x r, THE - OREGON ' DAILY- 'JOURNAL, . PORTLAND; OREGON TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1S21. av TypepprFrT gwpApg J . A. J4CUO.M i,...PnblutJr I Be nia, be eoalklrat, be eAMrfnl and ao at ethers m yoa would hare ithent da ri-l , I'ublh4 mrf wees 6tj and Bandar nomine. Tbe Journal buQdlns. Broadway and lam- hfll trnrt, PortlrM. Or-eTi. Antered at Ik poaurfftc at Portland. far tmneralartoa t&roufa etae natter. TAXrrHO.NK Main TITS. Aatoaatie 0-al. All Sfartmrtit Tsa-Hl by tHe mnahw eVATIONAt, ADVKKTlHINft BKfKESENTA TIVE Br.tawitn Kantaar I., Biunrwtc Wrildtnc. Z2S Vth imat, New Tort; 900 Mallere rmlMtwc. Ch trail. I tM iriO UMAST RKPKhjtjfcNTATlVE W. R. Barter Ce.. Examine bniWfcif.s Has Fran eiaee; TiUa laearaaee buUdia. Loa AAfaiaej PtrfatoHtww JwtkHin. Seattle. InHC ORaXiOX JOURNAL, reeerm the ritfhc ta . reiert aderUin enpj which i It de-ma ob iaeueaaBle. It alas will not print anr copy that ia any way ainilaLae reeriaaff natter or that aeanot reertilj ba reeueiihlil aa edrer- ttm. T BCB&CRIPTIOM tUTES By Carrier, City and Caaotry DAILT AND BUN DAT Om em.,. ..I .15 Oaa Boats $ .6 DAILY I . C!fDAT One I .10 Oaa week I .05 Oaa Boats 45 j Z MA1U AlA RATJ PATART.t IX ADVANCB PAII.I AJD BUM)! .18.00 .; 4.2 J ' On mt tat tjantha. .. : ; .. daii.t (Witboal Suo1ar) vT Ona yaar 10.00 O ftif. atoatha. 8.25 .: Three month.. 1.75 Oaa moath 00 . WEEKt.T ! ..." ' (Xtary wedaertar) i i; fna rer Si.oO u auMtba .50 ' Theae ratae apply "'" ia tha wee. , )V ' Kale to Kaatrra poaita famiahed an appllea i ,' . than. Make renuruneee by Money Order, Express .. Order -ar Draft. If your poatofiee la not a t aaaaey-order office 1 or 2-eent etampa will be -. eeeeptAd. Mil, all remittance payabla to The ',. - Journal, Portland, Oncoo. Tbraa nonthf , . .12.25 Oaa month. .... .TO SUNDAY (Only) Oaa year 15.00 8li moo the. . . . : 1.75 Tbraa, moo the. . . 1.00 UNDAI One yaar 11.50 ARE FARMERS FAIRLY FINANCED? 1 rpHE fanner -wanta a remedy. He ia not content to receive cents a quart tor milk which sells tor 11 cents a Quart in Portland.. He does not think it fair to pay 5 to S1Q for a pair of shoes and SlOO- for a set of harness when the best he can jet for the hides from which the leather is made is 4 cents a pound. . .. . f"-r' ; . -r He considers it an outrage to be compelled' to take 10 or 14 cents a pound for wool and then be asked to pay $3. SO a pouid for the same wool reduced to yarn. -' , I , .. -.i.--j i He sees no consistency between less than f 1 a bushel for. wheat and t a barrel for flour. Nor does he understand .why he should receive only a cent a pound for fruit that sells, canned, in a nearby store for IS cents a pound. .. When he has 8 cents a bushel left to pay him for the cost and labor of producing -oatpv after paying the threshing charge, and then must pay 10 cents a pound for rolled oats in cartons, is it surprising that he feels a lack of balance in agricultural affairs. . r : : 1 Is there fair financing for agriculture in our economic; system, when the farmer gets so small a share out of what he produces?) . 5 v I s I tolerably taxed, about 17 Ostfriea landa The two bombs weighed 2000 pounds each. They are but a step in the more destructive bombs yet to be evolved. Their cost was a few thousands dollars. ; 1 The Ostfriesland could not be du plicated for less than $40,000,000. The telegram read "Foundation under freight house needs attention at once.' In transmission, the 'V in. the word foundation got changed to an "1." and when received at St Louis the telegram read, "Found a lion under freight house; needs attention at once." The answer was wired back, "Feed the lion and noti fy livestock department." ' FOREVER OPEN Booka ara anr emwniof prlrOeta ia mod ar ciTtUiation. With a Uata for books and atoxic, lat arery peraoni thank God, aiaht and mo mini, that ba raa Dot born earlier in batary T. Starr Sine r- ON THE summit of the Andes at a point on the border line be- tween Argentina and Chile, stands the famous Christos statue, symbol izing peace between the two peoples At a point near Blaine, Wash., on the boundary line between the Unit ed States and Canada, there was ded icated today with becoming cerermo nies the famous Peace Portal, signal izlng the peace that has existed be tween the two nations ever since the signing of the treaty of Ghent, July 4 1815. "May these doors never be closed" is an inscription on one of the open doors, and on the other is "Brethren dwelling together in lives of the crew were hanging on the thread of a waterlogged steamer. but there was ao helping hand unless it was bought and paid-for at out rageous cost. ' Under system wherein a charge utterly confiscatory is. exacted for aiding a helpless vessel, men are driven by loyalty to their owners to remain aboard or row to shore under the risk of their lives, in preference to contracting .an enormous charge. It is a system that Is a survival of the age of the beak and talons. It would be eliminated, and humani tarian principles directhat it should be were " the '"charge for aiding a crippled ship reduced to a reason able level. TJotfl it is reduced, the lives of loyal men will be exacted by the ocean profiteer. country. The Times nomlnaWs"' Miss Woolley, president of Mount Hotyoke college, who it believe "would ba aa ideal selection tor a place among: in American delegates, and the Poet "can think ef few people, men or women, who could add more aolid vaiua to that disarmament conference than could Miss Addams" ef Hull House. And while, in the opinion of the Boston Herald (Ind. Rep.) tha selection of a woman 'delegate is unlikely, the discus sion of the question' as a possibility marks an advance from ftimes in which, almost by common consent, public dis cussions and platform activities were for men only.' - 1 gives promise of withstanding a rea sonable traffic. i When slate road work began a few years ago there was I in the public mind