- - .. :.. THE OREGON TWLY . JOURNAL. PORTLAND, TUESDAYS EVENING, f: AUGUST -2S, :1814 :7 I THE JOURNAL kit IWPEPKWDtCKT NEWSPAFKR. C . JACKSON .Fubllhr fetilUaed every Vffuiua tneept SuutUt 4 er liaiUf BMrntos at Tha Juurs'.l Build, lu. Broadway aad Vro.ilUu., l-ortiaad. Or. kaiattd at lb pwsiotriea at hcul. or., I, naaaiaiMiuo ittuuti u aaiu avooua uimnmr. ll.Ui.k-lioHkly kl.lo III.; Uuam, A-Oowl. AM tfaryerUMata rcbd by tbraa number, tail laa operator what dciartaiatit you want. imaiM AisVfc.aiia.iAU k.ihu.1a' 1 baojaailn KcutBor Co., Uruuawick. iStdc.. 1UA rlllU ., lr ura, Ul fauiile'a ' waa bfclg., Cbtcaga. - Mibacritua Ju by nail or to aojr raw. lu tba lultad Staira or Mailoo; ' DAILY Om .,,.. .li.ou t Ou moot . SUKDAX . One- rear IJ.40 I One tnonta DAILY AND SUNPAY Om a J.W t Ona awntb When You Go Away Have The Journal sent to your Summer addreaa. Care is" no cure, but rather a .(.rroslve for tUinKs that are not to Shakespeare. be remedied MODEKN UATTLEH T I HE prediction Of a famous general that the evolution or : holiness which coma trom wasmng inodern war would result i-afton. I The Chronicle's reasoning is t seems about to be realized .iu the . based upon a mania to find fault. reported engagement between the It is worthy only of amused tolera '; German aud allied forces in Bel-: tion. The charitable view is that - elum Along a battle front of j the Chronicle does not take even . fL mu hundreds of thou-! itself seriously, else it would not sands of men are in deadly con-; , ril. " tt to thla time Mukden, the final battle of tne war between ! f ially afraid of, competition through Japan and Russia, was propably J the building of a second canal, the greatest one in tho history of ; What this country fears and . pro the world in respect to duration Poses to forestall is the building ' and number of men involved. a canal by ome European More than tSOO.OOO men were en-jPwr. to be owned and operated. ; caged in that struggle which lasted j not in behalf of the world's com- nearly three weeks, during part'merce, but for the especial benefit of which" the opposing lines werei foreign ships. It is pot a ques ; extended over a front of more 1 "on of canal competition but of than eighty miles. ' j American integrity. The inventions of peace, have! Presumably the Chronicle is op i made it pomible to concentrate, j Psed to maintenance of the Mon ' feed direct and move vast armies. roe doctrine. The Nicaraguan The commander-in-chief of today j treaty is supplemental to that doc docs not fritter away his forces . trine. It proposes to keep Eu ln minor operations .but collects ! rPe 8 hands oft valuable American every available man to strike at a 1 territory which has value princi decisive point. Battles are now Pally because of its bearing upon won in the years that precede ! American or European control of them. A vast store of energy is.""- " cuunucms. accumulated in a long period of preparation and organization. War has become a scientific process. Every discovery of applied science la made to contribute to the sol dier. Wireless telegraphy has fa' cllitated the communication of or der). Aerial navigation has changed the conditions of conflict. The aeroplane and rfirahlp not only serve as eyes with which to view a large expanse of territory but may realize the poet's vision of "the' nations' airy navies grappling In the central blue." As the present battle exceeds that of Mukden in number of men tngaged and in length of line it will also probably excede It In loss of life. The toll of the modern j battle is a heavy one. That of Mukden Is estimated to have been 40,000 killed and 120.000 wounded, A compensating feature In the immense development of war is that the extent of the struggle, the huge cost in money and lives , makes nations hesitate more than ever to appeal to the sWord. THK PAPAL CONCLAVE P' lRESS dispatches state that the rigorous rules governing the procedure in a jiapal election may be modified In the con clave now assembling to choose a " auccessor to Pius X. It is nearly three hundred years since the pres ent ' regulations were formulated. They require that ten days after the death of a pope the cardinals Shall meet. As the word conclave denotes, they assemble behind locked doors. Each cardinal takes with him a secretary and one ser vant. The Sacred College, when full, ' numbers seventy members. They with their attendants and the prescribed officials make a body of not more than 250 persons. Late comers may be admitted but no one can return lo the outer world until a choice la made. The conclave lives in common. With only the simplest food al- , lowed it. Its meals are supplied through a window. Each cardinal baa his own cell with the plainest of furnishings. Two votes are cast . daily. In the morning and the evening. The ballots are burned ' as soon as counted. If no candi date hag received the necessary two , .thirds' vote straw is burned with them, to make smoke. This is the only hint of ttw progress of the - election which Is given to tae world. Morning and evening' a . . crowd gathers to watch the chim ey above the apartments of the Vatican set aside for the conclave. wnen smoke rises from it, the watchers only know that for at least " twelve hours no decision - . will be reached. , The strict confinement and the austere mode of life are often a . hardship to aged or infirm cardi ; nals. They were Instituted to 1 check abases which grew up In the " Middle Ages. Then the Papacy was prize for which warring factions . strove and Intrigue " often blocked or swayed an election. In the Thirteenth century there was an . . Interregnum ; of two years and ine months before a choice was . . aade. Finally the enraged popu- lace of Vlterbo,, where the car--r