'THE JOURNAL i C. . JACK) .PublUbe -ablia4 ry availing (except Buadai eer Sanda? Baorolnf at The Journal Baa V lu, Bread war aad VnmUlll ate.. I'ortiaDd- Or. 5 fc.uierea at Uh tMstofflos at fortlaod. Or., ,t traumUslwi tbroosa tlja alalia aa aeeoca 7 eUse miliar. i L L'UiiViu u.i. tit:' Mi.rnw A-OO&l. All .i -. - i l w.... MmbM. Tail aa vperaiov wdii owynwn'. elJbiUN AUVKH'IiSU'iU if',t,fi!l1S JO flftfe Ae., New JTork; JW PaetH a Uaa bids., Chlcaao. aubacrlptios ttinu by eU or w aar -aTeee la tbe tolled States Maxlco; DAILY . ju, Oca tail JS.OO One swats 8 ON DAT , DAILY AKD BOSl'At Ooa rear IT.U I On month -3 When You Go Away Have The Journal sent to your Summer address. Calumniators have neltner good heart, nor good v Standlngs. We ought not to ttilnk ill of any on. till we have palpable proof, and l even then we should not expose tliem to others. Colton. C.KRMANY'8 COLONIAL SESSION'S POS- Germany W mmtmuv. ultimatum to Ifrom England's ally, Japan. brlngaAiome to us the extent of the strife for territory be tween the great powers of Europe. They confront each other, not only "along the closely guarded fron tiers of the home countries. Far over seas on the teeming shore of the Orient or in the dense Jungles of the tropics or on the scattered Islands of the Pacific, the struggle for sunremacy has been carried on hv alt the resources of diplomacy. Germany was the last to enter the field. Her colonial empire ns grown up only within the last thirty years. Kiao Chao, in the Shantung Peninsula, which Japan calls upon her to surrender, is the last won of her foreign posses sions. It was seized in ioji a .recompense for the murder of two German minaionaries. Though Germany holds less than two hun- , dred square miles, it gives her a strong foothold and brings her into close rivalry with England, .which holds the port of Wei-Hai-Wel at the extremity of the Pen insula. Farther to tho south in Pacific waters England and Germany are again near neighbors. Germany has annexed small and scattered holdings in the numerous Islands to the north of Australia. A third of New Guinea is hers, the Bis marck Archipelago and the Caro line and Marshall Islands. She alw owns several of the Samoan group, lying between tho English possessions there and our own. But altogether her holdings in the . . . .a Pacific are less man a uuuuieu . thousand square miles. Africa offered the only consid erable field for colonial expansion when Germany woke to the ambi- . tlon to plant her flag across the seas. Bismarck, in 1884, some what unwillingly consented to es tablish a protectorate over the African regions where German traders already had extensive in terests. It Is a romantic story how three young and ambitious members of the German Coloniza tion Society, disguised as me chanics, landed at Zanzibar with blank treaty forms, and a supply of German flags and pushed into vno interior, cuiuia mo uiuumm gathered at that very time for the Berlin conference knew what was being done, they had secured from native rulers rights over a terri tory twice as large as all Ger many. As the boundaries of Ger man East Airica were iinawy uo . . termlned they run through the three great lakes, Victoria Nyanza to the north., Tanganyika to the west, Nyasa to the southwest Eng land, Belglnm and Portugal hem the Germans In from further ex- panslon all their foes In the pres ent conflict. On the west coast at about the same time Germany acquired ter ritory nearly as extended in South west Africa, which the Orange river separates from Cape Colony. Above the mouth of the Congo, at the sharp bend of the "coast line westward, she gained in the same year Cameron, and farther west Togoland, a narrow strip running r Inland between the Gold Coast and and Dahomey. Both these colonies are now flanked by English and French possessions. England waa caugnt napping ana ouiwinea, though the made vigorous efforts to cut off the advance of the newcomers when she realized their suddenly developed ambitions. A ' consul sent to extend a British protectorate over Cameroon arrived . vJnst five days after the German emissary bad signed a treaty with the native king and had to con - tent himself with annexing Nigeria. . England succeeded in preventing 'farther German acquisitions but rOermany retaliated by blocking her plan to secure a strip from the ' ' Congo Free State in the Jnterior, 'which would have bridged the gap T' between the English possessionem dvuuiviu auu uiuoieiu Allien. ai- together. Germany has less than a 1 'million square miles of territory while England controls, Including i the .country nominally ruled by . Egypt, 2,700,000 square miles. MR. WITHYCOMBE'S BAD ADVISERS ORSE advice was neyer given a . candidate than Is that . by "the advising politicians" who aro urging Dr. Withycombe to flop , on the single Item veto. ; , On, principle, Dr. WItnycombo is against the single item veto, and he has frequently said so. On principle, he is against the irequent use of the reto, and he has frequently said so. tie is noi omy against the single item veto on principle and against the frequent use of the veto on principle,' but he believes In a sort of working un derstanding between the members of the legislature and the gover nor, -and -he -has frequently said Dr. Withycombe says the single item-veto Is "a sharp two-edged sword." He says it would , be 'dangerous. He says It would be an instrument with which a governor "could run the legislature." 