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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1916)
V THE OREGON " DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, : 1918. -i - i Alt IWDBPBNDBNT NEWSPAPER. C. . JACKSON.: , Pobllhr ttbllaliad rrj say. atternooa and mornliw rpt gaodaj afternoon), at T!i Journal Baildlag, Broadway and TambUI afreets. Portlaad. Or. Lotarad 'tt Tbe poatofflce at Portland. Or., for : traaamlaalna tbrongb tba malls aa aeeoed Vlaaa Matte. laTEPHONHI Mala T1T3: Boom. it-SOM. All departmenta reached by theaa nnmbera. Tall tba oparator what department yon want. rOUEIQN ADVERTISING BEPRE8ENTATIVB . Baajanla Kaattior Co., Brnnawlek BMa.. ' 225 Fifth At... Or Kotk. Uttt Feopla'e Uae ttMg., Chirac. . -: Subscription terms by mall or to any addraaa is tba (Jnltad States or Mcilco: DAILY (MOBNINO OR ArTERMOO) OM MI tiM I On moat . J" ;r - SUNDAX. One yaar 12. W I One montb .23 vDAlLT (MOBNINO Olt AFTERNOON) AND ONOAX. Ona yaar S7.SO I Ona rbontb -AS ba baa a riant to aak for buminltr Until. WOODBOW WILSON. Million! (or defanaa. but nut a cent for . trlbnta. CHARLES C. PINCKNKT. America la a frown by tba natlooa. 1 4 fortnoata couttry ; alia folllea of our European Napoleon Booaparta. JASON LEE st T HE Oregon Historical Society's Quarterly baa begun the pub lication of Jason Lee's diary. We know of no worthier en- terprlae which it could have un- dertaken. Jason Lee is a com- j mandlng figure in Oregon's early r history. We do not heBitate to. say that the pioneers of the state owed more to his genius and courage j than to any other factors. Jason Lee was osfensibly a Meth f odiflt missionary but in reality he J -was a great deal more than that. He was a far-seeing statesman who understood the Importance of Ore- v gon to the United States and took timely measures to bring it into - the Union. He perceived promptly the folly 1 , of trying to do serious missionary .work among the desperately lazy and badly diseased Indians of the ' ' Willamette valley. The Nez Perces, ; who had first invited missionaries t to the coast, were of a very differ- ent stock. Accordingly Lee soon I abandoned his strictly missionary j - task and set about the labors of a " Y statesman. Under the pretext of -establishing mission stations he J planted outposts of Americanism I.- at strategic points in the Oregon i' country which helped effectually ' to undermine British influence. I , Ho -understood the economic needs of the Willamette valley f and was one of the first to unite In the" Importation of breeding :at- tie from California. He also joined in founding the firs schools in ' Oregon, and took a sturdy hand in the movement for a provisional government. Jason Lee deserves all the rec ognition he is likely to receive. His later career was clouded by slander and misfortune but his memory Is one that Oregon should delight to honor. - The pupils of the Portland high schools are going to study- the va rloua 1 measures on the November ballot and debate them for the In formation of members of the Parent-Teacher association. After reading some of the measures it 1b safe to say that if somebody does Dot tell us what they are all about we will never know. f AN EMPIRK A N EXCURSION of Portland business men is being Bhown by the people of Grants Pass that the Rogue River coun try is another empire in Oregon. .. It Is an Empire that has for years been ! struggling against adversa circuirfstances and conditions, but which, in the face ot these has made wonderful progress. v- With the mountains between it - and "California to the south, more mountains between it and the 'ocean on the west, and with the , long haul to the north over a railroad whose sentiments turn- to , wards the south, the Rogue River country has been having a hard time.' Yet in the face of top . heavy freight charges it has mado long strides forward. . It la famed for its fruit and its general productiveness. Its moun tains, dented here and there by the shafts of the miners, have yielded fortunes, and yet contain fortunes. It has water power for factories and! far reaching forests waiting to ' be- sawed Into lumber. It Is today; producing more sugar beets than any other part of tne state, and has a million dollar sugar fac tory for - the refinement ot the products of these fields. Surely Oregon is the mother of - many empires. " If It be true that there are at torneys In " Portland, we will ' not say ' lawyers, who are ' charging needy widows fifty per cent of the pension money due. them as a fee for making application to the pen sion department, then there are in- WHEN THE COUNTRY WAS ON FIRE r N HIS 8pringfleld speech Mr. Hughes went to the great length of charging that President Wilson "played politics in his prevention Tr the railroad strike." . ' In the same way, Mr. Hughes may think President Wilson "played politics" in each of the popular acts of his administration. He may think Mr. Wilson "played politics" in securing passage of the federal reserve syatem for preventing panics and keeping the people's stock of money widely distributed through the country for use In moving crops and financing enterprise, instead of keeping it In WallH street for the use of stock gamblers. Mr. Hughes may think Mr. Wilson "played politics" in securing the creation of a tariff commission for protecting farmers and plain people as well as the barona of cotton and steel. e may think Mr. Wilson "played politics" in going to the senate and appealing to the leaders to pass the child labor bill. He may think the president "played politics" In securing the cre ation of a farm loan banking system to help American farmers get out of debt. He may think the president "played politics" In securing a federal trade commission for finding out what may be the matter with business and ascertaining what may be done to help business, industry and agriculture. , Mr. Hughes