8 THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, MONDAY- EVENING, DECEMBER 28; '1914. THE JOURNAL a iJtnrprNnuwT nrwbpaprr. . a. Jackson . PnMlatwr. t ubltiberi arrry evanlos (airapt Snn'lart a4 arary flaadif nornlna at Tna Jonrnal BerlM Ids, Bmalwav anil YamMU ta.. Portland. Or .utvrrd at tna pwtorflc at for 11 ad. Or., for triattniMlun tkroask the Mils aecoeaj iUh anatta. IkUiPBUMf-Main 717-: UM. A-Oil. Alt partnta raaebad by ILeaa Bomber. Tail m rri"r wnat nr-iiarrmMK yon wm. Bnjam1n Kant nor Co., Braonwrlca B)1.. 825 Fifth .. Nttr Yoekw Ml Paopla-f Vaa Rld.( rhlrarn. - ' WitwcaJ I 1 " L. I uuacriullua turn t,w null or tit au wi aa ta ba GoHe.t States a Mextcoi DAILY. Om, aar....,,fS.oo I Ona , month, .....i JO cjroAT. - 0b . raar 82.60 I Ona month. 3S DAILY AXD SDNDAT. On raar... . . .JtT M) I Oar month The spirit of the world has four, kinds of spirits diametri cally opposed to charity," re sentment, aversion. Jealousy and 'Indifference, Bossuet. 11 A PKOSPEKITr PACT OREGON wheat commands tne highest price ever known. Club for immediate delivery in the Portland market Is $1.30 per bushel. The figure is not-only the highest ever known, but the advance is the most spec tacular ever known. Forty-two centimeter cannon In Europe do not produce wheat. It isn't grain that they plant in the trenches. Artillery and bayonets are not plows and harrows. The harvest in the big countries of Europe Is not a harvest of bread stuffs but a harvest of death. More than eighteen million men are now under arms. The issue is not going to be settled in a day, or a month and probably not in a year. The forces of antagonism In this war have been , gathering for more than a generation, and they are now in the full sweep of accentuated bitterness. This war is not accidental. Eu rope could not go on forever as an armed camp. The increasing armaments were the visible proof of a long-time fear by the nations of what has come to pass a gigan tic struggle to determine what is to be the geography of the na tions in the future. That is the issue, and it is a fearful, a stupen dous issue. On both sides, there Is conviction that it ia a war to prevent national degradation if not national extinction, and that is a cause that will draw the last re source of each government into the conflict before there can be' peace. The past forty years of peace In Europe has been an armed peace. The burden of arming was fast becoming too great. It was submerging peoples and overwhelm ing governments with debt, and there was no end In sight. It was a system that meant finally an aw ful war, and that war is here with all its-vastness, with all its huge ness, with all Its devastation. Oregon wheat is above all rec ords because wheat doesn't grow for the harvester on the red fields of conflict. OUR MERCHANT MARINE FIGURES showing the compara tive size of America's mer chant marine have been com- lled. They show that the United States., in gross tonnage, stands next to Great Britain among nations of the world. The figures are as follows: Vessols. British 11.287 American fsea and great lakes) ..... 3,400 German 2,321 Norwegian 2,191 Japanese 1,037 Swedish 1,436 Italian 1.114 Dutch l.r.52 Danish 75!) Tonnage. 20.431.543 5,427,638 5.082.0K1 2.457.890 1,500,014 1,047.270 1,521,942 2,201,104 1.309,840 1,011.414 Austrian 427 These figures indicate that ship building in this country is not so far behind other great commercial nations as people have been led Co believe. ' -Both in number of ves sels and total tonnage the United States ranks second. But nearly one half the American tonnage is afloat on the Great Lakes, and an other considerable proportion is ! engaged in coastwise trade. It is on the international routes that the United, States is weak. . : But the overseas merchant marine is gaining ground. Not far from 400,000 tons have been added since foreign-built ships were per mitted American registry. There .Is good ground for hope that when the European war is ended this nation's peace fleet for commerce with . other nations will not show the disparity it has bhown since the Civil war. The futnre of American com merce lies in building up the American merchant marine. Al ready over 100 additional American ships are steaming to foreign ports EFFICIENCY IN PEACE (HE London Nation , says the European war has established two great facts. M8CUBging Germany's ability to stand off with 800,000 men Russian armies of 2,000.000 men, the Na ' tion says: ' In the first place, we have learned that efficiency in war is today a function, a consequence, of efficiency in peace., The French and the Ger mans, not to mention ourselves, have reaped tne fruits of a high organ ization and a diffused education in time of peace. The - Russians, in a less degree than the Turks, are han rlireppard by their more primitive civ ilization. In the second place, it Is proved that forty years of peace do not corrupt a nation's courage. The Nation does not refer espe cially to Germany's great cannon factories, nor to that nation's won derful military establishment. The building up of these things was' ac- complished during forty years of jtration of disputes between tationsf cation and his later ' years wers peace, but they are not the great- to prevent the wastage of war. The : years of enjoyment of the compe est results of German initiative and j theory Is sound; nations should jtency he had won. It was more industry. The reason whr Ger-itaks time to determine where right than a financial competency. It many is strong In comparison with I some of her neighbors is because the German's efficiency on his daily job makes a better soldier of him when he is called upon to bear arms. . There is food for thought in the Nation's suggestion that a coun- trv's Btrentrth dnet nnt. Ha ilnnn . . . - . . ' . Jn the Size Of its army There IS a peace effiicency which can easily be utilized In war. That is Ger many's chief , resource. Forty-two centimetre guns furjiish the