THE ' OREGdM DAILY" JOURNAL, v PORTLAND, FRIDAY EVENING, JULY 24, . 1914. THE JOURNAL AW IXIl:PIt!nKT KEWSr-APER. rf" C. . JACKSoX .'Publisher I Published ar avaaint (aifept Beaday) and i rry Bandar morning t Tb Jonrnat Build v ln, Broadway Yarnbul at., Portland. Or. fcntared at the postoffic at Portland. Or., for ;. transmission tbroual, the ma 11a aa aecood elaaa natter. TKMfUO.teS Mala T178; Hoeoa. A-6O6I. il Mpartmaat rrarhed by the Bomber. Tali tha ape rat as what departmrot ran want. ' JrOftKIOM ADVKKT1S150 kKPRKSENTATl VB - . BaiJasHa Kaotnor Co.. Erasable, Bids., , 33ft rifts- A.. w York li PaopU'a Gas BlOf., CBIraro. ; . fttaorltUa tersw by mall or, ta a7 ad ar u tb Cult ad State or klaxlcos . DAILY -' j SUXDAT. - , . . dUl AND HON DAT . On Taar, ..... 87.50 On wonth. ...... M When You Go Away ' ' Bar The Journal sent to your Summer address. Trua bravery Is shown by performing without witnesses what one might be capable Of , doing before ell the world. Rochefoucauld. CARRY THB NEWS GAIN there jis positive proof that the underwood tariff octopus ought to be cast Into outer darkness. I British exports fell off seven per cent for June, according to the report of the British Board of "Trade. The loss for the month, as compared with last year. Is $15,000,000. J. - Furthermore, the figures" show a declining British trade, both in exports and Imports, for the en tire six months of the year. The board also reports that the Lan cashire trade in cotton goods fell Off twenty per cent, and the mills are to be shit down to prevent over production. As further indication of the . widespread calamity brought upon the whole earth by the Wilson ad ' ministration, the British board's report recounts evidence showing that there is a slump in trade throughout the world. In fact, there is plenty of testimony that the main business depression is in Europe. Carry it to Foraker. Carry it to ' Cannon. Carry itto the Ore gonian and its private candidate for senator. The tide of Wilson progressive Ism must be turned back or the whole planet will be converted Into one vast .desert of empty din ner pails. Penrose must be elect ed. Foraker must be elected. Can non must be elected. Aldrich must be brought out of exile. Mr. Booth must be elected. Standpat ism must' be called back to power. - -i The anti-trust bills must' be beaten. The income tax must be repealed. The Payne-Aldrlch tariff must be re-enacted. An American army must be sent into Mexico to protect Standard Oil and American owned mines. The Wall Street t dinner pail must be re-filled. : Hurrah for Barnes. Hurrah for "Penrose. Hurrah for Aldrich, and down with the Underwood tariff octopus. Down with progressivelsm, and down with a president who wants a fool bill passed that will send lawless trust magnates- to jail. WET IAXDS AND WEAITH THE department of agriculture has Issued a bulletin dis cussing the wet lands of . Louisiana and their drainage. It is a study of reclamation in the South, covering a period of four years, the purpose being' to en courage land drainage by empha sizing the benefits to"" be derived from bringing the soil under effi cient cultivation. ' The bulletin says that drainage of land which once had scant mar ket value has transformed sections into magnificent farms. The in crease in land values is marked. Areas which have been drained are ' suitable for a wide variety of crops. From 40 to 60 buBhels of corn can be produced with little cultivation, and it Is predicted that when drainage is completed Lou isiana land will become too valu able for staple crops. It is also shown that land, when properly drained; is entirely freed from malaria. Drainage destroys the mosquito's breeding place, thus decreasing an enervating ailment which hat been a serious handicap on ine state. The .bulletin demonstrates the relation! between wet lands and wealth ;in Oregon. Development of certain sections of this state await drainage. There is an Intel Ugent effort being made to re claim the wet areas, but the work costs money. Louisiana's expert ence proves that such expenditures are profitable in the long run ?.J DOIMY DIRECTORS ' r .... : . PRESIDENT -WILSON haa d rected that aujt be Instituted to divorce the New Haven and Boston & Maine rail roads, and that a federal grand . jury be given all the facts. A restitution suit by which minority stockholders seek to compel former and present directors to reimburse ; the New Haven's treasury for . $102,000000 alleged to have been " Illegally used has been started. , In Ban - . Francisco testimony given r before the . state railroad commission was to the effect that ; $1,098,000 . was abstracted from 1 the treasury of th Unite! Rail A SAVE THE RIVERS AND HARBORS BILL. ' HE most vital of all issues in Oregon Is the threatened defeat of the rivers and harbors blllL A most momentous question with ueoDle in the Oregon country is whether or not the un derhanded, thoroughly organized and nation-wide fight against it trill kill the measure. Defeat of the bill would set back air river and harbor work for whole year,, and cause Irreparable c loss of prestige and harm to commerce. Even now the government work, In the Oregon district is shutting down for lack of ' funds. - , --"VK,"- v ilTae dredge at Coos Bayjwill be laid np at the only season of the year when' it can work. The work at; Celilo will have to come to a standstill at the very season of the year . when it should be pushed to the utmost. . - . - ' Yesterday, it was announced from Washington' that the Panama canal Js ready at any time for commercial use. Yet, the work on the north jetty at