"a i THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND. , SATURDAY - EVENING, NOVEMBER 14, 1914. : THE JOURNAL AW IWDEPENnEWT NEWSPAPER. I C. . JACKSON .PebUahee. fabUaaae' vtj tb1d( Itirapt Snaday) aa varr snnai-r worDinc at TM joeraai Int. Brolwf ml TaihW f .. Portlaad. Of 1kotr4 at ttaa paaur f Ice at forUaad. Or.,' tor traaaniaaioe taro-aza ua aaajua aa-. www eiaaa aaattatr. - - . LX PHONES Mala T1T3: Hob. A-01. AJI dapartoMiita raaebe by rkma auuucra. Tall the eperafrnr what flirtnat jgra-'-wav UKKION ADVKHTlSINO KKPttCHBNTA'ftTaT - Pnlmln Keoteor Co.. BranawicS viae.. , t2S rift a Ave.. Kew Vers, U1S People's Bide. Chicago. - (,-, "' sabaeriptMa term, by Mil ar ta eay ireee la Ua Catted States av Maxlooi DAILT. i ' On ; yaar..... .AS. 00 t On SMratfc.au...f UKDAT. 1: Oaa yea U.60 I On month. JS DAILT AMD SUV DAT, i , Oca aaar TJO I Oaa a th......S . All service is the same with 'God . . S- - With. God. whoa puppets best and worst. Are. we; there U no last nor - first. Browning:. a- a BEHOLD "B Y- JANUARY 1, there will bare . been received in Portland for wheat shipped out of this port. $5,000,- eoo. - This was . the statement yester day of A. L. Milla before thel Port land Clearing. House Association, i of which he is president.! He added: ' -j This money will be bandied through Portland banksi much of It .will go 'to the growers In the Interior, but not a little will be left here in re fund for the advances made by Port land banks to handle the crop. ; Need lees to say, this amount of money circulating; In Portland and the ter ritory tributary to Portland means a great deal to- all business, and forms a very substantial basis of optimism for improvement of local business condition!. -. . ' The days' news tells of the sales of great numbers of Oregon horses for use. in Europe, of the running of Oregon woolen mills day and night at full capacity to fill orders for the world armies, of big sales of barley and oats at fancy figures, and of unlimited demand at sky prices for- almoBt every product this state has to sell. In Europe 20,000,000 men are under arms. Production is para lyzed there, but consumption of products goes on just the same. The' granaries, warehouses and mills of Oregon are 8000 miles nearer than ever before to theBe consuming hosts by reason of the ! - Panama canal. The governor of Alaska told in Portland yesterday .of the vast activities and develop ment the Chamberlain railroad law and the new leasing act Will im mediately open In the North, mak ing heavy demands on Oregon for every product of field, orchard and .mill. t ; Portland arid Oregon never faced I a future that Beemed so freighted , with demands on our . enterprise and work, so full of promised re wards for our endeavor. '' ' PLAIN AS DAY THIS is the way the Oregonlan says the war taxes were made necessary: The deficit which made emergency taxes necessary is esti mated for ' the current fiscal year at 1100.000,000. The Democrats appro priated for this year $103,000,000 more - than waa appropriated by; the last Republican congress. Had they saved that $103,000,000, there would have been no deficit, and no emer gency taxes would have been neces sary. .- There you have it, plain as day. Anybody that can't understand that. Is no, mathematician. The fool congress in passing ap propriations should have known ' that there was going to be a world war. Any congress that cannot tell In advance that there is going to be a world war ought to be re called, or be shot Now it congress had known, as It should, that there was to be such a war, and had appropriated $103,000,000 less, there would have been no deficit. It Is just as plain as the facts about the dough nut. Either the hole was punched In the doughnut, or -the doughnut was built around the hole, a fact that the Oregonlan publisher chal lenges anybody to successful gainsay. ! " THE RURAL SCHOOL ILLUSTRATING the plight of rural schools In many parts of the country, the federal bureau of education has published an article by, W. F. Feagin, superin tendent of education for Alabama. ' He says that a farmer with a cheap automobile has more invested I in one article than the average rural . community as a whole has in its . school" plant. j ; Mr. ; Feagin contrasts a dilapi dated school with a handsomely constructed Jail in the same coun ty, saying: j This Jail has sanitary : drinking fountains, shower baths, clean floors, plenty Of good light, . good . ventila tion and la otherwise attractive. " Could a person from the district In . which this school Is located be blamed for preferring the jail to the school. . Dr. Claxton, commissioner.- of ' education, says conditions found by Mr. . Feagin are by no means pe culiar to Alabama. It Is declared they . can be duplicated anywhere. 'In Tennessee, it was found a few ' years ago; that in a majority of the counties the average annual salary of the teacher waa less than the . cost of feeding a prisoner lit Jail. .Such conditions do not exist in Oregon, but ' the Alabama survey is valuable even in this state In calling attention to the necessity of adequate .support for the .rural schools. " Dr; Claxton say . that until a community spends at least SEATTLE'S CONTROL OF PORTLAND T HE deep sea Industry of Puget. 