,1 , 6 THE OREGON DAILY "JOURNAL PORTLAND, FRIDAY, DECEMBER. 3. 1915. ! THE JOURNAL AX INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER C. . JACKSON Publisher Pllbllfbed every day. afteraoon and nx-mlm (except Sunday aftcrnuooi. mt Tba Journal Building. Broadway and lanihill I'ort ' laml. Or. i Koterad at the posiorf Ice at I'.ctland Or., for traasmiMioa througii Uw mails at second rtarn matter. 'TELEPHONES Main 1113: Horn. ASf'Sl. All i department reached by tbr nooil-n. Tell i ;' tbe operator what department you aut. VOBEIGN ADVEKTISINi REPBESENTATI VE Beajamlo A Kenicu- :.. Rruiwwlrk Bid-.. t a una atc, .-vevr ion; i.i' cu - as Bldg.. Chicago . I ajohacrlptkia tenna by mall or to any ad- :lte in the fnlted State or Meilro: f DAILY (MORXINO OR AFTERNOON) 'Oim year fS.oo I One njmrtb .50 " HUN DA X 'Oite rw $2 SO One month S .23 ''DAILY (MOKNIN'O OR AFTERNOON) AND SUNDAY "One year S7 So ! One month $ "3 I America asks nothing for her : self bnt what hhe has a right to ,a4k for humanity itself, i WOODROW WILSON. r When tiie press is th: echo of sag-s and leformers. it works w.-ll; when it is- the echo of turbulent i vr.ii'. it merely feeds political excite ment. Ianiartino. OIK NKYV RICH HR Dupont Powder Company baa declared a dividend of j thirty per cent on its ne common stock. The dividend -embodies a disbursement of $17. .756,268. I America is beholding the ad vent of a new crop of millionaires. -;They ar6 munition millionaires. f Wars always contribute a ne'V contingent to millionairedom. This Is notably true of modern wars. -Before the American Civil '.war there were few swollen fortnnes in the United States. What was j a swollen fortune then would be ibut a moderate competence now in millionaire row. It was with the ;Clvil war that the new breed made ti great start aud began to mul tiply. J War is frenzy. It knows no limitations. It must have powder tand guns and projectiles and auto- inobires and barbed wire and aTl the other equipment for camp and 'campaign, and it ;3 desperately reckless as to prices. f Any- intelligent view of condi tions absolutely suggests that American munition kings should be ;made to bear a just proportion of jthecost that a foreign war haslder at his wrath, for their sallies tlaid upon America. For 1 6 months, i grow fiercer as the meeting time jmany American industries have of Congress draws near and as suffered heavily from the effect? their ferocity waxes their regard iof the conflict. Today, in a time for truth diminishes. Apparently ;Of profound peace at home, Ameri cans are taxed for creation of puh jllc revenues to supply deficiencies fthat the war . has brought upon ithis country. It would be justice jand sound economic policy for the fcnen who are gathering princely j one paragraph we are assured by profits from the war to pay pro- j thefr organs that American ship portionately to replenish the public pjnfr will be swept from the' seas -Vrevenues cut down by the war. j ov tho ia Follette law. In the I 11 1S situation mat congress 'ehould' meet. The worker whose jwage has been reduced by the -war, must, .when he borrows $100 jat the bank to keep the family go ring, pay a war tax on the loan. What folly to have him pay 'proportionately in replenishing 'public revenues with the powder '.maker cr the gun maker or the .projectile maker, whom the war 'is lifting into the classic walks of -our new rich. I REVIVING 1UKAL CHURCHES T lit, commission on church and country life has completed a survey of the rural churches in- Ohio. We are indebted to the New York Evening Post fo ran abstract of its interesting re 'port. It appears from this that organized Christianity is losing jTather than gaining ground In '.Ohio, a fact which is singularly discouraging in a state settled by .the children of the Puritans and hrell provided with schools, college? and. newspapers. Two-thirds of !the country churches in Ohio have either ceased to grow or are ac Jtuajly dying. j - Only one-third of them have in creased their membership in re- v cent vears. Manv of th r-hnrehoa have only a little group of menil01 1L The eneiies of the La ;bers, hardly enough, one would think, to undertake aggressive ;ChrIstian work in their communl- Hbhl The smallest rf thom only 25 members, or even fewer. llElsh.ty-tb.ree per cent have les than a hundred members, while : only about one-fourth feel eaual .to the support of a minister. In Vitha ereat majority of the mri jchuxches the minister divides his Boitaxa auiuug iujcc, lour and sometimes even six communities. "Less than 40 'per cent of the rural population are church mem bers. ? :There is reason to believe that :condltions in Ohio resemble .those . iaiOtlier states. The comparative ly few-fcountry churches which am lshing condition to ministers who zi6 exceptionally gifted with, com mon sense and practical piety. . It appalls one to think that so large a part of tbe population of the United States is living apart from the direct influence of the churches. If some of our fellow citizens should lapse Into outright heathen dom would it be astonishing? The commission on church and country life has undertaken a cam paign to revive Ohio's rural churches. The hope is that coun try ministers can be made to see that their preaching and "other labors must be adapted to their surroundings. A campaign will be instituted to convert the churches into genuine social cen ters. The old denominational lines are