THE Z OREGON DAILY T3U. .:,D, I.IO:'DAY ir.'IZNING. AUGUST 31. 1314. THE JOURNAL C . JACItStlh a-a .FnblUner fahtiaaa erarr evaalnf (eacaet Bandar) an '.eaerfSsedar aaamlng at Tba Journal BaUd. umaawar ana x aouu ata., roruaao. ur. a-aiared at tae poatof flea at Portland, V-, tot trtaamlaaioa ttraaxa tba mail M aaeoad was natter. IjCUtf UOIl Mala 8 ITS; Hoa.A-061. All . dartaaeita raacaed by tbaae Dumber, Tall u vparaior araai uptnam jvi wa. VU1UUM AOVKkHSINO KKFaitatCNTATl VK , benjamla A Keatoor Co., Bmnawlek Bid., 8 irta Kaw Xofaj 121S Fsupia'a ' - aa bids.. Chicago. - - -. " Sabacrlptlea tarsia by bmU or ta a ay ad raa 1 tba GnJUd Staiaa ar ataxia Cm faar 5 OO j Una steett f 0 BUNDAT Ose rtar .830 ( Ona monta......$ . . .. DULY AMD SO DAI ., -i Ona raar...... 87.50 On month. $ . When You GoAwy Have The Journal sent to you Bummer address. B- They are spirits of devils working signs, which go forth unto the kings of the whole world, to gather them together unto the war of the great day of Ood Almighty. And they gathered them together Into the place which le called in Hebrew "Armageddon." Rer. xvL 14-16. -a TURN ON THE LIGHT LONG ago. and many times, The Journal pointed out that there was lack of system In the conduct of Multnomah county affairs. Long ago, and many times. The Journal declared that loss, waste and extravagance resulted from this lack of system, to the great cost and detriment of taxpayers. . But In the main, these charges fell on unresponsive ears. The public was busy with Its private af fairs. It had no thought of public affairs. Now, there is confirmation of all and more than all The Journal brought to public attention. An impartial investigation by two pub lic bodies finds that there Is lack of system, that there is duplication, that there la waste of public money, that there was purchase of insect poison at $2 a gallon when ; TREACHERY; TO OREGON s i.i i . - . : fce .telr iir i, f . th: .i t -a .next . 6urri" i- - . -t Lieasure -will -l3 to-Be-, . . : vorld neutrality seat. -r-. . 13 teen established beyon-i cc laictjon tnat tne cnier iaciox; tLe tremendous growth of arma- It has fceen virtually proven tuat men who profit from the man ufacture of' munitions of war , are TILL fighting ithe' rivers and harbors bill, the , Oregonian , ; yesterday; - But it appears now to be obvlon that sentiment f the -cour.t. will support a reasonable measure, excluding the cork. The amet ..- ment of the current bill Is practicable. v , If. Senator Lane and Senator Chamberlain will - shift their . sui r ort of a - bill tainted with pork that cannot pass to a modified measure th.t ought to pass, they will be commended at home. - -. . ; ' There is no way to misunderstand these words. The Oregon e?n- atorsare advised to abandon tha pending; bill and go over to Bur-., cMefly responsible for tremendous ton, Borah and the other flllhnsterers. They are advised to turn expendUm by nations. - These their backs on the senators who have consented 7 to 'the placing of meQ aro actuated br QO patriotic the : Columbia jetty on a continuing contract, and make an allowance, mouve They are In the business of more than 15,000,000 for that work. i It Is advice by a Portland for the money and their business a, m k ull . Al A at A ik A a Ja,A.a, ... e.al at a " J -a - vxyci, iu spite m ins more inan )b,vuu,uuv proviaea lor vreeuxi m the bill, for the Oregon 'senators to scuttle the pending measure and Join, forces with a minority faction, who are trying to defeat rivers and narbors legislation, - - $m-S-: If Chamberlain and Lane should , take such a course all the real friends of a liberal rivers and harbors policy, would turn against Oregon. This state would be delivered bodily Into the hands of the men who are fighting waterways. Does anybody think for one min ute that Oregon can retain its more than 16,000,000 in the bill if the Oregon senators join forces with Burton1 who wants' the amended bill to provide ''but $12,000,000 for the whole country? ' ; : . r- m r EW SMILES Her admire - I will not grow unless there : is use i for what they manufacture. -:. But wh blame makers of can marry C ' J udge. , a wallowed bard, pulled at hi collar,, and finally made up bla mind. -. -Lllllaii,"; ' he ; said desperately, 'let's ' get married." - . Ulllan'a bored i ex-, presslon vanished. "All right, but who can you When Police Constable Ponderoof entered the police station to dgn off night . duty he reported the sudden fall of a chimney on bis 'beat in the wee sma' hours. . i .. -A n y .. idea' what caused it to- falir'.iln- - j non more than . manufacturers of . Quired the sergeant. ; the pistol? That instrument of death Is a common nuisance lc times - of, peace. Its manufacture and sale ' for profit should be pro hibited at all times. If a nation needs revolvers in the hands of soldiers or peace officers, the na- The Oregonian says It If fighting the bill on the ground that- j tion itself should supply them. Will the world rid- itself of the menace of revolvers - and . arma ments? Mr. Wells has outlined a large program, but it is a pro- Letter From the People there is graft in the measure. What part of the more than $6,000 000 that Oregon is to get is graft? In the bill, as Burton is to amend it, what Oregon appropriations are to be cut out, and what reduced? , The proposed Burton bill would appropriate $12,000,000 for the J gram ; ivhlch must be carried out whole country. Oregon could no more get $6,000,000 under such a jsome time if civilization Is to sur- total aDDroDriation than could Mount Hood be Ditched