THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND. SATURDAY, MARCH 18, 1918. THE JOURNAL AN IICDEPEOTMEWT HBWSPaPEH. S. JACKSON .................Pabttstie- j PubUshed every day. afternoon and inorator r (except Bonds y sftersoos)), at Tbe-Joersal Uulktiotr, btoadway end Ximhfn sts Port "land, 'Or.-' - " gatered at the postotnee at Portland, Or., for . transmiaalsu taroggk the stalls a aeeaad etaaa natter. . Tr.WrPHONEH Main -TITS: Home, A-0001. An , dapartjneota reached by thsse nam bar. Tsll r tba operator what department yoa wsat. TOR DION ADVERTISIHG EKPtlE3E5iTATIVB BeeJaaUs at Keataor Co.. Brunswick Bid., : 223 Fifth. Are.. New lock; 121S People's " ' a Bhif., CM c go. - Subscription terras by null er to say ad ' drs la tba Halted States or Mexico: DAH.T (MOBMSQ OB APTKKKOOX) 0i year.. MS.00 1 One month .50 SUHDAY. ' ' 'On rar...' $2.60 Oaa month .25 .": DAILT, (M0HTJINO OB AFTSBNOOS) AND ., . ECNOAT . Oaa yea...,... .IT .60 I One month t .65 Assertea aka sorbins; for herself bat what aha haa a right to aak for humanity liaelf. WOODBOW WILSON. - Million for defense, nt not a cent for tribute. CHABLES C. I'lNCKNKY. -8 Let tba aoldier be abroad If he will, ha ean do nothing tn thla ace. There la another personage, a personage leas Imposing In the eyes of rum, per fcaps Insignificant. Tba achoolmaater la abroad, .and I trust to biro, armed with bis primer, against the eoldlr In tall military rry. Lorti Brougham. JHR. SEXNOTT'S OPPORTUNITY I ONGRESSMAN SINNOTT of Oregon faces an extraordinary opportunity. He has suddenly como Into position in which ' he can render high service to his state. " Be has been named as one of the five members of a subcommit tee to report on the House grant land bill. The work of the sub committee will largely influence . the action of the main committee. . The action of the main committee will largely control the action cf . the House. Legislation at Wasb- - ington is more by committees than ; by the two chambers. As a member of the subcommit tee, Mr. Sinnott has a position of great strategic advantage. The is sue beforo him is whether Oregon Is to have 80 per cent or 40 pef cent from sales of the grant lands for roads and schools. The claimants represented by . Puter and others who have at tempted a filing on the lands are completely out of it. The court , decision eliminated them. Xb.a . principle it laid down made it ont of the question for Congress to consider their claims. Practically no : attention has been paid by , Congress to bills reflecting their claims. -On the committee with Con- - - gressman Sinnott are congressmen from neighboring states who should naturally have sympathy with his efforts. He can tell them and can tell the main committee and tell the House how Oregon has put up nearly $11,000,000 for reclama tion and got back only a song. He can tell them how Congress .long ago parted with the grant .lands, and that it cannot now reasonably set up a claim to take .them back for federal purposes. ;He can tell them how re fusal by the railroad to sell the lands held back Oregon develop ment and caused great loss to the state, notably in the grant land . counties. He can tell them how the fed eral government stood by and al lowed the railroad to hold the lands off the market, whereby ,. Cfeat injury was done Oreeon, and ' that devoting- SO per cent of the lands now to roads and schools would but partly compensate this state for Its losses. ; It Is a situation to appeal to the ambition and high endeavor of Mr. Sinnott or any-other man. It ia a chance to endow, the schools of Oregon with a handsome inheri tance lorall time, , It Is, an oppor tunity to add a 'great 8um to the Irreducible school fund and there by Increase the effectiveness cf that fund as system of rural credits. Never In his legislative career will Mr. Sinnott have a fairer op portunity to" render conspicuous "service. It is a chance that comes - but once in a lifetime. . : Ad vices from The Journal's Washington correspondent are that the chance' of Oregon Bccufing 80 per cent of the grant lands is tn grave doubt. Is Oregon going to thunder. Its demand for 80 per cent after' the se is lost, as it dltl fin- the case of reclamation? Are we going to wait 'until we lose and then raise a useless wall? AN UNSOLVED PROBLEM , - - ...... I HE federal trade commission i i gives -facta 'i to the country which indicate a pitifully small "profit for the average retail business. . The smaller the business the less the" profit, as a rule.. ,The icorner grocery in town and, coun try suffers most of all perhaps. If its ; owner comes out without a deficit at-ibe end of the year he is lucky. Indeed. The .failures In this line r business are : f Iscour aglngly numerous. The storekeep ers themselves ascribe their decline THROWING LINCOLN OVERBOARD R. NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER Is also warlike. He joins the D clamor to which the ultimate U armed mtervenwun a u. i?i President Wilson ought to nave "acted three year ago. he afA ft o Tnnfflnl 'ItitoTTrlaw. Why did not President Taft act five years ago, was the reporter's query. -1 . A. ' , . Dr. Butler's reply la significant. "A mistake by the previous ad ministration does not serve as an excuse for this administration, said Dr. Butler. And there you are. Mr. Taft'a policy has to be repudiated In order to be able to criticize