the mouth of the Columbia would now be at a standstill but for the contribution by the Port of Portland and Port of- Astoria of $ SO 0,0 00 to the project. - . ,, This contribution In. money, taken in taxes from the people was made to keep the work continuous in order to hasten completion of the north Jetty: Xt was $500,000 paid out by the people in order to;help the government prepare the mouth of the river in the short est possible time for the new commerce from the Panama canal.. But here is an organized banditti 'fight to kill the. rivers and har bors bill and defeat the purpose for which private Portland money and private Astoria money were thrown into the project. The present bill provides for placing the North Jetty-on a con tinuing contract at a cost of $5,100,000, and for the first time so fixed the project that thepe would be no delay. . Its passage would mean forty feet of water on the bar within three years, and open up the river to any ship afloat, a fact of enormous potentiality for everyman, woman and child from the; mouth of the Columbia to' the British Columbia line, including the whole territory within the limits of Oregon, Western and Southwestern Washington and Idaho. Defeat of the bill now would mean delay in deepening the chan nel at the mouth. It would postpone work there for a whole year, and would mean that the larger ships which will seek the coast traffic through the Panama canal would be denied entrance to the Columbia. Trade and commerce Would settle in other channels and our loss would be enormous. ' ' - It would postpone for a whole year the completion of the canal at Celilo and delay for that period other improvements 'above, and' Include a year's postponement of boat 'lines that would otherwise be established as soon as the Celilo work is completed. Oregon has never fared so well in "an appropriation bill. But Borah succeeded Wednesday In displacing the .measure on the cal endar with the Trade Commission bill. Burton is prepared to filli buster the bill to death. The attempt to kill it is not in a fair tight. but by Indian tactics and by a false charge that the bill la a pork barrel measure. ' General Dan C. Kingman, chief of Ignited States engineers, says there is less than one half of one per cent pork in the pending rivers and harbors bill. His statement is elsewhere on this page. He is backed by . the whole corps of engineers, and against this ex pert testimony are the cheap criticisms of pin-headed Congressmen, Ignorant of what they are talking about, and railroad newspapers . which fight the bill as a service to the railroad companies. In such a debate, when vast commercial and Industrial ' Interests are at stake, there is no question about which side to believe. When , great drainage basins are to be served, when vast producing empires need appropriations for Improvement of rivers and harbors, when . almost boundless agricultural areas need 'the lower freight rates that improved rivers will give, it Is a crime against the nation for, the greatest rivers and harbors bill in American history to be stabbed to death. Every project, in' Oregon Is hanging in the balance. Defeat of the bill means stagnation in government work on every project for a whole year. It means retrogression and loss. The citizens, "the commercial bodies, city councils and every other interest in the whole Pacific Northwest ought to bombard the fed-' eral senate, not the Oregon senators, for they are doing everything in their power, with demands for the passage at this session of the rivers and harbors bill. . - roads by former President Pat rick Calhoun. Charles N. Black, general manager of the company, testified that he did not know the money was gone "until June, 1913, when Calhoun was deposed as president. Three former directors declared they did not know what Calhoun took the, money for, and that they had not asked him. Each virtually admitted that he was purely a dummy director. Every shareholder in the New Haven corporation must be hoping that the stockholders' suit will be pushed. Every person who sees danger in the arrogance of big business must be hoping that there will be a "show-aown" as to whether men who - defy the law shall be permitted to go unpun ished. Every patriotic citizen must hope that dummy directors who consider themselves pieces of machinery to do as they are told will be brought to full realiza tion of their stewardship. As in the case of the United Railroads, the assets of the New Haven road were dissipated. It is' not mere wastefulness that is charged, but violation of law. There are no two ways about it. Directors who accept a trust can not evade responsibility for loot ing It by saying that they only stood idly by while others took the money. The time is opportune for es tablishing a newrule to govern the acta of directors. When they real ize that they are handling other people's money, there will be fewer dummies and less looting. HE IS EXTINCT A CORRESPONDENT of The Journal asks if the American passenger pigeon is entirely extinct. Bo far as known there la now but one passenger pigeon alive, says a writer In the Chicago Herald. This is a 28-year-old hen in the Cincinnati Zoo. What has become of . the pas senger pigeon? Nobody knows. Its disappearance is one of the mysteries of - ornithology. The early Bettler in Oregon will recall its yearly , migrations over the Willamette; valley. , It wag then that pigeon pot pie was a common dish and the .old familiar hymn was pharaphrased to read: 'When X ean shoot my rifle clear to pigeons in tne sines m " bid farewell to pork and beans and