THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, OREGON friday, jufcr ii. mi. 8 c ceded six billion dollar, or about ter Business bureau la Portland a C. A. AS INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER "j Ac'iisJ Publker f R nlm. be confident, be cheerful and do onto upim a yon wwwin na-e iwn no mo r i Mtntmxd oenr weak (far sad Sundaj inofjate at TW jMRMl baihtine, Broadway and Tax- bUl street. Portland Oman. t th7 nuif:ire .i Portland. Orecoo. tfcrough LIM maiia aa eecona atwered far t i .l.l MH 'Kl.kfRONKft kain 7173. Atttonaa tic 660 51. All ueuaaUaeiite reached JyaTloN Al. by INK numbers. klSi'ftEskS't TITE-Beniamin a Keatscr Co.. Brunswic tHtttnt. 25 Fifth aTenue. Sj 7rt 800 ' Mailer boildinr. Chicago. smuuric coast kepmementative w. r. f . KiMiM c-r tin- Title Insurance building, Lea Angeles; PoH-IntMcenr boildlng. Seattle, m .UfcU&MJ-N JOURNAL nwerren the riebt to reject adrertiin copy which it deems ob . iectiowabte. It also will not print any copy that in any way simulates reading matter or : that cannot readily be recognized aa adTer- . tbrinc SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier, City and Country DAILY AND SUNDAY .15 One week. $ ' Af- DAILY Wk ii i il 8 .in dial L A K afgwMf BUHUl. - T MAIL, ALL RATES PAYABLE IN AOf ANCE DAILY AND SUNDAY Ona month. . . . . 8 .65 SUNDAY One week ,8 .05 Three months. .. $2.25 One month. .... .75 SUNDAY (Only) Ona year 58.00 Six months., i.. 1.75 Three months. . . 1.00 mm year. $8.00 Bat months. 4.35 DAILT J . (Without Sunday) OH year .$8.00 Six months. .... 3.25 Three months. . . 1.75 0g month 60 je', WEEKLY . (Erery Wednesday) 4m year 81.00 Hz months..... .50 aoese- raws apply nuj in ine vt eeu Rates to Eastern points furnished on appHca tkSB. Make remittances by Money Order, Sapreat Order or Draft. If your postoflice is not Money Order office. 1 or 2 -cent stamps will be MSBpted. Make all remittances payable to The Journal, Portland. Oreron WEEKLY AND SUNDAY One year 83.50 tilSBeal AasY WmHKCSfmS9KmLt p. a " - - a ... . . Choose ahraya the way that nihil the '.'Nat, however rough it may be. ' Custom Will reader it easy and agreeable. Pythag-'erss. billion more heads asked" for. than Democratic THE MAGNIFICENT SCHEMER few days ago, disclosed the impor tance of honor and truth in the busi ness of advertising-. "Header confi dence" is so valuable an asset that the advertiser gets far mora value rNE achievement proposes another from his advertising in a medium " in the life of cities as well as thar .. nnr. truth hnntv individuals. Los Angeles solved the problem of a water supply by build ing a 200-mile aqueduct which per mitted the phenomenal city of South ern California to remain in its sunny environment and yet enjoy the clear waters of the mountains. that insists upon truth and honesty than In a medium that is less scru pulous. When people learn that a newspa peras The Journal doe; investi gates advertisers and advertisements in advance and will accept formbfi cation only statements that it 'believes Having performed this feat. Los after patient inquiry to he true, their Angeles discovered that the artificial J readiness to complete the transaction river it created possessed 250,080 proposed in the advertisement is horsepower of potential hydro-elec- doubled. trie energy. With characteristic vigor 'Truthful advertising is the search- the municipality organised to pro- j light of business. duce and sell power. Los Angeles is now vending 72,000 horsepower to ON WHEELS its industries and enterprises. Without waiting to perfect the or-l lp1? automobiles park nightly at e;anization or command the' credit the Pendleton campground, saj a necessary to the generation of the the East Oregoniaa. It argues that additional 178,000 horsepower, the the campground and automobile official administration of Los An- movement is worth more to Pendle geles has filed power applications on ton, so far as tourist business is con streams which represent approxi- corned, than two railroads. The auto mately 1,000,000 horsepower of po- tourists stop overnight; the rail tour tentlal hydro-electric energy. One ists do not. of the locations is so far north of Pendleton is a day's travel from Los Angeles that it is Immediately Spokane and from Portland and is to the e&at?t San Francisco's famous a-convenient and delightful rest spot, Hetch-Hetchy project facts, that tend to accentuate local San Francisco, enwrapped in a tourist business. Aad there is sim glant campaign for the bridging of iiar testimony from other points, no San Francisco bay, has yet a large tably Roseburg, Ashland and Med- amount of anxious attention for the ford self - government. Whan a good measure of education becomes uni versal, when every human atom in the mass is trained to think, for him self and vote as he thinks, there will be in these United States fewer of the ills of which some complain, more of justice, a greater equality and less exercise of power by crooked politicians. The growth, of the Chautauqua IS) a help. It is a clearing house of ideas. It is a place where people store up thought and open their minds to reflection. The increasing cumber of Chautauquas. springing up as they are in almost every com munity, is one of the reassuring signs of the times. It means that the peo ple want to learn and know. ring to 400.000 idle freight ears, tells you what business conditions are, la ens year the country's. sports and imports have been eat dews by tt.ssa.0OS.SwS. We have stopped doing; business with the ouuiae world, ana that is ao joke. COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF SMALL CHANGE pooka. burxlars ana tomcats." What a nightmare! Princess Fatima, here from Afghanis tan with a valuable Jewel in her neat. Is angered because Prince Mohammed, with other long names, also from Af- rhantatan -.A . e w-- .. . - - na