THE JOURNAL C. S. JACKSON , .Pubuaber. FiMUIitd IT aranlng ( Bandar) and ! every Sunday mornln at Tb Journal "nlld nf . "Broadway and yattbM at.. Portlaa. Of. Kotcrad t the -poataffJc t Portland, Or., tot UananlMloo tilrotua tha JB1U second rlaaa matter. 1 afclPHONES Mala IHl! Hc.-A-SOBJ. Ail ,Umrtiunli taarhad bf thaa i nnaiber. Tell '.'th Ofirrator what acpartmrBt yea want. roariuK aivektisinu hepsiesentativb Benjamin Itentnor Co..' BrpMwtak BliUr.', 229 rift At.. New lkvl Vl Feoplea tia Bid, Cblcaao. , - , - - .' ' SuUK-rlpttoe trm by mail " tta "7 -area la ttta Cmu-d Site wi Mewo: DAJLV. H -Oa- mr......fex 1 on th...... f .00 ' . DAILY ASiO SCNDA. '.. - a. Om tar .fT.BO On -aviata. .68 B H that well and rightly eonstderetb his own works will find littl caus to juobb ly of another. Tho. pis. a-Km- J EIGHTEEN MONTHS OF WILSON in. that of any other country,' and' ; they have shown themselves prac- D ' -L.- ' ' r7.. .:! vi. v uMM..tuau,Ma emcient. to an extraor k tULiAitiAU mat me ,uropeu .jpuuiuui um "'""8"' v -Idinarv deirree ;that render it imnosBible for him .to take part in the pending campaign for election1 of members of Congress, President Wil- . am" a .... j " 1' :t" ?' . . r "' -.V 'J". .;1,'-;?:'r' ,. r- . ?:' ' ? .ut-.-. The close 'of a? very extraordinary session of "Congress U at hand, which b, I ventur to say," been mora- fruitful la Important legislation of permanent uncfulnesa to the country .than any eMlon of, Conrreaa avittitn thtt m.mnrv - of -th sustivA oublio nta of our' tteratln. A croat constructive program has been carried through for which the country haa pound, and sutra.r at 71,4 hpnta are lom walteo. and -been carried through with, tha approval and -.up, ' Bff " ' . A FEW SMILES; . . . . 1 J. - ' UaV i PERTINENT COMMENf'AND NEWS IN BRIEF . ... - ...... AinnrBTi wnnian i niauin :9 vm.xusu ciuvicutj UJUJ tOBWU 11-1 V....,,. i with a self in . the establishment of - maxl-i i r i small arty; which mum war prices for food in Ber- j litt. , Rye and wheat flour at - 6 V4 1 and 6 cents' a ? pound,! rye and j wheat bread at 4 . nd 5 cents a t tfiUAL. CUANGK TIIE ' ARMORY . BITE THERE Is off money on hand now with' whicJv- jMultnomah county can buy an Armory Bite. There can be no money for such purposes until collection of taxes' begins. There should be no money on hand for such purposes until the plan of building an Ar mory has been cantassed, ; the needs and requirement systemat ically, ascertained and the whole matter made a part of the county budeet for next year, i Nor should there be purchase of a site merely because some reai estate agent desirea to make a ale. Nor because any owner of property Is willing to sell a hold In. Nor on any other unbusiness like, haphazard method. Nor should there be a purchase of such land for the public at random prices, three or four times the as sessed valuation. Nor should " the purchase bo behind closed doors and at private sale, but in the open daylight and .under condem nation proceedings 'if the price is several times the assessor's price. If there is not authority for the county to brlhg condemnation pro- AaaA4 In (TB thA 1r2-1fl1a.turA should VVVU'-UQO, a..v confer such authority. Commissioner Holman Is right In Insisting that county business should be on a business basis. It Is the mildewed methods and dry rot processed so long Jh vogue at the county courthouse that help make taxes high. aaaaajaaaaaajaaaaawaaaaaaMMaajaajMa ; BONDS ARB VALID rwirt. nf luiiifiniia , ritnn of all Dartles. And. wa have .abundant?: reason to congratulate ourselves upon the record that has been made during taa busy seventeen months we have devoted to Durtrreat legislative task. Cer-!-talnly in ordinary i clrcumstancea. If we were free to disengage ourselves for the purpose, ;we WOnVi be , warranted," la inow dlwcting our energies-to a. groat, campaign In support of an appeal .to the country to give us the encouragement of Its indorsement at tho-autumn-elections. " . V- We could goj toi-'tha country with a, very ialBcere appeal. In which there need no pretense or boast of any' kind, .but a plain ' statement of things ' actually accomplSshed, which ought ttf be, and I think . would be, entirely convincing. '.. vf . Haa anybody stopped- to think -what type of man Woodrow Wilson IsV 'Has anybody seriously considered. - the klnd of ' administrative" work he has done, and -the kind of legislative work he - has Induced Congress to do? - , . - - ' ' Did anybody ever hear of an American president who. In so short a time, has done so much to elicit, the confidence, the admiration, and the applause of so many of his countrymen? ' - ' . ; '' What he is to his country and what his country Is to him Is vAot,cpA in the tlnd of leeislation he i has brought forward .'His currency Jaw has the j unqualified - approval off all. It Is so excellent in Its provisions that it received not only the support of the Demo crats in Congress, but or many Republicans and Progressives. It solved " a problem that no other .statesman dared try to solve, though Congress and committees, of Congresses,! arid leaders and groups of leaders dallied with it and dodged it for a generation. : His tariff superseded the most infamous tariff in . history - It received the Congressional support not only of the Democratic, mem bers, but 61 La Follette and many other progressive Republicans. It was fought at the. time and is fought now only by standpatters, cheap politicians and , unfair newspapers ; for pblitical purposes.