THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORT LAND; WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1917. AM tRDtPKHDENT'REWftPAFItS At KmiD to $20 the ton from the same class of buyer In petty driblet. The local dealers' association of Kalamazoo- sent , warning to the Michigan state association which stirred up the Michigan,' Indiana and .Ohio coal dealers' association. V , .VI. '- V " a.. Ah kuwu waa U1Q IV . VlU4g pressure to bear on the mine oper ators that Mayor' Balch could for awhile get no more coal 1 for his poor. He finally obtained a supply in spite of the opposition, hut only at outrageous prices". , - 1 i In November and i December, ! aMUlolng, bmrfwif aa XMUu - . ratuim. Of ; auwtmi ika iMUtflM at rvruaod. wr., few vaaaaiMiutr luruuga uia mail . aa aawa f- tom laiiar. . - . ' - . iMAfnujtu MmIb III! BMi A-eVOl, aU acnatlaoanta HuiKd, br tbaae USlm . 'Xl lb mitiilat wtt .apart qrtKrt y wat. jus ruts . he ka. uw racpiea k.'bM DUt Cbk-afo, - ments of alien leaders and acts of J their deliberations, and that some- venturers pull out for new and greener their mfsgjilded dupes In this I. W, thing will he provided by President fIeJ2 . . , , ,,.,. W. organization, are' a - serious Wilson's foresight and study He lm'Zv iZ tV. hare American problem. : . Nine persons I may, well write his name in his-1 been purchased at a Very low figure. are already dead and . much prop-1 tory as the man who j.ut an end j but in 1S7 the town began to pick rtv. In' ntM-jiu ;wwiU'' nf th 1 tn wa. fc :..nnMnttia- na:in1rit I VP-:-',lt. wu -found that wheat would Fillnvord fires. ' . - of Justice which kills the : military E?VZZFtJ&? spirit. ! stock raising began to put money Into t MMrituo tars by Mil r m eajr aauraa .,! Ua UalUni uia r Itealao -' DalLY (alUKNlNO OR ArTKRKOOW iOM fmt... as.00 I On ... !hM if......1.u oi Mtk las 1916, -there was a coal famine in uaiux MoNiaoarrita;ooM au Kalamazoo In spite of all Mayor i Am yer '...91 I woe meet I M I Balch COUld dO. The '. poor BUf- ierea lernoiy. juven me weu-io-uo were seriously discommoded. While the famine was at" its 'worst y the interstate commerce commission discovered that the local dealers had. 80 cars of coal marooned on a sidetrack near Kalamazoo held for higher prices. . No' wonder Mr. Garfield worries a little over his Job. i Negotiations are in progress for -settlement of the Portland strike.- Negotiations are better for the purpose than the. portent ous city hall conferences at which there was to be provision for depu ties armed witb. rifles, troops armed to the teeth and other means of employing force. Present were district attorneys, sheriffs. generals, governors - and function arles In profusion. You cannot convert an American worklngman to your way of thinking with a first year, the United shotgun half as quickly as by mee&- wiii Axnand. inoiniUnz I inc him on the level in honest "Prattmtabla fir la mora than a private Blaforuina. It la a public drrelletloo. At a time Ilka thla of rmrrgnnoy and of man lfrat atcaaaltr for tba eunaervatloa of oa : tlonalr rtaoorcaa. It la mora tban ever a Blatter of deep and prraalng oooarquenea tbat errry tnrana ahoalil ba taken to pre Tent thla avU," Woodrow WlUon. FOR EVERY MAN N ITS States loans to the allies, a sum of negotiation and free conference money but little short of $20,- COMMENT. AND NEWS IN . BRIEF i -i LIKE OXEN I circulation. N THE midst of his own free- dom, his privileges of citizen . ship' and - his power as -a' sov ereign, unit in . a self govern- ment, how can an American worker T IX THE EAST i - ; ; ' SMALL CHANGE v: ... "Majority leader Kltchln aaid if 'the war lasted another year income taxea must be raiaed. stM turther." ; Well? It is stated ' that thV German mark Tias depreciated frightfully in neutral Bv 187 times Were booming, for I markets." As a. result of frichtfulnesa. wdrk was under way hy the O. R. & I f ; .hi ' " HTJ pHttArtna Xffttol p.,lrnna I N. company to extend Its railroad to 1 KB they ike4n-Kussia, so loug as they glittering Mlttel-fcuropa I walla Walla and also down, the Co-J go as far as they don't like In Belgium The xaiies was i auu x rsoce. the construction I "Whether wa ara athieall luatifiad jcheme which was the prin- lumhia to Portland. cipal lure that led Prussia I headquarters .for or noi is noi our concern," says Secret tirv HitanAH nf th. T . TV w Tin do - anything in his own countryjwas a grand conception from the I manent and substantial industries- on j way aamit that there v is such an am that may directly or indirectly as-J point of view of imperial ambi-J which it cap depend that it wiu con- J m1 .tbic8? . .i.i tk.D.n..i.. ..ti ...f, Alin it- t-r n nn I timid - to , rrovl mil thrtvs. - 1 On can hivt one's cake and eat it. hold Its power over German work- .olid . dominion Europe- and Asia Vlir ingmen? J from the Baltic sea to the Persian LHourlst trade have made permanent There Is not even the semblance I gulf, with a greedy eye on India J its prosperity. at freedom for a Prnssian work-1 and China. ingman. He has no voice in pub- The British advance In the Mes-H Letters rrom-the People lie affairs. ; He has no vote that I opotamian region cuts off a huge counts. , 1 J slice of territory : which pan- proviso oniy, : nat one must wait a while before one eats it. But one will have it, au the time. M It ught to be easier to sell the sec ond issue of liberty bonds than the first. Just in ratio as the PrussUn purpose is clearer now than it was when , the first issue was sold. ICommenJeatioaa aant to The Journal for I' '-" mtnt h.ti 1- rv,n EH?141 l th,'.ilepVtJ5"Dt,W,Ll7!l!:l n bcn bond investors to realise that Explaining the control exercised Germanism claimed as its own. "reK ?lywZ&XTl bv the Prussian rniine caste, for- General .Mande As winning laurels l ' i? t bu"a loan. But Pit is a loan. Ika nltl . 