t - THE OREGON 'DAILY, JOURNAL, PORTLAND. FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 2$, 1817. 8 ' '.' AN 'iNDBPKKDENT MEWSPAPtB ; s. lAtkauM.k. , Kepl Sanaa aUemousj t ,1 bo : Jjulldlna. Wrwadwa nad, aM , aUeeia, Hartlaad, t i -'' . aiitarad at Ue poatoMice at iorund, ur.. for lBMBMalua tarouca ; the nwlJa , rlaee asattef. 'liUfHUAM Mala 14 lioaM. -; . , Alt partoU reacbad by tbeea . Tell tlM epM.tof what t.prtmaot yon want. V iu.l,oi AWglilMUNU Kkt-aaSNTAliVS m nm ... Kr fork. 141 aoopl if. t.:t' .. t 225 na lt Cblfago. .;. Sutwerlptioa Mr ma by Mil or to an aadreea , , 1 , 1 tte Unltatl uih or Mexico: DAILY (MOBNINO. OR ArrEBICOOKV m s Om ... ....$S.oo I On month, JO 4. UAILX tMOBSUiU OR AJTMBKOOJO AiU Am Tar..i .....17.00 I um moots - ts-- ; ; ; . The preent German warfare eprraaeotn BMrra la a warfare agalnat mankind. It M a war againat all oatinoa. Tli cnalletiga ta to all mankind. Each nation moat dacida it Itaeli bow It wilt meat It. 1 Woodrow Wilaoo. END-THE STRIKE fHIPBUIllDERS in Portlan4"ire refuging to treat .with the men collectively in the effort to settle the strike. In explanation of this aloofness by employers, P. A. Ballin, of the Supple ft Ballin shipyards, said In yesterday's Journal: tha' nhlnbulldern a.fa not treating- with the unions regarding the open or closed shop, system because they cannot ,any thing to.be sained in a diacuaglon of an impossible situation. ""- '- The builders have no authority to treat with unions regarding wages, as the contracts with the government specify no chance in wages without the government's sanction.' - ' , . " If conferences regarding changes in Wages are held, tn government must be made a party to them. In San Francisco, the employers held conferences with the men. and the strike and the strike is near settlement Though the boilermak ers are standing: out. there Is' every prospect that there will be an early, return to work. " If employers in San; Francisco could negotiate with their workers, why cannot employers In Portland negotiate with Portland workers? If ne to try negotiations, in Portland? . Mr. Ballin says no change in wages can be made without sanction of the government. f In San Francisco, tentative wage scales were agreed upon with a representative of the government actually partici pating in the negotiations. , President Wilson himself, after an agree ment had been reached in these negotiations wired higV congratulations and approval. Wdre a tentativeagreement reached by negotiations .in strengthens Wiiliain. it lsi a! yet much, better' attention on the part u.-.;. -'. -1 I of tha - comDinr to service ..given u.uw: Aaienramaiu ana avawoi- LMitm-iiiM baaebaU a- ance to Prusslanisnu " It Is an Jat- j trona. There -houid be systematic tack from the rear while the coun-1 education of streetcar patrons as to ii v.Hh nrnn.. nUM-tn Will aor OOtM CaM , M Wen al ma ironu : L..t w . v. a.va iiaor of the If we are against America In I ear for maea o exit: it being- the it- ' .i.t. .i T...l and a h. .M...1fin Wilt MT8 COn- uw vijaiDf waj alio ivt ciusaui 1 . mfiu.ww MmAt.m .a i w mi I slderable itimeTIi j-erowwoln; 5 ' - ;Jr e"5 cars delaying alothers roi- for Prussia , and military despot-1 lowln-thmAhouid restricted. w ism, our place is In .Prussia. a to have a more eaual distribution under WllUam's flag and rearing Pfe conimied toreac lng comfort, seats, etc JLet - ui v all work , together for Fourteen head Of. 'Washington I satlafactdty solution of -this probjem. county Jersey cows brought "'TO1V average of $221 a head in a gale j taliy help the company or the uten. to Tillamook dairymen. In the I but on the contrary win lead to leas dairy field, the Tlllamookers know patronagre and a determined effort to goUaOons setUed the strike in San Francisco is it not worth while " j William's tag. TRAVEL STORIES ' OF NORTHWEST By Fred LoCkley Ling for settle tne western ana soutnern parua pi Ytnu. uocx, who helped organise tne for settlement Croolt county at the general election Spanish War Red Cross with Clara V" on November 7 last year. But It Barton: Katharine Fisher, whose an- ppeaiing lor a wasn't as simple as it sounds. -In the cestors fought In every war in which IM VATERLAKD HE head of the German de- partment at the Lincoln high school confides to the pub-, t lie tnat ne rears xne reaaing book 'Im Vaterland," over which j . - some excitement has arisen, "may j not- be a wis3 selection at this .'time' V We are constrained to ask If it , ; ? ever would be wise to oblige - American school children to fill : $ their heads with material such as thftt book contains. ,t V 'Since when have Americans ub-; scribed to the sentiment that the J kaiser Is a worshipful idol, that ;i his promising son, the crown prince. Is a lovable character, that Germany must keep up a big army "because it is surrounded" by ene- mles," and that Prussia and Prus .vtians are superior . to everybody and everything else on earth? .'