170,000,000 year. Portland's Portland Is supplied mainly, which much, la .taken along the caught in Oregon waters, the catch Is taken to Seattle, - where the choice fishes shipped to eastern markets, and. the poorer quality sold in Seattle or sent , to Portland. V. It Is altogether an extraordinary situation. The great staple deep sea fish is halibut, of which there Is a bank off Yaquina Bay that is one of the best in the world. This halibut is taken by Seat-! tie fishing vessels, carried past the mouth of the Columbia to Seattle and then, 1 shipped by rail to Portland at a rail cost of 35 cents a hundred pounds.' The extra haul by sea and the extra railroad haul Is added, of bourse, to the price of the fish to consumers, and Is paid without realization of why they get their fish In such a round-: about way. : -'.'r';'-' -.i - : Fifteen Seattle vessels fished on the Newport banks, off Yaquina Bay the past season. Their tonnage was 35 to 300 and they Invaria bly filled to capacity In four days fishing. All of their catch was taken past the mouth of the Columbia to Puget Sound and be came a considerable factor in the $70,000,000 that the deep sea fish ing industry of Seattle totaled last year. .- -si- if the Puget Sound vessels that fished on the Newport banks this year had marketed -their catch from Newport or Portland and fitted out from either place, they would have distributed $30,000 a month In wages alone. The situation presents amazing conditions. It is most extraordi nary that the Portland fish supply is under control of Seattle deal ers. It Is extraordinary that Portland consumers should be ; com pelled to pay a tribute on food fish caught In Oregon waters to the extent of an extra sea haul of 300 miles and a railroad haul from Seattle to Portland. If the Seattle control compels Portlandefs to pay these extra charges, what other tolls may not be" included in the extortions? r There) are other Impressive facts In the situation that The Journal will discuss in future articles. Meanwhile there are 33 varieties of food fish in the waters off the Oregon coast, of which 15 varieties exist In commercial quanti ties. On the Newport banks there is, black cod of the best quality and in unmeasured? abundance, and there are millions of pounds of the finest sole-to be found In the seven seas. The halibut on the same banks goes through Seattle to every Im portant city In the United States, including Portland, and to Canada. The Pacific Coast halibut, beginning with the end of the banks off the Southern Oregon line, and extending at intervals aa far north as the well known Alaska banks, -have the world for a market, some of the choice Newport halibut 'going even to Europe. What a field is jhere for a vast fishing Industry in Portland! It can be made an industry of far greater value to this town than Is the annual wheat. e-rop of the state. Instead of complaining over a vote our attention to a great fishing industry? Can we not, at least, take our own fish out of our own waters and buy it of our own people? i , as much for education as it does for any one of the material neces sities of life food, clothing and shelter it la not doing Its full duty. '. . There should be" no slighting of the rural schools. As much as Oregon desires material prosperity, no accumulation of dollar wealth can compensate for 'lack of an adequately educated generation of boys and girls. GASOLINE WJNS i T HE auto bus is proving not only to be a strong competi tor against the j interurban electric lines in sections that have good permanent roads, but it is making Its way in; urban traffic against the trolley line, i A dispatch from Los Angeles says that several ' nunarea auiomoDiies in mat city are engaged in carrying passen- j gers in opposition to the traction companies. ; . , Every important carline in the city is being paralleled by them. As a result there is a decrease in the profits of the traction com panies, who will probably be forced to grant universal' transfers. Not long since the , statement came from. Seattle that: the auto bus had severely crippled the in terurban line between that city arid Tacoma. It is all in the line of modern development which points to gaso line as a keen competitor of elec tricity and steam in the field of local transportaton. Nobody knows what changes the new competition may work inNthe great issue of municipal traction enterprise, especially when progress in the perfecting of the auto bus is taken into account. WHY ARMED? C LAD in pajamas and a rain coat, George B., Perkins, a Boston architect, approached a group of persons xsn the steamer Mohawk, en rOute from New York to Charleston.' The cap- j tain of the vessel explained to Per kins that . he must; wear - more clothes in going about the ship. After Perkins had emptied his re volver, F. W. Hinman, a. widely known newspaper man of Jackson ville, Florida, was dead' and the captain and .a ' passenger danger ously wounded. t The handy revolver is ;a wonder ful thing. It regularly! takes its toll, to-wit, nearly 10,o4o lives a year in the United States. It is claimed Perkins j was men tally Irresponsible. Then, if our civilisation is an we boast It to be, why was he permitted to go about armed and in! waiting for Victims? :."' . ,, : -::t THE LOAN SHARK LAW - j .... 