a G THE OREGON DAILY. JOURNAL, PORTLAND, MONDAY EVENING. SEPTEMBER ' 7. 1914. ' 4 at s. 1 II at F 'I I i . 5 ;m- Aft ifiMijfiKt' Kgwsr.rga. If 5 JACKSON luMM arcr? aala IMffil o47l aa S J .- ry Ssndar morotof ut Tha JanriMl BnU4- a urn. waaswar ma yanuiu eta., rwuuwui. - v kiHt at ID UMtuCItea at fMrtlaod. it., tut ar i . ; rUn aw ff I .i.a.r uj a t aljlrili Z imuaoiUatun tarvasfc w Bulla aa . hu aattar. - - 4tnBiHta raaebad by toeee MHtbars. Tail the tircor tor t airiiui h.niuii. A iia.. Urtutawlck Bids.. Ui f e, Vanr;- W .aaW . blU.. CbiCTs. 1- I fcuttavraptluft larau br smU . tJf - t .. la,U ballad State Maleas ,- ; tea ra-..- 2 1 J"": Una rar. . B Fcar to do baa. J-mwortny thing 8ls valor; If they be done to uv to sur fer .them : .' la valoi to. , , o-Ben Jonson, - -ti THE BURTON BI1GHT m FTER nearly eighteen months I A nf -nlendld legislating, the ! A United States senate ought -w to nermit its session to be blemished by the mad scheme of ' Burton ' and - his senatorial and 'newspaper allies. . ' No American senate can point to a better record of achievement. $ I No senate ha done so mucn to 'bring government DacK w mo ;ple. No senato has done more to 1 emancipate business, to liberate MniWrv and to Increase public ! I coofldenre in Tree representative ;' But Burton and his backers are ? pushing a plan to tarnish the '. 'Z splendid work of the session. They ' are trying to turn the wheels of 2 ' i i.-,o Thv have progrenn untiv ni i ' plunged hair the waterway projects orins iuuuh j iiiw 1 t ' thrown into idleness the thousands 5 nt mn mnloved uDon them. They -a v - i . " , .k. Hvprs land har- M " " " . i ..Icharee that th 1Q1 ? unnmnritiHnn I bors bill and therehy 8 agnate every waterway project in me 5 ronntrv. addinK still other thous- 1 ? anile tit the ranks of the unem- " .... I mloved through a winter UKeiy to (be made lean by the awMl con- Sh over leaa. I I V. t..,for,iat- fiiicreed. S f ,1.'' !,. hrm,rl. mn. li ,u' -ir.., ,, Th S will be loss in deterioration of t nlanta There will be i waste 'thronrh A am tie f. from the elements J to uncompleted work. There will lb added cost in the work that will have to be done over again. : There J v. f,f ,,t itouiu a u - ffoiiv. For four vears the eovern- ImMt has hen carrvine out a DOl- j icy . of annual waterway appropri- fatlons of about $50.0tf0,000. In ! l0 ; years of Buch policy most of a 'the great waterways of the coun- jtry -would be splendidly developed rand transportation - be made.- less costly because of more facility. It A . , nl.n Tuolt wnrthv of 9. irrAnt IS UIWM v j w a. " 1 .nroereaBlve nation. . . In installments, Burton Is de" jjivering a speech that began last jnna n talked RAvnn hnurn last I t : ml. " j... ,1- 7.. 7 " : , ,muiou.. "j"e " out the patience of members and ,' 2 -prevent a vote. The senate has shown Its great 2j capacity for legislation. It should I now show its capacity to deal with S the Burtons Jt should not permit the Burtons to make an ass of the senate. NOT' AS ANSWER BOOTH'S answer to the Albany Democrat was not an answer. 11. ti tv. -kAA n ertnee to the Jordan claim. Jordan W-ui - an employe of the Booth- ftellr Comnany. At the su-efees- t tlon of Mr. Kelly. Jordan filed on la quarter section of Umber select- ed by a Booth-Kelly cruiser. Jor- ? -ji.L ,t .j ..4 S u.tiuiaij oecureu paieui. and turned the timber over to the . W a . a JdOOtD-iLeiiy uompany. ... The government of tha United I '..4 government, ot tne unitea 5 States brought suit to cancel5 the patent, At the trial. Jordan, con- .leased on the witness stand that he S5 raji .ln effect,' only a dummy en- ; 5-ltryman for the Booth-Kelly Com- - f pany. Judge Bean ordered the , 2 patent canceled on the ground of - I fraud and collusion, and the tim per was directed to be restored to the public domain. On appeal to the circuit court of appeals in San irM..i.n -,.u . v 4..j , 4 gon court was affirmed., The rron court was irnrmnit Thai facts, all of which are of record in b6th courts, show how Mr. Booth's answer the Albany Democrat a, ... a. a. . 5 4 S : t f tement respect- . Insf tha lit Rant, rlafma ! nnt nnu 7 tZ I . . .v . J, , c r " . . - "jl whenever there Is a conviction arelBOiaier8 m tne e received a thor- fhf? !L f i!! r- A?0' veW dence that the government is onsh, masoning, and a large pro that; the entrymen -ftr these, four I ..m ' . v. r Dortion of th mmn wh -, t , - - 5 were dummies. . .In the case of these filings, the Icr TT S chargeaOtt.thebook. df. the. com; pany. The books showed that the . .... .. m ?H-i,Vr4.v.tvr,iiI uvrymen. as 3 tn company s expense. i ? ?o ac- count waa kept on "the books' 'with the n.trymen. until . proof- had - beeir. made , upon . the rdaims. . ;na?a jjaieuw were sec urea, so s counts ...were openea . wun each.linr on account of tha war. man deeds '"re taken from each, 1 100 wa pia to.racn ana tne account i. was immediately closed. - None of th , account. was ever opened f again.