8 THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, FRIDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 16, 1914. JOURNAL AM llf DEPENDENT NEWSPAPER. C. S. JACKSON Pvbllabar. i'abllfc4 awry aatof rxept 8ao4arJ 4 . rySaa4ar norslnf at Tb Journal Build in. Broad war and Yamhill ta.. Portland. Or. Itatarad at tba auatafflc at Portland. Or., for traaamtoatod tkrovxli Balls ateond cUas aiattar. TfcUtPHdNES Main 7173: HoaM. A-eOft ail ' departments reached by tbcae nemtarra- TeU tbaTTator what dtiartmht yoo 'want. ' ioHKlUN ADVEHTWIMO EEmKsBNTATl IV Bmjamtn Kantaor Co., Bntnawlck BllC.. - rifti .. iu Kti,mi'PwU'i Oaa BUlf ., C atearw. - -. I Ouoavrliitiaa farm by mail or to auj ad frt la tba United State Meikt DAILY. . On rear. IS. 00 I On month I .60 SUNDAY, . Ob r- 82.50 ! Or month DAILY AND SUNDAY. One rear.... . .87 0 I Oat month 63- Thy friend hath f riend. and thy friend' ; friend a friend. Beware! I From the French. NO PEIUIi BUT, IT N THIS series of articles. The. Journal is quoting from public docu ments to show why taxes are high. 4 1 , Oregon has a school fund of $6,000,000. j Heavy taxes have been collected annually for support of schools. It ought not to be so, Minnesota with an area of 83,365 square miles has a school fund of $200,000000, while Oregon with an area of 944560 square miles has but $6,000000 and the people have to tax themselves heavily for . support -pt schools. I Minnesota's school lands and public resources were not squandered. Oregon's were wasted; stolen and pillaged. . ; , . The school lands, were frittered away. " So were the swamp lands and forest lands and other great resourced. 4 A toore glaring instance of a robbed state is rarely seen than was the Cobs Bay wagon road land grant. Hundreds of thousands of acres of the finest forest lands were given away by an Oregon legislature for proposed construction of a wagon road through Doug las county to Coos Bay. As in the case of the Oregon & California land grant which one federal court has already ordered forfeited to the government, the terms of the Coos Bay grant were not complied with. Every cove nant in the agreement was broken by the company. ing system wilt - apply a funda mental principle in banking. It will afford relief in districts where the pressure is greatest. The people of the United States are to be congratulated on the early installation of. the federal 're serve banking system. " It means control under the law of banking A FEW SMILES PERTINENT COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF The RagQme Musa ' The doctor told him .he needed car bohydrates, proteids, and, above all, something' nitrogen eoua. The doctor mentioned a long list for him to eat. He staggered out and and currency by the people Instead wabbled into a Perm of control outside the law by a av.eJlue restaurant, small group of. Wall Street field Bt(?Z asked Cthe i marshals of finance. 0 waiter. "Is that ni- trogeneous?" The waiterdidn't know "Are fried potatoes rich in caroo- I hydrates or not?" The waiter couldn t pay. "Well. Til fix it," declared the poor "Bring me a large Dr. Withycombe and Dr. Smith chanced to be in Ashland the same evening, and people there 'asked I Dr. Withycombe to meet his op- roan n despair. ponent in a joint discussion J But p e OI " the answer was a flat refusal. Dr. Withycombe Is laundress of the village to xaie cnarge SHALL CHANGE i Contrariness Is often mistaken for tenacity. I Diplomacy is the art of concealing our dislikes. King Cotton, at least, will lssu no censorship order. Every woman thinks she's worth her weight in gold. When a man tires of his own com pany his case is hopeful. Never blow your own horn in public uniess you are a musician. I The only thing some women lay up w i aiiij uay 19 fell A. iiuijiei y . OREGON SIDELIGHTS The Chronic Last year, my 1 of the Pram. Mining for platinum is to be on of a wDe' the industries near Port Orford this An but he haJry cap winter, the Tribune says. Experienced beach tniners will carry on operation Th Million Mrrunnnilont nf the I iJe blCSSlngS: R.n7 Rull.t ,i I. '"H.mM faS. US paSSti caught , a large beautiful lynx in sealed orders which he Is not per- mitted by the managing men to disbbey. How unwise it would be for a great state like Oreeon to WHO U 1 A ll 'flliillvl.L i ... . .... ti-oTrf.HrxT n, mkin, .rrtimonti with the colored . Lnrequitea love is one brand of unui I -" ':, " . v- h heart failure. But it's never fatal. HE direct primary Is not in any sort of peril. vregonma. That sounds Ufce oia times. It is what the Oregonian said in the heat of Its great cam 'patgn for the assembly four years ' ago. It said then that it was a great "friend" of the primary. ' it thinks that the assemblyites i'are the true "friends" of the pri i'roary system. In fact, all assem f blyltes, Dr. Withycombe and Mr. ! Oeer included are fond "friends" i'of the primary in campaign time, j July 17, 1910, the Oregonian said: j' Without assembly, the Republicans ean hope for no success in Oregon. i'Wlth It, they may expect to accom plish purposes and policies in this state. ! In the, state pamphlet, there is a bill to revive the assembly in ( Oregon. It is the product of Ore ilgonian teachings and Oregonian ap peals. The bill is ou