-, The vote of such a statesman' as La Follettfer the present tariff shows the country what kind of men Its critics are. : The anti-trust legislation the Chamberlain railroad bill. for Alas ka, the Income tax measure are others of a . program to build up the country and free business and industry from the autocracy, of the trusts. What president in American history has done so'jmuch in so brief, a time . to plaa for a greater national prosperity; a pros perity to come with unexampled abundance' as soon as there is time for adjustment and for the handicaps' of a bloody European -war to pass away. . ' 'J "It is a kind of legislation and a quantity of legislation never before accomplished la so brief a time. ! It Is legislative, achieve ment carrying more relief and protection! for thet people than any American president ever secured in a whole term. It Is legislation directed to human welfare and to a wise constructive adjustment of ihe forces of national life and business j out of "which to bring the most prosperity to the most people. It Is earnest of the kind of th'ings Woodrow ' Wilson will-try to secure for his countrymen dur ing the remaining two and one half yeara of his .term. , What Woodrow Wilson brings to his country is evidenced In the contrast between the tranquility and peace at home and the. fright ful occurrences over-seas. Only yesterday there! was clamor for President Wilson to lead the armies of the United States into Me ico. He was scourged and ridiculed and denounced ajnd excoriated for his refusal to do so. His policy was called a f "grape juice policy." It was jeered at as a "spineless" policy. They said It was a foreign policy that made the United States the "'laughing stock of Europe." ' . ,i - While in blood-drenched Europe, 'women weep and men die," while children call for sires who can never come back "and mothers pray for the safety of sons they will never more see, there, is time for the American people to thank Almighty God for a president of peace, who pleads with the nations to sheath their swords and be at war no more. ' , " , Included i Mr Cook, widow of the . fa mous 'tourist, man a'ger. s The display within -.the crster was unusually fine, which the Ameri cans . at - -dinner prices which, in a country shut off lrom sources of supply are , mod-' BirJlingly attributed to - tto'e presence eraie, compannz favorably with what the American "housewife is obliged to pay, .President CampbeU is right. German thoroughness is an obfect lfesson for Americans. We should not emulate the militant spirit. but the German- method of pre-maw? paring for trade conquest, for m- Mrs. or mm. cook. -(. ... .-. , . After . several moment Of silence two Englishmen - exclaimed In one breath: - ,. "But how "could, they manage that?" Uttle Gertie Orogan hooking up from society page)-! Did ypu ever see dinner dance. 1m Orogan dustrial development and for gov- "(smniagiy)" .yaith, ernmental efficiency; has set the rVt yace , or Americans. ; shtruck th tabi wld his fist because One thine dATnrtntotarl vv I we had ' corn' taafa- - q -' wav Kf j VUw I eaa present war Is the' superiority of bbvre ft fnniD' ! me evening - newsDaner over the I v . : . : ' - t morning edition . as a news , re- I During the. furnace , cleaning opera- DOrter. It has bep.n nnlt nnHia. tlons in a larte steel works the worR able that what Important develop-' I few yards in the air. v" But -whenever ' Pat 4 hadV to cross he would do so on his r hands and knees The foreman, notic ing this; went up to him and said: Are you frightened of. walking on this plankr ! No. sir.- repUed Pat: "'tla fright ened I am of- walkln off It" ments the censorship has allowed 10 oe made pubuc j have all been i printed in the afternoon papers for' the first time. The reports of the morning papers have simply been a renash of , what has already been pubushed the day before. touches the ' advice 4 who Many a sermon that spot, la wordless. Lots of leeonla rlva naven t anyj to spare. Eurone was efficient In avervthlnk except keeping the peace ? r.. . .i i : Winter la srolna to comnllcat the war problem before long. i Nothlnar succeeds like success un less it Is the way failures fail. . Truth" Is stranger than either Dante Or Jules verne ever darea to oe. U EARLIER DAYS liy Kred lxckley. OREGON SIDELIGHTS -- La Grande Observer: Medford rises to remark that the short fruit crop in that section does not affect her finan cial standing, tor-ahe proudly boasta that her banks show no shrinkage In deposits. , - i , ' The Condon Times says It looks like the real estate business U over the state had struck bottom. With wheat brinainar II a bushel, wheat land around Condon ;ls being offered at 135 an acre - " , . - -., . " La Grande now has a revised charter. Essentials of the ommlsslon-manasjr zorm are retainea. oui error iu ju r children. flv bovs and five original documentOiave keen corrected ' " cmiaren. me ooys an. xive Woodbum's oldest settler is -J- L. Johnson.. He is 14 years oi'd. and has lived where Woodburn Is now located for 63 years. "X was born In Taswell county, II llnols, on : November 16,. 1830," said.-' Mr.' Johnson. "My father was born In North Car9llna, but was raised In Kentucky. . My mother was born and raised In Kentucky. My father was county Judge for many years In Il linois, so the running of the farm was turned over to his sons. " There wers Letters From the People lw . ttoM nt to The Journal lor DUDIleaUOn In this tnrn, .lv,i,M h rtt. tcn on only one aide of tb paper, ahoold set ezeeca BOO warda In tnt.,h . H m.fr k. m. eooipaoled by tha nama aad addreas fit Uta me writer does not' Oealr to I umtw vtm naroa nqbualied. be aHould ao a tut a.) "Dlaeaaaio la th arcateat of all raform- era it ratlonallaea arerTtntna it touetae. It iuhmw u au xais aancuty ana tbrowa them back on their rcaaoombleoaaa; If tney har no reaaonableueaa. It- ruthieaaly .The Ragtime Muse But a giH doesn't mind chapped lips ! If the right chap is responsible. ; , ' - : . . ( - . . - . ' , This looks like a poor year for: pun. lshing alleged international atrocities. . ,-. "-. i.