THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, MONDAY EVENING. JULY 27, 1914. THE JOURNAL " AN INDEPKSrPKNT WEWSFAPErt. C. . JACKSON .Publisher fnli UUbed ntr evening (eioast 8ondajr na very Bandar morolng at The Jonroai " lu. Broadway and VamUlll sta.. Portias. Or. ( fcatara at ths postofflce at Portland, Or., t'T :' tranamlwUm tbrouKb tn mail a, aecond . elaaa matter. - " .. IkXk-FHONh: Main T1T3J Hwne. A-0&1. All departments reached by thru natulan. Tell tbe operator wnai aeprimcnv ym " in the Barnes type of politicians. 1 Grande. "Within few hours The issue between -.Barnes and after the fury of battle is over and Roosevelt is important. Roosevelt appealed to Jthe voters in behalf of a candidate for governor who stood i pledged against domination by Barnes: The Republican boss counters with a suit for damages, evidently with the Idea of furnish ing himself with a sorry certificate of character. UUa.HJN ADVERTISING HKPBKSKNTATIVE )UZ rut Ave Nsw Xoxfc; ms People a Use lildg., Chicago. - ; - subacrlpttoa terms by mall , f --ad ores la Ue (Jailed atatea ataxic. v DAlLx .15.00 I Ou aaonts KITKTtAT '- Om 0. ft .... .Sl.fju I una room.".... vuw moatll......f 25 ..$ JOS When You Go Away Have The Journal sent to your Summer address. HE Central Labor Council of Portland has unanimously In dorsed the Waterfront and Docks amendment and - the Municipal Docks bill. Jt is a sign of the time. The workers have discernment. They see that the present status of the Portland waterfront is pathetic Much of it is already railroad and -a Talk to the point, and stop when you have reached It. Be comprehensive In all you say or write. To fill a about nothing 1 a credit to nobody. John Neal. B ' VANCOUVER'S ACTION IN RINGING resolutions, the Van couver Commercial Club calls upon senators and congress men from the state of Wash ington to fjgbt for passage at this session tf the rivers and harbors bill, j - ' It is vision. It Is the same kind ! of foresight that should permeate every point in the Columbia basin. Railroad commissions are all right, in their way. Interstate Commerce Commissions are all richt. in their way. But the greatest rate fixer that can ever be introduced in the Fa rifjf Northwest Is the Columbia river. No body of men, no constitu tional power of government can rin in the way or rate lowering what the Columbia river can do Once brought to the state of Im provement of which it Is capable, It can reduce the grain rates and the wool rates and the livestock rates of the Inland Empire to one half, or less than one half, their present figures. When barges and steamboats are once put into the fullness of their possibilities on the river adeauately Improved as It will be in time, no railroad com mission, no Interstate Commerce Commission will be needed to give the great producing communities and the multiplying shipping points along the river the lowered freight ' rates for which they have been waiting - for a generation, and to which they are entitled. The Vancouver action is a pro test against the fight on the river and harbor bill. It is an appea; for the passage of the measure. It is an effort to . save the work on the various government projects from a year or more of idleness and stagnation. SAVING THE REMNANT T the Victorious Villa "has captured a city, order and peace prevail, saloons are closed and business re sumes .its even way," says Mr. McCutcheonj It was Villa who introduced an efficient hospital service into Mexi can warfare. 'r It was Villa who showed good "sense when relations of the United, States with the Con stitutionalists became strained be cause , of the occupation of Vera CrUZ. Villa's rise in the world's esti mation impoverishes the: argu ments of privilege, which seeks to establish a principle that a few people are born to rule the many. If he Is representative of the peo ple he is leading, there is no longer question that. Mexicans are able to govern their own country. I- , History can show few parallels to face .with - its .thirty years ' as . a ' butcher of good names in Oregon, face to : lacej with its unfairness and injustice to public men', face to face with Its stealthy and" sinis ter attempt to defeat the rivers and harbors hill; It says "the pub-: lie is weary" or The Journal's ex-! posures. It Isn't the public that is "weary." It is the Oregonian i that is "weary." Becky Edelson, . who is - under lock and key in New York, la con sistent in her habit. She 'Won't work, neitherwill she eat. In any other country thai! France,, the duels likely to grow out of the Calllaux trial might be looked on seriously. A FEW SMILES PERTINENT COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF corporation owned, and if past processes are perpetuated, ail of to Villa's rise to power and influ- it will pass . under private mo- ence. This man, whose name was nopoly. once used as a synonym for law The waterfront amendment and! lessness, is now the man whose docks bill are an endeavor to save success is followed by order and the remnant to the public. Once tranquility, it was all the public's. But legis- THE PRINTING GRAFT lative skulduggery and court de cisions have changed the status. The people's holdings in tide and submerged lands have gone or are going where great bodies of tim- kx iaiiuo ncuin . . "V dvm0 I , i a, a V. A where the Oregon swamp lands v ... tt, ,v, state's resources. Legislatures so-called desert lands went. I T WAS only by dint of extraor dinary effort that the state printing graft In Oregon was forced to loosen its hold. Of . all the indefensible giving away of public resources into pri vate hands, none has been more bare-faced than In the case of the tide and submerged lands. First, there