dlnals were .assembled, shut them up in a tower and left them on bread and water until they reached i an agreement. After several cen turies of unseemly contentions, Gregory XV decreed the method of procedure still "followed. A re- -" " ouubco possipxe ana stringent isolation .is i not needed to secure a fair; and untrammeled choice.. It Is not strange that a protest, against the rigia restrictions necessary in tne past is making itself heard. ? THIS IS'JCARAGUAN TREATY. T HE San Francisco Chronicle has discovered a strange' ob jection to the , Nicaraguan eays that the Wilson administra-1 Hon. "which TmfftSRP to ahhor I monopoly, proposes to esta-blish the most ruthless monopoly the world has ever seen." This is the Chron icle's argument: The relations of this country to Aiha natlAna An -i ri 11ff ai f.i-Am f hna rx m ctrx r inHlvliia m tif anv n a- . iion. ?f there i mg;alwronrin in- . dlvlduald obtaining control of and Mocking up natural resources, there is even greater depravity in such action by a nation. A mere state ment of the situation is sufficient . to show the grounds for the utter contempt with which the world and ' all those who care for morals of any iklnd will regard the professions or expect others to heed its false ,vs"' The United States is not espe- EXTREMELY DISINGENUOUS s ENATOR ROOT of New York is an able man but even an able man cannot bolster up a weak cause. This was ex- t mpiiueu in a siriKing manner in his address at the New York state Republican convention last week. He said the delay in organizing the new banking and currency law had had an. ill effect upon the country. He omitted to explain that this delay was due to the ob structive tactics of his Republican colleagues in the senate. He did not point out the self evident fact that the mere promise of a reform which his party never accomplished reassure! credit and business even in the chaos of European war. He complained that a Demo cratic administration had not been able to complete the solution of the trust problem in a few months. He did not rfirall thot Mo lem wag inherited from Republican administrations administrations It may be true as Senator Root charged that the states having the largest cities within their borders pay the greatest part of the in-! come tax. Yet there are many people who will not overlook the fact that the wealth thus reached for the first time has been drawn from all the other states. If the distinguished senator had been able to lay aside his charac ter as a partisan advocate he would have endorsed in reference to Dem ocratic currency legislation the words of A. L. Mills, president of the First National Bank of Port land, who speaking on this sub ject at the Commercial Club re cently, said: These United Statrs were never in pounder financial condition than they are today. There is no danger of financial panic nor shall we ever see again such panics as we have had in the past. The weakness of Senator Root's argument probably explains his reason for not being a candidate for reelection. THE COMING STRUGGLE r T IS plain that caDital and 4i labor are both organizing on the Pacific Coast for a serious clash." This is the conclusion drawn by Professor Commons, member of the Commission on Industrial Re lations, from the public hearings so far held In the cities of the Pa cific slope. The words have an ominous sound. They Imply that capital and labor, instead of seek ing a peaceful solution of their troutLea by mutual concession and a spirit of tolerance, are prepar ing for industrial war.' W7e are watchng with growing horror the outcome of Europe's old belief that war must be the arbiter in her international rivalries. Are we going to -permit the great in dustrial forces of our national life to s marshal themselves for battle and resort to violence and bitter strife? Are we going to have class war? The problem of a fair .distribu tion of profits between capital and labor must be solved just as surely as the European problem of the balance of power. We must face it. It comes home to evorv nnn of, os. If we let it be settled ( by an appeal to force, a trial of brute strength. It means for us the same legacy of hatred, the same crush' ing load of debt, the Same heavy burden, of bereavement - and sor row that Europe will have on her ouuuiuen wiicu euw una nwu uy me swora once more. have Hhrown the weight . of j)ar influence and example on the fcide of arbitration between nations. Blue oi, aruxu uiiou uetwceu uiiiiuus. 4 We are.detennlned to find a betterl way than war to promote interna tional peace and justice. We are united in our opposition to mili tarism. " But it is the spirit of mili tarism which would marshal and equip the ranks, of capital and labor, concentrate their forces in industrial centers, fill their war wun goia. stuay tne strat egy or attacK ana aerense, spy upon and corrupt the enemy if possible. This is the spirit which, if un checked, will drag us into a life onii 4ntV ... rf . a. . . '. . A wnea outoreaK- is surely the ulj, ui very patriot, it aepenas upon the temper , of the nation whether arbitration and its benefi cent results shall be our choice or a trial of brute strength and the horrors of fraternal strife. It is not too late to stem the tide of hostilities, but it is time we were awake to the danger and ready to meet it by the propaganda of peace and good will. ALWAYS APPLICABLE 1 N TIME of war there are always self appointed critics who ex plain how (battles should be fought and point out the mis takes of commanders in the field. The present period is no exception to the rule. In every club, before every bulletin board and wherever men foregather artf these self con stituted boards of strategy who tell how the war should be conducted and what