page 88 In j'the pamphlet, where every citizen i. can find it. The argument for it Is on page 9 6 and that argument is the same argument the Oregonian i has always made for the assembly. I Of this bill the Oregonian re ! cently ' said, it is "politically pre- mature." "Politically premature" j'meahs that it was proposed too soon. It means that a more oppor tune time should have been await- . !d. It means that the bill should ("have been kept in the background i until the psychological moment ar ' rived for putting it over. ' The leopard cannot change its Bpots. . While the Oregonian seeks to lull voters to sleep with its state ; ment that "the direct primary is ; not in any sort of peril" Mr. Booth, hill at th 191 a BARsInn I A"r ' to rTpeTthe grant and provide for the distribution of the lauds. J HiT Torlfy l vnottr. n iaCo th wii Wonco thn '"uiseii unaer me autnonty or X n legislature wtv uuviiji uui'St'.iii 00 - federal government had originally granted the lands to the state on conditions which the . Wagon Road Company had in every respect and take orders from managing brigadiers! Talk is cheap, yet some people have a mania for trying to monopolize it. violated. Governor West urged passage of the bill in his message to both nouses at the opening of the session. On page 517 of the 1913 Sen ate Journal is this report from the Senate Judiciary Committee, head ed by Gus C. Moser: Tour committee on Judiciary, to whom was referred Senate Bin No. 229, having had the same under consideration, respectfully report it back with the recommendation that it do not pass. There was a minority report. It urged the passage of the bill. There was a strong debate. On the vote, the bill was beaten, 17 to 11, the line-up for the bill consisting almost entirely of members of the regular Senate machine. Governor West, in several messages, tried to resuscitate the bill. Among other messages on the subject is the following: gwine ter charge you double for vour Properly enforce the traffic or- husband's shirts." dinances and there will be fewer aJl, l: what'8 th reason for that. automobile accidents, less maiming. WuSW less mutilating and fewer killings mind washing for an ordinary man, of men, women and children. By butt araws the line on circus tents, m 1 , . . .1 sho do. v.nivyi vixiciii., iy5 urivcrs auu cnauffeurs to understand that a "Madame, do you think you can use law IS a law. your mnuence with your husband to in of their washing for the summer. Now, the judge was pomp ous and extremely i Every day brings new arguments fat. He tipped the ' from the front for the Christmas scales at some S00 1 Ship. a a ..MiL.'i ,4,, thoL Appearances are oftetf deceptive. - luxurious whiskers hide many an vum, 11 viw j vi j ugiy mug, wusning, dui 1 s l-I a- T,Q, r.V,H v,i v, ...k. UUW! 10 support o iism, iu me in this cam draw its own conclusions from the paign?" things he omits saying and to ask T, "I don"t know, sir, whv caves tv. o -o-t 1 ve never yet suc- -J," "" "'cfeuuiau. xcu ceeded in inducing ""iu tou - tueji Res oui ot ut. I rum to support me. ra- " ' " - I A7UhnAmV. X . 1 people for his official acts, I once more ask leave to call your attention '"wmmj ciwtjpi on a' a ureat- to the fact that while you have appropriated many millions of dollars 1 er tjregon, even With a Corkscrew. have created many useless ornces which wiu throw lurther huraens Oh it was my hao uenind a greipier to be, ad. but he wasis a hairy c No taller manAJme thinks, than roe. 5 Prince Albert andfthe queen, God wot, fn the glorious pair!) S I saw them not. ' I only saw "a yVp of hair. TanLwiflhT.a un Tour orthodox fistorlan puts The ansmal weighed about 66 pound. in foremost , rLik the soldier thus. Baker Herald: Baker usually does iTS0,! VUrJiS02 anything it undertakes. Sometimes it . c' "Xf does more. Take for Instance the auto 1 ''gi : iVTi Sf-ke.r "i"," h.l He. puts him tn54 In foremost rank. "vi "w " v -"v I You wnnrioa. at hla fan nf hair- , , I You hear his sheer's cursed clank. The faTT association prudenUy re-1 0"urs arj,ingng everywhere. fused to appropriate $300 to hire a nQ to, T h , band for the Wallowa county fair, I Wh .. and the lack of music was so keenly I nd all tlod s ieu tnai a movement is on toot ai nia- 1 To .uc. terprlse to revive the band organiza-1 Uon that lapsed a lew years ago. Tell me what f. The motor car that Is to run over t m?L the municipal line between Grants 1 nd vnow eraL yarn and his trade id tp cringe and bend. acerui people maae tn subservient? Pass and Wildervile Is now on tne tracks. "Th car." says the Courier. "Is resplendent in its coat of canary yellow paint, and will not need to blow the whistle to let people know that it is coming. a a At the recent meeting of the TJma- throats? 11 we to admire i scarlet coats, they load and fire. lie art of cutting William? Makepeace Thackeray. Chicago"! Melting Pot. From the Biilian I I Tt 1a iSM .u- o , ... - . . , 1 a ,v, mootinr tT tti I 'ma.-1 - - "" v&i. mc cnanECB in na- duiiiu iucii ijiiiac a specially 01 ctJl- I i"7 ....w ... . .