-up to the trial of the case, ana in ianas were carriea into tne - general lana account or tne com- pany . and ..treated , as , v part...f H4h'of potation's timber' holdings. I company ' thereafter paid the a taxes on the lands. s - 1 None of the .entrymen ever saw the land after they were vtakenj thereto by "the company's 'timber I cruiser. None of the entrymen I ever . took any steps td ascertain the amount of' timber of. the value therepfNo attempt1 was' made by the euirymeno to ' dispose, of the timber 16 any one else. No :In- qniry-f wa- ever. tnade; by the ''"en-1 trmen"as Jto ' the amount of ex- pense1 rlhcuwe'd" In ' perfecting the) entry, i In fact , nothing was .done by' "anr of nheT entrymen except to render' such services as they were directed to, in perfecting 'the title for, the Booth-Kelly Company. Though these, entrymen received 7n jZZL-limrz ho- ,L J r" TV' r " zz. :i for the poorest claims and from $5000 . to $10,000 for the best. The court of appeals at San' Fran cisco cancelled these patents, on the ground of fraud and collusion, and ordered the lands taken away rrom the Booth-Kelly corporation The facts are Of record in the! court, and cannot be denied -or re pealed. In effect, the court held that the claimants were dummy entry- men, and dummy entrymen have been the means by which enor mous holdings of United States timber have been illegally taken rrom the public Mr. Booth's an- 7 " ::. swer to the Albany paper is not an answer. STILL PURSUING T rittKiii is one tning, at least,nors. ic is me everlasting rigm In which the Oregonian is con-1 sistent and that is its policy of mendacity towards Gover-lwheh nor West. I In connection with the affairs I of his office it does not hesitate -w ....... LUO lacui. 11.0 i 'nisrepreseniauon is to "ts"7fr" - T,,- l0e truth is that the legislature Of or.n.nnJ.I.J . 1 I fi'.i'wi.cu iub sum oi V -1 0 onIy' f this nount ther5 ,s 450 available. The Iunds Practically exhausted are those aside to sustain the gov emor-s law enforcement camnaisn "'"T ?y ine Ure . - - misrepreBenia tions. The Oregonian's wanton Perse- cution of Governor West is iden- tical with its ferocious pursuit of Door old John H. Mitr.heli whom r- :". 11 aia not cease to hound even WBen his unburied clay lay In Its coffin, waiting for the mourners. AMERICA'S FOREIGN BORN rHE j-enort on nonnlation 1b. I sued Dy tne census bureau!, shows there were 13,515,886 J nersona of foreien hirth in persons oi loreign Dirxn ffl JL 1 TT.Il-J itl.. a I aa am luw uuutju Duties in adhi. xsiu.i ' - " I cent of the total nonulatlon when I the cen8u wag takeQ ag ed .. . - - I wun a Proportion or 13.6 per cent g 1900i 1 The number of foreien born I white males over 21 vears of in 1910 was 6,664,317. Of these, 3,034,117 were naturalized, 772 had first papers, 2,266 534 were aliens and there were 775.- 393 for whom there was no r- port on citizenship. The report shows that many mieranta who rom tn nnr- hoB I . " . . . i nave no intention of becoming clt-f" izens, and it Is significant that the more .highly civilized countries send na neoniA who arp mora dia-i Posed to become naturalized than are Immigrants from lesser clvil-lr"". Ized countries. , Out of Germany's representation the number who re- main aliens is small, and the same 13 tre as to Great Britain, France, Rmnrlnnnvt. and omo wu.u- "les mh fla A proDaouiiy mat mer European war may cause Immigra- ; TTnttawi . "A ? the United States to fall ofr 11 18 Possible that our Imml- Bra"n problem is being solved bj the sw&rd la Europe. niDIKlTTOntfl inomnamn. ixaiuuiiiu lllisrviVl fjmifi A r KuisKAij grand Jury . at Washington has indicted thirty-one food dealers on counts charsdne rHro ft vino- It Is the first big development in I- - "s uoiDiuuuieui mill m . . under direction or the president,! against men who have seized upon I I i rm r nrnnanTi arn t t a a -rya-aa.v , .. " lwi I OOQIUK IUP VUO JL 11 VI UK. , These indlctmenU and Attorney S10'000 men' " large a 8lnele General Gregory's statement thattmy as ever entered battle in the . ..... f V.n.HW. v Prison sentences wui be demanded 1 ney general -saia; . r tT.fT- nAiL.m ........ j throughout the world, capitalisation TZSSSZ, 'ao p-cuiiarty . reprehenaibu that vhen- ver convictions can be Obtained the I a.n.MM.n mill : nf elvU remedy win b. deemed ade- Iqiiate. ' f!-: The price fixers should be sent to jail., In ordinary Umea their operaUons are bad enough, but - 1 with many prices legitimately rls- whose greed'.capltallzea misfortune py Dogus , price inflating have no proper place outside the Jails. ; ' ' It is not charged that tho thirty- one Indicted men were entirely re- sponsible for higher prices. The charge , Is nhat they arbitrarily I fixed.; prices each',. day and clrcu- lated. -'price-lists 'which" eliminated J competitive market for food. I The illegal nature of such, metnoasioi differs In no way from practices j used by the big trusts, against the continuance of which the govern-j ment is fighting. . . , I , It Is more than a question of law.;; There are -degrees of crtmi- nality;v What Is the essential dif- ference between a " man whose greed , wiihholds food from the hongry and the other, man . who I actually steals? IiABOR DAY N O MAN It born Into the world j wnose worsris noi corn wiiu In the invasion of France, how him. To labor Is the mean- evePr the Germans seem to have ing of life; to labor with the made much headway. . bands to labor with the mind and tone is to contribute his share In labor and he who shirks this ob- ligation does not sound the depths of life. ti - 1 . 