Mr. Wilson. Mr. Taft's resistance to jingo clamor has to be condemned in order to condemn President Wilson's resist ance to Jingo clamor, and that is exactly the length to which Dr. Butler goes. Abraham Lincoln also resisted Jingo clamor m nis ume, ana re fused to make war on 'Mexico,, Just as did Mr. Taft and Just as has Mr. Wilson, and to condemning Taft and Wilson, Dr. Butler is con demning Abraham Lincoln. And that brings us to a clear realization of what the stand pat leaders are doing in their desire to "get" President Wilson. They dare not attack Wilson's legislative program. The dinner pail is full, and the tariff out of it. The president is for a tariff commission to make the tariff scientific and take It out of politics. They dare not attack the currency bill which takes control of money and credit out of Wall street and puts control in the hands of the people. They dare not attack the income tax which takes some of the bur dens off the poor. They dare not attack the president for saving the great mineral deposits of Alaska to the people by stopping the grab game of the Guggenhelms. They dare not attack the president for using the money in the treasury to finance crop movements and save farmers from being squeezed. They dare not attack the president for the movement to stop the practice of usury by come of. the national banks. - They dare not attack the president for establishing a trade com mission to protect legitimate business against Illegitimate business. They dare not attack the president for his great law which abol ishes interlocking directorates and prevents one great corporation from holding directorships in or unlaw! i lly absorbing a competitor. They dare not attack the president on any of his other great pro gressive measures, because he has lation demanded for decades by the people than has been enacted in a generation, and the people all know it. Consequently, they are engaged in the "extraordinary business of throwing Abraham Lincoln overboard policy overboard in order to attack It is an ungrateful thing, in the name of Republicanism, to thus repudiate the teachings and insult the memory of Lincoln, and there are hundreds of thousands of Lincoln Republicans who will bitterly resent it. It is a kind of leadership that is so false that it will tear the vitals out of the party. Besides, in the splendid friendship which President Wilson has created with the South and Central that unites the hemisphere In close millions of Americans accept and policy in the benefits it will bring, noblest results ever achieved by an to the competition of department stores and mail order houses. So they declaim against the parcel , post which makes mail orders feas jibl.e The retail dealer loads the farm produce he sells with an average advance of 35 per cent on the cost to him. It would seem as if this should yield him a good living, but it does not. The farmers who imagine that the retail dealer is amassing a big fortune at their ex pense are far in the wrong. The fact is that the small store keeper should be grouped with the wage earner and the small farmer as., a member of the "exploited" l class. A good deal of money passes through his till in the course of the year but precious little stays here. -This is not the fault of the department stores. It is the fault of circumstances which, deplete his till as fast as he can replenish it, and often faster. The small storekeeper is eaten up by unnecessary expenses. He must keep up a delivery outfit He must pay tribute to the ready made package firms. He must sell many of 'his goods at prices fixed in Boston and New York. So that the margin he allows himself on some goods is partly canceled by the deficit on others. But hisi""5" v 61C" "Mllu wlBn "P principal exploiter in the city isldown mt their own pockets to his landlord. It is a common say- i Psion the civil service employes ing that the small business man nobo,dvw 11 ect- T&e Parity works for the landlord. Whatever would lvelv to loo upon and T.nm mieht maka ia sunk in I would have the great merit of rent. , Either the small dealer performs a useful function or he does not. If he Is useful to society" conditions should be made such that he can do his task without ruining him self. If he is useless he should be eliminated. What form the dis tribution of goods may ultimately take nobody knows, but at present we can hardly dispense with the corner grocery. We should, there- j fore try to devise some way to give tne grocer a living income, n renr, stands in the way of this consum mation the sooner we get rid of rent the better for the world. Dr. Butler Baid in his speech at the playhouse that we had as good as solved our great economic prob lems. A fairer statement would .be that wo are just beginning to find out what they are. Now that there Is a strong pos sibility that the proposed 80 per cent of Oregon grant lands may be cut to 40, strong sentiment is de veloping in the state against tha reduction. Let it be hoped that it will not turn out to be a case of closing the barn door after the horse is stolen. PENROSE AND PENSIONS S' ENATOR PENROSE'S bill for pensioning retired government employes will please the thoughtless. The spectacle of an aged civil service employe turned out "to starve or beg" in his decrepitude is not agreeable The first shallow impulse of the mind is to "give