-' As if there were not trouble enough already , football is starting up again. f - ,' (. -f i.'' It takes I a - strong minded man to admit he la In the wrong when be Is. . i . Men who have nothing else to apolo gise for should apologise for being on earth. -- t . - " ' ' . . . : j . " Bordeaux : may ba thankful for the publicity, aunough regretting tne.oc casion of it.v i ' If your heart Drontots vou to do a good deed, do It immediately, before you have heart failure. There Is 'nothing a married woman enjoys more than helping a spinster to. get into the same aina or irouDie. Thoush the straiaht and narrow rath may be all to the good, you'll find the bigi-est crowd trotting down the great white boulevard. ' Thourh the- Germans " are .only one hour by train from Paris the trains to Paris are not carrying German pas sengers Just nosr. September. ! Now the nights are rather cooL cave wnentney are extra not, And the youngsters go to school Joyfully-r. rather, not! Comes the oyster. from its lalr some ioikb eay it s good to eat; eruahea tbra oat ot cxlatenc and acta np lu I -Jlyo" 2an-have my share own concluatoua la Uiair stead. " Wodrir Blind Pigs and ProhibiUon. Dallas, Or., Sept. 7. To the Editor of The Journal After reading S. J, I prefer a slice of tneat. Actors talk ftf "the legit." Ana or --contracts. in jnsw x ora. Now they'd like a little bit or team play with Knife and fork. i jraaes tno costly. Panama, Cotton's artlcla in Baturdav's issu. I vanisned Is the Palm Beach suit. isaturaays issue, iFeed tna covr your summer straw. felt constrained to reply to It . In that article he attempts to prove that prohibition is a failure in those sections of our state where the sa She is such a patient brte! Baseball's drajtwlng to a close, j -Furiously now fans the fan. Witb another comes to blows loon has been voted out by quoting! iraTuug'h repeated "can't", and "can!' dipping, from certain county paper, I think, iT coming S published in those sections. He seems I Heretofore this should be clear to take for granted that these editorial cuppings voice ma sentiments of a majority of the people in those dls tricta. . For Instance, .he quotes a clipping taken-from a Dallas paper. In whloh In the past it always has. THE opinion of the Supreme Court declaring the Hood River county road bond issue ' 10 valid is lh line with the mod- rn tnndencv of ludlclal decisions ,ni roth.r thrmaue accesiuie. .u- i li . 1 Hi veil 11 lUB lUUIUi ncui uii-n,uj from tourists if scenic points- are the letter. .. v' Owing to a minor omission in not defining a certain point-where the western end of the road was to begin and a confusion of words relating to the retirement of the bonds a strictly technical decision might have Invalidated the issue. It is presumed that the court had in mind the fact that there was a great popular sentiment in favor of the issue, as 1 was shown In the result of the election which was about four to one In favor of bonding the county and for this . reason was not disposed to insist on points- that were not vital. The decision will permit the early undertaking of the county's unit of the Columbia River High way, the contract for which has -already been let. through the state it would require four days to s.make the round trip. he . has whipped the other fellow or is knocked out himself. 'The savage in him gives little thought to his own hurts or to the sorrows of his family, He must keep In ROADS AND BRIDGES T Taking an average- of fifteen dol- j thd , fight at "whatever hazard to lars per day each automobile would himself hi cdst to his dependents. leave sixty dollars for necessities I a "watching committee" may alone. If our beaches and moun- not be named, but the suggestion tains were made accessible weeks J that such a body be appointed is could be spent . in the state ana j evidence, .that woman, has a fair the money spent by travelers can understanding of man." .The pro- only be guessed at. It is a good. Investment. DAY- OP PRAYER T HE designation of October 4 by President W ilson as a day of ; nationals prayer for peace is! most commendable. At a time when the jseiitiment of war so strongly possesses the world anything that "can be done posal la In line . with woman's eter nal problem of handling her liegra lord. She knows both his weak nesses and his strength. REQUESTING IXPOKMATIOf i HERE is a great deal In the newspapers about the pro posed detention home for wo men, for which a site may be hnirftrit hv th r-itv nt rhraa tlmai to turn mens its as&essed value. me'ways ;oi,peace euouiu rewiy the- encouragement" of all -people. IHE counties of Oregon have expended the sum of $18,- 292,042 on roads and bridges from 1903 to 1913, inclusive. according to figures gathered by the state highway commission. The 'figures are not official, however, : for ' the reason that many of the County records are Incomplete andj estimates have been made from the ' test available data. -This large amount was, spent under the old patchwork, system and a great deal has been wasted Multnomah county leads with an expenditure of $2,108,264. Clack amas comes next with $1,310,522. Lane spent $1,095,864, and JSarion $1,081,073. "" : In the year 1918 the total amount spent In the state was $3,- l 184,207. An increase of $16,568 over 1912. . . . , - During the present year besides the $4,000,000 spent by the coun ty authorities there Is $500,000, 'raised from county bonds, on the Pacific Highway, in Jackson coun- ' ty, $400,000 on the Columbia High way" in Clatsop county and $315.