0 RE GON has a law designed to curb the loan sharks. It provides that only bona fide residents of Oregon , shall be licensed, by the superintendent of banks to make loans: in excess of ten per cent per annum. Residents duly licensed under thy law may charge a maximum of three per cent, a month. ' . ' : j , : The representative of a Wiscon sin loan concern was! convicted in Judge McGinn's court j of having violated: the law. The convicted man. says he will carry his case to the' Oregon supreme court and to the United States supreme court, if necessary, , He maintains that the law is unconstitutional-because it discriminates against 1 residents of other states. j . , ,- me . i j enactment may . dis crimiaate cl .een residents of Ore- Sound, most of it Seattle's," totals is nil. by' Seattle, and with fish of Oregon Coast, . After being lost liquor Industry, why not de gon and other states, but it is not undue discrimination. Small loans to people in distress must be regu lated, but It would be Impossible to make regulation effective where the responsible person loaning the money is not in Oregon and pos sibly never will come to the state. The law's purpose Is not to give Oregon residents an advantage over people of other states. Whatever discrimination there may be is in cidental to the 'necessity of a statute which can be enforced. It is not probable that the courts will agree with the convicted man. It Is unlikely that an enactment in behalf of the man and woman in financial distress will be upset. THE NEED OF SHIPS T HE Holland-Americajn line op erates the only neutral steam ships plying regularly between the United States and the Netherlands. Holland has con tracted with this company not to accept consignments of contraband or conditional contraband to pri vate parties. It is announced that wheat, flour and other, foodstuffs may be sold and delivered to pri vate firms in Holland, but the ship ments must be carried ihAmerican vessels. This move by the Netherlands government is further demonstra tion of the imperative need of an American merchant marine. Flour and grain men in this country ex press the fear that Holland pro poses to maintain a monopoly in imported foodstuffs. Exporters de clare that if other neutral coun tries in Europe assume Holland's attitude it will mean, a substantial drop in prices. ! The movement for an American merchant marine should be stimu lated by this development. It means that if the American .pro ducer is' to' have free access to a large part of the European, mar kets there is need fpr American ships to carry the grain and goods. MONEY, MONEY, MONEY T WO Chicago aldermen sent to Europe last summer, to study vice conditions have reported to Mayor Harrison. They agree that Chicago's social evil problem can be solved only by sup pression. Advocates of segregation, going on the theory that vice must exist, have cited some of the larger cities of Europe in suDPort of ' their claim. The Chicago aldermen say these people cannot be conversant with actual conditions, that segre gation has not even promised solu tion of the problem. Chicago has abandoned the pbl icy or. segregation ana - in- a re cent address Mayor Harrison de clared himself to be In hearty sym pathy with the new policy. " He said, that although the old "levee districts are closed, thero is no more vice in the outlying areas than there was in the days when a red light district was . tolerated because It was said to be necessary to the virtue of other sections ,of tne city. . ; , . " V; : -- . No city has given more study to the vice problem than has Chicago. The agitation . there has been con stant and aggressive 'for several years. 1 It was in Chicago that the first important survey ; and report was made by a vice - commission i ne attitude of the .. authorities there at the present time is illnmi nating, although as a policy it will he disputed by many. - On one great factor; in vice, the, wuoie country : has made progress. U is agreed .almost .universally now that the captains of the indus try, not, the women are the power that the public must cope with in restricting vice. - The men : who rent houses at , balloon figures tor j immoral purposes, the other men who directly and indirectly profit . real power . that must be . over thrown in approximating any solu tion f the vice problem. . As in all "things, in , Vice the chief corrupting and debauching influence is money, money, money. BASIS FOR OPTttllSM NOUNCEMENT is made that the New York cotton ex change, . which suspended at the outbreak of the European war, is to be reopened, for business Monday. This means resumption in trading and shipments of ah important commodity and will tend to still further swell the trade bal ance infavor of the United States It is exnected that the stock ei-1 changes will be reopened within " . - 1 a short time as plans are being for mulated for financing European held American securities. . With ocean commerce restored, with an open market for securities and a demand from Europe for our products, American industry ! will quickly pay off American debts In the old world. Letters From the Peopb (Communications sent to The Journal for publication In tills department should be writ ten on only one aide of tbe paper, should -not exceed SOO words in leogtb and must be ac companied by the name and address of tbe aender. If tbe writer does not desire to bare the name pubUsbed, be abould so .state.) i "Discussion .is the greatest of all reform erf: It rationalises everything it touches. It robs principles of all false sanctity and throws them back on their reasonableness. If they ha Ye no reasonableness, it ruthlessly crushes tbem out of existence and set up Its own conclusions la their stead." Woodrow wiison. Farmer and Manufacturer. McMinnville. Or.. Nov. 12. To the Editor of The Journal A visit to the Oregon Manufacturers' and Land Products Show serves to furnish ah inspiration for a short article. Since the writer was a participant in the land products exhibit at the state fair and also in the Willamette valley feat ure at the Portland show, I am in clined to draw a line of demarkatiob between the system of rural exploita tion and developumeht, and that of city development and its advantages wnicn serve , a disadvantage to itself. Our system of advertising Oregon Is wrong. Our city and rural Interests are unbalanced. One is striving Inde pendently of the other, and the other of the one. These two interests must be merged to enjoy the fullness of their purpose. If, through