OOatll t know anvlhln. . knnl K., I . ' Fatima wants Mohammed to j7.Tf? , hr i T Sams of the soft drink vendors are , ""ler resi ana tnrougn very hard boiled, the police agree ii mi unaer oacg. it is generally un- TODAY derstood that Alexander' a family was wipeo out:, inane to rem ate jealousy and misfortune. But strange things may have happened in those early dava store interesting to America than the rautna lady's genealogy is the hand some sapphire fastened to s hole In the side of har nose. That would fill with disaain many of our Fatimae who would gladly wear a sapphire in a hole in each ear. magnificent scheming of her vigor ous rival. "Should the Southern city carry this big power plan actually into ef fect," comments the San Francisco Examiner, " the industrial supremacy enjoyed by San Francisco win become a thing of the past." But the interest which Portland may feel in the Los Angeles project is of different sort. If any com munity of Southern California, dar ing drouth' and distance, can make It is doubtful if the extent to which America is on wheels is fully realized. At any time on any impor tant street in Portland you can gen erally see a touring automobile with its foreign license tag and quota of bedding, cooking utensils and bronzed travelers. All day last Sun day such cars, each stopping for a 10 Sr 15 minutes' stay, were parked around the Vista House, on the Co lumbia highway. For thousands upon thousands. OUR FALLING TRADE THE foreign trade of the United a States decreased more than W.- 000,000,000 during the fiscal year ending June SO, in comparison with the figures for the same period last year. .That sum would pay all the expenses of the federal government for more than half a year. Applied to government, use it would cut fed eral taxes a little more than half. The figures mean that the foreign markets of the United States are ' dosing. They mean that foreign consumers have been drained of funds by war, by battleship building. by taxes and by high costs. They mean that, the prohibitive exchange rates and the exhausted credit of European countries are rearing a trade wall between the United States and foreign countries They mean that there is minimized outlet for American surpluses, smaller car goes for American ships and American railroads, and a general stagnated condition of business in this country. There will be few foreign mar kets for this country until conditions become normal in other parts of the world. There will be no normal con ditions until the problems growing out of the war are settled. There will be no early settlement of those issues unless the nations reach common basis of action, come to an orderly understanding, and, by agree ment in which each nation assumes its just responsibilities, underwrite Hp. future of the world against war aad for a prosperous peace. America is the nation that is in .position to take the lead' toward such an agreement. President Harding has moved to that end. Upon the deliberations in the dls armament conference largely de pend the foreign trade and the material welfare of America. Both . disarmament conferences at The Hague failed. It is perfectly pos Bible for the conference at Wash tngton to go the way they went sultless and discouraging. A great deal will depend upon the men President Harding may name tO represent America. Irreconcil able? like Hiram Johnson would M wreck it. Statesmen like Hughes would make it successful, for upon representatives of the United States Will rest the tremendous issue of success or failure,! of hope or dis couragement One of the most Im portant things now before mankind Is the question, What manner of men Will Mr. Harding name tor the con ference? May there be fewer irreeoncilsbles aad more foreign trade, greater amity between nations and more wealth for the peoples of the earth! .power projects scattered over half summer vacations and recreation in pt that state realize a profit to the America have taken on a new form. -city and -to industry, what could we, it i a new order of seeina America. With unlimited power at our doors. m u,, new8 widely heralded do along the same lines? over tne country that Oregon has built a great system of good roads. Therfe is somewhere a doctor who this state has come in for. a heavy says the business depression is a gooa share of the travel. thing for the country, irat years, he The automobile, like all great in says, make of America, a .tit people, ventions. has tremendously affected luxury loving, inert, oouna on tneir human affairs, it has opened up to way to the tomb through over-iq- the great mass of people of moder dulgence. Jn hard times, under his ate means a new and easy way to plan, cheeks grow thin and bodies gee an(i know America. slough off their rolls or nesn. Minos It naa done more: i has thrown grown fatuous and lexy sharpen to mt0 their lives a new and wonderful f keen edge unner yie struggle to means of enjoyment It has enabled get along. It's a-roveiy theory, but city families" to get on the wheels questionable in.jjractice. A good and go out into the country for the many tnillion .people, in the country delights and refreshments to be are perpetually ilk the midst pf hard found there, and enabled those in The Reporter's Duty 10 Hour Work, $3 A Foolish Old Man Women Are Brave Lloyd George, Come Over Sentimental Sometimes Business Stopped By Arthur Brisbane A gentleman of Los Angeles writes 'I have read your writings and thought you were a Christian ana a goon man. Now that I know you have been to a brutal prise fight, 1 have no more use for you. The gentleman does not understand the whole duty of man when engaged in the newspaper business. It is, to s everything and describe it accurately. This reporter has seen Prado and an other French criminal guillotined, has seen Carlisle Harris and another Ameri can