6 THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, V PORTLAND, WEDNESDAY EVENING. V MAY "5, 1915. THE JOURNAL LH INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER. ft C. 8. JACKSON .. ....... Publisher, l MUiiaUDIl rTtn ffffTriJsUg C'.CV arisuusa.r f s every Hundy morning at The ournai Baild Or, Kutervtt at th twstocrtca at Portland. Or., for transmission through the mall second class mstcer. . noLKPHnVIfK ul f17' Ham A-AOM. All departments reached by . cneae numbers. Tell me operator what ospartmeni yon want. -SOKEIGN ADVERTISING BEPBESENTATIVB B-nimln Kentnor Co.. Branawtch mag.. : 225 fifth .. New Xor;,1218 Peoples Subscription term by mall or tnr.i4 areas in u vaiiee states or aaexicw.. - I - DAILY. ' One rear.:. .13. 00 I One month. .....t .50 '' SrfNDAY. One ' -rear., .i.. $2-50 One month. .23 DAILY AND SUNDAY. rtna rnr......lT.60 I On month. ...'..t .69 . Speak; with contempt of no man. Eveny -one hath a ten der sense of reputation. And very man hath a sting which he may.-sif provoked too far, dart out at one time or an other. Burt on. j CELILO AND AFTUR -8 T HE cities of the Columbia country resound with rejoic- lngs. The wave of- enthusi asm ! over Celilo Is at full flood at The Dalles today and to- - night. , f Jt -Is something that the interior thus early realizes the Import of an open Columbia; - Upon the people will depend the fruition of the hopes now at high pitch. The river cannot do It all Alone, It cannot make the boats run. It can only offer its broad bosom as a great highway over which the traffic can pass at a ' very6 low cost. The people .must build and op erate the ! boats. The boats must have traffic in order to live. And the. peoplei must supply the traffic If they do not give the boats enough, business for survival, Celilo will rhave been In vain, the open Columbia jwill bo valueless. j Boats cannot operate without cargpes. jThey cannot pay main tenance, operating cost and other expenses with enthusiasm. They , must have products to carry to ' market, oir the great river wllr- continue ; ja deserted ' waste, the , habitat mbstly of the kingfisher and the wild duck. - But the river with its cleft Celilo U an empire in the making. Its banks, so long, deserted, can be come the busiest kingdom in the .country. Every mile can be made a meeting place of products bound , in and bound out. In time, a thousand oats and barges can be required tp rieet the necessities of the ever Expanding traffic. ' Back from the shore, hard' sur faced roads can tap the fertile dis . tricts, and assemble products at ,.t the. boat lan Cings. Electric lines can be; built, to connect with swift : river stealers. The stimulus of ' the new 'oirder is the creative im pulse in the upbuild of the Colom bia country. . . The celebrating cities have full reason f or j their enthusiasm. They are emphasizing an event that will write history. Celilo Is a turning point, The biggest thing In an Inland region Is transportation. By transportation, cities are made or destroyed. H L.y transportation. In dustry is btalted or accelerated, is .prostrated or. made to flourish like a green bsty tree. The open river Is the cheapest of all transporta tion, and it is on low cost of trans portation tjhat cities have their safe foundations for growth and their ? -sure impulse for expansion and prosperity. . Incessantly, throughout Its ca reer. The Journal has advocated, and urged and striver for the order now established ' above Celilo, and It joins with the celebrating eiti-, zens in rfejoicing oyer what has" come to pass. '-. - BOLD STAND GOMINfc out boldly for the mid night resolution, -the Oregon Ian says: i It matters little whether the 12.50 per acre charged actual settlers for the land goes to the railroad or government; The lahid for the people Is our need.j The legislators did right, That, Is to say, "It matters little" ; whether the case is decided for the 'railroad dr- for the people. "It matters little" Whether Judge Wol verton is jreversed or affirmed. That If to say "the legisla ture did right" in passing the reso . lution. The resolution- declared: - Wherears, It Is of jvital Importance to the development of the entire state of Oregon jand the several counties in which Bald grant lands are located, that such lands should- not be with drawn . from taxation, but that they should be (disposed of for .settlement and development under the terms of th original Arrant, i - Under tjhe terms of , the "original .: grant" th lands were to be sold by the railroad; and the railroad "was to pocket the proceeds. That is to say, 1he legislature which 'did . right," demanded in its resolution v that the j-allroad continue to sell the lands and' continue to pocket the proceeds, which. In turd,1 meant - that ; Judge Wolverton's decision forfeiting jthe . lands to the .people be reversed. f . ' v ' - For the Oregonlan to declare that "the ilegislature did right" in taking thU bold stand for the rail road -is extraordinary. : , It is doubt ful if any other newspaper In the - United States ever took such a po sition. . It seems incredible . that any newspaper would boldly ap prove the! legislative demand that $50,000,000 worth of lands be - taken from the people and be given back to the railroad. , . r it was but little .more than, yes terday that granges all over Oregon passed , resolutions demanding for feiture of the grant lands. So did every public body. , So did the leg islature.! So did city councils. SO ; did commercial organizations. So did the newspapers.. :. The i