the cour age and Industrial effort of approxi mately one half of the population off the state, a commercial center and me tropolis containing nearly an eaual number of people has been builded, and this metropolis is dependent and largely indebted, to the rural activities or the state's citizenship, then what great beneficial results would be at tained .for the great outlying districts If they should receive an equal amount of comment and judicious advertising? Who must do this advertising? That is tbe question. Must the village com mercial club strain its effort to pub lish, extraordinary literature trying to outdo its, neighbor and, in some In stances aVA great and unnecessary Cost to ltf5 few contributors, overdraw It possibilities, merely in a spasm of competition, or should ' the state reU quire a correct and uniform system of advertising, to be proof-read by the proper authorities and passed upon for correctness, as a means of attaining a nign standard or representation? i believe the Oregon Manufacturers' and Land Products Show is thegreatr est thing of its kind ever held in thijs state, and Its management should be encouraged for extraordinary effort shown. Seventy-five-per cent of the farmers throughout the state should be there, studying the manufacturing feature; an all the manufacturers should be there to greet them. Tm rarmer knows nothing of his business relationship with the manufacturer, neither has he learned his true value as a donor to the commercial devel opment of his state. He is housed up, Isolated from an appreciable ide. of his Importance as a citizen, won dering how he may persuade some deV spised real estate roan to believe hi land is worth more than it really 1 and get him some sort of a deal. The rural man needs him in i hia business. Our .lands need settlers and as a member of the Willamette valley exposition Doarn l solicit the atten tion of every organization in our great Portland to its duty in furnishing a creditaoie representation before the world at the Panama - Pacific interna tional exposition, where Oregon will make its mark. A. O. SARFP. Mr. Linscott's Forebodings, Boring, Or., Nov. 12. To the Editor of The Journal In The Journal of November 10, Edwin A. Linscott writes In a dismal tone regarding Oregon's recent adoption of prohibi tion and - thinks that result may be chiefly attributed to the woman vote. If so, let us all give, three cheers for the women. - Our friend wants to know 1 why. if prohibition is right sjid good, a dozen counties In Ohio, after being dry, voted wet. Prohibition, like all other reforms, has Its ebb and flow and seems to lose at times in certain places, but the loss is only temporary. irooapiy tbe main explanation of these counties going wet is that the big breweries and associated inter ests poured S 2,000,000 into Ohio In a desperate effort to keep the whole state from going dry. Mr. Linscott should not feel too pessimistic over the outlook in Ore gon. We have lots of companynow, several more states having 'just' been added to the dry column. Some changes and adjustments will have to be made to the new and better ' order of things, and business will boom' right along. You can't keep Oregon down. -If the statements In Mr. Linscott's articles were all as true as one there could be little objection to his .re marks. He says, "The prohibition of the -liquor traffic reminds me of pok ing a rattlesnake. The more We "poke it the worse we get bitten. . Good! "So say we all of us." No sane man or woman would "poke" a rattlesnake. The way to "poke" a, rattlesnake Is to land on It with a club right between the eyes. j. g. BROOKS. 1 War's "Glories and. Peace. . Portland, Nov. 13. To the Editor of The Journal I wish to offer a com. ment on your article. "A Day- Will Come., As long as we worship heroes, glvejthem Iron crosses and the like and send their names - ringing i down through history, there . will be wars,' The war lords of Europe of the pres ent want tor something before they die to place, their names in history. We teach ouf1 children. In school, of A: FEW SMILES "XI hov." i.aid a nereeant to a iun- lor member . of the force, -you can't say 1 didn't earn them by propping up street corners or : loafing about public houses." "No," answered the other, with a emile; "I know you didn't get them that way or you d have been a zebra by now." A bucolic i individual paused the other day before a newstand and to the proprietor there of put the following questions: - "Been in town longT" ' '.'Quite a , while,' eald . the vender of news". "Know 'a man named Collina Joseph Collins?" ' "NO. ; . "Surer . . . "Say." Exclaimed the newsman. testlly. "there are 3,000.000 people In riklnB n Y- . . . a Vnnn. every man 4n the city?" "No," said the rural one, "but I thought you might have sense enough to know-one" At a cafe in this town one of the patrons, was much annoyed by the vulgar manner In which his neighbor at table ate. He tried to take no no tice of the offending one, but after watch ing him pick, a bone in an extremely primitive fashion he could not control his feelings any longer and, leaning over, said : "Pardon me, but don't you think you'd be more comfortable If you took that bone out on the mat?" the glories won in battle, thus culti vating a war spirit. When ' the world - stops worshiping false . gods wars will cease. We pray for peace with a desire In our heart that our Germany or our allies may win. A, BERTLING. The Conditions of Peace. ReedvJlle, Or,, Nov. 12. To the Edi tor of . The Journal Peace can be brought about In this world only when the demon of selfishness is torn from the human heart; when we cease to hold the dollar above human welfare; when