t:: ciizccij daily jouiinai w -r Ayr t-N n rTT" T T ' JULV i . fi-IE JOURNAL S. JACKSON... ........... -..WMIttlt ;:4 eer eraolns leaeept Buedar) en rrj eonaar Keraiig at ilia jcmrnci nana ' , Frojrf awl T'Wtitn ata., forties. Or. t4 at tb poatofflee at Porl4. Or, tor aa Mien toroos tb , alalia . a , aecoaa - i t.KPHONES-iHH T1TJ Bom. Xtl t "-partmenta reached by tbeea Bsmbera, Tall rt"tf what dtrBCTt yon want. J OUZIQH ADVBBTISIK0 BKPHESBSTATITS i'-'io't Kantnor Co.. Brnn"r1c BI4f . j tifth ire.. Nnr Jotki iai Paoyle'a -- noa.. Miro feubaoiptSoa tame by giafl or te asy ad- One year,.... ..$8,00 I One swath. I.. JO runu4i CM rar,.,....f2.5M Oaa aaaath.. 2S PAILY AKD STJXDAX Qua year. ...... T.BQ ) One moata...,,..! .S3 ' America asks nothing for her- j ' self bat what she lies right to ; ask for humanity Itself. " WOODROW nXS03T. 33 It ! one of tb Illusion that th p res en hour Is not th critical, decislv hour. Writ it on , your heart that evry day i the beat day In the rear. man has learned anything rightly until be knows and feel that every day big doomsday. -Car- TirE A3XEIUCAN NOTE STRIPPED of diplomatic, lan guage, tbe American note ex presses regret that Germany's reply failed to ' meet the rel Issue 'between , the two govern ments,, tout proposed. instead partial Bucpesvion of the laws of humanity. It expresses satisfaction at the admission . by the German govern ment of the principle that the high seas are free, that the character and cargo of a merchantman mast first be ascertained before she can be lawfully seized or destroyed, and that the lives of non-combatants can in no way be put in Jeopardy unless the vessel resists or seeks to escape after being summoned to submit to examination. But it ex presses disappointment : that the German government claims that It is in large degree exempt from ob ligation to observe these require ments. , The government - of the . United States cannot - discuss the policy of Great Britain with regard to neutral trade except with that government itself, . i -v ' . . ; Illegal and inhuman acts are in defensible when they deprive neu trals of their Tights, 1 particularly when they violate the right to life lUelf. If a belligerent cannot retaliate against an enemy without Injuring the lives of neutrals, as well as their property, tbe practice should be discontinued. If persisted in; it would be an unpardonable offense - against the neutral ? nations v af fected.' - n The . government of the United States is not unmindful of the changed method of warfare through new weapons brought Into use since international rules - were ' adopted, and will make every reasonable al- - iowance therefor, but it cannot abate any right of its people On that account. It is the duty of bel ligerents to adapt their warfare to tbe immutable rights of . neutrals, Events of the past two months have shown that submarine war fare can be carried on in conform ity to International usage and law. The world has observed with In creasing satisfaction in that period that the conformity of German naval commanders with the rights of neutrals has done much to make submarine warfare unobjectionable. '- The government of the - United States believes the German govern ment wJU disavow the wanton act of its naval commander in sinking the Lusitania. and make reparation for loss of life incident thereto. - The offer of the German govern ment to indicate certain vessels on which American citizens can use th seas in safety is declined. To accept tbe offer would be abandon ment or the principles for which this government contends. s ; The American ana German gov ernments are. both contending for . the freedom of the seas, and they have long stood together for the principles . on which the American government ; now insists. a The " American government will continue to contend for that principle with out compromise and at ' any cost. It Invites cooperation of the Ger- : man government a this time when the principle can be strikingly achieved. ' . The American government be lieves the - principle can even be established between the belligerents , themselves, and ' offers to aid In bringing it about. Repetition of acts by German naval commanders t in violation of the rights ofs neu trals must be regarded, when ' they affect American citizens, as delib erately unfriendly. The note is not & causa for a break of relations. -It is the ablest -cf all the discussions of the Issues .yet submitted. Jt emhodies a Jusi tlfjable concession In that it does r:nt demand abandonment of sub marine warfare. r The note as a whole expresses the settled convic tions of the American, people, and will be - widely and emphatically commended. , s ; THE . CAESAItS - KOTHING more extraordinary has come from Col.' Roose velt than his denunciation in ' - his San Francisco speech of the arbitration treaties. " Thirty powers have joined the United States in ' these treaties which provided that before war can be declared, a year must: be given over to arbitration of the matter in controversy. Could there be a nobler or more commendable pledge between nations? - , r . - CoL Roosevelt ; denounced : the treaties as "shameful," : He said; But it was a shameful thins to have put oureelvea in eucb av posi tion that it had to ' b repudiated, and it was inexcusable of us to de clino to follow the principle sin - the case of the Xusitani without att the saiqe time rnaklnc frank confession of our error and misconduct , by no tifying all powers with whom we had already mads the treaties.