THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL. PORTLAND, SATURDAY,, MAY 24, 1919, 'Alt ISDEPENDENT XBWSPAPEB C. 8. JACKSON. , , .Publisher tsubliahed ererydey, Utemooa "1 m"ta , C.ieept eJonday aftenioon). at The Jw! Kuildmg; - Broadway . Ml 'TasalOU - street, ' l'crtland Oregon. -' ' xntered at. the, Po.toffk at fort land, OrefM. lor truumlma throng the jnaUs econa class nutter. :- ' - - TELEPHONES Mara . 7173 1 Mo aw. ,A-605X. . All diDutMti reached by these numbers. Tell tfa operator whet department yo went. rOREl'M AfVLHf IS1.NCJ BEPKESESTATrVE penltmtn aentnor Co.. Brutiawtek BeUding. 2a-Fifth anoav Wew r,QO MaUe - Building. Chicago. '-- . Subscription terms by mall, or to any address In the United fctatee or Mexico: DAILT" (MOBjflNO OB AFTEBNOOX) Ou year. ....fi.OO One att . . .80 BUND ' rear.-, i ; .$2.80 I One awmth 8 .25 DAILY 1MOBS1NO OR AFTEBNOOJI) AND . i -. - flCKPAX. .be ear,-V..$7.60 I One aonta..... .68 After all, the kind of world one carries, about in oneself is the important thins, and the world- ouUide takes aU iU grace, color and Tain from that '-. James Bussell Lowell. WHOSE FAULT? i HOSE who would sign this treaty will sign the death sen tence of many millions or German men. wornenN ana children," is the statement of Count 'von Brockdorff-Uantzau, head of ttje 1 German peace delegation at Paris- . ne aaas: .' : Germany would lose three quarters " of her mineral production and in ad- ' dltlon would be compelled to deliver 'enormous" consignments of coal to al- f lied countries. After" this diminution of her products, after the economic depression caused ' by the loss of her colonies! of her merchant fleet and of ' her possessions abroad, Germany would - '. not be in a state to import from i abroad ' a. -sufficient quantity of raw material. t But whose is the fault? Choosing war as the game, Germany gambled . . ' . 1 1 - ITn. flnot tior more raw inierii. hd move was to seize the coal fields and tiron deposits of France and Belgium. IShe had profited heavily by that Jprocess in the seizure of the coal and iiron of Lorraine in 1870, after beat ling France Into submission. I ,The Prussian junkers- played to f repeat the process. Coal and Iron I were the stakes she chose to gamble ifof with guns, bayonets and men in . 191i. J?he lost. - Whose is the fault? e " . - 1 "? Tlie general assembly of the Pres Sbytcrian church in the United States tof America, meeting in St. Louis, has asked the general assembly of the !lhresbyterian church in . the United -States, meeting at New Orleans, to enter Into new negotiations to bring about an organic union of the two churches Judging from their of ficial names there is little to keep the" two, organizations apart. THE GATE OPEN rEflE is a text' that Portland can well adopt in. its contention with the .government authorities for the establishment of adequate ocean carrier service for this port. ;lt ought to -receive some consider fion for It is the statement of Chair man Hurley of the United States shipping board,- the agency , which holds the " jower of approval or of ' veto over the question. Chairman Hurley says: ; Arrangements must be made -where by every section of the country will have every . opportunity to establish JJi rough , steamship lines In connection with its railroads ag that every com munity, may receive xirc.ciass service. "That Is . the .arrangement Portland has been contending for. It has the railroads but It does not - have the steamships. It' has attempted to get -the- steamships. 'It' will not ?have first class service until It does." J Artificial barriers have been built - tip about Portland by those who have very "unartificiaK interests otherwise. Artiffci&l. rates have been imposed upon the district in order that these interests might be served and de veloped at other places. The rail road terminals a.t Seattle and Tacoma .have been constructed with the dif ferentials : unjustly charged against ' Portland. Private and , corporate in-J tercst has followed - its . investment there to the detriment of Portland., v The statement of Chairman Hurley sheds an . added gleam of hope upon the situation" here. If first class service Is . the goal " of the United States' shipping board in its develop ment of the American merchant ma rine, and if through steamship 'lines Jo , be operated" in connection : with ' tfie railroads serving a port, are a necessary incident to first class serv- ice,, as .the chairman seems .- to be lieve," then it would seem . to follow naturally that Portland will be given ships. Portland ought to takeXhair- man Hurley, at his word and stick close to him until he makes it good Faster ' train time is rpromlscd by the - railroad administration between Portland and San Francisco. There is do doubt about' there being a lot of thirsty Portlanders who . would like to go to Frisco -on a fast train. (Vhatr would the peace treaty be Without the League of NaUins?t Without the league what authority would there ie to require Germany to make the Indemnity payments? Without the 'league, what authority would there be to require Germany to carry- out the; peace terms? TIUS FARMERS WANT IT T MB market road bill is the farmers, road bill. ' The farmers asked for it more, than i two years ago. , and the legislature refused to give them the law. Instead the legislature se cured passage of the 16,000,000 bond 1 issue which many, farmers opposed. There is a mammoth road , pro gram now. It contemplates a paved trunk road from the Washington to the California line. The fanners are helping pay for it and all other roads. . That fact places the rest, of the population under great obligation to the- farmers. Their market bill ought to be passed in fulfillment of that obligation. The bill proposes a tax levy that will create a fund of about $1,000,000 a year for strictly market roads. The fund has to be matched by equal contribution by counties in which such roads are built. The market road is the route from farm to railroad station and steam boat landing. It lessens the cost of delivery of farm products. In cases it cuts that cost In half or better. It contributes to the farm er's prosperity,' and when you in crease the farmer's