10 THE OREGON" DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND OREGON. TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 23. 182U I a nnrrtxDENf icgwsrartE -i JaCKSOM PablWbef ' Be mJ. fca aenrklMt, be dwarf al u4 4a . 'Ma athafa M in weald kar. them 4o uIp l"MHit.K4 awr Alia, aiwft AviMlav BomtM The Javrnal baildias, Broadny aad Tua- Ular at Um aactirffiea at FarUaod. Oraaoa, la ui iw troa uh staus aa aacana 1MB BKlteT rtUJ-.tHoNE aula IMS. Astoautie 60-et All Dim naathar SenarUaaiita feaesed by )ti.'..naL aiWa.kTisi.Nti ukpuksknta- I TITR BiBin Kaataor Ok. Broawk ulldla. fit rata araae, Saw Tort; .rA lt-ltl t'OAST ULfUESKXTATIVE W. fWa; Tttla lamuaara MMlnc. Lot AaeMa TUM OKEtiON JUUUMAL. Twm the riht to iNt adrartUki etn wtuck tt oanaa afcjaetloaabta. It ako will Mt print anj amij that In aa. way aiamlataa ranline aaat Wr or tiiat cannot raaOilr ba raeoeaiaed a adeerUn. all of Oregon ana spend their money all over Oregon. Many of them will see the Pendleton Round-Up. see his toric scenes at Astoria, see the fruit shows of Southern Oregon, see the state and county fairs. 'see the re claimed farm lands of Eastern Ore gon, see the broad acres of the Wil lamette valley and see the impres sive scenery throughout the state. The exposition. If finally approved, will In fact cover In exhibits a wider range and comprise more In publicity Of resources than any similar event of the past. The heavy vote in favor of it in Portland will probably mean that there will be no organized op position against it in the state elec srHsraiPTiov hates By CarrW. rtty and Van try. UAI1.Y AND SUNDAY Oee $ .1 I On BMiii.... DAILT ' BUSUI lOattMt .8 .10 I On. ..,... na amain , .4 5 Ml MAIL AM, RATES PAYABLE TN ADVANCE .8 . .$ M 1 lone yaar .... 1 itha. .1 DAILY AND SUNDAY S 00 4J at nonth. DAILY ! . (Without Saaday) Oae yaar 14 OA Sia BMBifca. .... 1.2 J Tana avontha. . 1 73 Oaa BHMitb. . . . ' .0 ! WKKKLY iCvary WadiMadir) Threa month. . . Ona month .... SUM DAY (Oaly) Ona raar Mix aontha. . . . Tbraa moatha. . 82.28 .7 .88.00 : 1.71 1.00 WTCKKI.T ASD SUNDAY On. yaar. . . . ,..11.80 Ona yaar. . . . IS BMMth ... .50 Tbaaa rat. arol only la Um Wt lb. ta BMm polnu rnrnlMSM sa appnea. Order or lnft. If your poatoffioe U do BMiary-onlar nfrtm. 1 or j-caal atanpa wui jba aaeapted. M all rtmiUanraa payabla to Tka JoanmJ lubUalung Coapur, Portland. A PROPER PROMOTION Ivan Stewart, wt prior to his "o wn service In the " World -wari made,' first, remarkable, records tar agricul tural production from the steep hill sides of Wheeler -county and, next, acquitted himself "with equal distinc tion as a student at Oregon Agricul tural college. No ex-service man. wounded or whole, has greater assur ance of a comfortable living than he who essays well instructed life on the land. , ' . . M. BRIAND DIPLOMAT THE WORD THAT WAS UNSPOKEN Armaments Conference Tested Through Consideration of -Secretary Hughes' Mode of Announcing His Plan Studious Omission of the League of Nations- Was Studious Omis sion of a jiKame He Did Not Care to utter The League Still the Main Event. THE promotion of Patrolman Per singer of the Portland police de partment for honest and efficient service is an excellent example of the proper basis -for promotions of those In the public employ, and more especially in the police department. Perslnger was offered a tempting bribe by a notorious drug vendor to aid him in smuggling opiates. In- j stead of accepting the tainted money and flaunting hil oath of office, Per slnger arrested the drug smuggler and confiscated $100,000 worth of contraband narcotics. . Some men would have accepted the bribe, permitted the poisonous opiates to go through and be dis tributed to hapless slaves, and aided the blood-sucking distributor to ob tain his tainted profits. But Per slnger recognized his oath, per formed his duty, and Tendered a service to his employers. For it, the rewards should be his. And other men in the police department should be rewarded for similar service, and no other. TTNTTL yesterday, France was In the background at the Wash ington conference. In the discussion of land armaments and means to re duction. the part of France in world affairs will be largely played. Her ship of diplomacy will be guided by a highly skilled and veteran diplo matic pilot M. Briand, who though to leave for Paris will be at Wash ington. He is little less successful as & negotiator than Lloyd George. He is a greater orator. He is highly popular, easily approached, subtle and intensely resourceful. Kra In war, moral pnawr ta to phyateal aa thfaa parta oat of foar. Napolaoa. FRANCE AND THE WORLD The shipping board praised the presentation of argument for the al location of combination passenger freight ships to the Columbia river. Words may compliment, but the ac tual allocation of ships will be Jus tice. THE