was legislation to give , up- came and went, and so did state printers. One printer after another had his time upon the stage, and stepped down, a rich. man. The office was used as a reser voir 'from which to finance cam paigns. The printer was made to disgorge heavily from his easy out to deep water. It looked all mon.ey proTld.e 1' r right. It was innocent enough on the surface. It did not pretend to convey title. Nobody claimed that it did more than grant a franchise. But here we are with the fran chise holders out, with a full fledged insistence on ownership. putting the whole ticket over. And so the legislatures that came and went perpetuated the graft. Some members honestly tried to cut down the graft, but there was always a secret and sinister force that blocked every attempt to re form the printing" abuse. It was a political force, a corrupt and con- Letters From the People Comraanlcatlon ant tn T TMi.n.t publication In this department anonld be writ-. n "iy ona aide t tbt paper, abould Bot exceed 800 worda in length and moat be ac companied by the name and addreaa of the aaoder. if tlie writer doe not dartre to have the nam, pnbllabed. be aiould ao aUU.) "Olrcaaaion Is the greatest of all reform era. It rationalises ererythlng It toechea. It roba prlDclplea of aU false sanctity and throwi i tbem back: on their reaaonableDcas. If they hare do reasonableness. It ratblesaly ercsbes tbem out of existence and seta np iu own eoncluaions in their atead." Wood row Wilson. - While. rJaltlnjr a nephew In New Tork Uncle Hayseed stopped In front of : a." movie poeter, on which ware dis played picture of lions, Uf-era, ' ele phants, and other African wild animals.- '".V ' - a r a t ' u n a, Henry 1" he said to his neprew, ."I'm mighty glad I leave town Saturday afternoon. "Why are yon so anxious to set awayT" asked his nephew. Pointing- to the poster oa the wall. Uncle Hayseed read aloud the words, "To be released on Monday." Examined on history at Wesk f'ofciit. Whistler failed to recall the date of the battle of Buena Vista. "Suppose,' said the exasperated Instruct or, ryou were to go out to dinner and the com pany began to talk of the Mexican war, and you a -West Point m a ri; were asked the date ' of the battle; what would you dor vol" was the reply. Why, X should refuse to associate with, people coma iaiK or such things at din r.err who was Prohibition and llard Times, PortlandZ-Julv 24. To th trHi nf The Journal If no other argument could change my opinion from a "wet" to a "dry" defender, Emma Goldman's Indorsement of the liquor interests would make a staunch of me, and fully convince me that. lik the other unlawful things she upholds, i the saloon Is wronsr. Emma r.nMman ! the anarchist itlhoil.is . u i I commented the and cries out loud and lor,- -r,- i68 y?u think vouare.r Mon a 1 1 1 hortw " cv. ... . Vr,on aJh r you crying imi ooyr asiced the neighbor "trolling by a west side dooryard the other afternoon. Because I m so mean an' selfish!' sobbed the little one. "Oh, I guess you're not very mean and selfish If It af fects you this way," passer-by. "What QMALL CHANGE . , When a wise chap sees an opportu nlty he seize It. v v , Belns? fond of cocktail la a feather la so man's cap. ... . .,- . -To Toalievai that a. task la lmnoaai. ble is to make it so. .... Many a man haa taken a hand In nol- itlcs and then put hi foot in it. w PeODl wish a newly - married esu. pie happiness, but they don't expeot 11 Ala for the man who will never be useful exoeot to -hra the undertaker JOB. ' , . " ' Flab 1 no a-ood asr a hraln food unless It ha something to assimilate 4 Styles that turn women's heads also put kink In the neck of the gentle men. Did a woman aver nalnt h,r rhtnti because she was unable to generate a reai oiuani . - ' A man never realises that time Is money more thoroughly than when he eiues wiin a taxi cnauiieur. Tou may have noticed in the ao counts of the joy ride accidents that comparatively few of them occur with the victim en route home from church. The Russian subjects settled In America who remitted tSQ.000,000 last year to kindred back home, are pay. ing the old country well for coming awaj, . - Says the Journal of the American Medical association; "No human face among the world's sixteen hundred millions may be held perfect, either artistically or physiologically?' Has m journal no women subscribers? OREGON SIDELIGHTS IN EARLIER DAYS Dy Fred Lockley. Within a Tew weeks Wallowa's new electrlo lighting system Recently while visiting with - Mr. will be in Benjamin Cornelius of thi itv a no- operatlon. In the aame town the work ne,r of Uii. she loaned ma a diary U iVprogreasT ; I to ber uncle, W. W. Walter. - - . i muui it i too long to publish in full, A ' county Jlbrary has been estab- j I am going to make some extracts and llshed at Weston, in free quarters, condense that narrative i . .,, wot. ,ninnt..r. urin . in turn aa c lno narrative into a nor l librarian. The promoters are going , article. ahead with, plan tor library expansion. The city hall at Silver Lake 1 being fainted and otherwise put in snape. t will receive two coats of white paint, and when completed, the Leader says, will be the neatest building in town. Missouri to friend in Wallowa coun ty la quoted in the Enterprise Record Chieftain as saying that it is so hot there she can hardly she would like to enough to get one stand It, and j Milton Earle: The bi combine nur- chased recently by J. H. Coffman of Dry Creek, was started Saturday, and while all waa running- smoothly the machinery suddenly stopped when the drive belt came oil. investigation disclosed the remains of a monster torn cat that had been ground to bits in the elevator. - ' Congratulatory