THE JOURNAL; AH INDEPENDENT NEWSPAKH TIME TO STAND UP AND BE COUNTED C &. JACKSON. ...Hnbllsber laii.urd Trr Sa. arieroowa awl i (except 6000.7 sfteroooa) t The Jool Building, Broadway end Yamhill ets., Vort- T 'HERE Is a fight at Washington to cut the figures-of the Chamber- lala land grant bill to a 20-20 per cent allowance instead or a 40-40 per cent for the 'Oregon school fond and for roads in land grant counties. : , . ' -. - - , - If it succeeds, the federal Government will take 60 per cent instead of '"'L 1X222. 2wtWiiio4 2 Pr cent of the excess oyer the railroad's portion of the lands'. Dfc- eiua miut. rfslon among members of the Oregon delegation at wasnington ana 'i..usfHu.K td.ut 7173; urn. A-evet.AU the Babel of plans and lack of action in Oregon hare afiorcea oppor Usd. or. tepartKKoU reached by these somber. TU kOjiElUM AUVKEXlSlNa Wtf KKiCSiaTlE Benjamin 4 Keatsor Co., Brunswick Bkjg., 2& UU In, Ntw orst Ul Peoples . ttmwcriptloB tcrius by maU or to aa ad Areas la tae United 8iatc of Jlsiteo: DAILY (MORNING OB AFTERNOON) One .. (3.00 One moot I SONDAX Om year.; tZ-BO Um month f -2S Daily mobninu ok aptkrnoon) and SUN DAT Om 7r 7.60 I On month. M America asks 'nothing for her self bat what she has a right to ask -jr humanity itself. WOODROW WILSON. Let there be ne Inscription upon my: tomb; let no man write my epitaph. Let my character and my motives, re pose in obscurity and peace till other times and other men can do them Justice, Then shall my character be vindi cated; then may my epitaph be written. Robert Emmet. ROBERT EMMET I tunitr for the movement against the Chamberlain bill to gain headway. Pubjic sentiment in this state ought to try. and repair the damage that has been done. The up-state press owes -the children of .Oregon, now and hereafter, the duty of struggling for. 40 per cent of the grant land surplus to go to the irreducible school fund of the state. . The metropolitan press is under the same obligation. ; ' . ; : If public bodies in Oregon ever had reason for action, they have it in the obligation that is upon every one . of them to declare for the original figures of the Chamberlain bill. If anybody should know tnst an enlarged school fund which is, in fact, a rural credits fend, is a desirable kind of public asset, chambers of commerce ought to know it. If any institution or person in Oregon ought to be fighting for the plan of adding to the permanent assets of the Oregon school fund, the chambers of commerce and other public bodies ought to do it - ' Ever since last June, the great question of disposing of the public's portion of the grant lands has been under discussion. Early efforts were made by "the push" to divert the public's interest in the lands into railroad and other private ownership. Railroad lawyers and "kept" men managed to confuse the popular view as to what the de cision meant. Trader the Day leadership the Salem grant land "con ference" by its inexcasable resolutions which made no demand for any part of the lands to be saved for public purposes in Oregon, did its part to befuddle the public mind. At Washington, everything was favorable for a splendid adjustment to have been made. The administrative departments were favorable to a plan of giving Oregon a liberal share. There was a prevalent viw that congress had long ago set aside the lands for the settlement and development of Oregon, a fact that even the leaders of the present movement to reduce the Oregon allowance cannot deny. But the fight for the reduction has developed. Oregon has dallied too long. Some members of the Oregon delegation have been coquetting with impossible and foolish plans. There are ominous signs that the cut may be made, and Oregon suffer a loss of a good many millions of dollars. If there are those Sn Oregon who want a larger state school fund, they ought to stand up and be counted. If there was ever reason for Oregon public sentiment of that kind to make itself felt at Washing ton, it is now. actors can. If they" win, master their art as Garrick did. without painful subservience to the old tra- ditlons of the stage. It may be that the stage would be better off NOTHING THE MATTER WITH PORTLAND (And now cooei another Iron working plant. ... . . . . i auu ww inm auv Without some Of those traditions, one of toe machinery building type. It to Garrick brought -ebMlairffJiSS! back to life and sent him On MS C duU time, dough ha tt looking forward . , . . ... ftt. to. Incomparably better times. - He tails'. In Way down the ages in full panoply No, OT of taa series, what his company's plant nf fa ma , Tin -nrnAnraA 5R nf the has aecomoliehed la Urn and Ponderous an- , . . . . . eertaklaga- . The story U one ot rapid growth I Plays, and actd in 14 Of them, and of th plucky assumption of Uk not I takinr 18 different narts. BeBideS , frtorij shouldered by W concerns.) A his Shakespearean activities Gar-iOTICE again the youth of Port rick was a sturdy reformer of the M land; manufacturing plants, theatre. He hustled the