1 . . snouia D oumea into me con-1 science of every man. whatever I his surroundings mav be. .that everything he coifsumes every- thing .that ministers tO his wants. labor, some Ones laDOr. If he does not do enough pro-I uucuve couBtruciive worn w ou set 'this he is a social thief, a para site, to the extent of his deficiency f tne bandit on the highway. Work, says Carlyle, Is a social I function and property a social I i trust. The great economic prob-1 lorn of th a Is th nrnnsr Hi. Ml?? I fy, ,! tne PTPer " VWlon OI t9 irUItB OI laDOr. A ' m i . m ma a I fair day s wage for a fair dayslencai strength of -the Republican work is as Just a demand' as nmort mn ov.r f t,wo. v Ovv--t1 of man." Doubtless the time will come there' will be a universal if Work day Of eittht hOUTS all over the United States with t.hA reniilt that the capitalization of natural ujwuupuiico iu wi iviiu values win j "e correspondingly reduced with rnrroonnnHitiir 4mnn-vATvBn n v. i ""v wno earn 11. bomeining ror notn- B8 then be more and morel f11tf1fM.lt f .Holn-AAnt LEASING COAL LANDS 0 NE of the five items of Sec- retary Lanes' program of conservation, the Alaskan COal leasing bill, has been passea oy me uouse -or representa-I uvea. The bill is complementary to the Alaska railroad act and it Urin hio to L7' m a general way the bill author general way tne pm author - es me aecreiary or tne Interior tn . I ml,,MTw -hr ocu Tne royalty fihall not les3 than two cents per ton and coupled With this "a competition feature is added as an additional safeguard. w w u -uowea to lease lor commercial pnr- wu bvcuoub preyent lessees , . I lllJlftl 111 IPTUM H Inf' nW nVTlinfl- a M aj i t . wt-.b i aW A. m A 1 terest in otner leases, nrovidinsrl forfeiture and penal provisions. The lease period of twenty years ttiow k ranmA - rTV' ' . ttUU".a" re" louuuo xuu new royalties. Tne I aecreiary tne Interior is au- rizea to retain tne surface area or't.alc"ure . n deemed m ... i 570,-118108 tnis is nignly Important, J M "B development ana conserva-1 a further encofr ouier- As a further encouraee - Iment to agriculture and mining, im-lperm'18 W1U 06 given to home- aieauers ana small miners for the QQ nt n i. . . ,. -w ee 01 royalty. . ,u 8auiBt dummy en- Sfn Peti- -"" "w "6uu!ui, ui Dan or an ieaBe II? to M made without ff'"': -OT uie aepartment. r?17 most far reaching fe wZii L, each J6 ? contain a clause wither- Vts. "sequent upervlsion y tne department insurinsT dilis-nnfn .... .viM... , . . Property. I U m. Ls V Cll L1UI1 t J I Mr MM! M VJ TI rt JTn Jaj A Ba1.. . - . . V . ' - umcr ' ; 1UI ueuin or tne United States as may be necessary tfa Dreventlo yZ ?JB&TJ: Jn If"0 of monopoly and r.. O"w6uo,uiu VL public welfare. The Whole design of the bill t I " uasuuvuu vl mo- I LO mmOVA tn, lllr.llkJ uopoiy ana onng the rreat ooai iieias or Alaska into use BEASOIfKD TROOPS I 1 tItmDS-WORK makes an Interesting comparison be tween the European armies. 1 vt.i . . wii tu us iroopa that nav 6 86,311 active service are In a- skuvi-wvi uact-u j.uilcb. i Al MnMM lr, i9na v-. f . w V UDPiA UftU r ?-"- "urm- ine czar's uB aimy now. ine kus- sinns mada rond nifiia. I not. -their fault that the czar lost K.o ha. troop, seasoned by actual warfare. Within the hast tn v-a, wnv ,. I 1 UCUJ UBU BB at one time. They aecured.no ex perience ' against soldiers Buch a. Germany s has. bnt ' tb WrAn,.?, north African force -became one of the best known fighting armies : of the world. l twaIvo tmh . ao-n pnt..A 1 1.000.000 men la the field to crush. the Boers, and many of these men should be available for use on the continent. The Servian, and Mon- tenegrin. are veteran, of two wars (hardly a. year gone by On-he other hand,' the German larrdV Austrian armies are 'without actual war experience. Except for the southwest African .campaigns i9U3-uo, in wnicn less tnan 20.000 German troops were en- gaged at one time. Germany has I not had a larger body of troops i than this engaged since the Franco- Prussian war. Austria,-except for small , operations; tias not had actuals warfare since the conflict with Prussia, in 1866.-, 5 As yet the fighting in Europe bas furnished no basis for com parison between the armies. But if seasoned troon rm an nnnmt . It IS aDDarent that (lrniiinr tiA Ans- r 9 . I Itrla ara handfrannoil in thla , .. T T7, spect. Letters From the People (Oommaoicatiofis itst t "rh inmii tor pobUcaLkm to ttaia department sboold be writ- ru n odij one io or u paper. aboaM M iHcm aw WQTOB in l.nrth nl mna, h. companted or h nam. na Vikiru. or th. "": u h writer 4ea not dtr t " " ..Jg rba principle of U false aaoctlty and Jther b s reaaoomblenee. it ratblaaal uiruws laem na m tneir reaaooableneaa. K the bara , DO reaaonablenMa. : it rnthtaaalr nMh" tbm, t ot ezlatenca aod HU op tu im Pro-Republican Predictions. Portland. Sept. 5. To tbo Editor of -e.m. to be a tore rone conclusion that the' Republicans of Oregon are again to go down in de- "at in the coming election. They! tnemseivea fully realise this, but are no w"n to acanowiedge it. 1 continue to quote figures from " wining lo ttcKuuwieuge 11. iney reetstration hooka u nrnof of th num. v a-vw .aBMic tlVl" - - gov-jpartJr which, as we all know, is no I criterion or indication as to how peo- Will vnfa whan 1 .nm ala tlon. This has been proved over and lover again in Oregon. It is. claimed JUVa,1 o the v0te8 reularly fears reeardina- th ontcom "nf the election if Republican methods are regard principle above party, and are going to vote accordingly, as they have done for manv vears heretofore. patters. or in other words, the machine politicians. We need pay no attention to figures taken -from registration books, as they are of no special value in determining the probable result of an election. Such figures are some what like blank cartridges; when fired, Ihpv KOiinrl Hkn tha real thine- hilt count for nothing in a real battle. They may be used in an effort to people, but that's ail. We aa th w.v neonle reeister but by the way they vote. S. E. CLARK. Personal Liberty. Portland Sept. 6. To the Editor of The journal C. A. Ball wants to pro- hint coffee, tea, and other di v ..M ..r , vin. wonder if Mr. Ball drinks coffee or tea' " rdy ta. nil ca vh.r, ona rlflRS of TIAOdIa thihk that because they do not like a certain thing, all other people must think as 5L-.Tie7.