- -V . . I ,t 1 1 . . . lecting paving material for the down-'tilla county library board 10 branch I uonaiity in theypopulation of Chicago uoranes were reponou n.u nave ceen morerapld and varied than and upon the taxpayers of this state, you have failed to pass a single measure framed with a view of producing revenue and offering relief. There were before this legislature three measures, viz: The Netmer Senate Bill to repeal the Coos Bay Wagon Road Grant, the" Kellaher Sub merged Land Bill and the Gill House Bill to repeal the Thompson Swamp Land Bill, which, had they received favorable consideration at your hands, would have produced many hundred thousands of dollars in revenue for the school fund. These measures, notwithstanding their meritorious na ture, were quietly put to sleep. Once more, in the name of the citizens and taxpayers of this state. I ask you to give these measures that consideration which they merit and insist that no adjournment should be taken until some favorable ac tion is taken thereon. Oswald West, Governor. What a loss this state has suffered through legislatures and legis- Letters From the People I ward path. One war writer translates "Helig oland" as "Holyland." You can take your choice. Affinities may be all right in their place, but they seldom make good in the kitchen. a Each of the belligerents wants not only the good opinion of the United States for itself, but its bad opinion for the enemy. a a A young widow sometimes marries an eligible bachelor merely to keep Pome inexperienced girl from getting the worst of it. dale school. Fteewater. Hermlston, Milton, Pilot Rock, Stanfieid, Tum-a- lum school, Vincent school ana wes- ln any city la the world. Lei ,ie United States or in S. than a quarter of a ton. Including that of Pendleton, century ago th5f Germanic races re circulation of 12,548 volumes, from I m. 4, 1 January 1 to September 1, portea. was re- of 1862 was subtle legislation that gave owners opportunity to hold the lands without effort, while the growth of Portland and the en terprise and daily work of the peo ple of Portland made the lands more and more valuable. Now, with the measures for sav ing the remnant of these public lands for the people on the ballot, the railroad hurries hundreds of men trt the waterfront for the first who Is a privately-picked candidate Jtlme to wnarf-out to deep water omy. The field is in eastern Oregon for a well equipped normal " school Why not let those people have it? The measure which will reestablish the (Communication. a, it,. r- -1 Weston normal is Number 316. and all publication in this department ahoold be writ- I good citizens should vote yes. -JUS ??ir "neJsl, ?f the PaP". abould not A, H. HARRIS. v. ix "uiun in icu(ui ana moat oe ac eomBanifid br thm nam -,1,4 n . . j" . - -M"lC "1 ' M !11.1 f euaef. 11 tee writer doe not desire to I ir. ouuui s vaer,es- haTe the name pubusheq, ha aaould ao atate.) Ashland, Or.. Oct. 14. To the Editor "Dlarusslon is the matm nf- ail 1 Of The Journal Aa a reader of The throws them back on their rcaaonablenesa. If the different amendments to be voted they have no reasonableness, it rnthleesly on this fall and the different discus rnipnpa tnpm mi t nt ,Tint.nM an nn . . . latlon! How Important to have a governor who will never be under ocoociaaion. u their atead.woodrow TserThe Jr ayS at the the thumb of the legislative machine! - J1E00 exemption wUl be for the bene- JJlrs. irunlway Defines Position. fit of the worker and producer. Let's Portland, Oct. 15. To the Editor of see: ' A has a lot worth 11000; house. The Journal WUl The Journal allow furniture, etc., and improvements as- le space to teU its readers Just where f6831 750: total' 1750- B has a A YEAR TO COOL DOWN i tor senator, voted in the state sen ate to kill the direct primary. Dr. iWltbycombe, its candidate' for gov j ernor. Bays the direct primary i costs too much and he joins every 'assembly movement that comes ' along because, he says, "the as sembly is needed to eliminate can- didates." Its candidate for Con ; gress is Mr. McArthur, who cham pioned a bill to make the taking of Statement One a crime. Mr. Huston, its hand-picked legislative candidate, said the assembly is necessary to make the direct pri mary "workable" on the ground that the people have to be advised. Oh no, "the direct primary Ib in no sort of peril," but Read the state pamphlet, begin ning at page 88. under the terms of the legislative act of 52 years ago. It takes no mental effort to un derstand what is meant by this sudden building of wharves. All the people of Portland have to do is to ga on the Burnside bridge and see how, after half a century, what a sham is all this opposition to the waterfront amendment. man piles where, they fell, in the stricken homes, the hungry land and the little ones who cry f or j sires who never return in all this I stand on the temperance question? I am opposed to the unchristian pn- misery and desolation and debt and deavors of the Anti-Saloon leaeue. devastation and death. lt thR I first and foremost because it proposes - ... I tn lnfsrrp, with V.n lnoll.nnM. rf.K " BJ1 Kel united btates, witn Dr. Jordan - " r 'ill ' V5 worth $1750, will pay as much taxes 4-V.nnl Almf ..Ul -l ,1 . 