5 G THE OREGON SUNDAY: JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING. SEPTEMBER 27, 1914. THE JOURNAL Alf tNDKPgyPKNT WbTWBPAPER. c a JACKSON PoblUboa rabnBI Try evening (except Bandar) nl rrr Bandar moraine at The Jonrnal BotW lf . Broadway and Yamhill Portland, Or. fcatarad at tba aoatotfic at PortUad. Or, tor transanal io taroaga lDe . ciiaa natter. d TKLKPHONICS Main 7172: Homa. A-SOftl. Ajl dpiMDMU reached bj tbeae no a bora. TaU tha operator what deimrtment jon want. lORKlON AUTKUTISf MQ BBPKrBrrATIVB Benjamin Kentnor Co.. Bro D'!'c s Ktfth At... New York; IMS Peoples (in Bide Cblraco. Suoacripiloo term by mail a to any ad dreaa ia Iba United Htatea ar Mexico: DAILY. . . One rear S9.no I One month 9 BtrNDAY. . M One rear 2.M t One month DAILY AND SUNDAY. Ona year -.17.50 I Ooa month -a 95 Olve us a character on which we can thoroughly depend, which we know to be based on principle arM on the fear of God. and It la wonderful how many brilliant and popu lar and splendid qualltlea we can safely and gladly dispense with. A, P. Stanley. THEIR ABUNDANCE NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FOURTEEN Is a banner year for Oregon farmers. They never were in the midst of such an abounding prosperity. The crops are vast and the prices high. A Bale of a million bushels of wheat at 95 cents for Club and $1.03 for Blue Stem was a tran saction of the past week. There is a scramble for wheat all over the world, and Oregon farmers never had so great a total to sell. A news dispatch this week from Heppner stated that representa ' tlves of Eastern woolen mills have offered to contract next year's .wool at 20 cents. It is a wool Incident never before heard of in Eastern Oregon. It is a price one to two cents higher than this year's wool price, and this year's wool price is the highest on rec ord. In livestock, in dairy and poul y try products, farmers have ex tremely high prices. Most con sumers are paying 40 cents a . dozen for fresh ranch eggs, and the .wholesale price is 35 cents. Bat ter is above the average price level, and spring lambs are $6 to $6.25. Ewes are $4.50, and even . sold the past week at $4.75. ". The farmers of the state have .more hogs than they ever had be fore, and the price is at a top level. Beef is seven cents, and there is an unusual supply in the state. Hardly in a generation have ' farmers had so remarkable a com bination of big crops and high prices. Thny will have more money this year to throw into the channels of business and to lay aside for their own uses than they have had before jn twenty years. Nor have they in " that period had an outlook for continued pros perity comparable with that which is in prospect for them in the com ing and future years. And the sunlight of their abun dance will, as it always does, shed Itself in a good measure of pros perity for those who are not for tunate enough to be Oregon farmers. MR. FLEGEL AF. FLEGEL is a better man for Congress than is Mr. McArthur, because in 1910 Mr. McArthur helped to plot the destruction of the direct primary through the assembly; Because he long fought State ment One and aa a member of the state legislature voted for and spoke for the notorious Brooke Bean bill which made the taking of Statement One an indictable off en ee punishable with heavy pen alties; Because at the 1913 session, Mr. McArthur was a pillar and briga dier in one of the tmost notorious legislative machines' that ever op erated in the Oregon state house, and Because, Mr. McArthur is a standpatter and reactionary of the most pronounced type and as such, is not in sympathy with the aims and purposes of Lincoln Republi cans and democratic Democrats and progressive Progressives. These are sufficient reasons for Mr. McArthur to have forfeited all claims' he may have had for the people to commission . him to go to Congress and act for them. Mr. Flegel Is a man whose aims and purposes and conceptions and Ideals are far better suited to the wishes and plans of the people or the Multnomah Congressional district. A HEAVY TOLL this figures compiled byl 1 Benjamin r . Trueblood, LL. D., are to be accepted, fifteen billion lives have been lost in war since the beginning of authen- tic history. During the nineteenth century alone, he estimates war cost fourteen million lives through - wounds and disease. In the Na "i poleonic campaigns six million were lost during the nineteen ' years from 1796 to 1815. The ' war of 1812-14 between England , and the United States resulted in the death of about 50,000 men. r The war of 1846-48 between the . United States and Mexico cost an- other 50,000, most of the Ameri can loss being from disease. v American Civil war ap- ' proximately one million perished ' from wounds and disease. The six .weeks war between Prussia, Aus trU and Italy, la .1866 cost 45.000 lives.-. In the Franco-German wax GETTYSBURG N EXT Sunday has been set aside for nation-wide supplications for peace. " ? - On that day, will ; the great battle of Alsne etfll be in progress? - - . . - . -v" .' j' :-. To that mighty struggle, with more : than 2,000,000 men. en gaged, fourteen terrible days have already been , devoted. .. There is no present sign of cessation of the fighting." . What more ' potent reason for . the mind of this nation to be bent for? one day on deep and earnest desire .for peace? V. ky'lV No battle in history has brought each gigantic forces into 'action. It is a portentous death grapple between two of the mightiest, beat armed, and best equipped armies the world ever saw. Before it, was the battle of Marne, up to its time, probably in loss dt life, a battle .without a precedent. V ' f , Little is known about what the losses are at Alsne. They can only be conjecture!. The war offices will not make the facta-public until the conflict is over. If then, - In J that .mysterious word 'miBsing" which carries part of the rollcall in every