- 1 . . v : -. 1 1. . T. ." THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND. SATURDAY; EVENING. DECEMBER 19, 1914. "T"LiC If-!' IDNJ Al I I L J V vx I I irUi . JaiKjkim . ptihtlsber. iuhli'bof rvry rnln teseepl Hoodari ana j tty Saivta? moralna f Th Jnwrnal 11114. la. Rmn4t aixt VnmDI . PortlnM. Or. -blarvd at ll- luuiltH-r al fiwllnxl. VC. lor traaaasiiwlMi Ik mux II ba walla a mtm4 " r, maftar. -Lr r,lo.fc--ldalo Hoot. A-UI. AM Dart merits mrbtd by fit nantwra. TU a anavatar adit 4i.rtmn araatt. fi-n)aiiila Kiatrto Co.. Brvmwlck Bide.. S23 flf'k in., Ke York. 12lf People . IM Oitnaa-o. " : aui;a. i, .iuaj lorat l wa.i or lu iu lit tli taltvti states or Mcstaac -. daily. . Om year 9.oo t On BiostB i M Oa 'rear 2. I Ona mimfa. ...... i tAILT AND 80NDAT. .. I lti r. iTIW i Da, mumth .....$ i -82 No genius can afford to neg lect the patient labors of the world greatest thinkers, and strike out , for himself. Car dinal Gibbons.. THE RATE INCREASE T T HAS not been the idea of The Journal that the Eastern rail roads should receive the five per cent rate advance, v hlch was granted them by the order, of the Interstate . Commerce Commis sion, announced yesterday. It.has rather boen the conviction that greater efficiency in opera tion, smaller waste in overhead ex pense,' elimination of stock jobbing and ,a general policy of operation opposite . to late New , " Haven methods are the true way for the roads to eirn profits and attract investors. -However, in assuming' authority to regulate rates, the government cannot always expect to regulate them downward. If government actually fixes rates as it now un dertakes to do, it is easily com prehensible that a condition may arise when an Increase of rates might be necessary. The commission says that the condition has now appeared in the destructive effects of the Eu ropean war on American transpor tation and other business. In line with this, it is notable that the commission refused the railroad's ' application for the present increase on the 29th of last July. In that decision the, . carriers were i left about where they were before. The next day, war broke out !n Europe, end on September 15, the carriers asked for a re-hearing because of conditions made woree by the war, and It is in response to this latter petition that yesterday's decision granting the increase was aanded down. It is thus apparently to the ad vantage of the roads that they are under government regulation,; be cause they are the only activity in the country which" government . attempts to deliver from the de structive effects of a war that has dislocated business and distressed industry on evsery continent. Vast consideration and unlimited investigation have "been given by the commission to the rate advance now authorized. The powers under which the decision is made were giveni to the commission in 1910. They were first used by the body in refusing an advance proposed by the roads in official classification territory. The roads then petitioned for the case to be reopened, but the application was denied. After three years, the five per' cent Increase was applied for, but was suspended pending hearings by the commission. The hearings began in November last year and continued throughout the winter. They were followed by a week of argument early last May, and after 80 days of deliberation, the com mission on July 29 handed down a decision which practically denied the increase. Respecting the ef . feet of the war on the carriers, the commission says in yesterday's de cision: ' i The European conflict doubtless ' wlll create an unusual demand on tlio world's loan fund of free capital nd may be expected to check the flow of foreign funds to . American rallroadB. Whatever the consequences of the war may prove to be, we must recoirnljse the fact that It ex lRts, the fact that it is a calamity without precedent, and the fact that by It the commerce of the world has , been disarranged and thrown i into confusion. ;' t; There can be no charge that the commission has, not given long and arduous consideration to the issue. ( There can be no denial that1 the body had before it a vast array of data and, that it was not until after repeated refusals and the advent of a world condition never . i'rttiieiru, mai iue aavance was finally authorized. Let it be hoped that there is nothing in the. decision to lessen , tne conspicuous v confidence the country has so far held in T this ; high tribunal whose equitable and Just exercise of , power means -so much to the American people. . AMERICA'S MEAT SUPPIA" -i nvnr.iAKi ; nuusiUiN Bays the shortage in the nation's tl meat supply is the most seri- , ous economic question now faced" by the people. The secre tary of agriculture declares 1 that prices are going still higher, and there is no Immediate prospect of preventing the. Increase. . In his annual report Mr. Hous ton gives much attention 'to the causes and results growing out of diminishing numbers of food ani mals compared with the demand for meat His conclusion is Jthat unless fanners, begin to raise cattle Tnore generally the . cost of beef steaks ! within a few years will be prohibitive for "most people. The national government- and private agencies are working to- either in an attempt to Bolve the, yiuuiem. juui mey aione. are aue- ; qual to the task. The situation distribution. It would not be so bad i cuua upuu ue iaruiers . retspvuw 1 to the appeal for the raising of j more cattle and . the government a I ability to control asjmal diseases, j Mr. Houston says the recent foot i and mouth epidemic illustrates one) cause of meat shortage. , j There is at least one large class which will be much interested in the secretary's