- that they were withdrawn, because in practice we had found it impossible and Im proper to follow out the principle to which they committed us. On what standard of morals and manhood is it "misconduct" not to go to war until after every means of settling, the . dispute by arbitra tion has been exhausted? . . Is the European plan of plung ing a continent into war over the killing of an archduke by a crank the better way ? i There has already been a year of war, and . no question Involved in the cause, whatever that cause was, has been settled yet. Nothing will be settled, until the end comes at an indefinite period hence; and then it will not be by. tbe butchery and blood that adjustment will be reached, but by the. discussion and debate at the peace conference. That is . to say, after all Europe has remained for , many horrible months sr-fearful slaughter pen, the representatives of the belligerents will assemble and settle their dif ferences by the exact plan that the arbitration treaties would have ap plied in the beginning, ;lf a dis pute must be settled in - the end by reason and arbitration, why not settle it in the beginning by rea son and arbitration and eliminate the unspeakable atrocities and fe rocities of war? ,. The contention of Mr. Roosevelt s madness. If the nations beyond the Atlantic had been pledged o first attempt settlement of their differences by reason and arbitra tion, Europe would ; not now be a vast human cockpit. Instead pt a world ' convulsed with, the most awful butchery in history, all great nations would be i in . the midst of peace, prosperity and - the pursuit of happiness. j ". ' ' There is not a . ruler in Europe but wishes : today that, he had stopped to " arbitrate -before .de claring hostilities; t There Is xtb f a . chancellory but wishes peace treaties had been binding on all nations, ' There Is not a mother in Europe that would not give up all her earth ly possessions to. have arbitration step in today to supersede the ter rible shells in deciding 'the contro versies. If left to a popular vote, there is not a ' pepple in Europe but would vote a thousand to one In favor of arbitration as against war n settling disputes. - The only men in the world who prefer the .-war plan to the arbi tratlon plan are the Caesars. ' BAXXROAD PROFITS THE . New Haven railroad has Issued a pamphlet giving some Interesting figures con cerning revenues and the cost of operating a railroad.' : -i The first observation car, built In 187-1, cost the New Haven $75 00 and weighed 41,000 pounds. The latest type h of i observation car Costs $24,397 and weighs 155,200 pounds. The price has multiplied more than three . times; whereas seating capacity has increased only 47 per cent. Locomotives In 1871 cost $13,000 each ; today the mod ern electric locomotive costs $42,- 000. - - ? In l$71 engineers on New Ha ven passenger trains received $9 0 to - $100' a month; 'now they are paid' $131.89. : Conductors wages have Increased in like manner. Firemen receive 25 ,per. cent more pay; and ' brakemen have secured a similar increase. All wages have been raised 20 to 60 per. cent. The average rate per mile per passenger in 1871 was 2.5 cents; in 1914 it was 1.7 cents, a decrease Of 82 per cent. , In 1871 the a.ver-r age. freight rate per ton mile was 4.3 cents; in 1914 It was 1.4 cents,; a decrease of 67 . per cent. j These figures ;bave value, but they do not tell i the whole story. The New Haven Uailroad may beilasta : two e&T leaser submarine paying - more for its rolling stock KSers will be carrying supplies and higher wages to its men. However,-that Is not the reason for the New Haven's present financial condition. In 18 71 that road was? operated primarily ; as. a carrier of freight and' passengers. It con tinued - in that capacity . for a long term of. years, and prospered greatly. " . j -' Then earns the blight of banker control, The New Haven's finan ces were managed ; in the interest of a small group of individuals. A . prosperous railroad was almost wrecked on ? rocks placed in its way by men who made railroading secondary . to stockjobbing and monopolistic schemes. - if it bad not been for these men the New Haven would,' because of the enor mous increased . traffic, be today !the prosperous railroad It was two or three decades ago, In spits of higher wages and greater cost of rolling stock. . . . ; Meanwhile, Howard Elliott has taken ; the New Haven out of stock gambling and put it into real railroading, . and it Is - once more returning dividends . A YEAR OF WAK N' EXT Wednesday the bloodiest war; .in ", history will have been In progress one year, ; V By official French esti mates last March, the losses of the allies were placed at more than 3.500.000 men with equal or great- ter losses by the Teuton group. , The cost in war- expenditure Is placed at 13 to 15 billion dollars in ad dition - to the staggering destruc tion ; of property on which no es timate; has tbeen ventured. . War: on Serbia was declared by Austria on - the twenty-eighth of list pf 11 of the most' remarkable demands ever made by one nation upon another,. Serbia granted nine of these demands outright, partly granted the tenth and partly re jected the eleventh. - , " r 2 Germany declared war on Rus sia, August' 1st, and hostilities be gan on the western frontier Aug ust 2nd, ' when Germany , moved against Belgium. ' ; v ; Germany , offered , compensation for - permission i to pass : through Belgium with an army in the movement on France, but Belgium resisted and appealed ' to England for help. On August 4th, Great Britain declared war on Germany. The operations ' on - the western front; ? after a . year of tremendous slaughter is a deadlocked battle line of which the French bold , 540 miles, the British 32 and tbe Bel gians 17,- Tbe . relative - positions of the antagonists are -: practically the same -as they- were, after the great battle, of the Marne, which began September Cth. All the power of r both sides has ; been hurled repeatedly into action in attempts to break the entrenched enemy, but always r without - suc cess. -..