dandies .1" The Hesse-Martin Iron Work. Off the stage where they had long ; at East Seventh and Belmont streets, roosted during the performances, la only five years old. yet It is dolus disciplined the actors and chast-j ? business of $150,000 to 1200.000 a ened their style of elocution. It iriyear. Originally it was the Heacock said of him that "he banished ;& Lawrence Iron , Works, and was ranting and bombast from the bought from those gentlemen. .It is THE GREAT REUNION By Alfred Noyes ThPnce Qser, BY FlPre I .AMPMAN- theatre." Tt he did there .has been a sad relapse. The only reliable knowledge as to the end of the war is that it is nearer now than when the first gun' was fired. A The fact is that he will do almout anything to turn an honest penny. Some wash dishes, some wait on the table. They so out house cleaning, practice gardening and TJ?nLbt?"t! ' Pi!f f0rtS install electric bells, canvass for books, and "serve punch at prohibition punch, ct course. The college Y. M. C. A. is a liberal-minded- society which does not stick at trifles when a be earned. youth or regret for the extin guishment of a brilliant light ZzL,. that fha Tn a wi A,. tv.1. i j nances, that the memory of this gifted son of Erin has been cherished throughout the years. ' It is because he stands for alu.. ; uuitai ao iv rause inai nas eoDea ana rioweai Qn some rich and happy days, from the time Henry II landed on I we learn from The Emeraia, the Irish shore. He embodied the tnere are a8 many as 15 calls for spirit of Irish discontent and prob ably typified more than any other the Irish character, liberty loving, impulsive and individualistic. Like all men who follow high student helpers. It is said by the Y. M. C. A. managers that half the men at the state university are paying their own way wholly or in part. We thus form some ideals, Robert Emmet was content estimate of the weighty factor the to leave to posterity, to other men J Y. M. C. A. becomes in their econ and other times, the writing of his omy. But it does not stop with epiiapn. btanding on the thresh- findin iobs. old of the scaffold he asked that the charity of silence be thrown around his career and that the It has a number of devices for cutting down expenses as well as replenishing pockets. It runs a Judgment of the world be sus-; book exchange, for one thing, pended until such a time when his 1 Trhich has sold S400 worth of used motives could be vindicated and j books for the students this year not aspersed by prejudice or Ig- and charged not a penny of com norance. j mission on the business. No doubt The day when his country should j the boys would like to keep their take her place among the nations old books to dream over by the of the world was designated by him as the day on which his epi taph should be written. That day seems to be dawning. Out of the stress and sacrifice of the present war has come a better realization of Irish patriotism, a disintegra tion of prejudice and a growth of fraternal spirit. The right to a home government has been practi cally accorded to the people of Ireland. There can be no debate as to te legal Justification for the exe cution of Emmet, but can it be Justified from a moral viewpoint? There should be taken Into con sideration the political conditions of the time. At that period the! only course toward; governmental reform was through, rebellion or forcible resistance.. Again Emmet was only twenty six years of age when with all the enthusiasm of a youth of exalted intellectual powers, animated by an overmastering seal for his country be took part in a conspir acy against constituted authority. .He failed, but he won an undy ing fame, a fame that is aa great as though he had been successful. His youth, his Inexperience, his confiding nature did not fit him to cope with designing men who de luded, misled' and sacrificed him. It is the knowledge of all these things added to the cause for which fireside in later years,Nbut neces sity knows no sentiment and the price they bring buys other texts. It is pleasant to read in The Emerald that the Y. M. C. A. at the university is flourishing. We know of no society that better de serves prosperity. The mayor of Philadelphia be lieves it pays to advertise: He is asking for an appropriation ot half a million dollars- to establish a bureau of publicity. TRAINING UP LAWYERS D EAN RICHARDS of the Wis consin university's law school has published an article in one of the law magazines to show us what progress legal edu cation is making. So far as num bers are concerned it is advancing as rapidly as one could wish, per haps a trifle more rapidly. The Increase of law students has been 75 per cent in the last fifteen years, from 12,000 to almost 22, 000. . Many new law schools have been founded in the same time. We now enjoy 120 of these insti tutions. Dean Richards says that most of the recent ones have been founded purely, for commercial purposes He describes them pointedly aa "cram schools for bar examina- the bench. For