AX tMDEPgWPEyf KgWgTAPg ; C.VS.JACK80M ....,. X'ublUlwd rrry lUjr, .fUreoos na (wtt Bund afUrooon). Tb J"1 KuiMinc. ' Broadway d , y.rnhia suss. Portland, Oresao. - - , fcntewd at the Poitoffice rt Portland, 0"i (or IrasMalMia threes the W . "C0D4 duo auttrr. - . 1 KI'Ei'HON ES Min . 1 1 1 I "JV Toll the opmtar what dprtonant fw Bt- I O REIGN ADVEBTItJINO BEP8EBEKTATIVB JUnJomin lrtnor Co., Brwk BWinfc 835 Kta fwwi'.-.TPli:..W;JJi Bandies, CUcMto. itubwrlptten term ty suit, or t say ddrao ia the United ett of Hwtoo; , DAILX '. JMORM E0 OB AFTEBJfOOS') . On year... ...$$.00 f Ob syren.. ...$ .6 Oho real. . ... $$ r On month . . jjjt-l XUILX (MOJWINO On AFTEUKOOK) AND ..-..- -i".-.,.- BESPAT ' " On roe. . J. . IT.60 t On wonta..... . Th PUcrlm the bid to arcsnppor ' etamaer.'whoe window opened toward the uo-rWiif : ib nam of the chamber we Pom; wboro ba slept OU break ef 47, M ' Uwn w awoke md &. Bunymn. FRANCE RATIFIES F" iRANCE ratified. The verdict was overwhelming.' The vote for the treaty was 372 against 53. It is one - more I step in the dlrec tlon of settling the turbulence that bas been In the world since August, 1914, a period of 62 months. The1 biggest human enactment that has appeared in the world Is waiting only for action by America. The day the United States acts, the success of , the league will be 'guaranteed . The power of America, the prestige of America, the leadership of Amer ica, the moral .Influence of America ' would Instantly assure the nations that the league is a reality, that Its action is to le Just, that Its organiza tion IS substantial, that war is to be abhorred, that conquest and an nexation are ended and that the era of. peace and good will that Jesus Christ taught has behind it a league Jof powerful nations .banded together to 'bring it as nearly to pass as may be humanly possible. , 'Happily, on the -very day of ratlfT cation ;by; France, the. United States senate! overwhelmingly voted down the Fall 1 amendments. They - were mischievous proposals offered by a man who sought a secret Interview with .Villa at the very time when the - Mexican bandit ' was outlawed and hunted by the American govern . men! for murder of American ci vilians and soldiers on American soil The i American senate "knows : that Germany will iot respect ( the terms of the treaty unless compelled to do so. The only way to compel her Is either by use of armies If there is no league, or iy . the economic boycott r provided in the league. " A Junker German writing In a 'Berlin "paper recently said that "non- ratlflcation by America would create a. multitude of new perspectives for ; Germany, which a. shrewd, active : The world knows from the agonizing events h that began in August, 1914, what- this Junker German had la mind, ftnd If shrinks at the thought - of his sinister suggestion. To tinker with the .'treaty tn such a presence is to tempt other days of massacre and butchery. Badly beaten in , the . first, fight and with the fact of French ratifica tion staring them In; the face, may there not be chance that confusion Is overtaking league enemies in the American senate T : With the faUlng- of the leaves, the wilfl fowl migrate from their north ern nesting grounds, and from the upland plateaus of the interior the prosperous ( grain farmers come down to spend the' winter in ; Port land. 'The lights f the city are a ; Jure which they - feel fully entitled to yield to, after the strenuous sea son which fills the granary of the Northwest .and their pockets Well. '; . - -, ' T1LL1E ALCARTRA ' , rpiLUK ALCARTRA, the world's I champion Holsteln cow, merited l l the honor paid her by the Ad i: ; fclub, , which made her guest of honor at a luncheon Wednesday in one of the city's leading, hotels.' For several years she has been producing more than 30,000 ; pounds of milk annually. She is capable of providing m people with a pint of milk dally. In her . comparatively short career she has produced the equivalent In food value v of the beef of more than a score' of steers.-. .Her butter production ; averages In : the neigh oornooa or lioo. : pounds -a year. whereas ; the animal , that , produces CC0 "pounds . a year 1st regarded as a good cow.. She Is the equal, from the standpoint of production alone. cf four good cows. She will be t i story maker in the dairy world, for her calves will develop Into great i ires, or, ; perhaps, even ' greater milk rroducers. . . . ;t Time Alcartra Is the- result of in tr lligent breeding. She Is In'berself r n epochal achievement. " Cows like : -? are the objective ana thr ambl encourage toe Improvement ' of Ilol stcln, Jersey, Caernsey And Ayrshire strains that the Paclfle International livestock exposition is being financed. That ? .Portland A has beeai chosen the permanent home of the 'exposition U a, significant honor, for It means this city will become the centre of m - .,..' Mi A a splendid effort for tne. oeneiu of .humanity," affecting not only the Northwest and the Pacific coast, but an area without boundaries. : r ' a v The Oregon wild rose may be pro duced to value ot $2000 or more an acre annually, says a famous In diana florist, who has been visiting Portland. It is used as ft base etodfc upon which to graft choice speci mens of cultivated varieties, a With such an opportunity, why be a school teacher, or oven a mechanic? OUR STREET ACCIDENTS HERE is Portland's public safety . commission ? .Where Is ihe accident prevention cam paign t Five people were Wiled in street accidents last rdonth ; 138 were Injured r 871 accidents were reported-. It was . the banner month for. the death and destruction that follow the dlsregardful and the crim inally careless. Once the public Joined with the police to arrest ' the fearful toll Of traffic accidents.. Business men '. at their : lunch eons learned how f ore thought prevents collisions and cas ualties. Women at their i meetings and children Jn their