THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAU PORTLAND, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1919. AN INDEPENDENT KBW8PAPEB C 8. JACKSON. Publisher Published ewjr day, afternoon and mornln , (except Sunday afternoon) ,at The ; Building. Broadway and Tnmuia sweat. Portland, Oregon. Sntered at the Poetofflce at Portland. OniW for tnaimiasion tnrougli the mail a ecooa , claet matter. - TELEPHONES Main 1111 Home, A-.0M. AIL departments reached by tbese 5" Tell the ooerator what depertaaent yon wacv. rOBEIGN ADVERTISWO BEPBEaiWTATIVE Benjamin Kantoor Co.. Braw BttlJdJn. 220 Fifth svenae. X tart; 800 Mailer. Bttildlna. ChieaaoL ubecrtptiou Urnu by mall, or to any address In the United States or Mexico: DAJLI (MOENIN'O OB AFTEKMOON) On year S5.00 I One month -60 SUNDAY One year. ... .12 SO One month $.25 DAILT (JI0BNISO "B AFTERNOON) AND One year 7.50 I One month t . The eyee of the world are on us. We kate promised to do all we cast for the world, and we will redeem that promise. If I thought I atood in the way of carrying out this promise, I would be (lad. to die to consummate it Wood row WUtoa. JOSEPHUS DANIELS THE work of the navy was oqaj of the master achievements of America in the late war. Through submarine inested seas, more than 2,000,000 troop were, transported to France without the loss of a single soldier who sailed on an American transport under Amer ican naval escort. . No other nation made such a record. It was an operation of the foremost magnitude for the. reason that it was accom plished in the face of cunning and ruthless opposition by an enemy that pmnlovfid a. wearjon in a manner con trary to all international and civilized laws, and for which for a time no truly effective counter weapon had been satisfactorily developed. . in the beginn'ng, the safe con duct of all these troops , overseas without attendant loss seemed a ta6k insuperable. Germany was confident all along because she believed deliv ery of American troops in France could be embarrassed and confounded hv hop rllvpra Our ships were few. Three thou sand miles of sea iras between the American base and the battle front. A submarine with' only its periscope above the water might at any mo ment send deadly torpedoes crash ing into the vitals of a heavily laden troop ship. It was a cruel kind of warfare with every advantage on the side of the hidden foe and every disadvantage hanging over and im periling the troop carriers and their precious human cargoes. The lurking divers had all the great sea lanes as the scene of their opera tions. They might appear off the American coast. They might make their swift attack in mid-Atlantic. They might strike near the Azores. The blow might fall Just outside the French or British harbors. t To antici pate, U avert and to escape the dis asters planned by a merciless and crafty foe, striking from ambush and employing a weapon never be fore used, was a super problem. Our supply-of destroyers wf lim ited. Of these swift, light and easily maneuvered vessels, wo had bjit few. It was a tremendous han x dicap. Nor had wo adequate ship building plants. But the navy, with rare efficiency, began producing in iO months vessels for the construc tion of which 20 to 24 months had The story will never be adequately told of the preparations, for and the Knilin? of tho first -transnnel rnnvnv ...... - " ...WW . "W , V-V 1. T 1 J . Some of the details have been eclated. But the anxiety, the apprehensions. the unspoken dread of that first de parture of thousands of men in khaki for the voyage through diver rightfulness to the friendly ports of Franco can never be pictured. There were spies in Washington ready to wireless notice to Berlin of the sailings. A stenographer has told us how seemingly innocent telegrams to Mexico were vital information carried to the enemy from pro Germans high up in confidential relations in New York and Washing ton. To dispatch ships on which large bodies of men had to be assem bled, and to keep every avenue of infornjatlon closed to these secret enemies at home was in itself a mighty problem. Above all else, the German high command desired to obstruct the coming of the Americans. The race to Paris turned out to be between Hindenburg's gray hordes and the American transport ships. The story of the little band of American ma "rlnes at Chateau-Thierry is one of the superb tales of the war. The American regiments t the second Marne are imperishable history. The race, with Germapy and America pitted against each other, with Paris as the goal, was won and gloriously won. by the Stars and Stripes. In her Intense desire to obstruct the arrival of American troops, alt German diver power was "concen trated against the American tran- I sports. The first American convoy was twice attacked, first on June 22 off the Azores and next on June 26. In the latter, a German diver, was destroyed, and to the destroyer Fan ning fell the distinction of being the first American warship to annihilate a German diver. The safe arrival of that first convoy at St. Nazaire June 26, 1917, was the beginning, of a world epoch. It was -America for the first time as a war power in Europe. It was the initial step in the downfall of autocracy. Nobody knew it then, but it was the beginning movement in a naval opera tion that, ships and personnel con sidered, set an example of efficiency and results not surpassed in naval annals. It was the occasion of wild enthu siasm at Washington. News of it thrilled the country. Congratulatory telegrams were interchanged between the heads of the national government. It was a most auspicious beginning of what proved to be the end. Yet the great, combat with diver frightfulness was but one exhibition of the power of the American navy. The navy built a wall of anchored mines across the North sea that Ger man divers could not pass, and the American admiral who directed the work Is in Portland today. The navy supplemented the marvel ous work of the British warships in the deadly blockade of Germany, an operation