its issue will be. It was the same in Assyria, in Persia, in Egypt, in Greece and in Rome. What the real fighting men think of these military critics was well stated by Lucius Emilius Paul us, a Roman general, who was selected to conduct the campaign against the Macedonians in B C. 168. ' - Livy tells us that Paulus went out of the Senate chamber and addressed the people thus: In every circle and truly at every table there are people who lead armies into Macedonia, who know where the camp ought to be placed, what posts ought to be occupied by troops, when and throug-h what pass Macedonia Bhould be entered. They not only determine what is best to oe aone put if anythin is rinno in any other manner than they have pointed out they arraign the consul as if ha were on his trial. After giving his opinion that commanders should be, counseled by skilled and experienced men and by those who are present at the scene of action, Paulus Invited any one who thought himself qual ified to give advice to go with htm into Macedonia at his expense. With a fine sarcasm he added that if this was too much trouble for the critic who preferred the repose of a city life to the toils of war he should not on land as sume the office of a pilot. His parting shot was. The city in itself furnishes abun dance of topics for conversation. Let the critic confine his passion for talking and rest assured that we shall be content with such counsels as shall be framed within our camp. limes and customs change but human nature never. AN AMERICAN PEACE DAY T HE St. Louis ReDublic urn. poses that August 13 he es tablished as Peace Day in the United States. That fay is . selected because it ' was August 13 that the United States Senate ratified eighteen arbitration treat ies with that many countries. The Republic says: Why should not August 13, the day Upon which, with all Europe at war. the senate of the United States rati fied eighteen arbitration treaties, be set apart to be observed as . Peace Day each year throughout the length and breadth of the land? We have a oay lor thanksgiving for the bless ings bestowed on us as a nation. Why should we not establish this new festival, looking, not backward at the harvest of the past, but forward. where the bow of promise spans the horizon or the future? It is urged that such a festival would be a mighty incentive to action. There must be agitation, education, the making of agree ments, the drafting of further treaties, the healing of old wounds. There should be general demand that nations be placed in such re lations to each other that the chances of war will be reduced to a minimum. Men are expected to live peaceably together; why not nations? ' The Republic's suggestion has merit. Inthe face of ridicule, op posed by interests which profit from war. Secretary Bryan per sisted in his effort to place the United States first among nations of the world to officially adopt a peace policy. The eighteen treaties ratified by the senate constitute an olive branch held out ' to the world. They say that neither America nor any of the other eighteen nations will engage upon war until they have paused, to de termine whether the trouble can be settled without bloodshed. It is the common sense way to look at international disputes -he way that men- of intelligence ' look at their own affairs. The Republic is right In saying that President Wilson and Secre tary Bryan desired to attack the J problem of better International re- lations at its source. .That source Is a willingness to discuss the trou ble before tha fight starts. y.toj That, it is a waste of money macadamize roads on which there s a heavy automobile trailic. nas been demonstrated t in a Jtoreef ul n(a,aner on the Hillside Park Drive, lately , constructed " by the city. After only a few weeds' use it was . . . . . x. , , fo.?inat SQr,face he t0 , was giving away in certain, spots, i It would have been economy in the long run to have Jut a hard surface on the entire drive instead of only a portion of it. Letters Frpm the, People (Ceinn-.snlcatloBa sent to Tba Journal for OUblictuoo in this department abould be writ ten oo only one clde of the paper, should wt exceed 3ou words in length and must ba ac companied by tbe name and addreaa of tba sender. If tbe writer doea not desire to bava tbe uaine publUlied, be abould so atate.) "Discussion la tbe greatest of all reform era. It rationalizes ererytbing It touches. It robs principles of all false sanctity and throws them back on their reasonableness. If tbey bare no reasonableness. It' ruthlessly crushes them oat of existence and sets up Its own conclusions la their stead." Wood. row Wilson. Mr. King Says Drys Beaten. Portland, Aug. 25. To the Editor of The Journal Oregon will go wet, two to one, judging from the observations I made on a tour of the state. The European war has upset all calcula tions of the drys. The government is going to levy a $100,000i000 tax on luxuries to offset the loss of xluties, consequently the people will be taxed enough and they will not throw the saloon license money away and add more taxes. The voters are conserva tive and say, "Let well enough alone." W. S. U'Ren, who is a shrewd politi cian, has rejected the Prohibition nom ination because he. knew it would drag him.M .1 . If. i . . v cinvncu, OOIU 1U1UWO XIV, W lu I nlav nolitlna hAttPr than h W kno i that the Prohibition nomination would ! be a millstone around his neck in the 1 political sea. j Apother straw that shows how the : Wind is blowing is the fact that ex Governor Geer and Mr. Brownell, ex president of the state senate, who both worked so hard and put prohibition as the principal plank in their platforms, i were badly beaten in the Republican primaries. These men were very pop