.i That Is the sort of mental stim lulant which has carried away the , German people Into their war of 3 Conquest for Indemnities and loot, -t If the doctrine contained In this j textbook is sound, then Americans ought not to be fighting the kai h ser. They ought to be bowing ,4 themselves at his feet in humble submission. Uf : It is a curious inconsistency to teach our schoolchildren In some ?v of their textbooks that all honor !is due to the American heroes who f?, fought for liberty in the Revolu : t tlonary war while, an hour later . fj, we oblige them to read a book which spatters with fulsome laud- atlon the worst enemy of liberty on "earth. ; 1 .During the forenoon we teach ' them that American free institu :v tions are the best In the world. .;; During the afternoon we teach them that Prussian absolutism is . grand and glorious above every- thing elBe. $J.At ; 10 o'clock they must rev' verenoe George Washington who fought for freedom. . "At .11 o'clock they must bow down to the kaiser and "the crown prince" who have slied the iooa oi 2u,uuu,uuu men to aes . troy freedom. - The selection of "Im Vaterland" ; ,- for a reading book is indeed a trifle "unwise" Just now or at any r other time, bur American . public schools ' should teach American principles, not the principles . of .:: autocracy. We have plenty of na tional heroes of our, own to honor ' . without going to the land of junk' . . erdom for junker idols. The Jour- . nal makes bold to suggest to the school board that the space now ' . given to the crown prince and Kaiser Wllhelm might better be turned over to Lincoln and Ben jamin Franklin. - In everything pertaining to the : War,, Oregon ?cOjitributes her quota and more. It was done in Liberty ' .bonds, done in Red Cross, done in "every enterprise' in which aid was asked." The burdens fall upon a - comparatively few, for there are ,many who do not contribute at I all'. Those asking contributions Of $25,000 for books admit that V the sum 1 more' than three times r Oregon's quota and base their ap-r i peals ; for the full $25,000 on . claim that the South will tall ' below its quota. . The trouble with 5 that policy " Is that in the many kinds of demands, wise and unwise, Oregon givers will be drained and . In some highly important enter- prise later, Oregon may fall below ;. her " quota. : i-' .. . i .t . THE FARM BANKS' FAIR PLAT. White House Pickets Named Portland. Seot. 21. To the Editor of The Journal I have heard people say harsh things about the Whi'.e House pickets. Among those wli J have stood on the picket line are u inica Datfa Bran nan. daughter of the Bend Is tha county seat of Destitutes I famous editor of the New York Sun; tvtuntv .nil th.rn- h,n 'a tala, I PlnMn.. n.v.ril T7i11a l.nrht., of Portland is it not absurd to claim that the Washington authorities Deschutes county was created from I our first ambassador to' England; La would not sanction It? With President Wilson appealing for settle -r the western and southern parts oflrinia, Dock, who helped organise" the xhent of the strike, with the shipping board appealing of the strike, with every authority at Washington appealing settlement of the strike, it is idle to contena that because of some I old days in some of the middle - west-1 thi 'countrv bu ven ten n-aa-i? clause in the contracts, shipyard owners should not attempt negotiations K'n states when tney w""J?m Mrm, AbDy Scott Baker, whose , two for a tentative agreement under which shipbuilding in Portland could Qut be resumed. -' I friends and divided families and fre-lv. HcioniL win wa Miurhi., f It is time for. Portland owners to realize that' in these disputes quently led to prolonged county seat I congressman Hill) .whose one boy Just they cannot persistently refuse' to deal with funionsT as such. ; They l 7a "X ' . , . i .. irt adays we wage our wars tnrougn w(ham, whose brother gets leave from a cannot wipe out a fact. Their employes are almost completely union- courts. So close was the decision astrai'ln t . . h , th ,ork. izeu. it ue employers get worn aone, n wui nave 10 u umub w wuemer n now mumy i nouse. ' entirely by union men. They may wish It were otherwise and try to cut "xSr- . 2,Jt yzU-JSlS 8uch women.-to mention only a few, think it is otherwise, but their wishes and their thonghts are : futile. hawreVuire; ihTt at lca.t 65 per cent vZtwlZJSlZ uu iucii eiuuicu euwif.ua VL fc w Dmuuat n; a wk.ue, af" i ui iuvo u mo v-vwv j fuHy jtnno y the president." No such built IB concerned. ... i iy -anaiyoia xor WOmn. and only such women, would More to the point, they are building ships for the government and nwthcu0y' the nart of the maka sacrifices, even at the bitter coal . . . . . - . . - i n r mi iiiTinariiaiinin. a n r w xnnrDi.n . tn trnvprn mriT rorocn nninna. in tn uttranrrtinarr Mmmiuea i.ti, n ni. i Via t.rrt. " -- vU...UB ...... , . . ............ , .1 : ... . . . . . ,. .citation, to help their country wuicn tne presiaeni is Benamg to tne coast in me attempt to aajusiiry u ;rwa in w vuuw itself rirht in the eves of the world the disputes here, one of the three members is a union man.' appointed mu" f"; rTth7rS $y establishing at home the principle at tha renuest of the president hv Samuel fiomrjara of the Arnertcan .t- ,. for which, our. men are to fight abroad. - m - ar - I Va U3 IIVW, VVUUV V a-3 .tvauu aaaa Federation of Labor. When this board comes to Portland, one reDre- I some of the votes had been illegally wnen ine tantltlva nt 1hn. on nna nf tha ohfnKiiUrlar. will ho IniHtal tn air I Counted for the division. ' - " 1 -. ar- .