doctor electrocuted, reported five hangings ia the Tombs prison. New York, the first appearance of Wood row Wilson addressing congress, national conventions. Queen Victoria's jubilee in London, Pope Leo's magnificent Jubilee in .St. Peter's, BOulanger's trip to the chamber of deputies across the Seine when he was elected from several dis tricts at once in Paris, and various things. But all this does not make your re porter a public executioner, a Boulan- gist, or anything but a heterogeneous reporter. To see clearly and describe simply is the reporter's business. Provi dence, not the reporter, is responsible for things seen, from a falling spar row to a flying comet e Here and there we are "getting back to normal." Some steel mills have re duced pay for ordinary labor, which means hardest labor, to SO cents an hour $3 for 10 hours' hkrd work. Men work hard when they know Ave millions are waiting to get their Jobs. Unleae you have tried to take care of a fam ily, with rent NOT down to normal, on $18 a week, there is one problem that you don t know. JAPAN" AND THE FAR EAST timeai' I the country to break dawn the old isolation by making town, city and neighbors easily accessible. Say what you will about the cost, but the p IS KOT likely that Japan wUl re- mak particularly of the cheaper a fuse to discuss Far Eastern prob- . . . . 7J!i lems at the disarmament conference automobile have dons a. great deal to nil human life with cheer and happiness, and- dode much to drive out of former empty lives the thought that life is drab and Bol shevism a panacea. So we have vehicles everywhere. Wheels interlock on every thoroughfare. What will It be when all the cars Somebody has discovered an ever bearing orange tree in Florida. What we would like to discover is a never flattened pocketbook in Oregon. AT GLADSTONE as has been suspected as a result of her failure to specifically mention them in her answer to the invitation of the United States. Why should Japan refuse to go into Far Eastern affairs at the con ference? What would be her mo tive in sweeping aside discussion of those affairs? Japan has heavy interests at stake com- to Oregon in 1925? in the Far East Her foreign affairs are concerned principally with her interests there. The Far East is where her sun rises and sets. Con ditions there are vital to Japan. She would not likely consider a move to disarm unless her interests near home were fully arotected. They rpHREE THOUSAND Clackamas will be protected either by states- -- county scnooi pupils had part in men or by fighting forces, and be- the program in the big pavilion at fore the fighting forces are dispensed Gladstone Chautauqua yesterday with, Japan will be glad to have her Enough parents and visitors were representatives meet with represent- present to swell the number to atives of other countries to effect I great audience of 6000. permanent agreements' as to the The topic was education, and the 'future of the Far East. pupils gave a program that tllus- The failure to mention the Far trated what school training means. 'Eastern discussion appears more like There Was a school orchestra a move for position at the confer- school play, reading and vocal num- ence. hers, club swinging and a wonderful reaction on the audience in the way of enthusiastic applause Chautauqua is itself school, and schools in their various forma are Johnson, 60 years' old, backwoodsman with rough hands and little know! edge, stops you as you go through the news. He was ambushed and'shot down with a heavy load of buckshot First in the hospital, he accused his wife. Llda. 25 years younger than him self, and Ed Rose, his young hired man wnen he recovered from the shot John' son swore he did not know who shot him. and stuck to it although threatened with prison ror perjury. Perhaps he thouaht he owed some thing to the 23 Years' difference In age me wue ana mrea man were con vlcted. much to Old Johnson's grief. The attitude of this old man compared fa voraory with one of our conspicuous young American bankers. It's better to be "a woman's toy doc. as Einstein puts it, than to be a woman beater. a e a On the front page you read : 'Woman risks life. Saves two in the surf On the back page of the same newspaper wri s world record drop. The front page lady, all dressed. Jumped off dock to ave drowning children, and saved them, a boy and a girl. The lady mat dropped jumped from a balloon 15.200 feet up and landed safely by parachute. There you have one useful and one wasted display of courage. Who ever aouots that women are as brave as the bravest men, and braver than the average, knows little of women. a President Harding opposes the tariff on oil. He wants to protect American industry and labor, not necessarily monopoly. Where a product is in the hands of a monopoly, as in the case of oil, gasoline and other products of oil, there should be no tariff protection. Protecting labor and industry is one thing, protecting monopoly and the power to tax the people, as shown in the oil Industry, is different a a a Jokins about burarlara is like whistllna in the dark. " be cut; bet It New prohibition commissioner admits his Job U a -whale." And If he's net careful he may be a Jonah. e e Headline ears "world Is veer-in from town Duma" Ever since it became the rasni oower in tne mimraan s Letters From the People (OsasarueaUona east la The Journal for. oa id thta dpe oae BtSa of the in their seeks down. Their area text prvpiem js. seeping inem up Things are coming to a pretty pass when we have to resort to the megaslwes itne eauors uunx we oo) to read articles on -i our income ana How to spend It. SIDELIGHTS Legislation would proceed faster la Washington if congress spent more time uniting for. action and tees divided for faction. Albany Democrat We looked at antral of the magaaines today and decided that most of the