1 " . I. . ,1.14. . fc, 1 wu.F" BT ioi urn, ,no iuoto i w. ., etemallv anlvant 1H fTriri- iam rAM 1 4tftaaaAlAal. r3AWAt4 flSt1 in UU S.alf3 . U1U aJaf.LL.it3 IIHIUB Ul Llltf I saaannal : I m a, a aaaa m naa M TA Waal: Z . . w. w w.w v . . . : - A.aa.iaM. a ji itI fa I tike luBM nnblishMi ihMM atfiU.1 v 1 " uouw n in cue. nia Hrtrriann finnmn i - aobjiuiub ouu jjaujiuuiauo. i ' nhev ak1ast mrnhaTa If la frUA. for retrieving the blunders wnicn the lower branch, of the Prussian J were made by .British arms - Between "Hannibal at tha rateai' CDargee Higner Ups - - l and -winaenourg at the gates!" there Portland. Sent 30. To the Editor of ;iln" I" i100"" 1 Miween the bunaesrath. ; OYer that is the house tbat regIon at the beginning of The Journal-Is there such a thing as I .America Hlndenbu?g i not In of lords, ' against which . the ilower chamber can do nothing, but even for the war. Every blow he strikes va. w , . . . . .. ... w . UHVWB Ul. TV Cdl , . . . - a a . i a n a ttAa fmm a f net a r r a k a icnr a i ... me lower cnamDer me y are oitclcu i " summer - without any recognition at j V ArnoId Bennett isaurea tha 'Rrtti.h oeins unpatriotic to labor 7 . The: pro-f t our srates. but there la nnlv ana aucers or wealth nave laoorea n i way o aeep mm away zrom tnem, a system of voting depending on I imperial dream their rights. Seventy-five per cent! that "the United States will do its wealth. Suppose a ' community has I , ancient times the MesODO-1 have received $2.80 per day -.and n I damnedest in this war a wealth of 19,000,000. llfon mani ' the face of thla in lust lea the em- tn unitea btates has never bad to m ittiiiiau. uuu ninvr. wr.t h nri,.r. t work in I oevona hi , aurna8t., weu. we wilt a men together have mensely productive by irrigation, walt on the decision of ome i' ?iSXtt 1U' 1 has $3,000,000 they put him in circle No. 1; if 600 13,000,000 they make circle No. 2; for which the Tigris and Eurphra-1 board that-never decides. and 15.000 men. who together may . affrtrj j rnv of watr. Labor has offered free service 'f have 33.000.000 make up the remain- l"ZZ, the shipbuilders would give free ma mg circie, ana wnen mey vote in. r.u6 wai uMWju teriaL Labor has offered two men at one man with $3,000,000 voting in long ago and turned the land Into the trenches if the employers, would Circle No. 1 has his vote count for ft desert. ; But science can: easily I contribute one of their own men, bit ana ine is.uuu in circie no. j. v, " - I capitalist pretense to loyalty It is And that is the ghost of a franchise and the Turk, the old Babylonian t0 them to make good or leave the wiun wn ia me poor rruss.an. naa plain will again become a garoen. I management to labor and the govera Raas: and Bobtail 8 tori a From Everywhere) OREGON SIDELIGHTS . nir. t ttm14 nrnuJlv asserts. is . more than doing her bit for the war library luna. xo oe nr " country in her contribution on the first day is being first indeed. Following the announcement pumping project near uoiudm. ib; klamath Falls Herald states that 00 acres above the aitcn in toe vicinity of Merrill is to be brought under irri gation before another season cornea around. This project is to be known as tfce "White Lake project. After six years' tender care under the watchful guidance of the Vale Civic Improvement club, its creator and sponsor, the Vale public library, the Enterprise reports, has been launched as a full grown insti tution with an organisation all of its own. The Vale library association has been formed and the first direc tors elected. .... Of Turner's flax interests the Trib une says: "The flax exhibit of our local mill at ttoe state fair was pro nauncad bv mniS Deode from over the .1,1. tHA host tvnr aann. All were SUr- orised that such flax could be raised J carrpts and- beets remaining to latt in Oregon, ana me imisnea pruunti iu mm me w:nier, xne actual ui was commented on by manufacturers I lay in cash for this garden was 1J. from many points. That flax can be for fertm- Q r-n ra L ,nr,Mirui v naa urcii I -. - - piants, i.25 for seeds and 2 cents for a . I snray. a total nt tain i .n its. Editor Lelter of the La Grande rv ... - .1," .Til nhurvnr believea in the little Old I - iwmiuvu irviu me oruj- e fTr He says" "The Wallowa work of the day. and amoCnUJ county fair this year has been a great 1 to no more than would the work vf , success.