- vw i ..i.i .v. v.M that with the committee at its hearings and act with' it in reaching its jronepw decisions. - - - - 1 30 asraLnst to 4 for the proposed dl- Thla means that Soonfr or latar.th Portland emrjlnver will h vision, these votes should not be brought by the government face to face -With the men with whom dha ary comtuingt iuc aio uun icmaws iv uBuuai. , it u cuuu.uuu twu uui a, uioui i county, as. in spite of tne -voting that has . come, to pass, that cannot, be changed, and- that Portland I place being within the limits of the .a ' " . . . ... . . ... I MwAWMaiail Ai4a Via Va-kt SaVei lltr-Ska-I In snipDuiiaera must accept it xney expect to get government snips to duuq. , ,V J. TV.nl. ,.fn..l fx .an IA. ' ....l I " 1 - . uo.a - uhu ,tw M'VvybjMWb. tuuuiuvu..jiyifj lum A-ujaeu lu ouici I in the new COUntV lrtv lt..ntlolnn. ttt.V mltrVt tnn J . Vi A lrtA . . a a ,ulv . i"ie"" i-"w i. "vaw On December 14. 191, the governor agreement mat enaea tne striae ana put tne snipyaras in motion again aimed the nrociamation declaring In San Franciaco throws upon the Portland owners a heavy part of the Deschutes county a political entity of flst f or democracy at home the responsibility for the present Idleness and stagnation In the yards. tne 8tt Ten ..day. la.ter-nJ woman's party pickets have stood s!- Meanwhlle, the unions ar3 wrong in their demands for a closed LairVrf tha membara of the len.ly ,at the ateB f.tn? WnIte. ?ouJ,e' t t.. ii v. v. j , ------- --- , 1 reminmnf mo presiaeni ana iua na- .uvi,. m.a iuh.i, yiavuuuij Wl bua U1CU 1U lug JBlUB cue UU1VU GOunir Court OI (DO llKvr IJ wi oaicu i , t. ni- ... , ... .v... though we carry democracy to Europe at the point of the sword we have not established democracy at home. That principle will be established at home only when the federal govera ment enrrancnises American women, Twenty states cannot amend thir con stitutions on this subject. We have gone to congress. We have letters from the chairman of the house judici COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF SMALL CHANGE i The chiropodists will do what they can to assist in the observance of a cornless day. If iCr. Burbank ezseeta icr to popularize the cactus for human con sumption, now is his time. . , President Wilson "bitea on rranlte.'' maybe, but let it go at that until the Prussian powers bite the dust. Those steel helmets tha Britiah sol diers wear may be mighty comfortable. out tney certainty are not Decerning. Colonel Roosevelt is riving as cor rect, an imitation of barrage firs as can be effected with mere language. The ansae or tne renown ea jerry Simpson, in his day the gadfly of the house, must look down and grin at tne spectacle now oeinc proaucea or Congressman Heflln of Alabama. I. SDoisavlUevie has sons to Amer ican Lake from Wallace. .Idaho. And there is no known way by which the sergeant that calls the roll can pass the buck! A favorite character In romantic fic tion Is the aged, lonely and mysterious man wno, it turns out, in ms prime used his great powers ra some cause nf deadly avil and who now eXDlates in whatever is the current equivalent of sackcloth and asnea. in aoout so or 4U years the novelists can thus capitalise the German diplomats of the Great War. OREGON SIDELIGHTS . t 1 1 1 . - - That tTnaV. ta . hnlldinr boom on in Arlington ia quite evident, th Inde pendent says, from the number of ner buildings that are . under construction and. contemplated. ; ) Tha rjallaa Itamtier dismisses auto crats and-autocracy with this; "Now Is the time to talk about kings. Shoes and ships and sealing wax are likely to onaure, ouc mere soon wiu um u kings to talk about J ( B The East Oregonlan. In announce ment of the change from six deliveries a day at Pendleton to four a day, sug gests further? "It is explained that another way the dellverymen ma.y be aided Is through people having at Im mediate hand money necessary for usa in paying for C. Q, D. packages. When ever a deliveryman ia held waiting by such a patron that much time Is lost. The editor of the Harrlsburg Bul letin says Joshlngly: "Since they are beginning; to move Coburg over to Har rlsburg. Junction City might well fall in Una and mova ovea too. and Hai- sey should Join the procession as we have room for them all and will wel come them with outstreicneu axiaa. These towns were all located too neir Harrlsburg to ever amount to much, anyway. No- telling where this con solidation and federation business will end. It started in our churches and spread to our newspapers and banks and now is about to involve our towns." Ragtag and Bobtail Stories From Everywhere f THE SECOND LIBERTY LOAN By Carl Smith. Waatilnttoa Staff Corraapoodapt of Tha Journal be taken on the suffrage amendment when recommended by the president. We have gone to the president 17 times since be has been in office. Since Jan uary 10 he has refused to see suffrago deputations. In order that the fight for democ racy abroad should not obscure the If, as they Insist, practically all the men in the yards are union-1 countv court of the jiewly created iied, they have a closed shpp as it is. If they have the closed shop, county. The order of udge Duffy waa why heat up the controversy and add fuel to ;he flame by demanding Sffi.uJS' ha" no oz employers mat tney recognize tne situation as a closed shop, when existence in actual fact. At the ses such recognition will eain them no thine? sion of the last legislature a bill was Why cling to an Issue that angers the employers and that, through paMef rcc.ting tne transrer or xne the passion thus aroused, stands in the way of the conciliation and twL o,..t! tn. compromise that are necessary and that' must be applied on both sides ty. and. to make assurance doubly "i,0.0 flnT.1.1..11 