to be obliterated as much possible and the old antagonisms between religion and recreation healed. With new usefulness it is believed that the rural Christianity will begin a new life. THE BEK.MAX DISMISSAL THERE is strong belief that the dismissal of Chief Quar antine Officer Beeman from the city, service is not from worthy motives. There is no charge that he is incompetent. On the other hand, there Is much insistence that he is one of the most competent em ployes on the city payroll. There is no charge that he is inefficient. On the contrary there is unqualified statement that he is very efficient in all his work. There is no charge that he is neglectful of his duties. On the contrary, there is reliable informa tion to the effect that he is one of, the most devoted and faithful employes in the city service. Kc night has been too dark or stormv, no day's duties too strenuous to deter him from responding prompt ly and aggressively to every ca'i for his services. As a matter of fact, well iii forraed peopie are of the opinion that the Beeman dismissal is petty thimblerigging, that' it reflects no credit on those responsible for it, and that it' should not have a plact in commission covernmcnt. Efficient public servants are too difficult to retain, for their re ward to bo dismissal. This thought should commend itself to the mayor, whose friendship for Dr. Marcellus seems to have carried him in this instance -into what appears to be a clearly unjustifi- able act. Tlr. Marcellus lias no rijrht to use his puhlic position as city health officer as a private appurte nance to be employed for gratify ing his pcrsnoal likes and dislikes. The position of health officer be longs to Portland, cot to Dr. Mar cellus or the mayor. FOi:S Of' THE K-VIENS ACT S EN'ATOR LA POLL EJT T E comes out in "lis personal magazine with a sledge ham mer attack on the enemies of his shipping bill. We do not won- the shipping trust magnates ball: at no mendacity which may tena to injure the prospects of the Sea men's act They do not deem consistency necessary in their campaign. Ir next it comes out that our shin- yards were never so busy before. "Commerce and Finance," a Wall street paper, says in the issue for November 24 that "merchant ship building in the United States has increased greatly." There is un usual activity in shipyards of all the nentral nations but "the in crease," saysi'Lloyd's Register, "is most marked in America where there is at present under construc tion and on order, for classification in Lloyd's Register, the largest amount of tonnage on record for the country." "The largest amount of tonnage on record for tha country." Tha. does not strike one as anything like the disappearance of American shipping from the seas. it looks more like a new birth of the in dustry. American shipping ha3 been in a bad way ever since tho days of the Civil war when it really was swept from the seas by Confederate privateers, it has never regained its old status be cause it has been hampered bj idiotic navigation laws and bar baric tariff restrictions. The Eu ropean war now offers an oppor tunity for our shipping to recover Its ancient prestige and the build- era seem to be taking advantage Folletto law could afford to pay them something handsome to con ceal their growing prosperity. BUT A FEW MILLIONS LEFT r N CONNECTION with the recent birthday of Andrew Carnegie the statement waa made that he had only a few more million dollars left to give away in order that he might die a poor man. In the morality play of Every man there is a scene in which Wealth frantically clutches, hla gold determined that he world shall have no part or parcel in it. une oi me most sincere regrets of "the miserly soul in dying is that it cannot take its money with 4 It but must leave it behind for others to share. ' -.'It would aot be fair to place 'all rich men In this class because we cannot see them open their purses. There are a few among them who successfully resist the hardening influence of great wealth and are not ruled by It. They keep it in a subordinate place. In gaining the world they do not lose their own souls. WHILK VK WELT A NORWEGIAN ship "that re cently left Portland for Na-j pies receives $240,000 for delivering her cargo of 10.-1 .. . , .. 000 ions oi nortnwest wueai. duc is expected to make the run to her destination in about 4 0 days. In Portland, for supplies and insurance and wages for her sail ors and other expenses, her cap tain paid out nearly $12,000. At Naples, further disbursements of about $8000 will be made on sim ilar accounts, making a total ex pense of about $20,000,. leaving a profit of $220,000, which is ap proximately the present value of the ship. In Portland we try to get rich off of one another by buying and selling town lots. We are trying to pull ourselves up by our own bootstraps, which cannot be done. We have giant trees from which to build ships and willing hands to do the fashioning and almost countless tons of wheat to be car ried over seas. But it is the Norwegians that build the ships and carry our grain, and set away with, the bacon. And we go on lending monev, and swapping lots and wrestling with the unemployed and sobbing about tie times and weeping be cause our ocean commerce doesn't grow faster. A CHALLENGE TO PORTLAND IT IS a pleasure to read the agreeable story of water front arrangements at Davenport. Iowa. The facts appear in an article on this