we cease to pray for all that is good to ourselves and oifr fellowmen on Sunday, and skin them the balance of the week; when we cease to meddle with the affairs of other nations; when we cease to force our ideas and re ligious beliefs upon a nation that has deep rooted Ideas and religious be liefs of its own. Is it for us to say that our ideas and our religious beliefs are the only ones worth having? As long as our own people face starvation, as long as our own business system la imperfect,, and our social conditions weak, what right have we to teach other nations along these lines? We hear the cfy of suffering Belgium and are moved to pity and are preparing to help them out. It is well. Yet our ears have not heard the cry of distress in our own country, that is going on day after day. No! We do not bear it above the roar of the machinery of industry which daily is crushing its thousands to build mansions for the few. John D. Rockefeller bankrupts Colorado to get "out of paying his "slaves'" a living wage. We shudder at the awful conditions that this war ha brought on Europe. We stagger at the stories of butcheries. Yet some how our hearts fail to yield -to th plea of the suffering ones at home. Is it because we have grown so used to it? - Or is it bpcause our own people are not worthy of consideration at our hands? They may talk pace; they may pray for peace; but as long as human be ings put the dollar above human wel fare, there will be no peace. O. E. FRANK. TheJ Foot and Month Fight. Ffom the Chicago Herald. The. drastic measures adopted to stamp put the lweatened epidemic of the root and nyoutn disease are justi fied by the situation. The disease is reported from as far east as Massa chusetts and as far south as. Missis sippi. As It spreads with extreme rapidity. It is evident that prompt ac tion Is necessary to isolate foci of in faction and so prevent transmission to uninfected areas. Here in Chicago the packers are co operating in every way wlththe agent of the department of agriculture. Sat rday night the yards were shut for nine days. During this period they will be thoroughly disinfected. More over, all cattle developing the disease are being promptly disposed of. These measures, 4n connection with further steps to prevent the transfer of feed ers through the yards, should effective ly. settle 'the local situation. As for the local meat and milk sup ply, Chicago has testimony from un impeachable sources that there is no present occasion for uneasiness. Dr. Bennett, Inspector for the department of agriculture, declares there is no trace of the disease In the dairy re gions; It' is only found in herds o stackers and feeders. "Milk is safe meat Is safe to date," he says; "it i reasonable to assume that It will con tinue saf e." Assurances' to the same , effect are given by Dr. Young, the city health officer. As an extra precaution the city health department has 20 men in the suspected fields turning back milk from these districts. Furthermore, over 82 per cent of the milk consumed In Chicago is pasteurized. Dr. Young advisee purchase from dealers guaran teeing that the product la pasteurized. It is pleasing to note that the meas ures resorted -to in connection with Chicago's great industry will be ac companled with the least possible in crease of unemployment, t It is stated that a maojrity of tbe 40,000 employes will be kept at work during the quar antlne period. When it ends the pacx ers will resume work and with full forces. 1 A Day of Dedication. From the Omaha World-Herald. . ! Thanksgiving proclamations mea more this year than usual. Hereto fore they have been perfunctory re citals of something that everybody be lieved but, which nobody took time to ponder over. This year they, reflect the dominant sentiment Of a nation and a state. r j Historians can write sometime in the future of the carnage that has devastated' Europe and of the nations that have gone down under the strokes of tbe mighty. But to he Infinite fu lure cannot be left the love and sym Dathv of our country for the sick and wounded and the home suffering that accompanies this titanie disturbance between.' nations. This, is present feeling that: overcomes us as : we go about our daily work, it is the mani festation of the spirit that enthrall all now and can never be told in after " r PERTINENT COMMENT SMALL CHANGE Homemade charity hex ta ti,, 't,,,. brand. ' The woman arhn illa It all miAn Claris to anow it all. Every" man nti a lot of Wlrele messages from bin wife. Coal may be hi eh- but .after it in once in the bin it soon gfta lower. Have a llttl vmnurttv fn th i.v who lets a famous woman-marry bun. The man who eoes to law mv rt- assured that his lawyer will get Jus- The dnllnr anon hnaVlna V. Will never lron tha , . u door. i,v"" a The true aentl man nav. fn, Vtia wedding suit before ordering a di vorce auit. Some men m a nrmM r vh , v do as others ar r uhut th. re. avoid doing. .. " A woman i sMnm ini.,..ti i her husband's letters unless they are A colored nhilosorjhr cava t V 4kA taa less luck in a rabbit's foot than there la in a chicken's foot providing tha rest or-tne fowl is attached. WW Luckily statisticlann nr. n... called upon to prov anything they say. For instance, there is the statis tician who says that nnlv fiv nut .t every 10.0 marriages are happy mar riages. WHAT SHALL BE From the Cleveland Plain Dealer. His detractors have hoped and his clandestine admirers have feared that in the great crisis Panco Villa would be found wanting. Was 4he not a brigand, a cutthroat, an outlaw? Is he not an Illiterate peon, wholly un versed in statecraft. Ignorant of his tory, uninformed in the usages of civ ilization? To be sure