these same tricky lawyers are the material from which judges are sometimes chosen. Something more than a longer and better course in college and law school is necessary to reform the legal profession. There is need of better formal training and far more need of training that is not merely formal but deals with substantial realities. Law books and law lectures deal with abstrac tions for the most part. As Dean Richards remarks, legal studies now-a-days are absorbed in "cases," which means word study. It exercises the same faculties of the mind as the old schoolmen em ployed in their speculations on the ology and Aristotle. The conse quence is that, far more than any other of our professions, the law yers ar medieval-minded. They are occupied with forms to the ex clusion of realities. Life does not concern them so much as certain abstract formulas about life which have been Imbedded in their -musty books for hundreds of years. President G. Stanley Hall has often said that theological educa tion ought to begin with a good. stiff course in natural science. Such course is even more necessary for lawyers than for ministers and it should be supplemented with a still stlffer course in economics We do not mean the dead, laisser falre economics of the medieval zing school. We mean the Tjy- namic economics which deals in a vital way with living men and cur rent problems. It has been said by observers who should know what they are talking about, that the supreme court decision gainst the former Income tax law was made simply because the judges were. ignorant of human conditions in the United States. They drew their decree out of books and not out of life. The same criticism has been made upon -the old decisions against shorter working days and better wages. Before we can expect the people to trust the lawyers and respect the courts it must be made pretty plain that the profession deserves confidence and that the judges dwell In the modern world instead of lingering in the cloistral shades of the dark ages. he contended that has kept green tions." Their sole purpose is to the. grave of Robert Emmet. The stuff enough technical information charity of silence can never be ex tended around the memory of a young life consecrated to freedom, a life whose chords vibrated re sponsive to the tones of the harp that - once through Tarn's . halls sounded and a life to whose soul th-j lowly shamrock, was Searer than the, "fame - crowning laurel, the love breathing myrtle or the storm daring pine." . V if the shortage In dyestuffs coo .tinues a while longer maybe Black Friday and "Blue Monday" will disappear. . . GOOD WORK into a man's head to enable him to answer routine examination ques tions. Of the deep principles of the law, of history and economics, they do not even pretend to teach anything. Dean Richards ascribes the pop- mar distrust of the legal profession to these "half-baked" products of the commercialized law schools. They are ignorant of human knowledge and they are bankrupt In morals. So what can you expect of them but dishonest trickery? This is all very convincing, but in our modest view the trouble goes deeper. Popular distrust of the legal profession .harks back, not so much to the Ignorant shyster as to the iHJ3. Y. M. C. A. at the state university earns the gratl- v tude of the students in many 'great corporation counsel who has ways- There 'la, for example. 1 LH ClUUHIJUCUk HWM-.1IIUU1 UUU9 jobs for the students. ; It has been admirably Industrious this year. jae jobs tons treait numuer isu ; ana . tnev nave enaDiaa stumoas ! I' - a tti ja a --- -- i . At V'Attl ftt. A. i ,tuu ,.;nm .is ; niy ui U9:-rigui, a . . inn . rivciri xr i iih a i e n l liiub.- r-ri -- rt i The Teader .may feel some fltue What kinds -of workiwill thV amr bitious student ' condescend - toVdo the heritage" of the ages In his possession, the finest product of our great - universities - equipped with, all knowledge and the choic est moral principles. Excellent as their equipment has been. how. ever, it has not made these men good, patriots or honest practition era In far too many instances. They nave lent their abilities to the clr cumvention of the law and defied the country to stop their sharp practices.-.- Here is the root of the popular distrust of the bar and It seems unnecessary to eay that women's fashions for this year are wearable and sensible. Were they ever otherwise? DAVID GARRICK T HIS year, which is the three hundredth since Shakespeare died, is the two hundredth since David Garrick died. The coincidence is notable, for Garrick was probably the greatest of Shake spearean actors besides b-ing the first in their long line. For a cen tury after his death the kii.g of dramatists was more or less neg lected. The rise of Puritanism was not favorable to his vogue. The parliamentary revolution gave peo pie sometnmg else than plays to think of and when the drama re gained its place nnder the second Charles the new playwrights "knew not Joseph." They were a lewd crew