that helped speed the end of the war. The navy supplied the personnel and navigated all government owned and built ships. The navy rendered conspicuous service in the speed and efficiency, with which it repaired and put seized German ships into service. The navy, which certain interests criticized shamefully before we en tered the war, so completely proved its efficiency during the struggle that it is almost the only great de partment of the government that is now free from stricture or doubt. The man who was at the head of the navy throughout this crucial period is Portland's honor guest today. Vhe power of a great institu tion is is leadership. No matter what its resources in brains, experi ence and training, there must.be a head to organize, to concentrate and to direct. There must be a leader to inspire, to stimulate and to unite the force and personnel of his organization, and, in the planning, to utilize the information and intel ligence of all his subordinates. By the performance and by the result that came from that perform ance, none can deny that Josephus Daniels was' the man for the place, a leader with the vision, a great captain of a great company. THE BIG FIGHT T HOSE who discuss the need of high wages to meet the high cost of living half way, do well to combine the counsel of Lloyd George and Woodrow Wilson. In a speech some time ago the great British leader declared that the ques tion of wages is of little conse quence beside the greater problem of production. If production mounts with wages, said he, almost any com pensation can be justified. And in his Labor day message to the Ameri can people, Woodrow Wjlson pleaded with his countrymen to enable "the processes of production to overtake the processes of consumption." As labor is- better paid it ought proportionately to become more ef ficient. The shortening of the hours of work should invite greater en ergy and less waste during the period of employment. It may not occur lo the worker that he owes greater production to his employer. But it is' beyond dispute, and Lloyd George and. Woodrow Wilson have made it clear, that increased production is a patriotic duty from which no per son should attempt to escape until times become normal again. If the world's supply of products is not as great as the world's de piand for products, the inevitable result is increased prices. Other things like profiteering undoubtedly contribute to present prices, but back of those prices are the world war, the transfer of millions of producers into the field of destroyers and the transformation of plants that nor mally produce into plants for con triving engines of destruction. There were 51 months of such a process. The effect was greatly di-, niinisjhed production and the exhaust tion, of all surplus slocks, The out standing fact is that only through production can the warehouses be replenished and conditions settle back into the normal. In the time of the Pizzaros, gold was so plentiful in Peru that a horse was worth ils weight in that metal. Six degenerate prisoners in the Kansas penitentiary are to undergo the sex operation under a state law passed in 1917. One of the six is the murderer of a little girl at fopeka. Why should such reproduce their kind? GOING FORWAJU) T HERE is much of interest to Portland in the news of recent sailings from ports of the Co lnmbia. England, the Orient and Panama are mentioned as destina tions. The cargoes are the products of the Oregon country. The ships, m numerous instances, are the craft built for the Emergency Fleet cor poration. Thus many of the things long de sired are coming to pass. Predic tions thaL resumption of shipping would include the Columbia are being verified. The relation that ports of the Columbia desire with other pro- ducing and consuming centers the worlds over is being established.' The enlarged use of Oregon products over a greater area is being recorded. The pleas for . service from ships of our merchant marine are btelng granted. Little by little, the things sought for and fought -for in port develop ment are attained. An aggressive policy Is bringing results. More hard work, better organization, the back ing of ship lines by shippers and public support of port concerns will give cumulative momentum. Thre things appear of first mor ment: To secure the port traffic manager sought by the Port of Port land commission without further de lay. To press forward to the earliest possible date the completion of the port's public dock facilities. To hurry the realization of a 35 foot all season channel to the sea. Taken to a barber shop at Law rence, Kan., to have his hair cut, a small boy voiced hla displeasure in a manner that attracted the attention of a passing bulldog. Ready to len der assistance wherever needed, the dog: entered, concluded that the boy was being abused and promptly treed the barber. a It took considerable coaxing to persuade him that the boy was being barbered, not butch ered, Remembering the sorrows that come In some tonsorial chairs, was this a case of almost human in telligence ? AN OUTLAWED NATION By Woodrow Wilson E3 HAVE such an agreement (arbitration treaty) with prac tically every great nation ex cept Germany, which refused to enter into such an agreement, be cause, my fellow citizens, Germany knows that she intended something that didn't bear discussion, and that if she had submitted the purpose which led to this war to so much as one month's discussion, she never would have dared go into the enter prise against mankind which she finally did go into, and, therefore, I say this principle of discussion is the principle already adopted by America; and what is the compulsion to do this? The compulsion is this: That if any member state violates that promise to 6ubmit either to arbitration or to discussion, 4 it is thereby ipso facto deemed to have committed an act of war against all the rest. ' Then, you will ask, do we at once take up arms and fight them? No. We do something very much more terrible than that. We absolutely