prosperity you swell the total of . money that runs through the channels of trade. Agriculture is Oregon's chief in dustry. It is basic. Its prosperity is a first essential' to general pros perity. All things considered, and with the farmers asking passage of the meas ure, how can anyone, on his con science, vote against the market road bill? Here and there along the public market are places that stink. The odors are eloquent of filth and should have no place where human food is sold. The market authorities or the officials of the health bureau should abate these nuisances. THE EDDY PROGRAM T HE pivotal point about which the- interest of the voters of the state will undoubtedly center when they go to the polls at the spe cial election of June 3 is the so called "Eddy reconstruction program" measures, consisting of the "Five Mil lion Dollar. Reconstruction Bonding Amendment" and its companion bill, the "Reconstruction Bonding Bill." Generally speaking, the people have become acquainted with the gist of this program. They know that the proposed 'amendment Is in the na ture of a grant of power, to be given by their votes to themselves, and under' which they will have the con stitutional authority to issue "recon struction bonds" with which to fi nance the reconstruction program as outlined in. the Eddy bill. They know that this amendment votes no bonds. but that without its adoption no bonds may be constitutionally voted; that even though the majority of their votes favored the issuance of bonds for the purposes set out in the Eddy biH that act could not live and be administered without the adoption of the amendment authorizing the issuance of the bonds provided for in the actK So they know that the two must go. together or both will fail in effectiveness. But there is more uncertainty as to the scope-and extent of the Eddy bill, which, in direct effect, is the vehicle upon which the reconstruc tion program must be carried to consummation, if at au. it may be well, then, to restate just what this act contemplates. First, it Is important to be re membcred that the entire program, both the amendment and the pro posed bill taken together, would authorize the-issuance and sale of a maximum of (3,000 fiOO in reconstruc tion bonds. But it should also be remembered that this maximum authority does not, of necessity, mean that 15,000,000 in bonds will be issued The purpose of the- program !j to block and ward from the state, dur Ing the period of readjustment fol lowing the return of large numbers of demobilized soldiers, sailors and marines to civil life,: the serious con dition of unemployment threatened during the coming fall and winter when seasonal employment Is stag nant and widespread, enforced Idle ness so often prevails. This intent was generally under stood during the discussion of the measures by the legislature which submitted them to the people and is specifically set out in section 1Q of the Eddy act which says that the board of control, in the issuance and sale of the bonds, "shall have due regard to the conditions existing as to unemployment and shall so ar range the expenditure 1 of ttio funds . " as , ta relieve unemployment." That -tins intent wiJk,be observed by the board is made definitely certain by the statement of Governor Olcott that before any bonds are authorized a serious emergency, fully apparant to the -people, will have to eilatJ Therefore it is to be ' assumed with satisfying certainty that no more money will, be expended' under the program than is necessary to meet unemployment conditions of serious proportidns. , Stated briefly as possible," the Eddy bill-pro Ides first, that a maximum of , $3,00q00 In. bonds may be Issued for public building and land settle ment work. -Of this maximum total, f 047,500 may, in the discretion of the board, be set aside for use by the land settlement commission In pro viding developed homes- for soldiers, sailors and marines. This amount. or that proportion granted by the board, would go into a revolving fund to be used in preparing farms and selling them on reasonable terms to honorably discharged service men. It would be returned as payments were made, to be again used for the bene fit , of other ' homeseekers. . . t This leaves a maximum of $2,358,500 of bonds to be sold, should the board so determine, for the construction of certain specified public buildings set out in the act. Here again it is to be remembered that the board -has the discretion to build none of these buildings, a few of them, or all, as the unemployment necessity may de termine. The second phase of the act deals with the reclamation of land by irri gation, drainage., or clearing logged off areas. For this purpose the board is authorized to issue and sell not to exceed 12,000,000 o bonds. . There is, however, a vital limitation and advantage upon the use of bond money secured for this purpose, that is to say, none of it may be used until the federal government has agreed to spenT dollar for dollar with the state in the development and improvement of any reclamation project undertaken. As a result, should the boardf de termine to sell and use the entire amount of $2,000,000 it would mean irrigation, drainage or other reclama tion work done in the state to the extent of $4,000,000. Still further, the board is authorized to enter into con tract agreements with irrigation or drainage districts so that it would-be possible to require them to bear their agreed proportion of the development cost, which might easily increase the development expenditures to three or even four times the amount of the funds advanced by the state. ; And it should be particularly noted here that the amount provided Ty the state for such reclamation work is an advance or loan, to be repafd both as to principal and interest by the land owners to the state, treasury upon such terms . and within such time as the state board of .control may designate in. the contracts made. "4 The final result, then, of the ex penditure of this entire fund would be reclamation development of at least double its amount without ulti mate cost to the treasury or charge against the taxpayers. What such development would mean to the state