whose names are still remem bered while their plays are for gotten by all but. the learned. Congreve and Wycherley ' are bet ter known than most of them. Toward the middle of the eigh teenth century when David Gar rick went up to London with Sam uel Johnson to seek his fortune, Shakespeare was little ' more than a shadowy 'memory. VGarrick had no "stage training." He evolved the art of acting' from his own brain much as the fable says Mi nerva sprang full armed from the head of Jove. Almost from the first he played the finest parts and his success was immediate. tf A QUACK PUNISHED GOOD story about a cancer "doctor" comes to us by way of The Kansas City Star. The learned gentleman In question professed to "cure can cers" by means of the usual salves, lotions and ointments. He had some magical compound whose ap plication would relieve the sufferer with wonderful celerity and leave no scars. Incidentally it emptied ! the patient's pocketbook, but that did not matter as long as the 'doctor's" was filled. But the disease was not cured. After spending his money and al- owlng ..he cancer to progress past all remedy, the patient finally had to face the miserable truth that he had been deceived and swindled. All "doctors" who advertise to cure cancers are deceivers and swindlers. There is absolutely no exception. The particular quack mentioned by The Star was con victed of imposture and sent to prison. Let us hope he will stay there a long while and be joined soon by a goodly company of his unscrupulous brethren. There is no cure for cancer ex cept the surgeon's knife. Other j treatment sometimes helps a super-' now corporation and is officered by Daniel Martin, president; William T. Harrison, secretary, and Fred Hesse, vice president and manager. , Forty-five men are employed in Us foundry and machine shop, and they are paid, from 13.75 to $5 per day for their services. , The buildings of the company cover half a block, the offices and drawing rooms beinc on the second floor, and yet the concern is hampered for room. Expanding- continually as it has passed through the periodbf depres sion so much talked of by the con firmed pessimist, this enterprise looks to the future with wonderment as to what will happen to it when the real ly "rood times" now so speedily ap proaching; have actually arrived. folded wings and settled down upon Oregon. If its growth continues with the accelerated rapidity these better days will develop, the company will be forced to seek new and larger quarters for Its business. SOME OF ITS SPECIALTIES. As this corporation makes its own A THOUSAND creeds snd battle cries, v A thousand warring social schemes, A thousand new moralities, r And twenty thousand thousand dreams! Each on his'own anarchic way, ' From the old order breaking free, Our reined world desires, you say, License once more, not Liberty. But, ah, beneath the struggling foam, , When storm and change are on the deep, How. quietly the tides come home, And how the depths of sea shine sleep. And we who march toward a goal, Destroying only to fulfill The law, the law of that great soul Which moves beneath our alien will; We that like foe men meet the past Because we bring the future, know We only fight to achieve at last A great reunion with our foe; Reunion in the common needs, The common strivings of mankind; Reunion of our warring creeds In the one God that dwells behind. Then in that day we shall not meet Wrong with new wrong, but right with right; Our faith shaJ make your faith complete When our battalions reunite Forwa.dH what use in idle words? Forward, O warriors of the soul! There will be breaking up of swords When that new morning makes us whole. AN ARMY CAN DO MORE THAN KILL From the Boston Globe. England, in a time of great national danger, debates the question of con scription among her unmarried young men. The United States, in a time of castings, as well as fabricates its sreat national prosperity and security, v. , discusses the question of universal cumpicea unaer ..-vice Oen, its own roof any piece of work It ! Scott chief of staff of our army, now the . lit. I "I 1 TTiiirVi I. I IIH 1 1 1W V BCrVItC. UCilDI C2.L ub. talks' to a congressional committee of obliging all youths to serve the colors for three years.' o No more sinister evidence of the effect of the European war upon our thinking can he shown than the pres ent talk of compulsory military serv ice In the United States. Europe nai set us a horrible example and we can- undertakes,, therefore reaping profits on the entire Job. "We specialize," says Mr. Martin, "on sawmill, transmission and con tractors' equipments. The screening plant for the Columbia Digger com pany, costing- $25,000, Is a sample of our handiwork. This com nan v is furnishing the material for the lining P' fv L"; nlT" have our cake and yet eat It also, ft seems to be inevitable that the regu lar army shall be Increased and also of the big tunnel the O-W. R..