The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, September 04, 1918, Page 8, Image 8

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THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, j WeDN ESP AY, SEPTEMBER -4, 1918.
a. s. jacksos..
';. Broadway end Xaaahia
.Foctiaed.
attend' the - 1222a
(or tnumMiM threes, the aw-Jkss;snseaa
' eisa mtuc -, ' r " ':::.
' V J 1 h eyrmUX what aapaftaaosa TO weal
obwriptie tm r U fcs Oteeoa end Wasa-
narLT laffrnjftxa O&AJTKKMOO"? r
'.Vihia M.i..illMtOa SMStkw.. . S0
; ;.,. , SUNDAY "is-- v
-"A '"." as n-A . ' . eft
. " V a aTklrw. . - S
.1 ' pw ywjiiimi- . ....
ii'-, tLr-':."K '' . -'.r
Satnly u w 'iJra 7f tlo f
5, tba aftotpriM oi fif And AamOi opan which
th Dsdoa kil tm4rt4. AM not pr-
aairv Hi i tWii t Irtrtjr w do aow
VT-kaw hak Wtn -tl parUMfi snd
matt tuad ad ntirl totatlMr. Aut w did
Bot rMttaa. u 4m M, tfaat w f kU
nliat4d ami BtMBbtn ! abigte army.
oT Mnr jNrukiwl Mir twin, bat eom-
Kaadttr itttfl oblitatlont mr turn
Mt toward tlaaM obJecUt W ow know,
; that - TT tool is ary iattlrttal lndua
. try la a waapaa, ana a waapos wielded for
tba - uim porpaa hat an trmj rifla lx
- artalAad. a" Man whihl If wa vara ta In
4ant Woadrow WiUofi.
A AEW BELLIGERENT
IE United SUte follow. Great
Britain'! excellent i erahiole and
rec0gnt2e ,th Cxeelio-Slav nk
?V3?,;Mal coancll as beUlgereot
I V; ;ta tho war. This arabunts to ihe
i r,. reoognluon ft Bohemia as an la-
gave la taaa - th power, 'w iook
everybody else , In the faceand tell
him "to go to heU." Rather fine.
is it not, even If a trifle rude? Sup
pose the war should leave g every
human being in the wide world with
that feeling In his soul ? fx" 7m
want that to happen or notl? Do yoU
want your 6oolc to loolt i you tn
the face and ten yoa td "go io hettr
The time is coming when slie "may,
do it, or if she doesn't it will .be
because he is too Tious and polite.
STILL ANOTHER HARDSHIP
' " ; ' -
rtlERE are thosewhOYdo not yet
grasp the hardships that have
fallen upon, dairymen. The fol
lowing fact should impress them;
Pive hundred carloads of alfalfa
hay from Ea6tern; Oregon was re
cently bought by the dairymen and
farmers of Clarke county, Washing
ton, to piece out their limited stocks
ef winter feed, sh-ertened by the
unusual jdrouth of the spring and
summer. This hay cost the dairy-
men 429.50 a ton. It was purchased
01 evperation by weir association
under the leadership of the county
agricultural agent.
Clarke county is one of the finest
farming regions in America. Its. hus
bandmen are modern in their meth
ods and intelligent in their business.
In ordinary years they grow all their
own feed, and more. But to the
handicaps that war has brought upon
them came this year's drouth with
its great expenditure for ' import
ed hay.
Shortened pastures and lessened
milk flow from their cows is of
Course a further consequence of the
exceedingly dry season.
The Clarke county case is " typical
of the experience of all dairymen,
even in the Coos and Tillamook dis
tricts; where pastures and fields aro
watered by the dews and mists and
mbist atmosphere .from the near
ocean.
Consumers can well afford to give
every possible concession to dairy
men until this period of hardship is
passed.
that means Reports Jcomefrom all meeting at once of their' own accoM
parts of the world that Juvenile do- and framing a tentative constitution
lincjueney is on' the increase. - r for the world. ' When it was finished
The Springfield Republican com-1 they co.uid offer it to the nations for
ments on a state v of affairs very 1 debate as the federal constitution was
similar in Boston to that, which offered to the sovereign Independent
Mrs. Frankel describes 'la Portland. 113 colonies. v . '
England is ? greatly disturbed by I Perhaps if" would . be a miracle it
youthful lawbreakers. In Germany i the six or seven more -important al-
tha number' of '' Juvenile delinquents j lied countries should adopt , and
is said to be appalling. (agree to live under it hereafter. But
Conditions everywhere seem, to be J miracles , of that aort happen now
somewhat like those in France to-land then. And if a federal union of
Lward the close of the One Hun- i England, the United States and France
dred Years' War. when law and were once formed it would be only
malting 5 cents a lirt for all InaerUons
the , ruJ can thank themselves .' for
what haa cotnd tipoa thorn.' -
Aa to th deJlnqaent tax list. Its pub
Heatioa la unnecMsary And - a vrasta.
Be side, it Blaces. th neampaperar that
ret th pubUoauoa In apaolally Ca-
vorea daaa. Her , this ooanty w
hava tha anomaly of a publication in
two newspapers at tha north mat of th
county- and aona at the . aouth and,
. The tree are Tea Tins and summer Is
leavtns with them..--.y.,,
' One fine thiac about aw vacation is
'hlch, if the . publication did any s j the getting bone aain to rest up. ;
""V- wwua om wjoauoei when the lenve begin to torn It Is
to taxpayers of the CoQullle, YaDey. indlcaUoir that summer Is getting a
Oregon will, we understand, be the tlrit yettow streak T
w aooiian newspaper paoticataoa I - . - - , " .
of the deitoouent taVUet should thft Must, admit that the cUag o the
ls.w be enacted by the people In K. SSEunA W
morals broke down under
psychology . of fightinaV
the
a question of time when all the rest
t of the world would ask to come in.
CRUMBLING AUSTRIA
I
f ered to a generation of men." The
way to rebuild it is by a federation
Of the nations modeled on the fed
eral union of the United States.
T. PAER TURNS
EYES TO FRANCE
By Bmlph Watson
Concrete surfacing on the road be
tween Vancouver and Orchards.