spec tacle, but it is the men who are able to devise and make those guns that are Germany's strength. PROVEN AGAIN I N THE advance sheets of the Pacific Reporter is a California decision that annihilates the arguments of those i who op posed the tidelands legislation in the recent Oregon election. The California supreme court holds that a riparian owner on navigable water has no right to ob- Ject to a public dock constructed on tideland in front of his premises, that be has no riparian or littoral rights that entitle him to claim un obstructed access to deep water.. "The, exact contrary of this prin ciple was claimed in the Oregon election by those who fought the tideland legislation. They insisted that even if the waterfront measures should carry they would be held unconstitutional, as depriving the upland owner of bis riparian rights to have access to deep water. The California case is Dalton & Sons versus the City of Oakland. In the" improvement of its harbor, the city was about to build a sea wall at some distance out from plaintiffs jland in tidewater, and plaintiff sought to restrain the con struction of municipal docks which it was proposed to build thereafter In front of his premises. The court thus explained the proceed ing: . The theory under which appellant framed its complaint is that as a littoral or riparian owner of property fronting on the bay, and Irrespective of who may be the owner of the tfdelands lying between highwater mark and Its deep waters, plaintiff by reason of such ownership of the up land possesses certain rights incident thereto. Including the right to free and unobstructed access over such tidelands, to construct suitable land ings thereon, and to enjoy exclusive occupancy thereof, subject only to the paramount public right of navi gation; that the city has no right to erect structures, such as it contem- plaes, which will cut off access from the lands of plaintiff to the deep waters of the bay and ? destroy its ngni or navigation over them. The court denied plaintiff's con tention, reasoning that any rights he had as riparian owner were sub ject to the paramount right of navigation vested In the state and the United States. The decision adds: When the public; authorities see fit to make improvements on the land below high water mark for purposes of . navigation, the riparian owner must yield thereto, as his right is subordinate to the public right. Here is affirmation by the Cali fornia supreme court of the prin ciple which It was sought by the waterfront measures to confirm in Oregon. It is flat contradiction by a high court of arguments put forth by the railroads and others who fought the waterfront meas ures. They asserted that the prin ciple laid down by the Oregon wa terfront measures would be "con fiscation." But the court of last resort in the state of California contradicts them and says that "when the public authorities see fit to make improvements on the land below high water mark for purposes of navigation, the riparian owner must yield thereto, as his right is subordinate to the public right." The decision is exactly in line with that of a federal court re cently which ordered the buildings of a riparian owner torn down to make room for an improvement by the public, and that no compensa tion should be given the riparian owner. Decisions will continue to be ! made on these points, and every one of them handed down will be an indictment of the position of those who fought the waterfront measures in the late Oregon elec tion. By and by, the people will1 learn that they were bamboozled j in excess of Germany's expendl by the railroads and corporation , tu res and yet some of the naval lawyers, and that The Journal was highbrows sayweb.ave little or right and the real tribune of the nothing to show for it. people in that struggle. j In 1913 the United States gov iom ii.i lTinv mrnTa . i aoii AiNU UtJMMEJN T apubli - cation i -t " C r.V. . . r TJ ;..Hr,- f ' The figures speak for them suggesting court reforms in . s- the United States. Courts of con- "l tuu cuiauon are discussed and an- proved, Denmark's experience be-: ? , , tiidiTe- for same from the Union Me Ing used to illustrate how such' 0t mnty xP.n1dltue?- 1 taUlc Cartridge company; 200,000 trihiinauT nnrV ! The screams against the navy j rlfies and 200,000,000 cartridges from nlfr! tw. . , are the publicity scheme of the 'the Winchester Arms company; the ueiore a Dane goes to law for . . t whole production of gun ammunition 8 fight to the finish be must call hia nnnnndnt hsfnu t , i . . . m i- " mo wuuimissiuu j ui cuucuiauon. ii a settlement is reached. It hasthe effect of a fi nal judgment." -If a : settlement cannot be reached, the complain ant" receives back his complaint with attestation that conciliation nas been tried in vain. Then the legal fight may start as it does in ?, .u 7' . His life was a modest one and if the Danish defendant Is measured by the standard of men, warned to be In court on a certainja successful one. r Meanured by day to present his side of the con- years it was one that had rnn its troversy; and fails to be there. ;,full course. To thev younger gen Judgment for the entire amount jeration his record j of achievement claimed, with interest and costs, is -is an inspiration. ! entered against him. Ills early years j were years o .tere Is much talk about arbl-lself denial and labor for an edu- lies before resorting to arms. But arbitration between nations is no more desirable than conciliation between Individuals. ; " The American people are paying enormous sums each year as a tribute to warfare In the conrts. Much of this is waste pare and sim ple. If the United States should , mi A n t, ni i require uugauw w um uyormo" disputes before engaging in legal 1 , ' .,Vl? . . . i j 7 j ; hostilities, money woild be saved and there would be ja closer ap proach to the perfect; In tlie dis pensation of Justice. THE BLOOD ROLL 0 NE night recently in Atlanta, a lawyer