magna no covers should be barred (rem the malea Pendleton East Ore gonian. The payment of the allied debt to this country is just as Sim pie as this : We want the aulas to pay us, and the only way tney oaa pay us la in aooaa, ana we don t want their goods. La Grande Observer. The Oregon Country OREGON NOTES Figures for the year IfrO show that d ersYWdirT PdUCt Wer Six and one half mites of the JPmclfte l ween Hateey and Shedd. The steamer- Pomona has flnxsbed loading 15.000 barrels of flour at the ASr torla port terminal for ik i T-ttt v... "More homes, more prosperity, says Senator Calder. Tea. for the senators Tr "Germans declare war en all waat, is the messaxe the wires carry. Has the supply of women and children failed t m . a. The greatest advantage in being a liillatiaare -tm a Itaoer tnoutnr is the personal satisfaction of havina had the .seat tne market arTorea "iLS'.rtJL! JPeiLt?2 L ..L?f? J h any trouble writer whml 7T, : JiTr.. i f "u " ) -ewpuia- tip wun tne new style of roil . "Bo I?JI lreaa u full aaaat aeons- 1 n their aarlra dawn Tiir rrut.. imnj Lot caainwoe. j A CHANCE FOR SOCIALISM Asked by One Who Quotes Historian on the Labor Problem. Ashland, July 10. To the FMitn of me Journal In an editorial In The 8un- aay journal or this date you quote Sena tor n-enyon OI Iowa as saying: "It Is a fearful indictment of the civilisation of the world that people are starving in "T- T-T- "as- larmers Phil Metschan is now a firm believer ".,T. rT'm mvKTa7e rn that old adage that "virtue is its own YhT. . f . , woul "wWaWsV- He has been elected a member keep these people from starving." I of the board of trust-, of wm.rru.tte i. 7r ,. . ,. "iuo" "V lal" university. As a gangling youth Philip len down is in a faulty distribution of ... 7L- i - ,T..L. I -...law sUfaawa ' - -" . r, I v ess i.sjioici a Jl SViliC lltun VB 1. 7.. r.7 "r " ,"'lr. M" ituflfiit at that pioneer educational to -rT. Z 3 "2r 2 opiate stitution. He carried large bundles of ik. oLr . ... ,5,Twn. x6. Indicative of great diligence, from -w J7. ,.V- a "if . "V. hu" nrty home in the morning to the Medieval and Modern History." section i i. i . .w v.!l - mi a quote. h. .. 1 . , . w . ocjuiiu guoirovtrwy tin rrait DrB (IB n .u. i.i.v. i ii. vi T T ctTV'' on mvoiving many otners, W0Und stripe by snapping his collarbone d uiw uwr prvDiam. in is. Diainiy I .r.in.t tv i... .... ,.i .. lJ2&?VZLmm errwman from the far dls- -,'" " "w trkst, then heading that Institution, upon a iwucu 4 The condition of things Is Una Through the employment of the forces Of nature and the use of Improved ma chinery, economic goods that is. prod- The ex -kaiser refuses to pay taxes rn Holland, because, he says, he oaune there garnet Ms will. He forgets to add. how ever, that there would have been worse than taxes to pay if he had remained la Germany. atugeoe Rexnsssr. Judging from the deposits In the vari ous banks of this city, there are a great number of people left in the county and city who betteve In the old adage. "A dollar saved IS a dollar earned." which Is a mighty good slogan even during vacation time. Baker Democrat. It is getting to he altogether tao coev on a practice here ia Astoria for peo ple to sue the city or seek to collect money by threatening suit, and there are always a few attorneys who are net averse to inspiring such suits under a plan whereby they get a generous por tion of w hatever settlement is secured. Astoria Budget- MORE OR LB6S PERSONAL Random Observations About Town the football field. College tradition has it that student tried to butt professor, for good cause given, but missed. He ass a charter member of the A. D. A O. which, stretched out, stood for After the institution to attend confidential meetings of the faculty at which valu able information and advice were ab sorbed by him. Classmates of the new trustee will doubtless be pleased to learn of the new honor accorded him. a Earnest D. Bowman, one of the lead log certified public accountants of Den ver, is at the Imperial, while he pauses in Portland for a short time to view the Columbia highway and other scenic points In the vicinity of the city. He was the guest of W. D. Whltcomb, who -uiii w diwi 1X4 c Daranaj weuaus I rkv A ,.i,,k kl.k Of men an b produced In almost UP- the faeultv nevwr .torwl F-jiriw re uiniLra uuaauim. out mis increase in vi - n . n - - - ' iiim wiuwk wen aa (Kcasigoaur K " power nas orougnt lhroghout it. he achieved the d latino or " correaponaing augmentauon tlon of b-,.- lr,vitM. hv - af w uioici i.i wcuunn iu i lie laDoniii 4ls Owing to some defect in our industrial system, a few secure a dis proportionate share of Its benef ita. Great monopolies or trusts are created and fabulous fortunes are amassed by a few fortunate Individuals, while perhaps the majority of the laborers for wages, with their toil lightened comparatively little dr not at all. receive almost nothing be yond the means of narrow and bare sub sistence. The proposed solution which has awakened moat thouaht and created moat I . , - . . - - 7 - i wu una (urn Ul tt. . tt 111 debate, is that offered by the Soc allsta arOYe hlm ovr highway. unv hm vui wee as utci 1111111-9 -aaio, titr a e or national now own school bouses and John McNarv of Salem, nromlnent taw. control education, own aad conduct the yer of the Capital City and brother of posioiiice, municipal water woras ana United States Senator Charles L. Mc- other public utilities, so would the So- I Nary, was visiting friends and trans- ciansts nave tne government oy tne ec tin lexai buslneaa in Portland Thurs- rraauai extension 01 its luncuona come 1 day. Into possession of the railways, the tele- graphs, the mines, mills, factories, the I Fred E. Veaese and H. A Baldwin; land in a wfcrd. of all the means of nro- I prominent sawmill and lumber men of duetlon of ail those things upon which I Winlock. wV'ash.. are at the Oregon for a or til connection wun woicn Biuoaa tawr i uriea ( uv roruino oo Duainwa 1. finlil v.lvl .