page. Order, intelligence, beauty and efficiency are among the charming contemplation that the printed pic ture of Davenport unfolds. It i a picture to awaken both the ad miration and the envy of any city. It embodies the municipal progress that has appeared in 6trongly de veloped form in European cities, notably in Germany, where effici ency and enlightened advancement have set example for the whole world. In the narration of details in the Davenport situation, appears this significant paragraph: A community of exceptional seri ousness of community purpose and willingness to pay the price of com munity advancement has found in Norwood a man who understands liow t') eliminate community friction and make tbe efforts of men of dif ferent capacities and ideas refnforje igfetead of neutralizing each other. Harmonious community purpose was Davenport's way to an ad vancement that makes her a chal lenge to every American city, the pleasing contemplation of every American community. , It io another Davenport chal lenge to Portland. THE LITTLE TI1EATRH THE Little Theatre, which opens at the end of this week at Twenty-third and Washington streets, is an enterprise of the Drama league. It3 primary purpose is to give the league a local habitation where it may per form its functions with a feeling of permanence. . The dramatic readings will be heard at the Lit tle Theatre this winter and the regular meetings of the league will be held there. But this does not end the tale of the Little Theatre's activities. It is to present a series of plays, some of which could not perhaps be accessible to Portland people in any other way. Very likely the plays will be staged with the mod ern improvements in theatrical art. Some of these advances pertain to lighting effects, which have been particularly studied in Russia. Others secure a wide background and deep perspective by certain modifications of the ordinary flat scenery. The Little Theatre also affords opportunity for that in timacy between spectators and actors which is supposed to be es sential in much modern dramatic work. Its fortunes will be fol lowed with hopeful interest by the intellectual public of Portland. A COUNTRY'S YOUTH 1 ORE appalling than the de struction of old cathedrals j and ancient works of art is the an nouncement thai, France will call to arms the flower of her youth. One half million boys of 18, who in the ordinary course, would not be subject to military duty for a year or two, are to be enlisted at once. It Is promised that they will not be placed in the trenches unless su preme necessity should demand. It is easy to realize that such a Condition may arise. Cathedrals and worgs of art may be restored but the lives of a country's y.outh when once de stroyed are gone forever. Weeding Their Own Patch. From Collier's -Weekly. We note that on a fair day In No vember the Justices of the appellate court of New York debarred IS ia-w-ytrs, suspended aeven, from practice for one year or more, ceYisured aix. and referred charges against two others to the official referee. If this keeps up we'll think more of what Is left. of the legal profession, and New York will be a safer place. THt POPULAR BUG SONG From .Commerce and Finance. S a clever skit upon the present fashion in'microbes and bacilli the J following lines will be apprect- j ated. They were composed by Roy At-i well and are sung by him in "Alone at ' Last," now running at Shubert's ttua- . lre' ' J" these days of indigestion It is ofentime a question As to what to eiWt and what to leave alone; r'or each microbe and bacillus Has M diffP,.nt wav , Uilf ..- And in time they always cUiim ua ' for their own. . There are eermii of everv klml !, . w. . . 7 , , i to almost anyone tnai it win ikbl Jn anv food that you can find , , , , , .v, In the market or upon the bill of , rca1 more to haul i. curlpud or wheat fare. to Puget Sound than it will to haul Orinklnn water s just as risky ! to Portland; but on that account the As the so calaed deadly whiskey. u -W will not pass up the business to I And it s often a mistake to breathe , lts rivals lf tmU cark)ad la required ; e alr' j to help make a cargo at Puget Sound. , Some little bug Is going to find you I Not by any means; that wheat will be I some day. hauled 150 or more miles farther at So,?ie s & wlu creei behind yolz;T Ind'arrrthtrouole' j to haul commodities, aud Some little hug 1.1 going to find you ' cre Kdng to meet each other on a com- some day. ; petitive basis in order to get that i The inviting ereen cucumber Get h most everybody's number. While t..e green corn has a system!""1 '" l"e se"e'" Bc'"r! , ! of its own' Though a radish' seems nutritious Its behavior Is unite vicious, 1 And a doctor will be coming to your j home. i if.l wSZSZlYZ?? ' .While an oyster sometimes has a lot in iv Put the clams we eat in chowder Make the angels chant the louder. Kr them HglTaway1 We'H e ' " Take a slice of nic fried onion And you're fit for Or. Munyon, Apple dumplings kill you quicker fw 'MJhv'n.il.i.t -rabbit" Aiid a grav you "ll soon inhabit Ah. to eat at all is such a foolish game. r-atmg nucaieoerry pie , WF, K i, . r.r, i f o,0 i.rJi,, i When you eat banana fritters Kverv unaertnKer litters, And the casket makers nearly o In-! eane. Some little bug is going to find you some day. Some little bug will creep behind you some day, With a nervous little quiver He'll give cirrhosis of tho liver: Pome little bug is