'ahus,' at the Civic League luncheon In Portland, he said: , It (the single Hem veto) would be a two-edffed sword. It would fiva room for an executive of opposite political tendency to work political re venge that would prove dangerous. There is no equivocation in these words. They are Dr. Withy combe's words. There is no way to misunderstand their meaning. There is, no way to wipe them. out. They are of record and fully known to the whole state. He later reiterated his opposition to the single item veto. He said again that it is ?a sharp two-edged sword." He said It would greatly aid a governor to carry out his spites. At the Pioneers' Picnic at Brownsville before an audience of thousands, he said: Now that (the single Item veto) looks splendid. But it looks to me like It would give the governor power to do anything he likes, that any tendency for spite would be greatly aided. It would afford a splendid chance for a man who had a little spite to make it a SEASF TWO-EDGED BWOBD by whloh he could run the legislature. I am very skeptical about this. - There is no way for Dr. Withycombe to forget these words. They are his words. There is no way for the public to forget these words, or whose they are. When "the advising politicians" tell him to deny them or go back on them, they counsel him to a course that can bring him nothing but embarrassment and disaster. Dr. Wlthycombe's opposition to the single item veto and to any frequent use of the veto springs from the fact that he believes that there should be a stand-in between the governor and the legislature. He says the way to reduce appropriations is for the governor and the legislature to be "harmonious." Thus, he said in his Chautauqua speech at Albany: What we want is the legislative and executive to work in harmony, and when we do that we will solve this question of appropriations. We will then get down to good sound and sane business, and there will be no log rolling In politics, but it will be clean and harmonious. These, too, are Dr. Wlthycombe's words. They show why, on principle, he is against the single item veto, and why on principle, he is against a frequent use of the veto. They show that his whole idea is against vetoes. They show that he has a deep-seated faith and trust in the legislature. It would be the sheerest folly for Dr. Withycombe to attempt to change his position. He cannot afford to be on one side of an issue part of the campaign and on the other side of that Issue the rest of the campaign. To change now would be proof of temperamental weakness. To permit the "advising politicians" to take his own words out of his mouth and put their own words into his mouth would be a pitiful surrender by Dr. Withycombe of his convictions. It would put him in the attitude before the whole state of stand ing, not for what he thinks, but for what "the advising politicians" think. It would place him before the people as a shifting political weathercock, blown hither and yon by any kind of advice, good or bad. It would cause men to say that, if he shifts his position be fore election, how can he be trusted to remain of one mind after election. If he shifts his position on the single item veto, it will discredit not only his new position on that issue, but discredit his position on ! the efficient competition , of the United, Press, the Oregonian denied its own "news", in Its own paper on the same day of publication. Part of Its readers were told one thing and part another. The public is witnessing an un seemly exhibition on the part of these Associated Press newspapers. It Is out, of harmony with the sim ple, patriarchal character of the good man who is gone. The man who with quiet firmness maintained the dignity of the Vatican cannot now look down upon a squabble over his demise with any degree of approval. A FEW SMILES Because The Journal kept faith with its . thousands of patrons and announced the death of Pope Pius X shortly after it occurred instead of withholding the announcement that the Oregonian might print it as ancient history, the Falstaff of the newspaper world whines. One of the best tests of character in the competition of life is the spirit shown by the unsuccessful com petitor, if he is a strong man he will gracefully acknowledge defeat. ir he is a weak one he will excuse his falling down by some flimsy pretext. - An' Irishman, an Englishman and a Scotsman were out of work. They traveled together In search of employ ment, and cam to a farmer's house adn applied for the work 'of ploughman. The farmer's house and ever told the biggest ! lie could have the iod. The Englishman eald he went to the NortA Fole in a tub. The Scotchman said he swam to the South Pole. The farmer then aaked Pat: . "Well, Pat. what's your 11 eT "Begorra, sir." said Pat, "I believe these lads." Pat got the Job. ' - - - - ; - - ' ' ' " ' 1 PERTINENT COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF QMALIi CHANGE OREGON SIDELIGHTS I all other issues. These things are 6ald in advance as sound advice to Dr. Withy combe. If he flops from one 6ide to another on issues like a but terfly flitting from flower to flower, it will lead him to political dis aster and political suicide. tion by Europeans and there less than ten thousand have settled. They lie too near the equator. A handful of German officials, rep resentatives of commercial houses and owners of plantations, are the