him a pension." When we stop to think who must pay the pension the impulse is apt to be checked. ' If we pension retired government employes , the money to foot -the bill must be wrung from working people. At any rate, it surely will be wrung from them." .tTndet a more equitable system Of taxation perhaps the monied magnates might pay their just share, but aa matters stand thejr, do not and . will . not. in three years, secured more legis and throwing Mr. Taft's Mexican Woodrow Wilson. x American nations, a friendship union, peace and understanding, applaud the president's Mexican as one of the most valuable and American president. Whatever pensions this government awards its employes will come mainly out of the wages of day la borers and other wage earners. In their old age, as a correspondent of The Journal remarks, these wage earners have no pension to depend upon. They must be sup ported by their relations or by charity if they have not pinched and starved themselves to lay up a provision.' The government's civil service employes receive at least twice the pay of an average working man. His pay does not exceed 600 a year. Theirs rarely falls short of $1200. Their opportunity" to lay up savings is at least twice as great as his, and yet Senator Penrose asks the wage earner to contribute from his pittance to pay pensions to the civil service em ployes. This Is the kind of special Justice we might reasonably expect from the Pennsylvania boss. His motto is scriptural, "To him that hath shall be given and from him that hath not shall be taken away," even the little that he has. The civil service employes are a numerous class and an astute boss may see political advantage in showering largess on them. If Senator Penrose and other proving that their sympathy is sin cere and not made to order for political effect. The resolutions of the Salem grant land "conference" so-called were denounced by a special inves tigator before the House commit tee yesterday as not reflecting the real sentiment of Oregon as to the rant lands. The question is, why vra the hocus pocus of Senator Day and his allies ever permitted to dominate such a gathering and thereby misrepresent the state? Instead of asking nothing for the state, why did the "conference" resolutions not demand 80 per cent of the grant lands for Oregon schools and roads? Such resolu tions at Washington now would help to defeat the proposal to cut Oregon's allowance from 80 to 40 per cent for roads and schools. , THOSE RESOLUTIONS T HE Central Labor Council should beware. There is such a crime as les majeste, which being interpreted means im pertinence to the Lord's anointed. We do not say they have com mitted this awful crime, but Aey have come within an ace. of it. Those resolutions impeaching the wisdom, or perhaps the integrity. of. our great and good governor. make one shudder with horror and amazement. Governor Withy combe's attitude on a certain matter "is stultifying Jnd discreditable . to . himself and provocative of grievous Injustice to all Workers." Such were the impious words of the Labor Coun cil committee. And the surprisng thing about it Is that the earth did not yawn and .wallow them up. We do not see how 4t man aged not to. , Perhaps it will to night or tomorrow night For the earth, and those who 6wn It, feel very ; tenderly ' toward Governor Withycombe. They are not going to see his sacred name blasphemed without doing something about it The good jpovernor was sent to plead the cause of some working women at an . employers' meeting , in the . Chamber of. Commerce, as It appears. On the way, if we understand the situation, he for got what he "was sent to do and when he sot there he did the exact opposite. Instead of pleading for bis poor clients he pleaded against them. Well, what if he did? How can a man as .'great and magnificent . as the : governor of Oregon be expected to keep such a trifling matter-straight in his mind? Wo rather believe that the governor honestly thought those women asked, him to plead against them. Woman's nature is so mys terious. The governor has a good many things on his mind. He has the interests of the water power trust to look after. He must at tend to the welfare of the railroad in the land grant proceedings. He must keep a general guard over the rights and privileges of the big monied magnates of the state. How can he be expected to attend to the interests of the people, es pecially the working people? The governor feels like a big man in a big job and it is enough for him to plead the cause of big business. The poor can plead their own cruse. NOTHING THE MATTER WITH PORTLAND appetiztn; la every sens Is tba menu to day set before these who shall read in this column the testimony to the faet that tbere ia "Nomina- tne Matter with Portland This is No. 80 of tba series. Taw if any of Its predecessors surpass it la either interest or aiue. J UT this in your pips and enjoy J the aroma. There is a concern In Portland which pickles 1000 tons of cucum bers a year. It converts 1000 tons of apples into cider and vinegar. It makes sauer kraut out of 400 tons of cabbage. It makes 2000 pails of pure food Jelly. It cans 12 tons of cauliflower. It grinds up five tons of horse radish and tucks it away in fancy Jars. - It uses up 26 tons of onions in its pickle factory. It places a ton and a quarter pf peppers in its