may think the president "player! politics" in securing the creation of a board with great powers to restore thg flag of American merchant fleets to the high seas and to send American ves sels into all the ports of the world. He may think Mr. Wilson "played politics" when, before the fed eral reserve system became operative, he ordered government money in the United States treasury sent to all parts of the United States to finance the crop movement and save American farmers from being skinned as usual In selling their grain. He may think Mr. Wilson "played politics" when, at the outbreak of the war, marine insurance becoming prohibitive, he secured passage of a law by which the government has regularly Insured at reasonable rates the wheat of American farmers and other products en route to Europe. Mr. Hughes may think President Wilson "played politics" when, for the first time In 80 years, he caused the postoffice department to return a surplus instead of a deficit. Mr. Hughes may think the president "played politics" when he established a federal employment bureau by which jobs in one part of America and the jobless men in another part of America are brought together. , Indeed since Mr. Hughes claims that the president "played politics" in keeping the United States out of Industrial civil war, he may also think President Wilson1' "played politics" in keeping America out of war with Mexico and out of war with Germany. If in all these and the other good things Mr. Wilson has done he has been "playing politics," would It not be a good thing to have Mr. Wilson kept in office so he can play more of that kind of "politics"? Rut the great question is: la it President Wilson who is playing politics,-or Is IV Mr. Hughes who is "playing politics"? During those anxious weeks when the whole country held its breath in fear lest the catastrophe of an industrial civil war descend upon the coyntry, did Mr. Hughes, who now Icnows all about what should have been done, offer any suggestion or propose any plan by which the railroad chiefs, and their employes could be brought together? He was making' public fspeeehes on great matters of state sincere now, be helpful in delivering the country from the Impending consequences by telling how the strike could be averted? Since he waited until after it was all over before uttering one word or one syllable, was he not waiting until .President Wilson and congress had acted so that he could take sides against them just the same as in the Mexican question he takes sides with Huerta against the president? Is that "playing politics" or is it not "playing politics"? Meanwhile, this country was almost on fire when President Wilson had to act. Industrial war was but cancelled all agreements to furnish fruit cars, grain ars, lumber cars, livestock cars and every kind of car. The travelers were notified that no tickets would be sold. The whole of collapse. Congress was flooded the country to prevent the strike. grams by thousands appealing to him to save the fruit crops from rotting, to save people In cities from starving, to save business from being stagnation, to save the country from conflagration. In this hour of dreadful possibilities, congress acted. Less than two days before the strike was to take effect, it passed the bill car rying the eight-hour principle for situation. It prevented the strike. but it put out the fire. It saved the Mr. Hughes says the president gate. Whoever heard of a fire department stopping to Investigate the cause of a fire before proceeding to put It out? If an American citi zen's house is on fire, he puts afterward. That is what the president and the conflagration provides for full a final adjustment based on justice claims that the investigating should have been done first and the fire have been put out afterward, and because President Wilson did it the other way, he says President Wilson "played politics." One of the big railroad presidents who was present at all the con ferences between President Wilson and the railroad chiefs has testi fied. He Is F. D. Underwood, president of the Erie railroad. He said Monday in an interview: Mr. Wilson, however, is not playing estly believed was for the good of the ?o one could associate with Mr. Wilson as the railroad men of the country did during these negotiations and charge Mr. Wilson with playing politics in any way. In charging that President Wilson "played politics" in preventing the railroad strike, Mr. Hughes is committing political suicide. It la a political blunder from which he can never extricate himself. - The American people wanted the strike prevented. Mr. Hughes' insistence that the strike should not have been prevented ln order that time could be taken to Investigate is a dreadful proposal. divlduals ln Portland who lack the attributes of ordinary manhood. BLACKMAIL, BUT I T HAS always been the custom to blame the woman. Adam set the precedent, so we are told, and, ever since, the sons of Adam have been following in father's footsteps. We are reading now of the ar rest of a "blackmail ring" in Chi cago composed of fair sirens who have lured many susceptible men of plethoric purse into positions from which they have been able to extricate themselves quietly only by the emaciation of their money bags. The current thought, and, with out doubt, the law, runs to the effect that the sirens are guilty of an offense "against the peace and dignity of the state of Illinois and the statutes in such cases made and provided." But what about the men? Were they not breaking some statute, or willing to do so, when they lis tened to the sirens' songs? When they put themselves, and their purses, in danger were they not doing things against the peace and dignity of the state? Are they so innocent of wrongdoing that the mantle of charity and the merci ful cloak of silence should be wrapped about them? It