through Increased assessable values of developed land, as well as increased- production from idle land made capable of intensive cultivation, can be readily understood. This, in. summary, points to the scope and possibilities of the Eddy program as embodied In the bonding amendment and the bonding bill. It could be more aptly called a con structive than a reconstruction pro gram.' The money it calls for would be used, either in whole or in part, for the construction of permanent public improvements or permanent and much needed slate development. As to the necessity for tile construc tion of public buildings there might be some debate, but that phase of the program has been interpolated to meet an emergency and its adminis tration may safely be left to- the sound business judgment and dis cretion of the board of control. As to the general benefit and ad vancement that would flow to the state from the reclamation features of the program there can be no ques tion. It alone, and, without deroga tion of the other features of. the program, makes the proposition well worth while. WASTED MONEY 1 F HE were paying his hired man $25,000 a year, any farmer would worry somewhat over whether he was getting his money's worth. If the employe were- handling the farmer's money, there would be even greater concern . as to how the finances were being disbursed. It would be txactly the same wtth any business man. The farmers and business jnen of the country are' paying around $25,000 a year for each United States senator and a sum ' somewhat less for each congressman. Special articles by The Journal's Washington correspondent show the wastefulness with which senators and congressmen as a whole are functioning. Seventy purchasing -agents are employed when one would suffice. ; Seventeen policemen in the senate office building and 11 in the house office building-are employed when one in each would be enough A seven hour day,. Saturday half holiday several months in the year. summer ; vacation on full pay and sick leaves for thousands of govern ment employes in Washington where the policy is to do as little as possible, is a rat-hole for wasted money. , , , . The people's money is spent with out a budget system. Taft asked' fpr a budget and Wilson asked' for it But congress refuses " it becausef it would be the business way of doing it, and many pet employes be , dis placed and political time servers lose their jobs, . We pay little heed because the money for this waste "is "collected largely by indirect taxation. We pay it in higher prices for food, clothing and shelter, ; Jut the same. We ought to ' establish the Plan of , having. ;eaqh estate pay senators and congressmen direct, if only for a temporary period. . -Then we would see some of the money go. Then a real howl would be raised.' 1 GERMANY'S DAY OF WRATH Antagonists Represent All - That .. Fatal to Old Regimes. Is Frost thar Christian i Science Monitor. At 10 minutes past 2 oil the after noon of the seventh of May, 1915, the Cunard steamship Lusitanla- was torpe doed and sunk, off the coast of Ireland, by German submarines. At 3 :17, or allowing' for the difference between Irish and French time, almost at the same hour,- four years later, the Ger man delegates were handed the peace terms of the allied powers in the salon of the Grand Trianon, at Versailles. The scene of the delivery-was not an inappropriate one.' In the house built by Louis XIV as the somber if stately home of courtly pietism, Jn the grounds of the palace where the victorious gen erals of King William of Prussia had listened to the proclamation of the re habilitation of the old German empire, the deputation from the government of the new German republic waited for and received the document of retribution. .'.. It would be quite impossible, after reading this lengthy document, not to realize the severity of the terms. And there is little doubt that it is only the. economic condition in which Germany finds herself which has prevented them from being still more severe. 'The great empire which, in the summer of the year 1914, had reached the zenith ..of its power and wealth, has fallen, in a day as It were, as fell the empires of the past. And yet it is easy to realize. In reading the terms, that it is the safety of the world rather than the destruction of a great power which the peace con ference had In view in framing Its terms. The world In 1919 is a very different place from what It was when the Napoleonic empire was erushed, by the allied powers of Europe, in Its effort ' to dominate humanity. The conference j in Vienna was far more engaged in i shoring up the rights of autocracy in i Berlin, Irr St. Petersburg, and In Vienna, than in taking steps to prevent another military orgy. The new Louis "Capet" in pride and insolence of power was 1 bone of the bone and flesh of the flesh of the Hapsburgs, the Hohenzollerns, and the Romanoffs. Napoleon's great crime was rather that he had been an upstart Corsican soldier than a military, autocrat. So it came about that the men who met in the Vienna -council chamber, after Waterloo, were ' not so much engaged in making impossible an other effort to dominate the liberties of the world, as in securing the thrones, of the ruling houses. Including that of the Bourbons. ' Whatever mistakes may have been made in the present treaty, and the framing of this treaty, has been almost beyond the wit of men. It has been aimed hot at securing thrones, but at safeguarding peoples. Great empires have been broken into pieces, and from the pieces there have been built new and small nations with their troubles and problems all before them. It Is by no means certain that a number of small nations will be any more peace able than a few great ones. And It Is In the effort to take no risks, whether at the hands of vast autocratic empires or small republics, that the League of Nations has been incorporated In the present draft of the first of the treaties to be made between the defeated middle European alliance and the victorious members of the great alliance. If the League of Nations falls to find accept ance when It goes before the parlia ments of the world for ratification, -then the