-,-AA In mrAmm In I ' satisfy human wants and to meet human I A. aenimer. pioneer resident and desires. (To thus function the govern-1 business man or Pendleton, is registered ment would necessarily have to be an at tne oewara tor a oner visit in tne city. Industrial one.) (Note: The word and . . the sentence tn parenthesis are mine.) TaKT? w . weU. known merchant "The Socialists lay great emphasis on I 1 - - this, namely, that what they propose is rte w w tj i in line and tn harmony with the great " -,-.. ,K. rv . kl.. 1 W -,1 I J ' - - .w. uioivin. iuv9uiin, a vp.fc,. - I f.w fl.yl vuntinr betel men. who com Into Portland from other sections of the t-, and particularly from the Willam ette valley aad Southwestern Oreron pomis. insist that Oregon is beginning to teei the beneficial effects of the nual tourist crop" of which so much been said d urine the few v.r. in.t n.t Down at the Umpqua, at Roseburg. the other day. out of a full house and the umpqua is s si sable hostelryall but 11 or tne guests were automobile tourists. Similar reports come drifting In from other cities and towns. But one thing mat uca.es the fellows Is that Oregon now is selling coals to Newcastle. While automobile license plates from every state in the Union are to be found in UM unending procession now upon the roads and highways of the state the majority of them wear the tags of our sister stats of California and are bearing the d tisane of that fax famed resort center away from its torridity to tne sheltering glades and cool at re of Oregon. The camping places around Crater Lake. Klamath county, and through that country generally, are filled with caaxernlans who have oome to Oregon to enjoy a real summer climate e a a atari B. Hughes, well known but prob aoiy, rrom the nature of mortal man not wall remembered funeral director of Astoria, does not believe In lettinr any body beat the undertaker to it not on the road, at sny rate. The other after noon he departed from his home town in his trusty gas buggy at ( p. m. and reached the corner of Broadway and Stark at 11 15. He grabbed a ham sand wlch, or something like that, stretched his pedal extremities while he ate then "stepped on "Sr," headed for Cor vallis. He attended to some bust there during the dsy. drove back to Port land the same afternoon, and left that night for Astoria and a short rest, this being the healthful season of summer. and vacation time OmatlUa county's wheat acreaure tXtSa year is estimated at 2M.0M, or about the same as last year. There la very little spring wheat. " Try Work on the Columbia highway be ween Five MDe and Ceifio A-i.-l for, several weeks on account of high water, will be resumed at once. Nearly 200 tons of. Rov.i ini. ries have been shipped to Eastern tnis season rrom Salem hv th. t Growers' Cooperative association. A part of the 1100.000 water honrra re cently voted by the city of Co-veins have wan solo, ana tne worx or improving the system will be started at ones, Richard Lombard. 28 year-old Port. land man. Is under arrest at Aatneta charged with passing $200 worth of worthless checks on merchants in that iry. The little dauahter of Mr. and Mr- Char lea Milter of Brownsville was badly burned when an exploding firecracker ignited ner doming ana enveloped her tn nan a. A new business Is soon to be onened In Stayton. C E. Brown and K. W. Swal low having formed a partnership for the manufacture of wool mattresses and wool beta The city of Pendleton used 1 011 OSS gallons of water for street flushing pur- poaca uurins me montn 01 June ana labor to the amount of 15&S hours was put on the streets. Not only does Umatilla count v rank first in Oregon in the production of wneat, out 11 ranks first also In the section of honey, according to H. scuuen. vi. a. u. bee apeouuast. Following a visit of an I. W. W. walking delegate to a construction camp on the state highway in Lake (jreen vauey. laborers laid down their toots ana waikea out in a body. H. W. Collins. Pendleton rrain man. the Pacific Grain Elevator company and the Farmers' Grain Elevator company wui rwouna .1 once tneir wsrenotl recently destroyed at Myrick by fire. With the reentry of the Hunt Brothers cannery Into the loganberry market. there are now at least rive concerns ia Salem actively buying berries, at ranging irom 2K io i cents a On a big ranch in Oklahoma 100 new harnesses were required. The owners, disgusted with the low price received for hides from their cattle I one of the chief supporting pillars as contrasted with the high price of the nation. We underestimate exacted for all leather products, did the strength ' they give ua If We this: They Installed a small tannery,! realized all they are to ua the fed eral government would not be spend ing around 90 cents of every dollar on wars past and to come, while spending less than one, cent on 'The emptiness of campaign flap doodle is shown in the following: .Estimates by the Democratic heads of? departments for federal expen ditures for the fiscal year ending last month were $5,064,350,793. This was hailed as "wild" extravagance" by the Republicans, and the Repub lican congress cut the appropriations to ft.T17.484. This, the New York Herald says, was "proclaimed as heroic economising." But Secretary of the Treasury Mellon now makes it known that the actual sum spent has been $5,602,024,881, not counting poetoffice outlay. With the postof f ice item added, the expenditure ex- hired a few harness makers and con verted their own hides into their own harness. The cost of the harness complete was, the owners say in a public statement, about one fourth I schools. the usual price. The Profits Of the Than an statistic, from wnlcn wa leather trust must be fabulous. know