only white inhabitants in her other colonies. Moreover the cost of ad ministration is heavy, sometimes greater than the total export and import trade. England an call on many of her foreign colonies for men, ships and food supplies, Germany's foreign possessions seem at present only a source of weakness, points dangerously ex posed to attack. Through Japan England has struck at one of them. SUSPENDED FAME A section foreman on a southern railway heard the following conver sation between two of his dusky labor-J eta. "Jim, you bettah come here ah he'p me. I's talkln' up fer you." "How's datr Wy, dia here man . von ain't fit fer de dawgs, an Ah tole him yes you Is!" Everybody's Magazine. Someone writes to The Journal to ask why the Telegram frequent ly carries in big type an editorial utterance on the first page? That's easy to answer. Simply because the editor thereof realizes that though a few people read the first page of that paper, no one reads its editorial page. Letters From tho People 1 i N CONNECTION with the gen eral European war it is Inter esting to note the recent death of John Phillip Holland, who contributed much to the solution of the problem of submarine navigation. He was an Irishman by birth and his first experiments In the sub marine field were largely prompted by a desire to cripple England's supremacy of the sea. At first he met with the usual discourage ments of the Inventor. In 18 1 S he submitted to the United States Navy Department plans for a sub marine boat which were coolly re ceived. He continued his experiments, however, and in 1893 received as a result of competition a contract from the navy department. Upon the failure of his boat, which he attributed to interference by naval officials, Holland organized a com pany and produced a submarine boat which proved to be a success in its trial at Perth Amboy, New Jersey, In 1898. His ideas have since been util ized by foreign governments in ad dition to those of other Inventors, Admiral Scott of the British navy recently predicted that the4 submarine would be a most 1m portant factor In future naval warfare and the world is watching the present conflict with interest to see whether this prediction is to be realized. If it should be, the fame of Holland will be post humous as in the case of many others. guiae ror nxmg Dlame. We are unable to see the war in its true perspective; our information comes j largely from one side; we are not equipped with the facts sufficiently to form deliberate judgement. That is why the president saijj: I venture, therefore, my fellow countrymen, to speak & solemn word of warning to you against that deep est, most subtle, most essential breach of neutrality which may spring out of partisanship, out of passionately tak ing sides. The United States must be. neutral in fact as well as in name during these days which are to try men's souls. We must bo impartial in thought as well as in action, must put a curb on our sentiments aa well as on every transaction that might be construed as a preference of one party to the struggle before another. The United Sjtates contains many people who by birth are tied to one or the other of the waning nations. These people are now Americans, and while they naturally have strong ties which bind them to mother countries, they should re member that they are now Ameri cans. It Is absolutely necessary that all citizens of the United States, native as well as foreign born, should observe fully their al legiance to this government. American citizens should heed the president's words because they are rounded In American principles. They are recognition of the fact that this Is a democracy. The peo ple rule in America, and it Is the people themselves who can plunsre the United States into foreign com plications or hold it aloof from trouble abroad. WISE WORDS There is One great drawback in Germany's possessions in Africa and also in , the Pacific Islands. F RESIDENT . WILSON'S state ment counselling Americans not to become partisans in the European conflict was timely and wholesome. The United States has declared -its neutrality, and tho declaration will have full force "and effect only if .the people of America observe its letter and spirit Europe's armies and navies will determine the winner. When the war's history Is written will be Soon 'enough to determine who is primarily at fault American par- Nohe of them except Southwest i tisanshin at this time will not af ' Africa are suitable for coloniza-! feet the-tnitcorae, nor is it a safe AN UNSEEMLY EXHIBITION A SIMPLE, kindly man is dead in Rome. From every cor ner of Christendom prayers go up for the repose of his soul. And yet Portland . newspapers dependent upon the Associated Press have precipitated an unseem ly controversy as to the first bearer of. the sad tidings. The Journal Is accused of "ghoulish Journalism" because it printed the news of the Pope's death on the day he died, instead of waiting, as did the As sociated Press newspapers, until the official announcement was filed in the archives. It has been established that the Pope died when The Journal said he died. The official announce ment was not made until 1:20 o clock Thursday morning. It was sad news, and yet it was news The United Press was Its sole bearer, and now that agency Is ac cused or "ghoulish journalism" be cause It had the only American staff correspondent in Rome, and he sent word of the Pope's