no adequate conception of the traffic - development sthe improved higlMray was to bring, or the large expenditure of money that would be required to build roads to carry it There was also a lack of engineer ing knowledge which comes from ac tual experience with local conditions and the absence of an engineering organization. i , : Back of all was that state of the public mind which questioned the necessity of large expenditures per mile. This -state of public mind was illustrated in the campaign for the initial bond issue of $6,000,000, when it was Beriously averred that the 16,000,000 would build 500 miles of roadv In short, there was a general lack of education regarding the sub Ject of road building. In deference to public sentiment against large expenditures, the early construction was made to fit the moneys available in order to get mileage rather than substantial foundation. Another important factor tending toward faulty construction was the insistence of the public for paved roads in a day. Every section want ed its roads paved, at once. As a result of these conditions the early road work is now being done over again at a cost in excess of what it would have been in the original in stance. Roadbeds are being widened. IS THERE A LADY DIPLOMATIST? Some Say No, and Add That if There Were -There Need Be None in the Disarmament Conference But , More Say Yes, and Add That Were There None. Tet does the Conference Need Aid of Woman's Counsel. Dally Editorial Digest " Letters From the People COMMENT ANDl N EWS IN BRIEF (GoeBantBlentioBe eeat to Tha Journal for publication ia tbia department ahoold Be written sa only ana aide of the oacer: ahould not exceed 500 worda in lencth. and most ba aimed by tha writer, whoa mail addreee ia fall moat acooav paay tha eontribatioa. I THE KU KLUX KLAN Organization in Portland Is Approved by This Writer. i , Portland, Aus. 1. To4 the Editor of The Journal To the Ku Klux Ban: I read with interest and approval of your organising in Portland.: I do not know just what the new order stands for but I hope it ia in part, the same as the old. That, to my mind, stands for the pro tection Of womanhood, which a congress betrayed some 58 years ago and which every legislature in America has left un protected ever since. Now, throughout the land we hear a protest against the divorce evil. The "evil" comes before the divorce. The evil is the unchecked, lawful, miled-et animalism of men (and some women) who come into our unprotected homes and steal the love and honor of wife or husband. If they took the silver they would be jailed, and if they took so poor a thing as a life they would be (Oonaaiidated Prate AaeociiaHon.) ' Representative Alice Robertson has many sympathizers among editorial writers , in her position that . women have not' the necessary experience to enable them to qualify as delegates to the disarmament conference. The atti tude her supporters uniformly take is that the appointment of a woman be cause she is a woman would introduce Of the home, the protector of the chil dren, and all that is worth while in life. why some one writes a comedy on the ; . ; SMALL CHANGE ' America's 'militancy U ingrained. Eves the public is "general." Is the family washing being postponed because of Labor day? . . .a a ; Germany Is bound to regain her eco nomic strength. She's started making beer again..- t a a - Mother's sigh of hope overwhelmed any noise the school-age children made this morning. . a a If genius is so generally imitated, why hasn't some upstart evangelist named himself "BUI" Mondav? e e 'Manv curb atono wrtrtdnrta mnmliit into the maw of the basement Monday as waumuouu to LADOr air, e e School days might inspire tha reminis cent poet or 40 years, but it a common, est prose for tbeyoungster today. .In spite ef our protests at the prev alence of divorce, seems that'a a better way out than hammer and run methods. e Reading and Titlng and 'rlthmatlo are more than ever forced to taka bmmmI place, with hair dress and shiny noses gctutig urai attention. a a e Probably the school be 1L, that used to ring out Its commands about this time or year haa been relegated to tha burial piace oi me curfew bells. e e ii Local laboiite urges that church be come a champion of labor. if the churches' efforts to get three squares a day for its pastors isn't championing laDor wnat isi SIDELIGHTS We have noticed that most ef this talk about reducing taxes transpires before election. Aurora Observer. ; a a, a J We have had only one mess of rreea beans, no peas, no corn. We are now eating -milage- of aog xennei ea smart- woQv Tualatin taiiey rtewa - a . a . Unless wa are ready to curb our de mands for public expenditures It Is use- leas to comolaln about tne- Uicreaatne? ouroen or. taxation. t-owera ratnou a . e . - There is a lot of men who have a 11- ey Under voice and a pirate's nerve, but the auantitv r their auauitv caa oa car ried on the aaaeaeatoa chassis of a Ford. Harney County News. W W Tha non-em olovment list in the United RtatM is imw aaid to have crown to $,000,000. Pretty soon Satan will have The Oregon Country Hart want Bappretatan ta Brief rem tat tft - : OREGON , Medford's peetoffioe reertpts for Aug uat show a 41 per cent increase over ASguat, li-a. ; The Hood River Trait cmpaar has Juat shipped the first carload of the valley a n apple tonnage, estimate at I2&0 cars. Bulldinr corts4retioii at Salem 400 per cant larger than that of August last Tear waa put unoer way during the monu or. Asgust,. MIL The body of Private David Humph rey. killed ia France, has arrived at Eu- Irene and was buried in the Odd Fr ows oeffoetery. Completion of a road Unking up Dia mond lake with Crater lake la promised In time for tha opening of tha Crater lake aaaaon next year. A mod era dry klia wfth a capacity ef MORE OR LESS PERSONAL the issues of the conference, and that the prime requirements of diplomatic and political