weather report in Myrtle Creek Mail: "While the weather was some hot the latter part of last week and the mercury climbed to the hundred mark for two or three days, no prostration were noted and the people went right along with their work the same as under usual condi tion. Bach heat in the east would have resulted In hundreds of deaths and untold suffering, and would have been followed by disastrous cyclones and electric storms." RURAL CREDIT LEGISLATION The subterranean processes of the sclenceless influence that dealt legislature converted a mere fran- corrupt men ln the legisla- cmse into a ciaim 01 buiiicicul ture and by. wllefJ and arts strength that the supreme court that BO of ten make BUCn bodies declares they have full title. irrnnndhi nrntHated the nrint- That is" why interested people lnK BteaL have arisen to fight' the game. At last the Tjower of the print- That is why legislation has been lng abuse Beemg broken. The bill, proposed to resist me grao. inai pushed through the senate by Mil ls why there Is endeavor through lerf of Linn, and driven through the initiative to put measures on tbe house by exposures made by the statute book to prevent further Governor Vest after it had been encroachments and save to the beaten in that body at the 1911 people the remnant of their tide Bession is now ln effect, and the and submerged lands, lands that 8avIriga for -10 months total $16,- m auiornia, Dy aecision oi me 2. accordine to the report of state's highest court, are all theprnter Harris. people s and cannot be taken away por fonr months endinz Decem- by court or a legislature. ber i 1913. i the savine wa8 The aid of the Central Labor 13 2K7t for three months endlne Council will be effective in the Mareh 31 1914t $5417, and for fight for saving the remnant of three months endinc June 80. these lands in Oregon. 5 17657 ' Witlf the power of the graft once broken, it may now be possible to ANSA3 has selected former accomplish further reductions in ine printing cost. sonal liberty." She sneers and scoffs ai our sacred institutions and Amer ican homes, and is Just the kind of a person who naturally would denounce prohibition. Emma Goldman has and will, by her stand against prohibition, make more prohibitionists 10Q to 1 than Ella M. finney, Mrs. Duniway, Osborne Yates, and other of their party against the cause. The cannibal, assuredly, believes in "personal liberty," and would undoubt edly question your "right" to interfere with him if he wanted to eat a man. For years I heard how prohibition worked such terrible hardships on the "business" world; how the grass grew ln the streets of prohibition towns, etc., until I went to a dry , state to live. Z know, from actual 'experience, bow exaggerated the reports have been or dry states suffering from "hard times;" how the untruths, circulated by the liquor interest against prohi bition, have been swallowed by the gullible, such a I once was. and X can. without any boasting, say I have and will continue to "nail to the cross," nara and fast, every misstatement against prohibition, as far as lies with in my power. To those who have been cursed by liquor within their own homes, and who might hesitate to cast a vote agalnBt it, much as they would like to see its evils swept away, and still fear our state or city will suffer ln other respects by it abolishment, I say: Vote dry and be convinced for yourselves! Vote dry, and you will see no one will suffer not even those whose interests now He through the liquor traffic a horrible profits, Prohibition will mean a wonderful step onward for this state, If it Is carried. J. J. RANDALL. See this bread an' JellyT WelL I'm so mean an' selfish that I ain't a-goin' to give Willie none of It. Boo-ooh-bool" A GREAT MAN K IS THE DAY'S NEWS I N THE operation of every law there is individual hardship. This is noticeably true in the case of Young Yow, a galley boy on the German steamer Sax onia, now in the harbor. Eight months ago Yow came to Portland on the steamer Belgravia. On the steamer was also a baker. Yow needed some clothes but the exclusion law prevented him from leaving ship. The baker, who was exempt from the law, was going ashore, having received bis discharge. Yow en trusted to him $7.50, three months' hard earned wages, and commis sioned him to buy the clothes. The baker took the money but he never returned with the clothes. Yow was forced to sail away but he swore he would come back At Shanghai the Belgravia t and Baxonla met and Yow persuaded the" galley boy of the latter to ex change places with him so that he could return to Portland and find the man who had robbed htm. . When the Saxonla docked ln this city Yow was at the rail looking for the Baker, who came down to renew acquaintance with the crew When he caught sight of his man, Yow forgot all about exclusion laws and started ashore. The ' baker aw him coming and took to his heels. Just as Yow was about to seize him the exlnslon law in the , person of an immigration Inspector intervened and the baker escaped Governor George W. Glick as that state's typical American whose likeness shall adorn Statuary hall in the national cap! tol. The recent unveiling has caused much newspaper comment, for the reason that Governor WING to the disturbed condi tions in Haiti and San Domingo, due to revolutions, It mav . tiA nAr.easarv for the n 1 j 11.1 . . . . 