ular, but "monkeying" with prohibi tion caused their defeat. The voters, in the face of disturbance and turmoil all over the world, will leave condi- j tlons as they are, rather than Invite j business changes and business con- iracuon witn wnicn iney are not. ia miliar. After all, prohibition makes people so stingy that they will not spend a nickel. And that's what the voters are afraid of, for they know that the "luxuries of life give work to many thousands of men. When people pur chase only the necessaries of life, em ployment is given to but few, but when people purchase luxuries many more have employment. I pity the dryw, but who can help them? Let them work for laws that will provide for pure liquor, rather than destroy the beautt ful cropa of hops and other fruits of God's creation. CHAS. H. KING. Women Who Will Vote Wet. Portland, Aug. 85. To the Editor of The Journal One of the things which many of us dislike about this prohibi tion campaign is the lowering of our ideals of womanhood. The most of us have been taught to look up to women the champions and defenders of purity, honor, -temperance, peace, the home and the nation. Yet nere in Ore gon we have an organization of wom en defending the licensed saloon. Does the saloon stand for any of the above things? I talk with men on this suoject, and some big. red faced, coarse voiced think that I am man says. "Do you eoinsr to give up my pleasure m driqit- ing because som'e fool can't control himself? . Not If I know myself. What is my personal liberty for?" This is in effect what this league of women stand for. My ideal of womankind is too high to permit me to believe that there are many such in Oregon. It is hard to unclerstana airs, uuni- way's point of view. She surely Know that the women owe no thanks to the liquor interests for their enfranchise ment. If the suffrage organizations of this state had come out and said. "Give us the right to vote and we will work and voje for and with the liquor Interests," what would have been the result on election day 7 suppose they try that kind of argument in the east ern states, and see where they land. We are all very glad to read that Mrs. Duniway's family escaped this curse. I gather that she ascribes it to her teaching and to the licensed saloon. Now, I know a number of mothers who tried as hard as they could to teach their children temperance and had the licensed saloon to help them, too. But something was wrong. These mothers lost. It seems to me the mothers in Oregon whose sons have escaped this curse should, as a thank-offering, rise up and vote the liquor business out of the state, - ROBERT GREGG. Republican Endorses Flegel. Clatskanie, Or., Aug. 24. To the Editor of The Journal My friend, the Honorable A. F. Flegel, is the Demo cratic candidate for congress from the third district. As I have known Mr. Flegel for many ' years, I feel that I am in a position to give testimony to his real worth - as a man who is up right, honest, capable and fair in his dealings with his feliowmen, regard less of political affiliations. The labels, Democrat, Republican, Progressive or Prohibitionist, should not be the thought uppermost ln our minds when considering candidates. We should vote for the best man. At the present time we need men at Washington who are thoroughly com petent to grapple with the great prob lems that confront us as a nation. I, with many others who usually vote the Republican ticket, have can vassed the situation carefully and have agreed that Mr.-Flegel is the one man In the race for whom all can safely vote. - I have gladly volunteered my assist ance, without any solicitation upon his part, REV. CHAS. T, M'PHERSON. The $1500 Exemption Bill. Oregon City, Or.. Aug. 21. To the Editor of The -Journal I read a letter from John Blair, of Portland, giving his reasons for thinking this exemp tion Dill wouia carry -just Decauae the Oregonian was fighting it" That will why it should be adopted. E. F.-Riley, I class. , U PURCELL, of PortlanV wrote a very Interesting ! - letter in the Oregon Farmer of August j, Questions. IB, showing the bad effects of this bill, ; La Grande. Or., Aug. 22. To the Ed which I wish everyone could read. It ; tor of The Journal A "foreign is a. bill that comes nearest being per- 1 brewers' association of New York is fectly void of justice of any bill I ever saw. Taxes are supposed to be levied Justly, but-this bill favors ope class, and hurts two. : It makes a distinct division - of the taxpayers, and favors the middle class,- and particularly kurts the - poor class, who are juat A FEW SMILES . At the time of the Volturno 4ia.s for a UtoMrv Atwitlrt fft nor! nin New York newspaper ai acting &s substitute ' for a copy reader who was UL It fell to him to write a head for the story of the disaster. The story was 'full of 'tlTrWoi Touis'e. and iie was told to . condense them all In a biff black line to extend" across the page, leading the paper. Hf thought for some time, tore up several attempts, and finally sub mitted this: "Oh,- Restless Sea!" Everybody's Magazine. A poet was walking with Tallyrand in the street, and at the same time reciting some of his own verses. Talley rand, perceiving at a short distance a man yawning, point ed him out to his friend, saying: "Not so loud; he hears you." A tourist in Ireland, driving along a country .road, drew the jarvey'B at tention to a mis erable looking tat terdemalion by the roadside and re marked: "What a shocking thing it is to see a man In such rags and misery." "Begorra, then, yer honor," replied the driver, with the characteristically Irish desire to put a good face on everything, "that's not from poverty at all, at all. The truth Is that the man's so tlcklesoms that sorra a tailor in the