feast on pigeon plea The wild pigeon was peculiarly an American bird. Other lands have pigeons but they differ great ly in size, plumage and symmetry. Audobon, the noted naturalist, tens or naving seen the birds In such:- numbers in Kentucky tha: the noonday : sun was obscured ' as If by an eclipse. Their flightcon tinned uninterrupted and In un dlminlshlng numbers for tbrea days in uecesslon, He rlslted one roost that was forty miles long ana three miles wide. The birds were gradually killed off In the East until they were to be found in large numbers only in the Mississippi valley and the Great Lakes region. The last great migration was In 1888 but the birds instead of nest ing in Michigan as usual passed on Into Canada - and disappeared from the sight of man. EST THE DAY'S NEWS S' rRANGER than fiction la the story of Luke Dillon. Four teen , years ago he was a teller: in a Philadelphia sav ings bank, a happy husband and the father of six boys and one daughter. He. was also an ardent Irish patriot. One day he mysteriously disap peared. On the same day Karl, Dullman was arrested in Phila delphia for complicity in a Fenian plot to blow up the Welland canal. in Canada, at a time when feeling over the Boer war was running high. Dullman was kidnaped and secretly taken to Canada, tried and. sentenced to life imprisonment. Dullman was Dillon, who had given a false name to shield his .family. From his cell he wrote bis wife and told her that as heour editorials on the jisoo exemp woruld probably die In prison she j Uo t.A . , nlight as well mourn him aa dead. As she did not wish any stigma to attach to her children she en couraged this belief and it was not until recently that the children learned their father was yet alive. In the meantime they had grown to maturity. A. few friends who were In the. secret persevered in. their Inter - cession with th Oanarllan mTO V . ment and a few days ago Dillon was granted a parole. He rejoined his family and took np the threads of the life severed fourteen years ago... ' - , A STREETCAR INCIDENT S HE was 'a young woman, pret ty and dressed a la mode She stood at the corner of Yamhill and Broadway wait ing tor an ea&tbound car. When the car came along a number of passengers got in butr. the young woman did not move until the con ductor signaled the motoraan to go ahead, j Then she started to board the I ear. She scrambled to the platform with the aid of the friendly . arm of the conductor "Why did S you start the car when you saw 1 was waiting to enter?" she snapped at the conductor- "I beg your pardon. Miss, but as you had .plenty of time to get aboard, I concluded you were not waiting for the oar", replied the conductor. Aa she paid her, fare the ? young woman caid in a loud .voice. Til report you for this. : Tho con- ductor , smiled as he rang up the fare. ? ifvi;:::rl;?;-ft f--i It you ask the conductor If this is an unusual incident he will teU you no, that it happens a dozen limes nearly every day, -. , A streetcar is an . excellent place to study human nature. It is there yoT will find people who Imagine they are entitled to special consid eration and not subject to the laws of courtesy, They act as though the cars were operated for their personal accommodation. A- camel can go a long time without water, but. nobody wants to be a cameL Primitive man lived naked in the woods, but no body wants' to be a primitive man. Letters From the People .i5?J?nnff?tIon nt t Tha Journal tot publication la.thl dapartBMBt abould ba wrtt- ? one ,ld" ot PPi. abonld not aacl 800 words in length and moat be ac companied by tb nam and addresa or the yeader. If tha wrltar doaa not desire to bar tha nam published, ba abould ao a tat.) "Dlsenralon la the groateat of all reform er. It rationalise ererthln; it touches. It rob principle of all false asnetlty and throw thm back on their raonablnea. If tfte' no reasonable!! esa, It rothleaaly crushes them oat of existence and set up It own conclusion In their atead." Wood row Wilson. Differs With the Oregonian. Portlaad, July 24. To tha Editor of The Journal "How w shall come Into our own" as regards Portland's rail and water traffic as defined by tha Oregonian In a leading- article of July 20, which, among other things, says: "The Oregonlon expeota to see al most the entire portion of the Inland empire's product that comes to the coast come down the Columbia valley. eut it win not If there Is nothing In the volume of traffic heory." There is or course everything In this "volume of "traffic theory." which is not a "theory" at alL but an Incontrovertible fact. Idle to discuss. Everybodr un derstands It. The question is. Should the two Northerns throw "the volume of traffic" over the mountains to the sound at excessive freight rates, or down the water level grade of the S, P. & S. to the ocean at rates the traf fic fairly costs, plus a reasonable profit. Was the 8., P. & B. built to protect the northern roads or to ulti mately give the producer and business the benefits, to say nothing of rights that would flow from nature's route to the sea. The Oregonian thinks the Interstate commerce commission will not take this question Into account, which Is to hold that this body con siders only the interests of the rail roads and Ignores those of the ship pers. The Oregonian would seem to be speaking for the roads rather thon for the public, and Its thought may rep resent Its desire. The Oregonian closes its editorial by saying: "Water com petition to give railroad rates their first Impetus downward and the estab lishment of the policy now in sight of regulating railroad rates