1 l -u ll 1 " " - v... tjiauA. Aiuii6uijr uuu luai uy mo be a law unto himself. lot worth $1000. house, furniture and Improvements assessed at $1500. Total, J2500. A is worth $1750. B is worth $2500. A gets an exemption of $750. B an exemption of $1500. A, being wisdom and strength of Woodrow Wilson, we too, are not at, war, 0 I have thrown 44 years of the very best work of my life into procuring for the mother sex the economic liberty In the home of the married mother that alone will enable her to implant in her husband and sons thn rs m decreA.Q nf mnnl N THIS page, E. N. Smith of rectitude that they, no 'matter how de- Ashland, presents queries re- based or drunken, now demand of her. SIR. SMITH'S QUERIES as B, who is worth $2500. A has $2500 worth of land, B. $2500 worth of livestock. A gets no exemption. B gets $1500. A pays taxes on $2500. B on $1000, which is favored. E. N. SMITH. Advocates. Word's He-Election. Portland, Oct. 15. To the Editor of specting -the $1500 exemption. L ??d " Ah ". f the 1 7' f ltZ,?L In the first case-Of A and , lo ' dldacr for reelection. Mr. Word has B. the man who has worked and who nmhihit, nn nnrmai inHivMnai shown himself to be an honest and .Improved -his place by bringing it J from exercising the divinely ordained :"lel f"e.ej; f Z' Into its highest usefulness gets f or seir government , wm . be- -ZTw m. iwu6 vi. .igiii. -u every bouq aumtui r . - . , . ART AND HU3L4X1TY T DELIVERING THE GOODS H' AS anybody noticed that the Oregonian doesn't deny that it entered into a political combination with the News? ,J: Has anybody noticed that the i News doesn't deny that it entered Into a political alliance with the i ! Oregonian? They, don't deny it because they .can't deny it except by . perjuring .themselves. Yesterday the News splattered Its whole first page over with chat tey about the charge but not in , one sentence was there a denial. It dodged the issue by evasion and by 'hiding behind a lot of words that mean nothing. Not only was this combination made, but the goods are being de livered. The Pittock-Fleischacker- . Kelly-Oregonian interests are ad vertlsing heavily In the News. A water and light company, purely ' local to Roseburg, and which hasn't i light wire or a water pipe within 200 miles of Portland, is adver tising heavily In the News. What further proof is needed to show that in an affectionate and brotherly way. the Oregonian is helping the News and that the , :.News Is helping the Oregonian? HE JOURNAL of the. American Institute of Architects takes a sane position on the de struction of works of art in war. It asks wny art snouia do exempted, any more than the other prized things of life, from the rav ages of armed conflict between na tions. "Faced by millions of bereft families, weeping women, father less children, why mourn over one cathedral or university library, more or less?" The question is pertinent. Stren uous attempts have been made to arouse world-wide indignation over damage done to the cathedrals at Louvain and Rheims. It is a strange fact that reported destruc tion of these centers of art caused greater lamentation In the civil ized world than reports of the wounded and killed. Why? When did a picture, or a panel, or a carving, or an edifice become more precious than even one human life? and hp mifi-ht to. That is hnw the I mnth., wvm rn.i I partment. . . ,.tiu imJ m q ti rv,)n l.w. tji k 's ujjpuiieui. 13 an engineer oy pro- fiul,ucu Ulcai5u"; "'"""" ..-v vi fMs1rn wllhnnt n.ri. In fit hln. provement and use of the land It ' at no w fa for this important'offlce. and would rewards the worker and producer. 'in Mv of th air iM.i.;mn Case 2 is an unnatural and j now running rampant over the land. wholly unlikely example In that a j which demands th destruction of the 1101, to nirw I right of self government by the many have houses, or barns, or machinery JJaiT diSSiute and 4nebHated few w d wiU ?uS??Ii J" 3 I tit v,iv, 1- v,rv, I i" v. ..v.i . ir Bueriii.. a DuxoiDJCin. LOUU Id. U M VJ 11 TV 111V.11 U.C7L LliVlUi I VLJyvaC (XI 1 CUtll UlCUJUUS UCCil. 11 SO wniie me man wno nas oniy iana 1 -"y "I1J micti uuuj.ui.-i uu rri. it fth no riwpllin- or haria or ma- equal rights for the mother sex and n J, , V i i I wim no QweuinB, or Darns or ma- . I Portland Oct. 14. To the Editor of chinery or livestock is manifestly fasten upon women such laws of their The Journal There has appeared from holding his land out of use, lor own making as will withhold from um 10 "mo 111 ine puouc press 01 mis speculation, which is unjust to so- fuch wives and mothers as are most "ln From the Detroit News. ' What may be termed "The Ameri can Idea in Diplomacy would have been a most valuable preventive of war had it only been in operation be tween the cabinets of England, Ger many : and Russia during recent months. Already two nations of the triple entente, namely England and France, and one nation of the triple alliance, namely Italy, have indorsed the idea by making it a rule in diplo matic action between themselves and the United States. Besides these three powers, 23 others have signed Includ ing all the countries of the Americas and aa a consequence there can never break out between the United States and another power or powers a war that shall come with the swiftness with which the European war was pre cipitated upon the world. The American idea is this: "The High Contracting Parties agree' that all disputes between them ... to the settlement