report. The farm er's of the country will read in the mounting shortage a certainty of high prices, and be moved to a larger attention to the livestock industry. t For a number of years, animal husbandry has been one of the most remunerative activities on the farm. It is one of the means by which the fertility of the, land is conserved or. restored, and this has turned many a farmer, into larger operations in livestock. The present assurance of con tinued high prices .should, and doubtless will, add impetus to stockraising in Oregon, where the business Is swiftly taking on new and better methods. W-H EX. SWORD IS DRAWN A' N ACCOUNT of the sinking of the Scharnhorst in the naval battle off Falkland islands tells of the courage with which the German sailors went to doom with the ship. It says: When it became evident that she was doomed, her crew assembled on the forward dek. The Scharnhorst refused to surrender, and after an hour's fighting, plunged beneath the waves. The crew preserved its for mation as the ship went down, and cheered as the waters closed 'above them. BaUIe has a cruel ethics. In nothing else is it accounted a weakness or wrong to conserve life. In nothing else but? the ty rannical exactions of war would It have been reckoned a virtuous requirement for - the Scharnhorst, when her doom was certain, not to have surrendered and saved the lives of the thousand or so of grim sailors in battle formation on her decks. In cothing else would "it have been the unwritten law to satisfy the brutal- ethics of war, that these brave men should go down with a ship that was doomed, should waste their priceless lives in a wanton act that could better nothing,, that could help nobody, that could serve no good end. They could have had a better fate. There is a way in which they could better have served Ger many. They could, had the code of war been less cruel, have been saved to return to the fatherland, there to strive and build in the works of peace, there torlnng joy and gladness instead of mourning into the .homes of gentle mothers and sisters and brothers, there to Join in the great task of recon structing the great commonwealth laid waste and desolate by the exi gencies of war.' They went .down with cheers, and probably with the ships band playing Der Wacht am Rhein. It was a thrilling -Spectacle of manly courage, an&d of devotion to the fatherland. It was one of stirring incidents to enrich the the annals of naval warfare. But what a cruel sacrifice, and what a futile wste of precious lives! : ' How dangerously near to the law of the jungle and to the prin ciple of-the beak and 'talons is civilization brought when great chancellories unsheathe the sword! PUBLIC DEFENDERS I N DIFFERENT parts of the United States there stems to be a growing sentiment for the creation of the office of "pub lic defender" whose duty It shall be to render legal service to those accused of crimes and misdemean ors who are unable to retain an attorney. ' While there may be need for such an official there is a danger that the- office may become an in strument of oppression by falling into improper hands through the influence of local politics. It was the old theory of the common law that the state's at torney was in a great measure the attorney also for defendant per sons. He was to be something more than a prosecutor. Ho was to see that a fair trial was secured and that justice was done. 'Through the false notion that success is measured by the number of convictions obtained many Btate's attorneys degenerate into prosecutors. Their disregard of the true function of their office has created this demand for a public defender. AN ECONOMY MEASURE A BILL drawn by Congressman Barnhardt, chairman of the ; house printing committee, is for. the purpose of prevent ing wasteful printing by the gov ernment. The measure has passed the bouse; it should get the sen ate 8 approval. The Barnhardt bill. If it becomes a law, will hit another abuse than wasteful printing.. It will strike Tblow at misuse of the franking privilege, preventing the use of congressional franks for the bene- nt of persons not officially con nected with the government. There should be reform, both in printing and distributing public documents. Every recurring eiec- iioi Dnnga evidence of what it costs the . government to pro mote me interests of individuals Speeches that were never delivered, BiHiemenw ; mai were never ut tered, are epread broadcast over the country, the government pay-1 iug me com. oi priming ana ais- 1 uj rouwuerauie jjrupgruou uijoimoBi ireuieu, mureaisius 1 11 um ! this franked matter was ever read. 50.44 pounds per capita. In li&9 to i But for the greater part, it boss ; into the waste paper basket or into the kitchen stove. : " r A few years ago a senator gave a - business concern In his state a puff which served in sellfjig? the concern's goods. The senator's re-, marks were printed and circulated at the government's expense under his frank. That sort of outrage Is not being committed today, but it was only recently that orie of the senate's leaders stood convicted of having given the use of his frank to a lobby. - The people's own money was used by a propaganda fighting the people's best inter ests. The Barnhardt bHl promises f save a million dollars a year now wasted. It is a sum worth saving. THE SEATTLE RIOT T HERE are unemployed and un employed. - Seattle has . unemployed who refuse to be employed. Some of them have been "rush ing" restaurants, whieh means that they go to cafes, eat a meal and then leave without paying, relying on the force of their numbers to escape penalties. Last night a gang of 200 attempted such an outrage and a small riot resulted. Seattle, like