training and sagacity can not be met by any woman. However, the woman delegate has many more ad vocates in the press than she has op ponents. The majority of writers con tend that Miss Robertson's requirements incident But the laughing crowd is diminishing. Some' are sitting with clenched hands. white, set faces and unhappy eyes. Mows and more are living in despoiled number of papers support their conten tion that even that, formidable list is not sufficient argument to debar women, by "nominating" individuals who, in their opinion, fully come up to specifi cations. e - Representative Robertson's "mental inventory of American womanhood" is unity." These are visualizations of the djs- sharp turns are being flattened, more sire of men to pass into a. status I attention is being paid to drainage BLOCKING RECONSTRUCTION and more substantial bases and sub- bases are being established. A logical road development would have been to have done no paving where the -bullets and bayonets of war will no longer pierce their breasts. There are few such monu ments in the world. It has been our t A MERICA'S industrial plants are practice, by marble shafts and fig- at first, but to have built up sub f not working to capacity. Many ures in granite and bronze, to glorify stantial grades, given .them a gravel W are not working at allj America's I the victories of war. surface, maintaining it ' until there i( . farmers are passing through one ofl Jesus Christ brought the tidings of was a permanent settlement and the worst periods In history. Wages! peace and good will on earth. Dls- I have corrected the Imperfections -:-i are going down and nearly 0,000,000 believe, if you will, the divinity of of drainage. With he experience ''-'. workers have no employment. the Nazarene, but you are compelled gained, the work of paving could 'i ?i One of the very great reasons for to admit that human happiness and have begun about the present time the conditions Is that many of Amer-1 welfare would be advanced by prac- with a great saving of money. That ica' foreign markets are closed be- tlce f lls precepts. These dead and woujd have been the constructive !N cause Europe, since the war, has these maimed would have been course, but it Is obvious that It would 'Si had no money to purchase our prod- spared if mankind had accepted his not have been possible In .the face ucts. Consequently there has been proposal for unity. of the conflicting desires. ' no outlet for our surpluses, and con- "May these doors never be dosed." Much is being said of the destruc- Ti' frequently there 'Is stagnated business these doors between our neighbor tive effects of an unregulated traf- r - In the United States. Aind Obviously people and us, these doors through fie on the highways. The import t'-r- it would be of very rreat advantage I which for more than 100 years two lance of this cannot be minimized T- to American groweri American I people" have passed and repassed in J nor the urgency for a strict enforce- S worklngmen and American business 'ull faith, one in the other and both ment of the traffic laws denied. . . 1 I 1 fil - a Aa . . AV . a . . if the reconstruction of .Europe were m ecn. ine oeama ot mo great sua xei it must oe consiaej-ea mat tne hastened and European countries en- swinging through the sky will rest J destruction by overloaded trucks at -"-; abled to absorb our surpluses. I tenderly and lovingly on this appeal a high rate of speed does not serve ' Austrian financial aid industrial put tatft the,P?C0 I5 bf together as an alibi for the faults conditions are at low ebb. The coun v; try is threatened with eptlre collapse because or, a lack or buying power. are irrelevant to the main issue, and a home8. Deserted chadren fill thV or phanages ; wives fill the work shops and Insane asylums ; discouraged, reckless husbands go forth to despoil some other's nome. Vamps boastfully ply their trade. leathers fearlessly desert children. And our legislators talk about taxes ! I am a good American. My ancestors were there and mar hav taken nrt in not intended, the Minneapolis Tribune that famous tea party. I feel sure some (Rep.) insists, as "a slur on her sex." of them were in the old Ku Klux Klan. Rather, the Syracuse Heraia una. And they have alwava lived n well agrees, "It is the recognition of a dem- I fought, 'within the law for the glory of onsxxaoie trutn, ana not in any seuae a. our country. reiiecuon upon tne intellectual capacity Therefore, I believe, when the la or womannooa. oecause, as tne w neei-1 won t protect that Klorv. which la lta mg intelligencer ittep.j Btates l no nomes, Americans must. Mrs. N. I. K. matter wnat ner natural quaimcauons, it is doubtful if a woman could oe iouna AN "ASSISTANT PRFSiriPJi with the requisite experience essential Portland, Aug. 2L To the Editor of to participation in conferences as impor- The Journal I notice a statement in vrs tant as that to be held in Washington." j terday's Journal, by a Washington cor Tne Indianapolis Star (Ind. Rept) does I respondent of The Journal, that there is not even entertain ooudis, dui oeciarea : a nearly completed Dlan on foot, at That there is not a woman in the Washington. In the reorganization of tn United States so qualified may " safely executive department of the government. be saw witnout mvesugauon. -er- to appoint an assistant to the president ; tainly "if there is any, woman whose and as the necessity for some such morn breadth of practical diplomatic expert- has been apparent to the common peo- erice is unusual," the Baltimore Ameri- pie for some months. I would sueeent. in can (Ind. Rep.) thinks, "she has sue- case this plan goes through, that, after ceeded in hiding ner .talents wita great au preliminaries are arranged, the success," and since. In the view of the 1 1 resident hit the wire and offeo the Job writer, "the most Important qualifies.