boycott them. It is provided in that instrument that there shall be no communication even between them and the rest of the world. They shall receive jio goods; they shall ship no goods; they shall receive no telegraphic messages; they shall send none;. they shall receive, no mail; no mail will be received from them. The nationals, the citizens of the member states, will never enter their territory until the matter is adjusted and their citizens cannot leave their territory. The most complete boycott ever conceived in a public document And I want to say to you with con fident prediction that there will be no more fighting after that. From his morning speech at Kansas City. Announcement is made that the Pacific Mail will establish a steamer service between the Pacific and At lantic via the Panama canal. With a blast of trumpets, the company, early in the war, when shipping- was scarce, withdrew its steamers from that route, announcing at the time that the withdrawal was caused by the seamen's law requiring more pay and better living conditions for sail ors. Restoration of the line now is concession that the former state ment was a bluff. WHEN THEV MEET N O MORE auspicious lime, could have been dhosqp for the con ference of capital and laboj" which President Wilson has called. It will be a few days in ad vance of the international gathering at Washington provided for in the labor anrtex to the peace treaty. and it follows the war's exposition of the great strength of organized labor. The,. growth of the principle that the general publio has an interest in industrial disputes equal to that of capital and labor is well shown when the events of today are contrasted with these of a few years back. It will be recalled that when Presi dent Roosevelt appointed a concilia tion commission in 1902 to settle the anthracite strike, he was condemned as, one who was interfering with the rights of property and was called a dangerous radical. It was perhaps the first time the effort was matte under government authority to settle a labor dispute by other means than force, and it was justified on the ground that the nation as a . whole was more con cerned than , either the miners or operators. ' Since this time the word radical has taken a new definition. There are radicals among the (employers and there are radicals ( among the employes, radical bosses ' and radical union men. It is largely they who are keeping the great masses of era ployers and wage earners apart, in a state of mutual misunderstanding and suspicion. The settling effect of the confer ence where both sides will meet face to face, where by personal contact they will more clearly vision the viewpoint of one another and where Iherc will be-at least a chance for mutual understanding, should be of value. : The gulf now is wider? than it has been. The trend toward radi calism is stronger than it ever was. Nothing can be lost and a great deal may be gained through the pro posed conference. In a three-hour battle, a horse mackerel that dressed 857 pounds was recently captured by three Jer sey fishermen. The struggle started when the monster fish became en tangled in the net of one of the boats. The other two boats spread their nets for him, but he tore them in shreds. The battle began three miles off shore and ended 10 miles at sea, when, with four harpoons in his side and 23 gashes from Shark knives in his boy. the huee fish suc cumbed. He is described as the big gest fish ever landed in the locality. HIS CLIMB TO NAVAL CHIEF Josephus Daniels' Rise From Country Editor to Cabinet By Ward, A. Irvine Josephus Daniels, secretary of the American navy, is a Portland visitor today. It was under his direction that Amer ican greyhounds of the deep transport ed more than 2,000,000 khaki-clad fighters from the United States to the shores of France without loss of a single life. Naval annals do not record a like achievement. He fought and won during the early months of the war, a campaign to re duce cost of Bteel for naval purposes. He abolished the wine mess on board j our floating fortresses and ripped to Bhreda the red tape that had previously kept uncoordinated busy bureaus of his department. ' He was the first jiavy executive to afford the enlisted man opportunity to become a commissioned officer. His is one ef the few. departments that has escaped the sweeping ire of criti cism pounding at the earthworks of most war organizations. Born in Beaufort county, North Caro lina, May 18, 1862, young Daniels pre ceded entrance into th- newspaper -field with a collegiate course at Wilson, North Carolina, the then home of his parents, Josephus and Mary Cleves Parcels. His apprenticeship was served on a small paper in his home town, of which he later became editor and publisher. A broader field beckoned from Raleigh, N. C, where he established a weekly paper. Editor of the Raleigh News and Observer, and owner and pub lisher were other rapid advances for the young Southerner. It was as chief of the Raleigh paper that Josephus Daniels first burned his name Into the political history of his native state.' His courage and honesty led him in a series of bold editorials to attack Federal Judge Purnell of the Carolina district for his acts as receiver of the Atlantic & North Carolina? rail road, a property owned by the state. A $2000 fine for contempt of court was im posed on the editor by the judge. Mr. Daniels became one of the prominent men of the state when Federal J" ere Pritchard, in a sensational decision given on appeal, absolved the editor from guilt and remitted the fine. An active part in North Carolina po litical circles was thereafter played by Mr. Daniels. State printer for six years, he resigned in 1893 to become chief clerk in the department of the interior, where he remained for two years. A political power in his native state; Daniels' in fluence gathered momentum until he was placed In charge of publicity for the national campaign for the presi dency by William J. Bryan in 1908, and bis achievements made sure his