heard a noise in his home. Suspecting the rjresence of - a burglar, he seized a revolver and went in search. He fired three Shots, after I which the burglar firfed one. The lawyer was Instantly killed, and the burglar escaped unhurt. The Los Angeles case was not widely different. "When the two boy burglars entered' the million aire's home, they were, of course, fully armed. It's the business of burglars to be armed; to be ready to shoot, and to shoot to kill." The son in the home fired twice. He slightly wounded in the leg. He ,was one burglar himself dan gerously wounded. The father was killed. The burglar and other crooks are professional gunmen. The peaceable citizen is an ama teur. Usually, it la better that there be no weapon In the house. Every odd in the world is against the citizen and on the side of the crook. I It was his revolver, handy for use," that cost the Atlanta lawyer his life. Many another good man has been hurried off j to the ceme tery for the same reason. The blood roll of the United States, on account ofj the revolver, is about 10.-000 lives! a year. The world ought to prohibit its manu facture, i AUTOS IN PORTLAND N EWSPAPERS throughout the country are saying that in Portland no One has been injured, let alone killed, in an automobile accident in the last nine months. ' Cominent on this statement by the Cedar Rapids Ga zette Is reprinted by a Chicago paper as "the best editorial of the day." The Gazette says: In Portland the automobile driver who is caught while traveling at a speed in excess of the limit pre scribed. Is hurried to the police court, tried, and, if found guilty, escorted to the rock pile, there to work out his sentence. No fines are levied. Every conviction means ft sojourn with the pick and rock squad. The purpose here ls not to take issue with newspapers that are showering praise upon Portland. But It is unfortunate that the city does not command all the' respect which comes to it voluntarily. If Portland is not entitled to the best editorial of the day, it is because of a few people who are either criminally careless or deliberately lawless. j There is much talk about adver tising Portland as aidesirable place in which to live. The Gazette's editorial tvnical of manv others I editorial, typical ot many otnera In various newspapers, shows how j easy it would be to secure the very j best kind of advertising without i the exnenditure of a nickel It is tne expenditure oi a nicsei. it. is up lO me BUlomouuB urivero. them live up to jthe- reputation which has been givn them. NAVAL DEFICIENCIES ' h T ESTIMONY given before the naval committee at Washing ton cannot fee reconciled. Some of the ekperts say this country has the second best navy in. the world; others .say it is be hind 'the times, inadequate, short of torpedoes, ammunition, officers and men. The New York Sim, a big navy advocate, publishes j the appropria tions made each year for naval purposes by Germany and the United States. from1899 to 1914. The figures show that in fifteen years this countrjy appropriated $1,645,000,186 andi Germany only $1,237,915,960. Diirinz that time we sDent more than $400,000,000 ernment appropriated $133,262, . 5oz ana tne uerman government '. J120'063'4'75 - ,1,? 1914 f.FSf1 , States appropriation! was $140,718,- ,!15 and the German $121,988,035. ?eivef- " ? -u j InfArlnr tn the kaiser's, as has , j.. , 77 Mr. mu . w t tunes. . SENECA SMITH A NOTHER link in the chain connecting the Oregon of to day with' the Oreson of 18 46 has been broken in the death of Seneca Smith L miner, lawver ; and judge. was an accumulation of self respect and tributes of associates to a life well spent.- His life was tlie typical life of the pioneer and the world Is ' better because he journeyed through it. Letters From the Peopls (Communications aent to The Journal for pwie" tuia eepartmaat should be writ- n only one aids of tba paper, abould not exceed 800 words In length and moat ba ac companied dj us name and address or to a sender. If tne writer does not desire to bare tba name published, he sbculd so cute.) - "Diaevaaloa Is the (Teatest of en reform era. It rationalizes everything It toncbet. It robs principle of all tale aeoctlty and throws them bark on tbelr reasonableness. If tbey bare oo reasonablenaa, it ruthlesa; enwbea them oat of existence and et np lta own conclusions to their stead." WooUrow Vtlm. Unemployment and Money. Portland, Dec. 25. To the Editor of The Journal-In this country today are millions of moneyless, jobless men, as the direct result of 'a money system that makes no provision for connecting the moneyless man, through a job with money. Our money system Ignores all the world except the man who has money to deposit and the man who has the best of collateral on which to borrow. The new currency law Is a banker's law and merely intensifies this feature. Think of the loss of say. three millions; that is a low estimate, of men with their splendid producing capacity going to waste. Impoverish ing us all by millions of dollars of real wealth for every idle 'day they live, beside plotting revolution, justi fiable under the circumstances, gradu ally drifting into crime at " worst; at best into mental and physical deteri oration. Suppose we brighten up this picture a little. . Let's put these three' million men at work on roads, con servation projects, and especially on those unruly rivers of the middle west, under competent engineers, for the prevention of their terrible spring floods, say at 82 a day. Then, every sunset would see all the people of the United States richer than they were at sunrise, by 86,000,000 of good sub stantial improvements added to our national wealth. But at this suggestion the banker men lock their safes and with their backs against their safe doors, ask: "Yes; all very well; but Where's the money coming from to pay these men?" Let us discard for the mo-, ment all our banker made opinions about money and all the banker pre pared