-n.l did not approve.-On being reprimand- ed. ha preached the next Sunday a ser- luvn vu uu",tul .", nhwi on th forbidden thinra for w - wt,i.h c.u ,Tknrf an t do. hut do a, i .4.ra say." Many take prohibition for nUl,rIiheirheearr fhefel"- but In their hearts tney leei iwn.i do as I do; do as lay.". Personal iibi ihrtv Is th one . thinar everv one should be proud of and hold to with e7ei.""? There ' are some naan a iv -t-i. wnrin vno ara mirntv "They want everyone, to think and act as they. do. As for :me, I want everyone to act, as tneir consciences lnTrinC ih nniitifn. nor church affairs with state affairs. .If we do we create.; monarchy, ADranam iincom saia, o r1""1 "" ..wirr' man. jueaning yuur nuwt..T beiong to you and no otner has a right to rule to that regard. Prohibi- - ?Zaml - . ,r DT.TnT Women's Votes ana Jt-roniDition. PorUand, Sept. 6To the Editor of ersVha? bav TbraTnt and aoStV 'uSfthem? tSeVeforec"rd"g to him. they will voto wet. They may do so. if they believe the things that sa- loon advocates would have them be- ry lt la o Oregon use their juagment tney. wm surety say, "w ww at i wui we can w op "is curse." Here la a question that the voters of this state would do wea to tudy: Does any man. or any community, -or any town, or any city. state or nation, benefit in any degree. Physically, morally financWly. ment- I . " I ficl The same writer gives ns a good ar gument against the liquor traffic when he tells of the things caused by liquor in the state of Maine. I have never lived In that state, but I know people who have, and my understanding is that if women there had the vote, aa they should nave, they would elect men to enforce the law and drive the liquor ours from that state, just aa tha men and women will in Oregon this Novem ber. " . - i We ara all much impressed with the arguments against prohibition. One writer tells -us that prohibition' has ruined this or that state; another, that mora liquor la aold in that state than before prohibition. Thla leaves the av erage reader In a sad state of mind. Ia it, orohibitlon that hurts the state, or is it the liquor that is sold there? Let's call tha liquor dealers bluff when they say they, wilt flood the state with liquor ' and , make Portias tha wettest dry-city in the country, and vote lt but and keep lt out. Nona will be th worse and many -will fee the better. ROBERT GREGG. A Dry Town o! Oregon. McMinnville. Or, . Sept. To 4 Editor of The ' Journal For 5 two months I have been touring this con gressional district, and I -have yet to find a city that baa mad in tha last three year so substantial Improve ment in business blocks, street paving, public buildings and "private residences as McMinnville. One may asic tha people' there why they have been . able to male thla Improvement and seven out of ton will say lt la because they have time ana money ror these things because they ara not. kept busy. caring for - tha wreckage 'and the waste of tho Manor business. - From other cities and state, dosens of families have come to McMinnville and Tarahul county because they are dry.t -J; Onovman brought hfes family 600 miles to'- settle on McMinnville, before having seen the city.. and even A FEW SMILES wnted a nw automobiio i tbouht i bm -would throw Thornton "When jWUHo jWUnpua out a broad" bint to his father, v-'; Bo a o m a ry did ,the. scheme work? Thornton Not exactly. He told the old gentleman he would like some thing be could t start . and stop,- and his father bought him a dollar watch. A M .a m. a H "veier. oousnt a ucaoi ana wen, going - out on tbo pUtform. said: How soon ' does the train start? "wny, tto ere she goes now," said a porter. "You've Just missedi her." . i The traveler kept on the line and set out in pursuit of the train with all his might. fBut in two or three minutes he came trudging uacK. v A laughing crowd had gathered and me porter said; "Well, did you! catch herr "No." said the traveler, "but, by jingo, x made ner puff." "I don't tiuite see the point of that remark of yours," said Mr. Sidnner. the grocer, aa he tied up the package. or sugar, "Whati remark was thatT asked the customer. i ou i just re marked that some men; had an 'off hand way of doing things. And von wished I was one." Yes; I wished to remind vou that your hand was on the sugar when you wainea it." he came. His - reason was that Me- Minnville is a dry city; It is a school center, without the contaminating in- zxuences or the saloon. I doubt not this instance could bo found true le numerous cases. : A brewer in West Virginia who was forced to close his business July 1. converted his brewery into a packing piant ana when he opened the new establishment he was compelled to employ 10 men for every one he had employed as a brewer. That