schools heard the same message. A lessening In number of ' accidents followed. The ranks of the careful gained reprults from the reckless. Why was this excellent work not persisted in? The public's represen tative was the safety commission. What bas become, of the commis sion? Does it still exist? Has it lost heart or standing? Has it proved unworthy or is there nothing for It to do?.If so, a new basis of cooper ation between public and police in accident prevention Should be estab lished. Public- safety demands per sistent accident prevention campaign in. . ' LETS GO S" OME one not long ago classed the word "daddy" as one of the finest contributions made by Americans to the English lan guage. The reason given was that daddy Implies a friendly, pal-like, relation between the 'father and his children In the United States. There Is nothing disrespectful about it; on the .contrary, it does not appear in the language of estrangement. "Let's gol" is another- expression that belongs In the category of brief words with big content. It Is pecul iarly AnWlcan. It. expresses force, purpose, determination and objective. Expanded, it conveys the thought, "Let's go from where we are to where .we want to be." It was the phrase of nonchalant super-courage at the fnpnt when the order was given to go over the top. It rivals the pistol crack as a race starter. It has never : failing punch when big. heroic, optimistic, worth while things are to be done. It Is a surprise that "Let's go" has not become the slogan of a city like Portland. ' No man or woman need remain uneducated In Portland. The poly technic school offers for night study courses in mechanical training In great and inviting variety. The Uni versity of Oregon is launching ex tension courses for evening patron age in languages and business, and there are other night schools. No one has any excuse for permitting Idle hours to binder self -Improve ment. MR. LAROCIIE'S. BRIEF TIE 8, P. S. is one of the most magnificently constructed railroads in tne united states, lie waver , giwjo Riuug we do- umbia and its easy curves -permit maximum traffic movement with minimum delay. A small . engine can move a train of 120 oars either west or east over it with perfect ease. Its operating charges are about three fourths the operating costs of the Northern Paciflo mountain route to Puget sound. ' Yet Portland's city attorney, W. P. LaRoche, has directed the attention or .tne interstate commerce com mission to the fact that this splendid transportation line is used to little more than 10 per cent of its capacity. Ills brief In the Columbia basin rate case reveals that at a time when the. nation's business requires the largest ,use of eVery transportation line the S.t P. A S.is almost without employment. He shows graphically that the northern railroads are haul ing trains, to more than half mile mountain altitudes when the equally available water level trade artery Is little used, i The S,P,dS.' is the Joint property of the Northern Paciflo and Great Northern, b oth reaching : Puget 6ound with their main lines, and both hav ing bnilt extensive terminal facilities for rail and water interchange i on Puget soundt The objective of their own economy would dictate - greater use , of the ; water grade : line, yet they have 1 failed to do so, and the railroad administration . has made almost no change in the policy.--v It is remarkable to think that mountain lines should be - so , heavily utilized when the -parallel water ; grade is neglected. It may -be that -thS city attorney's Words,' like the similar expressloa , uttered during: his "life time by James J. Hill, will be pro- pnttic. He sayss Commerce, Ilk water, follows the Hne of least resistance. Man may for a time raise it over mountain barrlera, vhea. close by, nature has provided channels of least resistance, bat there win ever be the , challenge of the naterel way uTZc??. ficial to the real. Aiding- the pressure of natural economic forces, from , now on.-there will be added the human tn- deavor of energy end ability. The Columbia basin and the ports of the Columbia' have labored under rates ; that discriminated against the water grade route. It Is within the power of 'the ; Interstate: commerce commission to remove that dlscrlnJ- ination ' and to pot an ': end to the favoritism that develops Puget sound at the expense of the ports of the. Columbia. ' '.' The women's Republican and Democratic organizations of New York have Indorsed a daylight sav ings ordinance now pending before the board of aldermen of that city, and ! are urging'. Its passage. .'The extra' hpur of daylight Is a safe guard for the young workers in the j office, shop and factory Jn Teaching their homes," they say. AOO .inoeea I it is. RVVSViG FOR PRESIDENT A T HIS San Francisco meeting. Senator Johnson was introduced j lo the - audience as "the next president of the United SUtes," and thereupon the Calif ornians . en gaged In an uproarions demonstra tion which lasted- several minutes. Whatever else the rest of the itnnnl.0 mv Oitnlr n h inik'rnlaln vl7l""7, "w --4 able opposition to the peace treaty, Senator Johnson's ' Calif ornia friends of iS750,ooo,ooo worth of German-owned understand it. Others may wonder vr operty. CriginaUy the plan was to . .. . . ,n hold this property In trust for the own why there Should be opposition to sn anm the war ended. Then, as the the only treaty that ever provided war issues were defined, the ramiflca- the machinery for enforcing its terms tlons of German propaganda and pene- withnnt retort tn war hot there is tratloa were laid -bare,' Palmer recom- wlthout resort to war, out uiere is and con?reg8 adopted, the pol- no lack of explanation for it among tc, f selling out this German property, the senator's California friends. They turning Its control permanently Into Vnow p-rnrtlv what thev are doing American hands, and reserving the Know exactly wnat