he was a successful gen eral; something of a military genius. But was he not fighting for Villa rather than for Mexico? Would he not show his true colors when the spoils of war were to be divided? Again and again Villa has amazed all observers by his- failure to prove himself either a scoundrel or a fool. The first great surprise was when the United States occupied Vera Cruz. The fussy and pompous Carranza was all for growling at Uncle Sam, and dis playing the mailed fist. Villa had sense enough' to understand that the American occupation was advantage ous to the constitutionalist cause, and to trust to the honor and unselfish ness of the American government. Tactfully he apologized for Carranza, and in . effect winked at the United States and whispered that it was not needful to give much weight to Car- ranza's vaporings. Then, time after time, Carranza hu miliated and slighted the one man who had made the constitutionalist triumph possible. At each demonstra tion of littleness it was expected that Villa would go into rebellion to pun ish the Ingratitude and folly of his THE FAMILY PURSE By John M. Oskison. Some time ago I passed on to my readers certain questions concerning the financing problems of the family in which children are growing up. From the "replies I have had I am going to quote what seems to me to be the opinion of the average parent who lives in the city, and who feels the pressure of living costs. Parents should not expect a healthy child of 12 to earn money there's no disagreement on that point. Between 14 and 16. If the earnings of the boy are needed, American parents who live in cities say that it's all. right for tne boy to go to work. Of course, in the country, long before they reach the age of 16, boys do a great deal or work. But there's this difference: When the boy starts to work in the city it means an end to school, while, in the country school terms are usual ly arranged so that children can help on the farm until they get through school. Parents believe that boys who work and live at home should not pay board: they should turn over their earnings to the parents, who should give them an allowance. One of the best answers emphasizes the oppor tunity of teaching the growing boy that home Is worth making sacrifices for. Until the boy is 21, or the girl years save by those to whose souls it has penetrated. Great as Is Europe's present need its needs following this conflict will be greater. The time will come when every nation will turn its eyes to ward this country and from us must come the aid and succor that, will be ministration unto them In their dark est hour. The president or congress cannot do all. There must be back of them ninety millions of people wil ling and ready to lend their hands 1o the work of restoration, and their hearts to the duty of comforting those who mourn. It is a future which we must face unflinchingly as a nation a future for which we must begin preparation at once. Our Thanksgiving day this year, must be a day of consecration to that work, a day when before our Master we must pledge something of our substance and something of our love for that time when they will be drawn upon by sorrowing, suffering Europe. As God gives us opportunity to ob serve Thanksgiving this year In a land of peace and plenty let us thank Him also that we are fitted to become the principal factor in the solution of the world's problems of tbe immediate future. Let us .thank Him that through our own peace, and our tears of sympathy for torn and bleeding fatherlands, we can dedicate our fu ture to the labor which He has meted out for ua. Why "Tipperary" Is Popular. From the Montreal Star. Professor Sir A,- Quiller Couch. In a lecture : at . Cambridge university re cently,, referred .humorously to the contempt of the average Englishman for sentiment at such a crisis as the present. His subject was "Patriotism In English Literature,' and he : told his audience that the cheerful Irony of the English private now at the front "played with patriotism Just be cause he was at home with that holy spirit, so much at home that he might be called at any hour of the day or night to die for it. - Precisely because he lived in that intimacy he was shy of revealing it, and from shy turned to scornful when the glib uninitiate would vulgarize the tnystery they had not plumbed." . On platform after platform he had sat since August, an seen the ardor of young men chilled by exhortation from Intellectual speakerswbo lacked AND NEWS IN BRIEF OREGON SIDELIGHTS Weatern Union linemen expect to have the telegraph line along the Wil lamette Pacific railroad ' completed from Eugene to Mapleton by Novem ber 20. .ys - a a - " And we havenH heard, exclaims the Amity Standard, "even an old timer claim that in the sixties, seven ties or any other old time we had a season just like this, one." , ; The Sumpter American thus ratifies one of the principal results of the eieouon: "Many a man will soon learn that the stuff flowing through the mountain gulches, canyons and val leys in an emergency can be used for drinking purposes." a ' Coos Bay Harbor: North Bend may well feel proud of the big vote polled. Nothing shows up quite1 so well as votes. It being a solid representation of population. North Bend haa a vot ing population of 1018 and Marspfield has 1506; therefore we are two-thirds the size of our sister city.. - a'. Tribute to October, in Enterprise Record Chieftain: "Now that Wal lowa county has had such a long and delightful autumn, no one will regret the coming of winter which cannot hold off much later, All through Oc tober the weather haa remained de lightful. Time and again a storm has threatened; the wind has