& X. Mtlmei 4 AAnstwiintlnw aManaaaa " ficlal case or alleviates suffering Z., " temporarily, but nothing can be! an lmmenM ,ot f ,and an supplemented by a volunteer reeof depended upon for permanent re-1 , T. . , " more or less sise. It is, however. suits but surgery. In their early of n Amerlcit we stages nearly all cancers can be Tfle are of a cured penecuy Dy operauuu. iu Burgeon cuts out the diseased tis sue and It never returns. it will deliver. ical type, and are handling S000 cubic yards of sand and gravel eacn 90 hflnn Tv ttwtt ttfa,H tttt ttl But this is true only if the can-L . ' ' aTW, tll. cer is taken in time. Delay means , , K ,, ' immense suffering and sure death. of an&g9 lg b th UM lur Hiker it, paBKD a wwu dla6d the cancer infects the whole body and then no cure is possible even by the knife. Physicians are do-t ng all they can to spread this im portant information. The newspa pers are helping. Any sore on any part of the body which does not heal promptly is probably an incipient cancer. The regular discharge of a drop of blood from the intestine means an Internal cancer. In all such In stances the patient should seek his physician as if life depended on speed and 6ubmit to an operation, for In the knife lies his only nope. The United States also has Its allies Republicans and Democrats in congress. extremely doubtful whether there will be enough volunteers to meet the ex pectations of the war department, and if the volunteer system falls we shall hear much more insistent re quests from army circles , that the United States shall adopt some form of obligatory military service. Our whole military structure is about to undergo a thorough change, for bet ter or for worse. It is the duty of of distillate engines, with three men 1 thoughtful dtliens to seek to reduc civilian. Much of the army work s merely devised to keep the men occu pied. Drill, drill, drill, colors, guard mount, sentry duty. It Is all rather simple for the rank and file, and aft-sr the first few months it is a horrible bore to many men. The army ought to be given a more vital Interest in life than mere training to commit legalized and organized murder. That is a demoralising ambition, a poor star to hitch even a mule team to. a So, if we must have an expensive army of many thousand vigorous youths, let it be an army of service to the country. It could devote part of Its abundance of time to building railroads in Alaska or elsewhere, re claiming desert lands, reforesting our large western tracts, protecting the Mississippi from floods, putting roads through our great undeveloped na tional parks. Let it also do work similar to the Canadian mounted po lice. We all know how much service for all kinds of suffering hunan be- TAUK J OH1NSON- mann - f il J Pantagea theatreis a law-abldix ciuzen so far as I know. IT But he OUKht to ba arraaMfI inina ror extreme cruelty. IT And Frank Ilennnaav forma-. ml lice Judge former deputy district a I torney former deputy county clerk-1 and present drum main- of til JiaKS- Dana clerk of the district eou I and friend of Joe Singer agre nuo mo. ; that something oua-ht to. bo Aarl nicest sunaay Frank :'went tl spena the afternoon with Jack in h orrice at the Pantages. fl And they wera talkinv ahnnt thai . nanus. 11 Ana Guv Halnen also a. vai I Jiinisn person was mentioned. IT And Jack seemed to rut aentlmeil iai. and he said Guy had always bed lUJKlliy e-ooa man of hl ,..TTnd ne believed he'd send Mm line present. II Ana he went to the safe arl iook oui a bottle labeled "Halg Haig." ana wrapped It up and wrO vauy b address on It. JAnd Frank tried to talk ta him. V... V , . . ... .uuui nuw lung- xney naa neen a I quaintea mat ishe and Jack ail wnere they met and all that. flAnd Jack said yes to everythlnj because he was so interested- zixing the package. T And the called a boy and se the package to Guy'a house at 4:1 E-ast Tenth street north. JAnd then he turned to Frank atd said: Tl xes yes Krank go on. ,. . y were saying : IT B"t Frank had lost Interest. flAnd pretty soon he said he h to go. V And Jack said "What's your hul ryr- and tried to smother a yawn. Tl And Frank went and grabbed car and went out to 485 East Tenl street north. IT And he got there only a littl While after the boy. f And Guy was home and glad see mm. JAnd they talked about the! friends. fAnd Frank switched the subjel around to presents. and told Guy what he got t cnristnjas. JAnd Guy said speaking of frlen I renu jjreaeuis ne naa JUSl 501 OSwl irom nis rnena jacK jonnaon. J"And I guess I'll open it and S what it is." T And before he arot It oDen n 1 ings the policeman does in his daily Knowing wnat it was Frank had h the evil of militarism as much as MEN AND MOSQUITOES 11 fl r, '" , V i "The Hawley Paper company's oil IVI common diseases and not by tank at 0reon Clty f3 fMt ln 1TJ. . 