mey are ooing proceeds for dl8po8itlon M pubUc poijcy and know exactly what the senator might dictate at the close of the war. is doing. This was a large work. and it natar- . . . , . ally led to criticism. With the close of It would have seemed the better war the vlrtual conclxiaUin. ot strategy for the senator's preslden- this .work, the retirement of Attorney tial Candidacy for them to have kept General Gregory from the-cabinet gave their real purpose hidden until 4 SLZ more seemly and timely day. America instantly there was a storm of protest. Is in the midst of strife and unrest, and the confirmation of Palmer as at- Mighty business enterprises are wait- Ing for the settling and pacifying ef fect that would come from the , sign ing and delivery of the peace treaty. The delay In ratification by Senator SSSStmn of New jersey. Johnson and his friends is Univer- who had submitted the charges, con ga 11 y known to be a chief cause of tinned his opposition. Then it turned ..a v a tx.1i i i m ' the growing turbulence and unrest seething tnrougn tne country, n is sobering thought with millions Oil Americans to reflect that at such a . , , , ,. . -.! i time the question in California Is not the welfare of the republic and fW ntntlnn nf its nrpRA.nt nrpssinr problems, but the welfare of Senator Johnson's presidential boomleL I Th thnnirht of thi anrtlla snd tohs 1 of the presidency for their state may be attractive to San Franciscans. But the thourht of a neaee treaty hune: up vuuMj " I for an indefinite period In order to j make a campaign issue ana 6ecure nomination for Hiram Johnson is I not attractive to the millions who want the country to return to norr J mal, want the high cost of living re- duced and want ratified a treaty that 1 ror the ilrst lime in nisiory oners a way to minimize war or prevent It ,,,h altogether. . ,. A nlan to end war would seem to I be the desire of all those who suf- fered from the late conflict. It must be that mothers do not' want Other of their sons sent to the front to face fire and steel. They reason that even though it be not the exact plan j to suit every individual, it IS the best and only plan proposed in is there- fore worthy of a trial. But it. is not so with Senator John son and his friends in the midst of their thought of who Is to be "the next president of the United States.' They are for Johnson first America ; afterward.; a-d And the eenator-he is not thinking of the 56.000 American dead on Flan- uao "wu. - c u ,iuuauw u ws liru campaign. The accident which befell Fred Boalt, editor of the Portland Daily! News, and the tardiness of his re- covery. is profoundly regretted by uinay itwvf ,- rvniiu.t wi.i Boalt is a man of nersonal charm and a brilliant writer, with a period of great usefulness before him, 1 early recovery is hoped for. MORE MONEY FOR ROADS - HAT the principle of federal eo- operation in highwar develop- ment 'Is well established Is in - dicated by ,Uie.'tatro!aeUoa lo OductlOn In congress recently of bills providing for inoreased appro - pnaiions. Tne majority or. xnese TSE5n& lnCre48ed MnUnt at f 100,000)00. . . m a . . . lss nee tne or lerinai law wa amennen A f,r mnm )ovtn i KOf the. old immigrant trains, but for th definition of post roads it has orl very : satisfactorily and jan Organtza- tlon has hepn htillt nn ti-hlrh m more efficiently cooperaU with the uubi v" ?.Thi flrRt annrnnriatinn for fednrsl aid to post roads amounted to,75 OQOflQO, distributed over a flve-year perl0d.b TOT this , was i; later added kaiIi innMin.intinti f 9fY nm Ann X A. Y .. .. r . Out of these appropriations .Oregon - 11.11 a 1 m AAA AAA' was auouea approximately. C4,uw,uuu. issamuei Siemens ano many another for- If the V proposed ..appropriation I: of j J"08 hunter tolled and endured prtva-..mm--, 1 t Itkm and suffered disappointment: the WMWusswinnruugu ujo foaro Of this State on the Old basis would be between $1,000,000 and 12.000,000. inbaeCthe pblloyjof rfederat Officials Z tOSreqUlre the States ; to for.doUar. -In thinly populated states In j some Instances it has; not. been possible to meet the condition.! .The proposed legislation recognizes1 ' this difficulty and one of the features of some Of the bills Js that it U'tft be kft discretionary wiU. secretary of agriculture as to whether he shall waive this requirement or not. ' He , tK 4,. .,,,,A-u mat ' be auUlorlty tot make the 7 government's share two .thirds Instead of one half, if In bis Judg- ment th$ situation demands it. In practical effect.lt .is to make the strong states give.ald to the weaker ones. 1 "V." ' ' Another million or so in the way of federal aJd will materially assist Oregon in its road building program. .PALMER PLAYS BIG ROLES By Carl Smith, Washington Staff Correspondent of The Journal - , Washington, Oct. J.Attomey Gen eral A. Mitchell Palmer probably has grown more ia the public eye. and stows more favorably In publl opinion. m a anon rao man any owr ium.il. Many suggestions are heard that the Democrats may go to Pennsylvania next year and choose Palmer as their candi date. " ; Mr. Palmer has long had the confi dence of the president. As a champion f clean politics in a state beset by Pen rose, the Vares and other exponents of i special Interest, Palmer fought the fight tn his own party, and finally over turned the "Ouffey gang" and the whis key ring elements, which had gripped the Democratic as well as the Republi can organizations In Pennsylvania. With the war came the problem of alien property, and the president chose palmar for that work. He took" charge w senerai WM fcj?,up wm,f ,e his record. Weeks were spent in the Investigation, and it ended in complete and unanimous vindication by a Re- Mm rK reinsurance with a Bulgarian company. the stock of which was owned In Ger nd tUs company had refused uinwpwiw wilh uio aiien property CUftodian, as most other companies sim- ilarly situated cheerfully had