Clarke county, Washington, laid down
but a year or two ago, has gone to
pieces, and the road is as bad or
worse than before the paving was
laid. A ten year guarantee by th
contractor makes him build so that
his work will not go to pieces n
two years or less. It costs more
.dependent -nation. It also means the
' end-, of compromise with the House
" of Uapsburg and the "beginning of
the end of that imperial plague in
f Central Europe.
pLv The alliesEave been tender in
thejr dealings wlb tihe Hapsburg
'. because the jr hoped he !Tnight soonet
s . ' -or later db . aeiacnoa. irnm i.armanv
5 . ..... . . anTnotimM jn the hpo-inninff hut Is fat
o ; . uu uruugmvw conciuae a separate - o---
!-;- v peace. Once at least, as all the Ies expensive m me-ieng run
5 world .knows vthis was almost ac
I . qimptlihedL Bu Uie timc 'has gone
M by .-.'iMkeo' aHich a hopo can be en-
tertamed. :
; . ; ' Austria has Irrevocably j linked her
fortunes j upwith .Germany's. . The
Ut-'-tWi' imperial:' autocracies must faft
tefether..' Austria , isA more vulner
"We must rebuild the taternationa!
, system." o says ixra Koners uecu
MPORTANCE is given the Czecho-1 n Enriand. scion, of the noble
Slovak revolt by "American recog- family of the Cecils who have played
nition of the belligerency of Its ft leading part in ruling Great
National Council. Britain since the days of Queen
It Indicates American confidence Elizabeth. Unless the International
the proportions and probable sta-.vStem is rebuilt after the war. con
bility of the Czeoh uprising agalnat tmued Lord Cecil, "we shall have
Austrian authority. It follows simi- missed the greatest Chance ever of-
lar recognition oy ureat Britain ana
other allied governments. It gives
the Czech o-Slovaka what the allies
have steadily withheld from tho
Bolshevik regime in Russia.
The Czecho-Slovaks, or Bohemian
race, has, as a kingdom, been a
part of the Austro-Hungarian empire
since 1527. They established them
selves in Bohemia in the middle of
the Fifth century. The monarchy
was alternately hereditary and elec
tive through several centuries.
Luther said that the Reformation
began in Bohemia The University
of Prague was for a long time tho
chief educational headquarters and
an advanced seat of culture in
Europe. It was the Institution from
which John Hubs received his great
est support.
The first newspaper ever printed
is said to have appeared at Prague".
In a fertile country underlaid with
rich mineral deposits, and walled
around by great mountain barriers,
the Czecho-Slovaks are an advanced
people, strong in their ideas of
national unity, and well fitted for
seizing upon the present as a fit
time for winning national independ
ence. -
Burned, hanged and persecuted by
the Austrians on account of the re
ligious schism led by Huss, the
Czech dissenters scattered over the
world.
The first New York alderman was
a Czecho-Slovak. The Jays of the
eettin' as far away from home as the
American revolution. th Parias. thrt-1 next block, think what a regular fellah
i-couia oe li x ever got o iai , u
Paris.
CHASING RAINBOWS
HILE In Europe an American
young woman bought $500
worth of cut glass as a wed
ding present for her sister.
When, the glass arrived at a family
home in America . it was discovered
sow - nan uermany . Because me i that It was manufactured In sn
Hapsburg -: empire is composed of
Jarring elenfetajs ready to spring , ,nrtr1 fhInir tn knaw voll- own
asonder -Nthe. moment vtheir chains AAlinNttf ftMrl VAUS a-mnm Atim rTHA
F0 relaxed. I -.lna tA-oa the AAa&n w(th BimHrvo
I hllUa BLU UDil bUW UlLaU aaUl DUUUl J
The recognition of ; the Czecho- railroad charas ami nump.roojis mid.
Slavs implies that England and the dlemen's profits could have been
uajiea Mates are reaay to do what- 8aVed in-the cut iclass eoisode,
ever may be necessary to break the a young man of wealthy parentage
kaiser's military power" and end the wa8 troubled with defective eyesight.
war.; ir revolution i in Austria is Inia 'mMh.r tnnt hir tn tcu vmk
'- sm aaaa luvfiivi aywasa miim w evww. , va aa.
nelpful to that end, very well. Let t0 consult an eminent specialist,
revolution eome and they will sup- -me specialist recommended that a
rt it- . snectacle man in Indianarfolis be
.Thls is mere common sense. It consulted. Indianapolis was the
1 idle to Hght Uhe two kaisers, young man's home town.
wane the system from which they a weklthv widow bf Cleveland
derive their power for evil is left wanted a book written b her hus-
' ' InliAt an IF it wom cAmnlnin hnlv 1 1 i ..i. i A
Tng world will never b safe for trin to London to have it done, hv
democracy;, until It is Wholly demo- certa'n bookbinders of great reputa
crauc. . as long, as a solitary auto- tion. -
is iertr on nis tnrone he will -do you happen to live near Cleve-
pio to aesxroy, freedom. land?" aueried the London bindery
? ;"-Vvv.a Czecno-blavs have been serv- expert. S
mm we ainea causa 10 nussia Dy "Why that's my home town" Was
opposing- :tha. German .propaganda, the reply, and the expert thereupon
They have been on the verge of told Tier the binding should be done
revolution at hone in Bohemia for j hy a certain binder in Cleveland. "He
many months. " Thousands of them formerly worked for us, .and since
nave peea put to death by th- he left, we have never been able to
Hapsburg for their resistance to his fjii his place." And the woman re
tyranny. Now the day of their turned home and had the book bound
deliverance seems to be at hand, in a shoo oniv a few blocks from her
i If the waf break up ttie Hans- LnMonnp ardino- tn rvtt-ii'a
.,urt,empu.,gn4 gives liberty to the Maggne.
'.oppressea peoples or ieniral Europe We have a fad of thinkina. that
11 J111 not have been fouht in vain. far away things are better. Most of
i - 50 'consideration of diplomatic 'le- us are rainbow chasers, sroinir on dis-
ftUmacy; should withhold ;the hands tant Journeys and sending far away
for things no better Jhan those to. bi
Bayards and other distinguished
American families are descendants
of that race.