demand for forfeiture was on every lip. Instead of selling the land, the railroad was holding It Nobody could buy an acre at any price. jMrVHarrlman declared that his corporation - did not Intend to sell It.; AV l- - ii'v ' ) ; v. r-" Public i sentiment for forfeiture was 'overwhelming. No- voice save that' -of the railroad was lifted on the other side. - r Bat at & A. M. the last night of the session, without the knowledge of most i of the members, the stealthy resolntlor;; with its pur pose" cunningly concealed, was slipped through the House. Its real demand Is that the grant , lands which, under the . law. Judge Wol verton has declared forfeited, be given to the railroad, and the Ore gonlan says "the legislature did right." The real Infamy : of the scheme Is J usi, coming to light. ; SENATOR WEEKS' VIEWS KNATUH WiSKKS told FOIt landers thfit there has been J "too much ; freak legislation,' - M: t A. . 1 J not Interfere with "business." What part of the Wilson legis lation is "freak"? What part of the .Wilson legislation would Sena tor Weeks repeal? i Would: he repeal the Underwood tariff and re-enact the notorious Payne-AIdrlch tariff? Would he repeal the Income tax and return to taxing poverty for the benefit of wealth? Would he repeal the Alaska rail road and the coal land leasing acts, and restore the Ballinger pol icy of turning Alaska over to the Morgan-Gu ggehheim syndicate ? Would he repeal the Trade Com mission act for making dishonest trusts . honest and or protecting (honest business against, dishonest ptwsiness? , wouia ne repeal the Wilson pro vision in the Trade Commission act by which, when they violate the law, trust magnates will be sent to tha penitentiary the same as other offenders? Would . he repeal . the new bank lng and currency act, and thereby take- the control of dnoney and credit out of-the hands of the gov ernment, ' and place it back under the control of Wall Btreet, giving to the Morgan-Rockefeller group of financiers their old power of per sonal domination over the enter prise and Industry of this country? Would ; he repeal i the Wilson act which prohibits interlocking direc torates, and thereby give back to a handful of financiers the power to organize finance, commerce, in dustry, insurance, banking, trans portation, ojl and coal Into gigantic combines by which to tyrannize over the rest of the country? We know that Senator Weeks would repeal the Interstate Com xnerce law, because he said In his Portland speech that regulation by the commission is bad for the rail roads and express companies. Know ing this, it is fair to presume that, if commissioned by the American people to do so, Senator Weeks and his co-captains of Penrose Repub licanism will begin with railroad regulation and repeal all the great progressive measures written into the statutes by Wodrow Wilson and jthe Sixty-third congress. That is to say, speaking for his great political group; Senator Weeks makes it quite clear that the new program is, not to have govern ment regulate business, but to have business regulate government. CHARITY SWINDIiERS JUDICIAL authorities of Paris have1 finished an investigation 6howlng that of 147 charitable organizations formed since the war began 76 are swindles. Thirty- nve of tnem are reported to be conducted .by men leased from prison after mobilization. who were re- just before or Two of these "Dhilanthronists attracted particular attention- While they were destitute when the war ; beean. thev now nav handsome town - and country resi dences, and are hosts at sumntn. ous "dinners The receipts of their charities" are said never to have fallen below $400 a' dav sine thw began operations in September. The fraudulent- en ternrisea are divided into two classes. One is purely commercial, although oper ating under the cloak of charity. The second class sends out cniie- tors, who are driven ! 30 ner cent, nf vhat they , get as a commission. some or. these collectors have been making $20 to $30 & day. ine nummest otthe organizations nets at least $100 dally. A Prosecution of thes rhu-rUv swindlers will be begun, j It should do, ior tneir offense Is a direct blow at sufferlnr humknitv. Thv 6teal from the poor, and there is no greater crime. FEWER IDIiE CARS PHILADELPHIA dispatch says A the Pennsylvania railroad is jf putting its cars and dollars to work, in the week ending April 23, that1; one railroad took idle cars from sidetracks and placed them in . nse. In the previous two Weeks more than 5000 mie cars were put at work. In the month of April the number idle cars decreased 10,608, or 15.9 per cent. ; ' i , The number of idle freight cars on the Pennsylvania's lines on April ,23 was 67,637, ? compared with 78,245 on April 1..' On Janu ary: 4 the number of idle cars was 86,033. Since that time the idle equipment has been reduced 18, 396 cars, or 21 per, cent. ' j Thf s Improvement . in the Penn sylvanla's territory Is evenly dis tributed over ; eastern and western lines. "During the first three weeks of April 5059 Idle cars, . or 14 per cent of the total, were put at .work on eastern .lines, and 5549 or 13 per, cent, on western lines. These figures indicate that business is active the f entire distance from Philadelphia and Chicago. 