theories of money and look at this thing through the eyes of sound public policy apd, common sense. With the exception of a paltry little pile of gold, all our money is a debt, Interest-bearing, "secured" by more interest-bearing debts on which the producing classes pay billions of in terest every year for which they get no return. But the word "security" in this connection is a misnomer. A debt is always an insecurity; there- is al ways a doubt attached to it. What, then, would be real "security" for money? Obviously, labor performed in return for it in advance of its issue. On this there would be no in terest charge and, no possible . loss, sinco the nation already ia in posses sion of the "security" the wealth produced. At this the banker man collapses In a heap before his locked safe door. Why? Because we have found a way to eliminate him. He may have to go to work. Think of that! This expression of the money en ergy is the logical corollary of the obligation which society as a whole is under, to provide the workless wjth work, therefore with compensation for that work. Let's consider that pleas ant picture once more.. Three million men at work for all the rest of us at $2 a day, paid In receipts for labor already done, these receipts receivable for all obligations due the government. These millions would not see the In side of a .bank and no interest charge would burden them. They would reach tIrst tho peopl , who needed them mo8t . The anxJous mother with her shivering, half starved brood would be fed with "daddy's" earnings; the man "laid off." with foreclosure on his mtl bome just ahead' would be reached wUh thJs Hveiy money; the Droud. .minted young fellow afloat. jobless, would jump at the chance to forget his half formed plan to go into the holdup business; the man with black bitterness in his heart at the prosperity about him -which he could not share would turn kindly again; so, from those who need it most, this living energy, freed by the one and only true liberator, would work' its way up from the bottom, carrying me, hope, happiness all the way. ' But some- timorous soul, so accus tomed to depressions and stringencies as actually to be hysterical in the presence of good times, asks: "But how about getting too much of this money?" The answer is that as yet we have never had enough, into sev eral billions of dollars; that as It Is issued only for public service per formed, as men went back to private employment, as they would as "times Improved,' the issue would cease; that the government could, if it chose, cancel all that returned to the treas ury and not reissue it, though it would be far better to keep it In cir culation. There Is a good deal of simulated concern over the unemployed problem.. Here is a cure which does not even call for a constitutional amendment. An act of congress is all that Is nec essary. Now kindly note where op position to this plan originates. 1C ... . , , tt;,i NSSSln. Or... Dec. 24.-To the E(Jltor of The Journal The president has declined, to permit the nmiding Of suBmarines tur me niis naucn of Europe. So far, so good; but what about these orders; Two hundred thousand rifles from the Remington , a-. rmnT,v; th soo.ooo.ooo car- of. the Unton Metallic Cartridge eom- ' nnv 4.000.000 pounas oi powaer rrom the Dupont Powder company; 1505 machine guns from the Colts; . 50,000 revolvers from the same company; 200 armored automobiles from the 1 Auto Car company; 500,000 rifles of 23 cal ibre, with ammunition for same, from the Winchester Arms company; 800 ( 'iflJr1. another 7.000,000 pounds of powder from the Dupont Powder company; 60 guns of 9.2 inch calibre from the Beth lehem Steel company; another 2000 tons of powder from the Dupont Pow der company; 100,000 carbines from the Winchester Arms ; company, with 100,000,000 cartridges; aeroplanes from different firms, the Wright company alone sending 10 carloads; ammunition to the value of $12,000,000 from the Crucible Steel company. : . Must the United States "pay the piper," as you so aptly express it, Juat A FEW SMILES Mr. 'Grimbattley One would think that Talkington had . rr I had enough of his XV Hi I wife's tongue, but he , oi puoiiuist iu - i ch ords, and he runs ' niera over every uo I ; W, while she's away. r' r Mr. NU-But think or the pleasure ho gets Jn talking back when they run down. "My dear, you ought to pass up mvoioug things and take an Interest In deep subjects. Take history, for instance. Here is an interest ing item. Gessler, the tryant, put up a hat for the Swiss to sa lute." The lady was a trifle interested. . "How was it trimmed?" she inquired. "The constitution distinctly states " Ambassador Walter H. Page was piloting some friends from America through the museum at Hastings when he observed an unhappy attend ant wearing a mili tary uniform, with a helmet adorned with a chin strap. at whom an inquisitive tourist was firing all manner of silly ques tions. Finally, as the tourist turned and was about to quit the building, he , asked: "Say, what is tnat cnin strap under your chin for?" The attendant sighed. "The strap is to rest my jaw when I get tired answering questions," he replied. - so a very few large concerns can make more blood money, concerns that have no regard for humanity, who ex ploit their working men, and who, by filling these orders for supplies, are exploiting the United States treas ury? Let me point out that accord ing to the following precedent the United States is liable for heavy dam ages: , "By the direction of the president the department has compiled reasons centering on the Alabama decision which lost England 815,000,000. The Confederate cruiser Alabama was built in England, but It was not outfitted as a warship there. England was forced to pay $15,000,000 because she permitted the Alabama to saiL" What was the Alabama but war sup plies? Therefore any of the above enumerated goods will come under the same head, and I just wonder what it will cost