positively what education does in putting men to the front. Here, THE SEARCHLIGHT OF BUSINESS for instance, is the fact that less than itna nor cent nf the men of America. TWO-INCH ad appeared in a a coHee education. Yet out wajsiorn newspaper advertising, of that one. per cent have come 5 5 "pure silk socks for 55 cents a pair" per cent ot American presidents, 31 at a small store. A woman who read par cent of American congressmen, the advertisement bought two pairs 47 ber' cent of speakers of the house of the socks and found they .were of representatives, 68 per cent of our wood fiber, without a thread of silk. sVice presidents, 8S per cent of our She and her husband threw the secretaries of stats and 9 per cant hose aside, but next they read an of the Justices of the federal supreme aaverusement of a 7 per cent secur- court uy ror sate oy a nona house. They Or, putting it another way. we have were aooui to put tneir savings into this: Without school training of any the investment when they noted that kind, but one man in 150,000 attains the ad appeared tn the same. paper prominence. With grammar school inai naa accepted the spurious sock training the number in 150.000 men advertising. They decided that any who gain distinction Is four. Oa high other advertisement the publication school training the number of men Biigm accept woum te equally open m 150.008 who rise to leadership is to suspicion. A legitimate advertiser 87. while among college graduates, lost business because the newspaper the number who gain distinction Is naa accepted tne business of one who j 800 misrovreseniea. I But u n there is the still The incident, as related by the larger fact of what a well schooled counsellor of the San Francisco Bet- aad well informed mass means to Intelligent directors of the great National City bank of New York are pub lishing statements concerning banking that every businessman should read. The latest entitled "The Power of the Many," is an excellent sermon on de mocracy and the importance of the lit tle man whose dollars ro throuah the savings bank Into the big enterprises ana make these enterprises possible. xne shore of the ocean, very big, is made up of small grains of sand ; so is the nation. Some of our able men oc casionally need to be reminded of iL They are apt to overlook the separate numan grains, looking at the national snore, a a With deference to Lord Northcliffe. who objects, this country would like to see David Lloyd George, and hopes be will come here for the disarmament con ference. There were two big men on the Eng lish side In the war. One Northcliffe, who had courage to tell the truth to his countrymen, although they burned him and his newspapers in effigy be cause he did tell the truth. The 'other was Lloyd George, outstanding- demo cratic giant of the country, who had the intelligence to accept and act on the truth. He first found the MONET for England, then MADE the munitions, then LSt.u tne munitions, and was boss of the whole business. We should like to see him. W. R. Scott, a weU known resident of Albany, is at the Multnomah for a short Portland visit. a a J. B. Sparks of Bend teat the Imperial for a few days stay in Portland. ... C. E Taylor of Stayton Is stopping at the Imperial for a short time a a Mrs. W. T, Phy of Hot Lake. Union They maintain that the democrattaation of wealth It should be carefully noted that democracy tn wealth does not mean communism, which denies individual rights in property, any more than reli gion means atheism, or democracy in politics means anarchy is the logical Issue of the democr-itixation of knowl edge, of religion and of government by the Renaissance, the Reformation ana the political revolution, For them the ai i.uui AVATutlnn I. th. aaa -t and necea-ar? phase of (he progressive U a gueSt at the Multnomah. course of civilisation. Senator Kenyon and his fellow-soutl- cians have had their fling and have mis erably failed. Would it not be germane for society to say to all politicians to step aside and give the Socialists a try? D. M. Brower RICKKNB ACKER'S RECORD ' Portland. July 11. To the -Miter of The Journal For the information of my elf and others who are Interested, kindly state the number of enemy planes Cap tain Ricken backer is officially credit! with. W. G. Schneider. (He is offiekUh- credited with 80 Piaaea At WASHINGTON meeting of poultry-men It, Jose oh K Garland, president, and E 8L Morton, general manager, of the Farm ers' Life Insurance company of Farmer vilte. Vs., are at the Multnomah, They bead a party of tourists making an ex tended vacation trip through the princi pal cities of the United States, having arrived from the south by way of San Francisco. After a view of Portland and vicinity they will go on to Puget Sound points and from there East. Included in the party are Ruth Garland, Mrs. J. T. Wolfe Eugenia Walker. J. L. Wells. J. V. Lewis. W. D. Averett and R. E Oar land, all from Farmervllte or vicinity. John Tait. who used to do his share toward keeping the linen of Portland white but who is now in the laundry business at Astoria, Is a Portland visi tor, at the Multnomah. a e a Charles Johnston, automobile dealer of The Dallas, is a Portland visitor, reg istered st the Imperial OBSERVATIONS AND IMPRESSIONS OF THE JOURNAL MAN ' By Fred Lockiey t la this article Mr. Looklej tela the atory of Baaa wno had a DcrfeeU coed tut set for a teat owe lacked a place ta plar h. feni-l the nlac Ia an '-" will tea whet ha dal after that rta-Ily ha U follow ha Curious Bits of Information Gleaned From Curious Places National prohibition gave a wonderful boost to the candymakera When men could' ao longer put foot on the brass ran may began patronising tne caaay stores. Henry R. Hoefter of Astoria built a beautiful home on the heights overlooking the mouth of the Columbia. bought a business block on one