'There is large significance fn the Pennsylvania's Idle car, figures Valuing a car at approximately $1000, they, mean that, $10,608,000 of this road's capital investment. .Which has : been earning : nothing, has been put at" work ; In three weeks. WHY, ' MR. MEYER? JT X-SECRETARY MEYER," who La was secretary of the navy m l'-' for four years v in President! i an s capinec, aisagrees witn Secretary Daniels' characterization of the "American navy and deplores our so-called, unpreparedness. In connection with Mr. Meyer's latest statement, another" made by him a short time ago 13 interest ing: - . : - -i In the past 15 yeairs we have speht $1,600,000,000 (on our navy). We have spent in those 15 years $500,000,000 more than Germany, .which; has passed us in naval strength, Wei have spent $600,000,000 more than France, which Is now but little behind us. At the end i of . the war We ma find that she,: too, is ahead of us... We have not got our mohey's worth. We have spent: enough money to have the sec ond . navy in the world, and we ; are spending enough now to keep it fully up to that mark. Who but ex-Secretary Meyer has been helping spend the money? He had four years at it. - Whose fault then, more than Meyer's, is it- if what he says of tha navy Is true? How can he condemn Daniels with out doubly condemning himself? What a lot of buncombe there is among the gentlemen who want every worker in the United States to have a soldier or a sailor on his back! TRIESl1 TALI s demand for Triest as I the price of continued neutral Ity has been resisted by Aus- iria. i ne reason ior mis ae- nial is explained by the National Geographic society. Triest Is Austria's only great seaport, a powerful commercial rival of Venice and Genoa, a city as important to Austrian develop- men t as is New York to the devel opment of the United States. It has been an Austrian possession more than 500 years and has been; growing 6teadily in Importance a an outlet for: the oversea trade of central land southeastern Europe, Austria does not Want to relinquish a port of first Importance. Triest is a tremendously successful business town, and largely a modern one. Its harbor facilities are the best that modern technique can devise; and many millions of dollars have been expended in carrying their un dertaking to . conclusion. In 1910 nearly 12,100 vessels, representing a total of about 4,200,000 tonnage, en tered . and cleared at the Triest har bor. The value of imports which these ships brought was about $117,- 000,000. - while they carried exports amounting to about $102,000,000. Vienna is 367 miles by rail. Con nections with southeast Germany and with Austrian and Hungarian centers have been much Improved In recent .years. Together with a Burrounding area of about 36 square miles, the city of Triest forms an Austrian crownland. It Is an immensely : wealthy, life- crowded port with a population almost equal that of Portland. Is It any wonder that Austria, refuses to surrender tTriest? - in the day or its fruition, a mighty lot of people are whooping It up as if they had always been fighters and workers for the Celilo canal. It is wen. But there were dark days back yonder when the real workers -;f6r Celilo could ble' counted on the fingers of two pairs of hands. Perhaps the enthusiasm of the present celebration will make more workers for the great Improvement yet to be " done fn canalizing the upper reaches of the mighty river. ' The Atlantic fleet is, to pass In review before President Wilson May 17 in New York harbor.' There will be 65 - vessels of all classes In line, from superdreadnaught to naval tug. It will be an excellent opportunity for Congressman -Gard ner to again tell the American people that their ships could not fight If they had to.. Freeport, , Illinois, has a newly- elected woman mayor. The eom- jtnon council at its first session ro- ected her appointments, but she had her way about one thing. The session was opened with prayer; and the mayor says all sessions will be opened that way while she, is mayor. :- 4 "A .: K.-.- "l:-rr Senator Day was : for 'the, mid night " resolution. Senator Moser was for it. Senator - Perkins was for it. .The Oregonian now admits it is for it. And thus the mighty cause of state "reform" goes marching on. . Governor .Whitman of New York started out : by saying he was de termined to be a - "constitutional governor." According to the best reports ; obtainable, he has been so excessively "constitutional" that he has killed himself politically. It seems that the American people don't want . a chief executive who stands so firmly for the constitu tion -that he: forgets them. Her captivating physical charms are one of - Portland's greatest as sets. But a beauty is not particu larly attractive in . a soiled -gown and dirty face. This Is clean-up week. e-' . i New York is talking about giv ing up ' the ' cabaret. Restaurant proprietors find. this kind of enter tainment too expensive and declare they would welcome a law denying them any kind of an entertainment. The Philadelphia Ledger says, "To accept the privileges of citi zenship and to neglect Its duties is graft." It is a new use for a harsh term, but; possibly, a, use that is justified. . : I The people of the United States are spending a quarter of a billion dollars every year to see motion pictures. If costing so huge a sum,--what of the pictures? There is "a reminder that Tempus does f uglt " in the v announcement that It Is only six weeks until har vest ' time . in Missouri. NEED OF A FEDERAL BUDGET SYSTEM From World's Work. , 1912 the Democratic party , made much of Republican extravagance in national expenditures. Their criticism's were Justified. Now Re publicans point to Democratic waste fulness. Their criticisms are Just .also. Both parties are right Both are spendthrifts. Under present con