- ine aiienaanco am Keeping me imlck yard tidy, had it good, the interest keen. There is .no OMn a lawa lt ny be said further, doubt that competition among the th . ,1o" exhibitors, Mvestock men and farmers cVlon of is a good thing, wnne tne annual iu v. t win, umw vegeisoicta. is a fine, social event. Union county were used by the family during this, should not be without its county fair. time. Can any business man show a alesabot ilaTin tm.'nf" M a r-ad af Tse Veersal ere lBTltad to coatritate erlclaal . mattar to " 7'l,J?n PbltoaovMeal etwervatlea 7...., Dg flaotaOooa. rroa any aoaree. Ceatribatloaa et i axaapuooal stem wiU se paid oc at tke aoltor a araiaaTj Ko Better Story Thaii This tXOULD-BE humorists continue to V v crack Jokes over the baca yM garden, but here, says the Columbian. . thV r,cor4 ot actual achievement a Vancouver oack yard 4 by t feeU All of the lettuce, radishes, onions, spinach, green peas. strUg beans, tomatoes, cucumbers, cabbage, carrot and beets that a family ut four ha7e eaten from the first of May up to the present time, and enough po tatoes to' last two months, la addition to all of those vegetables. enouU string beans were grown to put up 44 quarts, and tomatoes to put up t Quart Six gallons of , krout have been made from the extra cabbage grown, and there are enough onions. grown here proved." ment for the county. FOREIGN SHIPS IN COAST TRADE By Carl Smith. Waabingtoh Staff Correspondent of The Journal satisfied by his ruling autoc- WMnrton. Oct 2. WHMn a short "We are disgusted with I Ume lt l8 expected that 1.00C.000 tons of shipping will be withdrawn from the American coastwise trade tor the use of the army and naVy. That will be about 22 per cent of the entire OOO.OOO'.OOO. It is obviously impossible to raise all ' of this money by taxa tion. If all the- excess war profits for the year had been con fiscated, we would still be some thing like 14 billions short of sthe required sum. After applying the excess profits tax, 'which runs In some cases as high as 60 per cent, and after taking account of 'all the other war taxes, we shall Hill require about 13 billion dol- -lars for this first year of the conflict. r It Is to be remembered that all taxes are not immediately pro ductive. In some cases a year Is t required "to convert the tax leviea into actual availabe revenues. This " '' is another fact that cannot be reft-pealed, and that necessarily drives . us to sale of bonds. 1 ; This Is why a second Liberty . loan is offered. There is no other way to raise the money.- If we do ALLEN BATON A' a familiar LLEN EATON Is name In Oregon. The man who bears it has represented Lane county, sev- erel times in the legislature. He was 'always an honest legislator. He was never a member of the gang, that inside organization of subterranean process and masked manipulation. . Allen Eaton, as a member al ways stood for the cleansing . of the legislature and the purifica tion of politics. He was an open and brave advocate of Statement One. He was always a defender of the primary law. He was one of the pioneers in the great drive for the Oregon system:. As a member, he was the most powerful of all the friends of the state university in the legislature. He was always the Champion of the institution on the floor and ViAnva f'Vi a imm(f tAAa ' Ta Vi I a l"ti"1":, h!v!ttI' 'a"- f1111? influence and.- ability probably more than to that of any other ruling caste selects and controls have wrought. Few other , cities in J paratively free! such a living them. They are .-.U taken from the' Prussian noble class. No the northwest afford worklngman. no average man. no UWt between the two periods Th. - . .. . . m , -i t UiUlCB WllIUU U.va: ive aajaaaJiA alty receives preferment. How can any American work- fngman conscientiously do any thing that will directly or indi rectly help the Prussian governing caste hold German workingmen ... go on wiin toe war. ir we ao K not go on with the war in con Junction with our allies now, . we may be compelled later to fight a victorious Prussia alone. We might wish not to issue these' bonds. Some of us may have preconceived objections to ' bond issues. But what else 4 can we do? Our khaki-clad regiments are under arms, and they must be fed and clothed and raid.' Our . naval forces are a-sea and must be , munitioned, victualed and compeh sated. We must have the money . and we can only get it through bond sales. And the bond is every man's ehance to do, his bit. If he can not 'fight, he can save $50 'and , buy a bond.' Or he can save mora and buy a bigger bond. And every bond buyer will he a soldier in the grand army of finance on which rests every other f?:f' "?rlCa 19 thr0wlng accredltedstatement that Eepresentatives of Norwegian capital are In Portland waiting for completion of fifty million dollars' worth, of ships contracted for on this coast. They have another one person Is due the strong financial support the university has always had from the legis lature. Locally, Mr. Eaton was one of the leaders in' the ; struggle to popularize Eugene city govern ment, to purify the water system which" at lone tim filled Eugene with a typhoid epidemic, and in other enterprises which , always lefid to division and controversy ih" city affairs., In all these public activities, Mr. Eaton" obviously aroused personal antagonisms. It is the common lot of men who seek change from things as they are. It seems . to have been Mr Eaton's present offense that he at tended the meeting of the People's Council in Chicago as a delegate from a city in New York .state, where he was spending the sum mer, mere pas been no wen Mr Eaton did anything at the meeting that was disloyal or seditious Indeed, from his record as a pub lic servant and private citizen in Oregon, it is difficult to believe that Mr. Eaton did anything to the shipyards get busy soon, not much of the money is likely to he spent In Portland. TRAVEL STORIES OF NORTHWEST By Fred Leckley ben racy. .. None of . the officers in Germany that amount to anything are elected They elect the members of this