battle, thou sands upon thousands of brave boys will be told off into eternity with the nation's ignorant of what they were or how they went. At Gettysburg, the bloodiest battle of. the American Civil" war, Meade bad 94,000 men and Lee 76.000, a total of 170,000. There are twelve times as many men at Aisne, and probably many more. The killed and wounded at Gettysburg,' not including the "miss ing," were, Meade 17,567, and Lee 15,298, a total of 32,865. At Gettysburg, the fighting lasted three days; at Aisne, It has been con tinuous fourteen days. , A priest who was an eye witness of the -fighting at Mons, de scribing the slaughter says: The Germans charged at top speed. But the poor fellows never had a chance. The British were well entrenched. The' .enemy advanced in masHed formation. Our rifles were the best In the world, and the marks manship of our troops could not be surpassed. The Germans were doomed from the outset. ' : Steadying their rifles at the top of the trenches,, the British fired at wilL They couldn't miss. Every bullet found at . least two marks, and uornetlmes three or four. The poor fellows fell like chaff before a fire. Whole companies fell together. The wounded squirmed from the masses of the dead and tried to continue the charge. It then became necessary to shoot thm affair). The sights I saw showed me conclusively that this la not war, bat. a terrible holocaust. Its cost in human lives is almost impossible to comprehend. At Aisne, the terrible new artillery, the high power rifles and the range finding by the skymen are far more efficient agencies of destruction than Meade's 410 cannon and Lee's 190 cannon, and the old Springfield rifles at Gettysburg. With twelve times as many men engaged as at Gettysburg, with fourteen days of fighting in stead of three, and with 32,865 killed and wounded in Meade's and Lee's armies, this terrible battle of Aisne is to yield a slaughter to stagger mankind. What a reason for the United States to be thankful for peace, and to have a day of fervent supplication for all the world to sheathe the sword! of 1870 the loss was 225,000. A similar number perished in the Russo-Turkish war. The Zulu and Afghan wars in 1879 cost 40,000 lives. The Japanese-Chinese war, according to in complete estimates, cost 15,000 lives. The loss in the English Boer war was 125,000 of whom 100,000 were English and It in volved an additional sacrifice of the lives of 15,00,0 Boer women and children. ' The loss in the Spanish-American war was less than 6000 but the Philippine aftermath cost the United States 5000 soldiers. It is further estimated that the total expenditure of money for wars is approximately thirty-eight billion dollars. These figures take no account of the destruction of property and loss of wealth caused by the with drawal of men from productive oc cupations, nor of the vast sums that have to be disbursed in inter est on debts incurred by war. COLUMBIA RIVER HIGHWAY T HE roadbed of the Columbia River Highway is finished between the top of the bluff above Rooster Rock and War- rendale and the concrete bridges and viaducts are in place. There remain about six miles of grade to be built between Warrendale and the county line. A large sum of money is being expended by the county in the work but it is well spent. For every dollar the peo ple are receiving a dollar's worth of road. A remarkable feature about the construction is the low cost and the expedition with which it has progressed. In handling all classes of excavation the average cost has been 38 1-10 cents per cubic yard. This Includes the 100 foot tunnel at Oneonta gorge. In work of this character this amount is a record. The Oregon Washington Railway & Navigation Company,- .whose tracks run just below the highway, spent 44 cents per cubic yard for similar con struction and the North Bank Road 6n the opposite side of the Columbia river, had to pay 56i cents. ' In the section just west of La tourelle Falls Roadmaster Yeon installed a steam shovel to make large fills, at a cost of seven cents per cubic yard. Ftom a scenic and engineering standpoint the highway is un rivalled in the world. From a bus iness standpoint it is one. of the best investments the county ever made and at a time arhen the spirit of militarism is abroad it might be proper to say that from a military standpoint it is full of possibilities. All the mondy being disbursed la making the highway will be re turned a hundredfold through the lowering of transportation rates and through the attraction of tour ists to the state. When it is linker! up with roads to Mount Hood and other points of . natural Interest Oregon will have done much towards capital izing her immense scenic asset. THE ROUND-UP A' NOTHER Pendleton Round Up has passed into history and joined the -old - days of the west of which it was the counterfeit. ' Again it has been demonstrated that the spirit of those days when men's blood ran red still exists and that the "busting of bronchos, riding of bulls. and tying of steers is not a lost arL 4 It . was . also .demonstrated that all these things appeal to the man AND AISNE by President Wilson as A day I of today as the circus dd in the days of the Caesars. The early life of the west is passing fast away before modern conditions. It is well that it be preserved as long as possible' be fore it is lost in tradition. In this preservation the Round Up has been and may continue to be an important factor. May the name of Pendleton be long associated with it. THE SUBMARINE S INKING bf the British cruls era Aboukir, Hogue and; jressy by a German submar ine has again called attention to the possibility that naval war fare has been revolutionized.. Last J une Sir Percy Scott, ah admiral of the British navy and a naval specialist of Jhe first rank, du- ciarea in the London Times: The introduction of vessels that swim under water has, in my opin ion, entirely