every other city, Is straining every resource to aid the unemployed. It Is a work of mercy which engages the "endeav ors of serious-minded people. It is an outrage for agitators at such a time and under . such circum stances to push their contemptible propaganda of "direct action" or I. W. W-ism. Nobody is more directly inter ested in resisting such action than are the honest and legitimate un employed. Even more than the police and more than the citizens of the community; the deserving unemployed should resist lawless and riotous methods. Nothing is more discouraging to those who are trying to aid the idle than are the outrages at Seat tle. Nothing will do more to check the good impulses of those striving to afford employment and sur vival to those in need than the "rushing" of restaurants and other practices counselled by I. W. W. agitators. The honest and deserving unem ployed in every city can render themselves a high' service by a Bturdy and effective opposition to all disorder and all lawlessness. SERVIA'S FIGHTERS s ERVIA'S recent successes against J-.,.t,.t, ausiua iuiuiu Lut? of the most picturesque cidents of the war. What ever may be one's " sympathies in the general conflict, it ; is impos sible to suppress admiration of this little country's fighters. After four months of war it began to look as though the back bone of Servian -resistance was broken. The Austrian troons had captured Belgrade and were pene trating the country. But with King Peter on the firing line to inspire them, the Servians rallied and threw back the invaders In confusion. The Austrians were out maneuvered and outfought, Bel grade, was retaken, and reports from Nish are that the entire strength of the Austrian southern army is now only 30,000. Servia's successes will not de termine the war. Austria expected to overwhelm the little kingdom, but many troops were required on the eastern frontier to operate against the Russians. That fact gave Servia her chance, and it cannot be denied that a minor na tion which had just gone through two w ; has shown remarkable fighting qualities. Ai one time Servia embraced Bothnia, Albania, Macedonia, Thes saly, part of Bulgaria and most of the Hellenic peninsula. But its dominance was brief: Turkish in vasion brought disaster and the larger European powers used the opportunity to seize territory. Since then Servia's fortunes have risen and fallen rapidly. If Germany and Austria win the present war Servia may cease to exist as a nation, but if the allies win they must, if they are grateful, recognize what Servian fighters have dne in keeping 'Austria busy where she expected easy victories. OUR SUGAR EXPORTS T HE European war's effect upon sugar exports is shown by figures compiled by the de partment of commerce. Near ly a quarter million pounds of domestic refined sugar was export ed from continental United , States during August, September and Oc tober. The exports for those three months were more than 100,d00, 000 pounds in excess of the entire exports in 1910, the high-record year of the last quarter century. Export in August amounted to 38, 956,305 pounds; in September, 52, 290,773, and'in October, 138,372, 686, a total for the three months of 229,619,714 pounds. This total for - three months stands against total exports of 97,000,000 - pounds in" the entire fiscal year of 1914; 44,000,000 in 1913; 125,000.000 in 1910, and 10,000,000 In 1903. Another sig nificant fact is that In 1913 and 1914 practically all the sugar , ex ports were refined from imported raw sugar, and received a draw back equal to the duties paid on the raw product, lees one "pep cent, In twenty-five years sugar con- sumption in the United States has 86.85 ; pounds in 1914. i'ln' that period the domestic product has grown from 3 49,000000 to t,841, 000,000 pounds, while Europe, the Tliitrh V.ati Indlaa irtit nlhpr for- eign countries, not including 'Cuba, Hawaii, the Philippines and Porto Rico, have decreased their sales in this country from 1,219, 000,000 to 2 3 ,4 0 0,0 0 0 . pounds. Meanwhile our exports of sugar grew! from 20,000,000 pounds In 1889 to 97, 000,000 pounds In the year ending June 30, 1914. ' These figures do not " Indicate that sugar is an infant industry ; needing the protecting carol of a prohibitive tariff. . ' iCommanleattons seat to The Journal pabUcatton in tbia department ahonld be writ ten on only ooe aide of the paper, aboold not exceed 800 word lu ieogtb aod nait be ac companied by the name and addrew of tba tender. - it the writer docs not decire to have the name pabLated. be asoald tte.) "Discussion H tbe greatest of all reform ers. . It rationalise everything It touches. It roba principle of all false aanctity acd throws them back an tbeir reasonableness. If tbey have no reaaonablenssa, It ruthlessly crushes them out of existence and aet np Ita own conclusions In tbeir . stead.? Wood row Wilson. . j A Man of Peace. y Portland, Or., Dec. 16. To the faditor of The, Journal In behalf of the pat riots of Oregon and our-entire country I wish to render double thanks to God for the noble stand of The Oregon Journal on the side of national peace, as exhibited In your many editorials, but especially the editorial in the first column of -the editofeal page of Mon day, December 14. "What a bloody mud dle this nation would be in if a hot headed man were occupying the chair of our chief executive in the .White House .in Washington! The 'name, "Woodrow Wilson," will occupy a place in the galaxy of nations, side by side with the great peace makers of the world. Never has a mortal man in the high places among men, ' better represented the Prince of Peace than Woodrow Wilson, as president of our republic. Throw the mantle of