does not look very much as if prohibition would lessen the chances of the laborer to secure a Job. Booze never helped a man to get a Job nor to hold one. The booser Is the last man to be employed, and then only when the labor market is short, and the boozer pr even the moderate drinker .is the first man to-be laid off. When under prohibition fathers and sons have good Jobs at remunerative wages, girls will not need, in nearly so many cases, to go to department stores to labor nor into the bop fields, for their own support. The hop field is acknowledged, by all who have had experience therein and who will speak the truth about the conditions there, to be one of the most demoralising influences in the whole state. Watch it, CURTIS P. COE. Comment on a Pamphlet. Portland, Sept. 6. To the Editor of The Journal Some . one placed upon my front porch a pamphlet entitled "True Temperance," by Mrs. Abigail Scott Dunlway. According to the lim itation typewriting across the front page, tha reader would understand (be little sheet to be' put out by the Press Printing & Advertising company ot Portland, Or. I do not find such a firm listed in either the telephone or city directory, but I read her purport ed speech, which lt contains, and at the end of the article I find tha words, "Issued by the United States Brewers' Association, New York," Mrs. Dunlway says she is not interested in the liquor traffic, pro or con. Will Mrs. Dunlway please tell the publio why she is defending something she is not Interested in. It Is certainly the height of folly to defend a thing in which the defender has no interest. She closes her speech with a letter claimed to have been taken from The Portland Journal, March 18, 1914. She adjures her readers to follow the ad vice ot Mrs. Partington to her son Ike: "The best anecdote for plxen is not to take the stuff." This waa good phil osophy for the dark ages, but in our enlightened day we have learned It ia much better to . prevent s tho plxen (whiskey) from being made apd sold, thereby avoiding tha carnage caused by It.- . She aaya: "To quote my late broth er, H. W. Scott. The fault Is not In tha whiskey, but In man," Indeed the fault ia In man in that man allows tha accursed stuff to be made and sold. The saloon Is a product of the physical law, therefore it Is an absurdity to expect the moral, law to correct the evils created by tho physical. . Such reasoning begins at no definite point and ends nowhere. W. S.,HOIIIS. Coffee and Alcohol. Portland, Sept. 6. To the Editor of Tbo Journal 1 have read C. A. Ball's letter in last Monday's Journal and I want to thank him for his able ex position of tha evils of exeessiva cof fee drinking. "When its dangers are more generally' understood ' there win be a stronger movement for its elim ination. But unless Mr. Ball can show that tha-ttM.pl intoxicating liquors lessens the use of coffee, X! fall to see Jn tha evil, of coffee drinking, any logical argument-- against prohibition of tha' liquor traffic. , According to my limited observation liquor drink ers as a class use more ana stronger coffee than most others and also to bacco In its varioua forma, which con tains S more deadly poison tnan eitner coffee or alconolio liquors.; But how ever Injurious to tne general neaith coffee may be. it does not make Its? devotees quite so "crazy in tha bead aa alcoholic - liquor and does not so Injuriously affect - their moral sensi bilities, and If we should prohibit coffeo and retain liquor; &s a bev erage, what won ia tne late annxer do for bis cup of "blaci coffee" to coun teract tha alcohol and steady , his nerves for an explanation to the fam ily for bis Ming "detained at the clubr :" " ' " . - ' 1 - All reforms cannot, be earned f or- ward in one movement, and; to neglect on, because others are necessary, will never get ua anywhere. Let us first eliminate tho traffic tn boose, and then we can take up other reforms,. as pub lic aentlmant shall demand, f i Vote .Oregon, dry for social "purity, home and the children. . ! v , ; J. O. GARRET8ON. 1- :;: "EscIijNevr yLurn.:1 - Portland, Sept 5 -To tha Editor of The Journal I -cannot refrain from addressing you a taw words of thanks and congratulation in connection with the article entitled "Each New Morn." which appeared on the editorial page of - The .. Journal "last V Sunday. . No doubt many other poor , storm-tossed mariners besides myself were encour aged and cheered", by the! beautiful thousht so ; ably expressed," that even j though the night which had-Just closed 3 PERTINENT COMMENT GAIAIA CHANGE A long face gets a abort welcome. irom toe nusy. man. Unless vail trv vou will nvr Vnow what you .can't do. - ' , - " " ' ' Yon can buy a thing cheap If there w aw viusr maaers. . Family prida ha th, ruination of many a young man. . - - Some men tell their wives a lot of things that never happen. - -. . Cold cash melts away faster than most of us can f reese to it. . . . It isn't always the pretty girl who1 makes good -In a photograph.; . If a man ' deserves success it Is rea sonably sure to come his way. Every day it's "a little more of the left wing, please," from Germany.' ,. a .. a Ustially a man would rathkr visit a dentist than his . wife's relations. - . . As a sticker, the chronic bore has a porous plaster beaten to a fraasle. ,-: If you think you are" wise, take a dav off and observe bow little people care about your