- The eastern front has presented a more varying field. For a third time since the war .began, the Ger man armies"' are "menacing War saw, On the first of last October, von Hindenberg crossed - th fron tier and - in three weeks had . ad vanced within seven miles of War saw. With remarkable energy; the Russians concentrated their forces in the vicinity, and the Germans, after having been . within sight of Warsaw were forced to retreat. ? By the middle of December, von Hindenberg again took the offen sive and again penetrated within 80 miles of the ancient Polish capital., ; The Russians again suc cessfully disputed the German adr vance, and began the - victorious campaign which carried them over the Carpathians and into the Plains of Hungary, March 22nd, the Rus sians captured Prsemysl, "taking as prisoners an Austrian army of 150,000 men.1 In the present drive, the Germans are forcing the Rus sians back, over territory which they have : won and lost no less than twice during the war. -: Nothing that has ever come up i on the world has entered so deep ly Into, the life of so many peo ple as the present conflict. Orys of Its battles is described as the great- est in history and It is probable that several other " bloody strug- gles are eligible for classification in the same rank. Beside either of , them, the battles of Waterloo or Gettysburg are little more than small engagements, - The losses in a single battle in the present war are greater than the total ' number of men' engaged., on - both sides at Waterloo. . - i This r first 1 year of the great struggle is the subject of a review of the' principal events of;, the conflict, which will be found in Sunday's i Journal. "'A Washington dispatch says the government is to bring suits against American eitlzens -who, though apparently able to do so, refuse to repay money expended for : their ; relief when they ere stranded in Europe at tbe ii out break of tho war, - " The ' chances are good for tabbing the meanest American.; - . The ' Niearaguan ' minister saya that, in 'case of a foreign 5 war, Latin America ' and the. United States would v: turn ' out an ail American ; team. The expression reflects the new confidence our southern neighbors have - in us Letnce Woodrow ; Wilson became president of the United States. Simon Lake, designer of the new American .' submarine - that ; can cruise 6500 miles without refuel in e. ' oredicts : that ! ' If .. the r -war should be named Jules Verne. . David . Lloyd-George's worth to Great Britain . was demonstrated by bis settlement of the Welsh coal strike. Perhaps even the aris tocratic section, of England In time will admit that a genuine reformer Is av national asset. : j ? A whale mistaken for a hostile submarine off the Island of Gor gana, opposite Pisa, was fired upon and killed by n Italian warship. Another violation of neutral rights. Booker T. Washington an nounees ' that in the : first six months of this year there were 34 lynchlngs in the United States, Of those lynched, . 24 'were ne- groes and 10 were whites. Only seven of the victims were, .ac cused of crimes against women. Among the other reacons. for mob violence were stealing cotton,- cow, or a hog. . When human life is held so lightly is civilisation not largely veneer. : Oregon hens are leading in the egg-laying contest at the San Fran cisco exposition. The wonder is that , any other hen could - have been Induced to enter . the competition. i f New ; York's threatened garment workers strike has been averted, and the supply . of clothes will not ; be curtailed when we need them leasts ' . ; A Portland man has found use for his empty automobile seat. He employs it to take children over the t prettiest, parts of town. - THE GREAT WAR: THEN THE GREATCOMPROMISE r rrom'ttia Las Aacelea Tlmea. sae- A; rif ice, of so many bitter lessons learned - on both sides, ' there is a spirit of compromise abroad in the world; wraths .are abating; ' national bates sre modifying their spleen, im placable utterances hedging, .national hopes dwindling, .f On- sees the signs cropping- up in every country. Courageous voices are bIgv raised- to - dispute l the : wisdom of this war; tentative concessions are being made in important points; news paper articles ' are Jess murderous; reason, sweat reason, is gaining a fooihold : - - v I : Jvsry nation engaged has - a knife Is t' a. r raw wound, .which gives them all i pause. The ,spirit might bej wil ling but the flesh is suffering unto death. , The most .'indomitable courage In the "world is not proof against festering,' torturous wound- There Is A . limit to human . endurance. ... . " "Bo we find the newspapers of the various countries asking anew the questions What are w fighting fori Are -we gaining ; it? Is ; it . worth It ? : If England Is . waging a : fight against, militarism; bow is she suc ceedingf Already : talk of conscrip tion is at white heat; mrtisi 'law reigns in v thin disguise throughout the. country; and to observe England now . la to - watch the birth of a dras tic i and far-reaching militarism, de signed to ; excel . the : most - strenuous Qerraan brand. England is clamoring