done away with the utility of ships that swim on top or tne water. While Admiral. Scott's statement has not been- proved by the Ger man submarine, the sinking of three cruisers without injury to the attacking vessel goes far to ward demonstrating that naval warfare has been revolutionized. In any event, there is serious question whether -enormous ex penditures for dreadnaughts have not produced little more - than piles of floating Junk so far as ef fectiveness in war is concerned. Admiral Scott said the submar ine will make It unsafe for a fleet to put to sea, that battle ships will be of no use either for defensive or offensive purposes, and that there should be no more built, as it would be a misuse of the people's money. It Is entirely possible that when the war is over the militant na tions will be much wiser. The claim has long been made that a great navy is little more than a source of expense to a nation, for the efficient fighting ship of to- aay is worth little tomorrow. Also, the race for supremacy on the sea has not made any nation supreme. r' , If Admiral Scott was right last June, as demonstrated by one sub marine's work in the North sea, it is yet possible that the people of Europe may find relief from grind ing taxes for the upbuilding of imposing but useless fleets. AMERICAN DIPLOMATS A FEW weeks ago the country was told that under the Wil son administration, and par ticularly because of Mr. Bryan, our diplomatic service had been ruined. There are still manu factured stories to the same ef fect, but they are fewer- and further between, s Sir Edward Goshen', British am bassador to Germany when war was declared, has paid a high tribute to James W. Gerard, Amer ican ambassador to Berlin. In his final report Sir Edward says Mr. Gerard showed great firmness and calmness in dealing with a diffi cult situation. It is the testimony of a trained diplomat concerning the ability shown by America's representative. Our diplomatic' and consular service has done extremely well in performing their arduous and, peril ous . workup ; Mr. Gerard met the crisis in Berlin. , In Belgium Brand Whitlock is. credited -with having saved Brussels from bombardment. American consuls l performed the same service for smaller ' Belgian towns. . ; r The attempt' to . prove that pon tics and -personal , interests were si- lowed .' to lower . the ' standard of our diplomatic service has signally failed.. The United States has some modern Ben Franklins in ithe war cone. Whether .or not they belong to the "shirt sleeve" school, they are getting things done, and getting: them done right. . Except for-a mysterious report about Am bassador-elect Sharps in Paris, not a won of criticism has appeared anywhere. The - country has rea son to be ' proud of its representa tives in Europe. . THE POOR OLD MAN S THERE any sadder sight than that of the helpless aged poor, the maimed veterans of the battle of life? - . . They have struggled against poverty and have finally ' been Beaten. It may be that they were foredoomed ' to 'defeat by lack of capacity, or, want of thrift, bnt is it for us to judge? "When a man. cant get "work and is broke, the' best thing he can do is to kill himself," said a man 63 years of age when, ar raigned In the Municipal court Fri day on a charge of drunkenness. Although the man was wrong in his conclusion yet his statement opens up an old question. Is not the failure of society , to afford every willing individual an opportunity to exchange the ser vice of which he Is capable for a sufficient remuneration to meet his natural needs a greater crime against itself than the suicide of the individual? Is it not a greater crime than the theft of the individual to pro vide for a starving family? 1 Which la the greater the law of nature on the law of man? Better than an academic discus sion. Is the effort to bring them into harmony. To paraphrase a saying of Abraham Lincoln you can not have a civilization half fed and half hungry. A civilization which permits a . part of Its ! units to suffer from hunger is only a part civilization. To enlarge the social vision and i RtimiilatA the 11 rx,I- - w u vvaia wr 1A0 Mf UV'TJ VJ the end that every man shall have the opportunity to work according to his capacity is the real purpose of life. Young and able 'men are right fully censured for lack of service and lack of provision against the Incapacity of old age but there should be pity for the hopeless, helpless and friendless, aged, drift ing derelict. ' SALVATION BY SHOOTING E DWTN D. MEAD of the World Peace Foundation- has been In Europe as an observer and student of war. He declares that the theory of salvation by shooting has absolutely broken down. Concerning the war, Mr. Mead said. My sympathies- are with the peo ple everywhere, and the great les son for us all is to discriminate sharply between the people and the governments. Small military cliques In Austria, Russia and Germany were responsible for precipitating things. Autocracies must be supplanted by more popular control. Monstrous mil itary establishments are really ' re sponsible. Persistent and solemn warnings of the peace party have gone unheeded and their prophecies have been inexorably, fulfilled. Mr. Mead conferred with many leading men in London, Berlin and Leipsic He paid It is very easy to be a violent partisan and con demn Russia and England on the one hand or Germany on the other. "But this is the method of a man who knows little of the history of the last ten years. What is needed Is a political re construction of the world on ra tional and moral principles. The task is not impossible. It will re quire time, but Europe should profit by the lesson she is learning. The time win come when the world win be organized for jus tice and cooperation instead of for war. While the fighting Is fiercest is tne best time for dwelling on rh afw t - . m " "l "" " umojior