wisdom. - a Carranza should take warning from Huerta. Huerta tried to see how far ne could go, and he went clear to Eu rope. ' Russian enthusiasts promise a big reward to the first soldier of the czar to enter Berlin. But what if he enters as a prisoner? Who knows but that in keeping this country out of war with Mexico Presi dent Wilson also kept it out of the Digger European conflict? - Arter a man has known a woman about so long he begins to tell her th-i story of his life and three-fourths of the story is fiction. a a Americans who choose to hang around in Europe out of mere curiosity may not have heard about the gentle man who lacked the sagacity to come in when it rained. THE SILENT WAR From the Philadelphia North American. Historians seeking a name for the present titanic conclict in Europe may well call it "the silent war." With 10. 000.O0O men under arms or trooping to the colors, with battle lines drawn half way across a continent, with two mil lion men engaged in a death struggle front to front for 200 miles, the wait ing world can hear hardly a cannon shot. Probably nothing could more accentu ate the brutality of war than this al most supernatural silence. It robs war of the last vestige of romance. It leaves only Its horrors. War becomes Just a huge, cruel, in exorable monster that goes on and on and on, crushing the bodies of men, breaking the hearts of women, leaving children fatherless, destroying homes, laying waste fertile fields, smearing death and destruction over the face of the earth. And to accomplish this more effec tively, tha powers which are conduct ing this war throw over it a vast blanket of secrecy, through which only the most meager details are permitted 1 to seep. . For the first time since hostilities began, the names of commanding of ficers were mentioned in the reports of the great battle in Belgium this week. But even now there Is no certainty as. to the extent of that battler as to the number engaged on each side, as to the degree of advantage gained or as to the general officera who directed the op erations of any of the great units. Tho dispatches, as if by courtesy, mention one or two young sprigs of royalty as having been In command of armies. But that is all. For nearly a month the forces of France and Germany have been facing each other. Frontiers jfhavo been crossed, cities have been taken, battle has raged back and forth ; yet tha pub lio could not name a single general of ficer In the field. It forcibly illustrates tha fiendish ef ficiency of the new warfare. Good BEFORE THE EXPERTS WILL LEND MONEY By John M. Oskison. They're talking about putting an luterburban trolley line across a part of tha old range where I used to "ride fter cattle and go hungry at noon because there wasn't another ranch near enough to drop into for a 12 o'clock dinner. And I'm far from being a gray board! , ,, Nowadays, as soon a the fences au Join in any part of the new west, somebody says: "Wo got to have the railroad through here!" But. If a harder than It used to be to Induce the railroad to throw out a branch, Tha road's offi cials look over the land, ask about right of way, and what the community will do to help, and go away with some vague promises. "We must get an interurban through here!" says another hopeful. Ho ln tareats the local banker; the local bunker writes to his St. Louis or Chi cago banker correspondent and tails lum all about it; and perhaps tha big city banker will call some one on the pnone. "Hello, Bnlggsr he'll say. "Come over and hear what a friend of mine out in Oklahoma has to put to you." so full to overflowing for many of us with pain, bitter disappointment and humiliating experiences, had been seemingly unending, that at last, thank God! tho dawn baa come, and the "morning is ours to make the most of " Let us take renewed courage from this cheerful, elevating outlook on life and Its possibilities, and resolve to make the "new morn" one of beauty and helpfulness to othera by strug gling constantly to avoid the mistakes of "yesterday" and of the many sad yesterdays' which have gone to make up the griefs and -errors of a dead past. Let us keep our ayes steadfast ly turned to the future and Its won derful possibilities. One's sympathies naturally revert to tho unhappy one who, "with all the light out. fought aa for a kingdom," -.th. than to. the one who would ! weajtiy yield to adverse circumstances .n fall tn tha battle. of life. We need' more of these cheerful, op timistic ideas cast abroad, at this strained stage of world-wide disturb ance and unrest, and hope that your editorial page will continue to furnish many more such. ?. K- Cedar for Lead Pencils. ' NewportTtir, Sept. a. To the Editor Of The Journal i have read in . The Journal a dispatch under a Berlin date Una regarding the cedar supply for lead nencil making. When residents of th cedar belt of lower Alsea, Lin coln county, read thla Hem they won dered If Uncle Sam had no expert me chanic who could fashion a lead pencil. I own .a quartet - section with . cedar Sufficient -i to ? make pencils f for the world. V And when they . read of hem lock bark being shipped outside they AND NEWS IN BRIEF :; OREGON SIDELIGHTS Meaning- the Grand Ronde, the 1 Grande Observer says: '"If yon want to see the prettiest sight in th na-; tlon drive through the valley at the present time." ; ' . . ' . ; In a mood of deep congratulation