chances of the future peace of the world are small indeed. Rumors, and something more than rumors, are .flood ing the cafes of Paris, the clubs of Lon don, and the cities of America,, with news that the League of Nations Is dead before it is born. tSo little faith hate M. Clemenceau and the French govern ment In the endurance of the league that they have actually negotiated a defensive alliance with the United King dom and the United States as an addi tional security zor me imure saieiy or. France. In such circumstances the treatment meted out to the league when it reaches the various national parlia ment houses should : be carefully ob served ; for upon .it may depend, more than the men into whose hands Its fate will pass may be Inclined to admit. For the rest, the terms of the great treaty must be carefully read in order to be appreciated. To attempt to- survey them would be to do little more than to repeat the official summary. One or two things, however, are specially worthy of notice. It is only necessary to look at the map of Germany's altered- Boun daries in order to discover how unlike the treaties Of the past the present one is. In the half century of Waterloo, even In the half century of Sedan, noth ing could have saved the country west of the Rhine from passing Into the hands of France. Today men have learned that such victories are only the foundations of new wars.- It was the loss of Alsace-Lorraine that made France the implacable enemy of :Ger mahy, and the annexation of the Rhine provinces would simply have made Ger many the implacable enemy of France. Because of this the territorial read justments have' been i slight, and have consisted only in the. incorporation of territory essentially sympathetic to the victorious nations without the old Boun daries, t Thus Alsace-Lorraine goes, to, France, whilst that J part of Poland stolen in the great partition is returned to the re-established Polish nation. One other territorial change there may be, but It Is one left to the determination of the inhabitants, and that is to what extent the old Danish province of Schles wig, torn from her by war as Alsace Lorraine was torn from France, shall be returned. - J Next to this new political departure is the attempt, for which Mr. Lloyd George Is largely responsible, to stamp out standing armies. The army and navy of Germany are reduced to a truly defensive force. . Every means for the exploitation of the military state has been taken from her.l whilst the aboli tion of 'conscription makes impossible the old military theory of a nation f Midlers governed, by a war lord. Fi- nally. in Its economic aspects, the terms of the treaty are ny no means so oei- inlte or so dear am is aesiraoie. tne truth probably is that the great powers have realized that it Is quite impossible to make Germany pay financially for her crimes -without destroying her with no advantage to themselves. For this reason it is doubtful i whether the eco nomic losses of Belgium, of : France, or of the United Kingdom, can ever be made good. The United States is In a more favorable position, for the United States reaped the harvest of the early years of the war, before she was called upon to reap the whirlwind of the lat ter months. Therefore, in spite of the i.triw nt ome fire-eating politicians and journalists, the representatives of the great powers or .me ' probably done all that could be done. r tffliinAiit more from Germany, or to have taken more at the point of ,t. hovnnat: would have been to reduce her to poverty and hopelessness, and so to have cast her into "the caJdren ef Bolshevism, which Is Ahe last resort of passion .acting upon ignorance and de spair, . , : . , : ; . .;. - Even as it is. the exultant noontide of May 7, 1915, has disappeared in the Die IraeV.the. Cay of . Wrath, of 1919. In the words of general Von Bernhardt, it was to be wH4-empire or Imperial extinction when ier Tag' tame. The treaty handed to1 the German delegates In the Grand Trianon- yesterday leaves no doubt at all -upon wfclch. side; the scale has "kicked the beam. , Letters From the People ; ( Communication aetit to The Journal fo publication in this department should be written on only one aide of ttte paper, ahould not exceed SOO word in length, and nut be aicncd by the WTitr whoaa mail address in full tnuat aocom- vpeBr the contribution. 1 Who Shall Run the Railways? Athena, May 20. To the Editor of The Journal The question as to whether the railroads will again be operated by pri vate corporations or be retained perman ently by the government is a very Im portant one and should be settled right while we are about it. Many will, argue that competition is a good thing on ac count 'of " its stimulating effect upon business. Perhaps that is true to a cer tain extent. We know it will not make better roadbeds for too many competing lines, and it is certain that the railroads undertook to eUmlnate the element of onmnAtition and it was necessary to re strain them by law. The immense waste In aggressive competition in all large business, and .in railroads more than n nthnrs. cannot be computed. The claim that railroad corporations are not anxious to resume management onri ii ranital In extensions and better ments, without certain, guarantees and advantages. Is proof mat tney are piy Ing for large gains and they want the back of their enterprise. When they bulltcfthe great raUroads across the country in tuts iirtsi yia, rhv practically built them with bonuses, and besides vast grants of land. They tnen wanted a sure thing plus and they want It now. What the Southern Pa cific did to Oregon is not ancient his tory. "Harrlmans fence" was an ex nreHHion that meant a lot in the devel opment pf the state. The land they received in pledge to sell to settlers at a Mi-tain rjrice they practically took out of the market, and the public bad no riirhta thev were found to respect. They functioned for selfish gain only and not for the public weal, and it has been the history of most of tnem. . As to efficiency, if there Is any defer ence t should be In favor of govern ment ownership. It requires uie same material, the same men, and the oppor tiinitv for advancement must if any