glass bottles. It made 1600 gallons of apple but ter last year. It turned out 32 tons of mince meat in 1915 and will make it 40 tons in 1916. It put out 4000 barrels of vinegar Just as if people were not sour enough last year without employing artificial means of creating wrinkles on their faces and "scowls" on some of their brows. It keeps two mustard mills run ning 313 days of the year and would make it 865 if there were no Sundays. It manufactures all kinds of Wor cestershire and pepper sauces. THE KNIGHT PACKING COMPANY. The Knicht Packing company is the name of the industry referred to. It Is one of Portland's pioneers. It started doing things 37 years ago, when this city still was nursing, and it is still on the Job. It employs 60 to 60 men and women in the busy season, and about half the number all the year. More than half Its help is female. yet its payroll aggregates $45,000 an nually. It buys all its canning and packing stock except olives, in the region trib utary to Portland. It contracts with farmers for years ahead for the products it consumes, agreeing to take that grown upon given number of acres, so that the aiTlculturist may not fear to plant lest there be no market for his crop. Its seven salesmen cover all the territory from Ashland, Or., south ward, to Bellingbom, Wash., to the north, and to Helena and Butte, Mont., and Pocatello, Idaho, eastward. Every town in this district is a patron of the institution. It has 76 immense pickling and vinegar tanks in its 100x200 four story building at 474 East Alder street, many of them so large that they hold SO tons of cucumbers each at one filling. F. I Knight, the corporation's manager and chief stockholder, buys all the grapes he can get his hands on, to be converted Into go-ape Juice, and hopes to secure 100 tons of them this year. IT'S A BIG INSTITUTION. The Knight Packing company is one of the solid, substantial Industries jt Portland. It does a net cash busi ness, and this method may have a voice la making it such. It is a principle which gladdens the heart of the producer who sells the products of his soil to the manufacturer. Only two of Its numerous productions are put up in tin, nearly all' the rett be ing placed In glass Jars, of which it consumes about two carloads monthly. Large quantities of Its horseradish are put up in Stone Jars, and Its pickles and vinegar are, of course, put up in wooden packages and glass. Thousands of barrels made in Portland, are used each year. On the advent of prohibition Mr. Knight bought up all empty whiskey barrels offered, but these will run but a short distance 4nto his yearly output. The company packs . and barrels eider vinegar, distilled vinegar, amber vinegar, dill, sour and sweet pickles, chow chow, plcalUll. India relish, Onions, sauerkraut, prepared mustard, horseradish, pepper sauce, Worcester shire saucs, sweet, and boiled cider, apple butter, mines. meat. Jellies, man tanllla, queen, stuffed and ripe Olives, Alive oil. ialad en, tomato . eatsnp, bluing .and ammonia, U. "Every product of this factory," says ; Mr. Knight, ; "dOttf dfm strictly to the pure-food, laws.: There is not an' impurity In anything we1 sell. We elm to; make the best in", the world. and mean it. too, and It makes no difference whera tha other factory is locaUcd . r - who runa it. The excel lence of these Oregon soil products help us to- accomplish this. The land backs rja up, and with our own de termination wo positively accomplish that which we determine to do. Con sumers In Portland, as well as thousands scattered all througrh the territory we supply, will testify to the truth of these statements. FINEST CAULIFLOWER GROWN. "I would no go so far as to de clare that Oregon cucumbers are the best in the world, but I do believe this of Oregon cauliflower. I feel confident Its equal Is not to be had apywhere else on earth. Look at and feel those heads, and see and know how large and solid they are. These lands surrounding; Portland, on either side of the Willamette river, south ward for more than 100 miles, are perfection for growing vegetables ' of any kind, and cauliflower especially. Tears ago, when our plant was much smaller than at present, there was a market for a greater quantity of cu cumber pickles than we had capacity to put up, and we1 would import a few carloads from Michigan and Wis consin. I found those very nearly the equal In size and flavor . of those grown here, but nowhere have I ever seen cauliflower quite as fine as that grown in tha Willamette valley. It is simply the best in the world, and it is fast acquiring a national repu tation' for Its superiority. "We have sold many carloads of cucumber pickles to the government for use at its forts, and unstinted praise bas been bestowed upon the product. Last season a lot of these were shipped to the Philippines, and tho same kind words came back con cernlng them. We found, however. those cucumbers grown south of Ore gon not so good. A GREAT COUNTRT FOR PACKERS "This is really a splendid part uf the country for our line of work. It is splendidly well adapted to the pro duction of fruits and vegetables, and by working these into marketable products here, right on the ground. as it were, a lucrative market is af forded those who engage in this class of farming:." The Journal representative spent more than two hours coursing around and through