- 000 on the Columbia" Highway , in Columhia county. Multnomah county will expend on the Colum - bia Highway the sum of $500,000 and Hood River county a, .bond Issue- of $75,000. . 7-In; .addition to this the state, , highway commission has : appropri .. ated $30,000 for the Biggs Wasco section of the Central Oregon Highway and $12,0 00! for the Cap ; Ital Highway, or: Rex-Tigardville I 1. is estimated that it will re ' quire $10,000,000 'to. develop a T proper trunk system for the state. . This will necessitate a ten mill , ; levy, approximately or If raised by a bond, issue ' the annual -interest on . this ' amount at five per cent would be an annual levy of one ' half mill.- - ' . i . 1 Independent of the . vast- sum saved. to farmers with -a good sys tem of roads-. a crop.; of several millions maj be gathered annually and "blind pigs" and "bad" whiskey are the defenses about which the traf fic finally rallies, . rational men seek ing truth can only conclude that the victory shout Is Just at hand for Ore- the editor proclaims himself a prohlbi- j gon dry, a dry United States, and soon tionist. while at theame time he a dry world. F. , FRANKLIN, makes ' the assertion that "There Is more liquor here than ever before, and Instead of a few places being the re posltory ror such, it can be found most any place." The "Futility' V of Prohibition. McMinnville, O?:, Sept; 8. To the Editor of The Journal I quite often see correspondence in your paper from I "lived in Dallas at the time that I prohibitionists in reference to white statement was published in one of our slavery, 1 gambling, murder, adultery, local papers. That liquor was sold in aU the ills Vnd vices of mankind, and Dallas after we voted out the saloon, ,v,- i . no. one doubts who is familiar wl5 l.!"1 emoloa.al PP1 the condition of things as they ax- J v"1- wn ur evwyiniug, isted here at that time; but that j India naa thousands .jof Immoral wo there was more liquor here than when 1 men; also' Turkey, and they don't by an ordinance which became effective last Saturday. ? r -- m ; v The Lincoln County Leader, pub Itshed at Toledo, .has ordered a lino type machine from the Merganthaler company of . New York. The Leader says the typesetting machine will give It a chance to publish a better paper, mora representative of Lincoln county. . - . a i .. Vancouver people have been warned by Chief of Police Brotton against speeding their automobiles during, fair week. The chief says there has been, a marked tendency on the part of local people to ignore the speed ordinance in going to and from the. Interstate fair. The editor of sthe Harney - County News, published at Burns, says he is fattMilnir on soma corn from the aar- den of a constituent. The corn Is of the -variety received last spring by the Harney County National bank. . Indi cating that fat editors may have di rect connection with farms, and even national banks. , .There Is prospect of a new cannery being opened in the near future at Canby. The Irrigator says It will fur nish a market for a large amount of fruit and vegetables which are now going to waste. The Irrigator is boost ing the proposed cannery, and at the same time callUjg for more farmers to develop the resources of Clackamas county. -, EFFECT OF WAR ON MORALS a- From London Correspondent of the ' New lYork Evening Kost. The raoidltv of the deterioration In moral -standards, under conditions Of war was seldom more. strikingly shown than here and now.. , ' On July 29. a week befora England entered the war, lr Edward Grey was moved to Indignation by tha refusal of the German chancellor to pledge himself, in the discussions of Eng land's relations to France that ,Uer-" many would not In any of the con tingencies of war, lay hands on the French colonies. In ess than, a week after the actual outbreak of war France and England - united lri the seizure of the German colony In west Africa. we had the saloons remains yet to be proved. I don't believe it, nor do I believe the author of that article be lieyes it. That there would have been less liquor in the town than there was drink. The same Is true all through the orient. We make laws against -gambling. murder, theft adultery, because from . 1- - Jtl i it - T , i, V . r i. iviumw recognized as natural wrongs. Human their known duty, I have ample reason to believe. What is true, of the Dallas clipping Ufa and property have always -been held sacred.' You will also note that alcoholic liquors have been sanctioned Incidentally, the public has lit tle. Infnrmatlnn ' na tn tha nlnna - There are several reasons why fft, tT,, va whT la ,t nikBaar.v the United States should Ukethe to have tQlrty acre -o land foy a lead In this movement, vve navel ; -nruv - mn nn(,i, stbod for peace , at all times and Required for a woman's detention have preached the brotherhood 9f hom6? What use. would the city man as the basis ot progressive ihiTa nf nnn ,n vmuittuuu. o o fciio huuiS trnxn win. , ,!, . ... ,.vii.v iVaIi '.t 111 iava a nnmlnaht nttft In I l ZTJZl" .These are questions that doubt lTt'::: .C": "r" Z: less occur to many taxpayers, just o.v n ia'i. - as they, do to The JournaL basic Christian principle and as we I i - - turn to Him -who maketh -even f?I' L Culd " adequate site fi, A;n.iM-'xriM be secured for