was easy for Adam to say that Eve coaxed him to eat the apple, but in all probability if Eve had not have been a dutiful wife she ' would have testified that Adam reached for the fruit even as he coaxed. It is estimated that the ship building' contracts either now be- all that time. Why did he not, if two days away. The railroads had railroad system was on the point with telegrams from every part of The president received such tele to prevent America from burning, paralyzed, to save industry from Interstate trainmen. It saved the It may not be comDleted legislation. people. , should have taken time to investi out the fire first, and Investigates congress did. The law that stopped investigation by a commission and to all concerned. Mr. Hughes politics, country. He Is doing what he hon- ing filled, or waiting to be filled, by shipbuilding concerns on the Willamette and Columbia rivers amount in the aggregate to $20, 725,000. That is a pretty good be ginning for one season's work in a new industry. SAVING THE GIRLS A' PHILADELPHIA research bu reau has studied the cases of six hundred girls who went wrong and are now in cor rectional institutions. The con clusion of the investigators is that most of the girls came from "fam ilies in which the relationship be tween the parents was abnormal or where one of the parents was away from home." The relations between parents often become abnormal when they have too much money. The same thing happens when they have too little. The family is most secure when it has neither poverty nor riches but Just enough for health, happiness and comfort When one parent la "away from home" per manently it is almost always on account of too much or too little money. Family quarrels arise most commonly from idleness and superfluity, but almost as com monly from want. So if we wish to make family Hie secure and save the girls from ruin, we must see to it that parents are spared the curse of superflu ous wealth and save them. too. from the equally blighting curse of poverty. Chicago dressmakers, having de creed that the ladies shall be cov ered with nocketa. now dHrtA tht ih..VMt .h.n ..J Betted or something until theyj look like trousers, the whole ef- money controlled standpat Interest feet to be embellished with a climb- consider the importance of l kMpiac in .,,. . ... the background any reference to the ing trellis of cute little roses. All many genuinely beneficial' acbleve of which will be Just too sweet menu that have come with Wood row for anything i Wilson's tenure ot office. About their ' , only discussion on that line consists of . '. . attempted ridicule, and with that they An Oregon City man has sued ret nowhere. Such phrases as -the his wife for divorce because he Mexican muddle," watchful waiting-." says she Is continually, talking, Tfc.fa an c, That s where the Sultan of Sulu has the best of it. He has wives enough ao that they can entertain ... one another without him having to . Ul s 1101CU. ' j Letters From the People I Cominnaleatluisa aent to Tba Journal for publication la this department abould b writ, len on oaly 00a side of tba paper, abould not exceed 800 worda to leagtb. sod moat be ac companied by the name and addrea ef tba aeoder. If tba writer doea not deairo to bare tba auu published ba abould ao atate. "Dlaeoaalon la tba area teat of all reformers. It rationalises arecytbinr It touches. It robe Elnciples of aU falsa sanctity and throws tbesi ck on their reasonableness. If they bare so reasonableness. It ruthlessly emabes them out of eziatenco and sets up Its own conclusions la their stead." Wood row Wilson. The President's Poise. Portlani" Hrr 1 Tn tVi VAitnr rt The Journal One Is entitled to change j onn'a ttit,i. . (.,,n ... , peclally upon the mutation of ' the i Situation Itaoir On lh mithrolr rT I the European war the president had no reason to anticipate a transgression of international law by any of the bel ligerents, concerning warfare or any thing else. As the presumption of in dividual knowledge of local law re lieves the authorities of all obligation to proclaim it and to declare how its , lumbu river highway violations would be met, so does the This general subject has been from ?r,tfrnmtPni -1) k"owled ,f f i time to time discussed by the civic bu Miternational law obviate the necessity , rejHJ f the porUand chamber of Com- f.r .?VC l.hu Vjopty of similar ac- , m of which t am chalrman. How tivity by the foreign department of a ever the Coiumbia river highway . Is country An official declaration of b ond thft Jurlsdlction of civic duties our posit on regarding freedom of the of thl bureau. There is no question seas, at the inception of the conflict. that tha natural condltions as they ex would have evinced doubt in the effl-1 lst 8houid be,' perpetuated and con cacy of taternatlonal law and In the I eerved and the movement to do so I sincerity of European pledges to b- . am gure wJU haV6 tne 8Upp0rt of tills serve it. Besides these evil results i j fw xr. T.n from such a declaration, our people would have been incited eagerly fb. watch for violations of the law of na tions, and excitedly to speculate on cur prospective course in that carni val of blood. At that time the president's accu rate divination of our needs (they be ing, fortunately, only psychological) was eminently revealed in his ealru declarations of neutrality; his persua- ; ment( or lmproVement should be in dl sive admonitions to maintain our per- lect accord wlth nature and be passed sonal equilibrium relative to the upon Dy such commission before per merlts of the combat; and his mild mit t0 erect l8 Kiven. There should be suggestion of the limitations of our alao a movement started by such com interest in the whoie affair. It re- miSSion to see that old shacks and oth quired but a short while of calmness er deleterious obstacles are removed, on our part to fathom the