ditions it Is Idle to listen to economy talk by either party. Congressman John J. Fitzgerald is as good a watchdog of the "treasury as "Uncle Joe" Cannon and Just as helpless. But .there Is one change in the sit uation.' When "Uncle Joe" Cannon and Mr. Tawney, of Minnesota, were watchdogs of the treasury there was a general ' Impression that the system of -aste under which the federal money Vis ; expended was necessary. The public5 is rapidly getting into a mood to demand, if waste cannot be stopped under, the present system that the system be changed.' The system at present.ls somewhat as follows: The various bureau chiefs make estimates of the money which they want for their bureaus and sub mit them to the secretary of their de partment. The secretary may know his department well enough to mould these special pleas for funds, into a well-balanced budget, or he may only be able to add them all together and pass them on to , congress. But as each i secretary puts in his recom mendation without regard to the rec ommendations of,,4.the. otherdepart- mentai there Ta little chance thali they will together form a coordinated, well-, balanced plan of expenditure. The fact is, the lack of system leads ' to a kind of competition between " the different bureaus and departments to see which can get the , most money from congress.' . When the ; departmental recom mendations reach the house of repre sentatives they are divided among several committees. The appropria tions - for one department are even di vided among several of these com mittees. The committees call before them. In. secret sessions, not only", the secretaries - pf the different depart ments but all sorts of bureau chiefs and lesser officials, each one pleading for. his own particular Item In the appropriation: and quite often dis agreeing with his superior's recom mendations. " A this, of course, would result In the utmost confusion and waste even If the committees were free to use their, best judgment upon-the mass of undigested, conflict ing testimony which they get But the members of the committees .are not free to use their best Judgment for the"' interest of the nation.' They are not elected by the nation. They are; elected by particular congressional districts. They can get credit in their own districts by spending money in their home districts or credit with their colleagues by spendlng'lt in the colleagues distrlats a credit to be re turned in . a : fprm usable sit.' home. There is a tremendous pressure on every committeeman' to spend . more and more money... -Moreover, as there are several committees,, what one may save the others are likely to - spend. And if a conscientious' committee does recommend economy,, as- likely, as. not the house will not heed Its recommen dations. If the house does, it Is by no means sure ' that' ,the senate; will. The appropriation measures , which are not founded on the departmental estimates, such as the river and har bor, publio buildings, pension 1 bills. etc, are i perhaps even more waste full Every representative who wants a pension, dam or postoffice building for his district introduces a bill for the purpose. All these bills are col lected by the proper committee, which then decides what sum it has the con science, to recommend for expenditure, and divides that sum more or less pro rata among the bills present-id. The more districts their recommenda tions take care of the more votes their recommendations, are likely to get, for few congressmen have p olitical strength enough to vote against ap- j proprlations for - their own - districts ad still' be reelected. . ' -Such is the chaos out of which the appropriation " bills r. emerge for the president's signature. If be refuses to' sign them, there is no money forth coming to - run - the government If a . party . The publio looking on and paying this is a terribly costly chaos. The obvious remedy is to find out who w responsible for the waste and reform his -habits - or get him out of "office. But right there comes the rub. No one admits , that he Is responsible. The bureau chiefs say that they have asked for only what . they need, or if they asked - for more tt was because that is sometimes the t beat way of getting what Is needed. The secretaries can Justly say that .they are-not responsible, for their recom-s mendations' are not often followed, particularly If their recommendations neglect the districts of the strong members of the committees. Each committee In congress lays the blame' on the departmental recommendations, or on the other 'appropriating -committees. The house blames ; the sen ate, the Senate blames the housed and the president can blame both of them, i The public which pays- the bills, ' can't get its hands, on anybody who Is responsible, unless it la the .whole, party that happens ' to be in power. To dismiss that will do no good, be cause the other tparty, so. far as ex penditures go. Is the same thing under another name. , There have been some wonderful combinations of dummy corporations. operating companies, , holding panies. etc. concocted in com Nthe business world which were so complicated that only a Philadelphia lawyer could tell who was responsible jfor the expenditure of the Btockhold jers money, but none of these has ever been as successful in dividing respon sibility Into! extinction as the present method of making federal appropria tions. The federal appropriations are taken from money! beloiging to all the peo ple of the United States. The mem bers "of the: congressional committees do not represent all the peoplej of the United - States. They represent the citizens of particular districts. There is only one person who repre sents all the people of the country. He Is the president of the United States. He should be primarily re sponsible for the expenditure of the people's money. 