SEEDS OF WAR By Bertha Slater Smith . The world is so inured to postpone ment of Its expectations that when it suddenly collides with the fulfillment of a cherished dream it gasps for breath ana asks how it happened. Something like that seems to have happened when -Secretary Hughes an nounced to the . armament conference that America proposed a holiday of 10 years in naval construction. How it happened in this case is best understood from what the speaker did not say. ... When in his noteworthy speech Mr. Hughes reviewed the development of the disarmament idea, he excluded all refer ence to the assembly at Versailles and to the fact that a disarmament conference was arranged for in the League of Na tions covenant. Why did the speaker omit these important historical facts? It was expedient to do so. Had he stated those facts he would have re- Stone or mouldy log from the glare of summer days. The eld superstition that toads are poisonous has vanished before scientific research. Just like - many another dismal whim possessed by un enlightened minds. They cannot live under water, although their Cve-toea hind feet are partly webbed. Letters From the People COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF vealed the true'eauae of the convention's In his diplomatic thrusts he works ' being would have drawn attention to ONE of the sanest proposals to the Washington conference is the r N AN eloquent address before the arms conference yesterday, Pre mier Briand asked the representa tives of other powers if, situated in France's position, they would turn their barks to danger and Jeopardize their countries and their lives by sweeping away the only safeguard the army. lie-pointed to the German menace. a country defeated and prostrated, jbut not forever conquered, lying dor )mant, but always ready to spring at 'the throat of France. He pictured ;Rssla with Bolshevism, an army of 1 '10,000,000 men, and arma He sug Jgested a combination of the two another charge at France, another rape of Belgium, and other Meuses, Marnes and Argonnea Would the other countries of the world, situated as France is situated, disarm and bare their breasts to the enemy? he questioned. Would they close their eyes to the peril of annihilation? Without other means of protection, certainly not But is France prepared to ' close her eyes to the danger of interna tlonal bankruptcy and wholesale " paralysation of commerce and Indus try? Is Japan? Is England. Italy, or America? Is France prepared to crush her people under an avalanche of armament costs incidental to an other race for military power? Is Japan? "Is England, Italy or Amer lea? Is France prepared to brush I aside the business of production nd trade, the business of creating ' wealth, and go headlong into the ' business of war? Is Japan? Is Eng land, Italy or America? And is France prepared to face effacement in the . nest war, prepared to die under the attacks of the most poisonous and deadly gases ever known, prepared to face the killing ray and the in- visible germs, prepared to die under the fire of great and powerful guns ) and the longer ranged airplanes and more powerful discharges? Is Japan? ! ' Is England, Italy or America? Cer tinly not France will disarm. She is men aced by her neighbors. Without pro tection she might be wiped from the earth. She is likewise menaced by bankruptcy, stagnation, and war if there is no disarmament Both dan gers would be removed if the other nations of the world agreed to pro tect France in case of invasion. And - that is the only way France can t escape both perils and the only way the world can escape them. The perversion or thoughtlessness tn the person who fed tobacco to an elephant In the Sells-Floto circus and thereby set the animal Into a crate that ended In his death is one f the human handicaps. It has Its counterpat in the fact that as the wild stampede of the elephant suggests, msn Is the only one of all s tha animals who will use tobacco. OREGON AND THE EXPOSITION to tSoRTLANQ voted 8afuYday A shoulder two thirds of the cost of the 1I2S exposition, provided con tributors make good their pledge to raise U.000.000 bylsubacrlpUon. Tha Utter should be dona before the state la asked to vote. . Tha Portland vote was 4 to 1. In a state election. It would probably be even a larger proportionate ma jority. , 4 i Judged by tha vote In Portland, the etate will probably be less antag onists than has been supposed. It should, be favorable, for tha people who coma to the exposition, travel ing largely by automobile, will see modest request of the Chinese dele gation. Two proposals are made: (1) That China be allowed to work out her own destiny in her own way; (2) that she be freed from the spheres of Influence placed over her In the past by other nations. In public, these proposals have been accepted "in principle"; in pri vate, there will be reservations and attempts at bargaining to defeat If not destroy the principle. Behind the scenes, the reservations and bar gains are already discreetly suggest ed among the negotiators. Take the attitude of Japan toward China. It is exemplified in the de mands made in 19 IS. In groups, they are thus classified: 1. Japan to have economic conces sions in Manchuria. Economic ad vantages are an innocent proposal But the hard lines of history have taught that economic control ulti mately means political control. 