death immediately after the event. ' The Journal is berated by the Oregonian because it printed news that was so, and yet the Oregonian this morning told some of its read era that Anna Sartor sister of the late pontiff, had died of grief Other readers of the same paper were told that it was an "errone ous report." In its effort to meet t?fBn,.c"tlon" efnt The Journal tor DtrblicatJon to thla department aboald b writ ten on only one aide of the paper, ahould t exceed 300 words In length and must ba ac companied by the name and address of the sender. if the writer does not desire to nara the name published, nejr.houid so atata.) "Discussion is the greatest of an reforjs era. It rationalizes everything; it toucbea. it robs principles of all false aanctlty and throws them back on their reasonableness. If they have no reasonableneaa. It ruthlessly crushes them oat of existence and sets up Its own conclusion in their stead." Woodrow Wilson. Christ's Teachings and War. Portland, Aug. 18. To the Editor of The Journal In your issue of August 17, W. J. Garrison of McMlnn villa takes exception to statements from a sermon by me, which were published recently in Portland newspapers. He asserts that L ascribe the war in Eu rope to infidelity. He has been mis led by the caption. "War Laid to In fidelity," appearing in one of the pa pers, over the quotation in question. I did not write this caption. It was written in the editorial office and does not give an exact Interpretation ofi what I said, which I will refer to sub sequently. With this matter made clear, I will address myself to Mr. Garrison's criticisms. He says that I ascribe this war to Infidelity. I do not. if "infidelity" is taken to mean otherwise than failure to abide by the teachings of Christ. He says that the Socialists to a man are against war. Are they? Tester day I received a letter from a Social ist, in which he expressed regret be cause he was too old to go back to England and fight for his mother coun try. Also, in yesterday's Journal. Karl H. von Wiegand, the United Press Berlin correspondent. says: "Dr. Liebknecht and hundreds of thousands of other Socialists are fighting for the i- atnenana. uoes such carticiDation in war look like opposition to It? Mr. Garrison says that the churches call the Socialists Infidels. There is too much misrepresentation on this score, due to loose thinking and care less assertion. Some churches may call the Socialists infidels, but not all churches. The Episcopal church, of which I am a member, does not." And there are other churches that do not. I know of ministers and laymen who are Socialists and base their theories upon the teachings of Christ Mr. Gar rison's statement that the churches can tne socialists infidels Is too sweeping. He not only puts the part for the whole, but what he says is un just to both the churches and the So cialists. JOHN D. RICE. Vicar of St John's Church, Sellwood. For a People's Harbor. Banlcs, Or., Aug. 19. To the Peo ple of Portland The state of Oregon and tne municipality of Portland hav ing failed to. protect the publlo right in tne snores oi tne narbor of Port land, so that, as far as our local au thorities and courts can do so. they have become divested to upland own ers to the exclusion of the public, and that publio having nov been called upon for funds to reinvest these shores In the public for improvement. and a proposal made that other bonds be sold to buy Swan island to be dredged out to enlarge the harbor, at the same time that the Port commis sion Is filling for upland owners be tween the bank and pierhead lines, I have applied to the secretary of war that a harbor line be located to pro tect the public right in the shores of this harbor, and that the pierhead line be changed. The hearing will be held August 23 and I urge upon those interested In the development of the commerce of this port to be present to support this application, particularly for this rea son: The war department is no more interested in Portland as the port of the Columbia river than in any other point, say, Astoria or Vancouver, and it stands in hand for those interested in the conservation of Portland's advan tages to seize every opportunity to re- A philosopher stepped on board a boat to crosB a stream; on the pas sage he inquired of the ferryman if he understood arith metic. The man looked astonished. "Arithmetic? No, sir, never heard of It before." The philosopher replied: "I am very sorry, for one quar ter of your life la gone." A few minutes after he asked the ferryman: "Do you know anything of mathematics V The boatman smiled and replied: "No." "Well, then," said the philosopher, "another quarter of your life Is gone." A third question was asked of the ferryman: "Do you understand as tronomy?" "Oh, no, no, never heard of arach a thing." "Well, my friend, then another quarter of your life I gone." Just at this moment the boat ran on a rock. The ferryman Jumped up, pulled off his coat and asked the philosopher: "Sir, can you swim?" "No," replied the philosopher. "Then." shouted the ferryman, "your whole life is gone, for the boat Is go ing to the bottom." Baste makes waste, out It saves mat 'A little learning is a comfort In tiano of trouble. , Procrasticatlon Increases the de lights of anticipation. T . . . . i f pr rauns ui someooay ror- a Cain did not invent war. Ha was merely the first murderer. a A millionaire temporarily out of