succes sion to the post in the campaign of Woodrow Wilson, four years later. When President Wilson, on Inauguration to of fice, announced that Josephus Daniels was to become secretary of the navy, it caused no great surprise to those who had recognized ability demonstrated In campaign and administration. Upon entering office, Mr. Daniels be gan immediate search for practical knowledge of the navy and its needs. Many a night was spent aboard ship, steel-nosed sea-fighters carried him A.o target practice and fleet maneuvers, and navy yards and posts were objects of inspection. Naval precedents were wrecked to up lift the service and afford reward for conscienclous enlisted men. The shat tered regulations were used as shells for the cannons of criticism early leveled at the secretary by disgruntled officers and political opponents. It is doubtful if ever before in American history a cabinet office was subjected to such cruel and abusive broadsides as those hurled at Mr. Daniels. The abuse rolled on, gaining In momentum and volume. until the thunderous peals broke and the harsh voice of criticism shaded off into unanimous and enthusiastic plaudits of the people as the American navy proudly nosed a triumphant way homeward across the Atlantic, leaving behind a record of more than 2,000,000 men car ried to France without the loss of a single Ufe ! Civil War Veteran Compares Two Eras' War Songs From the Philadelphia Publio Ledger A Civil war veteran who heard some of the warriors of the younger genera tion cnanung "The Long, Long Trail," with their arms across one , another's shoulders and their heads together in the closest of close harmony, grew critical. Listening with his head on one side like a robin in spring on the qui vive to detect an earthworm, the old soldier said : "la that a very popular ditty with the doughboys in France?" "It is," I answered. "Possibly it's only second in command to the song 'Over There,' which has bean the raging favorite." "Rather lugubrious, if you want my candid opinion," he said. Then he grew reminiscent. "We had songs that were songs when I wore the blue." he said. "For instance, 'Daisy Dean,' that came out in 'tz." He hummed a few bars. ' "Then 'Dixie.' Do you know how 'Dixie' got its start? "It was a favorite marching tune with the Republican Invincibles in the Lin coln campaign of '60. Some of the Union regiments had the tune In the first battle of Bull Run, and the Kebs got it from them. "Then there was "When Johnny Comes Marching Home!' There was a- good high stepping tune for you. And STrarop. Tramp, Tramp, the Boys Are Marching.' "Tou say the boys like the sentiment in a song like this 'Long Trail.' Well we had sentiment galore, In bailads of the type of 'When Springtime Comes, Gentle Annie.' You remember Bayard Taylor's' account of the singing ot 'Annie Laurie' to soldiers encamped in the Crimea? "When we got real doleful wj could sing "When This Cruel War Is Over.' There was a ridiculous ditty about Massa Wld a Mustache on His Face.' whose words J don't exactly recall. Mrs. Henry Wood, the actress, popularized it in the closing days of the war. "Of course, there was 'John Brown's Body, which was promoted to firandllo- quence when the text ot the 'Battle Hymn of the Republic was SUsd to IV Stephen Foster, : with his "Camptown Races' And "Old Dog Tray and the rest was popular before the war as well as while it was or his music must last forever. He was a riant compared with these gimcrack fellows who reel off tea tunes an hour nowadays." Letters From the People . Communications sect to The Journal for publication in this department should be written on only one side of the paper, should not exceed 800 word In length. Tend mutt be sicned by the writer, wbeee mail address In toll ouut eceosa pany the contribution.) At Issue With Mr. Johnstone Portland, Sept. 1. To the Editor of The Journal The fairness with which he .presented his subject, "Practical or Patriotic Americanism," from his view point, is commendable for Attorney HamUton Johnstone, who delivered an address at Evening Star grange on Sep tember 6. Owing to a widely diversified opinion, please allow this public friendly criticism. To be fair, let it be said the speaker declared himself a conservative and not averse to being called a reactionary ; while I am known to be a progressive and not objecting to being called a radi cal. Yet on some things we are agreed. Supporting his conservatism, he cited the need of advising with older and not younger heads as a guide for the future. This opened the way for an attack by use of the phrase "entangling 'alliances," against the League of Nations and President WUson's part in it, entirely overlooking the changed conditions that time brings to all Uiings, including peo ples and nations. Evolution through inventions has revo lutionized institutions and wrought great social changes. These forces have made obsolete the former well stated axiom of our first president The ends of the earth are tied in one Indivisible mass, where there we: i great barriers of isola tion in the former period. When another people leaves off its friendly and takes on a belligerant attitude no individual, to sa y nothing of a nation, can remain unaffected. The late war has conclu sively proved this. This annihilation of separations, this congealing of everything, is what sup ports that statement of President Wil son, much criticized by the speaker, about "minding our own business." In deed, we must mind the business of others if we may be allowed to exist as a nation. Great emphasis was also laid by the speaker on Secretary Lansing's recent statement regarding a world code and congress. Any person not a reactionary would see in this statement the necessity for a League of Nations organization preparatory to a code and a congress. Lansing's statement was subsidary to a substitute for the league. It was rather disappointing that his address came at the close of the session, when adjourn ment was in order. To be fair when current topics are discussed