of the best earners in Astoria, and built a big factory, all because of your sweet tooth twee-1 and mine press The phrase "tweedledum and dledee" was originally coined to expr contempt for musical controversy, in I -Jgy father was a candymaxer before 1710 the Royal Acaaemy oi music Drougni me." said Mr. Hoefter. when I visited to London a distinguished Italian com- him recently in Astoria. -In the old poser and conductor. Giovanni Bonon- country they work it differently. Here, olnl. and the Incident was regarded as a hov channea from one lob to another. a deliberate attempt to assail the pres-1 depending upon which pays him the tigs of Handel, who had for some years J more money. In the old country you been established In the ravor or ueorge l have to oar for the orivtleee of work and his court. The great Marlborough lng for s man. My father's father paid family was then at odds with the house $500 to a confectioner to let my father of Hanover, and ana-German feeling work for him three years sod learn the Mr. Sydney and a young lady. Miss LaPointe, needed a goat for a vaudeville "turn." The lady arrested the gentle man, who used her 966 to buy himself a blue serge suit and a derby hat instead of baying the goat, to delight audiences with its cries when wheeled oa the stage in a baby carriage. That's one picture of American life. The young lady, when the man was convicted, said, "Judge, I don't want to see this boy go to Jail for only $55." So. the young man was set tree under suspended sentence. Many a man has gone to Jail for steal ing lees than half as much when his chil dren were hungry. That's another pic ture of American life We are a senti mental people where a vaudeville turn, I inciwoang s goat, bb concemea. a a a B. C Forbes, able writer on finance and business, addresses a letter to the bank&J He reminds them that they would deeply reseat -ft if business men organised a "run" on banks. He asks how they think business men like th hammering that bankers have been giv ing them, compelling them to liquidate stocks at any price and pay up with violent suddenness. line ia Mort' article. prevailed among the old Jacobite fam Hies. These factions speedily took the Italian newcomer under their wings and the result was that, for the first and Only time in British history, rivalry be tween two musicians assumed a polltl sal aspect" The feud was embittered by the real success of Bonondnl's opera "Griselda," It was while this contro versy was, at its height that the follow ing satirical lines appeared and were re cited throughout London : Soaae ear. aiaaieiafl to Sunnaaial That Myasetr Hsadal't bet a atear; Other saw that he te Haaaal la ac-reely fit te hold a aaaatte. Btmase that aaoh ttffetenoe -rwurt basin This, of course, was a long ago. Uncle Jeff Snow Say Grant Melhavea has some up from a tower of CaJiforny In bis 9176 tin Usale aad tells the Corners Community club that Oregon suits him best, taken all ta all In Leg Angeles, so he told on, they charge s penny ter a little chaser of water In a slot m selling that hangs oa the street corners like a mall boa He estimates that at the same price the runnin' fountains of water in Portiaad'd pay eft the naUonai debt la four year. Aad Doc Melts sat him if he didn't think Lea Angatea'd agree to pay It off if there was any way of trad in' la Ball Run to her. AND ACTS WORSE the Uieat rasa (Meet.) may not be a saedteine. fwxtag of the liseitmset e of the home brew tastes like It "When my father was M years old he came to America, settling at Syracuse. N. Y. I went to Work In my father's candy store whoa I was 14. At that time most work of that nature was done In basements. I worked Uil I was 1(. when I struck out for myself, going to Colorado Springe. I landed a Job there SS car.dymaker, staying a year. Then tk-l wanderlust caught me again and I struck out for the coast I worked1 at anything that turned up cook, . waiter, candymaker. any Job I could get. First I worked In Ban Francisco, from there 1 went te Los Angeles, aad finally drifted oa southward to San Diego in th days Baa Diego was a small place It was QDhasttsS with the outer world by two ships a week the Santa Rosa and the Orisaba, Ship days were red tetter ears, huaose the mail aad pape areught la by these ships. Thirty-five years ago. when I came to Port-sad, I Mr. Swot land tor a Joe. hs as dowB. so I got a Job In a little t n4nr the river front Pertland I wear back to Colorado and tore to Montana. I ah hare oa west Park street la Butte. Candy was about the lest thing the people of Butte wanted, for in those dash it was wide open and the the most regular msutroee is town. I farted, mere thiueah lack of capital aad for late at patronage Uaen from leek mt effort. From Butte I went to Oreat rails, where my brother Alfred Joined We made good. ft "After a year I sold my Interest to my brother and went to Alaska. I was sn the first northbound trip of the -George . Elder. That was in 1897. The first Job I landed was that of cook in a hastily built shack of rough lumber at Skagway. I had not been there long when "Soapy Smith came in and organised his gang of hold-up artiste. Not long before his coming I "had gone into the res estate business with Phil Abrams of Astoria We opened the first real estate office la Skagway. I sold Soapy' Smith the house he lived in. Phil was a notary public We bought and sold real estate, We also bought and sold miners' outfits and loaned money. We charged 10 te 25 per cent a month Interest, taking dia monds, fur coats or anything else of value aa collateral. We formed a chamber of commerce St Skagway and I became the first sec retary. When 'Soapy smith's got to running things with what we sidered too high a hand, a little of us met in my house and organised a vigilance committee. Soapy' had no real idea of the value of money. It came too