into the Pa- I vive. cific. What part of the Oregon allowance then would the Oregonian eliminate in order to free the bill from what It galls graft? Would it take It all for Portland, or would it leave some for Celilo, come for the upper Columbia, some for the Willamette, some for Coos Bay, and if so, how much? r ' r The pending bill places the Columbia Jetty on a continuing con tract and allows $5,100,000 for the purpose. By the arrangement, United States engineers say the jetty can be completed in three years. If Oregon joins the Burton filibuster and accepts Its pro rata cut in appropriations, would the Oregonian have the continuing con tract abandoned, and. permit the original million for the jetty to stand? Major Mclndoe said with an "allowance of only a million a year, the jetty cannot be completed in less than six years. In Join ing with Burton, does the Oregonian Insist on the latter plan? Does any citizen of Oregon think for one minute that the pending bill can be cut from $53,000,000 to $12,000,000 without Oregon be ing forced to make some such surrender as abandonment of the con tinuing contract for the Columbia Jetty? The Oregonian claims there is graft in the pending bill. It is now time for it to specify where the graft is, beginning with Oregon. The United States engineers have approved .the entire bill as It now i . . n. .? 1 1 nnti aaJBBBBBaaaa a 'The chlrabley was In a very shaky con dition - for a - long time," answered Ponderoof. : "Was there any heavy trafflo pass ing along the street at the timer' "Only roe, sergeant.", ' (OommeolCatlAna Ban n. nm publication la thla department etxrald be wrtt- ? ?5.'r OD 13 of tba paper, abould awt azoeed top worda la leocUi and mnat be ac companied by the name and addresa of tba r"! me writer does not desire ta save the name pnbliabed. be abould so auta. "DfaeneaioB fa tba nvifMt n nfm. It ratlonaUaea everxtblng It toacnaa. It frtraiiKi m an iaiaa aancaty ana thrown tbea back oa their reaaonableneaa. It ""J bare no reaaonableneaa. It rntbleaalr ercabaa them eat of existence and sets np lta vw swuGiuatona in ueur ateaa." woocrow vV luon. The Hunting Season. Koseburg. Or.. Aue. 28. To the Rdl- 'w ia journal since the an nouncement of Governor West's nroe lamatlon about two weeks ago, declar ing tne nunung season closed until arter tne rains have eliminated the ex treme rire Hazard confronting the tim . "Ever see any big snowstorm when you was young, under said the wit behind tha counter. , "Sure I did.- cackled the old man. "I seen some whoppers. X re member one where th' snow wus six feet above my head. Yes sir." "Oh. nonsense, uncle. That's in possible. There never was such a snow." "It's true, I tell you." "It couldn't have been." "Yes, 'twas. Six feet above my head. I guess I ought to know, I wuz down the cellar at th' timer' "Now," said the voluble salesman. "here's . a piece - of goods that speaks for itself." "All right," inter rupted a weary cus tomer. ; "Suppose you keep quiet for a couple of minutes and give it a chance!" If J&J ber Of the State. I have, Tint in A aAirornl stands with the exception of two small appropriations totaling $100,- articles in different papers of the state 000. Are the engineers grafters? Is General Kingman, chief of en- I evereiy criticising hla action and set- glneers, a grafter? Is Major Morrow a grafter? Is Colonel McKin stry a grafter? Is the Oregonian the only honest institution in the United States? 4 The pending bill passed the house, at about $48,000,000. Are the members who passed it by a large majority grafters? All the Ore- ung rortn claims aa to the small amount of damage done as a result of tne nunters carelessness. .There have been nearly 100 flree in the timbered districts of Dous-La ty alone, so far this season, and I venture to say that the amount of loss It could be bought for less, that gon representatives voted for it. Are they grafters? Are the mem- J from these fires has been many times more was bought than necessary, that no attempt was made to buy it at a lower figure, and that in general the whole county system Is antiquated, ragged, irresponsible, Ineffective and very costly. The folly has gone on for years. Nobody knows how much public money has- been wasted In the pro bers of the senate who are patiently striving to pass the measure grafters? What is the use of sending men to Washington to struggle for ap propriations if men and newspapers in Oregon fight appropriations? Why talk of sending J. N. Teal or any other man, and why send sen ators and congressmen to strive for waterway appropriations if their efforts are obstructed by such utterances as those of the Oregonian at home? The editorials of the Oregonian are being used by the filibuster- greater than the value of all the deer in all of Oregon. I am not decrying the bunting of game. But I do be lieve that every man who stops to fig ure one moment on the value of the timber to every man, woman and chfTd In the state, will soon see that it should not be sacrificed for what sport and deer meat there are to be got. The stumpage value of the timber Is about 60 cents per thousand. It costs PERTINENT' COMMENT AP NEWS 1N BRIEF BMALL CHAXGB t Tha nude truth sometimes needs aa Immunity bath. . Whv not ault aeeklnr a nosltlon and look for a job? - -, - : .. . ... ; w m -u - - - Soma detectives tnr to dlasniisa their breath with cloves. When a noet rets ud In tha world ha moves down from the attic. . .. . -. . . . . a a . , , . How particular is a bald man con cerning the care of his hair! ... - - x : - - The man who