1 To make the president responsible he must be given by law the right to prepare , and introduce into con gress, a budget of the government's expenditures and any new bills neces sary to raise revenue. The spokesmen of the administra tion should be given the right td pre sent and defend this budget on the floor of the senate and the house. - Both Chouses should be forbidden to add Items to the budget. These specific recommendations forward tentatively two years ago by Henry L. Btimson. ex secretary of war. ' While he claimed no perfection for them it is certain that they s embody the essential prin ciples of -a system for making our government financially responsible to the voters of the nation, and thereby stopping ii ium i.i.o . . . . m wo tranr A A FEW SMILES Pete, the hired; man, was known for his prodigious appetite. One morning he had eaten a normal breakfast; of oatmeal, buck-: wheat cakes, toast, fried : potatoes, ham, eggs, doughnuts, coffee and the usual trimmings, and gone to a neighbor's ,n h.u nHth extra work.: Pete arrived before the family had risen from the mornin m,-,A "Well Pete," hospitably Inquired the farmer, "had breakfast yet?" "Aw" drawled Pete In a wheedling tone, ' "klnda." Everybody's Maga zine. -I . ' ..- , The dealer in antiquities was show ing an old violin to a probable buyer. "Yes," he said. "this -is Of histori cal Interest; that is the Identical fiddle Nero played ' while Rome was burning" "Oh, that Is a myth!" The dealer agreed, saying: "Yes, It Is: and Myth's name was on it, but lt-ha-s got worn off." --' a certain siock DroKer went to a horse dealer and tried to pick up a general utility nag. He explained that he wanted a nice, quiet, good looking animal for himself, which could , b e driven by his wife in a dogcart and would not on oc casion object .to be ing hitched ' up to a lawn mower! The dealer listened with rapt, at tention and finally asked, in dulcet tones: j : - . "Would you lika him to wait at table at all, sir T' . ,'. Letters From the People - (Commtinieatloua sent to The Journal for publication in this department should be writ ten on - only one side of the paper, should aot exceed 3(X words in length and must be ac companied by the came and address of the aender. It the writer dees not desire to -hare th name published, he should so state.) . " "Diseossioa ls the greatest of all reformers. It rationalises ererything; it toochea. i It robs principles of aU falsa sanctity and throws them back on their reasonableneas. If they hare do reasonableness, it rothlecsly crushes them ont of - existence and sets up its own conclusions iu their stead." Woodrow Wilson. i "Equality" Elucidated.' , Portland, May 6. To the Editor of The Journal In defense of the truth contained in the Declaration of Inde pendence, which is higher and .might ier 1 than any constitution yet j penned, please - allow space for this , comment on the "shallower misunderstandings' of the kind of equality written-therein. v.- When . we" take into consideration the' franchise privilege of the :jeople I at i the. time the constitution . was adopted, by no stretch- of imagination- cajf political equality bel made the sole i T eauality Intended by those 'who wrote I I he signs them he becomes ,to the waste. ' , V " that all men were 'created" equal,- and j PERTINENT COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF SMALL CHANGE The older a man gets the less he knows he knows. But the man who pays as he goes can never go broke. - ., . A corkscrew Is sometimes used In opening an -argument . -' You can always ' have what you want by wanting only what you have. If you are dissatisfied with vour lot, put it In the hand of an auctioneer. ... : Contentment may be better . than riches, but. they ought to go togetner. J A woman may owe - her gray hairs to chemistry.. Invisible But a man never overrates him self when the - tax collector comes around. . A woman is more Influenced by what she suspects than by what' she IS told. . , z The student who takes up medicine will find it more pleasing than taking it down. j -;- u--;-'- ! Every time a man makes a fool!, of himself by acting contrary to his ow. Judgment he gets mad. . !' .The average Woman loves ' to go shopping because, fche thinks there's something good in store for her. - i . It's an easy matter to ! be popular with your friends. All you have to do is agree with them in everything. The poor -but honest brother's wife can tell you what the wife of the rich brother .didn!t have before she was married. , - THRIFT PLAN OF By John M. Oskison. They're known pretty well all sover the country Eddie Foy, the comedian, and the seven : little ' Foys. Mrs. Foy is often with; the act, -too. $o there are nine Of the funmaking family. Once in a while zealous officers of the children's societies arrest . Eddie Foy for allowing- the youngest of the seven children to appear, on the stage. Then the family's system of caring for the kids is explained anl the troupe moves on. In New York the other day a the atrical crltle wrote about the profit sharing plahx which the Foy family follows. "Every Saturday night," he said, each one of the Foys receives an envelope containing one-ninth of the net profits of the act