done. In the cancellation of Its contract. So. lLT tZlZ tor Underwood pointed out that the at- tacks on Palmer had been enelneered Ln14 "'fi? lrJ land who wanted to even the score with the administrator of the property. The I Frellnghuysen charges flattened out. n twI nr.lv mm - mppc rreUnghuysen in opposing the confirmation or f aimer. Ab4Mlt thw KJ, mtk . dent's appeal to congress to assist in reducing the cost of living. To the new fiL Rleil tlie brunt how auickiy he acted in bringing stocks 01 coia storage products into the market, concrete proposals which he submitted to congress to curb the prof- ltfter8. He took thfl broa(1 no-ition n profiteer should be above the law. f,."1" Zt?1? i9! wm- tion, he said, and the auiltv should not jhave it. Southern reactionaries like J"?. or Georgia and Smith of South ilke -w7d.wrth r "1 France of Maryland, saw awful 'perils ??116 attorney general's proposals. Only cjr Capper of Kansas. McNary of Oregon ana iiarnaon or JHlsslsalDDL wera with him. In the end, to get the business w or, a committee, a compromise had to. De made, and the senate is still dallying. (Until congress grants Ieelslatlon. H, Palmer cannot strike the .profiteers as fi"Mcvi, hui me meantime he is making1 use of the mw, rm- I .. opposition, but the attorney general f,Dm L"PJ uoea ID Siar a lam nart Ih iijr;u uie next zew years. 11 As the Airman Flies Along the ( Kcw Wilderness Trail ' t "' I t " irrancisco CaU - 1m air roue Ml over the Ails- gnenles, above the trails nt Tnin. hnteLand ,Con8toBa wagons; crosses . to .11 I n the unspoiled wilderness: then mhrZZ Straight westward to the MiasiHlml I beyond which it was once thonAt I neither, wagon roada nor railroads would S" - oe where the Indian signal fires once j burned and the buffalo passed by tens 1 Wf i1""- nas : uien crosses Nebraska, I not far from the htraw hni.. ryl ISL Lt5ndiv cr?S8e Nebraska, i the plains slowly heave themselves - - - . ... - mvooMllf . as 11. .LhOAl..- A. - A. m. . r w mat. owarr tne highest ""am?ever??he Muddy river, a mile and a Quarter i aoove ne Bea: t;asiie rock, landmaw V6 -SSJf j over the great salt lake, with cautions I consiaerauon or the wind from the tun ,vuw uvti iwA .uw jiyss or anal- 1 tered the health of hundreds of vtn 5. 22Zl JiSr jrange--wUl it glow and glimmer inTthi eunrlse to the air traveler as It did to I the footsore pedestrians who named it? then between the- Kik and River-ranges and op the Humboldt river valleyTwhere ! M-ml m " OTersthe Sierras, two mUes above the J sea, 5 guttering, wonderful, then down F1 sope wlUl ,ot the salt . .". 1 s-tmmlng -, In summer heat. or .t winter rain clouds, down to the Paifin I? J! MJ straggles of her pioneers, all th hard ships af ljer sUKrs. all the striving and the fighting, all the poetry and the pain of the westward movement, ell the InwentlyewsB. aU the splendid rashness. Tale Is the new wilderness trail, the last and most wondertui. ui uw wiuwi thronged with ghost they had to snake the way clear oeiore iu ' , Letters'Frbiri the People Mui i. ku i-.riMMit hanld sa wrltara en onlj ona rids ef Uu pepw. oold art SOO words tat laacth, u4 nt naa by On writer, thn, siu Man m ru n pur the contribution. 1 ; Prosperity and 4 bo Farmer - . Dufur. Sept. ?-To the Editor of Tba Journal May we have a word as or ganized fanners to the publio In gen eral and organlied labor In 1 particular oa the subject of profiteering and H. C. L? There aeeras to be a universal demand that ear produce from the farm shall first .come down, although it was the last to go op when the world ; war crone ouu. i -v i-t-. I think H will be universally admit ted that the farmer as - a class -has worked harder lor longer hours and for less wages than any other class of our state.: He has ever been -patient and tong-safferiag. He has never struck for higher wages or prices,: although he has raised many crops at a loss, time ana labor .thrown in. I know many Of them have sown and reaped for 10 or. 15 years to pay for a f 5000 farm, and then the mortgage took It This is the erst time since the Civil war that the farmer has been able to get his head above the wave and to experience how, ft. really feels to enjoy a taste of .prosperity, and then only for three years out of Li. put is he profiteering? Xt us see. Remember always that the farmer has never received the support and encour agement which the town and city work er so easily obtained in the form -of better schools, roads, churches, houses, amusements, shorter hours and higher wages for work under more favorable circumstances. During the past three years the farm er has made money, but the government had to come to his rescue and knock out the barnacles that have been preying upon him. For the wheat now to make a barrel of flour the farmer gets about 9 gross. The same barrel of dour, baked Into bread, is sold at $2$ to $30. When wheat was $1 a bushel, one bushel would pay for a day's work on the farm. Now it takes from two to three bushels and more to pay for a day's work. " Again, when wool was worth SO cents a pound, allowing four pounds for a suit of clothes, the farmer received for his share $1.20. Figuring the cost ot a suit of clothes then at $20 It ; required 13 days' labor at $U0 per day to pay for the suit. Today wool Is- eround'tS cents a pound, four pounds bringing the farm er $2.60. The same suit of clothes is now $40 anM the laborer can obtain a suit for eight days labor at $5 per day. Is the producer getting too much of any one's money? These comparisons will hold good with every farm product. Americans will not stand being told they must labor long hours" for a bare living or even for nothing. In order that another class may have shorter hours and higher wages. Even the faithful farmer, who has always produced suffi cient food for all, feels that he has about reached the limit, and that no la boring man of the city should find fault if he should apply the same rule that his city brother has taught him, namely. n striae. ' . - m.