mart-iea a nrettv rirl la apt to get thehort end of It It he An engagement may not be as ol as marriage from some points of view. but it la a great deal better from some ethers. v - mm - (. One kind of a boneless fool Is the chap who poses as a "good fellow" ana spenas more money on nis inenai man ne gives to nis wire. And many a successful business man can remember when be was a country noy ana tils old fashioned: , mother pinned her apron on him and made him churn. . , It's "Poor Old Tom!" for Linton, to be sura, but he might be worse off. He might have come on oyer and won tne cud and then the war mlKht nave broken out Just after that, and then his own people mightn't have cared a wnoop waetner na a won it or not. ' ' Oregon siDEiioirra 7 j'l " - ' , " " aWsbBaBBassBaBa The -Salem ' Statesman's stt ategtst gives it as his opinion that tha Ger mans' took Longwy the short way, , 'a serifes of aeroplane flights will be an attraction of the Benton County fair, to be held at CorvaUis. September It. it nd v -1 - Tillamook now has a" curfew ordi nance, -effective on and after Septem ber l. The light plant wnisue wm be sounded at I o'clock p. m, , . i ? .-.,,. a . . - r- ' The Oatette Times calls for disarm ament of the Juvenile powers in wr vnltli it aavs children who own air guns "fire In any direction regardless of 0e destruction.-" . ' ." ..-l - i Hertniston Herald: This haa been the dryest season in years all over the country. Thanks ' to a government backing with an immense reservoir, wa have as much water as any year, . 'According to Mlltonlans who are Cuoted in the Pendleton East Oregon ian, a clever deaf and dumb magasine subscription solicitor recently "took almost $50 out tof Milton In the course of a day and got away without leav ing any trace oeiund. Drewsey News: The Drewsey Recla mation company at its annual meeting elected J. L. gits president, I. M. Davis secretary treasurer. I. H. Holland. S. S. Williams and J. L. Sits directors. This company's ditch, nine miles long, with a tunnel 600 feet long. Is com pleted and the company is out of debt. j IN EARLIER DAYS By; Fred Locklry. COMMENT ON CONGRESS everybody would be benefited, that voted the saloons out of Oregon City and the law is as well enforced as any prohibitory law on our statute books. I defy Mr. Cotton or anyone else to show one instance where a man spent his money over the bar and his family was happier on account of lt I re cently made a trip over different towns in Oregon. I saw more drunk men in one day in a small town where they had a saloon than I have seen in Ore gon City since the first of last Jan uary. It does not help legitimate busi ness, for even Mr. Cotton knows If a man spends his money for booze the merchants do not get it, and the tax payers have to pay many thousands of dollars caused by the open saloon. M. YODER. about 111 tormt th. ttawn I i.a OI l.t8WW! .r'"",uu" ui cess. There is no way to find out, ers at Washington to help beat the rivers and harbors bill. The which means that about fio.eo goes I Sole ldea"-' the '-real temper! But enough has been gained by t"ltlauu UBU""r vummerce nas receivea miormauon irom nu- - wie way oi ance- Bhtt and her league represent. I thought a word of reply migbt not be amiss. I am old enough to have carried a musket through three years of the Civil war, consequently X know something of what was meant when It was said "A question was never set tled until it was settled right." We have been trying Mrs. Dunlway's plan for a good many years, and yet we are, according to statistics, drinking more liquor per capita than ever be fore. Mrs. Duniway says we are obsessed by this idea of statewide prohibition. I agree with her, we are; and we are calllnsr on Mrs. Duniway, with her league, with all the saloonkeepers, the brewers, the Democrats, the Repub licans, the Prohibitionists, the Cath olics.. the Methodists, the Baptists, the Congresrationalists, the Presbyterians. the Friends, the Universallsts and the other churches of whatever name, the drunkard, the man who is down and: out, every man and woman of thia great state of Oregon, to Join with us for statewide and nationwide prohibi tion of the liquor traffic. And when we have tried that as long as we have tried the old way, and find it is as much of a failure, we can easily slide downhill again to our pres ent condition. Now if Mrs. Duniway is not too much "obsessed" with her own idea, will she please tell us how much the saloons and the breweries of the state would give to have her idea adopted in this state and every state now arising to throw off the yoke of the liquor traffic? F. W. TASKER. Scouts the "Temperance" FLan. Portland. Aug. 29. To the Editor of The Journal Having seen in the col umns of a Portland evening paper of Thursday a call to the citizens of Or egon, over the signature of Mrs. Ab igail Scott Duniway, to give up the prohibition or tne Mark Sullivan In Collier's. The curse of congress is cheapness, Inefficiency, buncombe, devotion to private and local Interests, indiffer ence to the general public good of the nation. The intellectual average of the lower house and of the senate also has become lew. The quality of the average congressman is well il lustrated by a booklet used as a cam paign document by Congressman Charles Oordon Edwards of Savannah, Oa. He Is serving his eighth year in congress. As congressmen go, he is not the poorest specimen. Four pic tures of himself he puts in the book let. One is entitled "Edwards, the. man wno Maae it rossioie;" another, "Congressman Edwards, Pleading for