one fourth or one tiiv vv 4 cevu Ui . wau yiaiorj - 1UU1 l j --t - W S3 vail AJVJJJ ivl bAJiCfcft, D Lf AA Aw U peace without which all the plans of , diplomats are powerless of exe-1 - cution. -.' : . - He has promised: If my people, which jare called by my name, shall .humble themselves and Dray and seek! my face and turn from their wicked j ways then will I t-tOT"; is oQuouesa true oi ait. me cuppings as early as the Lord's supper. The by Mr. Cotton. commandments also' speak of these In order that prohibition may ac- natural wrongs, while they; make no complish that for which it is de- reference to alcoholic beverages, signed, two things are. necessary. , August 29 a Dodge City; Kan barber First, vote the saloons out; second, went on a spree at Bloom and caused vote dry officials in. Blind pigs never considerable disturbance. The people thrive where dry officials hold the at Bloom told the sheriff that he had reins of local government. drunk all the' hair tonic and bay rum. Some years ago the county 4n which some three quarts. Which goes to I was i born and raised. In southern show that the small percentage of in- Kentucky, voted the saloons out; but temperate people even ' in Kansas can. left wet officials in "Authority. The not bo helped by prohibition. In the bUnd pig that gives' the Wets o much Southern states, according to Right concern soop took up 'his abode in the Rev.- H, C. . Brant; Episcopal bishop of county seat. ' The officials saw to it Manila, 'where prohibition, has almost that the pestiferous animal was not become universal, the Increase in the disturbed. The people finally became sales of drugs per capita, is greater aisgustea, not- oniy witn tne pig, out 1 man tne increase in. population ; The loudest and most constant as surance In the London press has been that there Is no hoscility here to Ger-' many and the German people, but that the war is solely against the German autocracy and militarism. 'A week af ter' war was declared a piece by Strauss was replaced on the program of the first promenade concert of the season by something of Tchaikovsky's; the usual iWagner concert was re placed the next day by a Franco Russian program, and it Was stated that all the works of" living German and Austrian composers would bs ban ished for the ' future. This was to propitiate popular sentiment. "The patriotio feelings of th enor mous audience,", we were assured, had musio might provoke such manifesta tions as would embarrass the police. A writer In one of the newspapers ventures the Ironical comment that "it would be Interesting to know whether It. Is also ! high treason in Germany now to be Caught reading Shakespeare and MJlton." War" Is the caption for a column In a leading liberal newspaperlhls morn ing,' and essentially the a a ram appears In the other papers. "Millions to Be Won," "Plana for Conquest of German Markets," "British Traders' Opportun ity to Capture Commerce" such are the bristling headlines. "No such golden chance has ever been offered to Brit lsh Industry and commerce as is af forded by the conditions arising from the present European war," proclaims the British Empire Industrial league. and it gloats over the chances for! Britain's capture of the 1632,000 annu al volume of export trade till yester lay in the hands of "our most unscru pulous competitors." " One writer urges the annihilation not only of Germany's navy, but of her entire mercantile fleet aa well. If this were- done. "England would have such a booming trade as we have never before dreamed of." Even the colonial secretary and the torelgn secretary and the board of trade, are cooperat ing officially to collect and circulate the data which : will rouse English traders to the good fortune offered them by Germany's misfortune. "The complete paralysis of Germany's ex port trade which Ysas followed the sweeping of the 'seas by t the British navy," says the Daily News, the or gan of liberalism, "has presented our traders with a wonderful opportunity, and they are grimly alive to the situa tion." ,. . .... w. On August 5 this was a war on Eng land's part: for the neutrality of Bel glum, the rights of small nations, and tne sanctity of treaties. The surges tion of any: sordid or selfish considera tion was anathema. A, fortnight later Belgium neutrality claims less space In the newspapers than the capture of German markets. "World Trade One -cannot help wondering how all this will read in "selfish, envious and bigoted Berlin."; Will , she "grimly" venture the suspicion that the elo quent and mighty altruism of a fort night ago was not tne dominant thing in the. British compound?-- She could, like everybody else, make too sweep ing deductions from things like these. They-do not represent In any" sense the majority or dominant sentiment of, the English public today. But. as we see in every war, these, are the sentiments which rapidly develop as the war Itself develops, until public opinion in the : warring nations be comes inebriate, and selfishness and passion entirety usurp the throne. Deep Pocketbooks Among Warring Powers with the pig protectors also, and voted in officials who soon broke Into the sty, confiscated the source of his pros perity and placed the blind pigger where be was no longer a nuisance and a .menace to publlo morals. What was done In this Instance could be done in any town in Oregon, GERMAN. THOROUGHNESS P RESIDENT CAMPBELL of the University of Oregon ! has called - attention to German thoroughness -In preparation .commercial, conquest, -i- The hear from heaven! arul win forgive j GerrnlanB . -are highly trained for their sin and will heal their land. I . . , L " ' m, .