of which previous ar bitration treaties or agreements do not apply . . . shall, when diplo matic methods of adjustment have failed, be referred for investigation and report to a permanent interna tional commission . . . AND THEY AGREE NOT TO DECLARE WAR OR BEGIN HOSTILITIES DURING SUCH INVESTIGATION AND BE FORE THE REPORT IS SUBMIT TED ... The report of the com mittee shall be completed within ONE YEAR after the date on which it shall declare its Investigation to have be gun, unless the High Contracting Par ties shall limit or extend the time by mutual consent-" dominated greafe- in the foreign born pupuiauon. TOtfay the Slav races out- . " " 1 StrlO all Othersi timorl A number of students registered in . . ' , . " the school of architecture at the state x;i,LaBO in a recent re- university have organized an Archl- port says: j tecturai ciud wnicn wm Decome a "The majoritr f the Immigrants ar memDer or me .raciric iOMi Arem- hmj i.,v.iv . . t , . tecturai association and will have as unskilled laboiia and it Is this class its object the securing of prominent of cheap labor fjikt fills the great num- architects who will speak at their be of industrf,i worW- thi .on- ' meetings. A $1000 scholarship wm ,X ' . Z J luo 1 111111 yfi H.11 U 1 1 UUI wuuucuuu Europe the Rjaian Jew, the Russian and Austrian J'&e, the Bohemian and the Italian co "aijes here for no other purpose than .'jo seek employment at be styled "the telegraphio war." It uvlag wages ajHfl. the standard of 11 v was brought on with the speed of j ing which the gall ve American and the ugntmng. z.ea we wnit papers n8uaI pv of t immigrant from the of the British and German ravcrn-1 ..".. united lungaorrv wouia consiaer insui- also be open. of the British and German govern merits, and they are filled with tele grams. "Do this or I do this," wires kaiser to czar. Til not do it," wires back the czar in an hour. "If that is done, we shall do this," wires England to Berlin. "Do it and be damned,' comes back the flash. And almost be- flcient." Alxsut Persons, J. D. Herllh Rafter 37 years of serv ice, has quit the' New York police force poor. J. B. Ford. Goshen, N. Y.. fell heir fore anyone knew what was transplr- I the other day to, $6, 000,000 by the death Ine thousands of tlr trranhie orders I of a brother. , i were flying to army and naval een- James rvrgu is dead in Bt. Paul ters, to forts abroad and ships at sea, ter 30 T P eervice as depot mu- ordering them to attack the enemy terf V" eon- . .kJ r. .k- . I3r. Elisha-gjflagg. of Boston, has "Tha telegraphic war." 1 uwam. iaxe Je jenersun nuz- o .v.- t, v- , I rards Bay horns, "Crows Neat, from wer bound together, as 2 naUons are X"" r f; I . , , i.v. .1 tt-i a E. L. Mckkiey, arrested in Roan not to hHn l war nntli hirh-mlndd ke, Va, is aa 4 to have married three mmnptotit no niRintrMt m.n 1 women wlthoA-. bothering to divorce or should compose themselves into a com- I bury any. mission to study the whole airricuity involved, and report If there is any loophole of solution that diplomacy or plain ill-temper have overlooked. be obliged to depend upon his subordi nates for the practical knowledge nec essary to properly perform a sheriff's duties. It is to be hoped that all lovers of ONE WAY TO STOP WAR D VERY PLAIN PROOF A' LONG the waterfront, Port- landers can get a perfect ob ject lesson of what two meas ures on the coming ballot mean. They should all go and take a look, and let the facts sink Into their' sober Judgment Hundreds of men are at work on the east side along the river from the Burnside bridge north ward, exercising the wharfing-out privilege granted by the legislature in 1862. It Is the effort of one of the railroad companies to save the submerged lands from passing . under the provisions of the pending Waterfront and Docks Amendment and Municipal Docks Bill. ' , That la. to say, for 52 long years this wharfing-out privilege, has not been exercised: For more than half a century, the privileges under the - wharf -nout act . have . been a sham, a . farce, a humbug at . that point . on the river, because the AVID STARR JORDAN ad dressed the Commonwealth Club at San Francisco Satur day. Dr. Jordan had just returned from Europe and the bur den of his talk was that war once started cannot be stopped until the misery of the people on the one side or the other cannot be en dured longer. ' The outcome of war, according to Dr. Jordan, Is a people so ex hausted they can fight no more, ana rinauy tnese people con demned, they and their children and children's children, to financial slavery for the payment of an in demnity. Dr. Jordan had exceptional op portunities for watching the trend of events. He sees no ray of light In the present European conflict only a lesson which Europe may yet be forced to learn. , In the opinion of Dr. Jordan, after a canvass of the world "in' all continents, nothing can be done to prevent war except to stop pre paring for it. He advocates the abolition of gun factories and of dreadnaughts, severely penalizing the construction of machines capa ble of sailing under water or doing injury from the air, and above all, th abolition of compulsory : mill tary service in time of peace. ' Dr." Jordan is not a vain dream er. In the bleak and bloody fields, In the exhausted resources, in the armies of cripples, in the bivouack cietv and he is accordinelv taxed in need of economic rights within tha way me meanire on we oiricaai oauoi Ciety, ana ne is accordingly taxea nnnnrhmitio. for ir numbered 530 should not become a law. more heavily for it, as he ought ernment aa will enable them to rise Tn measure in question. "Municipal to be. above the man made laws that create Wharves and Docks Bill." is only a ' This sunnosed man with $2500 onr charitable and penal institutions, measure of justice to the com- TOV 7,171!,! 