Harmony." Some of the things he says about himself, in order to get himself reelected, are not calculated to make an American proud of con gress. He says: "It is in humble obedience to this duty which I feel I owe to the people of the first congres sional district of Georgia" that he is running for reelection. Bunk I He is running because he wants the office and the payl There is this promise in the metaphor of pork and pie: "There will be no 'second table' for any coun ty so far as I am concerned." Mark this appeal to sectional prejudice: "Has advocated and favors fair pensions for worthy Confederate veterans and their widows." But on another page: "Opposed Union pensions by his vote and by a speech on the floor of the house." .i , merous Waahincton sanrMs that tha Orocrnnian'a ffirv, ta anrorliKF laoor ana supplies on every 1000 feet tu uuotuciai .uujsauuu io I A " IV .,7 ".ir"' . " " cut And we ought not to take chances rant a further Inquiry. , The in vestlgating bodies were without power to compel the attendance of witnesses, and we have the spec tacle of refusal by the architects to present Information respecting the costly changes and other facts regarding the courthouse. It is a strange pasa when -the people of a county are not permitted to know what has been done with their money in the building of their courthouse. It is extraordinary when the people are required to foot the bills but are denied the Information as to what the bills are for. it is a gooa time to nave a house cleaning in Multnomah coun- ocuaiuio m viuer aiai.es ana alienating mem irom suppon oi uregon on this wealth going ud in smoke. projects In the MIL . The Oregonian made a bitter attack on a Flor-. I Deer hunting, morover, is better in Ida project. It was a project which had the approval of the army I IaU than ln he summer. The game engineers who vinltn1 th nrnnnaori 1 m nrnvom on t anA maria, a iwrgnnol I " in newer pnysical condition. The inspection. Sparkman of Florida Is chairman of the rivers and harbors com mittee of the house and Fletcher of Florida is on the commerce com mittee of the senate. These men will probably be on the confer ence committee If the pending bill passes. They have been friendly to the Columbia river and to the Oregon projects.: But the denunci ations by the Oregonian of the Florida project have done much to anger these men. It is one of the handicaps the Oregonian has thrown upon the Oregon senators in their efforts to do service for Oregon. Do Portland and Oregon business men think the Oregoni- an's fight on the rivers and harbors bill is a good thing for this state? It is almost unthinkable that an Oregon newspaper would take a course so destructive to the material Interests of Oregon. It seems Incredible that it would make a fight which must have for its fruit, if successful, the postponement of the completion of the Columbia ty. It is a favorable time for the Jetty to a date at least six years hence, citizen to have full and complete No wonder that all over Portland it is whispered by business Information. It is -high time for I men that the Oregonian has gone mad In its craze to elect Booth and some official body with power to I defeat Chamberlain. Men are saying to one another every day that the Oregonian Is actually trying to beat rivers and harbors legislation ln order to be able to say afterward that Chamberlain and Lane are without power in the senate. They are saying every day in this town tion brought out by the unofficial that the Oregonian is willing to sacrifice all the waterway Interests committee's investigation? there is of Oregon in a puny and puerile effort to make campaign flapdoodle abundant proof that the protests for the use of Its private candidate for senator. made and many times reiterated The Oregonian occasionally throws kisses at the rivers and har- by The Journal In the past were bors, but they are the kisses of treachery. It throws occasional authentic and based on disagree- kisses at the state of Oregon, but they are the kisses of betrayal unscramble the eggs to insert-the probe. Out of the Inadequate informa- reason that the people hunt ln Auarust is that It is at the beginning of the season, n is necessary ror them to get Into the woods at ithat time before the deer become so wild that the hunt er cannot get within a mile of them. If tne opening of the season were post poned to October, the deer would be tame, ana when the city man goes out to bunt he would stand some chance of getting one. Also, it Is practically Impossible to hunt any deer success fully at this time of the year. The smoke ln the woods precludes the dos- Biuiiny oi seeing tne deer more than a few hundred yards. I think Governor West should be highly commended for the action he has taken. Every foot of merchantable timber means a dollar or two to the timbermen of the state and $10 to $11 to tne peopie or tne state. The state appropriates $76,000 averv two years for maintaining the state bureau of forestry, whose duty it is to see tnat these lands are patrolled. If the state has that much Interest in It, it ought to have the further Interest or keeping hunters out of the timber when there is danger of fire. A SUBSCRIBER. the motto, In God We Trust.' be re stored to the coins from which it was stricken under the Republican admin istration. The motto was restored." Do the people of Georgia really swal low this sort of thing? Unhappily, it 1s necessary to admit that this sort of cheap and shallow demagoguery Is more common among the Democratic congressmen from the south than