counthry can attempt to take his measure." starting on a home, and have nothing to exempt, by raising the rate of tax on the assessed valuation of their to a frightful extent, to help nla UP Ior Brcal exemptions iven t the middle class and the rich, 1 have talked with a good many men who had not studied this bill carefully. and who thought it would be lust the bill for the poor man, because it would glye him $1500 exemption Just at the time he would need it most, when he was. tirst starting, and when I told tnem they would have no exemption until they had Improvements and per sonal property to exempt; and that a man and his wife that had plenty j could each be exempted $1500, and that his land would be assessed extra to make up for their great exemption, they Invariably condemned the bill as unjust. This bill would help me, but it would hurt all three of my sons and thousands more with them. Therefore, I say that no man that loves Justice Rhmil.1 Qiinnnrt thla Villi fill I"" - 'flS- GEORGE HICINBOTHAM compelled him to raise others of a strictly ecclesiastical type, of momeu- The Uses of Alcohol. ous lmPtoltanc- rn ""compromls- . I inS attitude he maintained under Balem. Or Aug. 21. To the Editor ; cvery Btralnmust always command of The Journal Charles A. King's J a certain admiration even among his latest statement is that alcohol Is a j critics, but its wisdom and enlight valuable medicinal agent. enment, at least from the worldly Away, you German scientists who . I cotic poison! Do you physicians who have declared that alcohol is a false stimulant expect the free-born Amerl- I can people to believe? What though you have experimented 30 years? Back to the woods, you French phy sicians and scientific investigators who declare that the tubercular death rate in France is heaviest In the sec tions where most wine is "consumed! "tVe know better; our champions tel! us that wine drinking in France has solved the problem. Do you think Proacnea wun certain counties, uu. we will believe those 8wiss invest!- th expropriation of tho church prop gators who tell us that alcohol de- ! erty- tn expulsion of the religious or creases efficiency? We will not even ers and tne complete secularization of h.li. rt,o11 Thlr, th. fmm. education he denounced as godless wrfr- liquor champion, because he was silly enough to say 65,000 adults are killed wle dt... each year In the United States by al- j spoliation and persecution from the cohol. The German emperor was hyp- mundane point tf view. He Imposed notized when he made that speech in ! n tbe French clergy a policy of pas whinh h wnmPd tnP Oormpn oa,w ! ve resistance and appealed for the aeainst the use of liauor. W, simnlv won t patronise tne hospitals that have almost quit using alcohol; we will build hospitals of our own,, where we can use all the alcohol we want We know it ia a great medicine! whpr. will thP. frM nrt? 'w ! don't the advocates of the saloon plead its cause on the ground of alcohol being indispensable food? Perhaps ! they will next! This letter of Mr. King's leads us to expect almost any thing. II. G. M'CAIN. The Hunting. Embargo. Corbett, Or., Aug. 24. To the Ed itor of The Journal Recently Govern or West Issued an edict barring hunt ers from the woods during the pres ent dry spell. It is well to exercise every precaution to prevent forest fires, but their origin cannot be laid wholly to the hunters. I would like to ask why hunters were barred, and no' restriction placed on campers and fish ermen, file experienced hunter is far more cautions, from a point of self preservation If nothing more. He knows the danger of being hemmed in or cut off. fromretreat. I venture to say more fires are started by camp ers from the city who are merely seeking outdoor recreation and the novel experience of living a spell in the wilds. I never knew a real hunter and sportsman neglect to dampen and thoroueb.lv extinguish his camDfire be - fore leaving It. This is open season for deer, etc., but the hunter Is denied the privilege of hunting them, while others more careless are at liberty to go in and light fires. The danger Is not removed by keeping the hunters alone out; the fishermen and campers build campfires also. . C. B. DEVERELI Drys in Saskatchewan. Milton, Or,, Aug. 21. To the Editor : of The . Journal In the province of i she have been suppressed by the Wash Saskatchewan, Canada, in which I have . ingtonians as a foreigner from Oregon my home, there are now about 850 local j wno waa "butting in" in the same farmers associations with a central ; ' ,ho tu. rvmhttdtton snpakf. . office at Moose Jaw. In Moose Jaw last r eoruary ai mir luiocuuuu inert were, more than 800 delegates. When ,the question of banishing the bar was put, the whole assembly rose as one man and voted for the prohibition of the retail sale of liquor in the province of Saskatchewan. None of these dele gates was selected with any consider ation for the attitude he would as sume on this question. They did not even know that they would be called upun iu vote vn iv. taa ui mee ue- i egates was more or less ox a leader in ; his own district They were men. who circulating wet literature in our state, Does Mi Bishop object to this Interfere 1 ence in our local affairs by the far off . aliens'of JJew York? i a few - years ago the writer heard j Mrs. Duniway lecturing iiv the state of Washington on equal rights. Should PERTINENT COMMENT UMALL " CHANGE Please others and 'you may please yourself. . ' . ' . . . :' It looks as if It might be Nippon tuck at Kiao Chau. . a Beware of people whose politeness Is inclined to slop over. a The heyday of youth isn't in it with tbe payday of manhood. --mm Better' a $10 wedding suit than a 110,000 breach, of promise suit. Many a politician