- 1 to Wood row Wilson. In case he accepts generosity and vision of Samuel Hill, I of construction. "May these doors never be closed!" I The primary purpose of the high May no antagonism ever arise that way should not be lost sight of. The will cause the gates to the sacred edifice to swing shut! aaaw i . Tnere no money. ' ' The financial commission of the s league or Nations recommenaea last The new rate for unskilled labor soring that the nations holding liens I . v.. rj.tvi.h. mm. a 7u oa Austria should agree to suspend cents an hour, which is $13.20 for an eight hour day and six day week. Those employes now know that de flation means "to deflate." I?- them for 20 years and that in return .Austria snouia eueci certain iinan cial and economic reforms along the lines suggested by allied financiers. By suspending the liens .ustria would I be permitted to issue bonds against construction should be substantial enough to carry & regulated traffic to the highest point of transporta tion economy. It is not a question of types of pavement. If well drained and sub stantial bases are not constructed. no type of pavement will survive. A FATAL HASTE- " I fas aas aw-a. lwaTa4 Iam at I . aa acamt ai tK eta I f MllTTJ v ata s0 levin vara tvatralAti. -kff Wall IfAiVBUMrUU UaMVUtW 1 wnv VaTJa Ul I - 'AA A-4 .VUI OV VaV Uf-Un(aJ UCf giVI' bonds could be used to purchase im-1 ment in Oregon, as in other t - ports and the country! could grad- states, is read in the history of the nally return to normal conditions, highway between the Multnomah Ray W. Clark, who used to greet the incoming and speed the departing guest at the Multnomah, believes in looking at everything from Its most cheering angle and in glimpsing things from the com mon viewpoint He has flown the bumps and worries of a metropolitan hostelry for the joys and contentment of that tourist tavern, the Umpqua, at Rose- burg, and when he comes To Portland for a visit, as he has, he registers from "Brumfield." That's the way It shows at the Imperial where Mr. and Mrs. Clark are staying. a Mrs. C. D. Gabrlelson of Salem, accom panied by Robert and Charles K. Bishop, sons of Chauncey M. Bishop, is at the Imperial for a short stay in Portland. e e Mrs. J. F. Reddy of Medford is at the Imperial for a few days: e e Lot L. Pearce, pioneer business man of Salem, is registered at the Imperial while on a business visit to the city. - Mr. and Mrs. D. Taylor of Freewater are visiting in the city for a short time, registered -at the Imperial. O. L. Foster of Independence Is at the Oregon for a short stay in the city. to hirTan aSXanTto flnd.enrh m iJK4' chlevous employment for all the idle SLmbAr EJrt eocy- hands. Waa ton iemoer. I - . - woe amiat, 11. rwoecuy arrcstea at An exchange says that a certain West- Heppner, has confessed to aiding is ern Oregon man burned nis wua a i inauni sates at vomrn aae Mount clothes to prevent her from running Hebron. Cat, last June. around nights, which leads one to won- The latest estimate of the Hood Rlvee der if her associates really noticed the I valley potato crop places the tonnage difference. Condon Globe-Times. 1 at about 110 carloads. Growers are , . - " " ... . .... I declining offers of ft a sack. TM eaaTa S aaatl flAm le-r-AfaaB laT'Il Hat tliamt I - Am.rican Tourlat. have "been a dlp- f-t.-'h wrSwlCS &tothi. earPrAnricantU Tn " .ltVU Europe haviTeo bWPPomtmeS a KlarrfU tonim. to oroprietors of American reaorta. The Hood River eehardleta have fixed - a- . . . ef T 1 AV a en a 4S r daaaahS an ani American tourist U) uurvprr anmi toi wnajaaj' iot ayine K "ia --"" have no friends anywhere- Banks Her-1 hour, with a bonus of 1 sate where lid. i help remained tnrougnout lds acasoo. A national forest crew Is at wortc ea a new telephone una rrora aievreaie Springs, 00 miles southeast of Eugene, to tha top of Fug! mountain, It mUea distant. Harvesting of mint in the Klamath rails section will start about Septem ber 15, A distilling plant with a capae- Ityt of 100 pounds of oil a day la ready Random Observations About Town Thomas W. Brunk of Salem who known from, one end of the Willamette I oration. led by hU two daughters. Is at the lm-Lj". ITtEanTh Vfra: Penal for a short vlalt In Portland. Mr.l juries auatalned when he slipped when Brunk Is one of aMrion county's leading I alighting from a heavy truck, and felt farmers and stockbreeders. a a J. W. Vogt, 4 merchant of Hood River. on business, registered at is in Portland the Oregon. Judge HenHk la. Benson, associate jus tice of the state supreme court, spent Sunday la Portland, staying at the Im perial. M. H. Abbey of Newport is swapping beneath a rear wheel. Tl It -Castle is now suiMrlnteodent of Benton county schools, having been appointed to succeed R. E. Cannon, who resigned to accept me pnncjpajimp oi the Union high school at Greet am. WASHINGTON Armour A Co. shlrmed last week Ave carloads, or SSOO. chilled lambs from opoavane to r.aar-ira) loaiuia. The city of Central la is tearing down .v , . ,.l , " . v. a y.v Ithe old jaU on Maple street to make the comforts of the Abbey house tor the room to MW J70.60O municipal buUd sights of the metropolis, he and Mrs. I inr. Abbey having registered at the Oregon for a few day a a e e Another representatiye of Southern Oregon in Portland Is John Hoglund of Marsh field. W. T. Matlock of Heppner is at the Imperial tor a short stay In the city. e e , e H. 8. McCowan of Coeur d'Alene registered at the Portland. tion is diplomatic experience," the con clusion is unescapable that , "the disarm ament conference is no place for a I woman." While "at no very distant day we may expect that woman's entrance into pub- the president can take the Mayflower, efter loading aboard all necessary food supplies, fishing tackle and golf tools, ana men cruise on the Mayflower from now till March 4, 1925. with fuU and un doubted assurance that the old machine. lio life win develop woman publicists I the united States, would be pulled