'or which free and independent moth- mn PePlf- Perhaps the measure does worth of land with no improve- erg of a race of nnborn chndren will ? ough; still it Is in ments on it is a speculator in land, ultimately have no need, because such right erection, a gambler with the land that is mothers will inspire such a spirit of K1T?,,ripfrlan .wnr,of lan.8 recelveJ for men's use, and not a producer -elf respect and self control in their- 'ff TtTtel IrZV, t offspring as will expand their moral ment. or the United btates by metes or worker. w it. -.., a and bounds from the meander line of It cannot be denied that the principle of natural growth from with- the riveJ M J101?? on authentic sur $1500 ; exempUon favors workers and producers, and penalizes spec- Ji, STLZ makes a claim to the foreshore he ulation and gambling in land, while human law which Cf itself will incite a". ta,to. trublft-1 under the present exempUon, the a determination to rebel, openly if It V8 claie0ibTr,pa1an ners that reverse Is the case. A tax on va- can and secretly If It must. From ZZwers MU wharvet lut I nd cant and idle land drives it Into - 1 use, its best use, the use for which bomP ona day, when I saw a man the law of 1862. The state of Oregon Uoa Almighty intended it. It de- break through an enclosure and under- Ul""r Bia"V f ' "s"' " creases the speculative value of take to hasten their blooming by ar- tZW land and increases productivity. bitrarUy opening some of the sel f ex- and congress restricted this power sub- On the other hand, a tax on food I .n . t, iw f to rights of commerce and naviga- animals increases the cost to the man must be when applied to human tiJn: . . , . . consumer lessens the earninea of nature from the outside, when God . . Th rights of commerce and naviga- consumer, lessens tne earnings or tn.t th moral and spiritual tlon 8X6 enjoyed by aU the people of the meat producers, and increases 0afvld?al an coTleluve this nation. It therefore follow, that the COSt of living. L must be inspired by the freedom foreshore and the submerged lands If Mr. Smith is a worker or nro- of the mother-sex, whom man has co- Llo".' .r n" I -a jHavA ,wa aaK(tFOr-v laws npiiiiiui owner. -L itijs is in aucuruatiiuc ducer. it is to his interest to vote eed into poverty by arbitrary laws I ith ripariaQ law Qf aU natlona The ABIGAIL SCOTT DUNIWAY. If this agreement had been in ef fect between the present belligerents, and they had respected it as the growing public opinion of the world would almost have compelled them to do the international commission would only bs assembling by this time, and the war passions of the nations would have yet a whole year in which to return to calm and to counting the cost. It is different for a citizen soldier to answer the mobilization tocsin at midnight, without opportunity or right to ask why or where, and for that same citizen soldier to hear the matter debated for a year, and to use his own mind as to "whether vthe question is worth his life or not. . Nations do things in a day that they would not do with a year to think it over In which trait nations are very like In dividuals, which in turn is not at all strange or novel, seeing that nations are composed of nothing but Individu als. The present war in Europe should Suppose that this commission, sift ing the matter thoroughly, should take six months or a year to make their report. Suppose that during this time the sane publicists, the calm states men, of the Involved nations should discuss the matter as befitted their dignity and influence. Suppose, also. that during this interval the whole gathering peace sentiment of the world should enter tactfully but in sistently to mollify prejudice, and un tangle misunderstandings, and find common grounds of' honorable adjust ment and good feeling. Suppose this to be the case could this European war have occurred? Do not Europe's statesmen already regret they had not a year in which to prevent it? Does not Europe's soldiery wish that there had been a year In which to say the last word? Why, if this year of wait ing, this year of search for an under standing, this year of calm contem plation should come to be the diplo matic habit of the nations, it would be "the year of Jubilee," and all the trumpets of history would proclaim it as a triumph of humanity's Intelligent patience. "Is this your last word?" asked the Japanese minister of Secretary Bryan about the California question. "Baron, there is no last word be tween friends," said th American sec retary of state. With a year in which to say the last word, that word is almost certain to be one of peace. for" the $1500 exemption; if not a worker ; or producer, or