us. Don't you think it would just be a matter of self defense to hai-e the delivery of these goods stopped? HERMAN AHLEK3. Hard Times and Prosperity. Amity, Or., Dec. 19. To the Editor of The Journal In the past few months I have read many articles on the question of the unemployed of our state. Yet right at the bottom of one of these articles one never falls to find an article on the prosperity of this state during the past year. May I ask this question:- If this country is so prosperous at the pres ent time, why all this howl about the poor condition of the working class? If ali the building is going on that we hear so much about. It seems like it would put a stop to a portion of the vagrancy charges in our cities. Still on the heels of all this so called prosperity that other thing grows in stead of diminishing. There is a class of people in our state that could help, but they are too stuBborn. Their reason for this is that we have. a Democratic president. I do not mean to say that that is my opinion, but I do aim to say that were it not for that, the mills and facto ries of our land would not shut their doors so early in the game. If you remember, these same men started In talking "hard times before Wilson was elected. It is for that very rea son that we have so little work this winter. Wilson had the right idea, if he had only carried it out. He said when he first was elected that per sons that' could not show a deficit on their books would not be allowed to close their doors. I believe If an in vestigation was made at the present time and Wilson would act on his words that the labor question could be solved. When the majority elects a president I believe that the rest of the people should be made to stand by him in whatever he does. - Until our people become more loyal to tho executive of the land, what may we hope for? O. E. HENDERSON. Concerning Conductors. Portland, Dec 26. To the Editor of The Journal I would like to say a few words in answer to "One Who Rides on That Line," who in yester day's Journal, praised the St. Johns line street car conductors. To use the slang phrase, they have nothing on the Mount Scott conductors.' I will give my experience with both. I live in the Mount Scott district, and was going to visit my sister In North Al bina. I had two babies with me and a good sized grip. -The Mount Scott conductors helped me on and to a seat in a pay-as-you-enter car, came back after the car was well on Its way and collected my Xare. and helped me off again at Second' and Alder. Carrying one baby and the grip and leading the other baby, I finally got to Fifth and Washington. After wait ing 10 minutes, which seemed an hour a St. Johns car came. I helped my little 2-year-old on the car, set my grip on the car floor, pulled myself up the high steps and got to a seat whilj the gallant conductor stood with his hand on the bell cord, waiting to give the signal to move on. At the carbarn the car crew was changed. Now, I thought, I would have help to get off, only two stops farther down the line. But what did this efficient, courte ous, gentlemanly conductor do but stand 'waiting until a lady, seeing he was not going to help me, came and helped me off the car, then went back to her seat. That was last summer, and I haven't had the courage to take the trip again alone and depend on the St. Johns conductors for help in getting on and off their cars. I take my hat off to the Mount Scott conductors and wish them one and all a merry Christmas and a happy New Year, but the St. Johns conductors nix. MRS. L. T. Arrows and Grenadiers. From the Chicago Post. War, they say, is a throw-back. It makes things as they were in days of old. We believe it Here is General von Meyer killed by an arrow. So men killed men before the huts on the sur face of the Swiss lakes were flooded. They shot the arrow from a bow in stead of dropping It from an arrow plane, but it was an arrow, just the same. We believe It again when we read "Eyewitness at .British Field Head quarters." In his latest pictures his troops are fighting in - the trenches with hand grenades. The "British genadler," who passed out at Lexing ton and Yorktown. thus come) back onto the historic scene. , The most modern of modern war scl- PERTINENT COMMENT SMALL CHANGE Even one enemy Is one too many. Immigration Is the mother ot most of our small troubles. Ever meet a girl who pretty as her own picture? was as A misdirected search for. happiness is the stepmother of selfishness. : And sometimes a word to the wife is sufficient to start something. : To th'e man who says "I will" the chains of destiny are mere cobwebs. Our idea of a wis man is one who Is just a trifle less foolish than the majority. But If a man is foolish and doesn't know it, it's a sign that he has no wife to instruct him. a The average woman never calls It flattery when a man praises her for qualities she knows she doesn't possess. a We ,do not claim to be a philoso pher but we have observed that the grind of life often sharpens a man's wits. I I Many of the warring nations are to participate in the San Francisco expo sition, but it is not reported whether their various exhibits will be fortified. Well informed orientalists say that chop suey is not really a Chinese dish, but- other nations are treating China just as if It were responsible, for chop suey. ; I To ' say that a young baby Is a perfeft image of its father ia not always accepted bv the latter as a compliment, especially if tha dear little creature has a face that looks like a pink wart. From the Omaha World-Herald. An anonymous correspondent sends to the World-Herald the following ar gument In favor of militarism: "Disarmament has never been tried, but every, one of our cities could try the experiment for itself by taking away the clubs, guns and other weap ons from its policemen. If we have not the courage to live in our own home cities in time of peace among our own citizens without an armed force to