- M. BUKTNER. r .."Puts Rule Up 'to the People. Portland. Sept 2$. To the Editor' of Toe Journal I can eee no good reason wny radicalism should be suppressed. If the American people . really desire radicalism, why shouldn't thev hava It? LWhen a . radical measure springs up it snouia ne uua xairiy and squarely before tne people and discussed and the good and bad points shown. Many say radi calism is a menace to society. Who Is society? A bunch of corporations, kings and financiers. X suppose. If the Amer ican people desire a radical change In our government. I believe they have a' perfect right to make that change. There is a big scare in this country about Bolshevism. We have a right to adopt any form of government wo do- sire, so long as we do it by peaceful methods. Does anyone believe that the American people want Bolshevism? If we want that form of government all we have to do is go to the ballot box ana adopt it. There is roinr to be a revolution in America Money has con centrated into the hands of the few, and their gigantic power will cause the over throw f our whole industrial system. The days of industrial slavery are pass ing and the great power of righteous ness will triumph. This great injustice has been burning In the hearts of the American people until it has become a roaring furnace. American workmen don't want Bol shevism, but what they do want Is part of the profits that have made multi millionaire to dominate over them. Is. A. IJN.8COTT, Urges Release of Debs Athena, Sept' 80. To the Editor of The journal Mr. Wilson has oome and gone. We have been proud of the great privilege to shake his hand and honor hint. No other man has met great ob ligations so unstlntlngly as Mr. Wil son. The American people are a rreat nation and they should produce great men. Mr. Wilson, more than any other American ever was before, has been before tne wono on exhibition, as it were. He has met all the great men of other-nations ana we have no cause to be ashamed of the comparison. : He has uniformly been admired in other lands and more titan ruiruied our expecta tions. He has met princes with the dig nity of "a prince, and still lost nothing ol nis : sunpte, unaeummg democracy. Surely, a man who has the Inbred ten dencies, to be just and bas such a grasp of the thought and impulses of the time, cannot forget to do his duty toward those who are now suffering tor conscience sake. Big hearted, kind and sympathetic Eugene V. Xeb is In a cell, a convict wearing the garb of a felon,! but not a criminal. Mrs. tcate Richards CHars is another victim of the chicanery, of nrivUaga. ' Her elo quent plea for social equity is her only crime, and she Is doomed to serve for five years at hard labor. There are others serving for various periods of time. Their stay thero t is a living propaganda, a vicarious plea that-will bear fruit an hundred fold. There have been traitors before in times gone by. John Brown Hike that other John who cried in the wilderness ana - was be headed) got hanged, for his pains. No one now would call John Brown a traitor, bnt we know that when John Brown died human slavery also died. and so it la with me tyrany or prtvi lege. - The great souls who Sacrifice -for freedom of speech will Just as surely brtnr it about. And President -WUson cannot for long Ignore their caU for justice He says It is an right to complain,- bnt says, "Oive me a remedy.' The remedy is simple; tt is even handed tustico.'.s-:--:'-.--ti;.v- r..;;;wwifc.-i & Wi Old -Age .Pensions -riv 4' S Varthtd. Sent. To th Editor of Tba JournaW-Wbat Is the United States government going to do with the old peo- t.n.T u Irwvirrie? .Fhirnn e-tvea pron7- Why doesnp-t oarj government, ao ino earn- --1 see by today .Telerami that Dorothy Dillon advises her readers Uiat It Is the county poor bouse for them. I had a letter from TJnited States Senator Miles COMMENT AND SMALL CHANGE 1 Even the fall styles era striking and no way to arbitrate. i. . . i. i- Norwav e-eta Rnlt.K...n t.m nnfvt but It costs money to get the Bpitsenberg. One record that' Portland has no rea n be- proud of U. its September record of , accidents. - All Jokesmlths win do well to- net that K'Annunaloa front name to Gabriels,,! m. uviu ui Aocoratngiy. i v When the farmer m lim iii flnH ?u hJf oper,tl9M fr 1920. he can omit i'6ui on jon ua cioca alal. Should the league covenant.be defeat, ed, the whole world will have to get in xii Goet ot it am. Those 40,000 people who "left Portland when the state went dry" must have told Wg. H folks what a beluvaflneplace For ones m cm Mmtoiit. . Bd Aa thlr actlvitle without (esiuig we di, up an . Je One Man Army - otherwise Alrln Tork. the Yankee bearcat, is. we read, to beenllsted tawtbe fight rgalnarthe olfffrette. and he needs to be careful u vui geintm at tnat. ,-: rtZA ?.ock 211 tt -Congressional ? J11 ,.w?rtl r some day will be i worih an it costa a hundred years from now It wUl be priceless to the moral pointer and the tale adorner who goes after the records of the sna- " in League or Nation a IMPRESSIONS And observations OF THE-JOURNAlu MAN By Fred t la this article Vr. tjoekmw eofanbtst the' etcb of Dr. Prace, eooelaaioe with as appeal for ehte 'epirit ia th rotn, and a etorr tint ahowa the suptrtM baportaoM that aur attaab to "sir ess vota"J . - , "McCormick ' - Theological . ' seminary gave me my degree in its J. when I was' Jt years old." said Dr. B. - Pence, ' pastor of Westminster - Presbyterian church. "Immediately after graduating I received a most excellent offer from an eastern church, but X could not get away from the" conviction that X should enter the home mission field ; so X went to Georgetown, Colo. The year X -spent there was better than any IS years one could spend in a theological seminary, for "there I met every problem that a preacher 1s called upon to