The traces of their existence left
by the Czechs on the history of man
kind mean that they are a power
ful group of people to whom America
now extends belligerent rights. It
will be encouragement of the most
effective kind to the Jugo-Slavs and
other subject peoples, fractions of
whom have already thrown off Aus
trian authority and made their way
amid Incredible hardships intct, Si
beria,' while others are waiting the
psychological moment . to follow
their heroic example.
The recognition of the Czecho
slovak National Council as a bellig
erent government is effort by the
allies through political means, to
hasten the crumbling of the Haps
burg empire.
Otvthe, allies from this j task too
Ma Paer peered Into the spare bed'
room, where her wrinkled helpmate was
exeeuUng hostile lunges with the family
broom at his advancing and retreating
Image mirrored In the long glass of the
marble topped bureau.
"T Paer!" she exclaimed, her horrified
hands uplifted, "hare you gone craay ?"
"Naw T Paer panted, wheeling upon
his Questioner and executing a rheumatic
Jig step In her direction, with the broom
handle leveled v at her abdomen; "I'm
practicing the bayonet drffl." ,
"That's a nice occupation for a man
your are." Ma said, taking up a defen
sive position behind a chair. "What oal
earth are you practicing mat iott-
"I'm goln' to war," T Paer answered,
shifting his broom to "present arms
and clicking his heels together, "and I'm
just brushin' up on the manual."
"What're you goln to enlist, as?" Ma
asked skeotlcaUy "ballast" fer the am
bulanceT
"Well." T Paer growled, grounding his
weanon and standing at ease, "you may
think I'm a dead one. but there's a lot
of 'em around town who's got a different
Idea about It.'
"I know." Ma retorted wltherlngly,
"When you're away from home you're
a regular village cut-up, "but when
there's anything to do around here
you've always got the lumbago."
"All right," T Paer countered, "and
If I can be a village cut-up by Just
COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF
Ragtag and Bobtail
SMALL CHANGE
Let sr buck.
vember. But It will not be the first
urns Oregon has set the pace.
Letters from the People
A-friend 'suggests that war gardens
are - particularly weU named rhea
neighbors fight ever division of the
tsotav .- - .. - '
There mar be soma mighty hard times
after the war,- but tne , man who has
8tortes SVonfTCverywhere
"EL'XZLS iVtriZr I Ptr ' War' Savings Stamps tucked
orZJ SSLS ! going to be ths one to worry.
800 Words In laru-ta mrui nat ha -1 -' ka aaai
wnw, wnoaa null inrlraai ta Tail aisat
paar-Oia aontrthatkiB.)
Land Profiteering
Portland. Aug. 11. To the Editor of I
The Journal Anent the much discussed I
" OREGON SIDELIGHTS
The Rev. It Si Rossell has begun his
work aa neator of Tha Dalles Chrtsttaa
ehureh. ' Mr. Rossell.. besides holding
important pastorates. ' has , served . his
church as state evangelist of Montane I
and also or jucnigan. v j
Ths farmers around Coburg ars-de-tormtned
that everybody In that Vicin
ity shall work or go to Jau. During the
past three or four days they have ar
rested three men who have been beg
ging, and have turned them' over to the
ansruz. ; ...
"There- Is." says the Wallowa Bun.
"one class, of wunr men In our station
today -eager for service, who are chaf
ing agalnat the restrain ts ot age. ome i other, between chucklea. -at th. rtm
are not even is years oia. out, utiur th,, h u m r. ' "7:
of patriotism IsStn the very air. Their el1.m?0 OM nlht ta Memphis
whole bains- resoonds and they- axe w" " -cauore revolver,
eager; to go fcrtn.'?,!-. t f
Soma CoBtrasf .T '
HT. WEB8TER, the cartoonist, told -
the following at a recent meeting
mw BMuuiuiu uug id new lorsi ii
city.-. : . ! , . .. - l
Shrapnel shrieked all about.- Bombs
dronned . from thai .w mA . u 1
often a big German shell burst over- , ;
head. 8oddenhr one Tank burst Into a
tit of laughter.
Smatter. Buddy?" his mate naked.
fearing that he had suddenly arone V '
Insane,
I was Just thlnkln. BDl." replied the . vf
to Americans OFtiERMAN origin
A dozen La Grande high school
students helped save the wheat crop
of Walter Pierce of Union county.
Their spirit is exampled in the case
of two who applied to Mr. Piercq
for work. I want to heh save your
crop of wheat," said one of them;
"I have a brother in. France, and
I want to help feed him." "I have
a brother In Prance, too," said the
other, "and I want to do all I
can to save food for him." It is
the spirit of American school boys
that has helped put ihe Huns on
the run.
FORMING THE LEAGUE
T
HE League to Enforce Peace
warns the .country that no sud-1 Unued enthusiastically.
a a
"Huh !" Ma sniffed, "if distance has
anything to do with it,. Lord knows how
big a fool you'd mke of yourself,
judgln' from the exhibition you made
in Frisco that time."
"I'm some goer when" the track and
the wind's right." T Paer. grinned. "I
sure hung up a record on -that trip."
"I shouldn't think as a husband and
father I'd boast of It." Ma said reprov
ingly. "I never was so ashamed In my
life.-
"Anybody." T Paer argued defensive
ly, "that wouldn't bet a last year's hand-me-down'
suit on four queens is a piker.
And, besides,' he said, as a clincher, "the
guy give me four bits to ride home in
a taxi."
"They's no use to talk about it." Ma
answered icily ; Tve tried tc forget it."
a a a
"Who started it this time?" T Paer
demanded. I was drOiln' in here all
by myself, and you butted in."
"If you'd drllr out in the woodshed
with the sawbuck, maybe we'd have sup
per before bedtime," Ma said sugges
tively. 'Td like to know what you'd
do in the army."
'.They've raised, the draft limit." T
Paer said belligerently, "and I'm not so
much older'n the limit but what I ought
to be able to horn in someplace."