if an agreement of any kind is to be reached? Suffragists have been sent to Jail for "obstructing traffic" Flfty-elgnt have served sentences. Fifteen are now in Occoquan workhouse. But Through its strike, San Francisco has lost a ten-million dollar government shipbuilding plant. Announcement from Washington yes terday is to the effect that the plan of locating the plant at San Fran Cisco has been definitely abandoned on account of the labor disputes and that a site for it will be chosen on the Atlantic coast where there is less industrial unrest. Portland may not be losing a ten-mlllion-doilar plant by the nres-. ent strike, but it is losing heavily, and every day of strike adds to the j wrn Brown, county clerTof Crco iuyn iuhs ia prestige ior iuture smpouuaing DUSiness. county, refused to turn over to the of- The government will not negotiate for ships in localities where it I ficia-isi of Deschutes county the regis sure, creating the cpunty anew. The Quro fl"u,n,i' "u "T""1"1 uece fight to prevent thi creation of the sa. because there has never been a new county raged merrily in the leg- when Americans refused to flgnt Islature ,till the passage, on January ad suffer -for democracy, for th 81, 1917, of house bill o. usoy "a" luv" -"" .iuU.h7 fnrhaa. which validated all acta in 1U vnu auverH' connection with the creation of the new county. The bill carried an emer gency clause and became a law shortly after Its passage. , , . J In spite of tiis ract, on May 23 last cannot be assured or delivery according to the contract. Even should there be an immediate settlement of the present trouble's, harm has been done to Portland that cannot be undone. America, mum uuim snips to win tne war. or that nurnoso congress has appropriated hundreds of millions f dollars aind the American people are cheerfully supplying the money by purchase of LiiDerty oonas ana tne payment of extraordinary war taxes. tration cards of voters of the newly created county, on the ground that the ment." DR. FLORENCE S. MANION, .Oregon Chairman National Woman's Party. PERSONAL MENTION Pendleton Goes to Fair' En route to Salem to attend the state quo warranto proceedings had not yet I fair and to return the visit' of the Sa. been decided by the courts. I lamites to the Round-TJn city. 15 men On December 20, 1916, Bend was se- I from Pendleton, weiring the nggeat lected as the temporary county seat. 1 cowboy hats and the "loudest" scarfs t nu. th. .ffVrt ,ni, tn 1 procurable descended on Portland bring the new county into existence I Thursday night, . The crowd was headed the residences of Deschutes county be- u T V Zi'-tr , The government is letting contracts for the ships and the work ofuvo that it was worth all the time. Prt" wrJL,;,E: Snd.' v D w1 bnildlne waa eolne forward nicrht anrl Av with nmm.hi. . I expense and effort, for they have a fn rtnn-ad- f v.,. tn Ti IT', ill " Z1Z '--'''"i wonderfully rich -lice of Eastern Ore- 7, . : " x """ wt uisvatea arose ana EOn included within their 1.928,077 strikes were declared In all of the yards. I acre of territory. The American people, in the midst of the sacrifices of men and! The newly created county Is rich in mnfiAv for tho war nr. nr.t innbtns- .nmninAr.ti M .1 . I resources. The establishment of mod- ; " present situ- ern and extensive sawmills at Bend oiiuu. nic, see meir ooya in unam going to llgnt In the war and has given a wonderful Impetus to the they see the $2,000,000 every hour, or $50,000,000 a day, of their growth and development of the new money, going out in defense against the kaiser and they are In no couniy-, Icn m resources ran t .v,(. 1, j .. . . u n. In ecenlc assets, Deschutes county is r" , "'aco """ wieir enorts nanaicappea destined to see wonderful development oy uiBtui oances mat couia ne Beiuea ana would be settled, if the within the next few years. parties to tne controversy wouia he guided by the conciliatory, compro mislng and patriotic spirit that Is to be expected from everr AmeriMn The present Industrial wars are heading the country straight toward compulsory arbitration or some means of saving the government from the weakening influences of industrial clashes in war time, it is a course certain to be pursued if present industrial wars are not soon enaea. Letters From the People CCOUNTS of the activity of the , new farm loan banks make pleasant reading. Up . the nresent ' they have lent $200,000,000 id the farmers,' who are organizing 000 cooperative societies ' to lane cnarge or me business. There can not be much doubt thai : the cooperative socie ties for conducting' the farm loan business will - lead on to others for conducting; the.- general-' bus! nesa of country' communities. ' The day of Isolated, . wasteful, inef fectlve effort is past in country and city both. The most injurious weakness of the American small farmer has been his inability, or reluctance, to cooperate with his neighbors. One reason commonly put forward to explain this unfortunate habit of mind is almost ludicrously wrong. We refer to the remark that "our farmers were so much Isolated and thrown upon their own resources in pioneer days that they have never been able to work together since." The fact is, as every pioneer knows, that there was a great deal more cooperation In early days than there Is now. . The barn raisings, husking bees, quilting bees and community road work of those times were all cooperative and have been largely superseded by paid labor on the strictly indi vidualistic plan. The organization of community loan societies' is really a return to the wholesome cooperative principle of pioneer life.' V- ..