1 . ..... I - Aliens uuo to greatness is mue United States to take drastio ac Known tnrougnout tne nation. t.nn It n announced, however. He happened tto be a Democrat, president Wilson will not use force until after all . peaceable the first Democratic governor of the state, but his democracy was of means have been exhausted. tne sort mat 13 spelled with a small "d." He went to Kansas ln 1858, enlisted in a Kansas regi ment in 1864, took part in three battles, practiced law again, served United States, in me - tvansas legislature nine THE BARNES LIBEL SUIT W ILLIAM BARNES JR., boss of the Republican party in New York : and " an associ ate of Penrose,. Cannon 1 and the rest in bossing the national organization, has sued Theodore 1 Roosevelt for libel. Barnes objects to Colonel Roosevelt's published ' statements in which - he said It Is - ' the duty of New York voters to : ' overthrow bosses of the type of Barnes and Murphy. This is Colo- . nel Roosevelt's charge: . ' In New York state we see at its worst the development of the system 'of bipartisan boss rule. It Is im ' f possible to secure the economic, so j clal and industrial reforms to which t we are pledged until this Invisible . government of the. party bosses, work- lng through the alliance between . 1 crooked business and crooked politics, ! is rooted " out ct, the governmental t system. . Barnes asks a salve of $50,000 t for his injured feelings. ; Hla suit t Is - confession that he was hurt. . t Further, it Is evidence that so long i as the .bosses can prevent it pro ' gresslve ideas will never7 find root DOMINICAN DISTURBANCE 0' terms ana was elected governor over John P. St. John in 1882 Governor Glick persuaded the legislature to create a railroad In connection with San Domingo, it is interesting: to recall that as early as 1849 a movement grew up favoring annexation to the It assumed con siderable proportions after the Civil war and in 1869 Presi dent Grant sent an investigator to the Island who reported, so. favor- ohW tVisit Via was Instructed to ne- niuuiu 10 cuec exactions oy gotiate an annexation treaty. me roaus, ana in otner ways he Thls treaty was ratified by the r. I. ... .4 VI- 1 1 . L IV . ' euuweu 111a yiuueer spirit m a fight, Ihen Just starting, which is now placing the people in command of their own destinies. It is significant that Kansas did not select John Brown or John J, Ingalls as the state's typical Amer- Domlnican legislature. In the United States, however, there was a particularly strong anti-annexa tion spirit and the matter was finally dropped, Since that time there has . been ) one revolution after another. Nine . Impressions of Hop Field. Portland, July J5. To the editor of The Journal Ella M. Finney speaks In glowing terms of our bounteous hoo yield and invites us to take trips up the valley to see for ourselves. True. hops make a good showing, but it has been mjr misfortune to spend several seasons there during hop picking. One season ln particular I had noticed the crowds as they assembled to boeln th season's picking. There were families. single men, women alone, women ac companies by a friend and all sorts and conditions. Many do not know, a they start on this annual pilgrimage, which is often necessary for families. what association they are subjecting their children to and especially girls. There is the man about town, the vll lage cut-up, the gambler, all with 1 more or less boose-soaked brain, and the slang- of the brothel ever present and before the season is past many new friendships have been formed, many modest girls have become Inured to the trend of a downward life, and.lt is safe to say that every little neigh' borhood ln this fair state has Bhared the loss of one of its girls through In fluences caused by new acquaintances in the hop fields.' To thinking people the beauty of the hopflelds is overcome by this awful condition. J It is- true that the grower trie to have better crowd and better con-1 dltlons. Yet it is not an easy matter to do so since many that engage with him fail to show up and he li com I pelled to take all, to insure the picking haps know, hag been organised to carry out an honest, logical campaign on be half of the 'Oregon Dry measure." xne fact that they are oraranued to carry on an "honest, logical cam paign" makes it incumbent on them to at once call down the Anti-Saloon league and Prohibition party workers and insist that in the future they tell the truth about Kansas. If they live up to their declarations, they will at once notify each prohibition worker to quit making the statement that Kansas 1 the richest state la the Union per capita, since every member or the committee knows Oregon Is much richer per capita. They will at once notiry all their co-workers that their statements about crime, insan ity, pauperism, banking resources and Individual banking deposits ln Kansas are absolutely at variance with the fact and they must cease or they will come out with a statement over the signature of the entire ninety and plainly state the truth, which is much worse than many of the license states, and when it cornea to a showing as to banking wealth, that Kansas posl tlon 1 not only bad but it Is so bad that every prohibitionist must really try to forget it. An "honest campaign" would cer talnly force them to this course; and then a "logical campaign," in view of the things that an honest lnvestl gation will reveal, would force them to pass a resolution condemning the abuse of liquor and declaring that bow ever one may dislike drunkenness th cold, pitiless loglo of experience has proved that prohibition is not a rem edy for the evil of intemperance. in the committee make-up they are at least logical; they are mostly tim' ber barons, pedagogues or coupon clippers none of the common herd ap pears. This is natural, since the "reg uiatonr would hardly want any of the to be regulated ' close to the throne. They might tumble to the job they were expected to belp put up on them. selves. D. H. ROBINSON. lean. George W. Glick was pre- years ago the United