shifted Into the northwest and has blown violent iu uui m w v ttuu nmm- utvwu tiviviii ly for a short while. Then It would j shift to the south or would die down, and all would be lovely once more. Oc tober did. not have one rough or-old day." SAID OF VILLA? leader. And each time the ex-bandit, apparently placing the welfare of hla country above his own pride, swal lowed the Insult and continued to giv loyal service. Then came the constitutionalist tri umph, the flight of Huerta, and Car ranza's unwarranted proclamation, of himself as head of the provisional gov ernment and candidate for the consti tutional presidency. .It was then that Villa, having brought the constitu tional cause to complete vlctoTy, re belled against permitting the "first chief" to dash down the principles for which the patriots had fought. Villa finally took up arms against the nation's nuisance. Now, said the old friends of the clentlflcos, the ban dit will show his true colors. If he has shown his true, colors he is a true patriot, and a man strangely enlightened beyond his opportunities. He has made of the cumbersome Car ranza an avowed rebel, but he has not advanced his personal cause In : any way. He has merely brought about, through the Aguascalientes convention, a constitutional program for the estab lishment of constitutionalism. And there is nothing in his attitude to in dicate that he has endeavored, to ac complish -anything except the rehabil itation of Mexico and the throwing off of an incubus that had become Intol erable. What shall be said of Villa? The tale is not yet told. He may yet show himself as black as his antecedents would Indicate. But his present val uation must be that of a great fighter,' a diplomat and patriot. ra AND THE CHILDREN 18, they should not be allowed to be come boarders in their homes. It la not desirable. If the answers to my questions are taken as a guide, to encourage children to become self supporting too early. Keep the child as a child; after he reaches the age of 14 you can begin to Impress upon him the need for considering the re sponsibilities of life. But do this gradually. Don't -drop burdens too soon on young shoulders. . Even though children art paying their way In the home, the parents ought to supervise their spending. They should be encouraged to open an account in a savings bank,, and they should be kept away from pool rooms and saloons. Parental author ity is a reality; it should be wisely used. In our cities the most of living Is forcing children out of the schools too soon In order to help support the family. ' The fight to keep them loyal to parents and the home under then conditions grows harder; but it is a fight worth making. After h xeatra Mrner -haa eon- . - , " . 1 r. tributed bis share toward running the nun,?, " ....... left as he chooses? No; the home i the first and sole consideration., learn ings are family property they should be spent for the benefit of the fam ily. understanding, by middle aged people, sentimental or patronizing, who schooled their heafers in what they ought to feel. For a mildly amusing instance, a clergyman in the west, deeming "Tip perary" inadequate to the spirit that should animate a soldier in this war, sat down and composed to tbe tune of It a lyric better calculated ' to brace the moral fibre. Here Were two pre cious lines of it: Good-bye, self-indulgence. Farewell, the soft, arm-chair; to which the British Infantry man responds: -"Have a banana." And, truly, when on came to think, it was hard to find, in a few words, a better anwer. Send for the boys of the girls brigade To set old England free; Send for my mother and my 8i'r and my brother. . But for goodness sake don't send me! , . i That was "Merry England." The Ragtime Muss Ballad of Consolation. Admit the vxorld is out of plumb That White is Oft condemned as black, That many speak who should be dumb And justice groans upon the rack: Admit, that on all aides the clack ff?k.e,rs spreads a false alarm; Behold, althdugb the times are slack. Life still has many things that charm. Though 'on all sides the folks look glum Andt "lonr to have the old days natjr" Though prophet pile opprobrium - Upon the future bulging pack: Though all . the chartered fools at tack . .. . - The present .madly, what's the harm? , There's Christmas in the almanac! Life still ha many things that charm. Tls more than easy to become ' A social hypochondriac. To let our souls grow stiff and numb; Ho. why not try, whate'er we' lack, To travel 'in the cheerful track. And lend a firm supporting arm , To those who've had from fate a thwack? .. - . - Life still .has many things that charui. L'ENVQI. Prince, though we feed .upon a ' snack Today, a turkey, from the farm Awaits us in tomorrow's sack---' . -. Life still has many thingsX that ., charm! . IN EARLIER! DAYS By Fred Locfey. I have lived ln Oreg? for over 70 Tears," said Mrs. Jamey Hembree of Lafayette, "f was no (blte 12 years old when we came acros-jhe plaln& 'In -Peter Burnett's, train ln243. p. "As I think back tof the old days -when we were, crossing;' the plalntifc I ean remember very p lately many of the meals we 'had. Supper waa our t best meal. We usually! had 'soup of 1 some Kind. . with ' burfaia ; or antelope steak fried with bacon. Then we had . bread and stewed, fruit Usually dried peaches or dried applesIJ lOccasionally we had fried fish. Tbimen caught fish in the Piatt. I thfbk they called them catfish. i The Hembrees andl'rour family : irveiea logetner. une day Joei, roy; husband's brother. whoS was t years old. tried to climb out lot the wagon ; wnue it was going. HfSfell off the wagon tongue, and before they could v stop, the front wheals tfjd run ove&, him and ktllf 1.1m . . -.1 . they made a box to burjf film in. On . viia iiivn tv en l uses $Jvg orougnt stone that he had noticed along the way, and another nith t who was handy with the chisel ihtVeled Joel's' name on the stone and 1 nut it at th hrad of the grave. Another time w stopped on the Platte all -day this H waa tAvM tha last nf lulu fc-Mt.. ..... - . . j .. n. a . Mrs. Hembree gave Birtht to a llttlv4 giri oaoy. in en christened her. Nancy Jane. ... 