the Baker Herald exclaims: "It's good to be in' Baker county where. crops ara enormous and where peace and plenty reign."' . a a f Medford Mail Tribune: There Is a decided, but as' yet, uncrystallixed sen timent amons- farmers and fruitgrow ers of the valley for irrigation, inose who scoffed at irrigation when it was offered now see its value. " ?, . a The news that an ample supply of cold water is likely to be found In the well across the river is very nearly as interesting to Eugene people, the Reg ister reports, as that which la appear ing on the bulletin boards. Specifications havo been prepared for street improvement at Carlton. Concrete will be used for the hard-surfacing' and the pavement will be sim ilar to that recently completed at Day ton. Wlllamina also has some con crete streets. - a a The Panama canal having been opened and the Oregon City locks deed having been forwarded to Washington, the Salem Statesman remarks: "So we may say that Salem is over 7000 miles nearer by water to New York and to Europe than heretofore." Astorlan: When Astoria has made Coxcomb Hill a Mecca for tourists and tL bv-word of delight to travelers. flotann mov n'll turn It attention tO I making Saddle Mountain a greater lure, by opening a feasible and safely-fast trail up and down this majestic monu ment and cast a fine road 'to It from Astoria. It stands invitingly, one of the sheerest glories of the country and It should be made easily accee sible to the last of its 3,100 feet. strategy has always dictated that a general hide from his enemy the dispo sition and strength of his forces. But here is a war in which the enemy doesn't know even the name of the general who is in front of him. The reason for this is plain. One of the most important factors in deciding a battle where th forces are nearly equal In numbers, equipment and morale ia tha psychology of the com mander. Students of our Civil war know how much depended on this. General Lee varied his' plans according to whether his opponent was McClellan. Hooker. Burnside or Meade. -In turn, the in scrutable Grant always threw into his calculations the psychology of the great Virginia warrior. In the big wars since the element of the commander's personality haa fig ured. But here Is a war In which lt is eliminated. Here is a war in which there is no commander, in " the old sense. For all the plans have been made weeks, months, years in advance. Great armies are hurled Into the mouth of hell by the directions on a card, much as a piece of steel might be sent through a well-organized machine shop. And each side knows that the ether has carefully catalogued every officer in the enemy's army; that an adjutant in Berlin may turn to the index letter, pull out a card and ascertain at once the age, education, theories of attack and defense and the mental bent and disposition of every man likely to have an Independent command In the French forces. And that the same process may be repeated in Parla with German namea on the card index. So, even the namea of the generals is kept a secret in this war. And the public wonders why the reports are so meager from the front; and parti sans, disappointed at receiving so lit tle comforting news for their side, sus pect the newspapers of conspiracy to deceive the world. And the war of silence goes on. Brlggs is one of the staff of a big investment banking house of the class of banking houses which , get money to build new electric Unes'aod consolidate old ones. Brlggs reads the letter, writes to the local banker and promoter for more data. When lt arrives, Brlggs goes over lt with this axiom In his mind: "In the case of a trolley lino pro moter, believe nothing he says and only half of what he shows you!" But, If through Brlggs hostility and unbelief the proposition does pene trate, he takes it up with his house. If the others agree, the house sends an investigating engineer (whose serv ices are paid for by the local pro moter and bis friends who expect to take the stock) to look over the route. To secure the backing of the bouse, this man's report must show that tie line will earn at least S&000 a year a mile and meet other standard tests. Few communities these day- can meet tho testa of the trolley experts;! they are principally busy now in mak ing consolidations and cutting ex penses of roads already in operation. Remember that the experts back only about one In fifty who ask finan cial help. It's a good hint to you. wonder If lt would not be cheaper for tanneries to locate here, where wood, water, bark and hides are plentiful". AN ALSEAN. . Vacant Lot Gardens. Portland, Or Sept. S. To the Edi tor of Tbo Journal I have Just been reading a description Of a garden grown on vacant lots. I pride myself on owning a nice garden grown on vacant lots. Aside from the regular garden vegetables, X am raising cotton on a small scale, broom corn. . "-Tana. nese cucumbers," calabash gourds (th kind that pipes ar made of), French gherkins, also a plentiful supply of muskmelons and watermelons. My Rainbow corn la a beautiful ornamen tal plant. Gardening pays big, and doea much to reduce the high cost of living. 