"They need flghtin' men over there.
Ma responded, "and not somebody to
start a rheumatic ward In a hospital.
"May be." T Paer shrilled, exaspera
tion shooting his voice up Into a quaver
lng treble, "but I lunovr darned well
they's somethln' I could do over there
to help out."
"I don't know what It Is," Ma smiled
tantallzlngly, "unless It would be to sit
around camp and eat."
"After 30 years' experience around
this dump." T Paer shot back, with the
flare of domestic battle in his eye.
bet. I could stoke a rollln' kitchen and
ladle slum out on No Man's Land and
be bored to death jat the quiet."
'Well," Ma said, a mollifying tone
purring in her voice, "you always have
been a great help to me in the kitchen.'
"And if I could do that," T Paer con
it would let
. a
Henry Tord, following his mora or
as - unsuccessful experience with the
dove of peace is now having vastly
mora success In the manufacture of tha.
uiue .-agje) snips.
A, motor! ess day hasteen observed In
ing of workers, the t riter has yet seen conservation measure. Vine chance to
very unit mention made in the varwos I pousn up- the old buses and to get 'am
letters addressed to and publisher ta 1 n shape for tha winter.
The Journal, regarding the system that
is tne mother ox the conditions wa are
now reaping. House owners and ten
t-.nta have been : tongue ' lashing each
wmmu. Ainiunr aajra. iaa auvei unmi l -. r. & .
. . . i aabtvi aiauT jama in tu nioc
rSmsrXnVert ,Ur?25S SJSSS - In fwnsa to a request for a word of
itf. convert them Into living patriotic appeal to Americans of German
suites. . ; 1 n- t j .w. ail
A lot of bluster was made a Couple otW'Z t . -.7-T":r
months or so ago about a committee -of I ijr ."...
our realty dealers and Chamber oU m&Qa Hengist and Horsa came
v. ln , t0, hoU"inK ov- froSolSae sot W a i-
"l ! German ancestor: all are mere Eng-
vtiuer oeen overiooaea or sruaiouaiy I ii.k t w. j . t
"" "TT " i"" . t, .7 rr uermany in behalf of democracy and ln
any thought to the problem at all. Our what I thought and hoped was the Ger-
taat as, kal i.Kkiti ai aM A - k.a. I . a. .
k o.i. uu iuikihiuuo i .aym bh i man language. The experience showed
DrouSui ma conoiuon upon us, ana me that the spirit of " was still alive,
whenever any duly appointed committee j in Southern Germany ac least, aafl ready
attempts to apply true remedy or to burst forth whtn tha timm ahoald
even advocate it, they will find the coma. Mot much Is possible ln wartime.
Chamber of Commerce, the Realty board for everything ln Germany la clamped
and the Oregonlan and like papers, all down, but when tha soldiers, or those
their bitter opponents. This tax system that are left of them, return, there will
operates tO subsidise the title squatter the -a demand for iMnrntlnr which na
for holding his lots and blocks vacant. autocrat can face. The ultimate -result
or zor ouuaing tne cheapest pretense ecfwill be control of the Carman neoDle.
a dwelling that Is possible, and fismal-1 NoHeydebrand.no HohensoUern, Is strong
izes those who do put tne property to Its I enough to breast tha tide. It Is only a
xugneat use. v question or Ume when medieval obsee-
Our government is tsxlng our Indus- alona wUI be cleared away in all Europe,
tries that reap the large profits, to the Such, delusions have lasted longest In
arooust of from SO to t per cen: ; at Germany, for there they acquire a force
least. It has been seriously considered. I they could gain nowhere else. But no
Why not put an annual tax of 50 to SO German-American can have any real
per cent on the ground rent value of 1 leva for the Prussian dynastic roach In
property, and allow this fund to release I ery. He may feel a deep personal arm
the tax on Improvements ; in other wordaW Pathy for His cousins who are forced to
"man's industry and labor r Such a suffer or die to support it. Such sym-
system would subsidise Industry and as thy la most natural and most honor
tenallse idleness of lan l value. Instead abla. But the need for It Is part of the
of thousands of flimsy shacks and patch- tragedy Itself. Those friends of his have
es of birdock and uitstles which our- fallev at the dictate of absolutism and
present system makes cheaper and more I tor the maintenance of an unscrupulous
profitable to the title squatter, we I rnasty. '. Were It not for the dynastic
l.onld wltnnu m tran.fnrmntlnn wrastl Stated war itarif would anon nana kT.
Frisingly pleasant. Ws should find that tf"ri1i a anormal world democracies do
two times two would bring the same a.otfear each other, and. therefore, Co
natural result here as It has tn ?;ew hot arm against each other. Remove the
Zealand and Australia, aad also, to the armies as the United States and Canada
extent It has been adopted. In British have -done, and you take away the men
Columbia. There is a natural law In war. This fact might not In
rhis question which we as a people have tnt,y appear, but ly would follow as
been violating, and we will not see har-1 uay.iouows tne nigni.
mony, equality and Justice fully oper-1 Wa may appeal to Americans of Ger-
tlve until we heed the truth spoken by I man descent in Ahe name of national
cur Savior when he said. "Not one Jot j patriotism. We fiiay call on them to
or one tittle shall pass from the law i rallv with other Americana to the kutv-
untu au oe luuuieu looeyea;. UI nart ef th countnr. tlw r muntrr u veil
course. wV don't mean to be -thieves aa ours. Very few will be cold to this
fJld robbers, but We must Consent tn I anrwal 1nt thar la mmMMniT mnr
quit tryln to "climb up some other way" quite ai Important We may further
tnan accoraing to natural law. add aa a 1 plead in the nam of the higher patriot-
people we must give expression of this I Ism. which means welfare and progress
-Vale has, bguHflsna" says ths
Modern VersioC -
EnterpHse, "looki p g forward to tha day jaca -smtaat
SywlfrMffi
of Europe. That wlU be wttnout quea- I Ad1 drvw out Diara.
t ion the greatest day in the htstory of I Ad. aaid. -im Um dan of mwiuUm and
tne-ceunty; ana vais. ui anwnunN I , jasetanea, artts b. e. 4. elaratad to the
toOke It tha uggest eeieo ration tune l n-uj eaaraa . aad. faat aoartna towarda ' tha t
evercontempiavtea. now you wnw u i - mn crunaara juiuns. i eonauMr
anar, Malheur eountv hove tell them that i" a .snsetr tot atsat. sad
tbera is a sura enough big time swatting J
uaae. aaptaaibar 1. "
s
vietoitoua''
consent at the ballot box. i -
We followed the unwise advance of the
Oregonlan et al ln our last Uu state
elections and rejected a measure that
would have been the adoption of a natu
ral, tax system. And now we reap the
fruit. C. A. MXiEMORE.