lower house and of the . reichstag, but even in the reichstag the districts haVe not been changed since -1871, so- that probably one half the people are 1 nrhan una acana tha naeea of Wash witnout representation. I inerton Irvine's Astoria and pauses to iw.. . Inafr lahnr tt Via I H a oh(nnlno Knn Vrl anri firm far No 'judges are elected, no , dis- marvel at ; the fortitude of the handy cut 0ff from obtaining material, so sage at the present session a WW trlct attrrnvr.. no irnvfirnors of aaventurers wno oniy a mua more mau the poor villains are between the authorising the admission of foreign ." Vfiii a, century ago mt.de their tedious wayidevIl and the deep sea. ships to the coastwise trade. iw.iuvco, uiuwoio 1 across the continent to loin tneir com- T tm i r,nr,A t ir, , tv,. mm spond to our higher county offi- rades at the mouth of the Columbia who rT i.Ka, will mrnr nut nut nf I mitt.. i4m1,,a, tViat ft ha nn mirrinaa cers. They are all appointed. Thejha sailed-around the Horn in the ill- business auch a menacing, vicious in- of changing the policies which have rols 1lea ao"ui, uo - i etltution as the Cnaraber of Commerce, I heretofore prevauea, having actea, n ment, for they have proved themselves to be a pack of hypocritical, unpatn- J tonna ee in operation. Already there otic exploiters who care for nothing: j i decrease of 360,000 tons in opera- but self and profit. tion as compared with the year the It has been proved, that, bad as some war in Europe began. of the shipbuilders are; they ; would I These are the figures which moved l"concede to the union shop, but that I the houie committee of merchant ma- vicious organization, the Chamber or I rine and fisheries to act upon the Commerce, has them bonded to serve I suggestion of President Wilson and progress that .the intervening decades wnen aj men 8hall once more be com- is stated, without reference to the JOHN A CHAPMAN. A Soldiers Library Suggestion soundness or unsoundness of reserving the coastwise trade in normal times for American built vessels. , "This is war measure and is are being called upon daily, why could not there be a circulating library established that shall consist of so IndianY trading i post. enjoyed a I ... M , .i . transient fame when'the Eastern Ore- joupnal-TherTis an effort being United to the period of the war and gon gold rush was on and now has de- cua nlraVfof lurmy8 fK reasonable time 2 veloped into a bustling business town. S1 e tha call ia so ereat for funds the committee, "and the powers vested the central marketing point of a wide I , .v. I in the snipping ooara are so neagea ana iruiiiut region. Probably the first white men "to camp on the site of the present city in BiiPh Biihlpptlon To hln aiiph of Tn Dalles, asido from Scotch fur many books being sent each month or in pucn BUDjecuon. iO neip sncn trader or French -voyageurs. was the quarter from each Ubrary of our coun a government la to he ID a rulinK I Q, r t.i. .n -n.rv-A Tn i nnn I . i. ii.4 . , - ---- I 11 Ji .v. .cl. iiau8 "'U"S I A.A.n th. n11t v nain a n.mt.rv .ridnrr.rv Mill creek, visiting and trading with a regular library system? The Honor hh?.,Pro"em.romihaniP , . . ' ., 1 . . ., I the Wasco Indians. I Guard could select and send such vol- and horses and swine. I rAnresent&tivea of both the coast and no extra work would fall upon those in Before the war; the most highly inland tribes. If was the great mar- charge. tu M. w. - la a J. t a a W 11 skilled, worker In Germany got a 1 t nJI?w, SZZXrA -Upholding the Strike Cause wage of- $2 a day, usually less, Indian slaves caDturert-from other Portland. Oct. 1. To the Editor of tnr 1 ft tn 12 knurs' work. In har- I tribaa. blankata. tomahawka and fura The '' JournalsIt - - I . - . : . I ..ctvii vest time, men in the fields got to trade ror ariea saimon, 48 and women 32 cents a day. The Indian name for what Is now 1nA Tt!l txt a vj 1 n m 1 1 m,infn. For that wage, they had to work -surrounded by walls of rock." The from long before dawn until long I mouth of Mill creek was "Well-look- after sunset. It is a work that it," or nne gap-in-the-rocks." The I BAe4l M M Th aa ulla Maal aata ai TT av . urutaiizea mo wumcu uu acoyo i -.,. .. - , ,i-. rtno-r Thi. the number of workers increased was where the Deschutes or Snake Jn- so . wages will be cheap. Discuss- j dlans lay in ambush to kill the , ..n.nin wascos. "6ninni-na-Kann" was tne about and limited that there need be no occasion for fear , on the part of the interests that have enjoyed the mononoly of the coastwise trade in the oast that they will suffer. - "They in common 'with all other riotie American, citizens mu nroblem from the standp nublic Interest and not from the VIII I ... . Here the white traders could meet ume, and help in the libraries so that i .VI .7. . m . . . US I If KIUUUU XU1 A.Caa a,auua fcUQ O IRUU noint of our shipbuilding Industry. "Never in the history of the world has any nation embarked on such a gigantic shipbuilding program.. Not only are our . existing shipyards crowded to capacity with new work, but large sums are being expended seems to me if Striker's Wife" had put her money bank instead of spending it on dress btbi ."en! .?,r.iV! falling to 2,771;000 on June 1 last- The Shyest Bird That Flies Bom of the school' boys took a trip down the beach one evening last week, says the Port Orford . Tribun. for. an old-fashioned snipe hunt, -Finding a suitable place', drank Carey was in the coast traae ana on. m 7" left to hold the sack open while the WT'ZJrjr 5" n on to arum up tne snipes. i . ' r, . T.,r ? r. sometime during the night, Frank con - Via w i;.