for! militarism; clamoring for the thing she is out to crush. Far from erushing militarism, she is about to install the most positive and : f ar reachlng militarism th world , has ever' known, all that Germany had attained and all that tbe lessons of the war have taught her. Jf she was fighting against the in crease of . armaments she .has: failed lamentably. After this armaments Will be the be-all and end-all of a government's duty.' - And the safety of t small nations and " their -right to existence will be' a . pretty fairy tale of i the long ago. If Germany was too ambitious. If Germany '.coveted world , dominance, if r the brave and ' splendid German army was designed : to maintain and Increase : German greatness, bow far ha - Germany succeeded? ... . It - has performed wonderful feats s of arms that will ' live . in history, but what has Jt gained, what has It maintained? 'Germany has lost her colonies, . lost her. overseas trade, lost much Jove and' respect in the "world: that was hers, lost her ally, Italy, Her great military vlotorlee have .- been empty victories; her r political .losses have far offset them, , -r, , ' e-ie Bussla,.,too, what has : she gained? If she meant to ; protect the Blav world she hgs failed. Sbe has jiot protected the Blava; - she has barely succeeded In ' protecting herself.. She Is dally losing all that , she : had gained, plus r millions of her man hood,' raueh . of her ' pride. . And France, her good friend, France, whose entry Into ; the war was thal of sympathetic adherent? She is pay ing dearly for her friendship, fight ing blindly "miserably now to regain her -own. lost territory, recover her own status quo, w iWhataver the natiopg were fight ing for. deep down in their . hearts, over and beyond . their proclaimed ideals, they have failed. : They have all failed but Japan. And they are all recognising that theyai must com promise . with ; their Ideals, oompro. mise with fate. If they go en fight ing now they ; know -that they must lose still more; loss, loss, loss, with never a hope of gaining a tithe of their original ambitions. They . proud ly declare -that they will not accept peace until such and such has been won;' both sides have their irreduci ble minimum of success upon rwbicb ther will be satisfied te make peace. But one observe that the Irreducible minimum grows beautifully - less . as the" weeks go by,- . J-Jko the college boy with n Implacable determina tion to become 'president, they Will be grateful enough .for a country postmastersbip et no distant 1 date. Non ef the nations were the big giants they thought they were. They hav. all . had to eat their boasts a hitter pill. Japan alon is ' immune from tho' medicine, for eh only un dertook a little Job. wW within her ability, and , made . no larg brag, '. ; ; And as Japan is - ths one unquali fied victor, Belgium Is the one un qualified martyr. But all the peace proposals include the restoration of Belgium. - Even 0rmany conced this, as ther would ' be small satis faction In" compelling so bitter and a population yoke. to serve . A harvest of bitterness and defeat i is ; all that- tho war .: has brought forth.. Teu cannot sow shrapnel and reap Jove and prosperity. Europe is realising- this poignantly, sadly. jj0 on can 7 believe - the war will last three years; tho lesson has been too repeUant, the tears too scalding. It will, . It roust . end : soon, before another dreadful session of the trenches ia winter, before further Internal woes lend , horror to the wounded nations. - -.. . s e "W all .'have to compromise with life; pever on of us that; has -not had to modify his demands of fate. Th great compromise Is at hand, and Europe -will : b saddsr, . wiser and profit only in iu disposition its arrogance. Its reapeot for .each othen Tonce Over SAM HILL master road builder chum of King Albertsarant an art appreciator be could .' deliver a lecture on Mrs, Spencer's eookleg)- was not bis wontee cheerful self yesterday. . -: i j Not that be moped like Hamlet or General Huerta-or Mrs. Fank burst or any other mollycoddle 'gainst whom -outrageous fortune has turned her rapid-firers. ' tj No not that. for Sam JIU Is' optimist of the kind who 5 regard life wbate'er befall as a goodly thing. and the world as the best place they ever, saw, - - II But yesterday there was about him v certain gravity that his friends couldn't help but observe. - and when ' he continued to gase afar they wondered, ' JT And finally at luncbeon-when be peppered his pie Sam Hill likes pi all optimists like pie. -r they, asked, him what was . the matter. , 4- , ,, TJAnd he answered thcra saying: . 5 "Ten years and two: months ago wrote a check tor f 1600. ; "and forgot-utterly that' X had uttered U - . " - tj"And in 10 years and two months I. have had several secretaries. . . "and after awhile X - guess one of them thinking it had been paid I suppose-r-dropped it from the books. . ' ' "and that was tbe last of It -"until ; today. . ' ' . . "when I found ray bank account bad dropped 1X000," . -i ej And ' Mr. Hill . sighed deeply, end pat some mayonnaise on his ice cream, , ! and no one thought it worth while to stop him. - J And of course it may ' be legal and all that - . -Vbut It doesn't seem right, - ej I've forgotten cheeks myself for smaller amounts fer a. time. until the banker called me up. ". and then down. -, . fjBut this as - Oencral eherman said is staggering. - i - and besides no ope knows but Mr. Hill and the man , who cashed It and the bank who got the money after X0 years and. two months. ; - and it may be the man