funds is a helpless creature. some people marry In haste and men live to nave golden weddings. a Birds of a feather have reason to be uianaxui to tne Audubon people. a Soma actors get divorces for the advertising and others Just because. A bird in the hand may have been some time in cold storage. Then wnatT All the waiters in Paris have gone to war. They ought to be able to give spienaia service. The fly In the ointment shows that the apothecary has been negligent in Early to bed and early to rise would put the theatrical Industry entirely uui ox Dusiness. a The toughest Job we know of Is that of a candidate for office trvlnar to talk politics to men who are only wanting to near tne latest war news. a Here's more trouble. While the sov ereign Texan Is rubbering the bulletin board Bailey Is going to try to sneak oaca into tne united states senate. a Twentv-nlna doers wera electrocuted at Medford Tuesday by the health au thorities. Their owners naa raiiea munle them within the limit required by ordinance. The Rend librarv has lust received a gift of 24 volumes from tha Bend uiee ciuo. iot dooks were yurauiKni with monev earned by the club at a i concert several months ago. . When the CorvaUis schools open on i September 21, it will be with a corps of teachers increased to 4. who. the Gazette-Times says, are one and all uncommonly well equipped as regards professional training and school room experience. I The proposed rravellng of tha busi ness streets of Wallowa has been aban- doned by the city council, and the mat ter of a permanent tiavement has again been taken up. A large majority of tha ' property owners protested against tne gravel, asking that pavement be sub stituted. Hood River Naws: Opening of the Panama canal Saturday and announce- 1 ment of a new steamer Plying on the I Columbia from Portland to The Dalles both mean Increased shipping facilities for Hood River. Such advantages will , go far towards contributing to tne eco nomical marketing; of the local crop. Weston Leader: Despite the strong market position of all manner of food stuffs, due to the European war. there was a decided drop in pork the other day on Weston mountain. George Fer ituson, who is farming the Dr. Kern plae went out in his hog pasture one morning and found that 14 good shotes. averaging about 100 pounds had all fallen down an unused well and all were drowned. It is supposed the luck less pigs followed each other Into the well while hunting for some place in which to wallow. THE SUNDAY ' JOURNAL Following are some of the Il lustrated features that will "P- Slement the tiew re pert In THE UNDAY JOURNAL for next Sunday. WITH TJCB afalSaaTaB OS XT. TOLSTOI'S VISION OF A WORLD WAR The Ragtime Muse Ballade t of Joule Obsolete views and outworn creeds. Selfish actions and foolish pride. Hates and rancors and cruel greeds. Acts by a low mind Justified; Acts that the doe would seek to hide. Gains that would come from another's fall. Evil courted and rood defied Into the scrap heap with them all I Motors driven at reckless speeds. Oysters roasted or boiled or fried, Toung widows' unbecoming weeds. x-aper ana pens py "tne nouse ' sup plied, Doors too narrow and folka too win. The porter's tip and the brakeman's Daw . The other stocklnr that love to hide Into the scrap heal with them all! Congressmen .who end garden seeds, " oiks wno gee angry when they're guyed. Chickens and dogs and fancy breeds. ijeneiny ipeecnea ana auu, beside, Apples and peaches and apricots, dried. Men who for hard luck tales wont "fall." Agents who will not be denied Into the scrap heaD with them all I L'ENVOI. Prince! May your power be magnified! To your attention we wish to call Tiresome things that we can't abide Into the scrap heap with them all! The following Is an Interview with Count Leo Tolstoi In 1910, written by his grandnlece for the Chicago Record Herald, in which he predicts the pres ent war: I see floating upon the surface of the sea of human fate the huge silhouette of a nude woman. She la with her beauty, poise, her smile, her Jewels a super-Venus. Nations rush madly aft er her, each of them eager to attract her especially. But she, like an eter nal courtesan, flirts with all. In her hair ornaments of diamonds and rubies Is engraved her name, "Commercial ism." As alluring and bewitching as she seems, much destruction and agony follow in her wake. Her "breath, reek ing of sordid transactions, her voice, of metallic character like gold, and her look of greed are so much poison to the nations who fall victims to her charms. And, behold, she has three gigantic arms, with three torches of universal corruption In her hands. The first torch represents the flame of war, that the beautiful courtesan carries from city to city and country to country. Patriotism answers with flashes of honest flame, but the end is a roar of guns and of muskets. The second torch bears the flame of bigotry and hypocrisy. It lights the lamps only in temples and on altars of sacred Institutions. It carries the seed of falsity and fanaticism. It kindles the minds that are still In cradles and follows them to their graves. The third torch is that of the law, that danrerous foundation of all unau thentic traditions, which first does its fatal work in the family, then sweeps through the larger world of literature, art and statesmanship. And, behold, the flame of the third torch, which has already begun to de stroy our