-Tn eluded it was the wrong time of-fae ticallyno .Mp. had bee., withdrawn .Tlp and" VVmrn.4 horn.: iui iiiiaiveat y aim 410: v n-a i . -- 1 1 i Under existing law a foreign vessel Jur Homes "Columbia, the Gem of the Ocean" may enter a port in Maine, touch at J xir New York. Charleston. QalVMton, Panama and San Francisco on her I We will stand by the homes of our way to the Columbia river or Puget I nation. t , Sound and discharge cargo at each I "" wera ouhi oj me Vt?'1?.:?!": wiir.Vaeve homes from their de, foreign ports, but she cannot take on I Andadi'for tha tvrant a arava domestic cargo at any of these ports I We wiU sweep from the folds of Old for another American port, mum This, says the committee. Olnrv involves atara. a tremendous waste of transportation I And we'll blot from th. world-honored facilities, ana snouia noi oe perrnmeu i story to continue when there is need for use I The words which its pages now nf ,v.rv fnrtt of anara. I mar. J. 11 ere ia no irn-oui. w uj m ,n,w I w . coming into a gulf or Pacific . port Wft wJ1, ,tand by th red, whit and uum IV .cuti ei vi duhuj auici .a. i D1U. port should go empty from th gulf I Our star-spangled banner so true, Ana we u sweep from the folds or port to a port or ports on th At lantle seaboard to load with cargo for some foreign port," argues the com mlttee, "instead of carrying cargo of sugar, lumber, i grain or cotton from a gulf port or Pacific port to Balti more, Philadelphia, Nw xork Boston." Several hundred thousand tons of neutral shipping Is under charter to American interests at the present time, and more will com, if given full opportunities in the coaatwid trade. From this source, the committee as Berts, the vacancies caused by the commandeering of American ships can largely be made good. The shipping board is expected to draw 800,000 tons away Great Lakes, taking all Old Olorv The clouds which now hang o'er its blue. We are coming, the scions -of 'heroes. To prove that they died not in vain: or I And we challenge the sin-hardeoed Neroes, Who play e'er the graves of the slain. Away with the laws of protection. Which shelters tneir iniamojs . trade: We are coming to show by our action xne strength or tn vows we nave made. We're the homeguard that never sur renders, Tha l1ana nt nntini. and truth: from the I We'ra Columbia's loval -defenders. th boats Who have pledged her our unspotted Bitttahl -frki. AVrBai mfnrlt Th, n . 1 vnuth dian government now permit Amerl- Kor God who in marchtni '"befdfe urn. or picture shows, she would have had j?1" J J.J1!, r(.haSi vaaS awellfmed pantry today to fall back he cnB .L.fhJ , . j v j t nlKM tha on hi tv-lxiiic is uiia. x am a uuiuu i -a ,i, , definite purpose of making that striker's wife and have a family to feed. I have a well filled pantry to day, and hope every union striker's wife has the same. Let "Striker's Wife" tell how much she is getting method of warfare hopeless as means of Germany winning tke war, a a American shipping engaged in the working class, Mr. Gerard said in h'a Portland address: I have seen those poor miserable slaves creep out of their cellars in Berlin and try to hold a meeting, and they are Immediately knocked on the name of the crest southeast of The Dalles and meant "the mountain that tells the sun's travel." Each spring, stream and high point had its name. . "Shelooks-thla-gipt- whalth" was the wolf's spring. "Gai- galt-whe-la-leth'' was th name of an- A UNION STRIKER'S WIFE. head by police, who have divided other spring ana meant aione in s the world, and down with the kaiser. the city into districts so that . no more than 400 or BOO could meet in any district, and no one without a pass could cross from ofle district to another and have a grand meeting. That is the way they are treated. Their newspapers are under censor ship! their people are under the police. Any act -by any American work paid for being unpatriotic. Let her ftrein trade before the war began ana some more oi utr tuna iook ai me employers and see who is unpatriotic. Did th shipbuilders take the govern ment's offer of 10 per cent over cost? un was found 2,882,000 gross tons. rso. weii, let mem pay a living wage I to their workmen and let us live; for union men are the most patriotic In aggregated 1.076,000 gross tons, and on June SO last naa increased 10 2,422.000 tons. On the Great Lakes in can vessels to carry between Canadian ports, and like privileges should be extended to Canadian vessels oh th American side, says th committee. m m m The bill as introduced by Chairman Alexander allows' the shipping board to suspend the restriction imposed upon vessels of foreign registry or ownership in the coastwise trade for For home: whos protectors w are. And the glorious country tbat bore us. we v eniistea our lire tn mis war. Benjamin R. Perkins. Uncle Jeff Snow Says Bilah Lopmlster talis us that in lowln' for cost of production h food and fuel dictators don't cut down a if on prices and ' rents paid for land, which makes that stuff mighty go id HOW TO BE HEALTHY i beauty J a In 1820 James Bernie was the factor in charge of the Hudson's Bay trading Twicf Jlf TS, Tta11a Frftm hiA Vi a went to tne tiuason s Bay post near I ' " : ' : Vi "... CHICKEN-POX. The first thing to determine about ehicken-pox is that .. . . 