thought if he Jtept It long enough Mr,. Hill's autograph would be worth more than, f 1000. . -" or perhaps he was a deacon In some cpurch, ' ..... - and used this Enoch Arden cheek for a bookmark in .his Bible 19 years and two months ago. JBut I feel that I'm groping in the dark, because If he Uid--how did he ever happen to find. It again? . v unless X kpow this is a hazardbut - tr LISTEN Perhaps be went wild -last wee to-- near uuiy Sunday says it pays to be religious. . he Letters From the People Coaiiamications aaot to Tbe Jovrnal : toe fiublieatUm la tbia department ahould ba writ, au en only one aide ut tha papar, should oat exceed 300 werda is length and nant be ae. companied by the name and addreas of tbe ii clef. li tn writar jxoea not eaaire to bare tha sane published, he aheold ao aute, "Dlaenstlos U the xreateit of all reformers. It ratlooaliaea eTerytblnt it toacbea. It roba prisclplca of all false aancttty and tbrowa them back os their reatonableneea. If taay bars do reaadnableneaa. it roth'.Bsalr eruabea them out of existence and aeta op ,lta ova eoocjuiiona ta taei atead.' 'Woodrow Wllaon. . On the Cost of Milk. : Portland, July il. To - the Editor of Tha Journal "Conumer,w writing in' The Journal of July 0, says, "I ean stat moat emphatically that th highest,, grad milk can; be secured bottled, ready for. delivery, for; 4 cents per , quart, and th delivery " of 25 - auart lots to some ' central point in tho community should, not exceed 1 cent per quart." - -. Signing such, a" statement, Con sumer" was superfluous. Any en would know - a consumer was doing th talking. "" No producer would run milk down 'like that.- No milkmaid ought to b required to milk for - tt eents the - gallon, let alone wash th dirty bottles ' and pay th freight. But I'm not speaking to disprove what "Consumer" spoke. I suspect "Consumer" is a lady, and I'm mighty slow' about getting into an argument with a lady. But if "Consumer" is a he 'consumer he will confer a great favpr by informing m where that 16 .cents a gallon bottled - milk comes from, 'a - Ko, I don't "want to buy any milk I'm looking for Milk river. And then X . want to locate Honey lake, plant me some battercake bushes and . set ! tie down to an easy life of consura I ing. far from the 'madding crowd's I ignoble strife,"- out of earshot of the I high , cost of living. - , La, yesJ. Put me err in the land ef milk and honey, and I'll risk: becom ing a mollycoddle. Let's find Milk river.. ROBERT G. DUNCAN. , . "Peace at Any Price. . Portland, July ?3. To the Editor of The Journal In your editorial, under the heading, "Peace at Any Price," in The Journal of July 30, 'you refer to the Brooklyn league, with 10,000 mem hers, who refuse to d military servie. You note the good Intention of th league, but question the advisability of such organisation. All - kinds of peace organisations are - now forming over - the country. Their multiplied activities ' but argue that ths nubllo mind 1 profoundly stirred at the ex-f Mbition ' or the military system ln4 action. v - . It never had a better chance to shew what ft could do for : humanity than revengeful under her j by what it is now doing in Europ. It PERTINENT COMMENT S MAUL CHANGE Chl Cairo TTftraM: Tt'a Inrirv th, , so few unexplored lands left. Some jMiropean powers might try to civilize Atlanta Journal: ; President Wilson received a greater ovation in New Kngland than ever before, whlcn may he a fact full of significance -for those people who profess to . see opposition aiong in r" Pittsburg Chronicle Telegraph That Chicago drygoods press agent has broken loose again and would have the credulous believe that Chicago and not Paris sets the styles for the entire fashionable world. . ' Taeonaa Tribune: Home prids is to be commended. It is pretty close to the limit, however, when WashingtOB, D. C newspapers run daily accounts of the virtues of tbe national capital as a summer resort. Seattle Post Intelttgencer: The de lay of Bou mania, in entering the -war is- now attributed to the difficulty which is found in selecting the proper color for the book to be issued explain lng why she was forced to take the Seattle Times: America does riot care whether Wilson gets the Nobel peace prise and it is probable he does not, . for ' be has already . received something more important the trust and confidence of his own people In a great crisis. 1 Philadelphia Ledger: As a famous physician said the other day, "The real business of the child is not to pass examinations but to grow up." For these, among other reasons, : the playgrounds of Philadelphia are among the city's greatest assets. Los Angeles Times: . Former Presi dent Taft thinks executive power ought to be Increased to save the people from their own weaknesses. It has generally been supposed that the idea of -democracy was for people to save themselves. 7w. t.a.-v ;-;v-.- ONE OF THE WORLD'S From the Toronto Globe. . On June 15. 