2. Japan to have very important concessions in Shantung. 3. Japan to have certain advisory influence with the head of the police in China. 4. Japan to have 80 per cent of the iron and steel output of China and to have a voice in fixing the price. 5. Japan to have guarantees that China will never alienate any of the harbors or islands along her coast line. Other nations had made similar inroads on Chinese national sover eignty. Japan had the example set for her. She may have gone a bit farther than the others because of her own necessities for raw materials and through her need of areas on which her increasing population may have room to exist To aid her peaceful penetration of China, Japan publishes newspa pers, in various Chinese cities, print ed in the Chinese language, but edit ed by Japanese. The movement is recognized by many Chinese and is resisted by boycotts against Japanese goods and in other ways. The proposal of Admiral Kato of the Japanese delegation at the con ference to modify the Hughes naval program is pretty certain indication that from his delegation there will come In secret committee work many contentions with reference to China. It. was unfortunate for the confer ence that Premier Hara was assassin ated. He was the voice, of the Jap anese mass. It was by sheer abil ity that he had won the premier ship. The huge petitions urging dis armament with 1,000,000 signatures, carried to Washington by a Japanese messenger, is token of what the Jap anese mass wants at Washington. But Admiral Kato, who originated the famous eight - eight naval pro gram, is out of sympathy with that voice, and therein the conference has a problem. Secretary Hughes recog nised it when he Issued a reply which is a near ultimatum to Ad miral Kato and his formulas. - The Integrity of China is a neces sary step to peace in the Pacific. If her territory and her great economic resources are to remain as potential booty for nations that want to grab them, a war in the Pacific will be Inevitable. The way to avert that war Is to pcAvlde for the integrity of China and to do It now in the Washington conference. silently, quickly and unseen. He has power and he employs that power when power strikes the balance. And he usually attains his ends. It was M. Briand and. his oratory that saved the cabinet, perhaps France, in a political crisis early in the war alter all seemed , lost and after other strong men had failed. It was M. Briand and his diplomacy that replaced Joffre In command, of the armies of France when the "Lion of Chantilly" was on the crest of his popularity, without a ripple on the waters of state. It was M. Briand and his resources that retained the power of the civil government when its authority was threatened by the military. It was M. Briand and his skill that did much to bring Roumania and Italy into the war on the side of the allies, that avoided peaceably a threatened railroad strike at a criti cal time, that engineered the separa tion act between church and state without bloodshed when civil war I was predicted. With him the arms conference will have to reckon. With his aid the conference could be reduced 'to im potence. And with his aid it can be made an event to shine forth in history as marking the end of the deadly reign of bloated armaments and blasting war. When a tree loses a limb in a silver freeze It should be able to console itself. It is much better off than a man, in similar position. The tree can grow another limb. WATER'S WONDERS A PATCH of sagebrush 25 years ago is now the "Apple Capital of the, World." Thus, in a sentence, the recent history of the Wenatchee district is related. It was a barren and unproductive area until men brought water to it Then the land became fit for the plow, the soil became fit for pro duction and the area became fit for homes. This year the production of the Wenatchee district was 11,000,000 boxes. Three - hundred and twenty trains of 50 cars each would have been required to haul this great crop to market It Is estimated that 30,- 000 families could live for a year on the proceeds of Wenatchee's apple yield. Twenty-five years ago Wenatchee district's best product was sage brush. This yeafa third of the fancy boxed apples produced in the United States came from Wenatchee. The value of