thing be greater, as the field is larger, a.nd there would be greater coherency. solidarity and responsibility than under various competitive arrangements. As to dificits or balances, they can not have much weight in argument for or acainst. There Is too' much statistical legerdemain these days, and the statis tics used cannot te convincing, Because of so many variant elements in them Rates have- varied, ways have changed, and the cost of material .and of calcula tion. Fiarures only confuse. The main element is the question of policy whether It , Is best for a people to manage their own public affairs or to let them out to special privilege to manage as they please. There is no use for railroads but a public use. They are a necessity. They are the vital ele ment in our being. They should be owned publicly and managed publicly. at cost if possible, and if profits accrue they should go to the public exchequer. F. a. wuuu To. Obtain a Patent Hillsboro,May 22. To the Editor of The Journal Please inform me as to particulars about proceeding to take out a patent. What would it cost Ana does a person have to go to .Washington, D. C? V. K. B, The applicant need not go to Washington. Re should write to "Commissioner of Patents, Washington. D. C." and ask that a copy of "Rules of Practice" be sent him. This ia sent free of charge, and contains forms for applica tion Tor patent, besides full instructions to applicants concerning aU necessary proceedings. Diseusses the Mooney Petition Eugene, May 21. To the Editor of The Journal -Why are some labor unions petitioning - the ' president and the gov ernor of California to secure for Mooney a new trial? Can Mr. Wilson interfere in the administration of state laws? Can California's governor do any more than he has done towards getting a new trial for Mooney? . By commuting the sen tence he has made it possible during the whole lifetime of the convict for his proponents to present evidence' of un fairness in the trial, or if newly dls covered evidence, to the proper leg.1 tribunal. - If the courts could not grant 'a retrial after final judgment they could certify to the governor that proofs of an injustice had been pro duced, If such were the case, and then there Is no doubt that a pardon would be granted. A pardon, however. In the present stage ot the case, though It is the only thing the governor can grant, would not result in the new trial which is being petitioned for, but would make It Impossible. There are patriotic, law abiding labor unions in plenty, but there are some which -are dominated by un-American agitators who may have what they call education but who are woefully lacking in knowledge of American laws and the Ideals on whjich they are based. WILLIAM H. WHEELER. Sundry Remarks on Prohibition Portland, May 21. To the Editor of The Journal The Presbyterian assem bly is pained. I am grieved. Elder Wil son has spilled the beans. As president of these United States, at present in France, he has sent a message to the Republican congress recommending that the emergency war time, prohibition of beer and wines, which was to have gone into effect July I, be repealed. Talk about tying grass, across a path 1 Here these patriots must at once give the country a line on what their action will be when constitutional prohibition be comes effective next year and those pests commonly called Anti-Saloon league superintendents get a new lease of life. Let us hope his excellency hasn't suf fered corruption of heart -while abroad. While I grieve for his sect I, was baptized by a Presbyterian minister more than BO years ago yet I find con solation in the fact that there Is no such moral - turpitude involved as there was itk the act of the Methodist Deacon Fairbanks, then vice president of these United States, when he gave Teddy that infamous cocktail that caused the Meth odist general conference to blow up. W. F. DUNLAP. In Reply to Mr. Penny ; Portland. May 24. To the Editor of The Journal In answer to S. B. Penny, permit me space to y ; that ariv ha knows America is a free coun try and that, under tne constitution of the United States, we are an auowea free thought and free speech. Besides, the "immediate action committee of Chi cazo" is not asking for the release of slackers or pro-Germans. There Is a vast difference between a political prisoner or a reliaious prisoner and a pro-Hun. But .perhaps Mr. Penny does not know that. All other countries nave released the! r political prisoner and even their military prisoners, months ago.' America, the land of the free and the home of the brave, cannot afford to be behind the rest in humaneness. . M. C. STARKE, j- , Witness Fees Bandon. Mat 21. To the Editor of The Journal I know two people who served as state witnesses in the Justice of the peace v court about a year sgo who have never received any witness fees. V Are they entltled-to any? If so, how much? A SUBSCRIBER. - J WKmiwe are-not -entitled to fees, hi Jo'tir tia as.vu Irotn uie uma 01 ua aerace. i COMMENT -AND - ' SMALL CHANGE V - ' As you were. . i . ;-. - i What kind of weather is this? '' An ' Evanston. III-." eirl save that all normal women are flirts. And all nor mal men fall for it occasionally. . . We read that returning Yankees are crazy for chicken." Another point fori tne nome girls m tneir controversy wfth tneir overseas sisters. Mr. Micawber . boosted for War Sav ing Stamps when he said : "Annual in come, twenty pounds. Annual expendi tures, nineteen six. Result, hapniness. Annual income, twenty pounds. . An nual expendiutre, twenty pounds, nausrht and six. Result, misery- The blossom is blighted, the leaf Is withered, the God of day goes down upon the dreary scene, and in short you are forever floored, as X am." 1 MEN AND INSTITUTIONS OF THE OREGON COUNTRY I By Fred. Continuing the brief biography of W. V. Olds, sir. Lockley traces farther the evolution of one of Portland's greatest mercantile establishments, lie then quotta from Mr. .Olds in relation to the results of lilt activities as loter 01 books ana collector of rare editions.) There is not a city In the United States of the size of Portland that has three department stores doing the amount of business done by