the Knight Packing com pany's big plant. There are long al ieways here and there, with so many branches that one unacquainted with the place would easily lose his way. and there are barrels and boxes of goods ready for shipment on every hand. Th Immense vinegar tanks must be 30 to 40 feet high. Wooden pipes connect them, and the manu facture of that article Is consura mated without its ever coming in contact with metal of any kind. Mr. Knight explained that If it did. the metal would Injure Its color and fla vor. For a fact, what is there to be desired in life which Oreeon does not possess? This whole region is gar landed in beauty provided by nature, and Its soil is of garden richness. There would be few unemployed tn Portland if everybody would restrict their purchases strictly to those products produced here. Factories all along the lirte would have to be so greatly enlarged as to provide em ployment for thousands of workers at home, Instead of doing that same thing for eastern communities. Port land and Oregon country money keep thousands of men and women busy in factories beyond the Rocky moun tains. This ought not to be. Letters From the People ronmmniilrstton sent to Th Journal for publication in thla department should be 'crlt- teu on only one aide or tn paper, snoaia noi exceed 800 words in leaf tb and mast be ac companied by the name and addresa of die sccdsr. It tbe writer does not desire to hare tb name pubuaneo, be snoaia so siaia.j "TH m as Inn is tne rreatett ef all reformer. Tf ratlonalizea eterrthln it touches. It robs prlnclpes of aU false sanctity and throws the in back on their reasonableness. If they bsre no reasonableness, it rnuueasir crusnas imb oni ot existence and sets up Ita own. conclusions la their stead." wewirow rr uson. The Civil Pension. Portland, March 17. (To the Editor of The Journal) In an editorial in last Sunday's Oregonlan, for obvious reasons, that paper went on record in favor of the Penrose civil pension bill for federal employes. In yesterday's Oregonlan a Mr. Mlsenhamer. as sec retary of the local union of federal employes, commends the stand of the Oregonlan. Of course a postal clerk holding a life Job like Mr. Misen haraar. Is red hot for a pension, re gardless of us fellows digging in the sewers, who pay tne bins, in I860 this nation had 82,000,000 Population and It cost 104,000,000 to run the gov em men t. or t2 per capita. For several years it has been costing mors than one billion dollars to run the govern ment, or more than $10 per capita. The pension bill now pending before congress appropriates mors than three times as much money as Jt cost to run the entire government in 1880 Now eomes the Oregonlan for very obvious - reasons advocating civil pensions, which in a few years will run into hundreds of v mil lions of dollars more. On the waiting, or eligible, list there are twice as many ready to take the Jobs of any civil service employes who are not satisfied with the lot, or with the wages whleh they are now receiving. It Is not fair to further burden tha ten, million wage earners in these United States, who actually produce the wealth of the nation, who are not under civil service, who receive no va cations with full pay, the majority of whom are taken care Of in their old age by charity or their relatives. - The civil service employe today is receiving more than a square deal and should b satisfied, or soma of these days the ' workers of the nation will organise and overthrew the whole civil service system. A MAN' IN THE DITCH. Argues Piparedenss Cmm. Vancouver. Wash,, March 14. To the Editor Of The Journal I am s firm believer In preparedfieaa protec tiva preparedness and not aggressive. preparedness, if 1 may state It thU. I do not quite understand the at titude of the man who is not fn fa vor of being prepared for any great crisis that is. to say the least, a poe PERTINENT COMMENT SMALL CHANGE BaaBSBwSS .... -.'V-.,- Deadman's hill, near Verdun, is rightly named, whoever occupies it. Secretary of State Olcott says nick names can't appear on the ballot and a lot of them shouldn't. a " Reopening of the Panama canal April 15 is promised unless those pesky slides play an April tool Joke. ' a Two Oreeon candidates for deleratea to the Republican national convention don't want to be bound by instruc tions irom tne voters. Now comes the suggestion that a woman be made secretary of the navy. She could keep up with the rapid changes in sty la among navies of the woria. , a i- Just whan tha European a-enrranhV class is ready to pass final examina tion, along comes a new course on Mexico. And this, too. when the fish are beginning to bite! . There is something- to be said for those Mexican bandits, after all. Thev were obliging enough not to wait until midsummer in the hot tamale belt be fore Inviting our soldiers down there. Those 15.000 Santa, Fe railway em ployes who were surprised by a 10 per cent wapre Increase that came like a boit out of a clear sky should have ex pected something of the sort with prosperity storming the country. WHEN THE SPECIAL From the Spokane Spokesman-Review (Republican). With such vital problems as na tional preparedness up for solution President Wilson is pleading with con gress to speed up its progress. After Speaker Clark and Democratic House Leader Kltchln returned from a con ference at the White House on