on the basis of a fair return on definite value of the railroad, ought in combination ta do wonders for Portland, and give In creased prosperity to the shipper." Water competition may be waived for the present. It Is not an issue. Re duced rates to Portland will come, If at all, only after Astoria has been given the common point rate. After that matter is decided and its effect disclosed, it will be time to raise other Questions not now germane, and in jected only to befog and muddle the real issue. . That Portland has comparatively no foreign commerce now, and has stood still In respect to increasing It the past 30 years, during 'which period tha sound and British Columbia ports have wonderfully developed their commerce, is passed by in silence. Portland has had the common point rate and has not thrived thereon. If discriminated against by the railroads, why has this just been discovered? ' Is Portland not barred from asking a lower rail rato than the sound by the statute of limi tation? What the results will be If Astoria comes into her own remains to be seen, and should be first ascertained. Eminent railroad . officials have said it would be Injurious to northern ports If Astoria was given the common point rate; the Oregonian says no business would come to Astoria that now goea to these ports, and that what ever Ast6rla gained would be at the expense of Portland. While Portland has not much to lose, ahould the state, mem of the Oregonian be true, there are many authorities competent to judge who think Astoria's natural ad vantages would bring Into her harbor a large and constantly growing traffic that would not be harmful to Portland and that would inure to the great last, ing benefit of the whole Columbia basin and adjacent territory. Why not do a simple act of justice and, await what the future discloses? CITIZEN. The $1500 Exemption Bill. Arooftn TM t-V Tlilir 9.9 aJTat tli XT! f-rt ofXThe Journal-ln The Journal July 20, I read two letters indorsing and I can't see any good In It. The other exemption law, that Is now In effect, exempting all household ef fects. Is a crazy and unjust law," and should be amended, and X think this 21500 exemption bill will be 10 times more damaging to all poor people than it is. This 21500 exemption-bill, espe cially hurts the poor man, who Is try ing to get a home for himself and fam ily. The first thing a poor man has ' t0 d. t h wants a little home, is to Ilnd a piece of land that he Is able to buy- Generally ho pays part down and t gives a mortgage on the land to secure the payment of tha rest- He has got to go ahead and work, if he ean get work, to support his family, and pay the balance on his place. X have been through the mill, and X know what xnis means. aiy nuw uaru u. is 10 s;e a start on your horn. And all this time this J1500 exemption bill 1. doing you no good, but y?" have no improvements to exempt, for a number of years, and tne rate or tax- latlon on your land Is so much higher than it would be if this $1500 bill were not in exlatanct, that It proves a heavy load. - , While those who have plenty get the full benefit of the 21500 ex emption, your-land has to ba taxed to make up for this exemption and you get ne benefit from it. GJEORGB mCXNBOTHAM. Declares Knowles ou the Square. . Vancouver, WashL. July 2 L To. the Editor of The Journal I have 'bean a reader of your paper constantly for several years, and I - have - enjoyed it j very much. .But what I read In tne paper this evening, written by Mr. Deming about Joseph Knowles' being a fraud, gets my' goat.-"' - . I want to say right here that X was born and brought up as a close neigh bor with Mr. Knowles, and knew him for' many- years, -v'-r ?y.; :.n--.s.: I have tramped miles n snowshoes, and paddled miles in. birch bark canoes made by. his hand ... I have worked. A FEW SMILES Flubdub seems to " have a wonderful opinion t of his . knowledge. j Pokus 1 should say so. Why, I've actually - beard Mm attempt to argue with his son who's in bis freshman year at college. Lippincott's. , A well known aviator waanot feel ing very well, so be thought he would consult a physician, to whom he was a stranger. He told the doctor his symp toms. Tha doctor examined him care fully and said: "My dear sir, you are all right. What you want is plenty of fresh air.' A fellow stole a coat banging In front of a South Clark street clothing store the ottier afternoon. But the pro prietor was on the job, and before the thief was half a block away he - had the police and most of the neighbors on his trail. The poor fellow who had tak en the coat was really coauess before the crime. And as he ran he struggled into the ab stracted, article, which fitted him pretty well, all things considered. And when he was apprehended, about four blocks from the starting point, ho protested his innocence stoutly. "What d'ye mean I sfole the coat?" he said. "I've had this coat all sum-1 men Why, I ain't had it off my -back j foraweek!" . "Tou ain't, ain't you?" sneered the policeman. "An have you wore that there coat hanger Inside it acrost yor shoulders all that timer Saying which, the arm of the law grasped the Iron hook projecting above the collar, dragged the victim to the corner and called for the wagon. hunted and trapped over a part of the same ground be has, and I know from my personal experience with him that what Mr. DemlQg writes is unlike Jo seph Knowles. Mr. Doming made the statement that he was hired as a guide for Mr. Knowles. Now, Mr. Knowles does not require a guide in the woods In the state of Maine any more than a red fox of the same place. He