protect us, what nonsense it is to speak of disarmament for , na tions! You may advise all law-abiding people to disarm, but you will never disarm the criminal And the desperado unless you disarm them by force, and it takes arms to do that. And if you need an armed force they are best protected who have the best force with the best arms. The trouble with this illustration Is that the analojry is not a true one. A little study will disclose Its fallacy. The people of our cities have already disarmed at least the respectable and law-abiding people have. And they have created a police force to preserve the peace, athd protect the .unarmed many from the armed, criminal and desperate few. This is what it is proposed each of the nations of the earth should do; that each lay aside Its arms and create an international police force of sufficient power, like the police force of our cities, to en force the law against those who will not abide by the rules and ordinances of civilized society If each citizen of Omaha went armed to protect himself against all other citizens; or if each ward of Omaha maintained an armed force to xrotect itself against the other wards; or if Omaha kept a standing army as means of defense and aggression against Council Bluffs and South Omaha and Sioux City and I-lncoln and St, Joseph and Kansas City, and if these cities each had a standing army in its turn then the condition would be somewhat analo gous to that existing among the na tions of the world. But Omaha relies- on its few score policemen to preserve peace and order among its 160,000 people. It relies on the laws, and if necessary on the mi litia of the state to protect it against South Omaha and Lincoln. It relies on the law of the nation, and If : nec essary Its standing army, to protect it against Sioux City and Kansas City and other envious cities in other states. The consequence is thatevery citizen in Omaha lives in reasonable security. No. ward is fearful of armed aggression from other wards not even from the horrific "Third." No city has the slightest reason to fear an invasion of armed bands af marauders led by the mayors of rival cities. The reason is that each of these peaceful units, from citizen to state, realizes that the forces of the commonwealth and of the nation are By John M. Osklson. Generally speaking, the various "blue sky" laws passed by the states have not been very effective In killing off fraudulent schemes promoted by unscrupulous "financiers." One reason is that the organized Investment bank ers have fought the laws because they felt that the toes of legitimate se rruities dealers were being trodden on. I Another reason is that the promoters have found a way around tiiem. "Under the circumstances," says a writer in Commercial West, "it de volves upon the investment bankers to keep up an aggressive campaign of education, especially among sal aried workers and wage earners. It will need years of hammering to pound into the heads of many people the fundamental truth that their in vestments should not be Jeopardized In Speculative ventures." " This man makes a distinction that will need to be kept in mind by the Inexperienced investor more than ever before. He says: "Besides the actual frauds, which of course should be avoided, there are numerous offerings continually en- na includes arrows and grenades. Aeroplanes and submarines rub shoul ders with military devices as oia as war itself. Adopting Belgian Children. From the Detroit News. A Belgian priest in .this country has effectually checked the movement which bad been proposed to bring Belgian children here for American adoption. His reasons have proved convincing. He says that Belgium is now a dis persed country, with the death list un- ! known, but not expected to be very large in comparison wnn oiner oeaiu lists. It was the custom, he says, for the Invading army to range the men up on one side of the village square, the women and children on the other, ai:4 to march the men off. In this way there are families of which all mem bers are und6ubtedly alive, but the men are prisoners and the separated mothers and children are either still wandering about in Holland or Eng landso that, though they are now dlsuerscd and know nothing of eacn other's whereabouts, there ts prosper "BLUE SKY" LAWS AND NEED FOR CAUTION of reunions later on. He says tnat AND NEWS IN BRIEF OREGON SIDELIGHTS The management of the Central Point Herald has passed from Haas ler & Bebb to Royal K. Bebo, who took over the business December 19. a The ice harvest at Union is on and the Scout says the ice Is the best for years. Continued dry weather has helped out the situation and there will be no ice famine in the city next summer. i j i T. B. Phillips, secretary, has I in stigated a lively campaign to swell the membership of The Dalles Busi ness Men s association. He is Bending out letters to farmers as well as to citizens of The Dalles. . "One of our citizens." says the Sheridan Sun. "suggests that the hew city hall be located at the west ter mination of First street. The ,ugges tion has real merit in- tho fact that If carried out the building- would at least cover up the quagmire of i Un certain depth that Is now the .source of so much profanity." Hood Kiver News: Not for many years has Hood River and this part or tne state enjoyed sucn a ong spell of excellent skating. RTiell or excellent Bkatlnar. . Tne slough north of the station has been swarmed early and late. Sunday there were several hundred gliding over the Bmooth surface, while local ministers, it wss remarked, preached to . suspiciously slim congregations. Commenting on the recent levy,' the Pendleton East Oregonian says: "The making of the etate and county tax levy eight mills instead of ten mills as last year is a saving ' of nearly 8100.000 to the : taxpayers of : the county. The , two mills extra on a valuation of over 849,000,000 would have produced over 898,000. The sav ing this year resulted from