entrancing . T belIcve that a great deal can be done iicuuuB ana romantic iTotrdoVubtathat ! of war glory. We began to doubt that ! a war wouia speeauy pusn us lorwara majority of whom undoubtedly are de into a fambus generalship or a hand-, slrous of lending their aid toward some majordom where we would be ar- maintaIning a ciean and unobstructed rayed ln the choicest toggery and highway. where our duties would consist largely It occurs to me that regulation could of referring solemnly to the valor ot te better handled providing a highway "our dead boys" and of assuring anx- , mUnicrpai zone were created by proper ious mothers that their sons "died like awful procedure, taking ln the high heroes." No; current events show that way and necessary distance on each most soldiers are candidates for the Blde thereof. One does not find con grave, and that their greatest fortune ceSsions, amusements or other things lies in sidestepping the yawning detracting from the natural beauties chasm. j jn the Tellowstone, Tosemite, or Gla- Unhappy occurrences during the . cJer national parks, or in the Grand past two years, however, have indi- , Canyon. We are endeavoring to bring cated that a continuation of our peace- j before the eyes of the w"orld the great ful status may require a -compara- j natural beauties of the Columbia river tively large army and navy; if blood : highway, and it, therefore, seems to can be saved in this way let the ex- i me that the affairs of the highway penditure of money be made; there ; 6hould be so controlled and adminis can be no greater purpose for financial i tered that nothing will be erected or outlay. rxuL, MAjiA.r.i. Front Page Editorials. Portland, Sept. 19. To the Editor of The Journal I have often observed that the Washington street afternoon paper runs its seemingly most Impor tant editorial articles on the first page, instead of on the regular editorial page. What is the reason of this extraordinary procedure? INQUIRER. The explanation is doubtless to ba found ln the sad conviction of the managing editor himself that the front page of the Telegram Is the only page T " "TV aLwWL . subscribers, and, thinking a great deal puts the editorial articles that he wants read on that page, to the exclu sion of the news. An Appreciation. McMinnville, Or., Sept 18. To the Editor of The Journal Please let me tell you that your Sunday Journal con tained six of the most instructive and advanced editorials that one could wish to read. The advice to women to consider the present common dangers. poverty and low wages, now pressing our present-day civilization for Imme diate remedy, touch living foundations the world over. These conditions have been neglected in cycles of prosperity, till they now appear ln hideous propor tions and an ever Increasing menace. Unemployment Is the terror by day and by night, for to live there must be a living state for all. Today our very civilization is at stake. We are striv ing to discover, to penetrate our men tality. We strike out in the dark. We wonder and speculate what is the mind i hat controls our actions and is the Ufa of our bodies. The editorial on "Tagore ' was ad ' anced thought, to stir thought or spec ulatlon, to fathom, to ask what are the higher" attributeT of our being ever . -- - --- -- - Out of the European war of the Old World nations is coming tne threat AWSKCmUK. HO L1 o ocaivuiua lu ' find open doors. These must open for the humble Individual, such men as Maeterlinck and Arthur C. Benson voice the sentiment of today, demand ing "Why should it be all Joy for some and all sorrow for others 7" The Roman said, "Life is a battle." "Tame birds pluck wild birds naked," writes Henry Arthur Jones of Institu tions. The Deserter," by Harold Titus, in the Sunday Fiction Magazine of The Journal, gives a view of the side of proving profitable for the companies life that is ignored. i that have installed them. In The Journal a notice was given of ! What is probably the most impor Pastor Russell's lecture, "The World tant innovation in track work is the on Fire." I wish "there might have pneumatie tamper now being Intro been a report ln the paper of tha, lec- i duced. It Is now known that machine ture. - - ' tamping costs less than one-third -is Newspapers are a most powerful medium for directing public opinion, and I rejoice at the liberal f lews of The Journal. I desire to help in the growing sen timent of common humanism. M. A. B. LINDEN. Wilson's Great Achievements Portland. Sept. 18. To the Editor of The Journal The- Republican strong holds are becoming more and more agi tated as the difficulties encountered aa the campaign advances increase, rather than disappear, or even de crease, Ths sentiment is firmly estab lished that Wilson has followed a wis course In dealing with the European war problems, many of which have been well nigh Impossible of solution by International law, but all of them in turn -being smoothed out finally, with honor of country intact. Thit sentiment of the people stands -a an hmmovable barrier against which all of -the attacka of tha opposition.; imagine bow thabJg ' tuttm" ef the "woras wunoui. aea. "-3 are cunningly employed by stump and pregli nlreUng, to wrest from wiuon the credit sained and richly deserved. U through the entire Mexican contro- mk. Mvnl at-A mnA will COT1. " - ,.y," .tlnue to be for the Wilson Policies just as ionr aa results snow, as my have all along been showing, trial Mr, Wilson is consecratedly devoting his masterly thought to the great qucs- tions of . government, for the ever-up- lifting advancement of American . idea's. The country is steadily makiii? headway In the right direction. The people are good listeners, but they are just as good reasoners and weighers, and therefore the big facts are neither lost wight of nor argued away by political spellbinders or press arrangement committees. Wilson's