for the week. The older boys act as' . agents . and bankers for the little fellows, and have the money exchanged for New York drafts, which are promptly mailed every Monday morning to New Roehelle, the Foy family home, where the various drafts are credited to the bank accounts of the different children and the parents. I were endowed with certain rights that they could not be aliento. - If political equality was the one in tended the practice of. the people, who so valiantly defended the document would belie its truths; for not half of the soldiers who fought the revolution and none of the women and chattal slaves Who supported them -.were al lowed the franchise privilege in the adoption of the very constitution that came as a consequence of that declara tion and war. Nothing is written that points 'llieil tucquaj. It must be plain, . therefore,: that Jn4 du atrial and economic equality was th accepted equation by those that passed upon the contents of that document. . Moreover were equal ,i Opportunity economically and - industrially ; - now aivea to the people ' little attention WnnU h r,nA tn nnlttin.n.1 nfrancb lBemen This statement is vermeq when a purely political election .is held, such as our primary elections af ford. On these occasions not nearly all vote who -are. entitled to-do so. The plain statement that all men are created "equal," embodied in that document, is unqualifiedly defined to be equal opportunity to pursue hap piness in life with liberty to acquire it. Since the time or tne aaopuon oi our constitution this inequality has brought about a Civil war to adjust the matter of chattel slavery. It re quired and requires repeated and con tinued changes by legislation to give equality in numerous other things that pivot altogether on legislation and not at all on- political enfranchisement. . in these latter years the pursuit of life. liberty and happiness has i been so in-' tensified by Improved machinery the development of the tool -and by pri vate) title to the publio domain land that these' two issues cover the entire horizon of equality and lie continually across our path in quest -of human happiness. We are now passing through a crisis that la tearlne- at the very vitala Of civil government because of the laok'l of equal opportunity in these two phases of life. Retribution haa: over- Llaken us and will make manifest every blunder we - make In . economlo lire. There is always a forfeit to be paid for being ; untrue to those words In that Immortal document. C. W. BARZEE. Carfare. . . Portland. May 6. To the Editor of The Journal I have read the article on page four of The Journal of April SO, entitled "Reduction Sought In Rates Charged by P. R., 1 & P. Co." . From time to time publio attention has been called to suggestions," prop ositlons and mention of "reduction of rate. If " present competitive condi tions Justify a reduction of rate, con ditions prior to introduction or "com petition" Justified a greater reduo tion of rate. Should the citizens of Portland unlte BIG COPPER SALES; ORDERS BY RAILWAYS ' New York, April 80. Advices Te-r celved here ! today from; Calumet, Mich., were 'to the effect that the Calumet and Hecla company had sold over 45,000,000 pounds of cop per at prices ranging from 18c to 20o per pound for delivery as late as September. Leading producers reported sale of electrolytic cop per today at 19c. " : j " .Figures compiled .$y the depart ment of commerce show that ex ports of copper .from ' the United States for March totaled 66.S83.3S0 lbs as followsi- Pig Ingot bars, 59. 677.711: plates and sheets, 1,995,350; rods and wire, 4,646,867; all other, t 263,422. ; - ;-' ., -- An order has been placed by the "Soo" line for -400 box and 100 auto mobile cars, with th Ameri can Car and Foundry company, Thet S't. Paul has ordered seven sleeping cars from the Pullman company, and the Pennsylvania; lines west have placed an order for ISO steel underframes with the Ralston Steel Car company and the Greenville Steel Car company. - " . OREGON SIDELIGHTS The Paisley: Press has been en larged, to eight pages, three of them home print.. I ( " . .,- Except corner ioles necessary to cross Depot street, all electric light and telephone poles on FTeeweter s main street have been moved to the alleys. - - - ' - ' , ... J. m! Bledsoe haa purchased the Wallowa Sun t from Tjulu ,V. McNees and Roy R. McNees. Mr. Bledsoe an nounces; "Although a change may come in the party politics of the paper, yet in, no way will politics . interfere with Justice and community Improve ments," : ? .- i Prosperity," says the E9tacada Progress, "seems to be coming the way of Eastern Clackamas, for with the outlook for a big fruit crop, new road building in country and city and a big new store to be opened by June X, it shows money being spent now,"-- 1 -, i Illllsboro Independent:: Portland had its regular fire : of mysteriousd being damaged to the extent of $140, 000. Looks as though the only way the metropolis is to end- this series of disastrous conflagrations, will - be a good old-fashioned , .vigilance com mittee. I . : . ,, - . . ,Woodburn Independent: The cities of ' Oregon are getting busy, doing needed work and givlrfg men employ ment who prefer work to charity. Portland will have 80 miles more of hard-surface roads,- at Oregon City there will be $300,000 expenditure on the locks, and other cities are doing or preparing to do something and probably Woodburn will decide to have that new high school building con structed this summer. - - , EDDIE FOY'S FAMILY In fact, the whole act is fot the financial benefit of tha Foy children, and Mr. Foy only allows himself a salary equal to that of every on of the children, V ' I "As a result, each' of the Foy family has built up a . considerable bunk account during the past two sea sons, and if the children never " work again on the stage each of tnem has a fine capital to start . business with when the time comes for them to make their living Independently of their parents." 