out well equipped for such service;" still, the I of the mud, overhauled; cleaned up and Minneapolis Journal (Ind. Rep.) points again put on the highway, headed for out, "that day Is not here." If it were, prosperity and peace, associations and If, Indeed, "the country had a woman 1 aiL in this case the president would of professional fitness and recognised I need to touch shore only at convenient experience and ability for this work," I places, for the purpose of drawing hls the Butte Post (Rep.) contends that salary. And all the president would need "there would be no thought of objec- to do before starting would be to turn tion" to her appointment as delegate. However, In the opinion of the Au gusta Chronicle (Dem.), ew, persons will believe that there is no woman in America fitted by ability, sagacity, wis dom and Influence to sit In the disarma ment conference. Such a position, it holds, "is not only far-fetched as to ac curacy, but it is wholly inconsiderate and offensive to womanhood" and "the nation knows better." But, even if it over the keys of the White House, and the United States senate, and Woodrow would do the rest C. J. McLain. The result would be sJ X construction in Austria speedier re-1 was known in the early chapters. construction in Europe speedier re-1 county line and Newberg, or as it and speedier the Rex-Tigard road, which Is now 1 reconstruction in America. 1 unaergoing an approximate recon- America holds a small lien against -traction. t: Austria. America has surplus stocks 11 ls a tor7 of baste, of lnade- for export. But of all the countries construction, the putting on with liens against the bankrupt cen- the roof of the building on an inse- v: tral power and ours is among the cure foundation. For the situation American firms were underbid 30 per cent by Belgian makers on S00 freight cars and by England on 35 locomotives for China. In addition. the credit proposals of the Ameri cans were not as favorable as those of Belgium and England. We lost the business and American workmen lost the employment. ' FINANCING THE FARMER Government Might Loan Directly and Not Through Banks. The Dalles, Sept. 1. To the Editor of The Journal Please Indulge me in very short article on "Financing the Farmer." If the government wants, to help the farmer, why not do it? Why were necessary to grant the force of the not the government loan directly to the statement, the Columbia (3. C) Record rarmer on gooa security? Why go (Dem) thinks "It should take no Web- tnrougn banks controlled by private in- sterian highbrows to dismantle the bat- teres ts and followed up with commls- tlpahina and rase the forts and tnus sions. investigating committees and miles make war impossible," and in this ef-of red tapef It makes millionaires, but fort the women nave nrst can. 1 not out or farmers. It ls like a man If applied to men. the test which Miss starting with a Kood head of water Robertson exacts would, in the opinion I across a sandy desert, to water a e-arden of the Memphis Commercial Appeal spot He gets there with very little or (Dem.), materiauy reauce me numoer none- yhy not put it through an iron of possible applicants, since "we have plpa and get there BOmething? I not half a dosen first-class Internationa. ut the government loan directly to lawyers In the United States- We do fwt low interest with good e. nlta Jt inl tiara WA n O VaTA T 1 T w uuc uio -o-. " security, thereby making something for iJ2?& the government- and more for the J'6".r,;J'i-.. farmer. . John M. Reed. : OBSERVATIONS AND IMPRESSIONS OF THE JOURNAL MAN By Fred Lockley "Lieutenant Capron, the son of Cap-1 tain Capron, under whom I served, was a very popular and capable officer," said G. W. Lowdtsn of Portland. "Ha waa one of the first men to be killed In" the Spanish war In Cuba, where he was lieutenant of I troop of the Seventh cav alry, Custer's old regiment. The Sev enth cavalry was always considered by soldiers as a sort of hoodoo organiza tion. The least you can say for It ls that It was very unlucky. It was pretty well wiped out when Custer, with five troops of the Seventh cavalry, was am bushed and all his men killed in a cam paign against Sitting Bull In 1S76. Gen eral Phil Sheridan helped even the score when he defeated the Sioux that same fall In the Big Horn mountains. In the battle of Pine Ridge. Colonel Forsythe, who was in command of the Seventh cavalry, had a troop of the Sev enth cavalry surrounded by. Indiana Suddenly the Indians threw off their blankets and fired at the soldiers. The soldiers opened fire on the Indians at close range, their bullets killing more of their own comrades than the Indiana Army officers severely critUed the mis management which resulted In the need less loss of so many of his troopers. Because of my long experience 1 waa made chief mesa sergeant for the school of fire, at which were more than 1200 1 months ago. student officers. I was offered a lieu tenantcy with the understanding that I would remain as an instructor in the ar tillery school, but I was too anxious to get overseas, so, after seven months' service as Instructor. I resigned as ser geant, and by becoming-a buck private. got over to France. I had been in France only a few weeks when X was promoted to sergeant and became In structor in the artillery school of fire. We had seven point tours and French seventy-fives. EVEN AT SEAT HAS life become cheaper than dol lars, even at im Has the free and restless ocean been stripped of its- romance and smallest the government of thejno one seems particularly to blame chivalry? Have the hardy men who United States is the only one that re fuses to suspend the lien. Reconstruction in . Austria is 1- blocked. Reconstruction in Europe ". It hindered. . And the j surpluses re main in American warehouses, the farmers' market continues pinched, the workers continue, idle, and busl ness Is still depressed' as it has grown