- Dyouat ymyuoco. & jrvruitui Prohibition) and the Taxpayer. Nehalem, Or., Sept t. To the Editor of The Journal -Mr. Yoder wants to know whether I can. show an instance where a man spent his money over even In Tillamook, the county seat ef th bar and his family iwas happier. the county in, which the gentleman J " xamiiy neeas tne money he from Nehalem resides. ' spends, it does not benefit them in M. B. YOUNG. ' the least and it matters' not whether i V. Kn. via ( L 1 Uf.OAA jw l.JLli. 'War and the Uquor Traffic. district. I want to ask Mr. Yodr or Albany, Or., Sept. 7 To the Editor I Mr. Luther if It -rellevea the anguish of The- Journal -The best European j of the. wife t know her husband got statisticians figure the direct and In-j drunk in a prohibitory blind pig? Does direct cost -of th present war in Eu-1 It stay the pangs of hunger, of the rope at $55,000,000 a day. This vast child that its father spent his money sum, amounting to $20,000,000,000 a In a speak-easy? Does it make the year. Is probably less ' than the annual mother happier to know thai her boy cost of the liquor traxiia to Hiurope I or girl got dru.nk In- a prohibitory rum and America. .It Is less than the I shop? You. talk as though it makes a financial cost of the liquor trafflo to j difference ;iaovr, show where.' the. United States alone everyfive I . They refer to Oregon City and Salem years. The terrible conomio waste j as models. ' People visiting Salem say of war is admitted by aiL . they can get booze when sthey want it But, eurely, we are .all wrong in I Things may not be aa loose, as in most thinking of war as waste. War is a A WATCHING C03iIITTEB A salesman has, devoted painstaking years! to preparation for his work; BUDAPEST; woman, Mrs. jit Is; thoroughness that has made . Roslka i Schwlmmer, wants a j modeirn industrial Germany. watching committee" named ! , ,Tne purpose of President Camp- , to urge mediation in ' Europe. i bell was' to' show the advantage She has come to America to urge of ..the right sort . of ' education in President Wilson, to take the preparation fox American trade ex- initiative, n ' - - ,1 nansion. . He - could have selected This woman's plan is novel and i so better text 'than Germany, .for characteristic! of her sex. She pro that ; country, haa- given definite poseji the creation of an . interna-1 meaning to the - word "efficiency tional body, made up of. repre-Jused ; connection with, commer Bntatives from nations whose neu-jclal and industrial enterprises. -In' trallty Is disinterested. This com-1 the , kaiser's empire efficiency is mittee's duty would be to urge 1 the iivatchword " of the nation, and mediation upon the warring powers lit Is '-used in ' every - undertaking dally. No single refusal or dozen I upon which the Germans enter: refusals would keep the committee J - Raymond E. Swing, Berlin cor- from the task of attempting to end j respondent , of the Chicago NewB the conflict. , ! I has told how ' Germany prepared Mrs. Schwlmmer has evidently I herself for the heavy burdens of studied man-nature.; The virtue of i war. fc, The German .' army is the her" plan, he says.i lles- in .the'imosti efficient organlxatlon. for Its fact that' it .would permit men wag-3 purpose to be found in the world. Ing the war to accept rather than I But .German mahagement was not ask. for mediation.. I confined to the mobilization of There -,, is a large idea in the I troops. - It was shown in financial plan. ' It is based upon male stub-1 and ; economic mobilization to .an bornness,- too often ! supposed' by J equally t remarkable degree. Uni the sox to be grit or courage." A I versity men are more of a factor man In a fight will-not quit until Jin the public life, of Germany than W. J. BISHOP. By John M. Oskison. God Is on the side of the heaviest artillery; and the makers of big guns and ammunition deliver first to those nations that have full pocketbooks out of which to pay. And in the final analysis the thrifty workers of a na tion are the ones who pay fhe bills, r. So let us take a glance at the sav ings bank deposits of the powers en gaged In war. Consider first those of Germany and Austria-Hungary. Austria has In her communal' and private savings banks a little more than a billion and a quarter of dollars, and enough more in the postal savings banks to raise the total to $1,363,600.- 000,' while Hungary has in the classes of banks named some $178,000,000, Germany!- Xa - by .far-v tna thriftiest power engaged in the wait judged by the bulk of her people's savings. Near, ly 23,000,000 - German subjects have about $4,500,000,000 in the private and corporate savings banks in the empire. So, between these allies, there exists a chest containing something Ilk. $, 4i;000.000. It is a huge sum; how does it compare with the savings of Russia,. France, Belgium-; (also em broiled en j the side of the triple en tente X, and the United Kingdom? great business. Perhaps no. other makes such a call for labor. Peace advocates are merely foolish senti mentalists .who are blinded by the fact that a mere fraction of the men employed in war are killed therein. The other millions -get their wages oo: of It and great industries thrive in the production of ' war supplies. ' Is thq reader weary of the" lame logic of this paragraph? It Is merely parody , of lamer logics with, which would be thinkers are seeking to save the day for drinK ana annx revenues. , Economic defense of the drink traf fic is an utter impossibility; It is: no longer merely. , a fraction of -drinkers' known as