5 j Here Is a fin study In family economics? A , fine and helpful plan for building up in children a sense of financial responsibility! "Few families could follow in detail the plan as the Foys have perfected It, but Jn every fp-mily where children are growing up some modification is possible. The child mind is quick to compre hend the idea of value; and as James Jj. Hill put it, "Thrift ought to be taught as part of , th alphabet of virtue." - ' . ' ' . -.. . ! t Hats off to the Eddie Foy system bt thrift teaching! p i r . r ; - t support of one electri-o light sys tem, one telephone system : and 'one public transportation system, probably a condition would be created that would "Justify a general reduction of rate and an. extension of service to' all parts of the city, including the thinly populated remote distrlcts.Uhereby ac commodating all citizens. ( ' i I have Implicit confidence Jn our pub lic officials and am confident our rail road commission would be pleased with. an opportunity to cause a! general re duction of rate In all lines of public utility.' service. . , ',::;':. ,, .. ,'.; Opposition,' or so-called "competi tion"" in the publio Ulity -business cre ates a duplication of investment and division of revenue and thereby neces sarily Justifies an Increase of charge for service. : ' ' ' The phrase "competition, common lyused in. reference to publio' utilities, became practically, obsolete at the time federal, and state' law were ' enacted providing that rates for public utility service shall not be higher nor lower than necessary to pay a falr.net dlvir dend on the valuation of the property in addition to 'the cost of operation and maintenance. ED. WORD. Married Workers' Association. Par Hand, -May L To the Editor of The Journal Believing that you stand for progression and mutual advance ment of mankind, I feel sure that you will welcome a letter from the! Married Workers' association of Portland, whose membership has reached! the one thousand mark and is .increasing in in terest -and numbers. . j That our organization . Is a 'popular and usefulpne is shown by the Interest taken in It by the officials of the city and nearly all employers of labor which, when called upon for an opportunity to be employed, refer Inquirers - to our association aa a distributing. center of labor in all Its skilled op unskilled branches. Hundreds of people are re ceiving employment, and many at sub stantial wages. The aim of our asso ciation is to improve the standard of living in every way, whereby our chil dren or dependents may have, along with ourselves, the opportunity to en Joy all the rights and privileges grant ed and -set forth In our constitution of liberty-loving and supposedly . free people. , . . : - .- " i The association's headquarters Is 112 V4 Washington street. . : J. A. CHAPMAN. .War Dates.- 4 " " : Hillsboro, Or.'. May I. To the Edi tor of The Journal On wbat date were Prince Ferdinand of Austria' and his wife assassinated? On what dates were declarations of war' made by the dif ferent nations now at war? J. D. Archduke Francis Ferdinand and his wife, were assassinated on June - 26, 1914. at Sarajevo, capital of the Aus trian province of Bosnia, Austria de clared war. on Servla July 28; Germany on. ' Russia, August 1; Germany on France and France on Germany, Au gust 3; Great Britain on Germany, Au gust- 4; Austria on Russia, August 6; France on Austria. Auirust'lOi Great Britain on: Austria, August 12; Japan on Germany, August 13 i Turkey on al lies and allies on Turkey, October 81. i Statement by George Zu Baker. Portland, Or., May 4 To the Editor of The Journal Please permit me, througb The Journal, to say to my, friends without qualifiatlon that in my pending , campaign for city commis sioner II have no campaign manager. I Any reports to the contrary are whol ly unfounded. No paid worker Is In the field in my behalf, and Z have authorized no person whatsoever to conduct -. or direct my campaign, nor , shall I do o. I am before the voters on my merits and my request for their support is being made frankly and di- 1 rectly to them, GEORGE I BAKER. Portland's Population. Sherwood, Or., May 4. To the Editor of The Journal Please state the popu lation Of Portland, through your valu able paper, A. X WEST. By the census of 1910 it was 207,- 214; by a recent estimate, 370,000. G mm , , mm. m t h W JEAEtY sari' By Frad icki.y. Sp.oUl Itif Writar ' ' ' ' ,T!s lourasi. " I ''I was 4 years ohf when we came across the plains toj-Oregon," said Cap tain John T. Appenson at his home at Park Place near Oregon City 'a day or so ago. "That was jmore than 67 yeara ago. Yes.' I will be SO years old on my next birthday, j I was borit on De cember 24. 1834, in.'northera Kentucky. My father, Beverly jApptrson. was born in 1803 near Jamestown Virginia. My mother, wlion maiden name was Jane Gilbert Tubbs, wasi born ln Tennessee. My father and. mother- were married the day before Christmas in 1824. . "When I was a' ljittle chap les than a year old my people moved to 'Mis-' eouri. Father' -was a farmer.