a smaller state tax and by reason of the fact that, instead of having road bonds to take up. the county has & surplus of nearly 835,000 on hand." " sufficient to insure enforcement of the law and the preservation of jcrvil rights. ! . And so it is asked, why should not the nations of the earth disarm,! cre ate an international supreme court, an International parliament, and an in ternational police force to enforce the decrees of the confederation against any rebellious member who may feel. like the train robber or the run man an Irresistible Impulse io defy society and have recourse to force and; out lawry? ! For one nation to attempt disarma ment all by itself would be quite an other matter. No considerable body of public opinion in any country, seri ously favors that experiment. Th world is now living in the same state that would prevail in Omaha if every ward maintained a standing army of its own, and if the statesmanship of each ward were casting greedy; eyes on the property of other wards; and increasing Its military power mean while. No one. ward could feel that it could safely idisarm unless.; the other wards did likewise and agreed to trust to a common police power to enforce the laws ; and the decrees of the courts. ! The world Is at war. It Is testing out the armament theory, muchjss it was tested out, in the good old days, in Dodge City and Deadwood; and Leadville. Pending the settlement . it behooves every nation that is yet at peace to be on its guard, and look to its arms and supply of ammunition, though at the same time it may bo preaching the gospel of international peace and holding up blood-soaked Eu- rope as a horrible example ot militarism leads to. wliat That is what the United States is doing. .We are preaching peace, we are pushing for the adoption of treaties that will promote peace, we are! eager that tlie first steps toward disarma ment Bhall be taken as soon as the world will agree to take them but meanwhile we are not disarming The appropriations made by congress for armv, navy and coast defenses and the like average about 8250.000,000 a year. In the last six years we have spent approximately 81,400,000,000 on our military establishment. The last congress provided for two battleships, eijrht submarines and six destroyers, while the sale of two antiquated bat tleships to Greece provides for an other dreadnought. It is proDaDie tnat, because of the world war, a disposi tion will be manifested by- the govern ment ,at W'ashington to further strentHen our army. But our people realize the folly of mankind that makes such a policy, on the part of a peaceful people, seem necessary. They deplore it as barbarous and wasteful. They believe it Is time the world should emerge from the condi tion that obtained in Dodge City In the seventies, disarm as Dodpe City disarmed, and create a police force. couraglng people to put their i small savings into Investments of a highly speculative nature. Many of these enterprises have small chance of suc cess, even though their promoters 'are most sanguine that large returns will be netted the investor." i He is quite right to point out that Investments involving business! risks should be taken by business people people who know wbat the chances of success really are, and who can af ford to wait for returns. More than ever before, men with business projects seeking capital to establish and carry on their work will ask the small saver for money.! Such men will offer the hopex of high re turns much higher than the owner of money can get from tried investments. The arguments and figufes of the business promoter wifl sound very convincing. i But for the inexperienced Investor there always remains a test of the soundness of an offering: What defi nite guarantee is offered of the a ex pected return? The answer for; all of the speculative kind will be: j i - None. Then ias H by. 1 even now, in England and Holland, the scattered fragments of families are be ing brought together as rapidly as con ditions permit, i j To enter upon wholesale adoption of Belgian children now, he says, j would be to finally separate families which, later on, will have a chance f re union; and he would wait until all the' accounts are made up before making disposition of the little ones. There will doubtless be enough or phans for the laudable and kindly pro posal which was made in America, bnt It will be obvious to every on that if a child's parents are living, br one of them, transportation across the sea would make for separations that never could be remedied. 1 As it is. Holland and England and America have their task, in feeding and clothing those made homeless by the war. ; i Any W ay l'on Vishu j From the Kansas City Journal.' "Yes, I can secure you a divorce. And without publicity, too." . j "You don't understand. I am an aclress." . "Pardon me. t understand. All the publicity you want." DISARMAMENT, j OREGON nr uut bays' i By Fra4 lecklsy, Special Staff WHtar ef The JovrsaJ. - j f- - Samuel Bowles, who visited! Oregon and Washington territory In tn sum- rasr of 1885, writing to theii Spring field Republican at Springfield, Mass.. gave an Interesting account jof the Oregon and Washington territory of ou years ago. Speaking ef tSie com merce of the Columbia river,? e saM: vi(auon ot tne tjoiumoia river is In the hands of a strong, energetto company, who have) the ca- paclty to Improve all its present oppor tunities and the foresight to seek and create new ones. Thev are) making new paths in the wilderness and show more comprehension of the Situation and purpose of development han any ei or men .that I have yet mit on the Pacific coast. f , "Organised la 1881 with ainroDertr worth 8175,000. they now have 18 or 20 first class steamboats. a railroad -around the Cascades and on; around i. ne Dalies, warehouses In S all the principal towns on the rlvr-and a total property worth over 3 000.000. alt earned from their business of navi gation. They have paid