The Hooney Banners
Portland, Sept. 2. To the Editor of
The Journal In our splendid parade,
which marched through the streets of
the city today, there was one discordant
element that ehould not go unchallenged.
lest it cast discredit upon the working
classes ; and that was the banners read
ing "Mooney Shall Not Hang." "Turn
Mooney Free," and the like.- Now these
banners were inspired and carried by
over-zealous spirits and did not express
the personal sentiments of an over
whelming majority of the working men,
judging from personal conversations
The Mooney demonstration was very
largely the performance of a fraternal
obligation to defend a brother, that jus
tice be done. This la net saying that
Mooney should go free If he is guilty of
laying a plot that resulted In the slaugh
ter of Innocent women, children and men
on the streets of San Francjsco. of which
he has been accused ; but Instead if
guilty, he should hang "higher than Hi
man."
It is claimed; however, that his trial
was not fair; and all we ask is afair
trial, and then jurtice be done.
A WORKER.;
PERSONAL MENTION
y;;The -dairymen will
.j lnjp-,fter the war.
their in-
iry herds.
th world , over, are being decimated.
fieV8
iDaii
had in the next block, in our own
home town.
den erection of machinery to
prevent war ehould be exoeoted.
Something like a Council of nations
might be instituted now under a
common pledge not to go to war
without the consent of all concerned.
But anything more elaborate than
that must wait for future events. -.
It is well to keep In mind the
extremely simple machinery which
brought our federal union into ex-
An important bulletin received from
the Agricultural college describes
istence. It began with a call for a can cut it"
y .Tne dairyjnan who sticks to the ship the construction of a "Re-saw silo.
inrough. tB present period of handl
); 3 ep TfvJll take dividends worth while
gije the peace treaty is signed.
) Vi-'
B0BDY
r-TrHE.' '"Honaon .x-poUceman, the
Bobby" of fiction" and humor, is
uauaiiy vie meekest - or men. H
pama in tm .n i. .
.!. " .. .0 , UM 1113
."stick" but sparingly. He has
f been vtaughtl to bow Jitehead to
' the great, to; smile fawningly upon
the proud, to - feel himself beneath
- everybody but the beggar and pick-
pocket: t . ' " "
) tBut, poorjworm that he Is, Bobby
KaSj turned at last. He. has formed
a " union ; anr struck for, better pay
We understand that it is made of
concrete. But what is the origin
of the singular name for it? We
read the specifications witff atten
tion, but were so, puzzled all. the
while by the name that we gained
only slight Instruction. . Professors
Robinson and Westover -are the
capable authors of the Bulletin. Will
they, explain the teem "Re-saw t"
JUVENILE CRIME
iROM the contents of7 Mrs. Fran-
kel's report It is hardly possible
to avoid drawing the inference
that juvenile crime is increasing
in Portland. -
pernaos we ouvht in uv .
"Thus'doth jthe leaven of the war linoueney Instead of ' Th
V leaven the lippiest part of the lump, latter word is a little too severe for
4 no iionaou;ouceman nas Breathed the misdeeds of the young persons
.the aephyr ef freedom blowing over who come under Mrs. Frantr mm,
Britannia's 5 Isle, and ahe effect is I latrattons.
-magical. v;Unaforma him: from al She nrooosea as a rsmadv tn the
.'servile V automaton .Into , a man. 1 trouble a h'tte- nfA.m.nf nt th
: ; v An easterh, magnate,, onpe gave hta curfew act. ' This might help. But
: definition -of democracy. aII was that it may be that thA diffimiitu t ioa
;.celinrto..fhe wni;-:he taid;. that serious 'u, be fully disposed, of by
some young fellah grab a gun and get
Into the mbrup with the rest of 'em.
a a
"I hadn't thought of that," Ma said
slowly. "Maybe you could do it"
fcYou wouldn't care if I went 7" T Paer
asked. ' "If I could get in," he addedi
wistfully.
"You know I wouldn't," Ma answered,
the. bravo light of youth flaming back
Into lu-r faded eyes. "Pvety time them
Germans have gained un liiCh I've been
sad because time's gons so fast we
couldn't be more help."
"Gosht" T Paer murmured, "I hope I
convention to deal with the trade
difficulties of the colonies. Nobody
dreamed at first of a constitutional
convention.
, When the famous convention actu
ally met it had no formal authority
to frame a constitution. But it per
ceived the necessity for one and went
to work upon the task of making it
quietly and without parade.
When the constitution was framed
the convention submitted it to ; the
country for free, discussion. There
was no trickery, no coercion. Tho
debates upon its adoption or rejec
tion were of deep intellectual interest.
Hamilton and Madison won world
wide fame by their arguments '..for
the constitution, which still serve as
text books for statesmen. ;
Is it a vain dream that what Was
done for our 13 wrangling colonies
may sooner or later be done for
the world? Is it impossible to get
together a convention of the caliber
"Maybe," Ma suggested, "you can get
Into some place over here.
"I don't want a place over here."
Paer answered. "1 don't want to do my
flghtin 12.000 milos sway from where
the fiKhtlr.- Is."
"Somebody's rot to do the work here.'
Ma said, "and the old boys might do It
aim it; i im juuub mw aw
"That's all right," T Paer answered,
"but I ain't oln to ask to stay here.
I'd rather wear the knees, of my pants
out on the firing step of a trench than
the seat of an office chair."