elsewhere. There are pages and pages of nis record ln getting pie: "Introduced in the past dozens oi southern war-claim bills. "Secured a public building site foi Statesboro. "Secured a publlo site for Waynes boro. "Has helped to distribute latest and most improved cotton and other seed. "Has furnished nearly every rural school of the district with a large United States wall map, ln order that the greatest good from these valuable maps would result to the greatest number. Instead of sending them to the 'favored few'." And so on ad infinitum. He calls himself "The Plowboy of Tatnall," and Bays of his opponent: "He can t out country the plowboy." Finally, he enumerates as one of the reasons for reelection that: "He delivered a speech urging that There is nothing so hopeless to an observer of congress as the lack of publlo information about it There, is literally no periodical In the United States which even attempts to give an account of the-'work of the government at Washington. In London the "Times" and one or two other daily papers give dally . practically a complete steno graphic report of the work of parlia ment, and this is read each morning by some hundreds of thousands of the people of England. With us congress does not meet in our largest city. For the New York newspapera to print an equally complete account of the work of congress would Involve prohibitive telegraph tolls. The same is true of every other large city. Washington la a city of only about 300,000, of whom about half are colored. It has not enough population to Justify the daily papers of that city ln printing an ex tended account of the work of con gress for local consumption only. Tho result la that dally papers throughout the country, quite naturally, expect their Washington correspondents and their expensive telegraph bills to give them primarily that kind of Washing ton news which is of local Interest the appointment of postmasters, local river improvements and the like. There Is no weekly paper which even" attempts to record as much as ona one-hundredth of the important activ. itles of congress and the government. To anyone who watches congress closely this is all very hopeless. The Congressional Record is, of course, a stenographic report of the debates and acts of congress. If it stopped there, probably it might serve aa a basis of information to the public But It is cumbered with speeches that never were delivered, newspaper clip pings, partisan documents. As it stands, probably not 1000 people . v. . ,.v... a finnntrv rmnA th nf. flclal record with any regularity. It ""on ,.njraa'1om ia.Knoxville. TeTm, In ' 1130." SaS ?A .'.T'naU T.a. u ... i V "v-eW iiuiiiT rf.fi LI r IA. M w DCODlft luft'.Taiinaes 4. aw. - t at - -"vwiiETijia, uo. . vaTTL chap U or II years old there was a lot of trouble 1, 71th i?fph 8m,h,and bis followers.- : j They believed that Independence. Mo, - i was their Zion. and, as th,. people - ' around there didn't like tb.ir doo- I tn Mormons out Our men routs had gone down to Plattsburcto enter th&ir tansta tk. i wvimvua, imu- V men iotas gone, came to our Place .in the middle of the night and burned our house and barn. It was winter.and there was about four Inches ' -Lnw now on tna found. We were ed.br lhe crackling of the names. We ran out Just as we were. ine Mormons told us they were doing alone. They said if we Interfered any the Lord's anointed we would pay for it with our lives. Borne f,f n,vWere ,n favor ' Putting us y as warning to the "lr man ln cnar ald no. " - watitQ oareroot 12 miles across h-111!1 to our neret neighbor, cam P vUv i j . - . ... ,K. " n oia seiner .,J " ha1 bn n Indian trader lm . , l,t a tr-"n Pot strong -i-- -rti My mo,her was in her night 5Tln Z wa" b-footed. I will never It, L fw ,co1d the Bnow was on my mVfSf 1 was cold- clr nlh arUnds.'nW "V"1 1,ke nmm aiy tamer and tlie other men had gone to enter their land, while m uncle. Neal Gilliam, ni most of the V rest of the men thereabout had gone with their ox teams to Jim Dixon's mill on Piatt Run to have their corn ground. Dixon's" mill was about 10 miles away. They had to camp there a few days to wait their turn to have their corn ground. They got back with their cornmeal about a week after Wi wer turned out. My uncle. Ncalv- . Gilliam, had been a preacher. He was a great belelver in the Old Testament particularly those places where it talks about "Vengeance is mine, I will , repay, saith the Lord." He always figured he was especially commission ed to carry out the Lord's will and smite iniquity hip and thigh. When be heard what the Mormons had done to us ne said: 'As a servant Of the Lord I will see that those worship- ' ers of Baal are destroyed.' He came pretty near doing It, too. He gath ered all the men In the neighborhood, armed them with guns and scythe blades, marched to Horn's mill, where , a bunch of Mormons were, and at tacked them. After the fight they threw the dead Mormons tn a well and followed them to Dyamon's, where they had another fight with them. When you take an oldtime Mlssourian who would rather fight than eat and let him think he Is fighting for the. -Lord and destroying the Almighty's enemies, you will see some prttty hard scrapping. In the spring of 1843 my father. Pleasant Belieu. with A. J. Jackson and some others, took some Indian goods to trade with the Indiana for furs. They established their trading post at Conesvllle, near Council Bluffs. Some government troops under ' Captain Waters were located there." Joe Robldoux. who had a store and gristmill on the Missouri river at what