States govern f erred above either because, while ment took over the administration mure oDscure. ne represented the of the customs for the benefit of . V li. r"1- . lue rsax in creditors and is still in charge, yuiut is mat greatness is not de termined by a man's notoriety. What he . actually does and the sane motive he has in doing it are iuo ueivriuiiuog xactors. ONE WAY TO DO IT I FRANCISC VTLLA T N the Sunday Journal. Jnhn Reed said that Villa is the only.man.that can save Mexico. I NTHE resubmission of bids for the construction of - the Sandy river bridge, Multnomah county has saved several hundred dol lars and Is in a fair way to secure a substantial structure. Incidentally the value of- the bridge department of the state highway commission In designing Mr. Keed spent five ; months with Villa making an Intimate and g,Tlllg advice on technical mat- fcuu, vi vu mxicaa people ana ter-- been ma(ie annarent. Its their problems. He. says Carranza is at heart an aristocrat, that he win. not be able to solve the land question, that Villa is the real lead-J er 01 me Mexican people. Whether or not Mr. Reed's fore cast of Mexico's' future ia correct, the fact remains that Francisco Villa has astonished the world. Less than a year ago - Villa left Juares with a handful of men and some donated guns, to become a revolutionist. Today .his military successes and his keenness to adopt modern methods are ; the talk of nations. The i former "bandit" has become almost a world influ ence certainly an object of regard by thoughtful people. John T. Mcutcheon, another Correspondent .in Mexico, has been etudying Villa. He says Villa's name and ' personality stand out more , boldly than ' the f names f and personalities of all the other Con stitutionalists. ' Villa has revolu tionlzed revolutions below the Rio of the crop in season. If "Oregon dry" would curtail the raising of hops, which It no doubt will not do, the same land can be used for other crops, and just as profitably, since hops require rich soil and the harvesting is -not attended with such dire results in any other crop as is that of hops. BACHELOR VOTER. ( plans and advice are available to all the counties as well as its assistance in the supervision of construction. It is no longer necessary to leave everything to the contractor as has been done in the past. Of course thi3 Is not appreciated by some contractors who would prefer to build according to their own ideas and be free from any interference ; by inspectors . who would only be in the way. ' On the other hand there are contractors who -want to have their work inspected. They want the public to know that they are build ing according to the plans and are putting "In the material specified. They want to return a dollar ln value for every dollar they receive. One way to reduce taxes Is to have the state highway commission design and supervise the construc tion of bridges. - -. In One Paper's v News. Hood River, Or July 25. To the editor of The Journals In the Memphis Commercial Appeal of July 21 are sev erai interesting things, one is an editorial which contains this passage "Great Colonel' Roosevelt seem, un able to hold the Progressive party to gether. This fact ha been conclusive ly shown for some time.' And on another page we are told of a boy being hanged for murder in Arkansas, July 6; but he is the youngest," and "last" to b hanged legally." as they have introduced elec tricity to get rid of the undesirables. On page four Is a story of a negro lynched for -stealing mules near Lake Carmorant, Miss. The coroner Jury took the body down and examined it, but as the county was out of funds for burying paupers, the Jury again "hunit up the body so the hogs could not get it." On the same page, same col umn, we are told of , a man who - got a prison sentence for killing another man. but be bad three lawyers to help him on hi trial, 'ibis was at mpiey. Miss, - Alexander Pop once said, What ever is, is right," but some of us sin ners can't see it that way.' Shakespeare said, "Though Justice The Oregonian whimpers because The Journal has brought it : face The Farmer and Prohibition. Oervais, Or., July 25. To the Editor of The Journal If I had a son and he disregarded my teaching and gambled, the chances are he might become a millionaire and build a great charity home. Not I, but the world, would call him great. Hi deeds would be upon his own bead, and I would neither appreciate it nor blame the world for his failure or success. Back of gambling there Is little of commercial value, but cards. Liquor is different; it belongs to agriculture. the greatest industry of man. To those who say it does no good. I will say its billions of production spin the wheels of subsistence. Its destruc tion would bring a change that would destroy financial prosperity. Kill our supply and demand by overproduction on other products, and you destroy the foundation that holds you up. For we stand back of you; without us you die. "The farmer he must feedthem all." Prohibition 1 too blind to see how it could bring about better result by enforcing good law and tattooing the hand with a tiny flag, so the drunk From The Commoner. j The problem of extending the bank ing- machinery and facilities . of the country into the rural districts more Intimately for the convenience and as sistance of th rural population haa oeen receiving profound attention ln this country, especially in the last few years. Th 1 difficulties arts partly out of th diffusion and snarseness of population in country districts, and partly out of th clas of securities which the farming population normally ns 10 orrer for loans. The national banking system up to the present time has labored under