- ' The; farther It is extended the better for the country. The small fanner, working "all by himself.' has. a hard row, to hoe. The eco nomic forces marshaled , against him are so formidable that it is only rarely that he can make head way against them. As a. matter of fact he is frequently forced to the wall and - has to give . up his honored place in the country's life to a tenant. : The farm : banks should " Infuse new vigor into our .diminishing race of :! small .farmers ; who i till their own land.. - -' expect to feel at home among civ ilized soldiers. The pleasant pas- tlM. J . . wiue ia. wmcn tney are said to have indulged was to torture fresh- tCktmaranieatlons sent to Tha Journal for publication In tbia department should be- writ ten on only one side of the paper, aboold not exceed BOO words la length and moat bo e Miniiunlal br tba name and addrcaa of tha sender. If the writer does not dealre to hara I registered at the Portland hotel. tne name pnDuaoea om aoaaia William ' GoedeCke, Fred Yost, W. D, McNary, E. J. Morris, John F. Qreu- llch, J: B. Knlghjt, C. N. Lassen, S. A. Lowell, B. F. Trombley, Otto Hohbach, R. Folsom and Roy Blsnop. They are in Salem today. . a - Stock Judge Returns T. Johnson of La Grande, who bias leen Judging stock at the state fair, was in Portland Friday morning, en route, to his home. He was accom panied by T. J. Scroggin, banker of La Grande, who nas been spenaing sev eral days at Salem. Gerard's Host Arrives Elmer E, Hershey, attorney, of Mis soula, who entertained James W. Gerard, ex-mbassador to Germany, at his home recently, and who has been traveling with him in the west, is Instead of a Six-Cent Fare Portland. Sept. 27. To the Editor of The Journal The suggestions that were made In the editorial on the ; friends In Seattle. Mr. MacRae says Hotel Manager Returns M. K. MacRae, manager of the Carl ton hotel, has Just returned to Port land' after spending a week with that the hotel business in the cities of the Puget Sound section has been uieau mat torture IS tO be OUr mode oi warfare? YOUR CHOICE? S PEAKING of the address at the ..-After their .hazinc exploits, some op thev upper, iclassmen: at West Polntyjullltary academy can hardly kmen to the fainting point, very September 28 were timely and good. """"" - vw uuijiiws xnaians tor-1 me cny anou.a pay m xre 01 il 1 ,,... eood du. to the larfi.. tured missionaries in the old days. ""i'. S '??JZfJ? western tourist trafic. uo tne practices at West Point IT'., i i ..r, n o nook. u. a. a. Cundv. f. w toil on the bridges, but we have a per-1 Bishop and U, ti. cnaney, memoers 01 feet right to expect the street car com- the firm of the Western Truck At- panyto furnish us a ride for a nickel l tacnment company, are registered at with transfer nrivileaes. as that is the the hotel Carlton from Seattle. , contract -that they agreed upon. I Mrs. William M. Thornton of One suggestion that I would like to I Great Falls, mom., as ai ine xxortonia offer that rou did not make in your I hotel, where she will make her home ill to rial, and that I have not seen of-1for the winter. f ered. Is this. With all due respect 1 Miss M. ts. JBixDy, or me Maryland to the genial and capable president of I and Huntington hotels at Pasadena, the Portland Railway, Light & Power Cau is regisierea at tne Aiimnoman. me what! romnanv and those who are his as-l On a motor trip along the coast. Mrs, n.mma wagner neriug, juios neiea Watkins, Frank Wagner and Martin Larsen of Etna Mills, Cal., are regis tered today at the Oregon hotel. A. W- Stone, manager of the Hood RiVer Apple Growers' association, is at the Oregon, hotel. Mrs. Robert Lincoln is registered at the Oregon - from San Francisco. F. Mori and R. Tamasaki, business men Interested In shipbuilding, from Kobe, Japan, are in the city for a few days, en route to Ban Francisco. Dr." and Mrs. G. L. Boy den of Pen dleton are in the city for a visit wt'th friends Mr. and Mrs. James H. -8. Bates of New Tork are in the city for a week as tourists. They are registered at the Multnomah hotel. The Misses Florence Declus and Alva Prouty of Boise, Idaho, are registered at the Multnomah hotel. Mr. and Mrs. J. C Langiiie are at the Multnomah from Tillamook. W. J. Watson, paving contractor of Oakland, is at the Multnomah. O. B. Bennett. Clatskanle lumbw man, is at the Perkins. W. 8.. Myers, a retired rancher, oi Condon, is at the Perkins. George E. Good, ? hotel proprietor from Pendleton. : Is at the Perkins. Dr. W. . H. ' Reynolds of Condon is registered at the Cornelius. . Mr. and Mrs. George W. Smithy Alan Smith and E. Kellems are at the Cor nelius from Eugene. v.