drunkards whose fate Is the condemnation of the traffic Science is demonstrating in 4 the .university laboratories of the Whole world that every drinker is, to a measurable, de gree, a drunkard,' or-an Intoxicated person. ' - ' ; It - follows that when the ' saloon takes money from any man for drink. there is no more real 'business in the transaction than in ainy other success ful bunco game or holdup. Tne high wayman is usually kinder to his vic tim, than, are the "poisoners general, Ignorance and appetite, and sup posed financial Interest will continue to struggle In every conceivable -com bination in defense of the liquor traf tie. - The key to much, of what, is printed in these words of Macauley: "If there were any large pecuniary -in terests concerned in denying the Ja of gravitation, that Jaw would noT,be acknowledged to thii dav ". I . ' When- so -called "personal liberty" ...We' find the United Kingdom (Eng land, Ireland, Scotland and Wales) with a total of $1,148,000,000 in the postal and trustee savings banks France has In private and postal sav ings banks about $1,083,000,000; Rus sia's savings amount to $715,000,000; and those of , Belgium- $211,009,000. Here's a grand total of $3,212,000,000; It's a, little more -than half of th total owned by the two powers at war with them. Take another sort of test th sav ings per capita; Austria shows $47.72 saved for each' inhabitant: Hungary has saved $22.85 each; ana the Ger mans have $65.83 each. Among the war rivals of these two powers, the record Is this: France has savings of $27.36 to each unit efl population; the United Kingdom. $25.14; Russia, $4.79; and Belgium. 1 izs.oo.' : ao. roaae tnese iigures a mne more significant, compare , them with our own record of total ' savings of a lit tie more than -$5,000,000,000 tf nearly 11,600,000 depositors, and a per capita saving of ss.7. Can you' wonder that Germany and Austria-Hungary have felt confident of the sufficiency f their "rolls'? girls. "Thomas J. Farnham; had "his. office ? with my father, and he ttold me so rrvoh about Oregon that I wanted to . go out to that wonderful 'region; t I read 'Fremont's Travels in Oregon and -California.' which enthused me still more. I used to spend hours listen ing to Mr. Farnham tell of his experi ences In Oregon. He organlxed i a party In the spring of 1839 to go to Oregon. They called it the Peoria party, and, as we lived 12 miles from where the party WHs organised, we of its preparation. "Mr. Farnham organised the party and was its leader. There were 13 in the party beside Mr. Farnham. - Joseph Holman was one of th party. He got work with the Methodist Mission at Salem. In 1841 he married Miss Al mlra Phelps. He built the State House at Salem. He was an Englishman, and had been In the United States about three years when he joined Mr. Farn ham' party. Amos Cook, late of Port land, was another of the party. Kid ney gmlth, whq was th cause of the party breaking up, was another. When he got to Oregon, they named Mm Blubber-Mouth' Smith. Fletcher. Kll borne. Wood, Blair, Oakley and Jordan were others In the party. "All the neighborhood was at the courthouse at Peoria, to give them a send off when they left for Oregon, about the 1st of May, In 1839. They went to Independence, Mo., and from there started out on the regular fur traders' trail for Sante Fe. Smith was quarrelsome, and was a1 born trouble-maker, so when he shot him self acoldentally most of the party wanted him to go back and- not con tinue the Journey and be a care and trouble to them. Farnham would not consent to this, so the party broke up. Farnham resigned the command, and when they arrived at Bent's Fort, thy split up. Joe Holman, Amos Cook, R. L. Kllborne and Franclst Fletcher started northward and wintered with a party of . trappers In the Rocky mountains. They reached Fort Van couver overland on the same day and at the same hour that the ship Lau sanne, with Jason Lee's new mission aries did. "Farnham. with Blair, Wood, Kelly, Oakley and Smith, the cause of all trouble, started on for Oregon. On the head waters of Green river Kelly quit, and Oakley and Wood decided to go back to Illinois. Farnham, Blair and Smith went on to Fort Hall, and thence to the Hudson Bay post kept by Payette, called Fort Boise. From there they went by way of Burnt river, Powder river. Grand Ronde valliyjind on across the 'Blue mountains to th Umatilla valley. The party agafn sep arated, Farnham going to Dr. Marcus Whitman's mission and Smith and Blair going to Fort Walla Walla, now called Wallula. Here Smith and Blair separated. Blair sroinar to Snaldina'a to the Willamette valley, and got a job with Ewlng Young. Farnham went on to The Dalles, and. with Jason Lee's nephew, Daniel Lee, Went to -Fort Vancouver. Hs stayed as a .guest of Dr. McLoughlin for a week or 10 days, and then traveled to the Method ist mission, at Salem. He went on a Hudson's Bay boat to the Sandwich Islands, and from there he caught a ship around the Horn for the Atlantic coast He spent a good deal of time after his return writing books about Oregon and his travels across -the plains. - "When gold was dlscoveed In Cali fornia, we decided to coma out to the coast, but it was the spring of 1851 before we were able to get under way. We started from New London, about 18 miles from Burlington, la, , John L. Starkey and -Dr. John McCully, a brother of David McCulley. came with us. Dave and Asa McCully had left in '49 for California. They went back to Illinois, and IA 1852 they came out to Oregon. We settled here where Woodburn inow is ' located, r Father bought a squatter's right Jack sox and Ell Cooley were our neighbors. Robert Copley and myself are the only ones ieft'who lived here In 1I5L"- HOO'S H00 By John W. Carey, j places, but -these cities are ' young in prohibition.:-- Give them time and ydTi will hear the same cry as from every prohibitory r district in our nation. Just give them time. They have never failed to come: through ini spite of hon est efforts of officials K "' Mr. Yffder . wants i to know why the saloon men ; fight, prohibition. The question is 'foolish enough.