discouragement. The world will secover from wounds Inflicted ! by the combatants, and the import ant thing is that recovery snail cairv with It determination by the! people tnemseives to be saved from another such devastating con flict. It is within the power of the people, the chief sufferers from war, to prevent armed conflict. There is no salvation by shooting for either individual or nation. '. Bismarck's Definition. From the Youth's Companion. In the newspapers of today we very often find -the words entente cordlale. Most readers understand the meaning of the expression, .but it Is rather dif ficult to make a translation that ex presses the exact meaning of .the original French. Prince Bismarck gave a good explanation when his daughter asked him what' the entente cordlale really was. -Well,, be said, "it is not so asv i to define literally. It means a cordial I understanding, but It also has a little different significance.. For mmni.- You were in-the courtyard this morn ing when I came from the garden with Nero; Diana was in the yard, gnawlsg a large bone. Then there was a few sharp blows with my. cane. After that the bone lay in the middle of the court, while both dogs stood : off at some distance and' looked eagerly at it. Each dog was afraid of my cane, and therefore neither ventured to seise It You see. that is what they call 'in diplomatic circles an entente cordlale." t, Who Threw That Brick? From Cincinnati Enquirer. --Why do you feed every tramp -who comes along? They never do any work for you." - - ' - . v. ' - ij "No said his wife, -but It is quite a satisfaction to. me to see a man eat without finding fault with the cooking.- w , - . .- :.- A y SCHOOL MOVIES By Dr. Frank Crane. (Copyright. 1M4, by Frank CraneJ The educational value of moving pictures presents boundless possfMU- tJea. It is safe to ' say that no dr1e ever conceived by the mind and mads by the hands of man Is so significant educationally as thu ohoto film. The days of crucifying children tn order to get Information , Into their noggins Is past. Latrslnr la coin to be exciting, interesting, fascinat ing. . The old theory was that pupils snoutd be forced to stndy. by author ity. by Waning. They beat one end of the child to get knowledge into the other. The new theory, founded upon intelligent psychology and scientific pedagogy, to that young- people natur ally love to learn, have an Inborn curiosity to know things, and that the real teacher Is the one who skillfully directs this normal desire. In other words, the good teacher la tne teacher that can transform study Into a srame. For instance, history. When X went to school this was the dryeat of all things dry. We had to learn and re cite that "On the fourteenth of June Grant moved toward Shiloh with his west wing, while somebody else ad vanced southward with two divisions to form a Junction with General Thingumbob's Seventh Illinois. Jt was as killing to us children as to the combatants. Wa had no idea what It was all about. All the Interesting part of the wretched text book was in the anecdotes in the foot notes. That will be changed. Our children shall see General Grant. The his toric figures of Washington. Jackson Lee and Webster will become familiar friends. Companies of skilled actors will perform every critical Incident in history before the camera, and ths resulting story of the world will b the entertainment of youth. Scipio and Hannibal, Caesar, Xerxes, Pericles and Napoleon, our boys and girls will know these char acters as well and as lovingly as we knew Jack the Giant Killer and Alad din. The time is not far distant when the moving picture apparatus-wtll be in the equipment or every scnooi house. The attempt to teach without it will be absurd. Geography, too. No more murder ous Dajtes of dull facts, but the peo Die of Holland and of Turkey, of Chile and of Newfoundland, will ap pear In person; gathering rubber, mowinar wheat, garnering the cane and catching the mackerel, will be understood in the easiest of all ways. y neing prwem auu watching the ote ration. In science the children will behold the Boentgen-ray photo of a living, beating heart and the circulation of the blood, on a screen 14 feet in disin ter." Botany, electricity, chemistry, bi ology, geology, anthropology, spectro scopy, anatomy, forestry, think of these being turned into fun! A child can learn more in his Tues day and Friday afternoons in the school. with the moving pictures than we learned in cruel weeks and months of book grinding. Moving pictures as an amusement are great; but the enterprising genius who shall first grasp and utilise the possibilities of ths movie in the school house will be the greatest benefactor of his time; the children of all the earth shall rise up and call him blessed. And ths shrewd promoter who shaU organize, capitalize and make real this idea will probably become one of our most dangerous citizens, oa account of his moneys. Letters From the People (Communications aent to The Jooraal for ponUcatioa la this department ahoald be writ ten on only one aide of the paper, should not exceed SOO word in length and most be ac companied by the name and addreaa of the sender. If tha writer doea not dealra t have Uae name published, ha should so stste.) itmm...i. - ih. .r.i t,t nf all reform- era. It rationalises everything it touches. robs principles ot all false sanctity and throws them back on their reasonableness. II they hare no reasooaWeneaa, it ruthless 17 crufbes them 00 1 ot existence snd art up Its own conclusions la their ints. " Wilson. If Hops Were No More Grown. Or SeDt 25. To the Ed itor of The Journal Growers ot wheat should be proud of Oregon, which had a 118,000,000 wheat crop, but are they too ?k Let them not think this is a fight between prohibition and the hon industry, wnue mey auuia 7, 4rvrtiffrrit- for 144.600.000 bush els of wheat la used for liquor in the United