'J; f "In the, spring of 184 the Burnetts and ourselves' . moved to Tualatin j plains. My father todkfun 4 acres 'g adjoining Lafayette. Hf tiillt a cabin,; left an open place in the" Joof for the? smoke to go out, -put jir some pole f beds, and with my brother Andrew,! he went up to Fort W9.Ua Walla 'to? get the cattle we had ef there the, preceding fall, while w ..moved lnt the unfinished cabin. jj "-is " "Peter Burnett's place was not far ( from oura. Our other neighbors were John Baker, Uncle Bill; .'ewby, and Captain Absolom HembVe. x maK named Gilbert started a? school abour two and a half miles frwrf Lafayette,! where most of the smaller children s went to achool. iJ J f ? 1 "My aunt had brought a:.splndle anl i a .wheel head from MissftuH with he?, and Andrew Hembree ffxefTup a spin ning wheel. I put in. all if my para, time carding and spinning wool, whkn , mother knitted into socks She-got r dollar a pair for all,sr&; gcould knit. There were a good, majibi? unmarried young men, so there was plenty of dv.- mand for her output. .fOe of my plainest memories Is o: ;my mother sitting In front of the Ififfeplce, the fire light .flashing on ner. long steel needles as she sat on a liome made stool knitting socks. The flick of her needles and .the hum of ta spinning wheel, with the singing At the iron kettle and the tatmBiss of lta lid mingled to make a sorm 0iat I have never forgotten. a il - In those days everyofle worked. My father kept busy al uty. splitting runs ana nuuaing ienceiu ana later plowing the .meadow lahdlund broad ! casting his wheat.by hand, j They of ten 1 narrowed it in by cutting down a srtiall oak grub tree, arid araggtng it; over the soil until the . fcloda were -broken up and the whe"ati thorouahlv covered. We threshed stbj wheat by iramptng n. om wun liars, ana men they ran it through a liaijd fanning mill. We used to haujj tlii wheat to the McLoughjiln mill at Oregon City. When the water was high&hey swam the horses and floated the. mi a eon over. or sometimes they, wpu-1 take' tha ; log across the stream., eart.t the gratn over on their shoulders, ajid put the wagon together on thr tfther' side. Nowadays all youhvef toj do to gejiv a saca 01 iiour is to go w the teiw phone: but then It was inoj so simple a matter, even if life waif. Supposed to be more simple in the earEr days." Memories or Zanzibar. From the Philadelphia 'Jvedger. Zanzibar! The name Kllrg memor!rt It reminds some of usjtht we ont knew what Zanzibar is; J'or a mo-1 ment or two we are 1?ujteleJ to decide whether it is a comic operas 'or an 11 land. Anyway, it docs hotsseem very important. . , r 'A The other day a amaIlioViexclaImed: "What's the use of .-"stsjly tjg geogra- . phy? It's all going tof be changed I" But the enterprising busneai man who ; ; This Is the very time wliejrih should ,tu(y geography geogaapyy -In Its commercial aspects.. ; n 1 - ,, rr-i i. , Kens nurviui nan a uu irfrm viewpoint I nu m, mier an, ni jar I portant Zanzibar wilt ike largeV ; quaniiun 01 American-! goaas IT we ourselves do something ifbout It. There are many Zanzlbars. Ther- is Sierra -Leone, for instance; and liberie, and even Togoland. American 'j! hardware, : building materials,, cotton oods and food stuffs are wanted, now that Euro- . pean sources of supply ijiari been ut off. True, we have maiieti In South America, In the Orlent,j3ln jurope It self; but let ua riot dep1e the Zanxi bars of commercial oppoHuiTity. r " 1 " j i 1 1 i 1 " T Also art Interpretation. .' : From the, Springfield !'-Rtiblican. . i As. spokesman for thei peile of thW United States, It is adrrt jtted that . ; Woodrow Wilson measuresHup- to the need. His gift of expre-gsioL is admlr- , ably exhibited In the jMtfiksglving ? proclamation. Every citzej1 ought to read It forits poise and suggestion of -the - part which lhe pnitsd States should play in this crlhle :.; vfclch has Europe fn the throes f Misfortune. We. shall keep tbe peaeel: arfiwe shall help those who need. as4tstaiice. There is much of moral educatlcm-in that through , which this .nation fn' passing, and it is well to have ths sjide of'our. -experieru-e set forth o- that all who' " read can: understand. 'Thlsiproclama-. tion ts also an Interpretation. The Santa Claas'KHiD. . From ,th rrnH:''NiiA - - vWJ It seems necessary but' to "Couch the heart strings of Americans produce a melody or sweetest sentiment, " . Sympathy for the war': --distressed takes varied form in thisiCoutitry.- ranr- jlng from utterance . to cargoes, of food i ana cioimng.. out or in.iiey inn wm t vail iivim inmv . ciiv. M, ; uy iiivre blessed or possessed of wlcjer appeal than, the Santa Claus lihlp .thtS "boat that will bear presents tf thi children of the war. ' , .. -Ji : .-r - The cheering of the Ufarts of chil dren over seas Is a manifestation that the Good Fellows who hjave .gladdened the hearts of so many chlldrjenn De troit and other titles, have fciecome in ternatiohat. -A j; . r- The Sunday Journal Tbe Great Home Jewispaper,' . - ", j .. consists of X: . Five news sections, r'epleje with illustrated featured ' ; Illustrated magazine : of uality. Woman's pages of ' rare? merit -Pictorial news snorrien-ienfL Ot Superb cdmic section. 5 Cents the Copy , I