- Any man, with the least ia.bility, will flgh.t to pro tect the unjust - destruction of his property, and destruction without com pensation. His assertion that prohibi tion has sent; men noma sober- has never been proved In a single instance. and I. defy him to show one. But Mr. Yoder and alt.th rest engaged on his side of the controversy seem to place the stigma ana disgrace or tne liquor business upon the, working man. There are working men who. drink Just the same a there are ricti men who drink, but Mr. Yoder and the rest will find the working man , Just as sober and capable of taking' care of himself ' as anyone- else... .-; . -., i: ... I want Mr. xoderrto point to one In stance where prohibiten has relieved the burden of the. taxpayer. Just one. 8.' J. COTTON. - Answer to a . Booze Pester, . McMinnvllle, TOr Sept . 8. To the Editor of The Journal Everywhere I have gone In the Interests of my con gressional candidacy . I have been' con fronted with the flaming red posters of the liquor- traf flc, filled -with mis representation and falsehood. ' Permit ma- space' to .answer ooei of. th- asier tlons made - in ; such posters; "Nine hundred thousand dollars lost 'In reve-. nue if we j vote Oregon dry." The Impression is that Oregon re ceives, $900,000 revenue - from; the liquor traffic; whereas Oregon: does not. receive one cent of- revenue from the liquor interests that would be lost if the state went dry. It i true that the liquor' interests are supposed to pay license to the wet cities, but if there be a benefit to any taxpayer of the state in that revenue, none of It .goes to any farmer or any resident in; dry. territory, but only tb kwet1 towns land cities. ? ' - This revenue -is used, and usually much more must be added, to support the police department of the city re ceiving it, and none, as Is commonly declared, goes to build sidewalks or pave streets? Every property owner knows that be pays the full contract price for all such improvements in fr.ont'of his -property. The poorj the oppressed, the down-' trodden, are: further robbed that those who own - property may evade more taxes, whereas; an addition of only one mill to the tax rate in Oregon would raise more than the whole reve nue of the liquor business, -, and th burden would rest where it belongs on the ' owner of property, . and - not on the weak and overborne. ; There is one other phase of the question. The presence of the liquor business in Oregon is accountable more than all other causes for the necessity of raising over $1,000,000 a year Just to . maintain tho . state institutions alone, and this fund must bo paid by farmers, dwellers :l v dry cities -and towns, ; and i every .owner of - a foot of property ini the- state oC Oregon.' "a Fine business. that: 'Voe 232 ' X Yes, for protection of home, lower taxes, ana tne : burden that must be. borne to rest on the. shoulders of the property owners and not on the poor. downtrodden, weak and oppressed. h CURTIS P. COQ ' Has Interviewed the Women. ' Portland, Sept . To .'the Editor of The Journal I .have just -completed a tout made la the interests of the Pro hibition party and th dry amend ment During my trip I was la eight of . the eastern Oregon counties. Mudh to my satisfaction I'found tb woman -very.vready to" respond to theall of prohibition. Mere so, in fact, than th meO. And this Is as it should be.. far th liquor traffic; as Everybody mag " 1 - . rACcH rAV ' aaasssaBBBBMBBVBaaUU - - ! Who's holding down today a Job ;foi R. Poincare & .Co., in whiclr N. -Bona part "won fam a hundred years agol Who leads the mighty-j host oi Franc in Europe's merry scrap, wltlj eye all set on Germany to wipe it off th map?""'. 1 - .. Who hopes to bring the bacon ton at least Alsace-Lorraine and other wise with Europe's map to raise sobm urn ram? - - -,-.. .Who's out to Jolt those Germans is the well-known-Jugular for what the J .K. gave th Frenchmen in th Franco. woman in th horn more than it 4os 2t!i?' Tiw-;r'w-i anyone else. Not only did th women 1 .Whf d "how h Franc a readiS! oar; pledges, but they eon- VAISlS1 TffineraiPJoffr tributed liberally also, i In on pUc at Waterloo?, TaOeneral Jcf f r man nine women assisted wnii oniy two or threi men responded. 5 -s -- I did considerable platform work. hut had' an" opportunity; to Interview j many, women -In their homea ; While t 1 have been . in th .home where th i wlf and th husband will vote wet in ! otmtrs where th wlf and tb husband will vot dry. In some where th hus band will vot wet and the wife dry, I have never been In any home wher th husband will yot dry and th wlf wet ' ' , 4 If any of the wet follower think that th majority of women willj not vote dry.' let him interview tham day after day as I have done and I am sure t 1 will change his mirwi. i ,. a W. JRATmVXLU -i The Sulrday Journal The Great Home r Newspaper, consists of . - -" V : Five riews sections replete with illustrated" features. Illustrated magazine of quality. Woman's pages' oft'raref merit' Pictorial news supplement. Superb comic 'section. - A ' -: .--'.. 5 Cents the Copy '; i