has found it easier to make a record than to explain it. a a Even the sarcastic woman cuts out her cutting remarks when' she has an ax to grind. a e One wonders what all these military critics do for a living when there is no war In progress. With the war doubling the price of tin. the full dinner pail Is catching It both Inside and out. a We anxiously await the day when all the knockers and kickers will get together and fight it out. a a Still, Job's patience wasn't taxed to the limit if nis next door neighbor didn t own a 11.98 phonograph Don't think because a woman de clares she has the best husband in the world that she has any Idea of meeting mm in heaven. . The dedication of that Swedish-Nor wegian peace monument, which took place a week ago last Sunday, is not likely to have any effect so far as shortening the war is concerned AN ESTIMATE From the New York Sun. History will no doubt coincide Vith his contemporaries in seeing In Pope Pius X two personalities. Regarding the man hlmBelf, Giuseppe Sarto, there will be no two opinions. Universal reverence and affection will be ac corded to him. His amiability of dis position, his simplicity of life, benev olence of purpose and salntliness of spirit will have recognition at all hands and will rank him among the most beautiful characters in the long line of Roman pontiffs. As a man and a priest the respect in which he was held was extended rar beyond the limits . of his own flock. a - a Regarding his career as pope there will always be much controversy. That It was animated by intensely religious ideals will not be disputed, but there will probably be di&cussion to the end of history as to his accord in spirit and intellect with tho age in which he lived. From the very opening of his pontificate-he was confronted with severe trials. Grave Issues of politics were forced on him and his conscience Plnt r vlew nave Deenna no ?0U,Dt will continue to be subjects of de- To the world in general the most portentious feature of his reign was the estrangement or the Vatican from the French republio because of the law of separation and the expulsion of the religious orders from France. From the outset the pope refused to hold any terms with the leaders of the a'nti-clerical movement which con trolled French destinies. He was will ing to negotiate regarding modifica tions of the Concordat, had he been ap- far upon all religion and morality in support of the laity in a spirit of mar- tyrdom. His course was watched by the world with many doubts. Even within the church organization in France there was much misgiving as to the re- 6ults' though haly any ? CtTA , or opposition. Pius remained deaf to ai ugtion of yielding "elying on ground with unflinching faith even to the point whereat he was charged with NOW IS THE TIME By John M. Oskison. When hard tims hit a city, the workers know that tho time is ripe for living economically, when crop failure hits a farming community Its members know what it 's to eat less and wear cheaper clothes. When America realizes what the Eu ropean war means in the way of de creased production and a startling in crease of demand for capital, we will see that it is time for us to practice thrift ' ' A newspaper tells me this morning that In another month I won't "be ablo to buy any imported champagne. (I Bhould worry!) An expert of finance and trade says that the apples anr. j sugar and rice and tea and potatoes I i bu' will be more costly because of the war ln Europe; and I should Indeed worry about that! From many directions the 5raln on our resources Is going to be felt. The prices, of needful things will go up many have already responded to thO; theory that ttie unusual demand will cause a shortage. Demands for fresh capital to . finance the war needs of Europe will come to us in increasing volume. j frnm nfhar atM ar doine htre to- day? Ella M. Finney haa shown by a re cent letter that if ahe were raising "the beautiful poppy" Instead of hops she would defend the use arid sale of opium as she does now the sale of booze. If ehe were in the undertak ing business would she fight against a ti i. nanltaHr nrs u a'trPU n 11 ftrfl Tl t in Vf'll i tlons or nv laws likely to lesen ,. j..h v. m.ir hr hnsi- ness ; Gur nati0nal emblem Is supposed to ; eDresnt eVerv citizen of the United and one of tife wet writers that we brand every habitual drunkard witn a little flag. Waa it, her plan to ah6w the in dividual responsibility of every man and woman in" the nation who has a vote? If eo, it waa a happy thought. Mb. Ruth saya "custom makes laws" and that "all laws are simply the cus toms of tbe people coined into legal Verbiage. Ia It custom to pay taxes without law, and doe custom make our tax and revenue laws? Does cus tom, make our fish- and - game laws? Did custom make law abolishing hu- AND NEWS IN BRIEF OREGON SIDELIGHTS The Brownsville Times believes that "now is the time for the nations of the western hemisphere to form a hol low square and attend to their jown business." Pendleton East Oregonian: The pop ularity of the bund concerts again proves the wtsdom of holding such summer concerts. Furthermore it ! food training for the band and every iv e town needs a good band. Water has risen to the top of the drill hole in Athena's second artesian well and the expert in charge of opera- nuns utiicves a. guener win uo ; opened. The drill had gone down about 300 feet when the flow began. j a a -Coqullle Sentinel: Coquille has the aspeet of the traditional deserted vil lage this week, while eo many of our Citizens are improving the gloriously golden houra by camping in the for ests, by the streams and at the ocean shore. Never were days more perfect than these. Coqullle people can in a short walk or ride reach places