11 11.1 ..... ryf th the mouth of the Columbia. From 1834 on for 10 or 12 years the Methodists maintained a mission here. the same being established by Lee and i Perkins. - In 1847 Perrin Whitman, a YY mnlotat. A f Wl r4a m tmmiw An unsigned letter ha. been received "no'I" fftf tViA former An epidemic of rn" .Za' L1"" "ee ma' rM,-ki-oox may prevail at the same "f.1."". I2r "! time a. 'one of smallpox or follow or r;:,.," "a ""CI I"-,:. "'"l precede it. Having chicken-pox aoe Journal. Inquiries of this nature are not render you immune to smallpox, nor vice versa. A chiia wiin cmcaen- Inm.n that hsmdirona A tn Arina in nephew of Dr. Marcus Whitman, and "H"V ""1 or" miwm placed in a hospital war a ..hina nrtrH Anson Hinman were here but fled to ,lwo' K th 5o!l.v.n0tn, "" where thefe were smallpox patients, building ships, or in constructing th. W1iiamltt. valiev unon h-arina swered in The Journals columw, WanM thev thought he was safe airplanes, or in sending food or cf th massacre of Dr. and Mrs. Whit- 1 11 TJL n,nymOU; -na from that disease. But he supplies and war materials to man at Wai-lat-pu. Z"Z" "Xl Jrw. 5 Following the flight. Captain. H. A. .k'"to --ch. " ""t 'JJ deveiopea cfaf i- D iioo.ooo ooo to nnd fnr ahina compromise his record or" his be built in America, hut unless standing in any respect except sucn as aruae nuui uis uieie v tendance-' at - the forbidden con- ! ference." That the holding of the confer- DR. GARFIELD'S JOB . ence wag unfortunate and that attendance of lt was a mistake; Is R. GARFIELD, the national true. -Mr. Eaton would better coal administrator, has put have remained away, for the rea ms hand to the plow to son that it was an act that In ' bring down the price of coal these war times was easily mis- to the consumer, large and ( small, understood, especially so since but he sees stumps and stones some of the men who " participated In the furrow Just ahead. . He were both disloyal and un-Amer-warns his colaborers tthat the re- lean. tail dealers will be likely to evade As the ease stands, The Journal the price-reducing order. Naturally cannot persuade itself from the they will . extort their current "ex- evidence produced that the 'Eu orbitant prices' as long as they gene commercial body Is war- ranted in demanding the drastic .Something of the spirit of the action proposed against Mr. Eaton, retail coal dealers may be learned President Campbell of the state from an address which. Mayor university has fully investigated Balch Of Kalamazoo delivered at the case, and has publicly stated ' Detroit before the Michigan league that there was nothing In - Mr. - Of municipalities. Eaton's conduct to call for his Mayor ' Balch says be was dis- dismissal from ;the university tressed last winter td see the ex- faculty. This la very high author- tortlonate prices which the 'retail ity, and lt will Incline the public coal dealers of Kalamaioo wrung I to wonder if there is not some- from the poor. To give them re- thing more than Mr. Eaton's at- lief he at first , tried to institute tendance at the so-called People's a municipal coal yard. But Mithl- Council that has led to the on fan has a constitution -which stood jslaught on man whose v public .ln the way. of hlis plans. . Mayor honesty and. public service have saicn taereiore nad to form a j never been questioned. private committee to sell coal to the poof. . , The funds f or the en-1 Forest fires .near Fillmore, Cal., ,terprise were provided by generous I originated in inaccessible districts , ; citizens "of Kalamazoo. . J where : neither .: hunters nor pros- : ; : At firstj everything was lovely! Ipectors- ,'evei penetrate, according The mine; 'operators sold him car-to.the statement of forest rahg- ! load lots - of coal . quite readily at ers, who are - convinced that the fair prices.; He . was . thus enabled I fires' are ;- Incendiary and attribut to retail it to the. Kalamazoo poor 1 able to the I. W. W, The. preach soon well Gen- . . ' . - I uow.wv.u ... " . ' auii. tii rru i n rn-mitwmr m.a, .r. . . . ti i mwimitam n t - - ( ws? -- i - - .Kviiv it la cniiaren www im si,u ";rA;.':,..L,S' r c.oul? b y mail, if 7.-'and Ine highest idcidence is b. awUA,a ...av.a 0. i t nit writer' name ana eomn urn ri. : .i.. aivth vn . . . . J rwaan III' BCUIIU suw - wa -w aa in JS5 tev. irainer osseau startea I Am. were furnished Tha artrt,-... 1. 1 :r ..7. in tw.t . fthH hnwh haln. ahrW ft- I ;. ..;. . I UUl aauna v- , - ---- . . , b " . I n u 1 1 n lmuorioiii. xnuH. 1 nm .iniira. I . . 11. ki. . .1. - -, ... v- Tr-tH- iLrru I " . . - - r lease, n orutaiizing me uermaa woraing i a.... now nas an inquiry irom Jirs. 1. Hols- I course. in ls&o Major l uoxara troops, con-1 man. who gives only the address xtk'.w Hon what rerm lailn MW a thraa. 1-V T-a niftai T iha I NTia.taa Ji f T aaM.aaa M era . . - " . . . A Kvprv obstruction thrown in th JL " Y rZit : "i - .niucuia ox rsruana the disease, xne symptoms coma wi I!, very ousirucuun turown in tne reeiment. established a military reser- mimt ariva atreat anil numh if t, j ik. nrtinii Then way Of the American government vatioh at Th Dalles and selected the expect mailed answers to inquiries, j are fever vomiting pains in the legs i,ui8 viiuo iicipo tiio rrusaian 1 1 -. .iutoui... nuanrc, ,o reauy sua i ana baca ana eruiiuun awuv Tnnto f hn,4.. wr comyaniea oi me nn regi- win oe mauea on receipt or her full nnnr They generally oegm on tne """" '""'' mt ,,nt tn California- two nmn9. All i.nl.Mh..A j - I 1 I I I " ' ' T : .... 