if he is a I speculator in land, he should vote against! it. owners did, nothing to meet the J of the new dead hurriedly buried A - a IV. M t-1 'wm. - - - Alt. - ' .' - . - ivruia ui. iuo iraucuise. xuo aciiu scant graves, or burned m hu- AN AMERICAN EPOCH T The Education Measures. Portland, Oct. 15. To the Editor of The Journal While a great deal of dicussion among the people has been occasioned by the presence on the state state of Oregon exceeded its authority when it granted certain privileges to riparian owners, and these are there fore revocable- Why has this matter never been taken to the supreme court of the United States? The answer is obvious. The common people's rights have never been seriously considered by our politi FIRST MOVE TO INVADE SOUTH AMERICA By John M. Oskison. A rumor flew down from Chicago to New Orleans the other day that a two and a half million dollar company was being formed to enter the South Amer ican trade. According to the lumor, the company was to own and. operate ships. Later It would probably extend its efforts to selling merchandise down there. Now, as soon as that rumor got well itno New Orleans that city's Associa tion of Commerce called a meeting of the manufacturers and merchants' bu reau and named a committee, to go to Chicago and get in touch with Chica go's Association of Commerce. It was said that business men In New Orleans wanted to subscribe to the stock of the new company If it seemed to promise well. The commit tee of business men would report on that. So far as I know, Chicago has made the first definite move to take advan tage of the new opportunities opened to American enterprises by the Euro pean war. It's the German trade (which in the ballot of a number of taxation meas ures, but little attention has been paid 1 parties. Any person who was in Oregon between the sixties and eighties HE Philadelphia Ledger is rieht. " All the machinery Is I to the two measures having to do roartv fnr ntittino- tho foH0rl I With the, educational work in the state, I " 1 T- -nmmo.. m i hod ntv.i. 1 rorvA hank fivstpm in m. r"" rz " ?" " . 7 . could be pushed through our venal leg reserve Dana system in mo- th ht to the very important subject I ,,. , . v. .,., tibn. j There is a new epoch In realties the need of trained teachers in Vu 'Tn Tlle act! American banking. the schools, not only m the city justiceJHughes of the supreme court The' first epoch was the crea- f "Ji"1 ""SlTL' '"LZZ! IT .VI I f the United States has placed him wn "u" " Doy ana gin is """ whol. ononis to waterfront la Bunerior the original United States bank. Teachers cannot train themselves to tetany riparian owner. There- The next epoch was the. destruction ror their most emcient wora. ormii f voters should vote to sustain this by Andrew Jackson of the Second e8 &tSJ2 m GEORGE pope. United- States bank. The third was ures have to do with the normal school tt... . - y- rY the founding of our present nation- U. At least one or the meas- al bank fifty-one years ago. The J ur?d pass. journal if orohibiUon fourth : and present epoch makes j western Oregons, save in the essential I such a good thing and so great a thpKfl ; hanka available for oromot-lfaet that , tba neoole are Oreeonians. I moral upllfter as is being con- last 10 years increased more than 80 per cent) that the live ones will go afteT. Already the British are being told by their boards of trade just where their opportunities lie, and In what arteries of commerce. They know that Germany did a foreign busi ness In 1913 of about $5,000,Oeo,00, only about a quarter of a billion less than Great Britain. The point I make here is this: Com panies formed to go Into the South American trade (where the big chances of profit lie) ought to be Joint crea tions of business men of experience and bankers of sound Judgment. Later on, you and I will be asked to Invest money In the stock of many Qf these trading companies. When that time comes, let us not forget the example of the men In New Orleans, who used the Association of Commerce to find out whether or not the Chicago plan was worth supporting. If It's business a company la formed to transact, let ns get a successful business man's est! mate of the company before we buy Its stock! Ing American prosperity. I The distance to western Oregon is I tended, why does it not brin? peace a r r To, ' " ' I great, the climatic differences are such 1 to the home and love to the fireside? After a lapse of nearly three I ,mtlaam f&md m this countrv. Here are some facts and figures fcr generations, our country returns and the conditions of life are very dis- tbe prohibitionists to study. They tQ - a modern banking system, similar. With these facts clearly in r taken from United States census rpfc-l--'wilt ht tWolvfi TTnlt'firl fitaton mind, is it any wonder that teachers bulletin "No.. 96. table 7, at page 42: There wIRo twelve umtea btates frQi Oregon do not attend Kansas, the leading prohibition state, banks instead Of one, .but their normai school at Monmouth? Is being in one division, and Maine, th final j control Will be lodged with it any wonder that the Tittle ed Nestor prohibition state, as classified one board of seven directors. schoolhouse" floes not 'offer the best by the United State census,? hr an n tint thft tmmnRP linrtpr thk service ? S , it any wonder that the other, we have selected these two Is IS not inft purpose, unaer tnis in the country seeks "the lights of divisions for comparison. Hre are new epoch, to create a vast amount tne City? - the United States . census f lgures: ot new money to reduce interest Eastern Oregon asks for Justice in Kansas, , 236 divorces to 100,000 mar rates The purpose Will be to the reestablishment of v-chool at ried populaticn: Nebraska. 