restrictions imposed oy law which made It impossible for the national banks to solve the emb lems ln th most effective way. State oanas wun rewer restrictions, with smaller capital requirements, ahd abil lty to lend on real estate hav estab. llshed more Intimate touch, and have pernap rendered greater assistance. Likewise certain agencies, such as building and loan associations, insur ance companies and mortgage deben ture companies and cooperative credit. associations recently created by state legislation in Texas, Massachusetts, New Tork and Wisconsin, operate to extend capital to the farming districts and thereby ln a measure to cut down the rate of Interest. W. W. Walter was born In Warne county, Indiana, ln H27. Irt 1136 they moved to Iowa, and in the" spring of 1848 they came across the plains with the same company in which Mr. Cor nelius and her father, William McKin- ; ney. and other relatives, came to Ore gon. W. V. Walter was Is years old when they started. Ills father, the grandfather of Mrs. Cornelius, started if lth three wagons, 15 yoke 6C oxen, about 30 head of cattle and three horse. They joined Cantaln Tatha- be In Oregon long row' company, which brought th em--: ' good night Bleep, igrant train up to 5 wagon. in iwiini 01 meir nrsi view or. buffaloes, he says: "It was a Strang and fearful sight to see a pert ecte ' . of living animals, a moving mass, that came sweeping down toward you." Th first time he went out' to kill a buf falo, be went out with Luke Ilenshaw, a young man of his own age. Th nearer they came, th larger they looked, and by the time they bad come ln sun shot, they looked so big that we sneaked away. We believed we had not lost any buffalo that day." - He describes graphically a stamped that took place on the plains. He sayst "Imagine, if you can, 65 wagon with their three to five yoke of oxen to a wagon, tearing along at full speed. ' Th teams doubled up, running five or six teams abreast at times. th '" . J women screaming, the children being I . scattered over the prairie and yelling." y After running two miles the stamped was stopped, and they laid by two day change, secured by staple agricultural products, or other goods, ware or merchandise from being eligible for such discount." It was provided that the ordinary notes, drafts, or bills ad. mitted to discount should have matur ity at th time of discount of not more than 80 days, but that notes, drafts and bills drawn or issued for agricultural purposes or baaed on live stock and having a maturity not ex ceeding six months, might be dis counted In an amount to be limited to a percentage of the capital of the fed eral reserve bank, to be ascertained and fixed by the federal reserve board. When the national banking law, com monly called the federal reserve act, was under discussion In congress the matter of farm credit was considered and debated, but it was decided that the subject as a specific program should be separately dealt with ln an other act The federal reserve act was passed with a view to the Improve ment of the banking conditions of the country ln the interest of all the classes; to the restoration of normal ity ln the banking law; to the estab lishment of a reserve of banking power which could be utilised In time of emergency, and therefore with a view to the securing of good banking at all times, and to the prevention of panics. It 1 not a banker' law, nor a business man's law, nor a manufacturer' law, nor a farmer' law; it ia. a law for all classes, for all the people. How ever, there were Incorporated Into the act several very Important provisions which had in mind specifically the needs of the farming classes and the possibility of extending banking fa cilities to th rural district more sat isfactorily. It was peclfally provided that a federal reserve bank mlrht "discount notes, drafts, and bills of exchange arising out of actual com mereial transactions; that is, notes, draft and bill of exchange Issued or drawn for agricultural, industrial, or commercial purposes, or th proceeds of which have been used, or to be used, for such purposes." The federal reserve board was given the right to define the character of paper thus eli gible for discount It was further dis tinctly provided that nothing in the act should be construed to "prohibit such notes, drafts, and bill of ex- It will be noted that not only is paper arising out of agricultural trans actions made eligible under the act, but that it 1 permitted to have a longer maturing period than other form of paper. This discrimination arose naturally .out of the fact that agricultural operation are seasonal and involve a longer period than ordl nary commercial transactions. Again, it was provided in the aot that na tional banking associations not sit uated ln the central reserve cities might lend on Improved and unencum bered farm land within the federal reserve district and that such loans might be made for any period up to five years. Such loan must not ex ceed 50 per cent of the actual value or the property. Any national bank under this provision of the act mav loan on farm land an amount in th aggregate equal to 25 per cent of Us capital ana surplus or one-third of Its time deposits. The federal reserve act therefore, so far from dlacriminatlna- against the farming classes distinctly bear tbem ln mind, and while not dis criminating In favor of them taes just and particular knowledge of their requirements. The matter of additional legislation concerning farm credits was promptly brought to th attention of eongres by the president In the regular session In his annual message, and many ex Pert have been giving persistent and careful attention to the problem. It 1 the Judgment of the