record has undergone the roughest attacks the Hughes backers could devise, and yet, withal, the country scans that record with com posure, and finds In it only the- ex emplification of the mind, the heart ni the hand of an able, thoughtful far seeing and firm champion of lib- rty. Justice and progress, for one and iui rn.iL. w .vi. Proper Care of the Highway. Portland. Sept. 19. To the Editor of The Journal I have read, naturally with a great deal of interest, the let ter of Miss Thompson and your ed itorial with reference to the -preserva- A ! m W tinin n 1 Aailtlai r f t Vla Pn. one of the directors of the civic bu- reau. I quite agree that the proper man ner in which to handle the matter is through a special commission, com posed of Interested persons qualified with the ideas expressed by Miss Thompson. I do not believe that the highway should be made an amuse Qrt wa hinMina- mnnn. ln thlsudlref tlon b'ap1peaj of the pro" ! er authorities to the land owners, the ieft in view to mar the great advan- tages to which we are calling the at tention of the world. It should be an offense to obstruct or litter the beauty spots of the highway with rubbish and offal. This. I believe, should be con trolled by sanitary legislation. I think Miss Thompson has brought up a subject which should be carried to a satisfactory solution; and, while I have not discussed the specific mat ters with Messrs. Coman and Yeon, the other members of the civic board, yet I feel that they will view the matter in the same light I do, and that the whole civic bureau will lend its aid support toward a lasting solution nf thA ., nlIT w T1T.RnT Easing the Trackman's Borden. From Popular Mechanics. Compelled to do his work by primi tive hand methods that have changed but little since the beginning of rail roading, the railroad trackman has long ranked as the poorest paid and the most unfavorably situated of all j laborers. In recent years a change has been taking place, a change that is fast placing the trackman in the po sition that his skill and experience and the importance of his work en title him to that of a skilled mechan ic. As ln many other lines of work this change, is due to just one cause, the Introduction of power-driven ma chines for doing the work formerly done by back-breaking hand labor. The first machine to break the evil spell, as It might be called, under which the trackman has labored. Is the gasoline section car, which has been in use in a limited way for a i num,l!er of years- wl nl means to the men engaged in the work 1s easily understood by Anyone who has witnessed the laborious ordeal of pumping an old-time hand-car. Start 1 ' 1" " ? uc2 2 ft5aSAf !?..h io aesiroy me ernciency or any grono of men or the rernalnH,P , Qn 8ome of the most prOKressive rai. roads the section men now ride to their work on a gasoline car that is capable of making a speed of as much as 30 miles an hour. When they reach nieir wora mey are as rresn and fit as a business man who has ridden to his office ln an automobile. Two other machines that are rapidly coming Into use and that are reliev ing the trackman of much heavy work lormeriy done Dy hand are the gas-j-line weeder and the gasoline mowing machine. Both of these machines are mucn as nana tamping, ana mat track tamped with the machine settles an proximately one-half as much as track tamped by hand and subjected to the same service. Mark Twain's Home Town. From the Kansas City Star. "Hannibal, Mo, has, capitalized one big asset we used to think was a- lia bility," said Robert Blackwood, post master at Hannibal, ln Macon this week. "When our people first read the way Mark Twain referred to us in Tom Sawyer and "Life on the Mississippi' it made them feel like running him out of town should he ever come there," Blackwood said. "You know, be spoke of Hannibal aa 'sleeping away on a drowsey summer morning,' and of the clerks nodding on tilted split bottom chairs. But others told tbe:n Mark -Twain was one of the biggest boosters the town eould have. They said he meant no harm about poklns fun at his old town, and the thing tcr Hannibal to do ; waa te get busy , in PERTINENT COMMENT SMALL CHANGE. Let 'er buck. The 6outhern Pacific Menu to Dj short on cars and long on experts. The Wasco county teachers believe in keeping church and school separate. All the armies are victors In the Bal kans, according to the bulletins sent out. ) As the official opener of county r AS in ornciai opener 01 coumj ffalrs Governor Wlthycombe Is most successful. and bosb Roosevelt failed to bring nome the bacon in New Xork. ,,.. PAllcinin fit ra n In catching traffic violators when dressed ln overall uncats the adoption of similar scheme on th Columbia River highway. i According to Congressman Hawleys statement Oregon would not have re ceived much from congress If he-ha'l left things to other members of the delegation. If the king of Greece had ever worked on a newspaper copy desk he never would have named Kalogerapon)a premier with such a man as Zalrcia sticking around. An unusual condition prevails in San Francisco. The board of educa tion has censured a teacher for want of discretion In allowing one of the high school girl to appear In a Greek dance, insufficiently clad. GENERAL STRIKES From a Bulletin of the National Riv ers and Harbors Congress. There Is no doubt that everybody was greatly relieved when it was finally settled that the threatened railroad strike would not come off, but it is very doubtful Whether any body drew a deeper breath of relief than certain petsple In the navy de-. partment and no one who knows what the navy people were up against will wonder that this is so. The work of building and repairing battleships and other naval craft must, of course, be done in shipyards located on the coast, but practically all the material used both for con struction and repair comes from the