States. With prohibition th would necessarily mean an un sold surplus. Locally. Curtis P. Coe would have us sow wheat instead of mi vcArlv S6.000.00O hop crop. This adiini wheat acreage would make an other surplus, meaning for all of us financial ruin. The wine, cider and brandy made Into liquor would per Hnai double the wheat surplus. Cut that nft rrom oar now overdone mar ket and have our toop yards in fruit. uui what would the fruit raisers get? i Oromn'a hav record is Iiz.boo.oow. sir. : fn, tAila us to sow our hop fields in V- ... Portland Clover, my nciauuvi " nt could not sell his hay. Does Mr. Coe want us in the hay business, so w will all get less man not rung t Mr. Coe tells us that $9,800,000 is spent bv Oregon for imported liquors, ims i nrnves that even now we are unpro- gressive. We neea-eastern capital iu all purposes, but especially to build in Portland great breweries, distilleries n wineries. With the exception of (prohibition Kansas corn) Bourbon whiskey, because we grow less corn. we pay freight both ways for our nroduoe axid manufactured liquors. We want greater enterprise to inspire greater production, not less; to bring multitudes of people to buy livestock, butter and eggs. We want a greater Oregon. Prohibition would kill all lines of business. It has the audacity to class us among the white slavers, the underworld, the anarchists and thieves. Yet they go into the penitentiaries and make the convicts their allies and class themselves among the murderers. Led by ministers, under the guise oi tern Derance. an attempted $704,000,000 con fiscation is on record ln California. Prohibition is not temperance. Tem perance is not prohibition. Vote wet to save the country from destruction and for true temperance, not prohibi tion. ELLA M. FINNEY. A Plea for Relief Measures. Portland. Sept. 23. To the Honora ble Governor West and the Honorable Mayor and City Commissioners of Portland Gentlemen: Don't you think it Is about time to try to stop this un rest and revolution that the people and the press are predicting this winter? It is claimed by many that this win ter one half of the workers will be but of work and starving. Why not use the credit of the State and of the cities and put the unemployed to work at reasonable wages, producing food, clothing . and shelter for themselves, tbe stat or cities, to pay for said prod ucts with credit script receivable for all debts due ths city or state, and sell said products to the citizens st cost. This will solve the unemployed prob lem, and its will not raise our taxes or public expense. - It is the duty of the tats and ef the cities to take cans ef THE WAR AND OUR OCEAN TRADE Wlnthrop li, Marvin In Review ef Without ader taking to consider the causes,, the fact is that when Great Britain, Germany, Francs, Russia and Austria plunged into war in the mid summer or 1814. their merchant amps and the ships of the few maritime na tions remaining neutral were carrying 93 per cent of the overseas trade of the United States a. trade which In the latest fiscal year was valued at nearly $4,000,000,000. Our principal carriers were Great Britain and Germany, and the ships of the latter's flag were at once removed from consideration. There ensued, of course, a paralysis of export and import commerce- that struck at ths prosperity of every part of the nation. At the outbreak of the war the American flag was flying over only six steamships out of the two or three hundred liners regularly engaged in the great; transatlantic trade between the ports of the United States and the ports of Europe. These six steamships are the St. Louis, 8C Paul. New York and Philadelphia, of the American line. from New .York to Cherbourg and Southampton 20 knot passenger, mall and express freight vessels of 11,000 and 10,000 tons and the Finland and Kroonlaad, 16 knot steamships of the Red Star line from New York to Ply mouth and Antwerp vessels of 12,000 tons, with excellent passenger accom modations and a considerable cargo ca pacity. Not one of the latest Atlantic leviathans has sailed under the Stars and Stripes. All of these six American steamships are in the service of the In ternational Mercantile Marine com pany. The four first named are the regularly subsidized transatlantic pos tal fleet of the United States, and the Finland and Kroonland were built in anticipation of a later subsidy measure, which was not enacted. Besides these six American steamers, the wax at the outset left neutral a few small steamship lines under the colors of Spain. Portugal and Scandinavi The Holland-America steamers have been forced to traverse a danger zone, the Belgian steamers of the Red Star, line went almost Immediately into the belligerent class, and a hazard of even- tual participation clings to the steam ship lines of Italy. Not only were the regular lines af fected but the slow freighters, the wheat asd cotton ships, belonged chief ly to tra-. belligerent 'nations. With al most twvsthirds of the cotton crop and many millions of bushels of the huge grain crop demanding markets over seas, the United States has been in volved by the war in an incalculable misfortune. For it is only In Europe that the great bulk of our surplus cot ton and grain can be disposed of. Though the war in .its first effects crippled steamship communication on tne transatlantic routes, it has naa no such disastrous result on the route to the West Indies and the nearer ports of Ian tic South America. American shipping hold a respectable place in the Caribbean region, and about one half of the entire commerce of that re gion is, and has been, with the United States. A strong Americas steamship service, the Ward line, connects Mex ico, Cuba and the Bahamas with New York. This is a mall-sufosidlzed serv ice, and so is that of the Red D line. from New York to Venezuela via Porto Rico. Our West Indian colony la under the coastwise laws, and