easily. It was simply a matter of ex tracting It from the tenderfoot by hook or crook. If he couldn't get It with marked cards some of his assistants would knock the victim over the head and take it swsy from him. One thing that mad It bad was that a deputy United States marshal protected Smith and took orders from him. for a per centage of what the gang could win or at Takima it was decided to establish ia that city an egg and poultry assem bling plant. Five Walla Walla banks on Jails M showed deposits of fg.70S.MS 98. a alight falling off as compared with the deposits on April 28. The Lytle Logging company's camp at Elk river, near Hoquiam. resumed operations this week, giving employ ment to 80 men. Dr. E. E Peavey of Takima, with Ms family, has lust completed s 2100 mile tour to the Mexican border without a mishap of any kind. M. O. Detlefaon. labor leader and can didate for city councilman at the last election, is under arrest st Aberdeen charajed with robbery and impersonating an officer. An automobile stolen from Hugo Nlemi st Aberdeen May 10 Was found In the river one mile west of Melbourne. Saturday. No trace of the occupants was found. The Patterson-McDonald Shlobulldine- eompary of Seattle has been awarded $1.028.158 In ship construction claims against the Australian government by a board of arbitrators. Captain Reed's new ferry dock st Ka lama te n ring completion and Is ex pected to be a great convenience to auto mobile tourists crossing the Columbia between Ooble and Kalxtnx H. B. Strong of Aberdeen, 85 years old. on board the real estate men's special eastbound, was prostrated with the heat at Nam pa. Idaho, where the thermometer registered 100 in the shade. A destroyer will be sent to Aberdeen to take the naval reservists of Aberdeen and Hoquiam for a cruise to California ports, providing 75 recruits can be se cured In the two cities by July 17. For the sixteenth time Mrs. Helen Elizabeth Taylor. 88-year-old member of the Ladles of the Grand Army of the Rpeublic. has been reelected color bear er for the organisation in Washington While attempting to rescue Thomas Herrin. 17, from the waters of Green river, near Black Diamond, Frank Pe llto was dragged Into s whirlpool and drowned. Six men hsva been drowned during the last few years in the same bole IDAHO Five hundred acres in the vicinity of Salmon have been planted to potatoes this season. The new Warm river dugway above Ashton has been completed, and is one of the finest pieces of road la rtaiaaal county. A company with 85.000 capital has boon organised to make additions and improvements to Campbell hot springs, near Weiser. Fifty or more of the forestry students of the University of Idaho are employed hi forestry work or with lumber com panies this summer. During the past two weeks nearly half a million trout have been planted tn the streams of Nes Perce, Clearwater, Lewis. Latah and Idaho counties. The bodies of Byron H. Preseott Of A u pert and T. H. Firth ot Firth, two soldiers killed In France, have been shipped to Idaho for burial. Julia, nine-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Nlckolayson of Kuna. was acci dentally shot to death Saturday by her brother white toying with a rills ta the house. Farmers in the Caldwell section de clare that unless they receive mors than 5 cents a hundred on early potatoes they win not dig. Marxet prices s year were $1.00. The Talmana-e Rawhide Mlf -i- .-. n. iiaMau k Mua articles of Incorporation with the secre tary of state. The principal office of the company is at Nam pa. a e a "O. .W. Dunbar earns to Skagway with press and some type aad paper, but he of money. I losnse aim enough ta gins hiss a start W a e "Selling out at fikagaray. I went to California wtth a few thousand dollars. Alter a few asonths, I headed north again, mutes the few thousand. I dropped off at Portland te see If there eras anything doing. I met Oscar Dan bar on the street He recognised me in stantly and told me he was up frees Astoria, where he was riiawag a paper. He asked me what I was going. I sett. 'I am not doing anything: I am looking for a Job.' He took me to lunch, aad white wo were at lunch, he said. 'Billy Whipple and I have just bought a candy and cigar store at Astoria for fits. A his wue partes company ana x up their, store at a bargain.' He that I come down to Astoria it. He told me I cold have ail I wanted to pay for rt This no. because I waa broke aad out of employment. Being a confectioner by trade, I wanted to get a store of my own aad be say own hose, so 1 bought the eaady store oa credit" know younj .PORTLAND rraaa f aeteeakx) ia plannini tor a Sew Uaaas railroad 1 1 n urn tarsateaL Baifctt Ia apertor at a PhaSS-lt rensatlr riettad the terser emaa of the eaeatry and awssaat that imiain tarateaals that rvrttead sateht have the lisafh af the hast leaae la see else where. These ataUaaanta frees dar ta day are takes frost he report aad will together lusiHteis the eosaptete report. 1 "The Union station of Columbus, Ohio, provides quite good facilities for the traveling public. The ststloa was built la 187 and. considering the time that It was built it Is a very good station. This station is used by seven railroads with TO trains ia sad 7S trains out a day. The cost of the sta tion was M.OOS.SOS. la this station the trains ran through. The aocees from the station to the tracks is by means of stairs leading down from sn overhead concourse. There are eight tracks. The number of ears that can he placed tn the station at the same time Is approximately SO. This station has a large t re hashed ever the tracks and pJ at farm. The length of the shed Is 7S0 feet T-he Columbus station te subject to all of the criticism that oaa he made of the trainshed type of at s than, ow ing to n- i aad dirt awrtdeat eadri to. The population of Columbus is iii.ssa " (To Be Continued)