charity over any mistake he has made or may yet make. He is our third Moses and under God is saving our country, f More over the constitutionalists of ' Mexico have only done what other nations have done in ridding their country of internicine troublers. That is none of our business. It is to be set down to their credit. The constitutionalists stand for the rights and liberties of the pons the common people, as against an autocratic, privileged class who have for centuries treated f them as slaves and bound them with the shack les of ignorance lest they might make the discovery that they were: only slaves. Let us hope that unintentional blunders made by struggling freemen along the border will not be a caflsa belli by our government. Let us not be like a burly pugilist, going i about with a chip on his shoulder, ready for any fray; or 'the quarrelsome schoolboy- among his lesser schoolmates, anxious for an opportunity to defend his "honor." Let us be men to whom a warring world can look and see a grand specimen of noble ; Christian u..w,iri.,i 'VI the worm n It strueeles unward loward that epoch foretold by the prophet of God. When 'nations f'shall beat their swords into plowshares and their spears into pruning hooks and neither shall they learn war any mora" J. H. LEI PER. . t I Goods Made in Oregon. -Portland. Dec.15. To the Editor of The Journal We are hearing la lot nowadays about patronizing I home products, manufactured and otherwise, and it is all good and sounds well; but what does It amount to, so long as we do not know what the home products are? I have lived here a good': many years, and paid the bills with fair reg ularity, but I confess that I don't know what is manufactured in Oregon, and the Jabel is not apparent on the goods that" we buy. When I go. into a store, or telephone an order, nobody tells me or offers to sell me .anything with an Oregon trademark on it. How are we to know? Why don't you print, for, once, at least, a complete list in your paper, giving us the facts? We could then cat out such a list, and by that means thousands of your readers would have a ready reference of home prod ucts. We need them all, Uttle and big, especially 1 the little industries. Just starting. . H. L. NOTTINGHAM. (There are practical difficulties in the way of presenting such a list as the correspondent requests,1 such as that it would be too long; ithat few would take the pains to preserve it; that it would for no long time be ac curate, since there would be constant accessions and recessions, and that there seems to be a better way. a That better way, it might be maintained, would be for customers to demand that the Oregon product in any given line be placed before theni without fail. Dealers would soon- realize the demand and Its Importance, and would pass the word back to manufacturers or other producers, and with I such 'em phasis that' conspicuous labeling would follow as a matter of course.) f The Tronson Sentence. The Dalles, Or ec. 17j To the Editor of The Journal It is: certainly gratifying to ,me, and I believed to a great many others, that in sentencing the murderer Tronson, to i life im prisonment, ' Judge McGinn j made it plain that life imprisonment- for that class of criminals means jUstj what the .words imply and nothing less, not one single day; and if this Was. thor oughly understood among criminals and would-be criminals it really, would have more terror for them than capital punishment. Judge McGinn i has done commendable act, and If there were more such as he, there .would never be occasion for misguided, sentimental fools to carry flowers to murderers and harass governors and pardon boards for pardons they should never have., And now that, hanging: is pro hibited in the state of Oregon, every criminal should know that a sentence to life imprisonment means every day of his life, and not a farce of from 10 to 12 years. I take off iny hat to Judge McGinn. E. F. MANN. . ; , - - l l - The Test of Enlistment. Portland, Dec. 11. To the' Editor of The Journal I noticed an! editorial paragraph in this . morning's - Oregon ian speaking of - the "un-American policy" of President Wilson! in regard I : - - PI . Letters From the People for to the Mexican matter. i Is It "un-American" to wish to pre serve our nation from the horror through which all Europe ils.istrug gling? It is "un-American1' to at tempt all honorable peaceful- methods rather than loose tbe hell on1 earth, of which we read each day? f .. ' Suppose : we - should declare " war upon our southern neighbors. Would the gentleman who so valiantly slaugEtrs hundreds and thousands k- ' !" 1 A FEW SMILES "One day, related little ; Lester Uvermore,. - ! was walking around on'; my bands, and the minister was IMilVt. auu t A didn't know it. Aunt Frettie slipped out and told me . she Wouldn't do that w iie ii uit pasior was there, and r said wouldn't, ne'ther, ; if I l was ner, x'cua it wouldn't look right. -Judge. Mrs. Henpeck, 'who had been read ing the war news, looked over toward Mr. Henpeck and decided to test" his knowledge. ' i Mrs. Henpeck Is there any difference Theodore, do you know. between a fort and a fortress? Mr. Henpeck i should imagine a fortress, my love would be harder to silence. "Why do you carry that umbrella, little boy?" asked the passerby curi ously, it's not rain ing and the sun Is not shining." ! "I know." said the youth, "but when it rains .pa wants it and when the sun shines xnaT Wants i it, andthis is the only kirida ' weather I can git ter use at ail." v with his pen, or Would the "man higher up," be among the first to answer the call to arms? Or, if he is an elderly man with an only son, would he loyally pat that son on he back and