family relations, our stand ards of art and tnoraJa The relation between woman and man Is accepted as a prosaic partnership of the sexes. Art has become realistic degeneracy. Political and religious disturbances have shaken the spiritual foundations of all nations. before the Underwood tariff went Into effect; that the failure of the enter prise was not one involving the tariff in any particular, but actually due to the fact that with Its limited output It could not compete with eastern mills whose production was many times greater, whose "overhead" waa far lesa in proportion to the out put, and whose market was always as safe and certain as any Industrial proposition could be, whereas the Ore gon company had to create a market In competition with the larger and otd established eastern mills; and last but not least the Oregonian would have discovered that the eastern mills, backed by millions of capital, could and do buy the raw product at more advantageous prices than could the Oregon mill. The statement of Mr. Toung. of the Multnomah Mohair Mills company. If ho is correctly quoted In tha Oregonian. is so full of holes that it need not be discussed. I do not believe Mr. Toung has been correctly quoted. But 'twas ever thus. Nothlnr la too loW for the Oregonian to stoop to, to attain Its questionable ends. "MADE IN OREGON." The a-reat conflagration will start about 1912, set by tho torch of the first arm In the countries of southeastern Europe. It will develop Into a destruc tion and calamity in iis. in mi year I see all Europe In flames and bleeding. I hear the lamentations of huge battle fields. But about the year 1915 the strange figure from the north a new Napoleon enters the stage of the bloody drama. He Is a man of little militaristic train ing, a writer or a journalist, dui in ms grip most of Europe will remain until 1926. Th end of the great calamity will mark a new political era for the old world. There will be left no empires nor kingdoms, but the world will form a federation of the United States of Nations. There will remain only rour great giants the Anglo-Saxon, the Latins, the Slavs and the Mongolians. After the year 1925 I see a change In religious sentiment. The second torch of the courtesan has brought about the fall of the church. The ethical Idea almost vanished. Humanity is without moral feeling. But then a great reformer arises. He will clear the world of tha relics of monotheism, and lay the corner stone of the temple of pantheism, God, soul, spirit and Immortality hii molten In a new fur nace, and I see the peaceful beginning of an ethical era. The man determined to this mission is a Monjouan He is already walking the earth a man of active affairs. He himself does not now realize the mission assigned to him by Superior Powers. Only small spots here and there have remained untouched by those three de structive flames. The anti-national wars in Europe, the class war of Amer ica and the race wars In Asia have strangled progress for a half a century. By then, in the middle of this century, I see a heroine of literature and art rising from the ranks of the Latins and Persians, the world of tha tedious stuff of the obvious. It is the light of symbolism that shall outshine the light of the torch of commercialism. In place of polygamy and monogamy of today there wl'.l come a poetogamy relations of the sexes based fundamentally on the po etic conceptions of life. And I see the nations growing larger and realizing that the alurlng woman of their destiny is after all nothing but an Illusion. There will be a time when the world will have no use for armies, hypocritical religious and degenerate art Life is evolution, and evolution is development from the simple to the more complicated forms of tha mind and body. I see the passing show of tha world- drama In its present form, how It fades like the glow of evening upon the mountains. One motion of the hand of commercialism and a new history begins. The late author-reformer finished. opened his eyes and looked at me slightly confused. "Had I gone to sleep?" ha asked me. I beg your pardon." When I read the vision talk to him he listened gravely and nodded, saying that It was correct Upon my request ; he signed the document and handed j It to me with a blessing. I left him 1 w. w nan v. t , a.iv. ... ... j r . my arrival infornrwl the crar of my readiness to see him. I was received at the court In an informal way and led Into the cars J private study. I handed him the paper. He opened it nervously and read with pronounced agitation. "Well, it's very interesting," he said. "I will make a copy for myself, anJ forward the other copies, with trans lations, to the kaiser of Germany and through him to the King of England. The original shall be kept In my pri vate archives. I shall ask the kaiser and the king not to make any com ments on the matter, aa I do not like to figure as an Intermediary between them and the old man whose seditious writings I do not like generally." It is because I have heard that one of the royal principals is going to In clude the secret message In his private memoirs that I take this opportunity of publishing the whole truth about it and how I received the unusual docu ment The cxar has told me repeatedly that the kaiser of Germany thlnka it is A photographic and word story that records the essential happen ings on the MaEamas recent as-t cent of Mt Rainier. COX.VMBIA XZOKWAY