our three largest department stores. Starting In a most humble way, they have kept pace with the growth of the city. As a matter of fact, they have been in ad vance ; of the growth of the city and have planned for the time when Port land will have a population of half a million. A few nights ago I spent the evening at the home of W. P. Olds, senior member of the firm of Olds, Wortman & King. "When I was 21 years old," said Mr. Olds, "and that was In 1878, C. W. King and myself bought out John Wil son, In whose store I had started as an errand boy. We changed the firm name to Olds & King. I shall always look back to my former employer, Mr. Wil son, with kindly feelings. He taught me more than business methods. He taught me to love books. He had a most excellent library for those days. and he encouraged me to make use of his books. I; used to take them out and read evenings and on Sundays. He loved books, and hated to see them abused. He said, You are welcome to my books if you will put covers on them While you are reading them arrd if you will treat them with the care and re spect to which a good book is entitled.' When he died he left over 7000 volumns of most excellent books to the Portland city library. I have' kept up my love of books,, and today nothing gives me keener pleasure than being able to give a fine set of books where It will be appreciated. . . "When I was 23 I married Lillfan Cook, a niece of Harvey W. Scott. "When I first started to work, 50 years ago, in the store of which I am now one of the proprietors, we had our store on Front street, near Morrison. In 1881 we moved to a much larger building on First street. By 1891 we had outgrown our quarters, so we moved to .a four-story, building built for us by W. S. Ladd on the southwest corner of Fifth and Washington streets. We were the pioneer, store as far up town as Fifth street. As business grew we added two more buildings, one adjoining us on the south, on Fifth, the other on the west, on Sixth street. When In 1910 we moved to Tenth street, to this build- Ling; which occupied a full; block, most people shook their beads and said neo. pie would never go so far up town as Eleventh street to -trade. Fortunately, they were false prophets. You remem ber what Emerson says about the man who makes a superior mouse trap hav ing a path beaten to his -door? t Not only did the public come to our store to trade, but soon many other stores moved up town and we found ourselves in the center of the business district. We are once more op against the same old prob lem of needing more room. "I would like to have you see my library. Come up some night and we will spend the evening together and I win snow you my books." - A few evenings later I went to Mr. Olds' home and spent a most delightful evening looking over his library- Mr. Olds has traveled widely, India, Egypt, AustraUa all of these countries are most familiar to him through numerous trips he has made in searching for rare OLD J. B. IN SCANDINAVIA By Bassett Dlgby , Special Correspondence to -The Journal and- The Chicago IMUy Kens. Christian ia, Norway. Doubtless when many an American reads of iso and so many thousand cases of canned - milk being sent to Europe's thirsty babies he feels a glow of pleasure. He might feel otherwise if he realized that in Sweden, for instance, our canned milk is mainly going to liquor makers. There is any amount of it coming in, but so soon as it reaches the groceries it instantly fades away like a flake of snow on a hot shovel. The children do not get It, nor do- the housewives. Investigation has now revealed that It is being bought up as soon as It appears by the home distillers, who find it- - excellent . and lucrative for the purpose. Their dis covery Is, of course, by no means new, for, to instance only one case, the na tional drink of 'the Southeast Russian Cossacks and Of all the Tartar tribes from Tibet to the shores of the Arctic is koumiss, a very heady liquor, made from fermented mare's milk. Here Is a practice of -which cogniz ance might desirably be taken by our Red Cross and victualing authorities when they come to distribute' tens 'of thousands of tons of American canned milk to Eastern Europe this year. A Halmstad newspaper prints the fol lowing report of secret distilling: "What Is even more depressing than the ' comprehensive extent of secret L liquor-making i the general view that there is nothing In the slightest degree disgraceful or humiliating about this Olden Oregon Interesting prediction. Made in 1854, as to Portland's Future. Describing Portland in 1854, the Rev. Ezra Fisher said: "Portland is , the principal t port for"5 Oregon at present, numbering probably about 2000 souls, with from 30 to SO trading houses, wholesale and retail, and must, for years at least, be the most commercial town ; irr' the territory. When j the re sources of the country are developed, I think the great commercial city of the Columbia river will be somewhere below the mouth of the Willamette river; yet Portland even then will he an Important point." M Curious Bits of Information . For the Curious . Cleaned - from- Cartons - Plates An Irish publication, The eTnamrock. is responsible for the following: "A NEWS IN BRIEF .. OREGON SIDELIGHTS Required by- growth of business, a fourth safe largest of aU and weighing 5330 pounds, has Just been installed lu the potftoffice at Pendleton. , : The paving of the road In Warrenton has been completed and the road is now open to travel ; tne trip can now oe made to Seaside via Warrenton, the As toria Budget reports. Persons from. Haines and vicinity re port many cases of -influenza prevalent along the foothills west of Haines, the Baker Democrat says, and in some in stances the victims are in a critical con dition. Nurses are needed, and none can be had. :v Endangering' life and limb of motor ists who essay what is called the brew ery grade at The Dalles, is the practice, the Chronicle complains, of small boys "standing ' on the bluff, 90 feet above the road, pelting- large jagged rocks at the passing vehicles. ,T Lockley and beautiful old -books. Though it is known to but few, there Is probably but one other collection of books as