- rJ? - En route to Salem, to attend the state fair, B. D. Lamar Tillamook mer- Washlngton. Sept. JS.Secretary William G. McAdoo of the treasury department. In an address before the waat virdnla. Bankers' association. has clearly stated the distinction be- tween the first and second Liberty bond Issues with respect to the dif ference in interest rate and the sub jection of the new Issue to Income su pertaxes, war profit and estate taxes. Extension of the exemption field would tend to build up a class of wealthy people who would escape all taxation, he said, while by Increase of the interest rate the bonds are made more attractive to the man of small means, who receives no benefit from the exemptions, as he does not pay on supertaxes or war profits. Secretary jt'eAdoo also took the occa sion to sa5 jUat "every pacifist speech mart, at ftita Inoonortune and im proper time is in ef feet - traitorous." He declared that congress has shown extraordinary patriotism and loyalty, and has proceeded with .unexampiea speed in the circumstances to organis ing the people for the Immense work of the war. The secretary said: These new bonds which the con- rrm la lust about to authorize are different from the first Isjberty bonds. They will be 4 per cent bonds instead of 3tt per cent bonds. They will also be exempt from all state, municipal and local taxation except inheritance taxes as were the .first .uiDeriy loan bonds. They will be exempt from all fadara.1 taxes, including normal in come taxes and stamp taxes, except what we call the super or graduated income taxes, excess or war prom taxes and estate taxes. "There has been some criticism, not very much I am glad to say, about h haaia of the new bonds. Some people complain that thy should be exempt from tne super income iaa aa wall aa the normal income taxes. Tha difficuitv about that is thlsr We cannot finance this war tnrougn any one class; the rich men of this coun try cannot finance this war by them selves. The ricn men ana xne men of moderate means cannot do it alone. "If you exempt tnese Donas xrom tha auner taxes the government is Mtmnaiiad1 to Day the -equivalent of an Increased rate 01 interest on no ooaa bought by the men of large means, which gives them a return, on this hnnd far in excess of what the men of moderate means or the men or small means who pay no super tax and no income tax would get from tha same bonds bought by them; in effect, it means that the government of the United States would pay to the man of large means a much high er rate of Interest than it would pay to the man of small or moderate means. These bonds must make wide appeal. a . "If you make the interest rate 8 per cent the appeal is not so strong to the men of moderate means and of small means. If you comptf them to take the low rate of Interest in order that you may induce tne man witn the large income to buy the bond at a very high rate of interest, you will in a measure compel tne man 01 smaii means to contribute to his government in the way of a concession in the interest rate to enable the government to pay the man of large means hi she r rate of Interest on his bond. That Is not a wise thing to do. We must make a wide appeal ,with these bonds. "The 4 per cent rate on the new bonds to be Issued will extend the field of the Investment very much more widely than the S hi per. cent rate on the bonds of the last issue. If we should build up ultimately through practically complete tax exemption preferred class or people who are exempt from all taxation, the time would come when It would occasion very grave discontent. Let me Ulus trate: Suppose the government of the United States had outstanding eventu war m an State fair. Judge McGinn of Portland said: If a man starts to tali this country is doing now .does net sistants, r would suggest that they get satisry film, I tell him to s-et an . fft .nalnscr arid e-o over their the next train or the next boat ni vu. 9 nave no DOlltlea nov. ik.i. ... rnntlna nf out fltinllrvi tlnn no KepuDiicans, no Democrats. We I whereby they can save a nice littae bunch of money, give better service. and in addition eliminate a tot of so- called abuse of the transfer -privllegs. CAK PATRON. Suggests P. RM L A P, Reforms Portland.. Sept.. 27. To the Editor are nothirrg but Americans now, It is impossible at such a time as this to have a divided allegiance. Necessarily every individual must be pro-American or nro-Prusslan. Choice is unavoidable, and if of The Journal We all concede the one is not on the side of this country, he Is on the side of tho kaiser. ...We are all accepting the Drotec a 4 . " . - . : tion or. me united States. It is our- united States, and, all having employes of the Portland. .Railway, Light Power company are entitled to better wages. All fair minded people will concede that the company should bear all this Increase, but that government, city and county employes in articular, and the general - pub lic should bear their share. There the ballot, it Is the kind of United fore,, permit me to suggest that. con States that we y have made it. sidcring the elimination of4, the jitney With our. United States struggling ITafnl -S.i::? WUh all j its strength against the that account, as per . their own late mightiest 'military power In the reports,, the following rate be adopted: world, struggling in defense of Five scents cash fare on all straight tha h.aa.. iTL iZ runs, as per city charter; cents for the democracy: and .iberty won fOr laVe and one transfer, all cash; 7 us by the colonists in the Ameri- cents for a fare transfer-and reissue: can revoluflon, such Opposition as 10 cents cash fare after midnight course of the United States Is aid, privileges; full fare forchiidren tc Is encouragement, Is comfort to eupylng seats and a .reasonable the " kaiser.: - charge for all packages too large to 'ETen UUot so 'Intended, that i SfliUSZuta well 'studied, opposition weakens Wilson and reductions m;service after s p. m.. ally $15,000,000,000 otfwholly tax exempt bonds, that