understands ways and methods of catching ani mals, fowls and fish without the use of traps, firearms or hook and line. Mr. Doming also stated that the bow and arrow that Mr. Knowles had he made with his ax and pocket knife, which Is again unlike Mr. Knowles, for X know him to be a master workman, and-when he' has not the tools he has the Ingenuity to make them or use a substitute. X know of no man who Is as capable of carrying out the task set before him as he is, and I sincerely believe that his trip In the Maine woods was an honest one and his advantage there was In knowing the woods, vegetation and habits of the animals and fowls; while in this country he knows noth ing, and doubtless will have to make new discoveries to win his fight, but knowing him as I do I believe he will make it, and make it honorably. But should he fall I believe he will con fess it before the world. I have been taking a great deal of Interest In reading the articles about him. and did not Intend to eay any thing, but I jost couldn't keep still" and have a friend and neighbor be called a fraud, although I haven't seen him for seven years, and he does not know I am in this part of the country, but I have every confidence In .his success and honesty. DANA HOWLAND. A Woman Admonishes Women. Portland, July 22. To the Editor of The Journal It Is with sadness I note the stand the Women's Equal Rights league is taking on the prohibition question. They mix in a few well known reforms that are being cared for by other and nobler leagues. In order to give them a 'more humane as pect. But they are for the whiskey men, and that is their main issue. The whiskey barons must smile when they see the loyalty with which they axe defended by women whose homes they have devastated. , The millionaire brewers and prosperous saloon men all over the world must Indeed be grati fied by such faithfulness. We are not surprised that some - men wish tbe liquor business to continue, but for women, who usually are for the bet terment of mankind, who have not been coarsened by drink and who are barred from the saloon; who see only the degrading sights of drunken men either in their homes or on the streets how these women can truthfully say they are against prohibition la beyond me. They ring in the old bugaboos hard times and decreased values in everything all of which is not true. tJtJ Su stitutions. maintained chiefly for un fortunate drunks, with the revenue de rived from licensed saloons, and it prohibition should carry, which it surely ought, we will still have the same desire for eivie improvement and more chance of money being circulated In -in proper channels. 'Tis true we may have fewer prisoners, fewer appli cants for charity, fewer women break ing their backs over wash tubs while their hearts are breaking, too. Let us think of the great and glori ous day when there will be no saloon, and we can truthfully say we helped bring about this ideal condition. MRS. GENE FRANCIS. Film Censorship. Portland, .July 23. To the Editor of The JournalAccording to a state ment in your valued paper, our city commission is to play censor, even if good - common sense and the funda mental principles of liberty should go t ,. . board, to as in. , l0'!0, 0Jr, l SayoV. should have the' rlghl to J forbid "the exhibition of any picture,! ; lluatratlon r delineation of any nude , i .,,, . a v nthr mutt., i I nf obscene natur or of. tensive to tne moral sense, or a njr io- murder, suicide, robbery, holdup, eta blng, assaulting or beating of any hu man being." "To save our children," la the rea son generally given for the necessity of such a drastio ordinance. Not the pictures are objected to, but the pub lid. And this, X believe, speaks vol umes t or' the frailty f the censor ship that should .not be tolerated la a free country. x -" -l -'- It is shocking to inhibit a product of art, to cause great loss to a legit imate concern, for the " only reason that a certain "picture should not be seen by cnuaren. ux n our censr Intend to apply this reason to the film "theatre, then it should also bo applied to-all other theatres to very many books, and especially to the pub lic press, which features the most ob scene scandals In their most brutal detaila : Is it not mora slmnlA mors sans, to force the theatres, by means of an or- HOkU-" PERTINENT COMMENT Host men reckon time by paydays. , . Many a mas who la good baa a sad look. . - , If the play is a frost the audience soon melts away. k Brides with sour dispositions are apt to spoil honeymoons. : - . Most married women are a trifle en-" vtous of a rich widow. . The tastes of a millionaire may be Imprisoned in a pauper's purse. -. a , Pride makes some people ridiculous and prevent others from becoming so. -.a-- A man who can dispose of his troubles for a consideration ia a sen- ,'iua. . a" Borne men are not content with be ing treated wellj they want to be treated often. Why are people so foolish as to want their own way when your way is so much better? - If If ' easier to preach than to prac tise, it must be easier to bo a clergy man than a physician. It's a ease of love's labor lost when a woman has to take in washing in order to support a worthless husband. It may not be very many years nntrl people will be wondering wny tne pres ent day experts made, so great a fuse! to their home at Tillamook, the trip over such a simple thing as flying covering about three months, a thor across the Atlantio ocean. oughly enjoyable summer. NO PORK IN RIVERS ' . t . The Journal's Washington of July. 16 carried a statei . t o vi.. dispatches statement made by General