XTZAKX COKPX.ETZOV. Within a month it Is expected that a section of the new Colum bia highway will be open to traf-r fic. In all the world it Is tmpoaw sible to find a route that la rlchei In scenic splendor. A set of new photographs shows tha present status of the work. rorx TtVU X. In the passing of Pope Plus, the Christian world has loit a strong figure. A review of the remark able career of this remarkable man offers wide appeal. WAS aTZSZUOrKTB. . A group of Illustrated articles which discuss many phases of th colossal European conflict will claim the Interest of all readers who would keep Informed on tha people and places concerned. OEXXATaT OtZ?I3Ul TOJUTTOIOJ WAS nVASB. General von Bernhardl of tha kaiser's army wrote a book mora than two years ago in which he declared that in the event of war. Germany's only hope lay In ag gression on land and caution on sea. The volume is full of what has proved to be prophetic state ments and a review of the salient points made is of timely Interest TUB KSS ASOX72CD TUB KAX8ES Frederick William Wile pre sents interesting studies of each of a group of Germany's strong men who have played leading parts in shaping the destiny of tne empire. suuTBAUTT or racAxx, HATXOKS. A veteran diplomat makes the statement that neutrality pacts are of little avail to small na tions, cltlne the fact that Bel- glum has been drawn into a 'war which she foresaw and for which she prepared and that Holland is little better off. A BIT Or BXCSZT XZ8TOST. Anything that savors of diplo matic intrigue and war la of in terest nowaday. Accordingly, Herbert W. Bowen's recital of what transpired In Barcelona. Spain, Just prior to the Spanish American war when he was Amer ican consul at that point com- manas a wide audience. Fiction Features PAPlfl STSATAQX3S. An illustrated atorv hv Rohrt Herrlck that represents the best in miasummer riction. THE TSZnr O' HZASTS. The third Installment of Louts Joseph Vance's thrilling atory of romance and lntriarue whlrh holds additional interest In that after reading each week's Installment in THE SUNDAY JOURNAL, readers may see each installment enacted at the movies. ros woMEsr kxadess Four pages of THE SUNDAY JOURNAL Magazine are devoted exclusively to subjects of interest to women. Features coverlnar wide field are prepared bv spe cialists. Those for, next Sunday include: "Hair hints for the busy woman." by Mrs. Henry nj mes , Advice on seclal customs; Answers to beauty queries; "Mod ernizing the home." by Wlnnifred Harper Cooley; Menus and recipes for a week, by Ellen H Whlttem: Hints for the home dressmaker; French fashion nots and attract ive needlework designs by Ade laide rjyra. rrCTOBXlX, 8TJ3P&EVE2TT. Two pages of photographs from near ana rar. including a full page reproduction of Wefater's picture, "The Pillars of the uescnuwi ; two unconventional pnotographs of Mt Hood that draw closer attention to what this snow clad peak has to offer the tourist ana a group of snapshots ot people and places you have ueen reaoing aoout In the news columns. COMIC SECTION. Your friends of the funny sheet are shown In series of new antics. THE BTTZTD AT JOtTSHAX, Complete la firs news seo tloas, magaaina and woman's section and cotnio, S oasts tha copy everywhere. Popular Science. In the Malay peninsula an Eng-a llsh naturalist has discovered a spa cies of ant that makes Its nest In tho fleshy stems of ferns that crow on thai one of the most lmpresslva literary llmha of trees hlgh ln the aIr propbeciea of this age. Prolilbition in North Dakota. Lebanon. Or., Aug. 19. To the Edi tor of The Journal Although I have been here for only one year, I am greatly interested ln the future of this state. North Dakota, my native state. has had prohibition for 25 years, and a big majority of the people are well sat isfied without tha saloon. For North Dakota prohibition has de creased crime. Insanity and pauperism, and very materially Increased the pros perity of the people. " It has attracted capital and desirable Immigrants. It has exiled tha baneful Influence of the liquor forces from state poltlcs. It has been a splendid safeguard for the boys and young men. Farmers, mer chants and bankers are staunch sup- move any obstacles to the development ' porters of prohibition there, of Portland's harbor. Remember that ! Every patriot in Oregon, every one there has been no effort to errant .who is loyal to the best Interests of away the shores of the Columbia, andi'ts young people, every one who loves they have that advantage of us. Port- peace, justice ana righteousness, will land Is ln this rescect handtcaonfe far 1 rejoice in the opportunity of banishing beyond all other ports on the Pacif lo 1 th blighting curse or tna liquor traf coast IN NON-EUROPEAN MARKETS J. B. ZIEGLER, The Mohair 31111s Case. Salem, Or., Aug. 20. To the Editor of The Journal Once more the Ore-1 gonlan has got ln its work on the Wil son administration. Now It is the tariff that is responsible for the clos ing down of the Multnomah mohair mills. Has the Oregonian stooped so low that It must blame every indus trial, disaster to the Underwood tariff and the Wilson administration? Is any conclusion safe enough for the Ore gonian to Jump at so long as that -conclusion can be used as a slam at the present administration? Does the Ore gonian aver investigate anything be fore it printa such erroneous and mis leading articles aa today's on the clos ing