fine west of the Mississippi river as Is owned by Mr. Olds. His collection of early editions of Shakespeare and his collection of Bibles are almost un equaled. For nearly 50 years he has been collecting. It Is not alone the beauty of the plates nor the wonderful texture of the paper, nor even the beauty of the,, tooling on the bindings that appeals to him, but he values what is in the books. , . e "How a man can be unhappy or rest less I do not understand," he said, as he handed me a copy of "Don Quixote " "when he has the best minds of all ages io consult; wnen ne can draw -inspiration, instruction and entertainment from all the innumerable host of the great aeparteo. . "Here is a book -I was fortunate enough to pick up for J1000 at the sale of the books of M. C. D. Borden of Providence, R. I. He paid 2500 for it Here Is a book of steel engravings, mostly, as you will see, reproductions of the paintings ' of Sir Joshua Rey nolds. Smith and Word were two of the great artists who were in their prime from 1775 on for some years. Their steel engravings have, probably , never been expelled. I have at least 600 plates of Reynolds' palntinga Here is a , binding of which I am very fond. It is of the Roger Payne school. . As you see, it is a stipple effect. " Here la a wonderful old binding of the Zaehnea dorf school. That school goes In largely for line effects. These wonderful , old bindings with lace designs are by I"e- rome. This binding with the floral de signs is one of Nicholas Eve's. Here is a book of the Grolier school, with cover of inlaid levant. Here Is a par ticularly fine example of the McCall school. He mixed lines and medallions in a very pleasing way." . Book after book he handed me, hand ling them with loving care, showing me the fineness of the grain calf or of the royal purple goatskin. "Here is a set of Milton bound in pigskin. It Is a rather unusual exam ple of harmony , in binding," said Mr. Olds. "Most of my took are in full levant, doubleaux. Many of these bind ings, both on the. Inside and the out side, are like some fine old painting the artist has put part of himself into the work. . : j ' "II. E. Huntington ! of Los Angeles, son of Coll Is P. Huntington, has one of the finest libraries in the United States. He has spent more than 82.000,000 on his books. Henry Hoe, many of whose books I bought when his library was auctioned spent no less than $1,500,000 for rare -books. - ----- -s r- ' . - , . ' have come to the conclusion that no man should devote his attention solely and entirely to business. He should study such "problems as profit sharing and try to be of service to others. i - "Have I spent $108,000 on my books? Yes. I had spent that amount many years ago, and have been collecting books steadily, ever since. Whenever I can replace a set with a finer set . I give the original set to some college or library where It-can be 'useful to the public I believe we should teach our children a greater appreciation for good books as a formative- influence. The children of today are not doing so much solid reading as they: ought. Milman and Grote, Macaulay and Gibbon, Shakespeare and Byron, the Book of Books, and many' other character form ing works should be read more widely, as It will result In a higher and better type of citizenship." ' "occupation. .Further, we have ascer tained that home distilling is not by'any means confined to drunkards and folks who cannot tear themselves away from the habitual use of liquor. A distilling plant was found most often in work men's homes naturally- there are more workmen's homes - than prosperous folks' homes), but also among practi cally all other- classes of society clerks, officials., merchants, military people. : A craving for spirits is not the reason for distilling ln"a"Tage number of cases. Many distill simply Ynd solely for the fun of it The so called -distill lrig parties are now very common. They are a new sort of sport. Folks -meet, at a house, each with his or her little ma chine under the arm. The curtains are drawn, the lights lighted and all the machines placed on the kitchen stove. The evening passes and there Is a keenly competitive spirit to see who distills most and best. - The drinks are tasted amid general jubilation and excitement. It Is usually the kitchen which is used for distilling,' but use also Is made of outhouses, woodsheds, waterside sheds and cellars. Usually the apparatus la, owned by alltUe company of friends. Explosions were at first much more numerous than now, but, by this time folks have learned h6w to regulate the temperature. rungergubbes,' or those who reflrns densturized spirits, are very numerous, but they are looked down on byUhe sugar distillers. ; - . - ' (Copyright, .191. by Chicago Daily Kews Co.) plan for old maid insurance, proposed by Dr. Karl Luttenberger, la being seriously considered in ; Germany, as a guarantee against economic distress and a measure to increase the matrimonial, prospects of spinsters. , , ..-;': "The girls may take out the insurance themselves, or It may be taken out for them. Premiums are ; paltl until the twentieth year of the Insured. If the woman is1 not married by the time she reaches the age of 87 she will be en titled to draw an annuity thencefor ward Even if , she finds a husband after she passes the 17-year mark, she will continue to draw the annuity. ; "If the insured marries before 37 she cannot claim . an annuity, but may : re cover with interest the amount of prem iums paid. Should the Insured die be fore the age of 37. the cash value of her policy, will go taher heirs." ; , " Worth Trylnffr t Least ; , Prom the CMcaao '--e Substitutes for the saloon are being sought. Home Js not so bad. Ragtag nd Bobtail Stories From Everywhere A Hen Story DIRDS of a feather flock together? uNo, not -always. A staid old Plymouth Rock hen (Ply mouth Rock always was staid) strutted proudly Into the front yard of her home at Mrs. J. E. Troxell's dairy. ranch near Havana, says the Pendleton East Ore gonlan, ,. .with a pair of tiny -Chtna pheasant chicks. She clucked and she chlded. Just as mother-lovingly as any hen to her chirping offspring, for she had raised them from eggs she found in