face, i earn Into contact with th highest type ot human culture as well as the reverse. In 1892 th panic hit Colorado, The prtoe of silver dropped below cost of production and most of my congregation moved away. I received and accepted a call to Janesvllle, Wis. After being there six years I was called to the old Fort Street Presbyterian church In Detroit. "For the next 17 years I saw and was part of th wonderful Industrial evo lution of Detroit. From a small middle western city It became the automobile metropolis of the world. I knew quit intimately many of the men who. have since become famous in the automobile Industry, men like Henry Iceland, cre ator of the Cadillac and Henry Ford, whose Tin Llziles dot the landscape wherever roads are to be found.. "I worked so hard In Detroit that X was worn utTphystcaUy and mentally, so I welcomed the call to come to Port land and be pastor of the Westminster church. X am hoping to see from the splendid body of young people In that church some who win nave tne vision of service and the passion to serve their fellows. I am-hoping there will be some of my young people who will be able to put away the temptations of an easy and enjoyable ure ana uw up uw urune and responsibilities of ministering to others. "Did von ver realize that many of our best ministers In the Presbyterian church are from Scotland? In these dava. to be a successful minister a man must be a promoter, a manager, a finan cier and a man or aeiau. un cannot preach a good sermon through the mere reading of books or the burning of the midnight oil, for a sermon must bo 61 that measure. My opinion, as a citizen. Is that if out men. naa support kind they would go on land and help sefc- .i . . v. Mt,ntw ond hMAtlta tajrnay w uy t, j - ers, instead of loafing around the slave markets, looking lor work. a. aaun. A Theory of the Mud Shower Kennewick. Wash- Oct 1. To the Ed itor of The Journal As that phenomenal dust rain In Portland of a tew days ., -em. to be auite mystifying to people thera, X would Io to gtve you a n,bie ,n. v ,u-..v . . , presume there ar plenty of people In Portland who nave neara oi uii wd section ot country . that lies in the big bend Of th tlumDia river, some jpv t-. ' .iwtkaui ef ftnokane. commonly m ' tr-tf .iw. " - . - referred to as the "Big Bend" and also dulte famous for its winds and Its dost storms. The one that hit port land last week was from there also. That section is located som ue rnues Vera hilt it was difficult tO SC SJlV distance .here for two days last week. or to breathe, eunsr. wn au mm tew estate In the air and more coming all the with a earring- wind-down the UIU,i -- . ColumbU river It carried the dust over th Cascade rang ana w nun-ironi where it originally started it dusted tbe people of western Oregon. Hoping this will help to clear up this mystery you may print in same in m jgumw. , C. D. SHOEMAKER. Olden Oregon: Astoria Held by England as Coa . quered Territory, 181$ to ISIS. -Formal possessloa of Astoria was taken by Captain Black of the British navy In December 1818. He caused the Union Jack to be run up to tbe top -of the flagpole, and changed th name of the settlement to Fort - George. Thta capture of Astoria ; wa not -known to th American plenipotentiaries when th treaty of peace was signed at Ghent December 24, 1$14, but President Mon ro had taken the precaution to instruct the American plenipotentiaries .to se cure the restitution of any Amerlcaa territory token during the war. In ac oordane with th terms of th treaty of Ghent. J. B Provost, aa agent tor the United State, was taken to As toria on a British frigate to take repos session. The British flag was formally lowered and th Stars and Stripes hoisted. October 1818. . Tbo Exclusive Party '-' -''-.?"'. ' nn tii Beibio ytMvfrmr ' ' 1 The Communist party does sot want doctor-lawyer-editor membership yet the average Communist win appeal to the doctor- to bind up bis wound, biro a lawyer to keep hint out of jail and beg the editor to keep the affair out of the wsp . ICntertalnlnff the Stockmen . . Proa the Detroit Newt Those catUemen out West turned out to see how It is done when a president NEWS IN BRIEF - , OREGON SIDELIGHTS t. if. rM vn Vtinr eolumn the Heppner Oasette Times further Inqulrea thus: -That Heppner. has ta promising i... ,nmm mMitM -Mi fair to mske a. favorable Indentation on the records of the literary wona. Wallowa county Is able to point with pride to homegrown fruJ JX, prise Reporter mentions 0, W. Mltehell. i mtmJL . several hundred dol lars' worth of pears, grapes and toma toes from his ranch on the Imnaha this year. The Reporter ,says the WWt is better than much of the fruit shipped In from - outside points. The Crane American passes this tip to rural hotnebuilders in Harney county i "William Butler, , the . good natured : malt ernntr actor Of tne CaUow vaUey, stated when in town this week that? he will soon have the only plastered residence m his region, -i n sooner it dawns on the people that plas- . . t aii hnuwi fa the only system In this country, th better. said Mr. Buuer. - - This little story can , be credited to th Silver lake Leader s "Dad Adams fminii mrioritv in. his hen house few 4 days ago an ordinary slee hen's egg impressed upon one side of which mrmmi a enmnlete circle about One inch in diameter, around the outsid of which were 12 distinct lines about one eignui of an inch long at equal distance from Moh .ether, the whole -renresenting a watch dial. If this egg had been found at the Agricultural college it wouia be announced In a special four page buUetln. Who can beat itr Lockley per cent of the man himself and must be flavored by his own experiences. - "Scotland produces good ministers, be cause from their very youth the children tnere are brought up as God-fearing, law-respecting men and women. Soot land does not have much to export, but one thing she does export lp a high typo of