of the mohair mills? If the Ore gonian had made an intelligent Inves tigation it would have learned the truth, and these facts: That the Multnomah Mohair Mills company was in trouble long before President Wilson ever was nominated: that the mills virtually were closed fic from the state of Oregon. F. THORD ARSON. Writes About Emma Goldman. Gervais. Or, Aug. 19. -To the Editor of The Journal We do not uphold Em ma Goldman If She is an anarchist but since the drys have used her as an ar gument against us we will say we are glad she Is not a prohibitionist There is nothing on record In California showing that aha was responsible, like prohibition, for an attempted $700,000 000 confiscation. Compared with our multiplicity of people, the drunkards are but few. People die every minute. Why should tfiey be expected to lives forever? Horses sometimes drink too much, and get foundered. Man, being; a superior being, should know whan ha has enough. X am told there was but 12 drunkards on Salem's black list I have lived ln Portland and Salem. I have seen the farmers pass my door for years, and never saw them drunk. That's Oegon By John M. Osklson. i Everybody knows that England and Germany have fought savagely for the markets of the newer countries of the world. They have been rivals ln South America, in Mexico, ln China and in Africa. As part of their campaign for secur ing hew and growing markets as out lets for their manufacturers they have become tha lenders of capital to the new countries. It has been like the typical bank In a growing western community: Banker Jones from Kansas City goes to X county ln Colorado, where set tlers are gathering in anticipation of the opening of a new Irrigation pro iect. Jones commands capital owned in Kansas City; he will lend this cap ital to men who show that they can usa It to develop farms, and to mer chants who can show that their trade will be profitable. ln tha same spirit the directors of one of the big railroads will vote to extend a branch into X county. In the expectation that later enough traffic will ba created to pay a profit on the money spent in building the branch line. Jones and the railroad are count ing on the future of X county. nut ther romes a crisis in the af fairs of Kansas City and the financial capitals ln which the railroad must i borrow the money to pay xor n branch line through X county. Neither Jones nor the railroad can get any more outside capital. What's going to happen to X county? What's going to happen to the man ufacturers, planters and railroad build ers of Argentina, of Bratil. of China, of tha African dependencies? They must do what the wide-awake dozens of X county are compelled to do. They must find new financial backing. Where will they find it? It is Jnevitable that they should look to the United States as a- source of supply. We are the greatest and richest cqruntry in the world not In volved ln the wealth-destroying war that is raging. Under the pressure of necessity. South America and Mexico and China must forget that we have heretofore been indifferent to their needs, must forget their racial praju dicea, and come to form financial and trade alliances with us. So the newer markets will be forced upon us. Dr. Naegell, professor of medicine at Liege university, commends thi prae tice of yawning. A good yawn tha Belgian professor maintains. Is excel lent for the lungs. gathered from all over the state. They looked many. A bunch of prohibi tionists gathered together look sane. One would not think them crary enough to destroy tha Oregon hop industry. A bunch of drunkards in Portland gath ered from' everywhere, mostly tran sients, who will not vote, look many. They represent themselves, not Oregon. God gave morphine, his production, of tho beautiful poppy, to make easy tha pangs of death. No one should abuse It Carloads of it should be sent to tha Jaattleflelda to soothe the wounded and tho dying. It would not be as craxy as the usa of bayonets ahd.bul- lAtai to lOaA thai arrt nnl With mor- Xn Salem I saw a ! Phine Pllla. shoot tha soldiers and let crowd of crazy men from the asylum, them sleep on the battlefield until ready to make them prisoners of war. Save production. Vote wet to save the hop Industry, and to prohibit pro hibition. ELLA M. FINNEY. HOO'S H00 By John W. Carey. The Languages of the Belgians. Portland, Or., Aug. 20. To tha Edi tor of The Journal Please state what are the principal languages spoken In Belgium, and the proportion of Ger man as compared with the other lan guagea. J. N. M. The latest available figures are those for 1900, whlrh are aa followa: Those speaking French only,' 2.674,805; Flemish only, 2.822.005; German only. 28,314; French and Flemish, J01.687; French and German. 66,447; Flemish and German, 723; the three languages. 42,859.1 Who guards your Unci Sam'I'S . health and shines bogie man to hookworms and bacilli all from York to Yucatan? Who goes to Vera Crux and makes of same a. Spotless Town, aa spick and span as Mary Ann In bran new Sunday gown? Who hies with rat traps by tha ton to Gulf of Mexico, and routs tho plague bubonic In a fortnlghfa tlma Who makes things so unpleasant for the yellow fever germ. It beats A and does not come back to seek a second term? TJLTVi s 4 ii aw A Visa ftrtaaiaataTern - tha m . ti taw- jwo a v w i vitBrvii a am ear fought off that love bug. too? Step up. unmarried lac lea. and meet Sur- I geon-General Blue!