say: "Go to it, my boy; they can't do any more than shoot your head off, or let you starve , in the desert," I wonder. - ' ALLEN MT3URN. Blackleg. Weston, Or., Dec. 18. To the Editor of The Journal I have just read an article in Tbe Journal of December 16 in regard to blackleg in cattle. I beg to differ from the statement made as to its being the first of the kind in this state. I have lived in Oregon for almost 30 years and have known of quite a number of cases from my earliest residence here and bave lost quite a good many head myself, but have never lost an animal over 18 months old, nor do I recall ever see ing one die over that age, and if so; it is a,.very rare case. My losses have always been worse. In the fall or early spring. The fall is the worst, here In this climate. I have read some au thorities on blackleg and they say it attacks cattle that feed and run on low, swampy ; land. In my case it was in a high, dry climate very high and very dry. As a general thing it is young cattle-that are very thrifty and doing the best that die the worst. One seldom sees a poor one have it, 4 at least in this part of the state. I would advise anyone losing cattle with blackleg to thoroughly burn the car cass at once. It is a very rare thing to core one at all, though there have been a few' cured. , , I have cured two or three myself, but you have to take It in a very early stage of the disease. In my experi ence, steers die worse than heifers. As a preventive, vaccinate in both shoulders in the j thin part of ' the hide just above the joint where the leg joins the body. One of the best remedies is a piece ft garlic about as big as a big pea or a little larger. Split the hide crosswise and run your finger or a stick down between the flesh and hide, and then push the garlic down In about two or three inches. I think it is a sure preventive. If this la done when they are young they will never have it. Once la plenty to vaccinate. G. L. II. Representatives in Congress. Portland, Or., Dec. 17. To the Edi tor of The Journal Kindly publish the number of men composing, the house of representatives at Washing ton and the number of representatives Oregon has and how and when they are elected; also state what Is meant by "representative district." C. C. COLEMAN. - The house Is composed of 435 mem bers. Oregon has three representa tives. They, and all other members, are elected biennially, in the even num bered years, by popular vote. Each state is divldedlntd representative districts, onefdr each of the repre sentatives to which the state is enti tled. Legislatures designate the boun daries of these districts, which are so drawn as to contain populations as nearly equal as possible. The number of districts is determined by dividing the population of the state by the quotient obtained by dividing the pop ulation of the United States by the total -number of representatives which congress has decreed shall compose the house. This i quotient-divisor is called "the basis Of representation." Mining Matters. Albany, Or Dec! 17. To the Editor of The Journal. Please let me knowJ through your paper, the amount of ground that a person is allowed to take up for a placer mining claim In this state, and if an extra amount for dis covery is allowed; and also for a quartz claim. ; G. C. MILLARD. . One person may take one placer claim of 20 acres, with no allowance for discovery; but eight persons may associate themselves, take & claim each, locating them In a body, and pro ceed to work them as one claim. Un der the Oregon statutes, which, seem to contemplate lode claims exclu sively, a discoverer of a lode is al lowed an additional claim as discover er. If the land is surveyed, placer claims must conform to survey lines. Lode claims, of course, lie along the lode. I Elevations. Portland, Dec. 17. To the Editor of The Journal. I desire very much to know the height of Mt. Tabor above sea level; 'also Stone Butte, near Mon tavilia. Kindly inform me through the columns of The Journal. ANXIOUS. Mt. Tabor's summit rises 645 feet above sea level, and that of Stone Butte, or Rocky Butte as it is usually called, 60.7 feet-l ; v Chinese Before 1850. Portland, Or, Dec 11 To the Edi tor of Tbe Journal Will someone tell me when and where any Chinese visit ed Oregon prior to 1850; also, when and where the Chinese first appeared in Oregon north of Eugene? A. H. BURTON. A Plea for the Needy. Portland, Dec. 1. To the Editor of The Journal Permit me to sug gest through .The t Journal that all those - who have been accustomed to buying champagne on New Year's eve use. that money this year for the re lief of the needy in Portland. The money usually spent In this "way in I ISa Wl VI l iff it PERTINENT, COMMENT SMALL CHANGE The man "who makes good doesn't ! have to prove it. - s.nwas'- Dl"h. didn't try to work Bamson for a dose of hair tonic or a anampoo. i ' vfithI?f.lnlerest8 5 ,rl le to his wife. has dedicated It is FlHlpr n r,,.-. ,V.L& ?, tand f.rom under whe our predictions go lame . Tn iftsa money a woman has the r.B things she can afford to see that she. would like to buy. There isn't much hen fm- th h-t . 