the field. ' 'Mra.' Troxeli Is feeding' the hen and her adopted ' young ones In hopes, that the little pheasants may be domesti cated. So far there is complete do- -mestic tranquility In. the peculiar little family, and Mrs. Troxeli is wondering it the birds will return to their natural haunts when they grow older. Going I'p, i I'd like to be ia flyer and with the flyers fly. Pri-haps- I then could purrhaMi tiling I that now are most too high. . . , - . The price of milk ts going up to 14 cents a ituart; It looks a if our tabby cat mtixt sue for . . non? support, Chicago News. Uncle Jeff Snow Says: Them Huna'll have a chance "to sign up the peace treaty or git off the map. We ketched a mule'-stealln' Injun on ' the Gila desert, one time, after tralltn' ' him fer three days, and we give him the choice of payln' fer the mules he killed or beln' hung, and the delight with which he poured out a -bunch of gold nuggets made us wish we hadn't been so easy with him. We found out some time after that he'd killed two or three women and several men. and hangin' was too good fer him, nohow, but by that time he was clean down to Sinaloa and still a-travelin. . The News in Paragraphs , World. Happenings Briefed for Benefit of Journal Readers GENERAL Influenza Is again epidemic In North ern California. There are 24 cases at ' Weavervtlle. Virtually every restaurant and cafe teria In Salt Lake City is clted became of a strike of cooks and waiters. A fire at Mobile. Ala., Wednendy de stroyed 20 square blocks of the relden;e section, and left 1500 people lionielesn. The steamer George W. Elder w badly injured, on May 20 when sne col lided with the breakwater at bam. Cruz, Mexico. The International parliamentary com mercial conference has reserved its de cision on the question of the interna tionalization of the Rhine. "Alarmed by the belief that Germany will not sign the pear-e treaty and thai the allies will oceupy Mannheim, citizen have become panic stricken and uiany are fleeing the town. The American colony, represented by 200 members of the American club, wel comed the new American. ambasnndor. riugn wauace, at a lunoaeon in -ans Thursday1. According to present Indications, mill of the International Paper company. throughout the country, shut down since Mav 11 as result of a strike, will reopen Monday, May 26, with strikers back at their Jobs. The entry of another conteplant for the London Dally Mail's $f.uoo prixe for the first transatlantic fUfiht was an nounced Friday by Lieutenant Leth Jen sen, French pilot aviator, who Is at St. Johns to select a site for a plane to be shinned from France. NORTHWEST NOTES Sheep shearing has begun In Umatilla county. A class of eight, all young women, will be graduated June 11 from let. Joseph's academy at Pendleton, , Yakima consistory N; 5 of the Scot tish Rito Masons will b instltued at Yakima Thursday, May 29, The Rev. Ernest Vincent Khalcr of Seattle has " been elected Protestant EpiMcopal bishop of Nebraska. John Wilson Evans, a logger, died In Bend foUowIng Injuries received when a runaway log rolled over his body. Mrs,- Eliza Best, aged 83. mother of George. Perry and John Van Orsdall, died in Pendleton last .Monday iiljtht. Kenneth L. Williams, recently dis charged from the Unitod Ktates navy, has been appointed poBUnaster at Alrlie, ' Or. - . , The commencement exercises of tke Weston high school will be held May 28. There are 17 in the graduating class. Nineteen instructors to fill vaonnHc left in the teaching staff were .elected Thursday evening by thee iienU schooi board.-.'. Lawson Booher. aged 20, popular Athena young man, is dead after un lllnes caused ry uie arayuiauuu ui leg two yeurs ago. - The steam schooner Premier, which left Ura" Harbor April 23 with supplier for-Bristol Bay. Is a total wreck off Cape Lutske, Alaska. The W-. the fourth vest-el built of concrete by the Great Northern Oonrretn Khlbulldliig company,' was launched at Vancouver Thursday. Of the-Vacancies filled in the Portland publin schools for the coming year, nearly 50 per cent re from the.OreKon Normal school at Monmouth. The schoolhouse In a Joint district maintained by Iane. Benton and Lin coln counties, known ms No. 14s, burned to the ground a few days ago. With seven feet of snow at the rim ef Crater lake U is not probable tli.it automobiles will be able to reach this scenic gem before July 15 this year. Several new cases of influenza have made their appearance in Halein. . In avuuition to tne several Haietn r-m-h. there are ulo a number in the outlying districts. The' United States government 1 r-on- aMerlne-I Mendintr out experts' to POIK county and other places in the state U explore he fell fields supposed to be located there. . Lafayette Is without water and the school are cloned. The electrUi motor which pumps the water Into a tank h broken down, and until repairs are tnado tne town will be dry. - Charges , that city funds have 1een mishandled during the previous Ueiwl administration were withdrawn by the city council Wednesday after exprttuvc tho books of former City Recorder Ellis. TK proposal to maintain a representa tive In WshlrtB-ton to further the proifset for the eatabiUthmenl of a firt-clHH naval bae near the mouth of the Co lumbia river is being dicued by the Astoria Chamber of Commerce. A 'woman homesteader. afcd 45,' who gar her name a Mrs. Kgart of Port land, foecafe mentally deranged a few days ago and in a nude state wandered aay into the forest. Mhe was later found by neighbors, who took her in and clothed, her. Will You Profit by Lessons the War Has Taught? igtorte of aAleemnt In the accflmu m at War Barings Stamrw, sent to The iournal and accepted for publication, will be earded a Thrift stamp. J This country has fought and won Its fight for freedom. America stands today as the world's leading example of a free people. How about the American citizen you and your neighbors? ; Will you pvoflt by the lessons the war has taught? - Will you keep on saving or will you go back to slaving? . Freedom from money worries is the only true trtxsAom for anyone. And thnre Is only one-way to obtain such free dom Be thrifty. Thrift tamre stvi 1919 V Stsini'S now on aaie at i:r-,il . 9