"Yes," Ma answered, "I'd rather have
you."
Publication of Delinquent
. Tax List Unnecessary.
From the CoasUle Santinet
rh sentinel Is opposed to the bill
Initiated by C. S Jackson. of the Ore
gon Journal, fixing the compensation
mnHahlng legal notices at J 1-a
cents a line for brevier type such i as
Is used ln this column .and for prac
tically all the reading matter of : the
KnttnL vwa oppose It for the reason
what such a. fee ? Is Inadequate r ere
lMrai notices are . to be publisher but
ui me men wno met at Philadelphia I once. "Tha-xee zpn-uia tirat inaeruon
In fa ..-ewe 'na,.. . it. I should not be less than 5 cents a, line.
Washington, a Hamilton, a, Madison Tnot unreasofiawy low Prob
somewhere ready for this Immense ably, however, the proposed law win be
work. . enacted "hands down." ; And -If it la.
There is nothing . to prevent their whole eaaoa-ataUiem ; to ' get-a law
in.
ua a jalsbtr load atsat. sad I. cannot ra-
askMt boy aaa II" - I
4 . T Ul.k
rvruaas. sapuajbar
Some-Taigas Worse Than Others .
"Tee. I finally got rid of him." she
said, "without having to tell him ln so
many words that I could never learn to
love him.' I ftidn't want to do that, be-
gataway .only but there la no other.
own career, the opportunity to maks the fa JSt ? laL,T7t f T Z 7 K 1
mM -uf T.-if JZa .mm. low- od I saould have been very sorry
awayaasw asttaW InUllt
"To be a soldier, pay taxes and keep "How did vau m-mn tt-.v. .-
hlajpnonth shut." is the cordial duty of leaked. ,
SLeVveTl? "in0 . dLV.T a VnVn , "Wby" TU he'' roae
eonceivea it In a democracy a man l far u t ... i
may have to be a soldier at tlmear-he rott whe nev 17 h. 1
will , pay his Uxes, of course. STias J?.r h ent Word ttat he
levied them himself, but he will noCkeep . . m a
CpnSIaueus Hostilities
his mouth shut. He is an equal partner
in the great corporation of the republic :
its ruture depends on bis awn wisdom
and that ot his fellows and on nothing
else.
The kfd cams into the house looking
i if he'd eeiv. In an accident, savs
the Cleveland Plain Dealer.
"OkJ" cried his mother, with a flash
Every autocracy rests on three legs of intuition, "you've been fls-htina- ae-ain
force. Intrigue and superstition. Vfcyth-1 with the little boy next door 1 And you
out a great army it cotua neitner en- promisea me jrou wouian t have another
force subservience at home nor threaten fight with him.",
its neighbors abroad. To hold its own "WeU, I didn't," maintained the kid.
people It needs tha menace of Impending "Do you mean to say that you haven't
foreign war, always tha "swift remedy" been fighting T"
ior internal unrest, yvitnoui its array "Yesm. Nom. I didn't fight again,
of secret agents. It could not put over This was the same fight."
its schemes in foreign countries. Finally . 1
superstition Is necessary, plays its part HaX IIal Hat Hat Ha! Hal
in upholding the divine right which A harmless mechanical, joke, say
TSZ. otocrc3r b claimed for Itself. Popular Mechanics, may be perpetrated
Dynastic rule Is supported by four as- upon elgarette smokers who "roll their
sumptions called -philosophical" the own." by nrbvldina- thm .ih ...
supreme state legitimacy, the supreme-! that haw ku t.. . v,w..
discipline or kultur and social Darwin- -jon .iMtrtn JZ,,Z "ZJZ"
ln!nremS 1! ,7 X Z? two mU- V be done 'with
IdeaU ana? ittln,n inS utMoWf otorcycle. or any other
laeaustM entity exiaUng in a moral foPm of , ,H. a
vacuum. It cares nothing for majorities u r.mrrl, . . "a CIVT Zl Z
aa tta fittuna Mnnot 1. U remOV f a plug and held about
as Its cltisens cannot disturb it. It I
knows no right or wrong because there
exists no power above it to command
a quarter Of,
perS betw
)fan inch away with the pa
een.. The engine is then
J. Louis Shields of Spokane is at the
Portland.
T. Nelson of Astoria is at the Carltoa.
Mrs. G. M. Hazen and Betty HasUk
of Astoria are at the Portland.
Mr. and Mrs. Royal Secies of Ogden,
Utah, are at the Bekson. Mr. Ecclee
is a. brother cf David Eccles, the well
known financier. -
W. P. Burnett of Corvallls is a guest
at the Multnomah.
Dr. Benjamin W. Brown of Seattle
Is a guest at the Portland.
W-. Hughes and family of Roseburg
are at the Carlton.
Z. Carnett of Cascade Locks is at the
Benson.
Mrs. Glenn Hutton of Spokane Is reg
istered at the Portland.
W. B. Foster of Hoquiam. Wash., Is
a guest at the Benson.
M. S. Hendricksen of Astoria Is a
tfuest at the Portland.
Mr. and Mrs. George tsmitn or Hood
River are at the Carlton.
K. Walford of Falls City is a guest
at the Multnomah.
Mr. and Mrs. A. I Fox of Astoria
are at the Multnomah. t
, D. Foster of Seattle Is at the Oregon.
Mrs. L H. Sexton of The- Dalles is a
guest at the Imperial.
. A. B. Wood of Cottage Grove Is reg
istered at the Portland.
J, R, Dunphy of Spokane la at the
Imperial.
Mrs. Wheeler, wife of Lieutenant G,
O. Wheeler. Seaside, is at the Multno
mah. j
"Henry Schulderman, corporation com
missioner of Balem, and family, accom
panied by Mrs. J. M. Ford, are at the
Multnomah. '- . ,
i-TL- A. Dudley of Astoria is at the Inv
BeriaL '
A. H. Powers of Marshfield Is at tha
Multnomah. . .