Dan C. Kingman, chief of engineers, as be discussed the criti cisms now being made against certain features of the river and harbor bill, which is here reproduced,' as follows: "The river and harbor appropriation bill Is the product of. a representative form of government, and I am a firm believer In the representative charac ter of our government. "The river and harbor bill Is the combined Judgment of tha corns of engineers engaged on river and harbor work, plus the intelligent understand ing of the needs of particular locali ties on- the part of the committees of the two houses of congress having Im provements of our rivers and harbors in hand. "Without the representative charac ter of our legislation, it is my hon est conviction that appropriations for projects might find their way into budgets that would savor of puir rath er than have the project stand upon its own merit. "The representative is the mouth piece of his constituency, and as such is supposed to present to the commit tees of congress the needs of his peo ple, and if be should ask for legisla tion that his people do not want or do not demand, they will very quickly tell him so and will very readily find someone who will represent their In terests. "So far as the charges go that the present river and harbor bill contains an unlimited amount of 'pork,' I am happy to state that in so far ava the engineer corps is concerned, there has been no recommendation made that has not been the subject of dose and painstaking study. The act of 1902 provides that after congress has or dered a survey of a project, the local or " district engineer reports upon the advisability, adequacy, cost and com mercial Importance of the improve ments. "This report ia In turn, referred to the division engineer, who approves or modifies it as the facts appear be fore him. From the division engineer the report goes to the board of en THE JAIL END OF By John M. Oskison. In Its latest bulletin the American Society for Thrift prints a cartoon showing seven human figures against the background of a jail. There's father. In the grip of three policemen, being marched toward the jail gate; mother (in fashionable hat and gown) stands weeping In the fore ground; Cupid, too, shuffling his feet in the ruins of two broken hearts and dollar signs, is weeping; and the sev enth figure Is that of 16-year-old daughter carrying her new high school diploma. Attached to daughter's commence ment dress, In the cartoon. Is this tag: "This dress cost four weeks of dad's salary." To the bouquet carried by daughter Is attached the legend: "These roses cost four days' pay." The Bulletin estimates that in the year 1913 embezzlements to the sum of 20,000,000 marred the record of trusted employes in America; and the proportion of such embezzlements caused by extravagance in family life is very large. "Normal parents, of course, want dlnance, to produce performances for children. Instead of confiscating films which, from a basis of social morals, must -work an educational . effect on adults, must suggest elose ' thinking? Censorship Is the most dangerous enemy of liberty. This enemy must be crushed before It can take footing. To this day we suffer the most revolting encroachments upon our citizens' rights; and if art, literature, press sre to be made dependent upon the will of probably uneducated and nar row minded people, then the altar built to liberty will fall. LILLIAN DUDEI The Committee of On Hundred.' MoMlnavUle, Or, July JL To the Editor of The' Journal I have read with Interest the letter from the Com mittee of One Hundred in "your paper f TnW Si. T nrit at that elalm. thev are an Independent orgaaizaUon. which is undoubtedly true, inasmuch as they v...,. uia ir- Onn'm am th r.i nMMr man to man ihtlr ramnsisn They do not deny that he is a paid t organization man. They say they will support no candidate, no narty and no organization which . also is. undoubt edly trua But -they do not deny that back of . all this destructive agitation known as prohibition ia a body of paid agitators with their foreign am munition and their arguments equally foreign to conditions ia Oregon, known as the Anti-Saloon league. ' The method to be followed,' if they succeed In - their destructive theories, will be to pass on, to another small state, for i- notice , they are active ' only In small states, principally agrl- cultural districts, and not In the large states, Where the big cities abound and where most of . the booze is consumed. . : The Committee of One Hundred agree with me that it is a' business proposition pure and simple, the only difference being the committee ' be lieves in destruction, while X believe ia building. They wonld kill a busi ness that distributes millions f dol AND NEWS IN BRIEF OREGON SIDELIGHTS A pipe organ baa been ordered by the Baptist church of Albany for. Installa tion about December U The Ladles' Library elnb of Bend will hold a flower show August 23. This is an annual event. Prists are awarded. . e e . Pendleton's new - gravity water sys tem is finished and all that remains is to make tests of the pipe line before the water is turned Into the reservoirs. '.