going to find some day. When cold storage vaults I visit I can only say what is it Makes poor mortals fill their s terns with such stuff? Now, for breakfast, prunes are dajid If a stomach pump is handy And your donor can be found quite soon ennugrw Kat a plate of fine pigs' knuckles . And the head stone cutter chuckles, ' vv niie ine grave aigger mah.es a note ; upon hl cuff. Pal thnt lnvrlv red holneim And you'll wear a wooden klmona, ! That is also a mistake, for one can As your relatives start scrapping ! not be deprived of a rigiit, but merely bout your stuff. ! Some little bug Is going to find you some day Some little bug' will creep behind you some day. Fating juicy sliced pineapple Makes the sexton dust the chapel ; soraedaT to fmd ou All those crazy foodp thev mix W ill float oa 'cross the River fttyx, m'fkv way' cUmb'nK up the And the'meals we eat In courses. Mean a hearse and two black horses. So before a meal bo me people always r.fnLn..wH. A vl the juke leads ?o wstrltl. So there's only? Veat to greet us either way; And fried liver's nice. hut. mind you. F AnMU things to say. Some little bug is going to find you some day. Some little bug will creep behind you some day. Kat some sauce, they call it chill. On your breast thev'll place a lilv. Some little bug is goin to find "you some day f V People Belonv, to Corporations? r'rr.ni I.a V'ollette's Magazine. The Manufacturers News, which Is always a staunch supporter of the : claims of public utili(v corporations, , merely turn that wealth Into legiti- i idea that ins community was "'-i" editorially comments on the recent ! mate channels. Money that goes into j on valuable rights and possibilities. . ,,, ...... , i the coffers of the saloon millionaires Mr. Peteisen went to (.erman and ruling of the public utilities commis- I go for ero,.erteH aml nothing studied the relations of towns to rivers sion regard.iig Jitney buses, as follows: J and baj-.k accounts. The saloon is the i and river traffic. He paid special at "The jitnev motor car vehicle was i greatest enemy the laboring man has. j ttr.tion to the financing of large river definltelv and finally disposed of In 1 The woodsmen of the northwest will front improvements in the ; nlr3 Ulinols when the pubc utilities com- -ndmoc.hs Inth woodsy the , es mission assumed Jurisdiction. The j to the clty niow n his earnings, and ' baric determined on two things: That Jitney is no longer possessed of letter I when ha is broke the man behind the j Davenport should improve its river- of marque to prev upon the legitimate - ... iu UEiri'.T, .11 I n i . i ' . i i- i i i n ii lulu n i inn lines." It will be noted that this amounts practically to a declaration of owner- ship of passengers, holding that thecal experience. P. S. WH1TCO.MB. people belong to the "regular trans- ! portatlon lines" (which of course I means the big public utility corpora- Tne journal Some time ago the Ore tTons), in other words that the people J go n I an took courteous editorial issue are the property of the corporations. I with the writer when he ventured to That claim will be reversed some day when the public utility corporations will be taken over as the property of the people. Song of the Watchers. Alice Puer Millet In New VurW Tribune. They told us it was dangerous For women at the polls; They told us it would smirch, degrade and coarsen women's souls. We found it quite the opposite And want to tell you now That men are nicer people Than the antis will allow. Letters From the People i 'Commnnleatknja ent to The jVirnal for ! Dublleatioo In ttala department ahuold be writ- ten on only one side of the paper, abould not exceed S'JO words in length aud must be ac- companied by tbe name aDd addreaa of the aenaer. If the writer doea Dot desire to hare Uiw name published, he ahould ae staue) r "DIculon 1 the treateat of all reformer. It rationalises CTerythlng It touches. It robs principles of all false wioetlty and throw them back on their reaaoniibleuesa. if they have Do reaanableneas. It ruthlessly crushes them out of eiiatenca and tet up lta own roucloaioDs la thair atead." Woodruw Wllaon. Portland's Kate Question. Portland, Nov. 30. To the Editor of The Journal Why la It that so mary of our citizens are struggling under what they think is a sort of Incubus In the matter of the preferential re quest of the Chamber of Commerce In connection with the Astoria parity rate as Indorsed by that body some time ago?" To my mind there .fa no ,.:..-! frw mk mneh unh.la.n. and import being attached to that re- auest for a preferential rate for Port- . , . . . l . , , . . . land. X ne resoiuuuu muvrsei positive- ly and unequivocally Aatoria's eon ten - Hon for. an equality rate with Puget Bound; the euppoaedly modifying re- quest which follows later on in the resolution, should be considered of no greater importance than I? the wording gives It: . t -1 merely a request, and that is all. TU Chamber could Just as well have aaaexi for rates onfy one-half as great as the terminal rates which it Indorses. nd the railway company would be Justified m treating such a request as It does thousands of other requests made by ! hundreds of otlier cities throughout llin TTnifeH Ktutou Tip fart Ol the mutter Is that terminal rates cannot be entirely equalized solely upon the " haul. Place the maps of the J four or flve riIroad8 of the Northwest bttore you on the table ana taKe, ior , instance IVn.Urt,.,, as a starting point; I common sense will tell you that a pre- ! ferenttal for Portland is not justified by the logic of the situation. As I i understand it. parity rates are riven f ! from competitive points, or territory. ; to terminal cities, and a glance at the , ,Ilap of the o.