- but no matter how hard he worked raising corn and hpgs and cattle he didn't get ahead much on account of "the low prices of farm products, so he decided to go to a new country. . The chance to .get a square mile of land for noth ing in Oregon appealed to him arid then, too, I think, the pioneers thought that a place so fa away and so hard to get to-must be a good country, ''Before leaving j for Oregon I had been to, school two, terms of three months, which was more schooling than' manyiof the I children , had! . The boys learned many things in thou days that the boys don't get in their school books .today. I knew -woodcraft and could go out and kill all the meat we needed. Deer meat and -wild turkey was what he ate jnp&yy- In the early forties Missouri was a won derful game country. My father waa a great hunter anil lie unod to go out after bear and defer, turkoys, pralii'i chickens and wild pigeons. With a neighbor or two niy father would ro out: at -night to ri pigeon roost and with a pitch pine torch to confuse tlm birds they Would kill! with their c-Juuh a wagonjoad of carrier pigeons ami aupply all the neighbors with all tlu birds they could eu&. I have seen the sky dark i with pUeonn. They would fly to tbelr rootint place in the woodM in a long line a mile or more long and hundreds of yards wide.-Thty lookod like a. dark cloud Unainbt the blue of the sky. The only i thing I ever nw that corrspared Itf. numbers to th clouds of pla;eons were tha herds of buffalo on tlie Kouth Matte in 1847. I have seen hands of buffalo worhliu:' nerth in May. '1841, that looked from a distance Ulte a Kreat plowed field against the green pt the prulrlo. An you came nearer you saw that the yaHt dark brown field was alive and irr mo tion. Even at 'the distance of a utifir ter of a mil it looked llko a Mollrt mass. There were tens of thousand In a single herd. j "We startedi fom. Oregon In' the spring' of .'47. - My oldest sister's hus band, Richard Johnson, bad come out to the Willamette valley the year be fore to look around and locate claim for- ua. "'"-' "We crossed the Kaw river near the present town of Kansas City and on the Little Blue the party organized. There were about 100 waaona in our Iparty, but before long the party split jiitu many . rragmenta. We had two wagons. The llglrter one had two yoke of oxen. The family rode in this, ona and I drove It, as I was the olAont boy. My father drove the larfter wagon, which had eight yoka of ox.-n.-There was quite a.fanilly of us. The oldeHt boy. Who wae born oh Chrint mas day, 1825, had( died In -"Missouri. Sarah Arnn, my oIdpst jsiHter, was 20. She had ,two children. Her .husband l'd gone to Oregon the year before. Matilda Jahe.'lny nnxt sister was 17. Harriet Rebecca was IB, l was 13. Donna Elviras the slater Just younger titan I, was 10. Albert Jefferson was 8, Suwan Hannah was 6, Jacob was 4 and Milton, tlie baby, was only year, old. - . , "We drank from the stagnant pools along the I'latje and father took the' mountain fever as typhoid, was called in thosedays. He died on Jul v 21 at Hani's Fork. Three young men named Falrchild had Joined our jparty and these three' brothers took the bed of our smalt wagonj made a coffin and burled father on the west side. of the stream by the aide of the road. They found a stone to put at the head of the grave. , V We abandoned the running gear of tne small wagon an went on with one wagon,: : which I -drove. I got along pretty well until I tains. The Barlow got In the mbun- trall had Just been opened and it was a bad one. We had to tie a tree to the back of the wagon to act bi a brake coming down some of the hills. In places, for. example, on Daurel ' hill and on a short pitch over the Zig Zag divide, coming down toward the Sandy, jwe had to let the wagon down by fastening a rope to a tree end easing It down. , "We camped at what is now Clacka mas station for a while, and tlaen ut a trail through tine brush to where Mllwaukie now is. iWe passed through what! is now East Portland and. stopped and became acquainted with the only settler on jthe east side of, tlie, rlver, Jimmy Stephens. We went on through Columbia slough to near the mouth of the Sandy, the present town of Troutdale, wherie we built a shak and spent the winter. , . , "My" work was to keep the family In meat; Deer was plentltful, ma xv al ways had deer meat, ducks or geese, and sometimes' fish, for I was a -pretty successful! fisherman. We didn't have flour nor the means to buy any, but we traded for some wheat and mother always had a-ki ttle of wheat over the fire, boiling. - "My cousin, Milton M.- Apperson, married my sister.! lit wag a -tanner and got a Job at jD. W. Ivownsda.'as tannery, which was in what la now 4outh Portland. The penitentiary wan afterwards built -Where .the tannery was located. Wo moved near the tan nery and I started to learn the tanning business. I helped tan the 6.000 pounds of hemlock-tanned harnens leather that Lownsdale traded to Pettygrov for his half interest Jn the townsite of POrtland.1 Leather p was wofth $1 a pound here, but Peitygrove took it tn San Francisco in the winter of 'iS-Wi and sold it at a high price to the mlners'who were earning from all over the world to the gold fields." ' 1 The Sunday Journal The Great Home Newspaper, consists of 'Four news sections replete with' Illustrated features. Illustrated magazine of quality." Woman's pages of rare merij. .Pictorial news supplertjent j. Superb comic, section. ' f 5 Cents the Copy j "The Biggest 5-Cents Vcrt i in Type." . . :