7 , , . possible. At best It is going to be a concrete sand, fine reinforced con- blg loAd on OUP backs and we want crete gravel and coarse concrete grav-' to procure what good we can out of el at one and the same time. It is the misfortune, a most perfect piece of workmanship. and we feel well satisfied it could not be Improved upon. "When the Oregon Trunk railway was first put in operation It ws Nothing in time of peace Is more useless than the army, with all its equipment, its constant drilling, its forts, its camps, its horses, its guns, Its wagons. Its barracks, its thou sands of men, its punctilious dlsclp not necessary to swing its bridge line and its bugle calls. It feeds over the Columbia river at Celilo, ! hungry mouths. It tills no soil nor .,,,. th. -.n.i w.. 1 loeB lt 8Pln- Ia Pc t Is a parasite, because the boat canal was not at In war ,t mav OP ,t may not protect that time constructed. Upon com- Us. That depends on "strategic pletion of the canal we supplied the I exigencies." The army Is a part of machinery whereby the draw Is oner-! however, and its problems are our ated, and it has worked perfectly from the moment of installation un til now. I merely mention this to show that we are prepared for the satisfactory execution of any class of work, be lt great or small. AN IMMENSE STORAGE TANK. "" ameter and 80 high, likewise its con cure. Its cause is a nara- i aM . j - j tt.. v ttuvu au uiavutuvr, are of our construction. Work of this particular character has not here tofore been done in this city, the east having supplied the demand. The en gines and derricks for Giebisch site in the blood. A stiff dose of' Quinine stimulates our prtectiug phagocytes to devour these insidi ous parasites but a new generation is always ready to take their places. It seems, too, as if the!j0plln. contractors for the Tillamook phagocytes lost their voracity after jetty. were built bv ua. and an th. a while. The patient then "goes into a decline" and malaria finally ends his career. Malaria does not pass dlrectl from one human subject to an other. It is carried by mosquitoes. The mosquito called "anopheles" is the principal if not the only offender. This pernicious creature sucks malaria into its syBtem with the blood from its human prey and when it bites into a fresh man it inoculates him with malaria. This is one of the many examples of that beautiful Interdependence which pervades nature. In the south mosquitoes do not carry the malaria germ through the winter, as the United States health bureau has lately discovered. So if people suffering from the disease would dose themselves well with quinine in preparation for stairway castings ln the new Meier Se Frank building are the products of our foundry. In fact, we could not direct attention to some piece of casting or machinery We have had a hand ln building or shaping. We are young but active. We have set a high standard of workmanship for everything-, and our molders are in structed not to permit a defective casting to enter into anything ws make. We attribute our success very largely to the confidence we have earned from the public, and that is something we never will betray." PATRONS ALIi ALONG THE COAST. The tentacles, so to speak, of th Hesse-Martin Iron Works reach out to nearly every section of Oregon and Washington, and over the border into Idaho. In the logging and lum- problems. Now seems to be a good time to make the army more useful, since It is going to be larger. Tt should have some value in time of peace. o o Anyone familiar with army life knows that the soldier in time of peace has a fairly easy time. Soma are worked quite hard by severe drill masters, but the main body of men are not required to use as 'much energy daily as the average working task. Let the army be one of greater service to the nation. It has time enough to give for such service out side of its training for war purposes. Let It even take a leaf out of the book of the Boy Scout. Lt it clean up dirty cities, let lt destroy pent holes, let It spread sanitation and civilization and not death and de struction. a a Of course some army officers will say such a thing Is impossible; that , what Is needed is more time fori drilling, more men to drill, more equipment, more funds. They are perpetually asking for more. Every Innovation is always called "impos sible." All of which does- not remove our conviction that much lant en ergy in the army is wasted at the expense of you and me. o a Bellamy proposed two years of corkscrew which has fallen into d! use ready. TT for Frank believes ln prepare ness. And they pulled the cork. a.nd got two glasses. and poured out what th thought they needed. IT And they held it up to the llgi : and told each other what a goi renow JacK Johnson was. i IT But I think he ought to be pros cuiea. ' and so does Frank because 'J LISTEN The bottle that chased clear over to the east sldel was filled with cold tea. Zdfe's Zafialte Variety. Din Smytbe had aearcbtd the itracta wain for a certain ibeeDberder. "Dara til service for the state as a social Auty 'M' .L. ' ?T . ' . ,. T ..... . aever aow wbere to look lur a mat) a I iur oi i c ii . vttw " " 7v - , store. ' duty let it be a duty of service to the a atnta. and organize our army so that C Cooke ?atton wu faalias is rataer instead of being a colossal tax bur-' JL J"Ln ij den lt can bo not only vital In time Effe? S"..