Monday they held a conference with other house leaders, and it was the consen sus of opinion that under the greatest pressure the president's program could not be disposed of before fall.jtspeaicer Clark thought the house might clear the decks by September, but Republi can Leader Mann said it would take until December. Meanwhile this was what was going forward in the senate, where for weeks the water power bills have practically blocked progress. All day the senate debated not the water, power question, but on whether it should continue its long wrangling over that legislation. After five and a half hours discussion It finally voted. SO to 28, to make the water power bill the unfinished busi ness. The conduct of the senate majority on this issue is becoming a national scandal. As Senator Norris of Ne braska told the senate the other day. the people of the United States are not thinking of water power now, and in that lack of public attention the grab bers see an inviting opportunity to press their program. ot raw tn v wav every right the people possess," declared Senator Nor ris, "and they will not nna it out, lor a long time, wnne may n csku to watch, the special interests will steal the platter clean. Thla bill (the Shields measure) gives them an op portunity to do It; and tf we pass this bill without amendment. In my humble Judgment we will find that these val uable rights belonging to posterity will have frittered away ior a ioui, sui the song not sung." 9 m aiffnrii Pinchnt ia making a gallant fla-h tn imnat tha Country, but What is one voice in 100,000,0007 In an open letter to the president, of January 29, Mr. Pinchot said: "Th KMelfla hill arives the USa Of enormously valuable property to the water power mieresis wimuui it.nsitlnn. Ostennihlv it nrOVides for a method of restoring its own prop erty to the public at tne ena ci ou Aa rruttr nf fact it haa been so drawn as to make It practically im possible ror in peopie to ran mcir own water powers back into their haa Thl, it roa bv onaning tbe way for indefinite litigation, and by the uae of language -unaer wnicn mo United States might be required to take over and pay for the whole elec tric lighting system of cities or the asittinmont nf manufacturing plants in order to get possession again of water powers ownea -oy mo peopie. When Mr. Pinchot sounded that n. r Via mihrs ridiculed it: said It was trumping up imaginary evils; that it falsified tne-true intern i me maMi T3nt when that Phase of the question was run down in the senate debate by tne inenas or. conervwon, Mr. Pinchot's charge was substantiated so fully that the supporters of the grab were forced to acquiesce . in silence. siblllty. We all prepare for the so called "rainy day." We lay up money for our children. We buy property to get the benefit of the raise n price. Why not prepare ourselves as a nation to resist the attack of any foreign power that might be pleased to attack us? t honor any man or woman who declares against war and its hor rors and does all that is possible to prevent It, but if the time should come that we would be attacked what would become of us in our present state of unpreparednessT Some argue that If we prepare to fight It will be an incentive to try the game. This mighjt be true, in some cases, but with the people at large I do not accept this view. , One thing, however, is quite sure, that if we are prepared to resist at a mo ment's notice it will cause any nation, however strong, to hesitate before throwing down the gauntlet. It is very, true that we could get any number of volunteers at the first intimation of trouble, but past ex perience has shown us that the vol unteer, although filled 'with patriot ism and courage, is no match for the trained soldier. I will gladly pay a little more -tax to support a well trained army. I believe our youth should be taught the horrors of war, but at the same time the importance of being prepared for any emergency. - There Is, to my mind. Just one care for war. When every nation on earth shall recognise the supremacy of Christ and follow his teachings we shall not have to prepare for war. But as long as the opposite condi tion exists, no matter now much we may long for universal peace, war will be a possibility. LEB R. PATNjs. The Case or David tagarv Portland, March 16. To the Editor of The Journal X read in today's Jour nal of how the tables are being turned In the ass of the Toungtown riot Please allow me te tell another story of Toungstown. 'V On January I. David Iftgar, an em . ploy of - the Yeuftgstown Sheet A Tubs company, having worked ; night shift the previous night, came to work at p. m. He then. learned about tbe walkout that had occurred in the morn ing. The bosses tried to induce him AND NEWS IN BRIEF ORKQON BlUKUOUTS - Work is in progress on the club house of the Roseburg Oun club at Winchester. . a- Tha number of contests in tha local land office Indicates to the La Grande ' Observer, a very strong aesire on tne part of some to getjback to the soil. The Medford Dostoffice will be moved into the new federal building this month and will officially open , April 1, six weeks ahead of contract ume. 0 Baker's met'ropolltanism is to be en hanced by the elimination of the use less noises that auto engines are cap able of making. Chief of Police Jack son has so ordered. a . "With the grain elevator nearing