-V. will make It clear ; . .. . .-., . business. Competitive hauls may pay i.uu ,fit ,,.,.nntitiv hauls ' ..rfit thn nnn-comn-titlv. hauls ..... , . , ! ..... .u- i .... .V,o .n,1 1 ousiiiess jcar mo iiimc ( 'complemented by the latter, and the; lower rates for the long" competitive hauls are justified by the greater prof- its on the non-competitive hauls. Port- land will never get a preferential rate against Puget Sound and Astoria j (where l:itier citv secures its Dar- . . ay rate with the sound) that is, not ! .until ships quit coming up the river I lor t:arS- In that case Portland would j be entitled to a lower rate as an inland ' (city. It is not possible that she will ! allow herself to be so classified in : rejlU.; the,efoi.. she will have to bo : satisfied soon or later with the ter -, jmiral rates established, by Pcget Sound , and Astoria, regardless of what the . j tiiiiispoi tatlon bureau of the Cham- i Utr of Commerce tries to effect to tlie contrary. That a.lded rtuuebt in ti.e " resolution is mer another artificial ! hindrance flung into the rate case to I try to stav the hand of rate a little try to stay tiic nana hi rate a June: longer. The old Portland spint dle8 . rA nvxM tiim lun-v,!. i , j .,::. ,t Liii-cott s Opinions. Reviews Mr. C.ladstoiie, Or., Nov. :!0. To the iEditor of The Journal 1 was intr- ; enp0rt, on the upper Mississippi, csted ill reading K. A. Linsc ott's :ir- j you tide' in the interest of the saloon Davenport is a trim and beautiful (Also, as a young man of 23, I am in-; town of 50,CK'0 people. In two Import It crested in scraping t!e barnacles off ant particulars it closely resembles , the shio of state. Mr. L,inscott de- i St. Louis. At the foundation of the i scribes prohibition as hell, aJid hell as 'a place of physical torment, a place i where you can't get a- drink. This is m.staKe. lor i am inclined to accept nis aesenpuon or nen as wnere ui soul is in a Ftate of torment." Also. l,e describes it as hell "where one cIa8s deprives the other of lhe right to partake of the fruits of the earth." 0f the exercise of that right Rights , j He exclaims that "when one class I puts another in a Etate of torment it 'brings a halt to the advance of civili - zatlon (of mankind) and creates class hatred . . . an,i finally will lead ' to one of the bloodiest conflicts the i world ever saw." Perhaps that Is the key to the present troubles of the I t,oJv oolitic torment dus to the ' barnacle, the saloon. i Prohibition comes under the right of ' eminent domain, that the good of tHe rnajority must be the first considera- Ition. and incidentally the good of the ! majority is In the long run the good of the minority. ; Mr. Linscott says further that when w trv t0 octroy the creations of roying our industrial I and commercial life. Industrialism arc inalienable. und commercialism are truly tne lire! -ii siones 01 -oo. m u.., .. of the world. 1 personal history at the bottom. This Again I m ist disagree. Industry is rro exception. Davenport has a busi and commerce are truly the life of , nofs community of exceptional quality, the world bi t industrialism and com- I but that quality would not have mercialism are as truly the blight of evt ntuated in the river and harbor tho world. Industry and commerce ! works now taking shape there, had have nothing in common with the i net two men of exceptional endow saloon bum and loafer. Neither does , n.. nt stood in pluces of strategic op the saloon create wealth. It is the j portunity. parasite, living off the wealth created The fir.-t is a merchant of German bv other industries. Its removal birth but American reanns-W. l would not destroy wealth, but would Petersen. Becoming possessed of the i bar says, "I know you not,"end there , i wnUintr and imashine of teeth. If - . any une minns iu aaiuuu ia mc .,rn. of mankind, let him ask the man who has blown in his summer's wages in riotous living. He can tell, from ac- Censorship. Portland Dec. 1. To the Kditor of Fay that ceusoiyiiip ioi newyuueia would be as fair as it is for moving pictures. Said the editorial: "fuhllc opinion has made censorship of news papers unnecessary." The word should ll.... w. ...,h-Jiki - f- .v,,f (U the proper American synonym for censorship of any kind, whether the object of it be the overgrown motion picture baby, or the battle scarred newspaper. The exhibitors of the motion pic- tutes did not as the Oregonian said want censorship. It was thrust upon them by the howling reformers (who whisper only into the city councils ('HI aiLU COC, IOC t-VlitUiiul f-i, .m;v, il hopefully because many decent minded people allowed themselves to be convinced that it was the only way j of curing prurient pictures and nior- Kiai, In, lln,.,l natrons llcnrlv ha , nnn,. manufacturer and exhibitor t,ie honest manuiaciurer ana exniDitor paid for his moment of indecision, for 1 he has learned that the censor is just as unqualified to know the public mind, or his troubles, as old Mother Grundy is to dress my little girl. And now Portland proposes a form of censorship that will allow a hun dred dollar a month clerk o arbitrar ily decide the fate of productions by