wis called Robldoux" Landing, or St Joe, being a friend of my father's. In vited me to spend the winter wttS-v them. I put In the summer of '43 with his boy hunting buffalo, and that wln-r- ' ter '43-'44 I caught fish through the lee and trapped beaver. "Along about May 1, 1844. my father mil I"n-1 Kent (illllnrn ramat on their way to Oregon. My father de cided to stay at Scott's Bluffs on the Nebraska river, or the Platte river, aa It Is now called. - "The American Trading company had a post at Scott's Bluffs. Three ef old Joe Robldoux" sons Rastus, Jul ius and Joseph were in charge of the They wanted to spend the . UPS AND DOWNS OF THE "INDEX NUMBER" able facts. Turn on the.lightT NEED OP A WAR TAX tax is stamped on each article the people buy. Americans nave ac customed themselves to paying their portion of the federal reve nues r without knowing the exact a WASHINGTON dispatch says Uount, and a habit of long stand tentatively , V,n nbanr,1 '-oHthnn a crro. rw ,-. n. I " . uo,c0oujr 1 1 causing some friction. But it Is the business of congress to meet the situation frankly and courageously. If a war tax Is levied, it "will be the business of the people to recognize its neces- ei K vr er1 e1a V. A AT a Jl"?... ! .reason to beLIeve that Uions abroad will be to blame for it, a war tax to provide revenues necessary for running the govern ment. Such a tax may not be popular, but it is evident that it must come if the European con fllct continues. the deficit in revenues from cus toms collections will be larger than was estimated at the beginning of hostilities. Curtailment of Im ports will continue long after the war ends, for Europe will need a considerable time to get back to a producing and exporting basis Even should England get THE DRUG PEDDLERS T Sound Stuff In Government. Portland, Aug. 29. To the Editor of The Journal As lawmakers of this state and nation, what is required of us? The preamble of the constitution, which la thtt prpnf rnrrtarctna court has found an attorney guilty government says: "We, the people-of of the unlawful sale of morphine. thtt United States, In order to form a A druggist testified to having sold more?ei'ct "nl.on-" Each law lald ha -Zr,THof TO . . . , down besides this cornerstone either the convicted man eight bottles of supports it or is a damage to it Are morpmne ana tne same amount of jwe earnestly putting good solid brick cocaine. The lawyer says he will around this stone in order to form a appeal his case, and until the ap- rl erfect, unlon' J. ar! we ach . . . . . . , group separately, working to get Into peal is determined popular Judg- the great structures of F government ment as to his guilt may be BUS- brick that are rotten, chipped and pended. cracked by our selfish interests? But the authorities should not L," Jtff1 1 cZVll hL 1m,! stop with one conviction. It is a the nation will suffer by it It is sc. comparatively easy matter to pun- easy to make rules we like and make ish the human vultures who actual- other? 1Iv JP to hem- that we fail to lv TYoiia u see how bigoted, contemptible and ly peddle such drugs. The war- narrow we have grown. But we will fare should be most Vigorous suffer In proportion to the amount of against men who are behind the malicious, premeditation we lndividu- traffic. men who, for the sake of I p"t,lnto ,:, nIy. fad part , . jn . ..lis that this doesn't keep the innocent rHERE should be no lagging by Portland authorities in their pursuit of men and. women engaged in the drug traffic. and I if. as has been said, there is an maintain control of the seas, there- organization engaged in the illegal by enabling her merchant marine sale of morphine and cocaine. Its to resume ocean traffic, that fact members should be put out of win not assure a resumption of business by sending them to jail Importations by the United States if that is the only effective means, on a scale which will restore cus- In Cincinnati, New York, Chicago toms collections. and elsewhere vigorous warfare Europe is engaged in the busi- has been begun on the Illegal sale ness of fighting and small atten- and use of habit-forming drugs, tion will be paid to the arts of Underground systems for the" pur peace. Production and manufac- chase and distribution of opiates ture will cease and exports to the! have come to light, and In some united states drop away even if cities politicians and public offi ocean lines of travel were opened cials, druggists and physicians have to tne entire world. been found to be participants In ' .The' Washington administration the Illegal traffic. has a difficult problem before it The extent to which the drug The government has enough money I evil exists is appalling. Only those -.In" its treasury to meet expenses I who come Into personal contact for a considerable time, but there (with the victims In hospitals, police is . question wnetner treasury bal-1 courts and prisons know tne wnoie ances should be drawn upon until truth. It was recently disclosed la the necessity, for.: levying a war New York that the drug peddlers tax ' becomes Imperative. Higher 1 had even marked school children taxes are never popular, and they las the victims of greed. are especially - unpopular when the A Jury, in Portland's municipal a few dollars, are willing to wreck human lives and cause un told misery. W CAN IT BE DONE? t - RITINQ from London, H. G. Wells pleads for the abso lute prohibition throughout the world of the manufac ture of weapons for private gain. He says: I would carry this suppression down eVen to restriction of the manufac