1 nav sold over ti worth of cucumbers and summer squashes, be sides having from three to nln vege tables oh our table every! day-sine June 8. I have potatoes, carrots, cab bages, etc., to winter us, and have not Jost a day's work to cultivate ; ' t'-'''f -:-'" : -a 8. M-. ' The Storing of Explosives. -- Crabtree. dr.. Sept S. To th Ed itor of The Journal What is tha law In regard to tne distance a. powder magazine or storeroom, . or nitroglyc erin " or high - explosives : of any kind must, be kept away from , any publio building, like a achoolhous or church or poatoffioe? V.':' A SUBSCRIBER, r tit seems this Is a matter th legis lature has overlooked. At least no . or in me session acts 01 mil r III that regulates , the storing of explo sives. - , " - - . . ...... , . " . ..... IN EARLIER DAYS By Fred Lockley. "When my .enlistment ' had expired In the cavalry in 1 861, I knocked around a while till I had spent what 7V left mr nd:then got a Job as head herder lor Wright & Stewart. said Jimmy Belleu, an Or, son pioneer of 1844. "They had. a !trf f0r hQl,g bridge Umbers and piling ahead of the bridge crews and construction gangs on th. Union Pacific railroad. I had six Mexicans to help herd the. stock. Old Judge J':. Co. ad a admT,.. ,u; '"ln ct that was the w, Um ?f th- who1- tts of Y,mlDK- He was very proud of it on L , Ut ! tu While I was out ChJL!i K '!th the took old Dan hunted in W'U. known fPP and th?o.,.ho8.day"- cm m from wOU"!f'n" LwUn .e Pack horses Iurs- - Ji had beaver. ?Lo crroia8V marte. 0-wifts, one or skin. h and " Uve- gray. fox ?iV H a anxious to get to Green River and take the train for the east I paid him a dollar a pound furi,." eBtltl'ated tu wlht of the in, .Ja v ia.d charee of th freight ing and had been very anxious to se cure Judge Carter's silver gray fox fckin coat. A little while after I 'had bought the furs Stewart, his partner. ? &nA 1 howed him the furs I had bought. I gave him the 11 silver gray fox skins. H, was so delighted that he gave me his favorite riding SSr,6, H P"-,J me Just what; I had Paid for the skins and when be sold them he gave me 10 per cent of the pront on them. He was offered 11200 for the sliver gray fox aktna hut k. Wouldn't UCll thm tne Iav. nr mnnji, He had them made into an overcoat at lAraml. All the tails huna- out l.ke a fringe. It waa one of tha finest coats I ever saw. "I couldn't keep away from tha army, 'so in 1874 I went to Alibene. Kan., and Joined Major Frank North's scouts. We served under General Custer or 'Long Hair.' as tha Indians called him. We scouted around the South Platte, Ladville, Dead wood and through Wyoming. You couldn't know Custer and not lovn him. H waa an bright and happy and so good-heartl and courageous. His men would walk into the Jaws of Hell for him, and with his sunny mile and gay laugh, he would have led them there if the department commander had ordered rt. He was too popular. It resulted in his betrayal by a brother officer, who deliberately let Custer and his. com mand be slaughtered. When we got there Jealousy and treachery had played their part and Custer was out of the way, though his death left a stain that was neVer erased from the officer who by falling to go to his assistance helped in his death. "Well, sir, I had been roaming around a good many years, so I de cided to go back and see how ray wife was. When I got home I found she was married. She had heard I was killed by Indians and after waiting a year or two, the had decided I must be dead, so she got married. She liked her new husband and -he stayed around home a good deal better than ever I did, so I told her it was all right with me and to let lt go. at that. She was willing, so as I had r gotten used to being away, I. went back east of the mountains and I have been up here ever since." HOO'S H00 By John V. Carey. Who stands in line to alt upon the German throne some day If same can be located when the smoke baa cleare-S away? ' Who's marked for place because ha haps to be bis father's son, and no because he's proved himself a -second Washington? ' Who spent the days that other, lads give up to youthful Joys In puttering with guns and swords and other Krupp made toys? Who's leading now, . mid shot and shell, the Death's Head regiment and seeks of foes of Germany to rid the continent? ----- Who says lt sure Is cruel war If it be fate's decree that' royalty must g to work? His crown prince majesty. The Ragtime Muse Lay of the Party Boss. . When I see a hale and hearty Chuckleheaded, serious party Who is cursed with lust. of office Or of honors, fame or pelf. Then I say. "Old chap, go to it! I'll turn in and help you do It. For if you assume that bur dee - I'll be free from it myself!" For my notion of perdition Is to fill soma high position Always in lb rubllo ontlc Always in th publio optic. Scutinised by night -and day. So if others are persuaaed To b publicly paraded ' I can go, serene, unnoticed, Happy on my bumble way. , , Worldly goods, then, do-not tempt m. From them fortun must exempt m; But I have ray own ambition- -And rewards that labor brings, ' . In tha background, and obscurely, I sit smiling aa X surely. , Work my little "Punch and Judy" rn th man that pulls the i Strings. To prevent i horse running away an Indians man has patented a lever te be fastened to a wagon wheel to which a hitching strap may be tied, pulling backward. If the bora starts. . The Sunday Journal The Great Heine Newspaper t - consists of 'Five news sections replete with .; u illustrated features. ' . .Illustrated magazine of quality, .Woman's pages of : rare .merit .Pictorial news, supplement, Superb comic section' - ' 5 Cents the" Copy