time should be given for brief discussion If there is to be enlightenment. The writer is not necessarily here en dorsing the League of Nations. Indi vidual right Is reserved to consider that document as a necessary expedient of po 1 1 1 1 c a 1 evolution, internationalising capitalism. And it is political and not industrial In its nature. Industrial in ternationalization, so objected to by the speaker, will come out of this League of Nations as a natural effect, not because It is so intended by Its promoters, but because capitalism cannot always con tinue to function for the necessities of the people. As recently and previously stated by President Wilson, this -was a commercial and Industrial war. It was also the result of capitalism and not of some other ism not in operation. Woe to that thing that caused this cruel war when once the people discover how to rid themselves of 1L C. W, BARZEE. "A Friend or Dr. Marie Equi" Portland. Sept. 8 To the Editor of The Journal I see by the Telegram of last Friday that Kathleen O'Brennan may not speak In The Auditorium, be cause she is an agitator, an I. W. W. sympathizer, and a friend of Dr. Marie Equi. Since when is it a crime to be Dr. Marie Equi's friend? What has she done that mankind must shun her to be classed among tlbi "respectables"'? Did she comer the bread market against the poor? Did she hoard leather so that the people have no shoes? Did she form a trust to steal the milk away from little children? Heavens ! No. Else she would be courted by kings. Her whole unpardon able sin lies in that she is a friend to labor and that she has fought these crimes of capital, iooth and nail. She told the migrator worker he had a right to a vote ; she taught the army of the unskilled that they could organ ize as well as the crafts, and to even better purpose. This is why she may not speak in The Auditorium she nor her friends, nor her friends' friends after them. Dr. Equi is a first-rank physician. The Medical association classes her as one of the great practitioners of the Northwest. She might have been a wealthy woman if she had not allied herself with the "under dog." She made the same mistake that Jesus Christ made when he turned down the king doms of this earth and cast In his; lot with fishermen and shepherds. She has her reward, and he had his a prison and a cross. If she had chased dollars, she might have figured in high Ufe scandals and made the people proud of her. Instead, it has become a crime to be her friend. The pledge of the mayor to the Central Labor Council turns out to be another "scrap of paper" when he bethfnks that one of the speakers is a friend to Dr. Marie Equi I wonder how many friends the doctor has In the city' of Portland? I'll wager she. has a thousand if she has one Let all of us who are her friends takeJ this as a personal insult and stand shoulder to shoulder-' in her behalf. Let us form an Equi society to show Mayor Baker and the other ruling interests that Dr. Marie Equi has friends by the score, and for the still prouder purpose of being a sympathetic support to that Indomitable spirit of hers. This Is written by a member of the Boilermakers' auxiliary and a friend of Dr. Marie Equi. MRS. LULA H. RUPEL. No Striking; Arbitration Portland, Sept. 4. To the Edtor of The Journal At a meeting of attorneys recently some attorney suggested that a law ought to be passed making strikes a crime, and I think I voice the senti ment of the majority of the people, in cluding the majority of the level headed people In the Union, when I say we will hall with delight the day when such a law will be passed, and if we can'J. have voluntary arbitration we should have enforced arbitration, and when any question "arises between capital and labor it could be taken into the court, or a court for that special purpose, and be settled with a court and jury. Dif ficulties on either side could be pre sented by attorneys and decided by a jury of business men and laborers. Laws could be enacted regulating wages ac cording to the profits In business, and this outrageous practice of picketing in front of business houses ought to be stopped.. It is surely against the law, as it Is nothing more nor less than boy cotting, and every city ought to main tain an open shop. If the unions can persuade everybody to join the union . COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF ,. SMALL CHANGE : i " ; No gas in Seattle. An, go on. ' Welcome, General Pershing. ; put 'er there. . Whafe the h. c of L investigation coming to? ; The "movies" do move, it seems, strike or no strike. . Cheer up: there'll be many sunshiny days before Christmas. - i It seems to be a case of where Arkansas tins come to Oregon. The city health officer can find no influenza in Portland. That suits us. e Colonel House will stay ln; Europe. He can keep open house over there, anyway; The "pretty penny" of which you have all heard must be one of the coins you srent at the beauty parlor. , It Is reported that an attempt in Chicago to raise shoe shining to 15 cents failed. What kind of a town is that umcago, anynow i e . Crop reports are to the effect that the wheat crop will be 17.000,000 bushels below the first estimate. Now we ma v expect the price of our dauy 'bread to go up anomer peg. e President Wilson at Omaha easid "there is no need for reservations." ' He was talkintr about the neaCA treatv. however and not about retting a place: to' hear mm at ine Auditorium. While pursuing the food profiteer, let all pursuers kindlv nauae In Inventicst the cafeteria pie ana find out what that iruca js ,tnat tne plemaker . puts in among its innards that is so different from what was wont to, be In the pies that mother used to make. , IMPRESSIONS AND OBSERVATIONS OF THE JOURNAL MAN By Fred Lockley- Tempting descriptions of peace and plenty in far-away Curry county are presented y Mr. Lockley tnday. He inventories the items eon etituUnt the daily fare ot the Fromm tastily, and notes other elements that make up their prosperous and happy liree. No "baek