ture and sale of every sort of gun, pistol and explosive, They should be made only in government workshops and sold only In government shops. There should not be & single rifle or pistol unregistered, unrecorded and untracable In the world. The Detroit Free Press says, that the end of the European war will be the . hour for dealing with a curse to civilization: . Let the manufacture and sale of the pistol be prohibited by Interna tlonal agreement It can be dona. But. will lt.be doner .i1:;: Mr. Wells says a .world council for the regulation of armaments as a natural outcome of the, war de pends upon the courage and hon esty of men. He Insists that trade ones from suffering, too. The "of" and "by" and "for" applies to all tha people. Every measure suggested to be im posed upon this great state as a law should be put into the public mortar of honest reasoning, ground fine and sifted, of all malice, vindictiveness and class prejudice, then sent to the cruci ble of a loyal, law making body, be It a legislature or the voting booth, to burn out any possible dross that might still be hid and turn the pure stuff out into honest bricks to build up this wonny state or ours. R. T. HUGHES, The Blind Pigs Sales. -Oregon City, Aug. 28. -To the Editor of The Journal In an article-, signed in Tfte journan or Aug. zs, s. J. Cot ton says prohibition does not lessen drinking. Then why do men that man ufacture it spend thousands of dollars to fight prohibition? He says there is not one Instance .where prohibition has benefited one man or community by keeping men 'sober. I know of scores of men that spent their money ln the saloon, but when the saloon was Closed they went home sober and bought necessaries of life or their families. . " ;s. JJr. .Cotton ..says' when the saloon goes out the blind pig . comes in. My observation Is that there is more liquor sold Illegally in licensed towns than In dry towns. It was the business Inter ests, with those 'people who believed The Blind Pig Question. St. Helens, Aug. 28. To the Editor of The Journal S. J. Cotton, whose letter was printed in your issue of August 26, evidently takes it for granted that the readers of The Jour nal will accept as truth all he says without attempting to verify his statements. He seems to believe that the blind pig exists in dry territory and not in wet territory, and that as much liquor la consumed in dry terri tory as in wet. Now if Mr. Cotton wants to believe that he is at liberty to do so, but if be wants the readers of The Journal to believe it why doesn't he give proofs? If it is true that blind pigs are not found in wet territory, why is it that Denver, with 483 licensed saloons has a list of 1020 retail dealers who pay the retail liquor dealer's federal tax? Counting out the drugstores paying federal li quor tax there are still as many blind pigs as licensed saloons ln that wet city. One of the Denver papers pub lished a list of the addresses of 103 of these blind pigs. If Mr. Cotton wants people to be lieve - that Salem. Oregon, uses as much liquor now as when wet why doesn't he back up his statements with reports from express and freight companies- of the amounts of iiquot shipped in tbere when wet and when dry. If as much liquor is used ln dry territory, then it would be reason able 'to expect as much drunkenness ln dry Eugene as ln wet Eugene, or ln dry- Springfield as in wet Springfield. Why not quote the reports of ar rests in such places to prove that there is as much liquor consumed without the saloon s with it Mr. Cotton states that blind pig operators have no respect for the Jaw. I would not question such a statement but would aak where there is a saloon having respect for law. E. T. LUTHER. Coffee and Intoxicants. - Ballston, Or, Aug. 29. To the Edi tor of The Journal All your corre spondents, both prohibitionists and anti-prohibitionists, have overlooked the greatest and most harmful drink to humanity, and that is coffee. In 1913 there was imported Into the United 8tates 852.629,493 pounds of coffee, which would furnish about 10 pounds to every man, woman and This treraen By John M. Osklson. The big commercial agencies keep track of the prices of those commod ities which are in common use in this country, and they issue from time to time what is called an "index number," showing whether the cost of Uvlng is rising or falling. From a spring issue of Dun's Review, this explanation is taken: "It is a well known fact that there is no better basis for a study of the commercial situation than a compara tive record of commodities. Tempo rary influences, such as short crops, war, financial or political disturbances may exert some effect for a time, but ln the long run the course of prices must be determined by the action of the law of supply and demand. Then the method used ln compiling the "index number" is explained: "Quotations of all the necessaries or life are taken, and ln each case the price ia multiplied by the annual per capita consumption, which precludes any one commodity naving more inan Its proper weight in the aggre gate. m m "For convenience or comparison uu economy of space, the prices are grouped Into seven classes: ureaa tuffs Include quotations of wheat corn, oats, rye, barley, beans and peas; meats Include live hogs, beef, sheep ni manv orovislons. lara. taiiow. etc.. dairy and garden products embrace eggs, vegetables, mux. irun, ouuer, rh!UL etc: other food includes fish. liquors, condiments, sugar, rice also tobacco, etc; clothing covers the raw material of each Industry, as well as quotations for