is. exemft from super taxes and all other taxation. The interest upon that would be $600, 000.000 per annum. Before this war broke out the entire expenditures of the federal government were about 91,000,000,000 per annum, so that more than half the expenditures of the gov ernment In ordinary times Would be required in the future for the payment of Interest upon these bonds. Suppose that 1300,000.000 of this interest rep resented tho amount which the gov ernment otherwise would ccllect from the imposition of super taxes. What would be the result? The government of the United States would have to tax all the people of the United States S300.000.000 additional to make up the deficiency occasioned by the ex emption of the wealthier .classes from super taxes. "The basis upon which these new bonds are Issued gives rich and poor alike an Investment upon like terms. The super tax upon incomes is a pol icy adopted deliberately by the Ameri can people upon the principle that those who are most able to pay shall bear a larger portion of the burdens of government. That is a sound prin ciple. It would not be wise to set that principle at naught in this war. do not believe the man of large means would hesitate to buy a gov ernment Investment worth to him with exemptions probably 4 per cent, the best security in the world, more liquid in the banks than any other class of securities, more suitable for Immediate sale it he wants to sell It, and exempt from all but inheritance taxes in every state in the Union. In addition to this the government offers a privilege to every man who buys these bonds which no corpora- tion, no municipality, no state of the American Union has ever Offered to Its citizens. It offers the privilege of converting this bond into another bond If the government should issue one bearing a higher rate of interest than 4 per cent during this war, under terms and conditions that are pre. scribed- Tou are fully protected. The government Is giving its' citizens the greatest opportunity . for investment ever offered by a. civilized nation in the history of all the world I know it will not be said that the patriotism of American men and women is based wholly upon the return that is to be received from an Investment. a . "I would not make an appeal purely upon the basis of patriotism. - I would make an appeal upon the merits of the security first, and then I would say to them, "When you ae getting this superlative investment, this most liberal Investment in the world, you can also render a service of patriotism to your country." If there la a man or woman In America who has the means to buy a bond for a cause so noble and so great as that, to protect the lives of our gallant soldiers and who will not do It, the free soil of America is no place for him or her. The spied, did spirit you are manifesting is the thing that is going to-make the American army invincible. a II "We have only to let our men upon the battlefield know that they will be given all the protection that the wealth, courage, mtght and resources of the American people have at their command, that we are willing to sac rifice at home as much as we ask them to sacrifice upon the, battlefield. We must let them know that though we cannot ahed our blood as they must do, we are willing to sacrifice comfort, convenience and property for country and liberty. That is the American spirit, the spirit that must pervade this country if we are going to win this .war and win It quickly. "We cannot, ask those men to go and give their very lives if we at home are unwilling to make- these sacrifices, Insignificant in compart son." tT this column all reader of Thm Journal are laviud to eoatrlbat original matter la story, la rer or ta philosophical olaMrrattoa or sulking auotatton, , frost any aoare. J Contribution of axcapUooal merit will be! paid far at the adltur'a appraisal.) j Oh, Well; Let It Go at That I YOUNG William was evincing much interest in the evening paper, but finally, says Harper's Magazine, a puzzled look came over his "counte nance. : ' ; , ... Mother." said he finally, "what does d d stand for T' - 'Doctor of divinity, my son. Don't they teach you the common abbrevia tions in school?" 1 "Suae; but that don't seem to sound right here." , . Read it out aloud." " 'Witness I heard the defendant say. "I'll make you suffer for this. I'll be doctor of divinity if I don'tr ' " Socks Straight From Home ' Harold Becker, a nephew of O. II. Becker of Portland, is in France with the Canadian army, a non-commissioned officer, having seen three years 01 service in the great war before his twenty-second birthday, next Novem ber. He has once more found truth to be stranger than fiction. His mother, who lives In eastern Canada, is an active worker id the women's auxiliary for the home 'contingent of troops, and nas knit something over 100 pairs of socks, for her sons and for the aux iliary. Harold wrote home the Singu lar fact that In a consignment ot socks received from home and distrib uted among the men, he found his mother's name in the pair issued to him. - Of the Well Known Booth Family When BalUngton Booth, head of the Volunteers of America, was In Port land the other day he told this story at, his own expense: f An examination waa being held .' of candidates for police officer In a cer tain city. One of the questions was "Who'iwas George Washington r- The answer was: "George Washington was a British general sent over at the time of the Revolution and he licked the colonists so well that he became very popular with them." Then came this question: "Who killed Abraham Lincoln T' The answer. "Balllnston Booth. To His Country Hold me. tonight I am wearv The dav has been cheerless and cold. Raw were the marches and dreary, 1 Ana worn 18 my spirit, tnoagn DOia. jaoia me tonignt in your arms; t In their love let me quietly rest. I Guard my repose from alarms .1 In the curve of your sheltering Dreast, . : i Fighting is sure on the morrow, . . 