' , C H. Tull of Seattle Is at the Imperial
t Mr. and Mrs. WUllam MeHaffee of
Los Angeles are at the Benson. -. '
': A.- B. Wood of Cottage . Grove Is -at
tha Portland. " . ' - V
V Mrs. R. A. Stranahan and Miss Stran
ahan of Boston are at the Multnomah.
v ; C. B. Ferret .of Eugene Is a guest ' at
the- Hultnomalt.- ' i?
Walter M. Pierce of La Grande la at
tba Portland, t " t - ' -
to the world. For this war once started
has gained tn motive as well ad In mo
mentum. Its final end must rid the world
Of the menace of aggressive dynastic
militarism. We know well what the
danger really is. It is written in blood
In the cities of Belgium, on the fields Of
France, above all In tha wreckage of
Serbia, the murder of Armenia. The
Prussians have killed war.. They have
made it too wicked for human compre
hension. They have set aside all other
godB to worship at the -shrine of military
necessity. Prussia is organized as no
other state has ever been before for re
pression at home and aggression abroad.
Prussia knows no right or wrong. She
is at the mercy of an eristdcratic-mUl-tary-plutocratic
clique, of which the
kaiser le at once the agent and the vic
tim. He is the leader only when he
leads along tfle way they have marked
out for him. This clique broughton the
war, The authors of the Serbia ultima
tum were ln the plot and the deed was
consummated in the hurricane pf lies.
One of the most absurd of these fables
was that the war was the work of King
Edward) VII. through whose machina
tions innocent Germany had been sur
rounded by a ring of iron. The real
truth, as you know, is that Germans!,
since 1871, has been organized as a war
maehlne, and the mind of the nation has
been perverted and poisoned by cheap
visions of military glory, with a golden
shower of Indemnities to boot.
as as al . a
The system of subservience known as
Kultur pointed directly toward expan
sion by conquest. Kultur, or monarchial
order. Is a system of discipline enforced
from above. It means complete military,
as well as Industrial, regimentation, and
complete subordination of the individual
to the dynasty and the state, it is rum
ous to Individual development, destruc
tlve to Initiative, and It plays Into the
hands of the privileged classes generally,
whose serfs are the people. To these,
relative security without hope is granted
ln place of freedom and initiative.
Among all the many efforts in Germany
to relieve the working classes, not one
arises from a desire to do justice. They
ara all merely devices to make labor ef
ficient, thus yielding the highest profit
possible to the caste which tn rives on
their work. -.
In autocratic or dynastic rule all de
pends on the will of one man. himself
chosen by the accident 01 nereany. Au
tocratic politics goes on behind t3te
aoenes. none the purer for being secret.
Thnr never was .an autocratic court
which was not corrupt to the core. There
could never be one, for Its very essence
eanalata ln exercising a power the people
never have delegated, by men they have
never commissioned, unaer eucn a ruic,
in the different states of Germany, the
masses have no rights. Every privilege
reata on roval favor, and by royal veto it
r.n t an time be taken away. More
over, the watchword of "monarchial or
der" is perfection. Every institution,
army, church, school, university, society
Is perfect from the start. "The state can
do no wrong." It Is thus Immune from
crimes or blunders. Perfection, however,
la tha mraetnal enemy of progress The
perfect state- is stalled In the bogs ot
the - middle ages. . Democracy means
progress, and no real progress Is possible
until the obsession of perfection is dissi
pated. Democracy knows nothing of
nerfectlon. It has no finished products.
it is a "going concern," deserving better
things because ever moving lowara wem.
nmMiw 4oea not mean good gov
ernmentonly better government. It rs
tha gateway tafceedom and justice, the
obedience. The supreme discipline la en-1 ea T01. y nna or operating
famit fmm ihnv. t, I wiw am otner cyiinaers. This causes
tha freedom to enter a fixad atetn.fVom Ignition sparks to Jump through the
which he cannot escape. The doctrine I papers Peppering them full of minute
of social Darwinism, a malicious per- bole The holes are too small to be
version or science, teaches that life Is 00011 wlln u naxeo eye, nut a -ciga-
a perpetual struggle between races of re"e maoe xrom them will not draw,
men aad that It becomes the duty of the! The victim of this Innocent joke usually
strong, numerous, well-organised peo-1 affords -much hearty laughter before he
plea to exterminate or enslave the back-1 discovers why his cigarette will- not
ward races and to subdue or assimilate burn. -
all . klnk .11 1- I
-cava., w v.l- a:.i .
peace-loving. I n iNot Simmy
, a 1 nay. maaaa aaa cola aM clammy
The infamous Pangermanist leaeue Wbaa tba swocla aim -tana,."
( Alldautahthnm Vrh.nill In I And I wtatt- taw wouldn't da fat u.
1891, ha had as one of its purposes the Pm nZ hTl fuhTte TL.
absorption! of Flanders, Holland, Den- But dr ?"S.mr.iTU
mars. Austria, witn tha expatriation of t i rou as wo mi oar v
tvia, nAnni.tu. v... .1 w I If m'd abnDly call aa Taaka .
,7. 7":r"l...T."r. -r. a turd, aaaa thai ail of ut ior
aaaww aw r aaaajaS SSSva WUVIUCM. AUB I
scheme of Mitteleuropa, by which Prus-1 it micht ba taat
si a was to dominate not only Germany
eft nuldan.
With tha paint and parfama laeaa,
iiiino ui h. urn oi aucn i it ai auiy tmia tattle.
states to reacn tne Persian gulf, are both
rangermanist In their nature. After
a long struggle of underhand Intrigue.
tne league xorceo uermany to begin
this war. Its leaders are now in tha
saddle, riding Germany to her death.
There is no hope, for the nation and no
hdpe for lasting peace until their power
is proaen and au their unholy ambitions
of annexation and robbery are definitely
aoanoonea.
There is no question as to ths re
sponsibility for the war. It lav with
the Pangermanist group, and lies with
them etlll. with the general staff, the
junker nobility, the ironmongers, ths
vacuous crown prince bolstered up by
credulity and greed of the uninformed
populace. ' It does not matter much
whether the vain and vacillating kaiser
was led or driven to the fatal step. In
victory the monarch assumes the glory
of victory ; heSnast suffer the Ignominy
which, accompanies victory and defeat
alike In defiance of the "new morality
of nations.'