interior, much of It fTom points hun dreds of miles from tidewater. For in stance, armor plate comes from Bethlehem. Pa., and steel, in many 8napes for many uses, from Pittsburg. it la vitallv important that this material shall be moved regularly and continuously from the points where It is made to the places where it is to be used, and this movement -has been entirely by rail. Just as soon, there fore, as it was seen that a general strike on the railroads of the country was actually impending, an investiga tion was started to see if there were i an v routes avaiiaDie ior us uiuve- ment by water. For Instance. If work was to be continued on the battleship New Mexico it would be necessary to move 2500 tons of steel within six weeks from the mills at Pittsburg to the navy yard at Brooklyn. Could it be dons at all? Was there more than ona route that could be used? If so, what route was the best, the shortest, and especially, the quickest? The first thing discovered was that there is no map or document, official or otherwise, that shows or describes ji the waterways in tne unuea States. The reports of the chief of engineers give the fullest possible in formation as to the rivers and harbors under control of the war department, but not a word about state-owned or private canals. The general staff and the war college have maps - showing all lines of transportation in certain areas, special studies of which have been made in working out problems of defense, but no maps or data cov ering the country as a whole or any considerable portions thereof. Com mercial maps and atlases were found to be worse than useless, since most of them do not even pretend to show any waterways except the principal rivers, and of the rest no two agree ln what they show. m m It is only a little way from Pitts burg to Lake Erie, and a canal across this short cut has been both proposed and opposed for many years. So far the opposers have won, but if the navy department could have got hold of Aladdin's lamp two weeks ago that canal would have been built quicker than a wink. With a sigh for what might have been, and ought to be. but isn't, the naval investigators turned hopefully to the three canals across the state of Ohio, only to find after a strenuous search that the best of the lot has sections 20 miles long which have no Water in them, and that the i only way to get. irom ruisouij the lakes by water is to go down tne Ohio, up the Mississippi and the Illi nois and through 60 miles or more of the out-of-date Illinois and Michigan canal, to Chicago. Another possible route from Pittsburg to Brooklyn was down the Ohio and Mississippi and then by ocean steamer from New Or leans. .a A little further search revealed the fact that no dependence could be placed on the Ohio, because this Is letting the world know Mark Twain once lived there; that ths father John M. Clemens was a jusffce ' of the peace, and Sam a printer's boys; and get Hannibal on the map as the home of Mark Twain. ' "Hannibal went to work on the Idea. The nlace was advertised as the boy hood home of Mark Twain. A big hotel was named for him. Bear creek was ! staked out for visitors. Holiday Hill diagrammed and photographed and all j the places where Sam and Huck and Joe Harper played were worked into blue prints for the benefit or visitors. "The Commercial club has a tour mapped out for visitors, so that in a day they can see almost every place Sam and his chums set foot, includ ing McDougal's mysterious cave, where Injun Joe' was trapped after the 'murder of young Doc Robinson. "From a small river town 20 years ago, Hannibal has become a modern city, with every municipal conven ience, and is still growing rapidly. "Hannibal photographers have mane and sold thousands of pictures of the Clemens home in Bird street, Huck Finn's house and Squire Clemens' court. The pictures have brought a good deal more money than tbe build ings were worth. "Ths people of Hannibal are no long er resentful of what Mark Twain wrote about them. They've erected a large monument in his honor." Who Is General Brusiloff? From the Atlantic Monthly. An achievement so brilliant aS that of General Brusiloff, like a sudden splendor of dawn from the midst of darkness, inevitably arouses an eager desire to know something of him; and, in the absence of knowledge, gives birth to all kinds of fancies and imag inings. One of the best newspapers in New York printed, a day or two after the beginning of his great offensive, a charming and whimsical article,' alleg ing that about the unknown person ality of the Russian general were al ready gathering all tbe stories of mil itary prowess that had served for Al exander, for Caesar, for Napeleon; he AND NEWS IN BRIEF OREGON SlUKLiGrfTS Many people want houses in Joseph and the supply is nil. Hence the Her ald Inquires, "What's the matter with the city's Investors that more attempt is not made to supply the need? North Plains business men are mak ing an effort to secure electric lignts in that enterprising little town, and the Herald says there is no reason why Banks cannot secure the same ad vantage. The people of Sweet Home are mak ing arrangements to 1 hold an Ever arreen Blackberry fair on Saturday, September 30. Liberal premiums are being offered for a great variety of products. The congregations of the Myrtle Creek Methodist and Presbyterian churches have voted to iederate tor the coming year and have one pastor In common. The Bunday schools ar to be consolidated also. Elberta peaches" 10 Inches in circum ference, the Madras Pioneer asserts, are proof enough, together with that furnished by plenty of other fruit products, to establish central Oregon's eligibility to the garden-spot class. The Civic club "of PendVeton has had the town's old Iron drinking fountains replaced with fountains the entire bowl and bubbler of which are of por celain. A new fountain Is being