woolen, cotton, silk and ,hhr roods also hides, leather and boots and shoes; metals include vari ous quotations for pig Iron and par tially manufactured and finished prod r.cts. as well as the minor metals, tin, lead, oopper. etc., and coal and petro leum; miscellaneous Includes many grades of hard and soft lumber, lath, brick, lime, glass, turpentine, bemp, linseed oil, paints, f ertlllaers and drugs." Wholesale prices are taken, since retail prices vary too widely to be of i . . m -a t V- v than .n auiuiiier uui Hi in me uuimio, iu iney s a book of reference rather than one , my father y chArw tO De reaa. I r,t tha Intin, rt U'h,n lh,v Pirn, I back from their big buffalo hunt my 1 father took some goods to trade for 'furs and went up on the headwaters of the Columbia. We heard that he died on that trip, so he never got to7' Oregon. 1 went on with my uncle, Neal Ollliam, to Oregon." .. ' use ln comparison, so as "Index num ber" cannot be taken as a guide to th .-ultimate cost of living, except that generally speaking retail prices do roughly and in time follow whole sale prices up and down. In the light of these explanations let us make soma comparisons of liv ing costs based on the "index num ber": On May 1. 1912, the per capita cost at wholesale of the commodities re ferred to above totaled S128.98; on the same date this year the cost was down to 8118.23, which was 11 cents cheaper than on May 1, 1913. On July 1, 1912. the. figure was $122.27; a year later it was $116.33, and on July 1 this year it was 8119.71. From these figures you see that living costs reached .the high point in this country about" the end of April, 1912, more than two years ago. Now let us compare the quotations of wholesale prices of some of the commodities used to make up the "In dex number" during the week ended August 15 this year and the same week last year. This year, apples were 81.25 a bar rel, against 81 last year; beans were 85.10 a hundred pounds, against 84; building materials were unchanged, ex cept laths, which were 4 'a thousand, instead of 85, and lime, which was 92 cents Instead of 90 cents a barrel; thla year, coffee at 8H cents a pound com pared with last year's price of cents; cotton goods were slightly high er this year; ordinary good butter was cheaper; eggs were a little higher; prunes were cheaper, but nearly all other dried fruits were about 2 cents a pound higher; winter wheat flour was 84.90 a barrel, lnsteaa of 95.40, last year's figure; lumber was gener al I live beef was up from 87 to 87.15 a hundred pounds, and live bogs from 87.70 to 89 a hundred pounds. Here are enough examples to show that the next "index number" will record an advance over the last one I have received, the 8119.71 for July 1, this year. Yet the Increases do not seem startling, and many of them will be only temporary. HOO'S H00 By John W. Carey. Who sent an ultimatum to his majesty the czar, and when he failed to toe the mark let loose the ilogs of war? Who got the bug 'twould be great sport to make all Europe prance, and so stirred up another row with nest door neighbor, France? Who tired of life's monotony and yawned and said, "Oh, hum." and sent his troops across the line to scrap with Belgium? Who kicked the British lion in the y cheaper; metals were cheaper; j ribs and pulled his tail and roused J caffetannate of caffeine and potas sium enough deadly poison to kill every man, woman and child in the United States. According to the analysis ln the Encyclopedia' Brltannlca (pages 112 113, one pound of coffee contains over three-fourths of an ounce Of caf feine, caffetannate of caffeine and potassium. The medical dose (find out from your doctor) is one-fifth of a grain of caffeine. 1 is so strong that this small dose is all that is tequlred. Then figure it out Tou wiU find that three-fourths of . an ounce lust equals 1800 one-fifth grains, the contents Of caffeine, caffetannate of caffeiene and potassium ln one pound of coffee. - Just imagine what this means 1800 one-fifth grains of a virulent narcotic drug, in one pound of coffee, and the average family's supply for a week, ln 10 pounds of dous mountain of eof fee contained I coffee, each person's share of what ever 60,000,000 pounds of caffeine, J they orank last year, contained nearly 47 one-fifth grains dafly of a known deadly poison. Prohibition advocates, ministers, de vout church going people, and millions of others who decry and work against, the excesses of others, must have their coffee, and even ' parents are such slaves to the habit that they will see their children addicted to the use of it without remonstrance. The drunk ard. when sober, will offer the most abject apology for his condition when drunk,' while an opium fiend will ad vise strongly against the use of It; while a coffee drinker will urge every one to drink. W. C. T. U. women unthinkingly and unknowingly will make strenuous ef forts to keep people from drinking beer or wine, and offer Instead a far deadlier drink, coffee; and many would fight for their coffee harder than an anti-prohlbltloniat for his beer or wine. C. A. BALL. Bull In dudgeon high to hit his bloom ing trail? Wbo undertook, ln other words, "tome Job" to tie the can. abaft the. well known world-at-large? That Kaiser Wilhelm man. On the Trail. Kansas City Stsr. "Do you see that man going along with fats head in the air, sniffing with his nose?" "Yes; I know him." "I, suppose be believes In taking In the good, pure osoneT' "No; he's hunting for a motor garage, I believe." 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