possesses com munication In ships of several American lines with New York and ports of the Golf of Mexico. The Panama Railroad Steamship line, another American serv ice operated by the war department, runs from N-rw York to Colon. The Clyde line runs to Santo Domingo, and the Southern Pacific line from New Or leans to Cuba, which has steamship connection also with the Florida penin sula. Ships of the large fleet of the United Fruit company, sailing under British and other foreign colors, but so secure ly American in ownership that they are not likely to be disturbed, ply between our Atlantic and gulf ports and Jamai ca, Cuba, Central America, and the Isth mus of Panama, and the Munson line, also with American owned ships of for eign register. Is an important factor in the Cuban trade. The United Fruit company may come completely under the. American flag. The Atlas line of German steamers has been withdrawn from the New York-West Indian serv ice, but otherwise our West India com munications have not been, and pre sumably will not be, seriously reduced. Nor Is there any hazard in the war to what is . now the most important steamship service under the American flag the long voyage coastwise serv ice through tbe now open Panama canal between the Atlantic and Pacific sea board. The American-Hawaiian com pany has completed its great fleet of 26 steamships of a total dead weight capacity of nearly 300,000 tons; the Emery company, of Boston, has ap peared upon the route, and the Interna tional Mercantile Marine company has confirmed its purpose to offer a pas senger service that will become avafl abel as soon as the war will permit. These Panama steamers are all of bona fide American ownership and register, the great present hope of our mer chant marines. They are sufficient ln number to provide a sailing f ronv, the Atlantic to the Pacific every business day throughout the year. On the Pacific, one American steam ship of the Great Northern company, from Puget sound, and four or five their citizens and give them a show to make an honest living for themselves and famiUes. This plan will stop this unrest and give us the best market ln tbe world for our products. Tbe stats and the cities are well able to take care of -their unemployed, but we cannot take care of the unemployed of ths whole world. J. LANDIGAN. Why r He Votes Dry. Oregon City, Sept 23. To the Ed itor of The Journal We hear a great deal about booze ' and the saloon of late. I heard a man say not long ago that every saloonkeeper waa a thief. I cannot agree with him, but I do not think boose makes men any better. My first recollection of booze was when I was quits small and my first recollec tion of a saloon was in Paris, Texas, and while I never entered It, some thing happened there the night my chum insisted on my going there with him. Just to look on, that I never have forgotten. It seems to me there is so little good. If any, in ths saloon or booze that we would be better oft without either; i my experience and ob servation has been that they are very dangerous. I have had a few friends that committed suicide and have seen many that were made destitute by strong drink. - I have seen : both men and women that were about as de graded - as a human being can get. I was ln a saloon once that had several tacks of money on two or three ta bles. I do not think that I ever saw any more money at one time ln any place. I hardly knew what to think about it, but finally figured it out that tbe mines had produced the money and the saloons came to get it, and that .was why they were there1 with the gambling devicea, , I do not' re member of being in a saloon ln Ore gon City, but I saw amove of their pa trons when , they were running, and 'X shall rots oryj K. M BKOWIC- steamships of the : Pacific Mail com pany, from San Francisco, run to Jan- an, China and the Philippines. The Oceanio Steamship company operates a rcesuLousnea postal suosiay una rrom San Francisco to Australasia. The Pa cific Mail maintains a service from San Francisco to Central America and Western Mexico. There Is. however, no American steamship line to the greater countries of South America, with the exception of one freight line operated by the United States Steel corporation, with chartered ships of the Araerlcan- Hawaiaan company from New York to Brazil. . f . Both theraln and the cotton crops are coming .forward. Where are the shlDs reoulslte'to earrv them? Shins of neutral nations dan nominally trade to ail ports, even ports or DelUgerent nations that have not been formally blockaded, but ln effect the widening j of the definition of contraband to in clude conditionally even such articles as food stuffs very seriously "circum scribes all practicable war time com merce. Theoretically, until formal blockade Is proclaimed, as waa done by our government in the Civil War with the porta of the Confederacy, an Amer ican ship, or any other neutral ship, has a right to carry a clearly non-contraband cargo to Bremen or Hamburg or Trieste. But, as a matter of fact, no American or other neutral ship will dare to do this, except as a desperate speculation. Whether or not a block ade is proclaimed, a blockade actually exists, and Germany and Austria must be dismissed from consideration as con sumers of products of the United States. But the -porta of Great Britain, ex cept those on the northeast coast, and the ports of France ought to remain open to the neutral commerce of Amer ica Already a large part of the serv ice of British and French transatlanic steamship companies Is being cautiously resumed. It must be expected, how ever, that the British and French steamship schedules will be liable to interruption throughout the war, be cause of imperative demands of the home government for ships for trans port or other auxiliary service. Already freight rates to north Euro pean ports have doubled, and there has