1US, -on "Charter Island." in the Thames, King John af fixed his name jto a document that has done more to develop constitutional government and promote political civ ilization than any other ever penned by human hands. The king signed the "Articles" with the utmost reluctance and - only under the most - persistent pressure exercised by; the feudal no bles of England. Almost immediately afterwards be did his best to undo what he had been constrained to per form,' but Magna Chart survived him, and it was many times either revised or . confirmed by , bis son and grand son, Usnry-III and Edward I respect ively. All need for such renswals was ended when the latter, in a new docu ment,1 gave up finally his royal pre rogative of raising a revenue without the consent of parliament, which had by that time become the "great in quest of the nation. . Magna Charts, as Its name imples, was drawn up In LaUn. the work of composition being done by Stephen Langton. archbishop 0t Canterbury. There is litUe doubt that Xngton brought to the attention of the nobles the charter granted ? voluntarily by Henry X to the people of England a hundred years before, for In some re spects the Great Charts of bn lm an enlargement of the one signed by hie great-grandfather century ear lier to- strengthen his hold oa a throne to which he bad no hereditary claim. Bhorten cbartaa had been S'ven by Stephen and Henry Jl . and eonees. sions to their subjects were made in the treaty of WaUlngf ord, which se cured to Henry III the peaceful rever sion of tbe crown of England. The enduring effectiveness of the Great Charta was due to the fact that tbe. nobles who t.oed " their sovereign Included within Its scope provisions ' intended to seeure tho ughts f the commoners ?' as those Of the noblest The bond thus created between the two classes was is "war at any prte and a pHeei Oenral Shrman said: "War Is barbarism and you.: cannot define it." AW the wealth, all tb" resource, all the able bodied mn are , on th altar of the war god. What mor does he want? Can he compute the ing, ruin and dvasUtion -of- th last year, or th legacy of an unborn gen eration that comes into the world with war debts and taxes, like a millstone about its neckT The nations of Europe have been , shaking . their mailed fists in each other's face tor years. Now thev are at each other's throats, and elf they are fighting la "elf de- tfense." . The military .of our - coumry blinded. . It does ndt read the hand writing on the wall nor see th mili tary system of Europe breaking down of its own weightr but rushes on- In its mad career. Bummontng inventive genius, new infernal machines ar to b constructed; the aeroplane must be brought down from its lofty helghtr? a submarine destroyer must be 'built,- and other ad nauseum, .And all this for "self defense"' to a nation that ha never been attacked, has no enemies and whose professed reliance ha been upon righteous principles and moral force. Is it not a fact that "peso at .any price" Is the only peace worth th nam? Do th military, with all w. r.iTnfn- about "our unprepared- ness," ever refer to the 'condition of our northern boundary? When we agreed with Canada a- hundred years a "m" 1 V INDEX OF ADVANCING TIDE OF PROSPERITY - . j -. NwessaeweeyasaS' - - -v Plttsburg-Posltiv .evidence of very encouraging improvement in domestic demand is furnished by the Pittsburg district. Colonel H. PBope, vice president of the Car negl Steel company, say that d' rAeA lmDrovoment in the 'domes ? . )t nation has been under way ror sevsrat moniwa of leading .lnaepenaem voropauiioe .rf., atmllar testimony. On Of the largest independent steel bar t noanufacturers is no raat material for shells. Thi company i. nnanfinr-at 85 oer cent of ca- f paeity and fully 70 per cent of the orders ar .- xrom uuatcavxv -Burners, most of whom, it is be lieved, are not shipping abroad to any extent. - -'. The bulk of the business of -th American 8het and Tin Plat company is purely domestic, Auto- T mobile ouuaera are wains a aheet tonnages, . car nuuaers are specifying mor briakly and elec trical concerns, such as th Weat lpgbpus and Ganral Electric, ar beginning' to take normal require ments. It- is predicted that July will run ahead of June, th best month in two years for specifica ttnnn. KalrlT heavy demand for i tin plate for export has come out recently, but a very large percent-, age of the tin plate tonnage is go ing to domesti consumers. AND NEWS IN BRIEF OREGON SIDELIGHTS - "Oh, well. St in the shade Is only spring weather in places where it real ly gets hot." drawls the Eugene Regis ter, letting it goat thau w : Road supervisors in Yamhill county have been directed to wait a fight against tiie Canada thistle in their re spective districts, and rigidly to en force the state law against the pest. A new city jail at Ashland will be constructed of, cement, with steel cells, to meet the requirements of the state law, and the room at the rear of the city hall, where tha jail la now lo cated, will be equipped for a woman's rest room. - Dallas Itemlxer: William ElUs, of Falls ' City, is tearing down what is known as the old D'Lasbmutt house, on North Levens street, It is one of the oldest houses to Dallas. Mr. Ellis will erect a new bouse on this lot dur ing the summer, - ' "Plans are on foot," says tbe News Beporter, "to-give McMinnville an ade quate and wholesome water supply and the water and light commission has filed water rights on a creek on the mountains west of here. Whatever the cost, the health of the city de mands that a new water supply be obtained.". Salem Journal: v The Eugene Regis ter makes a pertinent suggestion when it advocates the use of Oregon prod ucts at home. - As an example it be lieves that one way to popularise loganberry juice is to 4rmk it our selves and not attempt to make it a beverage entirely for foreign con sumption. ... .