to the land" for them they're already baek. ; and. what's more, intend to stay there, by jiagl'J Tou may not be able to locate Brush creek on your map, so I will tell you where it Is. It is 10 miles south' of Port Orford and 22 miles north ef Gold Beach. I am staying at Robert Fromm ranch on Brush creek, in Curry couaty. The open season for deer Is on, and this is in the heart of the deer country.. If you have been feeling sorry for the isolated homesteaders of Curry county, you have been wasting your sympathy. As a matter of fact, they are sorry for you. This morning we had a huge plat ter of hot cakes with butter and lots of horrey. We had fragrant coffee with a pitcherful of crejfin bo thick It would hardly pour. ' We had a platter of trput ranging in size from 7 to 14 inches trout that I myself had caught the evening before In Brush oreek. We had lots of crisp toast and fried potatoes. For supper we had a platter of tender loin of fried venison, as tender aa spring chicken. Mrs. Fromm's brother. Arthur Anderson, had killed a buck the pre ceding evening. He had come to be on hand for the first day of the open, sea son. We had baked potatoes, beaten biscuits, maccaronl and cheese, honey and wild blackberry jelly, with a big pitcher of creamy milk and a dish of apple sauce. We sat at the table in the kitchen, eating leisurely and talking as we ate. There were Robert Fromm, Mrs. Fromm, Raymond, aged 6. and Bobby, aged 4 ; Anna Anderson, Mrs. Fromm's sister, and Arthur, her brother, and myself. "No, I don't want to live in a city," said Arthur. "I lived in one once for nearly a ytar. I thought I would die of homesickness. I am cured of the city. You don't get to keep the money you earn long enough to get acquainted with it. My wife and I thought we were getting good wages, but by the time we had paid our rent, our grocery bill, our butcher bill and our bills for fuel, water, gas and electric light, and had dug up for carfare, we didn't have anything left. We just got to handle the money ; we didn't get to keep any of it. We thought of the Ice cold streams and springs of Curry county, where you could have all the water you wanted without worrying about the water meter. We thought of the hundreds and thou sands of cords of wood to be had for the hauling. We thought of the trout and wild honey, the 1eer meat and wild blackberries and strawberries, and we beat it for Curry county." V "I suppose the people who HveMn the city must be satisfied with their lot, or they wouldn't stay there," said Robert Fromm. "As far as I am concerned, I prefer the country. It's a better place to raise your children. Then you come nearer to being your own boss if you live in the country. You don't worry about punching a time clock, nor you don't worry about losing your job. that Is' their privilege, and, perhaps, their duty, but when they come out and try to dictate lo people as to how they should conduct their business that Is carrying things too far. I have con ducted business in different parts of the United States and Canada and have paid the union scale, but I will never allow anyone to dictate to me sis to whom I shall employ to ao my wow - . . . , I am member or ine carpnrs . - j .iAi,.ti union, ana never voieu vr vk-hcuus, and it Is my intention now to organlae a Buffalo millwrights union wherever I happen to do business, aid this union does not tolerate any such -foolishness as picketing. If business men pay union scale and grant union hours that ought j repeat it Is up to the members of the union to get eyeryooey into me union that they can. Imagine a Mason coming along to a business man and telling him he wilt have to employ members of the Masonic order Dr he would be boycotted. There Is 3ust as much sense in that as the union dictating to a business man as to whom he shall employ to do his work. A. J. CLARK. On Communicating With God Eugene, Sept. . To the Editor of The Journal The communication from Mr. Johnson in last Tuesday's Journal, criticising the use of the word "God" by "American in the sentence "Ood did not mean for the white man to in trude upon the yellow man's home, nor did he intend him to enter dark Africa and carry the black man into a life of slavery," illustrates the danger of forming new assumptions as well as In Ignoring oM ones. As to how "Ameri can" gets into communication with God, about which Mr. Johnson inquires, that is . matter In which Mr. Johnson has the same privileges ,as "American." He can also get into communication if he wishes and complies with the condi tions, as God is said to be no respecter of persons. The implication that such is impossible is merely a matter of opin ion to be determined by evidence like any other issue or disputed point. In this case, however, the conscience or reason of each person is- supposed to decide, "and "American's" view or opin ion may be just as good as Mr. John son's statement that "evidently 'Ameri can' has a greater knowledge and un- OREGON SIDELIGHTS Ptm telephone service between CoquHle and Myrtle Point baa ended. It now costs 10 cents for a three-minute talk. e - e e viona fnnniiintMl make It certain that hi. hnlMlner onerationa in Baker will soon be in progress, the Democrat awys.j e RsitnM ha farmer: he Is now reap ing the results of a year's labor and is receiving a just reward," admiringly remaraav tne Amity eiuuru. "They are telling us," says the Crane American, "that the publio doesn't buy low nrieed. ahoea any more. That s be cause there are none to be had. e e Colonel Clark Wood of the Weston Leader Is not so sure about It. He says : "We are all of us consumers, and nearly all of us producers, and nearly all of us profiteering more or lessso the true solution of the price problem will in all likelihood have to be left to that great adjuster. Father Time." This, from, the Coqullle Sentinel, Illus trates the teacher problem as It exists in Oregon today: "The Sumner school, which ws offering $115 a month salary, informs Superintendent Mulkey that they are going to Import two teachers from North Dakota, having contracted with the young ladies from that state whose applications Mr. Mulkey sent them." . The Moro Observer might well have told this interesting little story more fully. It excites curiosity : "A generous ample of roasting ears from the garden conducted by Helen, Ruth and Harold Bryant was received this week by the Ohurvw Tr Is not arenarallv known that a number of the tables of Moro are supplied with iresn vegetames oy vaoA vnnnr merchants each Year, but the quality of their garden products is bringing them a larger list of custom ers each season.