been an increase of SO per cent in the rates to countries outside ot the wax zone, to Africa and South America. In surance rates also have attained exces sive figures, though they are signifi cantly low for ships flying the Amer ican flag, of unquestioned American ownership, on- the American register before the war began. Our government in this crisis should insist With firmness on full neutral rights for all Its ships and cargoes. If the nation possessed a great mercantile maxims, or was naiuaiy ctbbuiik such at nr tKi- k! opportunity. Undoubtedly, there will be additions to our overseas tonnage from the larger vessels of the coast wise trade. Some of these have al ready been chartered, and others are being offered by their managers. The Clyde and Majlory lines and their al lied companies have signified that IS steamers to carry grain or cotton are ax the service of the government. The American-Hawaiian company has other and larger steamers ready. It so hap pens that because of the general de pression ln domestic business many American coastwise vessels have been lying idle ln port awaiting an improve ment in trade, or the opening of the Panama canal. Seventeen such Vessels have been unemployed at Boston. 30 at New York, and more than 40 at San -Francisco. Some are too small for profitable overseas voyaging but some are larger vessels carrying from 5000 to 10,000 tons. .- One factor, beyond the lack of ships, which has temporarily crippled the ex port trade, is the breakdown of ex change. This is a financial, and not a transportation, difficulty and it can be remedied. Another factor of discour agement has been the heavily increased Insurance rate, so high as to leave small profit to shipowners and owners of cargo. But this difficulty will be lifted with the adoption by congrea of the plan recommended by President Wilson for the government insurance of ships of American register. Vigorous inaisteno on the rights of neutrals, tbe oee of coastwise vessel wherever practicable, and national in surance of American vessels will be straightforward and practical methods of relief of the war congestion of our export and import trade. Congress has already at this writing passed the emergency shipping measure In the form in which it was sought by the administration. This provides for the admission to American registry of foreign built steamships, without re gard to age, owned by American citi zens or by American corporations of which the president and managing dU rectors are American citizens. Fur ther to encourage the naturalization of foreign built ships, the president Is authorized ln his discretion to suspend the requirement of existing law that the officers of American ships shall be American citlzena The president ia also authorized in his discretion to sus pend the requirement that foreign built ships shall comply with American laws governing survey. Inspection and meas urement. The new law In its terms actually grants a valuable preference to foreign built ships over existing ships on the American register. It is an unmistak ably liberal proposition an urgent in vitation to the ships of the world to seek the American, colora Indeed, American ownership may be merely nominal, for it can be secured by for eign capital through the simple exped ient of organizing an American corpor ation, ln which only three or four of ficers need be American citizens, hold ing the few shares of stock necessary to qualify. Recognizing already that even the broader free ship proposition will fail of adequate result. President Wilson has brought forward a new and radical expedient government ownership of steamship lines. Tbe maximum of $30, 000,00 which the president asks con gress to appropriate for the purchase and of ration of foreign built steam ships in government lines under the American flag is only a small fraction of tbe amount requisite to create an adequate fleet. The proposal la a make shift, and a perilous makeshift, for the mere Introduction of It has aroused re sentment abroad and provoked warn ing that the American nationality of ships bought from belligerents ln this belated and dubious way would not be accepted for a moment. Thus both tbe emergency shipping measure and this later plan of government ownership in volve grave risk of international com plications. One steamship service is now owned by the government that of the Pan ama Railroad Steamship company, ac quired from the French with other as sets of the old canal. This line, though favored in the transportation of gov ernment supplies, has Incurred heavy deficits in some years when private owned competing lines earned reason able dividends. It Is an unfortunate precedent: the experience of the United States in ooeaa trade with the one line which it controls la not encouraging, i The great, unmistakable lesson of this war to the American people is that an adequate merchant marine can no mors be improvised ia an emergency than can an adequate fighting navy.: Ths cost of our lack of American ships will IN EARLIER DAYS By Fred Loekley. Dave and Ben McKee are not only brother by blood, but they are broth- era in arms. Both served in the Yak ima Indian war. Dave waa born la Kentucky In 1S3S. and Ben was bora . two year later while the family was ' on the way to Missouri. Both Dave and Ben live in Woodburn. where I recently met them and found Dave at hts brother's' house discussing -. the war. -Tell me about the war in r which ou served 0 yean ago," X I said to Dave. "Ben was 18 and I was 20 when - we enlisted," he said. "Ben enlisted ln Captain Bennett's company and I , "'atned up with Captain Williams la taptain uon ana - lu 14111 Williams were sent with their companies Into the Burnt river coun try, une oi the rirst experiences we had with the Indians was when three -of jur men were aent to a high ledge of rock to look over the country for any signs of Indians. The