out of conditions surrounding the inauguration ofl state highway work' when experi ence was absent and road work in Oregon on an experimental basis. ride out into the billows and the tempest, the men of strong heart and sturdy character, too been re duced to a basis of dollars and cents under the dark shadow of dollar Up to this time experience in pave-l grubbing landsmen? ment had been confined to city Captain Blssett of the waterlogged streets, principally. The only county steamer Canadian Importer is hailed per cent Americanism, and as to listen ing a great deal and saying lime, tnat art is as difficult to men as it is to women." - But while a number of papers take A WARNING AS TO WELLS Independence, Kan., Aug. 30. To the Editor of The Journal In traveling through the country I am surprised at the great number of open wells and wells An Arkansas farmer jbroke ground, harrowed and planted, cultivated, s. hoed, i sweat, cussed land wrestled S with the crop and produced six bushels of A-l stringbeans. Then as a hero. He is hailed as a hero be cause he refused a tow to land from a steamer of another line. He is hailed as a hero, as are the men, because he permitted 11 of his crew to tempt death on the merciless road pavements to serve as a guide were those of Multnomah county, which had been laid on old macadam roads with well drained and substan tial bases. There is a vast difference between paved streets in the city and paved I ocean attempting to row 600 miles Mr1a f f ViATA AAtintl-V Tk fhsa. f Awmat I a aVe ... la. aa .ak.c-r A. X. alfc ..w -""""""Itbd surface is broad and admits of Captain Blssett could have accepti and pipped his tender Arkansas a disrtrIbutlon of traffic. In ed the tow. If so, his owners would k beans to St Louis to feed the ntulU-wttei. tha trwfie r-.triotM ha .nt. witW . .d.; : 7t .Pr!8!, h"eS 7?,! to ' nall area, requiring a much bill approximating fS per cent of the v-34.01, Commission 61 Cents ana the foundation. Another: l aA. I voln. ,a. ri.an.ar ft. P D!t fafN to,lones Ut vanUge of the city street ie the curb- If he refused the tow, the other vea- I ; , lnsat the aide, which serves to pre- sel, in spite of the property and life cost 01 me containera puaitu. j ones i vent spreading as well as to carry at stake, would refuse to bring the joct 7 cents. e nas gone out oj all surface water away and keep it helpless craft of Captain Bissett to ut scaa ouatnena eu u&u wuuu from penetrating the base. safety. ;it ho, another economic tragedy is I i a has been nreviouslv tomted out I cantair, th.i U.f VWf w to m rvt-urvu I hr The Jftnrnal 1h marl t Kaa. n. nf.mul ,kV !! wi V,. Curious Bits of Information Gleaned From Curious Places WASTING OUR TAXES berg is not the only one which must cargo, and the lives "bf 45 men, to soon be reconstructed. All the pave- contracting la huge salvage bill for ; ments that were laid . early . In r the J his owners. He even preferred to let state work are going bad and must 11 brave men place! their lives in the soon be gone over again. The pri-1 balance against, fate in a frail boat roary cause seems to be lacs; of I In the tempestuous sea. rather than drainage and too light a base. In I compel hia owners to face the cost merely , me "tKauvc wsmua uia.i I with onlv a trarjdoor or tanaA rnvr-r is no good reason why women should not j which are a constant source of danger to sit in the conference, other writers, with I the lives of tha children on then farma the Lynchburg News (Dem.), maintain as I believe that this is partly due to that "there is every good reason why thoughtlessness on the part of farmers. President Harding should appoint a would It not be well for you to publish a woman on the American delegation," and warning In your paper occasionally arguments are put zortn in support oi i against this dangerous condition, aa the contention. The j Wichita Eagle I many children lose their lives from this (Ind.) for example" puts the matter thus: cause. ' A. L. Potter. "Women are interested in disarmament for exactly the same reasons that com' pel the Interest of men. They are in terested as taxpayers, as heads of fami lies, as parents of potential war vic tims, as humanitarians. They have done much to forward the cause of dis armament. They shauld have at least one voice in the great conference that may initiate the actual proceedings for International disarmament. Further, .the Cleveland Press (tnd.) considers, the first requisite of a dele gate is a belief in what he ls doing, and "there are few women in America who do not believe in disarmament," and with that fixed purpose a woman would keep her mind steadily on the great aim and refuse to let that aim be deflected by accumulating technical de tails auid minor irritations growing out of national issues." There is no reason that the Christian Science Monitor (Bos ton, Ind.) is willing to concede "why the policies of the world should be de cided from now on, as they have been In the past,- by men," and 'the increasing activity of women In government should be one of the strongest influences leading to disarmament and the overcoming of "After returning to the United States after serving In the Spanish war, Phil' iooine insurrection and the Baxer rebel lion. I reenUsted in F battery. Second artillery, at Washington, D. C Lieu tenant Hawthorne, under whom I served while we fought the Sioux Indians at Pine Ridge, was promoted to a cap taincy and transferred to Vancouver barracks and was given command of the Twenty-sixth battery. He wrote to me, suggesting that I secure a transfer from E battery. Second field artillery, to tne Twenty-sixth battery at Vancouver. came out to Vancouver, where I served as a sergeant under Captain Hawthorne. At the expiration of ray enlistment in Vancouver barracks, I bought a small farm near Vancouver. I contracted to do work at the garrison. "I kept up . my work at the garrison and my farming until