- , .. ...... :- . :;L . ' ;;.. Case of mercy tempering justice, re lated by the Canyon City Eagle: "Karl Gregga was arrested at Austin charged with the killing of a deer while pass ing, through the country, lie was ac companied by his family, who were in destitute circumstances, and the deer was killed to supply their depleted larder, - Under the circumstances the case was dropped." GREAT DOCUMENTS never afterwards permanently dis solved, i In i th reign- of John's son, Henry- III, l31mon d Mdntfort in 1265 framed the constitution of. an assem bly which vrould have been historical ly known ai a "parliament" it it had been summoned by a-king. and. as a matter of historic fact, when .Edward I did call a parliament in 1235 it was made up or the precedent set by the assembly of Da Montfort, ''':''if-iJ -v'l , v'--'f 'v-'. The most famous provisions of Magna Charta ars thosevnumbered S and 40; "No freeman shall be arrested, or detained in prison, or deprived of his freehold, or outlawed, or banished, or In any way molested; and we will not set forth against him, nor send against him, unless by th lawful judgment of his peers. "To no one will we sell, to no on will w refuse or delay right or Jus tice." - . . , . 'A careful reading ef th' text - of Magna Charta will show that, it has In it the germ of th British jadica-. tura, the administration, of justice, the statute of treasons, the peti tion Of right, and the habeas corpus act; and, while nothing is said of th legismtive function in ths stats, it is uulte clear- that the assembly of. no bles who forced th king's hand in th matter of his subjects' rights was it self the great precedent of alt modern monarchist parliaments, as well as all modern republics. That this splendid political evolution should hav gone on in. Britain alone of all th modern na tions was due to the insularity of that kingdom; bad. th British peopl been a state of the continent of Europe it would probably never have become a model for the evolution of tbe doian llmlUd monarchies of Europe, to say nothing of the : four republics. 6 wits. I erland, France, Portugal ; and the United Statesi oi America. This is what th world owes to a profligat and tyrannical - king and to a great ecclesiastical statesman. From the New Tor k Tribune. I German propagandist journals are already printing tabulations of th loss of Democratic votes incident to Mr. Wilson's performance of his duty. This is an Impudent and intolerable assertion of the doctrine that the presl aent or tn united states must think of the - vote of those frankly de voted to alien Interests when nation al honor and national - interests ars at - stake, . ' In this situation there is Just on thing for Republicans to do. Their support of a . president defending American lives and rights roust be complete and unfaltering. American Republicans must replac "German Democrats in the national alignment. Th president must know and feel that at th water's edge - ail Questions of partisan politics end. It would be better for the Republi can party to Indorse Woodrow Wilson in 1916 than to permit the principle to be established that to defend Amer ican interests Is to commit political suicide. Let no American, let no Republi can, be deceived by the far-reaching and industrious manipulation now In i progress. I ago to throw away our bludgeons, did we not inaugurate a peace policy, prac tical and. safe, without reference- to the military? How strange I - There, then, as in many other In stances, 'is "peac with honor," Why do not. our militarists sound a note of warning for national defense here? Many were interested in the celebra tion of a hundred .years of peace on the 'national boundary near Blaine, Wash., th other day. Present were some 2009 or 3080 with 6am Hill as master of ceremonies. Wer those all mollycoddles? . May their tribe Increase a thousandfold. ? iy ---- If .instead of 10,0dtf signers of the Brooklyn pledge, 10,000,009 i should meet tbe next congress with a demand for a change of program and refuse to appropriate and wast any mora means for military! purposes, such a change would be hailed by the masses of our people, and- by the people of - Europe, as the dawn of a new day. As matter now stand, famine, pestilence or any Other calamity is not to b so feared as the' curs of a modern war, - - JQHN F. HANSON. The, Milk Question. Portland.. July 23. To th Editor of Th Journal In a recent laaue, "Con sumer" calls attention to th price of milk, and if his statement is correct, that good milk can be delivered at t to 0 - cents pen auart. something should b don . to aid such a cooperativs movement as he suggests; and I think your paper could - render th ' publlo great service by a thorough investiga tion of this matter. v ANOTHER CONSUMER, . Bid TJp, Gentlemen. ' ; From th Chicago News. In time to come maybe the regular stage will beg the movie actors to. do s few turns for It. - i aS.. i , ..i .m ANAPPEALTO AM ER1CANS fT t U JLaJSLX HATV By rraS Lsaldar. Spaoiai Staf WriU t' - Tka feanaL Tea, I guess I am on of th oi- t Masons In Oregon, said J. W, Vauii i when X visited him recently at home in Cottage Grove. 