thrtse men were Dan Smith, Richards and Eateav A bunch of Indians were hidden back of the rock. They fired at our man, killing Smith and Estea. Richards trousers and coat were riddled, but none of the bullets hit him. He re ported locating the . Indiana, and as they were ln force, we decided to wait until next morning to attack them. They fired at our camp fires during the night, so we moved back from the fires. Next morning we drove the In dians off. "Dan Smith was about OS years old. Me had a heavy 4iead of hair and a big heart. The Indiana scalped bis head and alao his face, thus getting tnree scalps, one from the head and. one from each cheek. Estes was bald-' headed and smooth shaven, so they didn't bother him with their scalping , knives. "We came on back to the Grands Ronde valley and found that another company of volunteers had been ln a fight with the Indians there. We found two dead squaws. We went on to what is now Walla Walla and put up a log house, the first one to be built on ths present site of Walla Walla This was ln the summer of 1SS6. What is now called Wall a la was then called Fort Walla Walla. "Dave's talking about having two of their men scalped reminds me of a similar incident that happened to our company," said Ben. "We were up in the Touchet country, after Peo-peo-mox-mox and his cayuse Indians. Three of our boys were out scouting when six Indians took after them. The Indians chased our three men down Into the bed of a creek. There they killed two of them while 'the other , . . . , . . . man crawled Into the brush beside the stream. He stayed hidden there while tbe Indians scalped his two comrades.- "W. K. Beale, one of the sergeants ln our company, married Hiram Taylor's daughter after the war. I went to see him hanged ln Salem. He and Baker were executed for the murder of old man Delaney. John Hauxhurst was one of our best fighters. He had a little Indian blood ln him. Horace Hol den was In our company; so was John G. Wright, who still lives In 8a I em. "A bullet makes a peculiar sound when It hits a man. I was standing by Bluford Miller when lie was shot. I happened to be standing by Andy Shep ard, our lieutenant, when a bullet went through his arm. "There used te be a lot of politics In companies 60 years ago- Albert Davis wanted to be elected captain of the company, but Charles Bennett was elected. Davis got a lot of the boys drunk and got them to promise to leave the company and start a new company with him as captain. When the boys sobered up they wouldn't leave Captain Bennett's company. Bennett called the company together and said: 'If any of you men are dissatisfied with me as captain you can quit right now.' Davis and a few of the men quit and that settled the trouble. -Fighting 60 years ago and today Is altogether different. Now they can kill a man farther away than they can see him. They can mow them down with machine guns like I moV my grass with a reaper. They can sail over him and drop a bomb on him. We killed at most a few score or a few hundred; now they kill a few thousand and call it a slight skirmish or a rear guard action. It isn't even a battle. About tbe only resemblance between the Indian war in '55 and '66 and the war today Is that, while we didn't kill very many, the ones wo killed were just as dead as the ones they Mil today by their improved method a." be borne throughout tbe war, not by the maritime states, but by tbe cotton growing states of the south and the wheat and grain growing states of the middle west, many of whose public men and public Journals have for half a century shown themselves indiffer ent or hostile to every effort to create an American ocean shipping. It was these influences, from tbe Interior of the country, that defeated the earnest efforts of President Roose-C velt and of President Taft to secure na tional aid for the establishment of steamship lines to South America -and serosa the Pacific ocean. Both Mr. Roosevelt and Mr. Taft pointed but that the inland states needed a mer chant shipping even more than the seaboard states. But inland statesmen caused the defeat of the shipping bill by narrow majorities in the house of representatives. Their own people, their own agricultural constituents, are now paying the penalty, and, in spite of all efforts to prevent it, that penalty will have been a heavy one be fore this war 1 ended. More than a century ago President George Washington and Thomas Jef ferson, his secretary of state, warned their countrymen in a Joint communi cation to- congrea that dependence upon foreign nations a onr es car riers was a costly blunder, for. aside from tbe disastrous effects upon our shipbuilding and seamanship which these two great Americans vividly pic tured, "our products, carried ln foreign bottoms, would be saddled with war freights and Insurance ln time of war." Congress listened, and passed one after another laws that brought ths American tonnage registered for over seas commerce up from 123,600 tn 17S to 667,000 ln 1S00, and to ft 1. 000 la 1310. At the beginning of this period American ships wars carrying 23 per cent of this country's Imports and ex ports; and at tbe end of ths period they were carrying 91 par cent. Another great world war has found the United States as unprepared and helpless to safeguard its overseas trade as it waa in the first administration of Washington. That this is so is going to prove the shame and ths loss of ths American people. - - There will be a grave shortage of , food this year tn Europe. Great Bri tain may manage to provide ships te bring supplies for her own people, but she cannot do much moss. An Amer ican merchant marine of unquestioned natlonall ty tot a merchant marine .of ' suddenly "whitewashed" ships would -now be a boon to tha-world -4o tho people whom its safe neutral carriage could succor, as well as to ths people I whose flag it would Oy, v.. -' -Mi . . .1 "- i