that are well the envy of summer resorts, which people of the plains and cities often travel thousands of miles to take advantage of. The growth of thrift and other vir tues at Weston is clearly indicated by the Leader, which testifies: "Wes toa has a right to preen itself over its peaceful .atmosphere, having managed so tar to jret througrn tne narvest sea Bon without a single arrest. Harvest t'otvviviality has usually led each year to the collection of a few fines by the city, but this season most of he boV are both economical and discreet. They ; want to know next winter what they have done with their summer s wages. OF POPE PIUS X obstinacy. Passing over all the details of the struggle, it cannot be denied that in a certain way the church in France has greatly profited by it. Though losing Ub vast wealth and the state Buhsidy o pay its elergy, and though having the use of its churches and the requisites of its ceremonial only on sufferance, it has ben visited with a notable wave of piety. Hun dreds of thousands have become prac tising Catholics who before were luke warm; the attendance at churches has more than doubled. Finally, the active spirit of hostility which undeniably af fected officials in the early days of separation has disappeared and some thing more than toleration is accord ed by the government to the church. The broad campaign which the pope instituted against "modernism" in the church was the second in notability, though really, perhaps, the first in im portance, of his great trials. In this he aimed to stem the movement among i t i i u i n nemo iiu icauitci Cf IU I PtUU" cile the teachings of modern science with th(se of Holy Writ and sacred tradition. Conceiving this tendency to be a preat evil, to be in fact the un dermining of faith with an insidious materialism, he placed it under the most sweeping censures, denouncing against it thehigher excommunication not only for writers or speakers pro claiming the false doctrine but also for their followers and even for those who gave them a hearing. What the actual results of this, as it has been called, reactionary course may be, it is impossible to say. A few noted In tellects were cut off from the church by their rerusai to retract tneir views, s Bound country, and not finding a vet But probably a generation must elapse , sel bound to Pugt sound, bought the before it can lie. judged whether the j Orbit at a very reuKonable fiK :re nnl decree has had any serious effect upon took her north. Thy wold her at T.im Cathollclsm or even whether the mod- water. . .Shortly afterward ki.o w er'nlstic Impulse has been effectively killed in the fold. In matters of administration Pius She wus taken bck to the sound. oHd X was a notable reformer. Much of j d with piling, and rent to Honolulu, his work is of high utility. He re- , lisabl-d in a r.ulc. si.o drilled into organized the Vatican finances. He re- j Ksiiuimalt. wht-re the Hu l.io i s l;ay moved English and American Catholl-- j company bought hrr for Hutu). Mr. clsm from the jurisdiction of the Prop- ' Ieonurd bought her of the Hudson 'h aganda, making of them true nation.il ' 1?a:' company, and, buying a loud of rhurches. lie purified church music j f f ;l1 at Nanainio, he orought it to bv forbidding the use of secular forms, j Portland for the Manufacture of gas. He appointed a commission to revise . T- J- IJ-ycr. It. writli K of tin- new en. the canon law and another to restore . terprise lu the Weekly Oregonian. the pure text or the Vulsrate as St. j under date or Januaiy- :1. HOD. Bays: Jerome, left it. HC pushed ahead tho ;' "The works of th Portland t la.-dislit reconstruction of the Curia to accord , company, now in proci of erection, with modern needs. f'111 ir f"11 oPrnron by April 1. The reign of Pius was Just a few 1 A portion of the, miuhinery. now over- 1v. mor than 11 vpars In duration. It was a term of stress snd tribula tion to which the pope showed hlm- self equal at least In courage and will power. He wilh not rank among th great wearers of the trip! crown, but v. m itv in l,i,trv .. ,.. gained the respect of Christendom m his own day and left his Impress Mrongly on his time. TO PRACTICE THRIFT Unless we are thrifty during this . period of war and the following period of reconstruction, we Are likely to find . ourselves In the position of the prodl- ' pal spender who does not alter his wav ) of living when the mills shut down or : the crop falls. Certainly we shall miss one of tho very bst lnvptment oppor tunities a people ever had. When the exchanges of the country closed, prices of the Very befit securi ties had dropped nearly to the level of , the panic market of 1907; and that was a reVel far below actual values. ! w nen trie marKcts reopen there is go ing to be a long period of low prices. for the competition for capital in our ! markets will be so keen that the own ers of money can command exceptional returns for its use. Hut you won't le able to make any profit out of sn intention to save. What Is wanted now and will be wanted still more as the war progresses, is the cash of the people who have been able to save. Qut of the resources of the nation's thrifty will come the relief from excessive prices, as well as the salvation of the struggling people of France. man slaveijy? Are the laws against gambling, prizefighting; opium smok ing and lotteries made by custom? Any answers that the liquor forces might make to these questions would look as silly to us as the questions do to them, but if the questions and answers are the means of attracting the -attention of the honest but yn.'onr well known mundane ptage some concerned votfcrs and start them to ; three and forty years ago, of shbwahop thinking on the great issue, our cause lineage? Is safe. "UNCLE JARVE" EMlOH. Who came, like fearle Iocblnvar, from out the golden west and made the Interest on "Last Half." j Great White Way ait up and say, "Pro- Orand P.onde, Or.. Aug. 22. To the batum e8t"7 , Editor of The Journal Please let me! Wno 8htu, " stoclt M Shakespeare know through vour columns if it is to. but !Be,J lhe Hall of Fame till legal to collect interest oii last half of Belaco on toe boards wrote taxes, paid before the firt of Sep- hlh and wl'Je her name? . r ternber. M. PETERSEN. 