'I have btwi a Mason for th past 6 peara I wy raised tp l$4. I hav been a Jus tic of th peac for $ years beij in Cottage Orove. No, I am rot Justice of the peace now. you sea I am 93 years old and sonw people think I am too old to serve, I guess It la because X am juat a trifle hard of haaring. No, I ain't what you woull ' really call deaf, but lots of povla don't talk very plain, and I don't hsr as good as X uaad to. - "I was born In Jefferson county, N. Y, on November s, lS2. My full nam is John William Vaughn, but my folks and boyhood friends general ly called m Willie. In IS4, when I was 22 years old, I left New York and drove a horse team to Iowa. It was about J600 miles and it took over , two months to make th trip, ior tha next law years I drove ell throusii the border country, " selling booka, pictures, clocks, and musical instru ments. Bibles and fiddles wrs my standbys. Those that didn't want u. family bible for the center table la the best room, v generally wanted a iiaoi to pass ths- time away with. I paid S 4 each for the family bibles and sold them for IS. I paid from 11.50 to IS for- the fiddles, and sold them for from 5 to 115. I could auot 'era a vers from th bible or play , 'Money Musk' or 'Turkey In - the fctraw, whichever was most like to mak a. sals, a sold a fiddle .ones for 6 and th man I sold it to got 7u for it, but it was th only one in th Whol dosen I sold on that trip that wa worth a picayune, jou could gat musio out of that fiddle, nois was' all the others mad. I stopped over night at farm bouses, Th people wer glad to "se me. I eould tell them about what was going on in th nxt township and, ilk as not, I baA met frUnds or relation of their la my Journey. . v "Along In 1J52 it seemed as if everybody-wa moving to Oregon, so I concluded I bad better follow my cus tomers acroas th plains. - "What's that? How many children old I have? No, X didn't hav any. That's right; I was 80 years old, but I didn't hav' any children. Tou a X wasn't married yet, "In 1949 X moved to Clark county, Missouri, and traveling around all tb tim I hadn't taken ths notion to settle down yet. In the winter of 1152 I kept company with Orllns Daniels. We were married in th spring of '63, just befor we sUrUd for Oregon, 8. H. Baylor wa th captain. of our train. ,W only saw on buffalo on tb plains, and th minute he saw ua h'tartad for th Oulf of exlco or some other plac in a big hurry, so we never tasted buffalo meat. An telope steak and Jack rabbit was our standbys. We took the cutoff at the head of the Malheur river and al most starved to death. .We ran out of jack rabbits snd pretty much every thingr else in the ... eating line. We struck the Willamette river near its headwaters and followed it down into the Willamette Valley. - "We settled in a little town called CloverdsJe. When Cressweil started up everybody in Cloverdal moved to Cressweil, and that finished ths town Of Cloverdals. I worked in a griat mill. Many Is th pack train I helped to load for the southern Oregon mine. My wlf died In 1861. W had four Children, I, stay d single four ye,arn. I married my present wife, glnla Alex ander Vaughn just 50 years ago. I bad four children by my first wUfs and eight by my present wife. - Four of my children are dead and I have four boys and four girls still living. "In 1862 I became justice of the peace and during the to years I was justice I hav bound over many a man to th grand jury that was sent to tha pen and I have married prob ably 500 couples. "It it had been left to me many a time I would hav sent a couple horns to think it over in plac of marrylnat them, but if I- didn't marry them some one else would, so I generally mm.i nothing and pocketed my fee. Gen erally -the girls were from . 18 to years old. If they had waited for tha- rignt man many or them would have done better, but they won't wait nor they won't study each other's dlarosi tions, and so they corns to grief. Man a girl married a young fallow becaua be has a cute mustache, finds she ha t to take in washing to make the living. Character lasts, longer snd wears better than tanned shoes and a striped shirt. A Plymouth Rock' hen isn't as showy as a bird of paradlte, but most young folks choose th bird of paradise. Fifty years sgo pret:y much all th couples I married rode up to my houss on horseback. While 1 was a justice of th peac ther wai non of this 'Stand up. Join handn. Hitched., ta.SO please' business with me. I made up a regular ceremony and learned it by heart, so I would -marry a couple wherever they hap pened to run across me. I have said it around 600 times, so I remember It yet. It goes Ilk this; 'Join hand. Do you take this woman whose hand you bold to b your-lawful weddl Wlf? Will, you cherish and support her in every circumstance of life? To the girl-1 said; 'Do you take this mm to be your lawful wedded husband sn-t will you lov and cherish him H your life? Then I said to both of them r 'By the authority vested in m by the laws Of the state of Oregon I hereby pronounce you husband ami wife. "I never put any 'obey' ' in my cere mony, - In a team neither horse is boa. ' They must both do their share. The team that is rearing and plunging and kicking isn't doing much pulling. J. have all my lire believed that (') woman is an equal partner and tV it there can ba no double standard rif morals. If the woman must take man and love htm and be true to-hi n then the man must love and be true t on woman. "I have seen a heap of fjnhapplnes because the man thought what w wrong for the woman to do was ell right for "him to do. When a man swsars to cherish snd protect a woman and be true to her he Isn't a real man if pe figures he can lrrk. his vow and not allow his 'wife tim same privileg. Take away a man s faith in his wif end th home i$ busted up, - Tak away a -.woman's faith in her husband and love m tcon sod what was a home l a living hii. you marry people for nearly htfif century lik I bav snd you can't help doing a lot of thinking on why mot marriages ar not as happy as V .' should be." The Unpardonable Sin, From the Portland Chamber of C: merce ?fews, . To live in a town. To make a living off of It. To educate-your children In it. To set everything you possibiy rr out of it and put absolutely nci' into it. Patronising th merchant anl r ufacturer who help to make your 1 possible ts a good way to c-rrt . , glveness.