in stalled by the club at the north aide park. AND WATERWAYS the season of low water and not one third of the dams needed to insure a nine-foot channel have yet been com pleted. Material started down the Ohio might get through, but all the probabilities were that it would get stuck on a sandbar and stay there until the November rains should bring a rise in the river. Sometimes it happens, too. that the November rains do not come until January. Al most in desperation at the situation with which they were confronted the navy men were trying to arrange to ship by trolley cars from Pittsburg to Cleveland, and thence by lake to Buffalo and Erie canal and Hudson river to Brooklyn, when the emergency legislation passed by congress caused the strike to be called off. m m If the word "desperation" seems too strong. It must be remembered that Resides the New Mexico there were under construction five other battle ships, ten destroyers, four auxiliary vessels and S2 submarines. Work on every one of these would have to stop If a strike should last two weeks. More than that, congress had Just appropriated nearly $315,000,000 with which to build something like 60 ad ditional vessels for the navy, and not ore of these could be begun. And in addition to all the rest, when the threat of a strike became acute the navy had only a two weeks' supply of goal on hand. By ; buying every thing within reach a sufficient sup ply was secured for ten days or two weeks more. But If a strike should last a month, every ship ln the navy, except the very few that use ollfor fuel, would have to tie up to "the dock and lie there as helpless as "a painted ship upon a painted ocean." m m Because it leads out from one of the greatest coal flfclds and from the greatest steel manufacturing center of the world, a completely improved, definitely dependable Ohio river would, in case of such a strike as has just been temporarily averted, be worth more to the navy alone than Its im provement will cost. If the coal and steel that it could carry should save us from attack by an enemy when our navy was helpless. It would be worth more to the nation than all that .ever has been or ever will be spent on all the waterways of the United States. Vet the filibusters conducted by form er Senator Burton have seriously de layed the work upon the Ohio and on every other waterway and harbor in the land and the senator who led the filibuster against the river and harbor Mil of 1916 tried to cut out the whole appropriation for the Ohio and stop the work entirely. Recent dispatches from Germany state that although the railways are given over almost entirely to military use a thriving commerce is being car ried on with Switzerland. Holland, Denmark. Norway and Sweden over the network of waterways which reaches every part of the empire. Be cause we have failed to develop and use our waterways the reople of the United States have within the. past few weeks, been brousht face to face with the portentous fact that. Just as long as we depend solely on one method of transportation, our com mercial prosperity, our national ex istence. Our very lives may be im periled by a dispute over wages, hours and conditions of employment. No lesson Is more clearly taught by the anxious days of the recent past than that the work of Improving our natural waterways and Joining them Into a great, connected system should be pushed with all possible speed and it should be made sure beyond all peradventure that the needed ap propriations can neither be Burtonlzed nor Carterated." was fast becoming a Solar Myth. And we have had. since then, a curiously detailed story that Brusiloff Is only a nom de guerre; that the victor on the stern battle line is really the ill starred Sir Hector Macdonald rediel yus, come back to repeat the triumph of Omdurman. And, in passing, one may note that this legend of a miracu lous return wreathes itself about every dominant personality, not only the spiritual heroes like Gautama and Zoroaster, but the men of war, like Kriedrich Barbarossa, asleep ln the Kyffhauser, Shlvajl of the Mahratta hills, and now for the second time, about the fine soldier who forfeited the renown won in the Sudan. Bo in sistent is the sense of Immortality aroused by genius and power. The Tax of Personal Waste. "Girard"' in Philadelphia Ledger. How many mornings does your cook spoil the tcast? You don t know. Nor do you keep tabs on the SO other apparently trifling things of every day. From the moment you draw an un necessary amount of water for your morning bath until you have touched the push button and stopped that tire less electric meter at night and retire to rest it is waste plus "don't know" all along the line. If Standard Oil was as careless with Its pennies as a man making $20 a week is with his, it would be bank rupt before Christmas. But you know well enough that you've got to be wide awake to snatch even one cent from J. D. R. And here is President Rea's railroad. which has run passenger trains 1,000,' 000 miles without killing a passenger. Why T Because he has made in three and one half years 2.500,000 .tests to see that his trainmen observe the rules of safety. But. heigh-ho; you never test any thing ln your smaller affairs to see how many little spigots are pouring out pennies needlessly, just the same they are taxing you av great deal more than your ennrca pew. - CLAIMS VICTORY IN NOVEMBER Chairman Willrox Gravely Issues lrediction of Hughes' Succeas. By William R. Wlllcox, Chairman Re publican National Committee New York, 8ept. 21. (I. N. 8.) With election day not quite two months distant, a significant development in publio thought is steadily making for the emphasis of national Issues in lo cal political campaigns throughout the union, from Maine to the Pacific coast. The Republican pulse Is beating to tht rhythm of an inspiration that Is na -tlonal ln scope, a