, ; "The Worst Is Yet to Come" "
F at tba Detroit Frae Praia
If the German soldiers believe the
kaiser when he tells them only a few,
American eoldeers are In France, they
must by now ba wondering, what Is go
ing to happen fo them when therest of
the army arrive -- t -
The only alternative to absolutism is
found ln democratic control. It matters
not what have been the failures of
democracy in the past. They represent
the unsteady steps of a child learning
to- walk. Every people which finds free-
Uom must pass through its kindergarten
stages. France has had her turn, Rus
sia Is now in the primary class, with
Mexico and China; and Germany when
her iron bands are broken, may not
escape the same Infantile disorders.
Monarchial rule gives no help towards
permanent government.
The democracy of Great Britain, of
late years, has forged to the front and
holds the future of the nation tn its
grasp. The democracy of France has
nobly justified itself, and our own
country yours as well as mine has
joined its future with these two. Prus
sia has left us no ether course.
We must clearly understand also
that this war Is no mere conflict of
rival imperialisms, no question of col
onies or of boundaries, no matter of
retaliation for lawless encroachments.
Whatever the eagerness of profiteers
in any country;" thl war is not their
war nor has It on our part any purpose
of commercial gain. It began with the
attempt to rescue Belgium. We snail
guard agates that in due time. It has
Become a supreme snort ior tne saiva
tion of the world, a war for a new
morality, a war to end war.- And there
can be ho true victory until that end
is accomplished.
aaa
Of all men In power in tha world to
day. President Wilson has beheld most
clearly the Issues actually Involved. Our
purposes he has clearly stated: "We
have no selfish;, ends to serve. We de
sire no conquest, no dominion. Ws ask
no indemnities for ourselves, no ma
terial compensations for tha sacrifices
we shall freely make. We are but one
of the champions of the rights of' man
kind."
Do you as Americans of German
origin believe that this is true? You are
not aliens, you are et us. We" need
your help and your sacrifice tn this
struggle of the centuries. Stand by
your country to. do your, part even as
did German-Americans tn- the struggle
$0 years age. that "government by the
people, of the people, "tor v the people.
shall not perish from ihe-earth."
Av lng taok; Ahead :,
aTaniaws is ii sai si sTTIa Swalasat
Young Husband Why,- MabeC what
are you crying about T Cv -y , r.
Young Wife Oh, ' Tonv I am afraid
the baby Is going to gjow up to be a
pugilist I Just see how he doubles uq
And would maka tba bra.t aoldiat of Sa alca.
Whether flylni or with taaka.
it jou u aimpiy an ra iiwi -
We'll have Setter ewtenUodiniv ye and L
I hava aeas ihe slrk aad wovnded,
wnen ina aaavj swat - T aminilrq
aad, blWr ate. 'twaa a dark aad aolama bear
And I know (mt wmU roaast at
If tbrr raaDv tasnaat-wa. aatt it
To apply aoeh.bawy aarnet when ahadowa lower
And they atasd apoa tba baas
Ot tea death Jsad. Call them - "Tank"
It a s nam al eaishts atordy atraatU and power.
Tia a name ereadfether earried
When the eonthera hoeti ha harriad;
'Tta a food aM aama aa any ia tba land;
Prom Yorfctown elear down to ShUoh
You'll aaree that roil and I know
It'a a name that's level full of ertt and land.
Bo let ap on fnnny prank.
And iuat aimrty -call as Tanks-1
Uoodl
Asraedl Now aa tha bareals jive your hand.
uajvin Uoaa
Cove. Or. -
Untie Jeff Snow Says:
Mebby the, kaiser don't know when
he's licked ; and moot likely well havter
tell him all about It after we git to
Berlin. Still, it does seem 'slf them Hun
sojers might git it through, the bones In
their heads that we'rs comin', a,nd they
might take their diaappintment out on
Pirate Bill and his bunch of blackflag
Journal Journeys'
Neahkanle Mountain a Monarch Set
Amid Scenes of Grandeur
Haystack rock, k on the - Tillamook
coast, looms up off shore like some ti
tanic monolith or some lonely sentinel
rising high above the sea to keep ward
and watch, i All along the wave swept
shore Huge, rocks project -out of the
sea Humbug point. Austin point. Syl
van point. Arch rock, and then Neah
kanle mountain. The beauty of aw trip -
sround this mountain cannot ber de- .
scribed. Oae's - breath comes In gasps ,
at th sheer beauty of It- Far below
the surf Is pounding the rocks with an
srtlllery-like sound. Circling gulls with .
wings outspread are soaring. Ths green
of the steep hillside blends with the
malachite and jade color of : tha ever
restless ocean.
For information regarding this trio '
call on or write to The Journal Informa
tion and Travel Bureau. : Information :
free. 1 ' '
Olden Oregon
Describing the Founding of Fort Van-
couver ln 182&. . ; . r
TVf. John Mcfjouarhlfn. Mrf fim ..
the Hudson Bay company Sa the West,
realising the -favorable location ef Van- -U
couver, decided to make. It bis headquar
ters. and la tha latter part of 182 moved ,
from Fort George , to Vancouver.' Be- v
caose of its geographical situation it
was the converging point f trappers," -and
because' of its fertile surroundings, ?
It was all that could ba desired- agrtouU
turally. The .fields were cultivated. and'
a grist mill and sawmill were built. In ,
a very few years many bushels of graiav
were shipped to England. ! Many . catUe
were also raised. At Xlrst the fort was
buBt one mile from tha yrver.t v your '
years later a stockade was put tap' on
lowers ground near the river bank. It
was made of posts' about 20 feet long,
which enclosed a- rantajimtar . napa i
rods In length and 18 In widths It con.--talned
all the vprlnelpal buUdlngs. In
cluding the residence oC Dr!cLoughlm.
The servants ot the company, with their V
Indian families, nved just outside, where, v
In course of time; a considerable village -grew
up. ,..'.' . i