9 Who Can't learn In Ban, V. th- !.. il v?lubDy'" "Woddln- garments need Many women are now wearing Kllia bethan collars, but that, of cours-V would not Justify you in calling the sweet creatures ruff-necks. a Probably the most convenient thing about a woman's figure is her ability to shift her waistline anywhere be tween her knees and shoulders. On account of the war the price of diamonds is to be advanced, so it eec-ms that there is to be no end to t!i mm me narasnips or us uiior consumers. Some people are always complaining that this is a hard and cruel world, but jUSt think What wnnld harnAi ts. tl.i.... jlf the fool killer really attended to E1.lAbrah.am'.whne making pancakes on his claim in northern MltinesoUi, accidentally dropped one. cutting off his little toe. VVe know them well. Ihey are the same kind that we used to get in our old boarding house. MORALS AND MOVIES Front Harper's Weekly. Moral questions are best handled bypublic opinion. They are bungled by politicians. A vast new art, with direct appeal to millions, must involve moral influences. The moving picture is the most amazing art-form of our time. In impress upon national life, the movies are comparable to the school and the newspaper. In 1909, Mayor McClellan of New York City suddenly shut up all the moving picture houses. He took this course on no stated principle of what was allowable and what was not; sim ply on ah impression of harm being done. The big manufacturers who send films all over the country acted promptly. They saw their business, national in scope, certain to be ruined if it were to get out ,of key with American morality", and thereby to be constantly interrupted by-police power after millions were invested. They went to Charles SpraguSmith and John Collier of the People's Institute, as men prominent In popular educa tion, and asked them to decide, before films were sent out, whether they were permissible. Hence arose the national board of censorship. It Is a stirring example of successful voluntary co operation between vast business 'and the ethical sense of the public. It has grown in life with tbe growth ef the business. , It has not been exact ing. The business has prospered and the public has been protected. A threat to the continued, success of such cooperation la offered by the butting in of politicians. Ohio put into practice last September a law by which three paid employes undertook for that state the work done by about 145 representative citizens for the na tional board of censorship. A repeal bill will be presented next ' month. Three political-appointees, examining five to six hundred films a month, af ter a large and especially competent national board has passed the films. represent wanton and absurd offi cialdom. How little the national board, after five years of cooperation, now needs to Interfere with the manufacturers is shown by the figures for October. "Eliminations" are nearly always com paratively slight and changes inexpen sive. Number of subiects viewed 571 Number of reels viewed 915 Number of pictures In which elim inations were made 71 Number of eliminations made.,... 175 Number of subjects condemned.... 3 Number of reels condemned.. 10 In other words, the big -national manufacturers try to act on the prin RE-ESTABLISHING By John M. Oskison. It may be that before this little arti cle is published- the New York Stock exchange will have been formally opened for trading In the securities listed for dealing there. , In effect, the market for securities which are not listed for buying and selling on the New York exchange has been already re-established. On the day that the "reserve banks" be gan business, November 1, the New York curb market officially resumed operations. It was expected that on November 23 the Cleveland Stock ex change would open, and there trading would be nnrestricted except that a minimum price would be put upon se curities which are listed on the New York Stock exchange. On November 12 the Pittsburg Stock exchange removed its restrictions on trading in bonds' and in stocks which are not listed on the New York ex change. So far, then, as bonds are con cerned the banks have ceased to fear that unrestricted buying and selling will lead to such a slaughter in prices as to Imperial . loans based ' on the se- would provide food, fuel and blankets for all the poor, and would be a small sacrifice in proportion to the great gooL,accompllshed. And what a'wonderfaf thing It. would be o ay of, our beautiful city that on .New Year's eve not one man, woman or child went to bed hungry or cold. READER. A Legal Question. Portland, Dec. 17.- To the Editor of The Journal Kindly answer through the columns of The Journal if a fam ily's household goods' can be held for house rent now four months due. Can tbe renter move and take his gopds. and not be placing himself criminally liable? R. L. JACOBS. - The question is one tor a lawyer. The Journal cannot undertake to an swer questions involving the giving of legal counsel. Tommy Atkina' Mother. i ; From the Chicago Post. We know it Is old-fashioned and weak-minded and all that sort of thing to be ; sentimental, but doesn't this little glimpse of war bring a lump In your throat? It Is taken from a. story printed in the Post of yesterday: "Last night we had an eerie experi ence. We were suddenly awakened by a deep bass voice tailing piteously: Mo'ther mother! An English 'Tom my,' shot la the head, had become In- AND NEWS IN BRIEF OREGON SIDELIGHTS Taxpayers - of Washington county, after going over the county budget with the commissioners at a meeting called for that purpose, have asked for it like callinar thi roll of the the striking out of expense items. - 13 "K calling tn-rou or ne amounting to I75.000. : pioneers to read the record of the (county commissioners lor. 1855, the employment agency, is said to- be fill- ' , I ii ing a long felt. want at balem. Fifty J Among those whose 'names occur : meals were served on opeping day , most frequently in 1855 either as wit' and 17 lodgers were accommodated. j r..utl(, " y n 800 J" . 