best stu dent of economlo condition her that there 1 needed to supplement exist ing agencies a proper land mortgage banking- system operating only through private funds. Just as other banking institutions operate, and this judg ment Is shared by the leader of eco nomlo thought abroad. Th students recognise the desira bility of another piece of legislation which may properly be had at the hand of th several states, namely, legislation authorizing 'and encourag ing local personal cooperative credit association. Some states have already taken step in thl direction and oth ers are contemplating taking1 them. Th department of agriculture has road earn eat lg-veatlgatlon In this field and should soon be ia position to offer valuable suggestions a to th need and operation of such association. LIFE INSURANCE AS A SYSTEM OF SAVING By John M. Osklson. Insurance people sell insurance pri marily, and rightly, as protection asralnst loss or Injury on account of ard, gone beyond recall, could drink ' some future happening, certain or un no more. Prohibition says drunkards' ; certain. But the companies also sell children are degenerated weaklings. I life Insurance on the endowment plan. My honest observation has been that , based on the argument that it leads thm verr few unfortunatalv Thnrn arm. ..v4 Tn th, hv avasb au axa ' a a aa i arwsaaava j the. very few unfortunately bom are mostly children of our brightest sober parentage, while among" our greatest statesmen are sons of drunkards. Anarchy la an abuse of personal liberty. Th same la true of prohibi tion. - . 1 Vote wet. for temperance. ELLA M. FINNBT. 1 Government Loans to Farmers. Portland. July 27. To the Editor of The Journal I understand there is available 1600,000.000 for farm loans under an act of ctfngress. Where can one make application for a loan, please advise me ln The journal. ' ' A SUBSCRIBER The inquirer evidently . confuse terms of a measure merely proposed, with provision of the recently enacted banking law. Thl law mark an ad vance toward a rural credit system, but lacks the specific aid feature abotx which inquiry la made.- An article oa thl page state th term "of the new act as regards provision for loanq to farmers. l'.:fr' The Consumer aa Freight Payer. Portland, July 27. To th Editor of The JournalWhy : panic and pov erty, unrest and no peace? The soil, at the bidding of labor, produces the sustenance and the raw material for clothing and housing th ' nation. Labor in turn passes the production on to the trad and commerce for dis tribution to the consumer. So far to saving, in that sense, they say that buying an endowment policy is a wise investment for th average man. . . ' - - They have pretty good arguments, too. For instance: Tou would hav to - take to the sav ings bank regularly for 27 years theJ amount you pay ln premium on a pol icy before the total of your savings would amount to aa much as the In surance company will pay you. - But la that. tim 276 out of every 1000 who could pas the examination for a policy would be dead. If all of them had possessed the win and de termination to be saving bank de positor during their - whole working life they would still not fare as -well (that is. their estate would not fare as well) as if they had been paying premiums on life Insurance policies. Of course, if every Insurable man and woman could be made to patron ise the savings banks, th Insurance companies' argument would not stand up. Their own table of mortality show that 725 out of every 1000 In surable people are living at 48, and If w had onr way we'd stipulate that at age 20 .the process of saving should begin. Long ago th insurance people round out that men and women will not voluntarily take Insurance they have to be called upon and argued with "a only a solicitor working for commissions can argue. Now, life insurance la, undoubtedly a good thing to have. The necessity for forming the habit of saving something, regularly and persistently, is Just aa pressing as that for carrying a reasonable amount of life Insurance. But the saving a bank do not hav aolicltor to com to you and convince you by argument ana xigure that you oueht to save: I don't know bow long It will be be fore they adopt that course. 1 Meanwhile it will be worth while for you to listen to those who say mat a in insurance policy la an ln centlv to saving. It is. to fix up the broken wagons and broken ox bows. Their company went with Stev Meek to find a new road to th Wil lamette valley. He says: "We trav eled up to the Malheur through the 8nake river, through sage, lava and sand, forcing our way forward where there was no- sign of a trail, and tak- - lng turns to go ahead with the team to break the road. We divided up in small companies until we came to Stinking Hollow, where we all cam together and camped for a week while we sent out runners to look over the country to the southward. A child was born while we were watting In this camp. We finally headed back toward The Dalies. We were all starv ing and sick, we were out of food, and eating the emigrant, cattle made many of us sick. There were threats of hanging Meek, but as It waa thought he knew more than anybody else, about the country, la was not done. "On the night our scouts returned Meek, with his wife and a man named Olney, slipped out of camp, and ln th morning the men swam the Deschutes river and tied a rope to Meek wife and pulled ber across the river. When we came to the river we lashed our wagon boxes together for a ferry and stretched a rope across, and so crosaed the river. The Deschutes hill I a long, steep bill, and while w were going down the hill, old lady Butts died. When we reached The Dalle It was so late all the boats had