Wenatchee's apple crop alone is estimated at 325,000,000. It has not been so many years since the Yakima district was also a sagebrush desert. Yakima's apple the power that virtually projected him upon the scene of action. To have presented that information would haje been to take cognizance of the existence and the attainment of one, (he mention of whose name would have brought forth a demonstration rivaling that evoked by the thrilling disclosure of the proposed naval holiday, and would have disturbed the carefully considered psychological situation. . Everyone knows, however, that the Washington idea was conceived as an offset to the meeting proposed by the League. Everyone in that noted assem bly and every intelligent onlooker knows iiat the whole proceeding was and is a political strategem compelled by the fateful utterances and momentous achievements of our great war president Woodrow Wilson. Mr. Hughes' omission is glaring ; his silence is eloquent When America's man of destiny made war upon war in the name of democracy, when he said, "The people of the world want peace, and they want It now, not merely by conquest of arms but by agreement of mind" ; when he asserted and reasserted that America would not disappoint the "high hopes of the world," be was spokesman for the world's better self and the accents of his voice have not died away. ... But Mr. Hughes made no allusion to this. When Mr. Wilson so fused the sentiment of the world and focused its thought that he drew practically all the c.vilized nations into a covenant guar anteeing peace and providing for a con ference upon limitation of arms, in which all of the 40 or more contracting parties to the covenant Should participate, he accomplished a feat the scope and mag nitude of which are unparalleled in the annals of statesmanship. But Mr. Hughes did not mention this. Furthermore, when the fierce passions engendered by war and political strife vented themselves upon Mr. Wilson him self, the, unswerving rectitude, the pa tience and forbearance exhibited by him, the fidelity with which he kept the cov enant he had made, proved him to be possessed, in himself, of the virtue he sought to confirm among nations, there by enhancing his achievements with a moral force which appeals powerfully to the hearts of men. Mr. Hughes was too well aware of this fact -to risk the mentioning of that name in his speech at the opening Of the conference. He did mention the name of Elihu Root however, and re ferred to an official communication re garding disarmament which Root made tc the czar of Russia. That name and that fact, to the discriminating mind of Mr- Hughes, are more important than are the name and the facts he suppressed. f CommoirieatioBa aent ta Tba Journal far pablicaaoa is thfc departaaaat ahoold ba vrittva aa aaly ana tida at tha paper, ahonld not ax eaad 80S worda ia teacth, and ant ba Dcacd ky tha writer, whoa b3 ad&raat is fall matt ascaeagany Um contribution. 1 THE WAY OF A CHILD That Way Has Been the Way of the World's Leaders, Says This Writer. Portland. Nov. 18. To the Editor of The Journal I wish you would tell those peace conference delegates in Washing ton what they deserve Accepts, "in spirit and in principle.' These words of Mr. Balfour; in answering to the Hughes plan for .limiting of navies, are hiding an old diplomatic secret, and also revealing a great suspicion which pre vails between the hearts of all the mem bers of the Washington peace confer ence. They sound also, like If there would come the God Almighty to guar' an tee them ail their safety . from the aggression of their own hearts, there could be then a complete disarmament of all the world. But from the point of view of my own belief this will never happen, because I believe that the God Almighty doesn't owe anything to the humanity. For the reason, the God has provided us with a conscience and a thinking power through which we must work out our own ways towards the perfection, and bring ourselves again in closer relation of the righteousness and back to the highness from which per haps our first ancestor has fallen when he became desirous to be free from di rect governing of his creator, or we shall suffer forever. The Washington peace conference shows that the civilization, after so many thousands of years, is yet like a little child which once deserted its own sweet home with a thought of finding the bet ter place and more liberty by doing its own ways ; and after the long suffer ing became to realize that there is no place like home, but still its selfishness doesn't allow it to concede to the con science and choose once the right road, but on its way back to .beg parental for giveness, planning a false story how the Sam, John, Francis, Joe, and so on, should be blamed for its desertion. Ain't it a funny way to show an honest heart with