1 When war and hot hatred Is rife j Shield me tonight from all sorrow, j Tomorrow I die for your life. - . Claudius Thayer in Oakland Trttrana Uncle Jeff Snow Says: Cleve Hedholler has been mighty glad ever' time the governor has called off deer huntin. Cleve used to raise goats on that upper ranch of his'n, and sold the jerked meat for venison to the hunters, but the deer lit out Jist as soon as the huntin' season started ever year, and them city fellers shot his goats, his colts, his calves and some of his cows, and one year' one of his hired men, by mistake for deer, Sometimes Cleve got pay and some times he didn't. It got so it was dan gerous, indoors and out, what; with stray bullets and mistakes, and CI eye moved down into the valley this year, He has gone tack now to dig his spuds and pasture Ma stock in peace. , , HOW TO BE HEALTHY Copyright, 11T. by 3. Kealey. KILLED BY A PIN, A man who lived In a suburban home had a boy 6 years old. He loved that boy better than he loved his own life. One night the father returned from work and called out as usual: "John where's John?" The little feet were heard coming, but this time the boy was silent. He held up a finger, to show his father. .A little sore had come on It, evidently from something that had occurred in his playing about. The sore finger gave the child consider able pain and he waa fretful, but the mother and father did not think It necessary to call a doctor for so triv ial a matter. By night the sore had gathered into a little fester, and the father thought he would open it Taking a pin from the cushion, he In serted it Just beneath the skin of the sore spot and squeezed out the pus. The next night the finger was badly swollen and the boy was in the moth er's arms crying with pain. They decided to call a docter. when he arrived he set about at once to dress the finger. "What have you done for him already?" he asked the father. He told the doctor of having pricked the sore with a pin. The doc tor took on a grave expression, which immediately filled the mother and the. xacner witn a great xear. "it is not the original sore that I must fight, but the germs from that pin or from the skin, carried through by its puncture, which have caused blood poisoning," the doctor said. The parents were amazed. They had never known that there was danger from such a. simple procedure as a pin prick. The blood poisoning spread from the boy's finger through his whole body, and in spite of all the doctor could do the boy died within two days. If the simple precaution of painting the sore with iodine had been taken, and of thrusting the pin in a match flame before using it, a tragedy would have been averted. 1. -, . Tomorrow: Eugenics Benefits Off spring,. " chant, and Mrs. Lamar are at the .Cor nelius hotel. . M. Ov Stevens, business man ef St. Paul,' is at the Cornelius. ' O. T. Pardee of the United States geologist survey, Washington, D. C, is at the Portland hoteL v , D. S. Fotherlnghara of Seattle Is at the Portland. 1 Mrs." John Flaherty and" Miss May Flaherty are at the Portland, from Se attle. - i ' . - - - Mr. G. B. Myrick and Miss Hazel Myrlck of Pendleton are at the Wash ington hotel. . T. F.- Kerin, of Lewlston Is at the Washington.. , -- Mrs. H. M. Cox Is at the Washing ton from Arlington. . ' " . . Mrs. C. J. Retd has moved to the Norton's hotel for the wlnr. Mrs. J. O'Neill of Oregon City Is registered at the Nortonla, J. 8. Dinehart, business man of Los Angeles, is at the Carlton. - Mr, and Mrs. Jerry Cooney of Loon Lake. Wash., are at the Carlton. Americans in London . i From tbo Omaha Be Shooting craps on Piccadilly Circus glimpses the evolution wrought by the America invasion . of . London. It is only a starter. . As time wags on and the pep ot live ones animates the oil town from Ram cat alley to Bishops- gate one may vision baseball en Par 1'ament Square, rolling tenpins on Pail Mall and bootlegging in the dusty by ways of the Tower. Stranger things have happened, DUN A J EC THE v WATERLOO OF THE ROMANOFFS! Mackensen's great victory that saved Austria takes on rjew importance as pri maty cause - of Russia'j . collapse. So declares Frank H. Simonds in his! ' Sunday war article de scriptive of this epochal struggle, which he classes : with Verdun and The Marne as the three big battles of the war to date; r OREGON. BOYS AT CAMP GREENE News letters relate the exj- ? periences of units. of sthe Oregon National v Guard now . undergoing training at Charlotte, "N. C Jtist the kind of reading"', that, , interests' the friends -at FICTION AND FUN " si. The lighter side is not overlooked in the' Selec tion of,, feature materia! for The Sunday Journal. 1 The Fiction . Magazine lis a short story section pf -r a r e - m e r t; whife ' tie . comic, section 'is.the,blst there is'tcr be bad;; THE; SUNDAY.: JOURNAL V Five Cents the .Copy Everywhere - NEXT SUNDAY