- "Take this place here I have a sec tion of land. You can get all the land you want, as good as this, for 85 an acre- Mjr land runs along the creek for about a mile and a half. It Is L shaped. At the upper end it takes in that bald mountain and runs to the ocean. . On my own place I have good surf bathing, fine trout fishing and deer and cougar hunting, and at the same time plenty of land for farming. We get along pretty comfortably. You came through our apple orchard when you were fishing. You noticed what fine Gravensteln apples we had. Did you notice that field of sweet corn? It': about as fine a lot of corn as you will see anywhere. My wife puts up. lots of peas, string beans and corn for win ter use. With our spuds, carrots, tur nips, beets and cabbages, that gives us lots of vegetables to eat during the winter. We have our own honey, and there are lots of bee trees, where you can get wild honey, near at hand. Ar thur got two tubs of wild honey out of a bee -tree he felled not long ago, We have all the eggs and chickens, and all the milk, cream and butter we can use. We kill a few deer in the fall and jerk their meat for winter use. . "I am runnnlg about 500 sheep on my place. I .never feed them, winter or summer. I get 812.50 for the sheep and 85 for lambs. Last year I got 6S cents a pound for their wool, and their fleeces averaged about eight pounds, so that meant over 5 for the wool from every sheep. This year I have been offered 50 cents a pound for my wool, so I will get about 84 each from my 600 sheep, or about 82000 for my wool. As soon as my pigs are old enough I turn them loose to feed on the acorns. It's the finest kind of food and I never saw the acorn crop heavier than it is this year. e "When I first came here - there were lots of wild hogs, but we hunted them down with dogs and shot them. I get 18 cents a pound for my hogs, so when you can turn in a rood sized band of hogs weighing 150 to 250 pounds each, you see it runs Into good money. We put VP our own bacon, ham and lard and it's better than you can get at the corner grocery store, and we don't have to stint ourselves on It, either." 0 "What do you do for amusement?" I inquired" of Arthur Anderson. "Fish and hunt and do lots of reading winter evenings," he replied. "Occasionally I get a cougar or a oyote. The county pays 820 bounty for male coyotes and 825 for females, so It Is profitable work to shoot them. "Of a morning about sunrise you can often count from 25 to 60 deer In some little clearing or on- the side of a bald mountain. "Taking care of the stock, fishing, hunting, hauling wood, and keeping things up keeps one occupied and con tented and you can save lots of money, which is more than you can do in the city. "No, sir-let them that like the city have It. ft'he country for me every time." ' . derstanding of that which does not exist than he has of that which does," as well aaejother statements in his communica tion, seems to imply that God has no existence. But such implication would seem to be as difficult of proof as "American's'', belief that he (God) does exist, and I believe the race In general, or the civilized world, prefers "Amerl can's" point of view as more reasonable W. r. rt natural tViut, t ha nth.. anI m rr p - conaucive to ine Desi interests, peace and welfare of all. JAMES T. SMITH. X 'Good Chance Overlooked Portland. Sept. . To the Editor of The Journal. -If School Director Thomas is so sensitive about his honor and is able to put up 82000 toward paying for the auditing of the books of the school board, why didn't he walk right in when he got back from his junket ayl fork right over what was left of the 8600, and not stand so long on his dignity? It is too late now to put up a bluff to save his honor. A TAXPAYER. Vrry Likely From the Rufene Reflster. The ex-kaiser is said to be greatly pleased because a Dutch airman flew low over Amerongen cast i and greeted him with what looked to be a wave of the hand. But Isn't he taking too much for granted? Maybe the aviator was merely shaking bis fist at him. Curious Bits of Information For the Curious Gleaned From Curious Places The terni 'links, in connection with golf is of Scottish origin. It" originally was used to designate a stretch of land covered with short grass and stubble, which lies between the high point of the coast and the water lit parts of , the Scottish seaboard. The first golf courses were laid out along these stretches, hence the hame. When the sport spread to other countries the name "links'" clung to it, but the original meaning was en tirely overlooked. In Scottish history golf can be traced back as far as 1457. though others eon tend that it originated hundreds of years I prior to that time. The News in Paragraphs World Happenings Briefed for Benefit ot Journal Readers OREGON NOTES xroo&,co?nty'm WaTh school, opened Prlneville Monday and the attendance, broke all previous records. After being closed for the past year, ine bt. Helens Creosoting company r-ia " a-M wum wiui a core or zu men. The big bridge across the Santiam , river at Jefferson will be rebuilt next yer by the Southern Pacific Railroad company. ..lS,amatJ co"U)r teachers institute, flui dosed, was the most successful ever J113-, Nearly seventy-five teachers were in attendance. ChftrlAM .QmAt. 14 , . . -- neart Alleghany when out hunting and rr Vi . , " "kib in me wooaa, flas tound his way home. u ' -.'"i1" .L Bosorth, for many years a. mSli1 