-'." Cottage Orovo Leader: The South ern Paciflo company has made a sub stantial and voluntary Increase In wages paid the force of men at work in the Pass creek canyon just south of Cottage Grove, which benefits a number of citlsens of this city. - ; Xa Grande Observer: Towns In the Grande Ronde valley now have their annual shows very well distributed. Union leads off with- her stock show. Elfin comes next with her Fourth of July celebration. Cove has her Cherry Fair, while La Grande holds her Chau. tauqua and county fair. Let's all let it go at that and make these shows permanent and lasting. Grants Pass Courier: C. W. and M. Talma re of Tillamook were In the city s few days to outfit for a trip down the river, fishing, hunting and proa pecting. These gentlemen last year made a trip of 450 miles on foot, witli a pack horse to carry bavggage. They walked from Grants Pass down the river to the ocean, then up the coast AND HARBORS BILL gineers for rivers and harbors, who ex amine it with scrupulous care, giving their approval if the project be mer itorious, and finally it reaches the chief of engineers to be examined by him with just as much discrimination as was shown the project by those below. At each stage of the proceed ing local interests may be heard, for or against the oontemplated Improve ment, and then, after It receTves the stamp of approval of the chief of en gineers. It Is transmitted to the sec retary of war, who, in turn, sends it to congress for legislation on the sub ject. . "Is It not fair to assume. In view of the careful Investigation that Is given every individual project by the -corps of enigneers engaged In river and harbor work, that anything that looks like "pork" will tfo discovered by this body .of trained engineers, and will be reported upon adversely? It Is ridiculous to believe otherwise, for the entire corps Is jealous to a degree of its rood name, and Its reputation for clean methods as the servants of- the people. "The criticism that Is being made against certain appropriations for creeks, as carried in the river and harbor bill, is also most unwarranted. What would an appropriation of 25000 accomplish for the mouth of the Mis sissippi or the Ambrose channel? Tou might just as well shovel that many dollars Into the sea as to expect It to max an impression upon either of these two great projects. But f 5000 spent on a creek may be the difference between Increased freight movements or the absolute abandonment of, the stream , as a means of transportation. "There are numberless cracks in the United States, the word ' 'creek being but a local designation for a stream whose tonnage may rival mighty riv ers, and a few thousand dollars spent upon, them means the development of sections that otherwise would remain virgin soiL It means Increased crops, increased markets, and Increased prosperity.- "My judgment Is that there la less . than one half of 1 per cent "pork In the river and harbor bill now pend ing In the senate." EXTRAVAGANCE their children to dress as well and have as many pleasures as the chil dren of their neighbors. That desire is one of the effective spurs to ef fort; It Is spoken of and written about as one of the distinctively American traits. . Xt Isn't aa American trait It's uni versal. We don't deplore It What we ought to do is to teach the chil dren of America In the borne. If we have the clear sightedness to do it, but at any rate In the school that clothes and pleasures bought at the expense of a father's honesty or his health, are about the most extravagant things It is possible to buy. Grant that It is humiliating to sec your neighbor's children better dressed and entertained than your own. Sucn humiliation is mors easily borne than a burden of debt and worry. When 1 your children- are properly fed, de cently clothed, and sent to the best school you can normally afford you have done your duty, and by keeping within you Income you will b able to give them better opportunities quicker than by trying desperately to stretch your income. lars to the working fathers, mothers and children of this state every year in the Oregon hopyards which the state government advertises as follows: "There is no other business' equal to the hop business -for distributing for eign money among the people of Ore Son." Vote wet five to one, and follow the real business men of Oregon the Chamber of Commerce. . W. J. BISHOP. The Ragtime Muse A Slimmer Romance. L"olle! ,n bX amlllng sea With. a radiant maiden. Annabel Lee, And. I smiled at her and she smiled at me And I placed my arm around her. And just at that moment my rival grim fcnealced up behind it . was rude of him- . And he smote me there with a horrid vim, And the girl, he nearly drowned her! He cast v her into the raging wave. And she seemed doomed to a watery - grave, - . . And only say. strong right arm could save - Wlth an airship I rescued her. We then were attacked by pirates bold, Who had no wish but to gather gold; By them to the villain we were sold, And tne villain still pursued her 1 But a company f brave marines Appeared, Jut then on the stirring scenes, My rival resisted with all his means And there was a battle gory. The girl soon married the ensign guy With. Prcaidewt Wilson standing by Oh, pleese, - don't ask tne how or why -' 'Tie a moving picture storyl - " Nothing New. Vigg They say that the silt skirt Is 2000 years old. Truly there is nothing new under the sun. Togg Right: Nor over the daugh ter. , ' IN EARLIER DAYS By Fred Localey. we were on ur way to Oregon j la. 1845. we met Dr. Elijah White." aid Mrs. Benjamin Cornelia f thla ' city. "Dr. Elijah White, who bad boon J aa Indian agent m Oregon, was on his way east to see about his reap-' pointment as Indian agent. He met averal of the wagon trains and ad vised them to t&ae a shorter route to the Willamette valley. Stephen H. 1 Meek, who was an old mountain roan and a brother of Joe Meek, said he knew the shorter route that Dr. White" referred to was one that had been uaed by the old Hudson's Bay trappers. About 