1 ttuu.u OU I m yt .wwiaius wuiuo ui vrei luauy. i nies or tne x irst artiuery wer sta- l Well in all cases to give complete mail tionea nere. Frahce, or that hinders our gov ernment in its conductjbf the war, Is .a direct aid to the Prussian ruling caste in .dehumanizing and men. to run a sever -causes aerVardT ference to be 'glver'to" oldin' investment If you don't .v.! ,Ji.X Jl i.-- w. , i it no immeJit Income you don't pay Tr.ii. with aimI mt,a k.t...n no xtry taxes, and the demand f : Alaskan ports is excluded from the ,an u" to make prices com up lino am. xie oai uw,u kwwuv - tlons of Und In Washington and Ore gon, mostly second growth and burned. over stuff, and all his incom goes for taxes. Naturally he wants every thing els taxed to pay for tn war out his stumps. bill. Copyright, 11T, by 1. Ky. back and chest, but sometimes on the face. The rash itches Intensely and the child has great difficulty in keep ing from scratching the sores. If be does scratch them they become in fected and when they heal leave ugly scars. Gangrene has been known to occur about the blisters, especially in tuberculosis children, but such com plications are uncommon. Death has very rft-ely occurred, but has been Stage and Screen By Edna Irviti Conway Tearl will play MArmandM to Ethel Barrymor' "Camme." We are selling Liberty bonds I In 1852 two companies of the Fourth heranae we cannot raise pnmieh wianiry tummaim ui v.iin ora oecause we cannot raise enougn jamin Alvord were stationed at The money oy taxation to meet war i Dalles. needs. We are compelled to have 4 .t -Ran- of SaiJrn 'atarte thar.t the money in order to feed clothe store in j The Dalles. This was in snil nav the armv and navv. Tf 1851. He soon sold to William, Gibson. vou- cannot to to the front voal'1011" araa yeSr -"McKlndlay estab- come a member of the American field you cannot go to ine iront. you llsnea & trAding post Md put Perrl voiurteers. John: Shuhm... wen in an uni giv compieie man I . f- , , v, aam. addresses and phone number, a. well Hanton' ,;i.S?ei at K if residents of Portland. company, is also '"tera " .-" I Multnomah from Orange, I. J., ana PERSONAL, MENTION Will Leave Soon, for France Before departing for Franc to be- nma other attaches of th corpora tion ar expected from the east today. a a a . ' Move Here From Beattle T G Haywood, representative of the Seattle Car & Foundry company, of wmch Twohy Bros-this city, are nas iqovcu w tuiuauu can help a fighter fight by buying whTtman "a. -x. SSS a Vtnnrt . I thev sold to Sima and Humason' : n.i . Wltn aura. , . . . they bow wsims ana numason. . caL. is spending a few days in Port. itnnmh In 1854 W C. Lougblin took up ajiand with his sister. Mrs. A. O. Car- - PREPARING FOR PEACE boteL Fritzi Scheft is suing her latest known as the result of extensive skin I hushand, George Anderson for di- compucanons. i vorce. , Th principal thing for which a I u.nr uiur will eroduea JohnOili. doctor is needed is to diagnos th worthy's play, "A Bit of Lov, early! disease. It is easily distinguishable ,n K0vembr. by an expert, from small pox. After I m a a a that there is nothing special for him I star oi roujana, xb io on to do. unless comolicationa artaa No I seen here, is only 17 years old and her medical treatment Is of particular name is Helen Hayes. benefit. . The roost difficult thing for Bttty Barntcoat' of the Alcasai anyone to o is to keep th child from piayers. admits that this is her first' , r . mZ. .. S w LU season ut of Jw cngiano. alleviate the itching by applying a . - ' - . . soothing lotion. They are threatening to turn efti I the lights or in ureat wmt way iw Tomorrow Food Hoarding in th 1 New York lor conservation purposes Liver. I tn : Kriawir irlioni." nilva Thomas plays . a queen of th Great ville, and Mrs. Rhodes, ar at th i White Way, who Js kidnapped by a Perkins. I cowboy. . -- . v Guy Mallory, lumberman from Ker- I Thnmu' Carrlaan 'now Mabel Tal la-, ry, Or., is at th Perkins. I f.rro's husband, but once of U Bakarl Dr. and Mrs. H. G. Than) and Miss I .twir 4n tha rut of "Mntli.r C.rarV Luleah Nutt of Rainier, are at the Or-1 chickens." , egon hotel. Frank Calvin of The Dalles Is at the Oregon. H. L. Everttt and C. D. Corbln ar at the Oregon hotel from Ban Fran- Cisco. a David : War field will soon begin. another season In "The Music Master.! Already be has portrayed this famou character more than 2000. times. O. Lester Paul, one the editor of Mrs. 3. E. Bell and two children la Corvallis newspaper, is now a full-t claim near th garrison and W. D.j toxian, Mr. Shishmanian's father was T Bigelow also took up a claim on which the business district of The Dalles is now built. It was not till 1865 -that HERE is evidence that Presl ' dent Wilson, While he urges The Dalles had its first real boom. on warlike 'activities as he ougQt, tninKs oi peace as longingly and much more ration ally than the clamorous pacifists- i ne paciusts ciamor lor . a peace The Fort Colville gold excitement made The Dalles the trading point and outfitting point for' the mines on ac count of bng at the head of naviga tion on the Columbia. Many stores and Saloons sprung up at The Dalles. -In 1862 th discovery of gold in a missionary to Constantinople at the time th late Solomon Hirsch was I United States ambassador