completion at the port dock and Uma tilla county proposing hard surfaced roads to the Columbia, a port owned boat and barge line will be very much In order," says the Astorian. Boost, for newspaper pubUcty, in Gardiner Courier: "Not a day passeB but the Courier receives a request front some one who lives at a distance ask ing for a sample copy of the Courier, and two or three such requests some times in each mail. In air cases we send the paper. What is the reason for this? Simply that the one who asks for the copy is seeking informa tion concerning this section of the country, and they can get it by no other means so satisfactory." INTERESTS FORAGE . Senator Norris was speaking and this question was put to him by Sen ator Kenyon: "Was the senator in the chamber yesterday when the senator from Washington (Mr. Jones) who fa vors this bill, admitted that this meant practically perpetual franchises?'' Mr. Norris I was not in the cham ber, but I understand he made that ad mission. Mr. Kenyon He did make that ad mission, and I think the senator wlU agree that that is true under this bill. Mr. Norris I think so. Mr. Konyon It would be Just as well to say so as tojurround it with this kind of language which means the same thing." s Mr. Pinchot has been ridiculed from Maine to California for warning the nation that it was drifting into in creasing monopolization of water power. fincnoi was cnier loresier under Roosevelt. Read now .what Chief Forester H. L. Graves of the Wilson administration said on that subject In a recent report to the senate: "If inquiry is made into the control by certain corporations it Is found that 85 public service corporations, through ownership of properties, majority own ership of stock, lease, or direct man agement, control 88.6 per cent of the total public service power in the United States. Thirty-five of these 85 control one-half of the total; 16 control one-third, and 10 control one- fourth. Of these 85 corporations, 59 have waterpower developments, "and of these 59, 18 control 2,356,621 water horsepower, or more than one-half of the total water power used in public service operations in the United States. Of these 18 corporations, nine control more than one-third of the total, and six more than one-fourth." s The grabbers are pressing their op portunity with great shrewdness and persistence. As Senator Norris said: "The entire country is worked up about military preparedness, and, like the senate of the United States, the peo ple are not paying much attention to water' power development. I am talk ing now to practically empty seats. Senators have no Interest in it; the people have not any interest in it; and that is the kind of a time when the unseen government gets in its work." While the people sleep the big inter ests forage. We can not better close this article than with the following ex tract from a recent number of the Wall Sftreet Journal: "Those who seek James B. Duke do not find him now in the offices of the tobacco Industry which is identified by his name, but usually in the office of a corporation which is occupied in developing water power so that it may be converted into electric energy. "Several years ago Mr. Duke, with others who are associated with htm, made a prolonged excursion through many parts of the far west Reports were circulated soon after his return which told of his investment of capital in large amount in water power privi leges in the far west. He is believed to have 1 ad an eye to the future, ap parently not having any faith In a statement made recently by a man of some authority that the reason there is not larger development of water power for electric energy is to ba found in the lack of profit." to work, but he refused and Joined a group of strikers who had congregated on the street and were dlseusaing the strike. Shortly afterwards a bunch of uniformed and armed guards, without any provocation, fired directly into the crowd. The Toungstown Vindicator, in a special edition appearing at 6:80 p. m., January 7, states that between 76 and 100 shots were fired Into the crowd on Bioad atreet. In that article the Vindicator lists David In gar at the city hospital with a bullet wound In his leg. David Ingar, like the rest of the crowd, started to run away when, the shooting began Two bullets hit him, one in the shoulder and one In the mall ef the back. A policeman brought him to the mayor's office. From there he was taken to the city hospital, David Ingar was at .the city hospital fully three hours before the rioting began. The following day. in his still weak ened condition, he was taken to the county Jail,, charged with rioting, and held for 11600 bail. I don't know what the charge against Judge. Gary is, or what the Toungs town courts will do with him, but of one thing 1 feel certain that Judge Qary will never be sentenced to as long a term of imprisonment as David Ingar has already served for that "rioting" he is supposed to have done while he was flat on his back in tha hospital. And David Ingar is still to be tried and probably sentenced. ' B. E. NILS80N. As to tho Humane Society. Portland, March 13. To the Editor of The Journal I have noticed that our city commissioners have found an other easy method to give out the tax payers, money and don't control its expenditure. The Oregon Humane so city is to havi a loan from the city as well as receive 80 per cent of the dog, money collected, so tbey can op erate from a palatial knnel properly constructed, heated, aired and lighted. Now please state wherein the city charter; gives the right to our commis sioners to lend this money and by what authority they band out of the city treasury 80 per cent of dog collection money. Please quote the section of the charter. 