1 who made good In Us wild west This question cannot be mo an-1 now ln wnfn le Birl who swered as to coverall counties of thiajfoUe4 the sheriff for the man ,(who, at so.h f.oi!.etim ia iri ,i., WM no duke nor earl)? the law as it stands, but in some coun- Who " known to all the footlight ties Judicial action has been taken tOifanf. in Jfcht.and forty state the avoia intercut payment on last half. notably in Multnomah. Th county commissioners in certain other coun ties have adopted the status that has been brought to pass in Multnomah. In the case of fbe present Inquirer, all depends upon the action if any, taken by the courts in Yamhill county or by the county commissioners. IN EARLIER DAYS By Fred LockJey. 8omelme ago. while vlaitlns at the home of a pioneer resident of Port land, the subject came up of the light of other days. "I don't-suppose there are many Portland homes where you could find lamp of this kind.", said the lady of the house, as she handed me a heavy metal lamp consisting of it an iron barrel with a double burner. T vuv oi uie ota wnaie-ou lamps which on special occasions we used In place of the tallow candles. Here Is our. oia candle laolfl, in which, as ia T girl, I molded most of the caudles we ' used. In the '60s the Oregon newspa--pera used to carry among their Cali fornia advertisements the announce ment by Stanford Bros., proprietors of1: the Pacific Oil and CampUene works . at San Francisco, of their celebrated 'burning fluid,' adapted to all kinds of fluid lamps. Soon a new form of lamp came into use. In place of tnt iron whale-oil lamp with the double-barreled burner, this new lamp had a glass bowl and a marble or mttal base, so that it would not tip over. The oil was not properly refined, and we used to have some exciting times when the flame shot up as if it was utiout to explode. In fact, the lamps did ex plode every once in a while Today we press a button and flood our homes with light. When I was a Krl. trim ming the lamp wickrs, uan.iij; the chimneys and rilling the lamps was as much a part of the household routlnt as scouring, the ste l kiuvea and forks with brick dust or v.v.,Hiiiig the dishes. We didn't know anything about the light-producing posibuitics of carbon ized filaments, platinum, osmium, tan talum and all the other i leuunls which we of today take us a mutter of course." H. L. Leonard, who utill lives here and on sunny days nuy be etn on the streets.' is the man to whom Portland' is indebted for its first real system of municipal lighting. A few barrels of whale oil from New Htdford. Mass., or the humble tallow candle might do for towns of minor linpoi turioe, but he had a vision of Portland as the metropolis of the west at a time, too, when San Francisco had 10 people to Portland's one. The only cities west of the Rocky mountains in 1S59 to be Illu minated with gas were Sari Francisco and Sacramento, in talking with Mr. Leonard recently he told me of visit ing San FranClsco and of investigating the gas-lighting system thre. -He de termined that Portland should be illu minated with gas. He a(.d his Itre iong friend and long-time partner, John Gren. applied to the city council for a gas franchise, which was Kranted. 0reKon waa 'no t yet a state, they were required to neoure a franchise from the territorial government also. They were granted their tranchlise by tho territorial legislature, and-In 1859 they were rudy to begin building their gas works. John Groen went to Trenton, N. J.. and ordered the machinery and iron pipe, while Mr. l.eonai'i went to Vic toria, where lie touKi.t Hie brig Orbit to carry coal from Nana'.mo. The Orbit was brought around. the ilorn In 1819 by a party of miners. Iaie in the fall of IS 49 siie wan purchased at San Francisco by li. Shaw, Colonel I. X. Kbey and some others, uho. anx ious to secure pashurfo to th Puget caught in havy weuliitr on the Colum bia bar and Abandoned. Bho .birtcd i into Haker's bay and was recovered. Que ln Ba" ' rpncisco. nas not yet sr- I rived. The company hav already erected spacious and siihatiini 11 brick i buildings for the retort ho.if.-A, puri fying house, mtpr room aid "office. they have al.-o bilt n u hsrf. with : storHM! bed. for their cna 1 , of which hr have received th ir fir.t cargo from the N:r.imo mine on V ancouvfr ;1;iml ' ,a!,M ron " ,,ff'7eKnt ?? I two miles lias arrived nd will be Jabl ! hm anon as the weather Is t a vora !!. i Tho rapa ity of the works will supply ! 4',oo0 cubic, feet a day. Tln work 1 were made at Trenton, N. J., and make on pgtrr ;iie shipment of over ZtO ton." Ity the pii'nmer of th fish- , oil lamps were superceded In most of t the prores-i stores on Front utrent. In 1376 i-onard A- jfJren sold the ; water work to the qlty. and In 1892 ; they sold the nag company. i By John W. Carey. ! Who made her f irnt appearance on Girlie from the Oolden Vest? Step up and meet Blanche Bates. . , New Use f Electric Fan. - -Any electric fan can be converted. Into, disinfecting apparatus by the us of a nitw device to beettaeheI tr it frame containing av fluid , which is drawn by a wick into tbe air current a. - .- - ;-- ' :' . ; HOO'S H00 . - 6 . Hy .John W. Carey. ' V A TWP : it " 1 . 4XS : M -5 Is AT Hi - 1 "v4 M- J. VtM 1 (- -it r.A V