ttftmselvea 8332,750 in dividends. So large has been the travel and trade to e mines of eastern Oregon and Idaho) that the Oregon Steam Navigation company has carnea to tne upper coiumtta. eo.szu tons In the last four years. ey car ried over 22,000 tons in 1864 fciid their boats have carried up and 4own the "er, approximately 100.000s passen gers. In 1864 they had 36,00i passen- -gers during the season. jj In many ways Oregon iiand Its : people make a pleasant arftf promising impression. They lack nuusvi- of the advantages of their neighbors to the south. Their agriculture is 4js varied. out It is more sure. Mlnlngi has not poured such irregular and lntfxlcatlng wealth Into their laps. They need more varied farming and mgif varied industry; they need intelligent and. patient labor and more capital. They have bullded what they have more slowly and more wisely them jthe Call- fornlans. They will have less severe reaction from unhealthy growth and less to unlearn. They are in I the way to be the New England of thi' Pacific. . "May Oregon steady itself, or be steadied by sufficiently earljf failure, against such dangers as California's experience with mining hat thrown around her condition as a stita. The uncertainty, the wrecklessftess, the i gambling habit, which the varied and ' fickle results of gold minbjg. throw over the whole business and florals of -a community, that Is possessed by the gold fever or passion for irdblng. are great obstacles to permanenllpupsper Ity. growth and high civilisation. "Two days ago, on July t, we put -out of Portland, steamed ?db"wn the Columbia for 50 miles, up ite Uowllts branch for a short distance, and landed on the Washington. terrltoiJii side ot two houses and a stage wagfdi bearing the classic name of Monti5sUo. The , question here was how to ut eleven passengers In an open wCgon that . would hold only seven for aisf 90 mils ride across Washington territory. We settled It by putting three ot our pas sengers on saddle horses. Tji'e road Is rough beyond description. ,Jiiring the winter rains It is abandoned., it In ungraded and simply a 'path cut through the dense forest, but the ma jestic beauty of the., fir aid cedar forests through which wejrode was compensation for the disc yjnfort. "We dined on the secojl day at Skookem Chuck and came t the head of Puget Sound, where we'jwere hos pitably received by . Acting iUovernor Kvans and other! official citizens. Olympla has less than 500 habitants. It Is the largest town In thri territory, . except Wallula. It .-numbers more stumps than houses and is : the social and political center for a large extent of country. Si "If there Is one thing .fnore than another among'.the facts ; iaf civiliza tion which the Pacific coa' organizes most quickly and completely! It Is good eating. From the Occ-i denial at-San Francisco to the loneliest: Tranches on the weekly stage routes a good square meal is the rule, while eachj village of 500 inhabitants ha Its j Restaurants with French and Italian cooks. "When the Puritans settled New England, their first public) duty wss to build a church, with thrifty thought for their souls. Out here,! their de generate sons begin with ' organizing a restaurant, so the seat of. empire in Its travel westward changes its basis from soul to stomach. Petfh&ps It Is only In obedience to that delicate law of our later civilization, which forbids us to enjoy our religion unbsfi we have ' already enjoyed our victuals -and which ' sends a dyspeptic to hell by fan eternal ; regard to the fitness of things. "Washington territory Is 'the upper half of old Oregon, divlie by the Columbia river and the foitleth par allel for the southern boundary and extending up to the forti'-nlnth, to which, under the reaction f from the unmartlal Polk's "flf ty-fouf-forty or fight" pretensions, our northern line was Ignominlously limited.' "The population. of Washington ter ritory is less than 20,000, and It Is not likely to grow fast or make, a state for many years to come. But it; holds sure wealth and a large future through Its , Illimitable forests and ltn probable Immense coal deposits. Not-more than cne-eighth of Us surface wet of the Cascades is open land. The 'rest is ' covered by a growth of tlmjer suchas no other space on the car$'a surface can boest." . ' The Unwritten Boobs. " v From Collier's Weekly. Sometimes we wonder; about ' the books our favorite authors did not write. In what ways would R. S. Hawker's great poem about King Ar thur and the Round Table have been finer and richer than Tennyson's Ar thurlan poems were. Would Bryant ' fave written other poems as good as j "Thanatopsis" If lie bad f wot con- . demncd himself to the dull respecta bility of editing -the New; fork "1-Jve-nlng Post"? Then there is'' Dickens, iliom one thinks of only as a novelist. Yet In, his letters there are passages : that might have occurred! In 1-cigh : Hunt's best essays. When Dlcken-r came to America on a lecture tour he went to Boston, of course, and "speou- ; lated on the oyster men: , - - "What do they do when oysters are not In season? Is pickled salmon vend ed there? Do they sell cTSBa. shrimps, winkles, herrings? The.eyster open-,, ers what do they do? Dor they com mit sulcldeln despair, orywrench open , tight drawers and cupboarq and her metically sealed bottles for practice? Perhaps they are dentists,-; out of the v oyster season. Who knows?" On another page one finds Dickers I wondering what emotions- stir post office clerks when they .get a letter. Read this passaje aloud and ask your- self whether you might .--not have as cribed it to Charles Lamb Jor Robert Louis Stevenson If we hadn't told you Dickens wrote it: , . - r1 "Vo you suppose the;, postofflro clerks care to receive letters? I have my doubts. - They get into) a dreadful, habit of lnllf f-Tence. 'V ipostniari, t ,V 1 matt tne. Is quite callous! .. Conceive , his delivering one to himself without i being startled by a preliminary double V