the United States declared war on Germany. Immediately after our declaration of war, I came to Portland and tried to enlisy I was turned down without examination. The fact that I was 51 years old really slg nified very little, because I was strong as most men of JO" and, having put in over 20 years in the army, knew what soldiering waa. I watched my chance and tried to enlist under different officers In Portland. Each time they courteously turned me down- Finally I became disgusted and went to Fort Sill, Okla. I passed my physical examination 90 per cent perfect and at rpHE two bombs tfiat sank the -- heavily armored German Ost friesland in the recent naval bomb ing experiments, did not touch the Ship. The force f the explosion in I m.. Instances the arm da iatnAnar. Lf ealnr Ait tnat moertan. axi th.i' i'8id ke4v ,! bul! "w. bringing the pavement almost rival vesseV it conformance with the as if It had been an egg shell and flash with the side ditches. ; 1 present ethica of the ocean, refused sent her to the bottom. V It is but fair to aay that the state to Jend ja hand; refused to pun the - We are talking of disarmament, highway department has profited by fnlured craft to safety, unless a con- We are also building, at prodigious j the experience of the past and that J fiscatory stun was forthcoming. The cost at a time when people are in-1 the pavement now being- put down I vessel was in imminent danger the impulse of war." The question of qualifications, the Monitor believes. Is secondary to the need of woman's In fluence: and "the need far such a ren- resentaUve will develop just the right one to serve, for, as in the case of men. ability is brought to light by circum stances requiring it- Nelther the Hartford Times (Dem.) nor the Chicago Post (Ind.) finds diffi culty in selecting a woman to meet- the rea aire ments which i Miss Robertson puts forth, or which the conference itself could demand, and each suggests a can didate, in full confidence that she could Infantile caralrsia canned the death ef two persons at Walla Walla last we4u One was that of Mra Merle F. EUia, aged V John i. Cllett la trowing cotton and peanuts in the Taklma valley, and hi expert ments so far are said to be a thorough success. Uiror Ridden of Teeoma haa under way a plan for financing local improve ments which will put to work nearly all the unemployed men in that city. Plftv-four bridge In Clarke county are said to be badly la need of repairs, and the county engtneerfta asking for an appropriation of $100,000 for the purpose. Three large manufacturing plants, em ploying 14.000 men, wui soon oe tocatea in Vancouver. It is said the Standifer shipyards will soon be operating wiut aOOQ men. Frank L. Reynolds, chief of police of onoe was appointed a sergeant and In structor in the artillery school of fire. I Bremerton, was arraigned in court Sat urday on charge of extortion and grand larceny prefarred against him two Food costs in Aberdeen showed a ereater Increase Jn August than in any other city in tha at ate, according to a survey by the Loyal Legion of Loggers and Lumbermen. The, Cox Lumber company, now oper ating a mU near Appleton, will construct a modern mill on Burdoin mountain and rebuild the dam ana the eeven-mue uume to the Columbia river recently destroyed by lire.. "A few weeks before the armistice was igned. my horse and I fell in a trench. with the horse on top of me. My spine was Injured and my right side seemed to be permanently paralysed. On No vember 7, four days before the armis tice, when I was In the hospital. I took the flu, which turned into pneumonia. I was In a hospital In France until Jan uary, m, when I was carried aboard the Leviathan and shipped back to the United States. I went from one hospital to another in the United States until finally landed in the base hospital at Camp Dlx, where, after having spent six months on my back, I at last wa able to get up. From Camp Dlx I was sent to Camp Lewis, where I was la charged with 75. per cent disability. In spite of not being able to lift my arm. I am still good for many years' work. and that's why I am serving as elevator operator here in the custom house. e e "I am now 55 years old and have put In most of my life in the army. I have seen many young lieutenants under whom I have served, such as Jack Per shing. Lieutenant Lawton, Dr. Leonard Wood and Lieutenant Peyton Marsh and others, become distinguished generals. On account of my disability, I will re ceive a pension for the rest of my life. ana, aa i ait oy tne tire oi an awning and think over the campaigns I have participated in, from chasing the Indians in New Mexico and Arisona. flghUiu? the Sioux la South Dakota, taking part in Pole's revolution in the Sandwich Is lands, fighting the Spaniards and the Tagalogs in the Philippines and the Chi nesa in the Boxer rebellion, and on ta the battles of the World war. I can see how the science of killing men has lm proved. I hope we are through with war, but I suppose If my country be came Involved In another war, I would be as anxious ss ever to be in a uni form, serving under Old Glory once , . IDAHO Permission has been granted the Beiaa independent school district to raise tha tax levy for 11Z1-Z3 to la mine. The Oregon Snort Line Railroad com pany haa begun construction . or. new depots at Georgetown and TutUe. Eighteen hundred cars of potatoes. cherries, early apple and peaches were shipped out oi loano up to aanaay night. A rental of tl win be charged students of the Boise high school this yaar for the us of text books during the school year. Captain Winters ls putting machinery on his mining properties at FeathervUle and will employ a large Xprce el men in development. The body of John McClatn. eon ef Mrs. H. McClaln, who fell at Beileau Wood June I. lilt, has arrived at Hebokea, N. J-, and will be sent to Boise tor burial. One hundred .and slxty-slx acres of timber