reputable producers productions that acarreaate In any one week of exhibi tion hundreds of thousands of dollars of cost, and with absolutely no other, uppeal from her decisions than to her coworkers on a socalled board of cen sor! that representsneither the taste nor the wishes of the public. No supreme Judgeof the land is In vested with such pxwer as this ordi- ' nance proposes, and why In the name of common sense. Und even Siberian 4 A m,a 1 ' should it hA intrTlsteH t n ! lone reformer operating from the tail ' end of a police patrol wagon? If XXf I, t . ! Federal Employe. Portland. Or, Not,- 23. To the Edi- j tor of The Journal The article and. editorial in Tbe Journal referring to 'the condition among the federal em- PERTINENT COMMENT SMALL CHANGE Jupiter Ptuvius Is a jronerous pro vider of juice for electrical week, a Remember rwtnnla W ho helD the Muti In their good work are not uecea- sarily inuts- jeopIe of few words ought to be well .pp for entering the Rose Festival slogan contest. Tliere is to be no Portland auto - r' "B -- Sr.eak.insr as a us veholorist. not as a phophet. Professor Munsterburg says the war will end in the spring, thus 1 Putting peace prophecy on a scientific . basis. m . . "t rifle Joe " Cannon showed his prytiess by dodging a Washington auto. His agility in getting out of .atit'er may come In handy when the hand wagon starts next November. Oregon and Washington are uncer- tain about their boundary line, bo are eome of the Kuropean nations, but , Sheriff Hurlburt says cows should be taught not to loiter in the center of y. v yw uu.j i y Montesorri or the . roebel system of "lon.,eBorr or me r roeoei system 01 "" "."! ' ifwwng, unless the tienri nas at Vlsert omethln better, A CHALLENGE Uavenport, Iowa. Correspondence, 5t. Louis Republic. While other Mississippi river com- munities always and honorably ex- cepting New Orleans have merely tliiked river terminals and waterfront improvement iJavenport has acted. T, , Q,id , prosper0UB Iowa com- , " , . , nuinlty has actually, worked out and partially complete a comprehensive plan for realising the utmost from the waterfront, both along the lines of utility and beauty, end has done It in such a way as to make it put money h, tha oitv trdimin' InkfPBfl C T t a W Tl tT ' o it out. i When asked: "Where is there ,,,,.,( typical example of the utilization of a n v.rfront by a city for large com- munity ends?'' the traveled American ! bus answered at random: "At Ius- .... . ... n,1VL. : ans,vp, with Derfect truth: "AtDav- ; commercial and social structure is a large north German element. And the ! city has had the forethought and -ood i i " "".";, . mi uum an ."- of the river and its possibilities. St. Louis people, may view Iiavenport's achievements as those of a town with the same sort of a riverfront as ours, and the same sort of people living be hind it- A third point of resemblance ! Is its financial stability. Uaveiiport Ihonw. hv t'tn. 000.000 of decor-its. and ,..,rr more than 40 000 accounts carry more tnan u,uuu ao ouiiim. I Built on limestone bluffs where the 1 interior uplands of Iowa break sharp- lv down to the edge of the river, Dav- enport stand, at the foot of the up- per rapids of the Mississippi. Its street cars are run from the water power furnished by the government dam. and ! the smoke of the factories of larger I community Of 110,000 people mingle , in the upper air. Tor Slollne ana kock Island He Just across the stream. nv years ago Davenport was beautiful, pretty much everywhere except along ! the riverfront. There there were refuse dumps and uncomely riats. winch looked like the universal scrap-heap of creation. ; , i rrcnt, ana mat u.iwl o., 1 ray for these improvements, but should make them pay for themselves. ployes strikes tbe nail on the head. Some weeks ago the writer had busi ness at the custom house and Inad vertently entered the wrong room. There were five federal employes lounging around, and although it was in mid-afternoon, two had their feet on the desk, while the others jweje draped nonchalantly over the rest of the furniture. Cigar smoke was waft ing gently upwards and a jolly story was in progress. "With an Indifferent (.Tnd unabashed) wave or the nana tne i writer was directed to tbe proper room. On another occasjon the writer waa present at the. custom house when four small tables were needed Now eacn of the tables was about three reet by one and a half feet In dlmens ions and weighed about 10 pounds. One man - ,,,taTTT- - - T" .-.nnAinn 4 NULAUr AU VAINLrl 1 1 V3 J V TIDE OF PROSPERITY , From the New York Times. t After Thanksgiving day the re- a tail trade of the country tuma to the holiday business and this has new begun in all the large centers. t The auspices under whicn tniai naa T started are brighter than for many I years. Aside from the generally prosperous conditions whleh pre- vail and which are usually coti t trolling, the business has been T heljed very much this fall by I ideal weather that brought with it seasonable purchases before the t time came fo tne nouoay uuue to begin. The character and ex- T -tent of these purchases nave oeen so satisfactory that an equally a -gratifying amount of holiday buy- ing is expected. Large stocks of 1 goods have been accumulated to t 1 meet the demand and they are, as J ' a rule, of higher grade than his I been customary in recent year. tv.Iw 1 in deference to the chanaed J k aspect that has