manhood. In the old days the bright est child of the family was always picked out to become a minister. Too often here In this country a child who Is not, shrewd enough or keen enough to be a lawyer, doctor or merchant is trained for the ministry. As I look at it, ' a minister's Job is more than the preaching of sermon. It Is th helping to mold public sentiment toward higher ideals and better citizenship. I believe a minister should take an 'active interest in -seeing that politics Is clean and that good men are elected to office. A good many people who are indifferent about going to the poll complain bitterly about th low type of men who are elect ed to office. I believe every man and woman who has a Vote should use it. and us It intelligently. "There is a grove In Southern Indi ana about 20 miles from Louisville. In 1894 my brother was campaigning through that district, for congress. He ran across an old man who in a remin Iscent mood told him about the, day he cast his first vote. He said, 'I cast my first vote in the 40's. As my father and X were driving home from the polls we passed this grove. Father heard the sound of chopping In the grove here. He stopped and hailed the man who was wielding the axe. He earns to the Bide of the fence. Father said to him, "Have you voted yet?" He said. "No. I ain' aiming to vote. X haven't got any shoes, and I don't Ilk to go to the polls bare- foot." My father turned to me and said, j WllUam, what rise shoes are those you are wearing?" j said, "Number il,i Turning to the man father said, "What also do yoi wear?" 'He said. "I wear number llj too." Father said, "Shuck oft your shoes, son, and give them to this man. 1 want Birn to go to the polls and vote the straight . Democratic ticket" ' . i "Ed Hannigan. the Democratic candi date, was elected by one vote. He went to the United States senate, and It was his vote that decided the question of the United! SUtes declaring war against Mexico. The Mexican war was fought, and Texas, New Mexico and other terri tory were added to the United States, all of which goes to prove th Import ance of as small a thing as one vote." Curious Bits of Information F6r the Curious Gleaned From Curious Place Som Icebergs are more than 200 years old, according to Rene Bache, writing in the Philadelphia Publio Ledger. He gets his information from discoveries made by th "ice patrol" of tbe United States coast guard, which has been pa-' troling the northern waters. Most of the berg com from Greenland. Snow may fall on the crest ot one of the Island mountains. It hardens and is pushed down th slope by other falling snow. This process may continue for centuries before tbe mass finally reaches the coast and is broken off. Icebergs are often of enormous slee. one sighted by the coast guard steamer Androscoggin being SOO feet long, 400 feet wide and 120 feet high above the surface. As that portion ot the iceberg under water is much larger than what appears above the surface, only a faint Idea is given of Its gigantio else. Parts ot bergs consist of snow, and parts of ice. The snow melts first and some times causes huge cavities In them, or sometimes arches largi enough for ships te pass through, in some cases, due to the action ot the warmer waters of the Atlantic, the side of the berg is washed away and a hug overhang appeara This saved a ship recently that crashed into a berg off, Cap Race. Its upper work ings were damaged, but it was not damaged along the water line. When Icebergs melt they usually melt underneath first, until the berg loses Its equilibrium and turns over. - Sailor on th . Androscoggin saw on berg ; turn over four times In, 20 minutes. Uncle Jeff Snow Says: Doc Dan Daniels has been tellln tales outer school to the social welfare bunch that meets down to Mra Weld rum's most ever . Saturday afternoon ; when their ain't nothin els in particular fer the highbrows of the Corners to do, Doc was telUn' us that most folks stops ustn their brains early in lit, and most gln erly bout th time they start in to git married, I reckon. The scientific fellers he has- been readla' after insinuates that unless a brain is used it. sorter gits numb,- and ache when yon try to think about, somethin new or ' reaL That's why so many, folks would ruther go to a movie than take a chane on anything that'll make 'em think. It gives 'em the headache to think so bad they hardly. ever do U - They only think they air tblnkto. when their stununlcks is merely- WcktaV. JM! Jv.;. , Senatorial Dignity " ." -' Trem the Blnulnstw Ase-gweld -' "Were you much Unpreseed when you saw the United State senate in session r . ."No," replied Mr. Cobbles, who had Just returned from a vledt to Washing ton. "In fact. X was kinder disappointed. Twarn't much different front a session of our own state legislature, 'cept that tnc-m fellers ia Washington beat about tli buuh crulte a speU before they come The, Oregon Country gorthvwt Happentae fa Brief Torsi lot Uw OREGON NOTES . Jm , mmsw.t tivu ' va, U1V lillU, Columbia have ended their work for this ;., season. The salmon catch was unusual- Herbert fitnn amt ' n,ni ninu. . members -of th l2d infantry, hav re- ilT'l'?. I?