement. Superb con ilo section. 5 Cents the Copy J