to Turkey, I a a a College Girls to Return . Miss Lois Dorn of Pasadena. Cal. is the guest of Miss Stephanie Strain of Willamette Heights. Miss Dom will attend Oregon Agricultural coi- Conditlon Prosperous ' H A. Hinshaw, general freight agent for the Southern Pacific, has returned from a trip through the Rogue and Umpo.ua valleys. He reports condi tions generally prosperous and the fruit crop good in that section. Mrs. Grebel on Way East Mrs. Jacob Grebel, wife of the man- which would be nothing but the j Eastern Oregon practically made The prelude to new wars. Mr. Wilson j Dalles. Thousands of miners came Is determined to make a peace .lJVJr.1 t..!?orIand' that ShaU last. The Dalles. Her they stayed till For the coming negotiations ha I they could arrange to have their goods lege this winter and. Miss Strain has aeer of collections for th R. G. Dun been student there for the past two Co and her daughter. Edwlna, are years. Both girls will go to Corvallis on "their way over the Great Northern in a few days to take up their studies. t(t Vj8it Mrs. Grebel's old home in Grand Rapid. Mich. They will spend Will Tour United States icm" time t Mackinac Island and James M. -Keener, secretary of the rminta and return by way of V"C ..a v ,.n.w iu UUUI I Kt,.-n M. I -r, I . 1 1 T nl. 1ta in ICn- ""r, aM After a sumror m th mines th which they will be gone for about five of pasaaena, ana ."r" , w miners came ot with 'Veil filled months. Mr. and Mrs. Keeney are ol Ixs Angeles, are at the Multnomah "pokes' of gold dust to winter her. going direct to New York, visiting the hotel ,today They are leaving this So plentiful was gold -dust that con- large cities en rout, and will com efterhoon on th Shasto limitea gress appropriated $100,000 Th 185 to hack to the coast by the south, spend- Mrs.- 3aren ,Mt Hyd, Miss R. E. build a branch mint at The Dalles, but ing month in Pasadena before finally Baragwanater and Charles C, Harris, before th mint was completed, the returning to Portland. , aU -of Nw York, r- tourists visittn rich placer diggings" began to play "r Portland, on.'th way down the coast, out and the mint ; was never com- EdlwnRepweeiitaUTes'.iB.CIty - Mr. and Mrs. A; S. Hailen and Mr. pleted. Harrison .Durant, financial super- nd Mrs. W. t- Hailen of Condon are With th decline of th gold diggings' visor of th Edison electric nlant at registered at the Perkins. A. & Hal- treaty Of Peace, some thine bettarlna the- Shutting down of th gold 1 Orange, N. arrived in Portlond this I len i the father of W. I Hailen and v,.. m. .ru -m V! mln in about 1887 and 1868, The 1 morning; on a business trip gnd is reg-l both are prominent Stockmen. . tnanmere expeaiency win guide Dalles saw th ' restless tide ;of ad-J istered at the Multnomah - hotel.', C. ' B. "F, Rhodes, merchant ofMcMlnn- tions in, the West Mr. Brandeis is to study affairs in the near East. : From their researches the president will .' form an opinion as to what 'is Just to. all con cerned. . - We may take it for granted that when the diplomats at last assem ble around the table, to frame the and a chauffeur ar tourists from Sar atoga. Cal- who stopped at tha Cor nelius hotel today, en rout to th George II. Stevenson and John W. blown actor. pUying in ouver v Bailey' "Braaded" in New York. Marr McLana, the girl from Butta. has. become a film star.- She. is writ ing her own scenario, wnicn wm o tfn Mad. Iv. t br of yars was a leading botl pro-1 a a a -r prletor in Seattle. I Th fabulous salaries paid moviar Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Ward elf. nu pletur Ursar not one p exaggrr dendale. Wash., are at the Coraeliua. td-" "y" " ! air. war is a business man. i.iurnw w " - .r Edward V. Bubanks of Ban Vnn. I Jaunt, . : cisco is spending a few days in Port Jrvinaj C. Ackerman, Hippodrome Und on a business trip. owner, is t doc fancier, and In; Nw C 17. Niawonger. an undertak. nt I vrv reeantiv bouchUwo beautiful wire Bend, and G. V. Smith, undertaker of j haired terriers for his California ken-t Reddlng, Cal., and Mrs. Smith, ar reg-1 nels at a cost of $1800. While in' istered at the Portland hotel. I Portland . this week, the vaudeville Mr. and Mrs. F, H. Tristram are I marnate talked dogs with . W. B. tourists registered at th Portland ho I Fechelmer. tl from StLouls. " I W .v. .t.,.tt 'u.n'n.tt. rMU Mrs. G. M. Joselyn of Fort Dodge. LZZ XT fket. tlr tim Iowa, is staying at the 1 Nortonla for a few darys. Mrs." H. L, Kuck of Th DaUes is staying at the Norton!, Mr. and Mrs. F. 1 Haaghton are at ui rvortonia from Th Dalles. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Coanlff ar all the Washington from Seattle. Charlotte Larsen is at -th Washing. ion irom Doum- xrairie, wasn. srominent -; figure . in . theatricals, ; . te making his first "trip to th -north west - He is a.-, brother. t : Edith) Luckett, n . here- last season wit hj Chaunear Olcott. m,.rh. Heart e0 Paddy Whack." He' It' waa who .told Margaret Mayo, that thooner she dropped- acting and took np writing the quicker would "ahe attain success. That wa when Miss Mayo was a- h . - r . A ! V ' v aaB , vv, Dpencer OI BacrtOUDtS it at MMnS.r af Mr -T.iu-tratt'a- -famnua .1. . W..t.4.kl.. ' .. . . I -..-v- wio , . ,.u.wu. , .twW enmnanv in waantna inn. I. . P. G. Johnson Of Fort RUy. Kan.. I an whan tier husband. Edrar RalwvTI is at th Washington. . - -A I WM a.B usher in a New York theatr. g ' i . . ' , V " "V " -- ri, -