1 ) neases, jurors, or road- viewers are Wasco county's' commissioners have : K B. Comfort, p. A. Marquam, J. B. ' 3lfn,51athe,t" i0"' wlth a,-I1vy : Backeiistos, C. S. Klngsleyj J. K. Lam of 14.2 mills, a 2.05 decrease. Lnioubr. riin iut v . Ll county is also to enjoy a reduction of IcU,ul,lln. ?ra." F- By- 1.4, which leaves the levy at 11 mills, ! De. Lownsdale, A -jTrevltt. Kli due to higher valuations and a lower j Stewart. W. 11. Frush, jioWiah Falling, budget. N. Q. Northuo. Jos. Ktmhrl.l rr Cottftira rirovn in inilnr a f t ee ha reputation of belnsr one of the Dret- nest and cleanest cities In the state ; auring 1915. At the annual meeting or tne tjommerclal club a civic Im provement committee was appointed to have tbe work in charge. Medford Mail Tribune: Mistletoe and Oregon grape, that grow so pro fusely in the woods of this state, are now in brisk demand for holiday decorations, and Sunday many people journeyed to the hills to gather the twiggery. Some of the mistletoe and Rrape will be sent back to the states of the middle west where a branch as big as a hand is a treasure. ' ' Eugene Register: Ice haB " formed on ponds to a depth of more than an Inch but there is very little skating. The boys have broken through the icj in places and that which had -formed on the ponds where skating in former years has been Indulged in Is not yet quite strong enough for grownups. Once in several years those who know how to skate enjoy this sport for about a week at a time. . 25?J J6'1 wrk ot and dearly written down. mey realize mat tney J "cvexineiess. a certain anno r. vision. All they dread is tion of arbitrary political ignorance for well-informed, tolerant, careful and disinterested criticism. Perhaps five per cent of the lm exhibited through the country are fur nished not by the large companies but by small fly-by-night dealers who cfc? not subject themselves to the Na tional Board of Censorship.' There fore some local supervision is needed, and this Is procured by city commit tees, ine national board welcomes such committees and has about 409 correspondents to whom it sends its bulletin every Saturday. Such com - mitre ni nnhi o irtm ' ' force its own peculiar moral or social point of view, where it from general national morals; but the main work of these affiliated city committees is to concentrate on the 5 per cent of fugitive films that may be Objectionable because they have not been censored by the national board. Political influence exists to a great er or less extent in California, Penn sylvania,. Illinois, and elsewhere, but lOhlo is the first hard fought test case and the question should be . thrashed out thoroughly there at once. Later It can be taken up In other states.' Illustrating the tolerance of the na tional board as compared with the strictness of police caprice by a few individuals may be instanced the sup pression of tbe Annette Kellerman pic tures by the police in Chicago; the chopping to pieces of the Merchant off v enice in oruer not to allow Shylock'a , t.AkM..lM. . .. J 1. , t wcuatiur Aiijr pussiDitj asper- sions on the Jews; the forbidding of all Bcenes, however gay and farcical, that could be construed as ridiculing police or other constituted authorities: stopping Pagllacci altogether; and the practical certainty that "The Hypo crites," highly thought of by the na tional board, will be suppressed in Chicago, because the figure of Truth; bless her heart. Is nude. Harper's Weekly will have more to say about this Bubject before the Ohio repeal question is decided. It is con tent at present to put before its read ers the general principle that when enlightened public morals are In har monious cooperation with enlightened rmftinea.4 nn n nntlnnnl air-nla It fa a. pity to have the harmony broken by wi iw .rr...ni,itiv inort., - in number, deficient in training, and too often within the reach of devious influence. STOCK MARKETS curity ty of bonds. Also the banks and er. no longer fear that investor, deale will dumrj their hold in its of stocks in small corporations and corporations that have refused to list their aecuri ties on the New York exchange. There, Is an actual, if small, market for securities listed on the New York exchange. The other day a New York paper printed some quotations show ing the rise in prices in this jnof ficlal market, Atchison. Topeka & Santa Fe stock rose from an October low price of 82 to 86 early in November; New York Central rwe. from 72 to 75; Northern Pacific from 89 to 92; Penn sylvania from 99 to 100, and Union Pacific from 104 to 108. Of cAire, these unofficial quota tlons are below the price at the clos ing of the New York exchange on July 31, and until the banks and finan cial experts are fairly sure that ap proximately the July 21 prices can be maintained there won't be any open ing of the big exchange. But every day is bringing the time nearer when all the markets for se curities in this country will be re-en tablished. Investors should get ready for that time. sane and was literally an infant cry-! resumed; and wise men. ,'rven in the ing in the night.' He died In the ' mldt,t ot war na its pas' Jlons. never course of an hour. Ills mother will ; for(Pet tnat afteP tn- wanthe antag never know Jiow her brave son called ; onBta will once again hjfrve to live upon her for- help at the last. His , together and work together. was Just an ordinary death. We have had as many as seven such deaths out of 25 beds in one night," After the' war is over, the mothers are going to be heard from. The cry of Tommy Atkins and his comrades in the ranks of France and Germany and Russia will not go unanswered. Guardians of America's Honor. From the Philadelphia Ledger. General Funston and a large part of the American troops from Vera Cruz have reached Galveston. The men have come through a very difficult situa tion with great credit to themselves and'to tbeir country. It deserves pub lic