-81'?1 'ter PMig $0 months w anco and Oermany. , . Twelve hundred dollars for road eon strucUon work between. McKensie bridge k i' "pnnga iias been authorised by th forestry department. it a conference Wednesday the dtf-' ferences between the Port ,tf Astoria . sna the iynjrdhoremen's union were ad veted and the men are araln at work. The Bend Pnmmii.i n.K i atiag with the business men of Burns to securo the eaUbllshment of a through daily niali route between the two clUes. An axecuuv committee which will conduct the .Roosevelt memorial cam- r"'f". county has been organ- 1 sea in Salem. Mn4mi ..n....,. n..n. la $1760. ' At a Special meetlnr of th tavnnvere of Crook county, held recent 1 v. ft was oecided to put the matter of a $i20.00 road bond iau before the voters soma nPiW' WCfn of M. E. Zwirht. a lumber manufacturer, was killed near Olenoale Thursday, when a huge limb Of a tree he was renins .m.i. i the Btau. crushing the skull. Employ of the automobile depart-: ment of the secretary ot state's of floe ,Su"f.Srepnna" application blanks J0' the 1820 automobile licensee. Kegls traUota will start November U. -" In th case of Joe Craig and J. W. .Klilln, former fish wardens on? u,e.,M Asiona on tne cnarge or holding up five men with revolvers, wer unabl iu siw ana were aischarged. . The irnlllno- hn Rniino nnm r.v ing ton state fishing license No. 6.10, was wrecked Wednesday on the rocks at Tillamook Head, near Seasida Th iaie oi me occupanu t th craft Is a mystery, Members of the Clatson Cnuntv nlrv- mens asnoclation have voted to increase the capital stock from $1000 to $ooo. The .money will be 'used In th con struction ot Clatson county's first cneese factory. . Taxpayers of Union county, on Octo ber iL.wm .vote on a proposed bond, iseue of $1,488,000. to giv the county approximately 600 miles of roads, and nu50 the most Important towns with the Columbia highway. k WASHINGTON Three hundred members of the Metal Trades council are on strike at Belling ham. !; i, . ine new evaporator of the Selah urowera Incorporated, has started up -with payroll estimated at $3000 a week. . .... Lightning struck a haystack on th ranch of Morrell Roberts, near Wen dell, and caused -a fire which burned ; 40 tons of hay. Pointing a revolver at F. J. Hammer ly, night clerk at the Langham hotel, in Spokane, an unmasked robber took $14$ frosi the hotel till. . . - The University of Washington has established a course on mining. Orad uates wiB receive the degree of "Bach elor of Science In Ceramic." Bank robber blew open , the safe of the Baumrlster. Volimen 4k Scott ban at Asotin Wednesday morning and stole money sal to amount to $3000. The state board of law examiners has recommended the 'disbarment of Otis Johnson, Tfecoma lawyer, charged wh forgery and misappropriation of money. The TacoTea schools hereafter will sell milk to atudrnts. The milk will be pur chased by the school board and sold tn half-pint bottles to students at $ cents. The strike of ISoo miners of ' th Coeur d'Alents was brought to aa end. Wednesday night when delegates from tne unions met ana voted to- can th strike off. & Because ot the, refusal of the Grays Harbor Railway a- Liaht eomnany to discharge a non-union armature winder. linemen of the company in Aberdeen, and Hoquiam ate out on strike. Vancouver seon will have a com munity building In which will: be a swimming tank gymnasium, handball courts, large auditorium and other fea tures for the benefit -and use of every one In the city and county. landlords of Seattle hotels and apart ment houses are compelled by law to maintain heat at J to 75 decrees by tween the hours f 9 a. m. and 10 p. m. during the wlnteri months. .. . , Rain has come Jo help the firs' tght firn who have bee working to save ihe summer i-esorts en the north side of Lake Crescent. Port Crescent, once a rosperous logging town, was oestroyra the tire. IDAHO : ,( 'Julius Olese. a prominent fsrmer snd stockgrower of Jnliaetta, sold six head of fat hogs this week for $S81. i Word hss reaches Wallace that Wil liam Kaugstad, a former resident of that city, was drowned In tbe St Jo river, near Arery. i W. Scott Stuart? of New Plymouth lost a 200-ton stsct of hsy by fir a few days ago. Th origin of the fir Is a mystery. . ) A car containing 0 head of fat' hog wa shipped from Jiillaetta to Spoksn Wednesday. The porkers brought H cents a pound. . I r An election will be held In Nes Pere county, Octoner 7, on a propoeea oona ismie of $100.000 , for tlie building of bridges and roads, ' . A lifesaving corps has been organized at Coeur d'Alene, 'The town I n th Coeur d'Alene lake and is renowned for its situation as a bathing resort. Because she did tiot love the i giver well enough to mrry- him, a : Boise Judge has decided that Miss Luella Har rell must return the engagement '-ring and all othT gifts from Fred Coepman of Baker, Or. '-' -f i GENERAL ' .1 . ' . ' After attempting te kill her husband' with an axe, Mra George Hlslop ended her life with razor; at Touopah, Nov., Thursday. . 1 Four men suspeoted of a plot- to set fornia were taken into custody at Los Angeles Thursday. . - - j , Thouands of exuoldiers will meet at the Palac hotel In Kin Francleno Oc tober 8 to bold th first -state eonven Uon of the American Legion. , r . Prices slightly higher than these of last year were adopted Thursday by th California Walnut Growers association for this year's crop of English walnuts. Count Leopold von Bsrchtold, formerly Austrian foreign minister, who Is said to be th particular pereoti responsible for tbe great war. Is residing in Swit zerland. 4 - The Journal Stands for ' Qcan Advertisine : Ao accomplishment of which The Journal Is particularly proud has been th - practical elimination of doubtful and questionable advertise ments from Its classified column. Particular care Is exercised to see that advertisements accepted for the classified aectton ef The Journal cotw tain : no Obvious mtsrapreiientations and make no wild or unreliable prom ise which art seldom, if bver, ful filled, Att oil 'and mining stock ad vertising to rigidly excluded, .Matri monial advertising is refused, and fake advertisements of all. kinds, so far as The Journal Is able to deter mine them, are sent back dally. It would 4 be i difficult to . t!mat th amount of money which The Journal refuses to accept because it , value th confidence of Its reader mora tLan the few lines ef advertising and the dollars- this advertising repre sents. No doubt- this amounts to a considerable figure in the course of each month. -eut 'Th Journal eon aiders tbe protection of Its readers as paramount to the galnlrg tf a few lines of advertising. -