2 2S to v. r.u. t,,t,A Weston, a school which was success- 100,000; Missouri, 281; Wisconsin, 180; f!eU.? Jlt .BUPP S g110" fully operated for many rears and Minnesota, 161; Illinois, 267; Ohio. Mil theunited States. 1 he new bans- which was- throttled in a fit of econ- The above states are all wet except Kansas. Yet Kansas courts grant more divorces to the 100,000 of mar ried population than her sister wet states. Here are some comparisons In the North 'Atlantic division: Maine, 282 toi 100,000 married population; New Hampshire, 272; Connecticut, 130; New YOrk, 60; New Jersey, 60; Pennsyl vania, 98. lis It not strange that Maine, a pro hibition state for To, these many many years," should grant more di vorces than Pennsylvania, a state full of factories and large cities? We think extremes are always detrimental to healthy conditions. Possibly Kan ana has too much alkali water. But how about Maine? Maine is dry; the balance wet. THE WOMEN'S LIBERAL. LEAGUE OF OREGON. pollute our beautiful city with his presence. We want only respectable citizens in Oregon. KU5IE. Dishonest Employment Agents. Portland. Oct. 14. To the Editor of The Journal Is there no law in Port land to touch an agent who deliberate ly sends men out to find employment, doing It Just to get their fees? It Is Well for the mayor to make him return It, but that does not go far enough; they have also lost their railroad fare. If there U no other redress, a com mittee of respectable citizens should Wait on the man and Invite him not to Dr. Withycombo's Citizenship. Portland, Oct. 14. To the Editor of The Journal. The charge is being made by a great many people that Dr. James Withycombe, Republican can didate for governor, voted for IS years before he became a citizen. I feel It Is unfair to Dr. Withy combe to make such a charge, and agreed to leave it to your paper for the truth of the matter. , K. E. JOHNSON. Dr. Withycombe was born in Eng land in 1854, and came to Oregon In 1871. Investigation of the federal court records in Portland sbows that Dr. Withycombe was admitted to final citizenship and naturalization certifi cate Issued, before Judge Deady In 1888. . L. A. Garnett appears aa one of the witnesses. At that time, under oath. Dr. Withycombe renounoed al legiance to Queen Victoria.! Statistical Xotes. Uganda's 1912 imports were valued at $3,039,309. Seville in 1913 exported 403.000 gal lons or ouve oil Peru In 1913 produced 27,000 tons of copper. 30-FQtfT CHANNEL FROiVi PORTLAND TCVfTHE SEA The dream of commerce is realized. The Port of Portland and the XJj S. Engineers have cooperate Jin the work of ren dering th1 Columbia and Wil lamette sif? to the shipping of the worlds What has been ac complished and how will be told in h illustrated article next Sunday. Read wlk Erich Marcks. dis tinguished. German historian, says of H pjprmany's position in the war; cji the editorial page next Surttiy. IN THfe MAGAZINE (Sbtober 18 . The Spirit of Apple Day A cover aesign in color that ex presses tfrfjs significance of Apple Day in arc. artistic fashion. - -All rfjfl King Apple" is the title of 4. article in which Hy man HUj Cohen sets forth the history fcf the fruit that has made Oregon famous. Four $&ges of war pictures convey jgjraphic impressions of what t going on in the war zone. ; 1 1 TheseJ photographs are of the same h$$i order as the others which i jhave been printed in THE j SUNDAY JOURNAL Magazine during previous weeks and coititute a feature that surpasss all others in timeli ness angi general interest. Man j people are preserving these ybotographs each week. In thelend they will have a pictoriql history of the war that cannotl&e replaced. If you have not dofii so. begin now. Yon and ytnjr children will appre ciate tHf effort in the years to come, il Art treasures ever have been the lo& of war. In the present conflict they are not immune. An illustrated article relates steps tSken to preserve the pic- ttures tn? Europe today and reS calls me seizure of priceless painting in days gone. Another installment of The Trey uO Hearts, by Louis Joseph Vance, will be read with interest by the many who are following this serial of romance and a&nture in THE JOUR NAL !.as they are witnessing each emode tn photo-play form at thefpovies.. A pEJie of cartoons and short stories provides interesting ma terial for the leisurely reader. m : TW : SUNDAY JOUR NA1 V-Complete in five news sectns, magazine and pic torial) supplement and comic sectpn -5 cents the copy everywhere. : Pfeks for Portland's and Oregon's contribution to the Chritsmas Ship are fast be tngjxecuted, and shipment will? ie made 'from Portland. October 23. THE SUNDAY JOTRNAL next Sunday will tell fin detail what is- being don' , : I CI 4 l - - ....