recognition. ' General Funston's men landed in the principal port of a nation at peace with the United States. They seized a city which offered active and bloody resistance. They did all tbia - in a country whose nerves were, already, overstressed by a long period of in surrection. And yet for seven months they held and administered Vera Cruz so firmly, so wisely, and bo justly that no whisper of disgruntled re proach reached America They were sent te guard America's honor. They bave held It untarnished. ' "'IN EARL Y pA YS" By Fred Lock lei. Special Staff Writer of The Journal - : k. ti. Wilson. Thomas liHhlmiii. Sane n"d BalCh, J. B, Knapp.f c. B. Pil- ion, K. K. cof rin, C. G.Birdaeye, :'A C. Bonnell and D. W: Litche.i thaler. The record is full of reference to and discussion of the rates tor fer riage across the Willamette at Port- ' land and across the. f Columbia tv Vancouver. James B- Stephens was granted a license to run a rejry be tween Portland and E?Jtt Portland. ' "Jimmy"' Stephens eventually sold hi flat boat ferry to Joseph, lnott. For years there was a constant ag itation by the east aiders to have a bridge built across th Willamette, but the ferryman and all J of his ad-, herents claimed t. bridge would be too hard on the horses, es a ferry boat enabled the horses to rest while coining across th river, i In 1875 Joseph Buehlei. who still lives in Portland, and William Beck. -who had a farm midway between what is -now Sunnyside nd Mount Tabor, circulated a petito5i to have a free bridge built across! the river. J. H. Woodward, the count? judge, fa- vureo. me Driage, so did commissioner Penumbra Kelly, but -Tyler Wood- ' ! wanl id. ttKA . I .... out that as there wa' no county road en the west side Icf tha river. the county owned no land on which to build the west approach of the bridge. This settled tBi bridge fer , a year or two. i A Bridge Across the Willamette association was formed, yilllara Beck was made president, Joseph Buchtel secretary, J. L. Atkinson ' treasurer, and Melvin C. George attorney. Final ly, not being able to isecure . funds for a free bridge, the company : de cided to build a toll i, bridge. Mr. Buchtel resigned as eorjiary, ao he wanted a free bridge." f i Dr. J. c. Hawthorne. William Beck 1 "UD8C"Da Jf ltle and GarrlU Bros, of 8anFancwco De a a. 1 .... .as - im fa" ?,rk on Ea8t orrten.tr.t An d' as t was ' ' ,l-,o. that Th . J1 . . aE. al? , r 'th temboat traff,c A" '1 ferfy ! aV The case was l, the courts 1 lr severfI ya"' The ; contractors ; bepam disgusted at tnelong delay I an..qultvL , , ' M iicn me injunction ? was at last dissolved the Willamette icon Prldge company took the contract and ' for 10 or 12 years they divided their time between working 'tf-.tha bridge ana righting injunctions, and suits in- i etltuted by the owners! of. ' tho ferry and the river boat interest, who were bitterly opposed t; the building of a bridge. Finally tne , bridge was completed and with William Brck at the head of the procession and Jo seph Buchtel as grand. ! marshal, a procession was formed jaud marched across the new bridge : which was formally opened to traffic; T ' . Thee Teacher and the State. By Mary H. Force. I'm sorry, -children, sorryi for every hasty blow, I inflicted on your tender hands in, the ignorant longrajpo, Sorry for the unkind word that brought the chlldlsH tear. For every trembling little;. lip, r knee that shook with fear. I would no little . rudd? cheek e'er pale at my decreed No 'startled, anxious fittj . eyes e'er plead their cause with me. I would no awkward, 6'iirgrown boy could say in years ' come That I failed to give l itn c-ourage when he failed to alo'lila sum. For the boy who went "a.flhhln. " and tne lot wno stopped to play. ; Listening to the birds and "wlshlnV 1 - he cquld stay outdoors all day; LFor the bully of the playgrounds, the liar ana tne cneat.v I'd use a different mothpd now. But the children? Tim is fleet Oh. they needed only leading oy gen- tie, loving bandn, And they needed understanding, not cold ana stern conn j ana a. i They t?0"0-?? I JOBt .iVtaln thar Ah, but ar when we've lonp forgot; the pains. And thus ttu time will surely come, when, in light Of higher thought, . The state will look with sor'ow on the havoc she has-Wrought For she'll have a wlne.rs method of handling sinners tluTi, And her criminals and weaklings she'll develop into men. Tia then she'll view wlfh', sadness her history's blotted oage. And cry out to her people of a more benighted age: ' i Tm sorry, children, sorry, for every vengeful blow: ,.r . I Inflicted on your willful -heads ill the ignorant long v'go." Hillsdale. Oregon. tecen ber 1 0. r9 1 4. i --. - Hate or Cooperation. From the London News and Leader,: In the real world nations are differ ent and eoinplenrgitary, ,i&t opposed and hostile. In tne general progress of civilization they cooperate, each contributing its own peculiar quota and enriching the whole. 'That Is the ! norlnal ,V,fe..of tfie wor1 JB."W hlch w,ln preacning jor inte interna tional hate. Is a hideous', aberration. WVian tha war DutM ' e.ofinaratlnn la" , Convenient Deafness. ' An oia tarmer in Ayrsnire naa habit of feigning deafness When' he wanted to avoid answering an awk- ward question. One day la neighbor said to him: . '-j .. "I'd like to borrow youp cart this morning- Mine. Is having y a spring mended." - ' old farmer answered. "If don't heaf very well and I don't like ; to lend my cart, anyhow."' .j: 4 The Sunday journal The Great Home Newspaper, . consists of j Five new sections replete with illustrated features. Illustrated magazine of quality. Woman's pages of rat merit Pictorial news supplement. Superb comic section.,! "" 5 Cents the Ropy 1 r .1