-0 InV? o! OX war, dut vaiuaoie in ume ui mg me nrat reiocipeaa in Bairm Oelonn I aa rail Th aervlce our armv has K. Cooke Patton. roucbed or br Mr. Pa til done in the Philippines, Cuba. Pana- j "JX' IZrZTuXSt ma. and even during its short con- , of 122 6(, brto,ing bm loto UBuaj trol of Vera Crus, only proves that prcmlnence even at the age of 5. Ua waa I it, ia in.M a? ancTi aarvlca. If our envied br th bora tail tbe following wal program of Preparrtne.swa. thu. ' gLl raisea oi mo ! th MrMt. xije three bori war enriee to Kill w- annuia sun do buio iu bbw mrerr Touumrr in town ana m r n our boys from the many evils of mill- btbltlona of riding apaed round Wllaoa pail -al.. onraelves above 1 Th distinction of ownlris the first two wbil rider belonged to Ben Tartor. wbo aiade 1 1 tarjsm and to raise ourselves above Europe's horrible example. a hand to any cause that means any thing to his fellow man. He is a leaner, and he is the same whether he is rich or poor. Letters From the People spring the new crop of mosquitoes berlD dltrlct" PcUiry. the con would not be infected, no matter how many men they might bite, aLd the pest would be stamped out. But perhaps it is too much to look for such foresight merely to put an end to a miserable disease. - In the Yazo0valley of Missis sippi four persons out of ,10 suffer from malaria. This is a low, swampy . region singularly suitable for the propagation of mosquitoes. In i other parts of the - south the Communications sent to The Journal for publication la this department sboold be writ ten on ooly one alcVe of the paper, should sot eieeed 800 words ia length and mast be e njanied br the aame sod addrees of tbe scarcely point ln any direction and i stader. If the write does not desire te bae ' v. m,Klfah.i4 htt flhnnM ma at.tr I "Dtscoatton ta tbe eTeatest of all reformers. It rationalises earythlns It touches. It robe piineipas ot all falee sanctity and throws them back on their rrsaeflabUoeaa. If they hSTe se reasonableness, it ruthlessly crushes them eat of existence and sets Bp Its own exclusions ln their stead." Woodrow WiUon. "Controllers" Criticised. Portland, Feb. 2S. To the Editor of The Journal I have been much inter ested in the birth control letters, and wonder why selfishness seems to be the keynote to -so many of them. God doesn't seem to be much of a factor with the "controllers'' anyway, so I hereby suggest that while they are Improving so much on nature, lt would not be a bad idea to go a little further and devise a means whereby tbe old time formality of conception and de livery might be done away with and have the little cherubs made to order: some way. It certainly would be a big, boost tor tbe "controllers," could this condition be brought about, for the path of the old way is ao long and so beset with trials and tribulations, it would be a great thing for mother s dren ln the house they should be taught by tbe parents to respect and treat the servant like a human being and not like a dog. Another thing, some servants a-e keot busy from morn till bicycle himself. -Salsa Capital Journal, Drewsey has two of tbe biggest horse thler in this great stock region. Drery weak lose from one to six head. Tbe bloody blaot in' thleres are Jajr Smith and Lrla Oawao afed 8 and 8 ears. Tby eater this ssnetn while the editor is boar stndrlns m oolitic nlaht for i asTeimatii ana swipe an oar empty uf - . . , ; tt,..tt JUM.-V nnuvi ana pwo wa w " mra ot i La air rear mey may noi earn u.r mhoat tiMir -oc,, biking for corer. wblle t) and at the same time ineir misiresa eiink of empty bottlra ramiBda as 'Ua tli annovs them with unpleasant face and harsh words. Now, why can't these women, or "cranks." show their ser vants that they posses a human feci for another full one. Drewae Pioneer Sua. e There will be a mobl Mat tion of the Beanei est Tuesday to lay plans for a aiaas atta lag by being P'e"w. 'f. , 0 ZCZS&ti them, and making their work easlerTl.p wlu M follows: Bog, 1. W., M. cern Is well known, and If a person were to scrutinize any member of the corporation with a double-barreled microscope he'd search ln vain for he might blood as the Sabaran' deserts are -void of moisture, and be would be engage! in a fruitless effort if be were seek ing a drop of discouraged .fluid. Optimism perches on the forges, nests among the molders, feeds with . I- . M f aaaa mW tAlTlr. ( .aaanaai a as ei v nni ni rvar- n l laiuoi m arw an inch of pessimistic hide, aad'tbok with such an advanced idea night drain, their , vein, as . dry ot j perfected, surely everyone then would have the time for babies. MRS. JESS C. HESS. Justice to the Servant. Mt Hood, Or March J. (To the Editor of The Journal)- I wish to write a few words in regard to the ti- it ia well knows that a great number of our women who are abo u aiuiuDw ma urns. .au uih uati - - - whn Baltimora harf cn '-..r. - ins song, of JubiUUon for th employed as house MrvapU are not iUhad almost as much malaria aai -tenographer and th. office t the Yazoo valley. , The health bureau has labored manfully to eradicate both malaria and th mosquito which transmits it,: but the way is beset with dif ficulties. The mosquitoes can be checked by pouring kerosene, on their breeding pools, Jdt this Is a mere palliation. . The ' effectual means is to drain all the stagnant pools and marshes.: But that costs what man has done man - can; do again, we may believe that future I money. boy carrie. him in his pockets. It Is sunshine -all tbe time in and around thai place of exceptional ac tivity, and all hand, will proclaim It over and over, ThV re Is nothing tbe matter with Portland!" The worker is always hopeful, op timistic, faithful, invariably honest. The worker V lifter, while he who lives from th. worker lives on bimr-- paxaaillcally ""-r- is hopeless, pessimis tic, cannot bs depended upon to lead I all, in regard to making tnem feel homelike, they snouiu om welcome their company at least into the dining room, and not in the kitch en, as it i. not said tfaar because she Is your servant she is aot.a nlc and respectable girl; therefore .he should be granted that privilege. In many case, we find that a servant has a room, ln either an attic or a basement, that isn't fit for a human being to live in. Then is it a wonder that so many, after their uays work U over, run out evening.! Furthermore, where there are chil- Manv a delicate young woman uaa ruined her health as a house servant, by doing such heavy work as tending! furnaces, which Is man's work. But still, it Isn't the work so much as the "tyrants." Every now and then they give the servant more work to do, so why don't they do the same thing thing with the low wages? Lucky are those who are fortunate enough to make their living In some other way. STMPATHIZEA. Belittling Wilson, Bruce Dennis in La Grande Observer (Republican). What a grave mistake Republicans are going to make if through the newspapers or on the stump they at tempt a campaign to belittle President Wilson. Many of us want to beat Wilson be cause we do not agree with certain principles of government that he be lieves in, but an attempt to go forth with heavy gun oratory, and scream ing editorials against the present chief executive will react just as sure as apple blossoms will bloom in the Grande Ronde valley next May. There are reasons for this belief. First, the day has passed for that kind of campaigning the Jim Blaine speech will not do in this year of 1916, and fierce criticism coupled with epithets that carry double meaning have long ago been supplanted with earnest, dignified argument by mod ern meVi. Second, President Wilson has within the past 14 "month. , seen hi. error on two great questions one on preparedness and one on a tariff commission. Yet be has been frank and open enough -to come out squarely and say he was wrong on those questions. - That kind of a man appeals to many people. He has not been a president that justifies malicious attacks, not by any means, and th. orator who in dulges in them is going to get tbe worst of the deal. - There are many things President Wilson believes and advocate, where in people honestly differ with him, and for that reason he is going to be energetically opposed in th. coming campaign with the hep., of defeating him. ' Snt nix on the rough .tuff, - Bebert, Boy and Sam.-Uediord Sua. o o Itrse aa. mora fires. We Tooeolla folks a settinc almost atread to oallo firee la Btoraa. The fire bells Boated eat twice la j week, once wfaea the home of U. Mtasfle I caught Ore, sad again when Mr. Arthur's fl I was wrning out loocaua ftsaa ROOSEVELT HAS REPUBLICANS 1 1 WORRIED MOOD Oregon Journal, "The above headline was uewd tbl week." say. C C. 8. In bis Aftel thoughts kollum of th. Detroit New I "It could have bees placed la type i long ago as 1114, when-T R headi the New York delegation to the Ct cago convention, and could have be used almost any day since.'' Morning Delight. How sweet to waken ln the morn When sunbeam, f lret begin to erel Across tne lea, and then to turn Right back again and go to sleee. Xoungstowu Telegram. How sweet to waken in the mom - When sunbeams first begin to bob .across me tea. and men to Know That poor old dad has got a lob. Palnesvllle Telegraoh-Republlcan. How tweet to waken in the morn. And find that vou are In your bed. And that the dream you had air true. The Candid Grouch. "It's imeaav thing to say," a?l Z.oke XcZ.ake, tbe tysdicated, GasAl Orouoh. "but yea earn always get r salt, by appeallag to a saaa's egottal aad a woman's vanity." However. "Hard luck raral;- falls to atta th. kind of fellow whose spring f.vj last, all th. year." - Thus does Claude Callan, ' gent' philosopher of the Fort Worth Bt Telegram, assure himself that cnange nas come over nis tixewi : Claude thinks that he'.' over n case of spring fever, apparently. r .-v-r . .-! ' -- ti,7i,i-lVi!.-tj'.fVi