1 - P. KELLT. The authority was given the com mission by vote of the people on an amendment to the Portland charter at the last city election. . ! lho)nce 0er 1 I SV WBVtMPMm BEFORE WE START IN today for our little ramble down the kollum I want to toss my oompli- f nienia across tne roouignts to ' Man .. ager Myrick of the Columbia the- . atre. f J Because I suggested in this Hav en of Hopefulness day before yester day that Billie Burke be billed thereafter as- "Sunshine of the Screen." y J For that's what Billi is abso lutely.. ' -w J And yesterday he billed her that way. J And I'm glad he agrees with me. - because there isn't anything that I know of that's mors agreeable than to be agreed with. . f , J It gives you the same good opin ion of the other fellow. that you have of yourself. - J However our personally conduct ed tour for today Is otherwhere. '. as Bill Bristol would say when presenting an alibi. for an innocent client. J And the particular otherwhere to which I refer is the First National bank. where I went yesterday to pay a social call to Arthur Jones the assistant cashier. which of course is all I eould have paid. J And he dismissed a millionaire. who wanted to borrow $200. and turned to me. and took me in a cage. and showed me $76,000 In green backs. J And Arthur and H. Sprague Bur din the teller tossed It around carelessly. like I would three or four hun dred. if somebody would let me. J And then Arthur took me through a barbed wire entanglement. and past a beautiful stenographer ' named miss Smith. only iie stopped at Miss Smith. which shows that history repeats Itself. J And Miss Smith smiled and said she liked the Once Over. and I said I liked stenographers. or something like that. ? Anyway I tried to be nice and like it was nothing for me to be. wandering around wide awake where there was so much money. J And I stumbled on as Jack Lon- wn wuuiq j in my oeunum, i. J And we went into a steel cave. J And Arthur said It was the re serve vault. J And the other man twirled a hob and then twirled another nob. and opened a hole In the wall about as big as the oven of our range out at Oak Grove. tf And he said there was 8400,000 in gold in the canvas sacks In that hole. J And when he told me to lift a sack his voice sounded far away. VAnd I lifted it and it was 110, 000 and weighed 37 pounds. J And ha opened other doors and showed me more gold and silver and paper. f And I noticed that 12000 In goM fives was Just as big as a nickel's worth of peanuts. with which I am familiar. TAnd while we were in there I saw 11,347,600. according to my flgureC .whlh mov tint a r. wltH trio bank's. J And altogether I saw $1,998,000 and a few cents. ' ajTbat Is I saw it all except about 384,000. that the boys at the windows were using to make change. J And there was a hank examiner working at the same time I was. and his figures may not agree with mine either. j And after I got out everything looked hazy and I felt queer. tf And upstairs there were a lot of girls. J And they all looked like the girl on the dollar. except that they had rainbows around their heads. Just like A. 1j. Mills the presi dent had around his down stairs. j And I was afraid to ask Arthur If h could see the same thing. and I wanted to get out in the r and see if the people outside looked the same way because f LISTEN One of the things that . Arthur told me as w went around was about ths large percentage of people who come into banks when they get ready to go crasy. Dangerous Days. Today is "orange day." Yesterday was St. Patrick's day. ' Almost to close for comfort. The Difference. E. Roscu Pershln of Portland, is a nephew of General Pershing, Amer ican commander In Mexico. The orthographic variance in Ros eoe's and the general's names Is ex plained by this morning's Oregonlan as follows: "The difference in the spelling ot the name is caused by the different spelling adopted by different members of the family after coming to this country." There you have It, Wherever there's a difference there's a differ ence. Hence the difference. Get the idea? ' Prom Picture to Pumps. ORTON S. GOODWIN, the Dumas of Portland press agents, haa gone to Los Angeles to introduce to the peo ple of southern California a valveless pump. Goodwin has recently been touring the northwest with moving picture films. He usually press agents at the Oaks in the summer. Query; What will John Cordray do without himT Who will get beautiful chorus ladies to fail from balloons? Who will have country visitors diving in tanks to rescue drowning maidens? When the Street and Town reporter broke the sad news of Goodwin's de parture to the esteemed city editor, the latter was no sadder than usual and merely said: "All I hope is that John Cordray won't try to save money and write his : own press dope himself." . - -' Inventor Weals Green '.Tie.- f C? MORTON COHN appeared today k7 at 'he Strand corner wearing a , handsome green nee tie. .Mr. conn IS the inventor of photoville., .o-v -i i i