been brought about J .' by the quickening of ac tivity In - .. . , 1 . . (t.fii.tr.. v.h I l pravcucaii jr 5cij ". ! ! the accompaniment of Increased wages and greater employment. t And these things merely supple- ( J ment the riches drawn from fields, I j ! far-ma .and mine. iaaaaaaaTTTTr-TT -f AND NEWS IN BRIEF OREGON SIDELIGHTS "Shop early and ship early," Is the Bend Bulletin's iender.it of the fa miliar Christmas textT The Baker Herald admonishes its readers to do their Christmas wishing early and ask Santa flaus to briuf cluster lights to Baker." The Christmas slopan has been one irto rhyrue by the Salem Statesman, thus: "Don't be stingy, sad or surly. Husband, wife or buy or girlie, do your Christmus shopping early." Speaking of the apple crop the .ood River News says: "The over-produc- tier, bugaboo is beginning- to fade into thin air a "Ptre which ha, lrisht- The Gardiner Courier reports that tho corn shows recently held in Mr sh fleld, Coquille and Myrtle Point have vastly increased the Interest in that pioouct. Soine of the finest coin grown in Iouglas county vas grown tl.is year in the lower L'mpqua valley along Smith river. Reserved tribute paid a neighbor town by the Pendleton Kast Oregonian; "The people of Hermtston have ;ir ratiged for a tax of one and a third mills for library purposes. That ac tion is a badge of honor for "lermiston and typifies the progress! veness of west etid people and their desire to pro vide the best advantages for their young men and women.." TO PORTLAND and then return a steady income to the city in perpetuity. The second man is Irving C. NbrV wood, the secretary of Davenport, The title has not been conferred on Mr. Norwood officially, but here is a man who is secretary of the Davenport Commercial club, the greater Daven port committee, the Davenport Retail Merchants association and the Daven port Manufacturers' association, and has all of thes organizations housed under .a--t.gle roof and working in harmony, lilfe the Arab team that Ben Ilur drove to the chario;. If he Is not the secretary of Davenport, we should like to ask what !.; is A community of exceptional seriousness of community purpose and willingness to pay the price of community ad vancement has found in Norwood a man who understands bow to elimi nate community friction and nmke the efforts of men of different capacities arid ideas retnforce Instead of neu tralize each other. uavenport raises more than 1 per capita per year for municipal promo tion. First, Davenport got the Inited Slates engineers to establish harbor 1'tns, out tVw.'iirh the town might fil! in the river flits. Then a sea wall was started, two feet above tile record flood, and three miles long, a mile of which is now completed. The con struction of this sea wall, and the fill behind it, reclaims 140 acres of land of the most valuable character. It is characteristic of this community that the first part of the plan to be com pleted was a lovely riverside park, t.ine acres In extent. And the business sense of Davenport takes honest pride In the fact that a park worth at cur rent prices $L'70.000 cost Just (51.000. Above th riverside park there is a break in the limestone sea wall, which fcwr.eps back In graceful curves at either end of a. space perhaps 12uo feet long. A eloping levee of the fa miliar typ gives ferryboats and pack ets a chance to land and receive pas sengers in the traditional way. Just north of this levee Is the site of the municipal terminal. Here will rtand a municipal warehouse, with electric cranes, aUitch tracks, space for wagons. eb Here all sorts of packet freight may be inexpensively handled. Beyond the municipal terminal Is the industrial terminal, with the sea wall on one side, and switch tracks on the other. This is divided into tracts of approximately 10.000 square feet, which are to be leased at low rentals perhaps $600 annually each. The fill ing is not completed here, and but a small fraction of the space is leased in conxequence, but every dollar of in terest on the cost of the project thu far has been paid out of rentals, and $7000 worth of lionds have been re tired beside, lielow the riverside n.irk a much larger tract will be similaily treated. s a ' The completion of lhe 8 foot water way forming the link between the Chicago drainage canal and the Henne pin canal will give Davenport a water route to Chicago of about the same length as the Rock Island railroad. The imminent revival of traffic on the Mississippi will find at least one community ready to harvest its bene fits. could have carried all four tablea: but true to all the, sacred traditions of fed eral employes, the bead Janitor was first summoned; he. In turn, marshalled hio forces, and, in due course of time, four colored assistants and second as sistants Janitors, each proudly bearing a diminutive table, proceeded slowly and solemnly down the hall. Some years ago a certain incumbent of one of the higher appointive offlcea at the custom house, was an enthusi astic stud horse fancier. The writer had occasion to spend several days in his outer office; during that time there was a continuous stream of smelly horse fanciers and traders going in and out of the private office, which had been converted into headquarters for loud discussions upon the merits of various studs, fillies, mares, etc. Horse trades were engineered and con summated there and the general at mosphere was more like that of