land, bordering on Coeur d'Alene lake, a part of the University or Idaho school lands, were sold Monday ta J. M. Carey for l0. To increase the consumption of con fectionery, candy men are going to have a candy day in Idaho. October a. A fund of $15,000 has been raised to pro mote the observance ef the day. It name, "phrenosooper exactly de scribes, a new French X-ray lnstru ment to those who . have a knowledge of the dead languages, for the term is composed of two Greek words mean Ing a view or survey of the mind or diaphragm, and this, says Popular Mechanics, ls-precisely the purpose of the instrument. It makes possible radloscoptc view of any opaque ob ject, and In the case of the human body enables one to see distinctly the diaphragm the v membrane that sep arates the chest from the abdomen. dividing thus the body into two com partments. This membrane, although very slender, is muscular. -. and It vibrates constantly under the action of respiration. It is claimed that these movements of the diaphragm act in unison with the mind, or brain, and therefore a study of the diaphragm In this manner makes possible an analysis that Is mental as well as physical. Indeed ,the French originator of the Instrument asserts -that he can read the character of any human being,- when placed behind the screen of his instrument so that the diaphragm is fully exposed to view. . That there is some basis for this assertion 1 has been definitely proved by ' a . number of actual tests that were very suc cessful. . 4, . . J - . pestition that wasn't religious but Jlst political. My . Grandson, Jerry, was a-readln outer a big book about them old Roman statesmana ' that couldn't keep the people on the land nor the land outer the clutches of grabbers and spec tator a, tilt bya by her come the Gauls and Franks and beat 'em up. That's why. I reckon, we've got so much gall in the American people, and so many fellers named Frank. Uncle Jeff Snow Says Down In Mexico some of them there religious fanatic Injuns - uster .-whip Oieirselves to death with a crowd acquit herself creditably as a - repre-1 p-iookip' on. Whole nations of people has tentative nouL or women - ana o- , the same thing, foilerin PORTLAND'S STRATEGIC MISTAKE Frost- tha Pendleton Xaat Oresaalaa "Wa often fall by looking far and wide for what' lies close at hand." is a bit of wisdom Oregon people and especially Portland people might weU ponder over. The city of Portland is making he role efforts ia pursuit of aa elusive ocean commerce. Millions are being expended Id dock improvements and la dredging a channel that shoals during every spring iresnet. However, the expense may well be worth while. That ls not for this paper to aay. But the East Oregonlan is convinced that if Portland would devote an equal amount of energy to promotion of hydro electric development ia the Columbia basin there would be no uncertainty about the results and those results would be especially beneficial to the metropolis. When a territory is devel oped within itself nothing can take that business away. - Freaa tha kaa FraacaEav Can - I love him. . I have always loved htm and I always shall tove him, I cannot him up. 1 shall .not give him up. We never had a word in all the 14 years we lived together. We were real sweet hearts. I never called him anything but loving names and every wish of his wa to me a law. How can tear him from my heart and give him up now, even If he did cast m offf "Sire, I beseech you to pity me. a woman and a stranger, without an as sured friend and without even aa Indif ferent counsellor. I taka God to wit neat that I have always been to you a true aad loyal wife, that I made it my constant duty to seek your pleasure, that I have loved an whom you loved, whether I have reason or not, whether they are friends t me or foe. I have be air your wife for yearn. I have brought you many children. If there be any off ansa which can be alleged against me I con sent to depart with infamy ; if not, then I pray you to do me Justice.' The first of . these paragraphs was spoken ia HU ia a court of San Fran cisco by Julia, the win of the manager of a telegraph company. The second was spoken in 1529 by a wemaa named Catharine when her husband, Heary the Eighth, was seeking to divorce her. The first' is sharp and ejacuiatlve and hys terical, not delicately rounded and cal culated for effect.' but coming starkly from the woman's hps t the printed page. The other paragraph has been shaped and smoothed by four centuries of historians and commentators: it Is probably not exactly In the words of Queen Catharine,- But what real d!f fere nee can anyone , find between ' the hearts of these two .wives on of Ban Francisco, the other of London ; one ef today, on ef four centuries ago? What I Ukm Bit In Thm Journal Has your opinion appeared la this column ? Send it with name and address. JAMES GILL. (51 Clacka mas street The sporting sec tion. Sirs, moore. ss East Eighty -third street Fred Lockleya stories. W. O. TURKINGTON. 1247 Wllber street The Journal, because it Is a good news paper from start to finish.- MRS. B. TTLER. 124S De troit avenue Especially In terested in the editorials, but regard the entire paper -aa very much above the ordi nary. H. D. SMITH. 1171,. East Nineteenth street The edi torial page is the best among all tha paper I know. F. A. HAGER. 1013 East Nineteenth street north It is the best paper In Portland. Have taken it for 12 years. W. HICKET. 10SS East Twenty - first street north Tne editorials are fine. I like the letters from the people. S. HUTCHINSON. ISIS East Twentieth street north The Journal U not partial to any one and has the Interest of Portland at heart. MRS. OLIVE LIVERS. IS2 Harney avenue The Oregon City news in the first edition. MRS. W. Y: NEILD. X7U; East Fifteenth street The' . local news and "Bringing Up Father." MRS. H E. SELLWOOD, 21 Umatilla avenue X ta joy the editorials most. 1 .... dW i