200 wagons in all decided to -try this shorter route, or Meek's cut off, as it was afterward called. "After we crossed the Malheur mountains we struck a country where the lava cropped up and made the cattle's feet so sore they could hardly travel. The- water was poor and there was rmrdly any grass. The bad water resulted in- many of the emigrants taking mountain fever, while others, particularly the children, had the dya- entery. The men in the train threat ened Meek, so he and his wife crossed the river, where they secured some horses from the Indiana, and Meek hurried back to The Dalles. Her he ' secured some horses and got a man named Moses Harris to come to meet ' the settlers with food. Twenty or '. thirty of the people who had followed , Meek died, and many of the cattle j were lost. When we finally got to The Dalles father went to see Waller and Brewer, the missionaries there, nnd bought some chopped wheat, of them, which we used for flour. I re- ,- member father was very indignant be cause he thought they had taken ad- Vantage of his necessity and held him , up for a big price. In fact, most of the emigrants complained bitterlr ' about these missionaries making so large a profit from everything they old. "We reached The Dalles about the middle of October. The emigration to Oregon was so mueh larger than was ' expected that the water transportation ' was wholly Inadequate. Our pariy ' made some rafts and logs on which ' we went to the Cascades. My uncle, . William Walter, and my oldest broth er, Charles, drove our cattle down by the Indlan-trsll. At the Cascades "we were met by Captain Cook's sloop, the Calapooya. which had been built at Oregon City a few months be f era He ' took us down to Vancouver. T.he Hud I eon Bay company also sent their bat- r teaux up to the Cascades to bring the emigrants down the river. At Van- , couvcr father got a bateaux to take . us to Llnnton. ' I remember the boat ' was so heavily loaded that It sank at ' the wharf at Vancouver, but aside ' from wetting our things it did no other harm. "We reached ILnnton safely and we were there joined by our oxen. We drove out into Washington county, set tling about five mites from Iilllsboro. We had a much more comfortable time coming acrous the plains up to the time we took Meek's cutoff than many of the settlers. We had a big Dutch oven and a good reflector, so we al ways had plenty of light bread. We had some good milk cows along, so we were never without milk, butter and outterniilk, and, of oourtse, we had plenty of bacon, beans, dried fruit and buffalo meat and antelope meat. We didn't reach our place in Washington county until a few days before New Year's day. "In tha summer of 14, we chil dren went to school to old man Fickle. There were about 20 or 25 - pupils In this school Many of the pupils were the children of the old mountain men who had settled in Washington county. "Late In the fall of 1S1. my father. William McKinney and porne of the other men, went to California. The following spring my grand-mother. -Mrs. Walter, and her two sons. Wil liam and Philip, went down there. Benjamin Cornelius had gone down with my father, Mr. Walter. 'My grandfather had intended going with : his wife and their two boyn. but he stayed to sell the farm. Before it was cold word came that his wife had died in the Sacramento valley, fe'o he never went to California. The gold miners returned in 1850. "On July 15, 1851, when I was It years old, I was married to Benjamin Cornelius. The Rev. William Jolly, whose son now lives in Portland, mar ried us. We took up a pUce six miles from Forest Grove, at what was then called the North. Plains or Tualatin Plains. "We raised wheat on our section of land. We used to haul it to Portland, though we got our flour at Oregon City. In those days; the cold weather would bring the elk and deer out of the mountains and down into the val ley. We used to often look out in the early morning. and see them io our barn yard. "My husband's brother, Thomas Cor nelius, was appointed -colonel In 1861,' and was authorized to raise 10 com-, panics of cavalry. It was thought that this regiment would be sent east -. to take part in the battles of the Civil ' war. But most of the companies were sent to Walla Walla and they operat ed on the coast during the war. Mr uncle, William Walter, had served In the Cavuse war in '47, while my hus band, Benjamin Cornelius, his brother Tom (who was later colonel), my uncle Daniel McKinney. and my brother Wil liam MfKlnney, all nerved In the Yakima Indian wsr. The only wound my husfcand received during this war was one time when he was shot In his plug of tobacco. He h.id it In his pocket and the bullet tore the tobacco all to pieces and tore his pocket be yond repair. ' "We used to have some very exciting times during and before the war. j My -husband's father, Benjamin Cornelius, was from Tennessee. He wanted Ore gon to come into the Union as a slave stata My husband and bis brothers wanted it to come in as a free state; while my father and his family were strong free tate people. So there used to be some very , spirited and lively discussions before Oregon b-, came a state, as well as during the Civil war." Secured. ' "Soakem seems to be drinV.lng worse- , than usual since bis marriage." "He's not worried now when he sees 'em. He married a snake charmer." . - The Sunday Journal The reat Home Newspaper,' . consists of Five news sections rep'.ete with Illustrated feature Illustrated magazine of quality.' Woman's section o.' .are merit Pictorial news supplement ' Superb comic section. 5 Cents the Copy