a Front street livery stable than thai of a, government office. To tiie writer's mind, most of this waste ai,d inefficiency in government office would be eliminated lf the higher, bst paid offices were taken out of tiiW realm of politics. What li.ducement is there for a capable, am bitious young man to enter any fed eral department when he knows he can not advance to the better positions? Whenever a law 1h passed whereby the higher federal positions are filled by promotion, based on merit, it will auto matically result in a better class of men entering the subordinate positions, and the J5000 positions wllWbe filled by $S00u men. II. E. CASTELL. The Tenant am Taxpayer. Portland, Nov. 29. To the Kditor of The Journal As The Journal has al ways contended that the renter, or ten aru), pays his proportion of the taxes, I heartily agree with it. The average renter knows that high taxes cause us to pay more rent, more for clothing, more for food and other necessaries. Therefore we are capable of using the ballot for our own interest. The land lord who struts up to the courthouse to pay the taxes is not so much of a tax payer as the tenant who occupies the premises. We' should all have a vote on the school directors, aa this would have a tendency to the selection cf Im partial instructors. - J. O. HANtEY. Tt,eOncG0ver SINCE LAST SATURDAY when I printed the verses about Henry Kxrd and his pear shlr there has been a flock of letters. JAnd the first ones whose writers , misunderstood were very bitter against mt v for writing what they thought was blasphemy. 51 But since Tuesday when I tried to make it clear j-j.st what the verse meant the otl.r kind of letters have been coming JAnd one received this morning says I made the Sainn mUtake in the Ford v erses- - as I attributed to Henry him self in trying to d something for mankinds bei.efit. J"Vou dared to write something;" he says which caused a niomefit'e reflection a pause f.,r meditation." JAnd tl.en he goes on to tell me that this is a mistake. a And he says to make my stuff acceptable to everybody -1 should keep it so to f-peak in tune with the times aj"You sh"'!,i adiust your writ ings to the ideals of the people" he says. and then goes on and gives an example of What the IMblic Wants as follows: "Picture tl:r. dashing young hero with a maiden embraced in one arm and an out. Mi etched hand In which is clutched a icvlver sending It deadly 1 ead into an army of eome 'fhree or fo.ir hundred, w'hid he I holding at hay sihgle-hniided " aj And when I r.-ad it -I half ex pected that the nevt lire would be: JUST A Mti.MK.NT. FI.KASK, for a cmamik of ki:kls. J But It wasn't and the letier cloe with best wishes. JAnd tliere rnav be souicMnpg in what my fri nl wi o wiote ti e let ter says. But I think h-'s a little too se vere on us and by "is" 1 mean t lie Ameri can people ell of us. J And T believe ti nt most -,f u are really vrv imi. Ii In earnest about seeing j'jstii done. )f curse -I l,iinlv We nte mis led -- snrretiTnc - p.-:iiaps often by false lights - and that we seem to be touched .'ust now with a little 0f the mad n'fi tl.a has ir.arie Ilurope a aliam bles 7 It it 1 '. cli-e that the cause of hniy.-it: ' rt i i our keeping. and that we must cherish Its sa cred fire and vplift ls l.cht to the world. JAnd whete; it is a city ordi nance or a lull before congress Wt should o.p It or approv.. it Re cording '. wl'-thn r no it Is for the gr.-at s; goo-l--of- t:,, wl ole peo ple .... . i ,l . . ... . . . - . . , . w hi. " we can uu i:.i.-t i . j-.-i-m, .i vj letter or telephone or te'r-grapb. r And as to Henry F- rd -- he may not end t! e war or eve'i get a hearing- but-- r 1.1STI'N-Hf has taken stand for W'.-it he l,el!eve to right - aiid thiitV an i nspira t Ion to nil of ur Common Sense Talks By Lillian Russell A new illustrated page that will apr-car in The Sunday Jour nal Magazine every Sunday, he g: nil in;; December 5. !"or the mt part Miss Rus sell confines herself b sugges tions concerning health and beauty, but her scope ii not lim ited to a discussion ol these sub jects. Anything pertinent to bodily well-beinr is within her field, which vhe covers in a sensible wav that azures her a wide audi ence. This Sunday page will supple ment lhe daily beauty chits by Miss Fussell which are appearing on the woman's page of The Journal. An Alphabet 3 For the Needlewoman This is the season of the year when milady's needle stitches ast in anticipation of Christmas. That her needs may be met in part, a complete alphabet of old English letters, Suitable for em broidering on. towels, sheets, dresser covers, etc., will be found in .Section Four of The Sunday Journal, December 5. Celebrated Writers Discuss the War Included in next Sunday's Journal will be the following articles: , THE DEPARTURE OF THE TRAWLERS By RUDYAPS KIPLING. POLAND'S DESPERATE PLIGHT By HENRYK SIENJC1EWTCZ. IN THE TRENCHES By GOUVENEUR MORRIS. In the Magazine The Sun stands Still for Mars The army searchlight. Why the War Will Make Us Live Longer Progress in bac teriology. Jhe Peroxomaniac Novelette by Jack Lait. Science and Near-Science Up- to-Date. The Housekeeper Council Table By Dorothy Dolan. Cartoona'grams 8y Charles A. Ogden. The Legend of Saint Nicholas By Georgene Faulkner. The Sunday Journal Cofnplete in four news "sec tions, magazine and comic sec tion. Five cents the copy every where. Next Sunday " . "The Biggest Fnre Cents' Worth in Type"