circumstance that constitutes one of the surest indica tions of approaching victory at the polls in November that It has been poBslbla to far to sense. When the people of the United States begin talking along the same Unea, la the same channel, it is a sign of the solidarity of publio opinion that has been many times the salvation of the republic. Something skin to the patri otic fervor of Americans of all classes that ssvept the country ln 1898 with a cry for "the honest little dollar," and establishing the gold standard as the nations bulwark, is now taking place. As the great masses of the people become articulate through their lead ers, large and small, the Issues of ths day are taking shape and assuming an aspect and strength indicative of ths depth of public feeling. Two months before election day finds the people in terested, to an extent not heretofore suspected, save by those leaders pecu liarly able to fathom the public mind, ln the crimes of incompetency Thai have been committed by PrestJent Wil son and his advisors in dealing with the Mexican problem, and ln the re establishment of the protective tariff i the definite policy of government. These two issues already have placed the six states of the New England group safely in the Republican col umn, and when Maine led off this month with a Republican majority of. more than IS, 000, it was the beginning of a Republican victory in November that will be of landslide proportions. Not in years have Republican cam paigns ln New England been conduct ed with so much enthusiasm and skill ful management. Many of the local political contests are of extraordinary Interest ln the various states, yet ev erywhere ln New England candidates for local offices are appealing to the people on national Issues only. Ther realize that this year the American citizen has the world for his horizon, and that he Is looking up and out with eager eyes an A mind alert. In Massachusetts Senator Lodge, the Republican candidate for the United States senate, is making his first cam paign since he became a United States senator for the direct vote of the peo ple. He has been quick to oatch the drift of national Inspiration. With lo cal issues ln plenty occupying ln ths affections of the people of Massachu setts, the place once held by Webster and Hoar, Senator L,odge Is basing ths most important campaign ln his polit ical career on the lofty plane of na tional affairs. The response which he has met has been Inspiring. Ilia Indictment of the Wilson administration for Its shame ful incapacity In dealing with the Mex ican situation has been unanswerable, and the senator Is proving by the crowds that are flocking to hear him (peak that he has the people of Mas sachusetts wllh him. Irrespective of . their former party ties. IT'S BEEN quite awhile since Joe Teal has had a chance at Bill Hproul in legal combat. He has had chances at Bill Skinner repeatedly and at Hai vey Lounsbury and even at Ten Winchell on occaalon. But at the car shortage hearing the Esepee chief ap peared ln public for the first time here In a long spell. "Now tills Is a rather direct quts tlon," said the rail Nemesis with seem ing apologetic mien, "you can answer It of course, but still it la leading. Does not the Southern Pacific still care for California as its little ewe lamb?" It happens that Bill Sprnule is a Callfornlan himself. The reference te the alleged favoritism, of the railroad for the land of the grsps and the sun shine made him smile. "I would say that Oregon is also our little ewe lamb," replied the chief kindly. "We are now helping develop all the Industries of Oregon, you know." "Yes," was the reply, "but our lamb Is tired of feeding on the bottle. It wants to get out on the grass some time." At this the executive sprang a Joke which every Callfornlan likes to spring on every Oregonlan. "It seems to be off the bottle now,' he retorted, with the faintest sus picion of a snicker. "Oregon, I under stand, has gone dry." At which F. G. Donaldson and Jay Hamilton chortled and ths official stenog blotted his notes. Get a Clown liaiid, Billy. Across the street the bugler has quit bugling. For that we are thankful. But ln hie place has come a rauoous, scratching, diabolical, hideous, shiv ery, blatant, noxious, squeaking, rat tling, banging, wavering, squawking, nerve-racking phonograph. We suspect Billy Pangle. A straw vote of this office, hastily taken, resulted in the unanimous wish that the bugler be recalled. He will be welcomed. Anyone or anything would be, after a day of this bedlam. If Billy would put shock-absorbers on the machine when It tries to play tne sextet from "Lucla." it would help some. We also wish he wouldn't play the Silas Hayseed conversational rec ords. It's hard enough to get out tnis column with the ordinary office jokes buzzing around. Maxim silencers would be better. Things We Grouch About. "Pretty Women Trap Rich Ken" says a page 1 headline. Just as if there were any news In a situation that has persisted for some 14,000 years now. John Abbett galloped with his new horse so fast the other day that his watch fell out and hit a rock. John Is soi s because the watch didn't break so he could get a new one under the guarantee. Between,- reels advertisement at movie show reads: "If yo- value your health worth anything to you, buy So-and-So's Sanitary Corsets." Uncle Jeff Snow Says: Some of the Hughes button ' air going to bloom into Wilson votes. J1 Nlxmauer is wearing one 'cause his uncle bought him a motorcycle; but hie best girl is a Wilson booster and she lowed to me and Ma that 'less he voted right wouldn't have her clinging on behind no more and all talk of a side car would be off. And Claresser Is some dinger, too, es Jer can testify. Who Will Want Messenger Job? may put the dime novel out of busl. ness. This will make a hit with people who need messenger boys ln a hurry.