gone, so we built rafts of logs. We cut the logs, rolled them Into the river, and lashed them together, and put our wagons on the rafts, trusting to luck to get through safely. We drove the stock by the old Indian trail. It was November and cold, rainy weather. and the people on the rafts wer sick. hungry, cold and miserable. W boy who drove the stock wer nearly starved. "Charley McKlnney and my nephew killed a crow and cooked it but he could not eat It and neither could L W gave it to Anderson Cox, my brother-in-law, and he tried to eat it but be could not make It stay down. When we got to the Cascades, th rafts .were all there, so we hitched the oxen onto the wagons and mad 1 th portage across the Cascade over six miles of the worst roads any white man ever' tried to travel. The -mud was hub deep and It took, us three days to make the six miles. At ort Vancouver, ur. jucLoagnim gave us food. This was the first time we naa naa enougn to eat tor wees. A good many got sick from over-eat-ing. but none of them died. Dr. lie Loughlin loaned us boats belonging to - ed on the main land at the head of 8auvlea Island. From here we crosaed the Willamette slough, where we pot ous wagon together and pulled out -for" Tualatin plains. T urn m lot. fn . TW.mh., , Christmas, when we finally moved into- -a little cabin It feet square. We traded two of our thin oxen for a fat steer, which we killed and ate. We . . . . .1.1.. ..11. . . kOUD gvl wun Diaaiii. iwm iwr an Englishman by the name of White. He gave us a bushel of wheat or a bush I of riotatoea. whichever we Preferred. McKlnney and myaeir took some of the wheat up to a little mill on dales . "On the plains tn those day there . . . . . . n- .nv .t 1 rt vmwmmrm m nun. lain men,-and former employes of th . Hudson Bay company. Most of the men were Scotch, most ' the women squaws, and practically all Of the chll- r en were halfbreeda. "Th McKay family, who lived here, were particularly kind to us. Peter H. ourofii, a 11 js " t " .... vra aitrwara governor or uuugrmii -ti4 this aattlamant Next SPtina w took up a claim of good land. Late ln the fall of 1147 news cam of the massacre of Dr. Whitman with hi wif and many others, a em iw volunteers was made and I enlisted in " Captain Lawrence Hall' company.". be thy plea, consider' this: that in the man' work? Is honest and fruitful, but course of justice none of us should see trade and commerce, ln the hand of salvation." . I avarice and corrupt politics, ar not Maybe that' so. Who -can tellT ! disposed to be satisfied with th Just J. M. BLOSSOM. I rains of honest efforts. At this stage. graft, usury, extortion, craft and cun ning become active and rob' not only the consumer of their portion of th production but filch from labor as well, even to the poverty of absolute hunger and nakedness of each.- Next comes society with its vanity and vice of frivolous and riotous living . to squander th plunder purloined from The Committee of One Hundred. Portland. July 25- To the Editor of The Journal My attention has , been called to letter sent out by the Ore gon Dry Committee of One Hundred. I note with - pleasure the following statement made therein: "The com mittee of One Hundred, - as you per- labor and th consumer. . But lo, the poor consumer I - He la a more belplesa victim than labor. He not only give his toll toward man's work, but must assume th whole burden of .profit to labor for produc tion, to honest trade for distribution, to graft for politics, to extortions for dishonest trade, to waste for society and to expense for restricting vice and critnal We Know, or should b willing to learn by listening to reason If we will or by painful experience If we must that . natural - and . unnatural things have their growth and decay, easy or painful a th case may ba, and that th purpose at th alpha 1 always refUcted in th omega. We go on with our predatory pros perity and pursuit or pnantom pleas ure, thinking to go beyend th rest and peace or honest endeavor, nut also. th goal Is forever beyond our reach. Must it always be so7 we trust not for the world Is beautiful and so ar the people when reason prevail. - Graft ia not business, and business to b successful needs no graft The Ragtime Muse Down and Out Ballad. I wonder what ray yacht would bring; The yacht will nave to go Unless I part with Spender's Pride My shooting place, you know. This week I've nad to sell three cars, And that' a stunning blow. X tried a market tip. but lost Of thousands not a few; A worthy charity I had To give six hundred, too. There's Dickie Splurge the lucky dog lie is in no such stew I . X might go in with Sharp, but there's His spendthrift, tattling cub; Unless things change, I'll hav to drop My twenty-seventh club. How to economize without Such skimping there' , th rub. Apoor man never can enjoy '' The simplest thlnir that s clear, A fifteen dollar lunch I find Seems lately rather dear. For sixty thousand dollars now Is all I hav a year) About Persona. Mrs. A D.. Wlaship, 82 year old. is a student in the University of Wis consin. .... ' Mrs. H. A- G ruber of Wllkesbarra, Pa., ha a letter written 100 year ago . v Rlrri a ravoliitlflnar malm- U J mmnzm ' - dier. , "' - ' ' ". . Mia Myra Tyreii, 40 years a scnooi . teacher, died at 12 ln Phoenix. Aria, leaves $50,000 to found home for. old eats. M. G- Browne, who wants or nee. mm.m.m.mm da aa amrVl 4rSOT A rtllMatl - A. .SW m. m trmmm.4 AM A A W-4 SB- ' - trayln away In 4ull times The Sunday Journal The Ureat Home Newspaper, consists of live news sections replete wlta .- Illustrated feature!. Illustrated magazine of quality. Woman's section of tore merit. Pictorial news supplement. - Superb comic ' section. -. - ' . 5 Cents the Copy