of.. s'fn' and Portland, but i . . vi nay u ty, aied at thtK latter c iv itwa.u " v V .liuf, Chnrla vr rjii i . . rtmastership of "M." ' eSS" Itta Sffif r'1if:ur. "udaon will be ap- fvsii,vi u iiu uiu vacancy. . o ii uiaiir years bii. fiJJ" ih .practice of law at La "u T"3" anown throughout the state, is dead at the age of 46. Two Vmnrfral ar.A . - . - .v. muutiaiia serfs . or public land In eastern Klamath county may be plJbed in charge of the naUonaTfort" f th m0nt ofan,0.nvS.WoSack, becomes the owner .t w iya"3r Hardware company store at Wallowa, purchasing the establlsh- ,iorw- A. Arnold, organiser and i-r.ma"i,r fi.the y1 Llo" ---- umiiucuuaii oi uoos ana ti!li COUrLlMS. nas signed and re turned to his farm at Pleasant Hill. t..firf ?owff?ot 8alem & Instl-, .K.edTU" 'ori"wo. images again HnT.kl7 ci.iJi c"Uany and the Southern Pacific company for the death Of hia eon in an v.fi - . , . . . June uwuwmn auciuent last .Tnunhln. An. . mm. ..T ' " "Prosniauves ra to attend an extra session of the ..T.ney. exPr themselves, how ever, aa in favor nt h. i . ment. .menu- A corn ihfinr f k v. a t i . hur-r ThnruHav & ,.,uiu , - a - - i " mi," cttsn prize a !f?rKStln r'v wlU ba w'rded. All .uu ar?. t0 b made with the corn slngl.- exhibit "n mwu cont"""p- . Marvin 7hna ...v.. jii . . hie home at Hubbard on April 80 and "f"" sougnt py orfloers In all ffi.Jl ? tt ountry, has written a Lfnrt win ,hi.a 1ov.thr that he is well and will return home soon. WASHINGTON . The aP.ni,al. lovy for the city of Che halie will be 21.3 mills, the same as last year. '" Licenses have been issued to date In JJ f I2at,oollnty, for s'018 automobiles lm &08o"' reclpU reacnln a total of Steps have been taken at Walla Wall, for I HA nr.unl..tinn 0 - ...... . ... .1? artillery, authorized in the Washington national guard. . Underwood orchardlsts will ship about J00 carloads of the highest class apples this fall; almost &0 per cent more than were harvested last year. A "lllW In that Tat1- i court has returned a verdict of guilty Baiiiai narry lumore, cnarged with a crime against bis own daughter. Of the tOtnl fVnr vf wlaava t 1 alia Walla valley about 60 per cent sum at prices ror ine most part above the government minimum. Active preparations are under way for work on the Pacific highway for seven miles north of Castlerock. The contract has been let to Henry &, McKee of Se attle for $241,317. The electric generator at the plant of the Northwest Electric and Water works at Montesano exploded tSunday morn ing, Injuring three men, one seriously, and demolishing the generator, rt Walla Walla is planning for the big gest agricultural fair in the history of the COlintV. ("lilt- fmm am tarn - ... as Minnesota are promised for the event, which takes place September 10 to 13. owners or several threshing outfits In the Walla Walla section, refusing to pay the wagiis demanded by the workers, have pulled in for the season. Some or the men demanded as high as 812 a day. Fire at Prescott iSunday morning burned six wooden business buildings to the ground. The loss is estimated at 830,000. The Floyd King Cold Storage company was the heaviest loser, with 810.000. On account of delay In the completion of the Vale-Yacolt bridge, commissioner of Clarke and Cowlitz counties will In stitute a suit for 813,000 damages against the extractors if the bridge is not finished ray October. OKNERAL A national campaign to Increase its membership. to 1.000,000 veterans Is an nounced by the American Legion. A Bolshevikl wireless message reports the capture by the Bolshevlki of Tobolsk, capital of West Siberia and the govern ment of Tobolsk. Lieutenants Frederick Walerhoune and Cecil Connelly, aviators, missing: from San Diego since August 30, are believed to be dead. Governor-General Burton Harrison ar rived at Manila Sunday from the United States. He and his bride were greeted by thousands of natives. The association opposed to national prohibition announced at New Voile Sunday that it will go Into national politics at the November elections. Private Reass Madsen of Sacramento, Pal., was shot and killed at Cobleng Sunday- by German troops. The shoot lng took place in the neutral cone. After two months on the transconti nental highway, an army transport train composed of 72 motor trucks and automobiles, arrived at San Francisco Sunday. Banks of the United States without quotas belnp aijrned them subscribed In a day for 8573.84 1,500 of treasury certificates of indebtedness dated Sep tember 2. Two negro1 charged With . murder were taken irom tne Jacksonville, r la., jail Monday morning and shot to death after being dragged throush the streets witn a rope aoout tneir necks- Property valued at approximate 10.000.000 marks sold directly by the) Americans to ine uermans, was de stroyed Sunday by a series of explo- Ions in ammunition dumps near xsieuwiea. UncleJeff Snow Says; " nVaTe rilsia. e-tf 1 1 vrT-A m Vin ai arrtnav a am. a II" J' . J a. ssca as-v Uf 50 per cent In Portland so the lawyer could have -T-bone steak instead oi namDurger. Olden Oregon' First Boosters Appeared. Upon the ticene as Early ae 183s. One of the early efforts to advertise Oregon as a favored place for capital and settlement was made in 1888, a few years after the establishment, of the Methodist missions. So far as work among the Indians was concerned, the mission realized that It was destined to be a failure. To Jason Lee and others) It became apparent that the proper course was to build up the country. A memorial which was to be submitted to congress, to the mission board and to the public generally was drafted. Thi memorial, which was signed by three fourths of the white population, rave a description of the country, its fertility, climate and general adaptability for set tlement. According to Clarence B. Bag- ley It was a literary gem and full of, I patriotic sesiumeni. it waa carried east by Jason Lee. The object of the me morial waa to call attention to the needs and the value ot the country and to secure men and means or extended cDurcn work. ; -