such an explanation? The outcome of the Washington peace con ference will show that I am not entirely wrong. Just watch it M. Kovacevich. SIDELIGHTS Tha mall trains wfU bereafter guarded by marines, and If the bandits rtmember what happened to the Ger mans at Chateau-Thierry they'll lie low and take no chances. Eugene Register. SMALL CHANGE Gratitude is gratia, but It's generally as hard to collect as a bad bilL a a a That Country ii In a furnmnl aan m. heavy editorial. And most of it is ille gal, too : ijia;anvul) Courier. The - automobile isn't as sure of its footing on asphalt aa the old famllv steed was oa a muddy road. WWW Having obeyed the suggestion that folks who live in glass houses should not throw atoned some hiva found that thav cu iwi din wim impunity. the same sudden ferocity aithe storms L'", ""d or me. in eitner case it is well to ba - r V There are 24.420 acraa of uaapproprl ated and unreserved land la Bentoi county, according to the United States tana omce. ro occasion ror anyoooy being without a home hare. CorvalUs Gazetts-Ttmes. a a If the parole and pardon were taken away from Judges, governors and presi dents there would be more of an even shake up of big and tittle criminals and The Oregon Country Xartaa OREGON Two and a half mlUtavne la the valsstlon of West LI so and a I mill tax is proposed ta the budget for swat year. The Yamhill County PubUe Health aa aoctallon u orrinliml at MrlalnnviUa Bentoa ;last week.. Mrs. Jan ale D. afUler of New. forewarned and forearmed. A little cloudbifrst a couple of floods and a silver thaw, to say nothing of a vicious wind and a dropping thermometer what are these when there's a dance on the program? a The president proclaims Thanksgiving a day for devotion and thanksgiving, but far too many will make it a day for de vouring everything in sight, with rarely m niuuftj t VI giving or VI T Tlf r f s We might better buy food and rai ment for the free use of our neonle than to give it to them in the form of wages paid for their work in building imple ments with which to kill their fellows It really Is a shame that the 'laying on of hands" , has to be omitted as a cor rective scheme when a boy approaches man's estate. A little "strap oil" now and then would do a heap of good for a lot of full-grown offenders. Well, if we don't build any new bat tleships for 10 years we might afford to cancel thoee foreign loans. And if those foreign nations quit building battleships they can well afford to pay us what they owe so the question would still be un settled. tugene Guard. If those who are criticising the officers for lack of moonshine prosecutions would do their part and tell what they know the officers would be better able to en force the law. The trouble Is there are too many goody-goody people counte nancing lam breakers and obstructing the process of the law. Baker JJemocrat Father was a boy not so long ago. Son will be a man in a few brief years. Hare is rare ground for sympathy and under standing and for companionship to begin early and last long. One week of such intimacy is better than nothing at all. but one week In itself amounts to little. It is the permanency of its ideals that counts. Albany Pemocrat MORE OR LESS PERSONAL Random Observations About T.own by However, a reflecting public mind will in the end arrive at the truth. The arms convention and .the secretary's con spicuous part therein are indeed a re sponse to the call of distressed hu manity, but it should be noted that the cry of humanity is inarticulate, and it may be inaudible to the ear of official government until an individual human voice articulates its plea and speaks at close range. Woodrow Wilson spoke ; and that is how it happened. And what will be the outcome? The Washington conferenca will not be fu tile, for the reason that the Versailles conference was not futile, Mr. Wells toJ the contrary notwithstanding. Those who kept the UniteTl States out of the League of Nations are not only staging a political play but are endeavor ing to discharge an obligation. They Intend more than a mere gesture ; they RICH MAN, POOR MAN A Comparison of Taxes Paid Either Class on a Sales Basis. Portland, Nov. 21. The Editor of The Journal Because the Oregonlan re fuses to print unfavorable comment on its misleading editorials I ask your favor to print this analysis of its editorial In its issue of November 20 entitled "Re volt on the Tax Bill," wherein it says of bolting Republican senators support ing the 50 per cent income tax as against Harding's recommended 32 per cent that they did so because of the "folks at home," whom it calls "ignorant" constituents. This insult to the whole Democratic party, and to the intelligent part of the Republican party, whose intelligence is marred only by their connection with the Republican party, should not go un challenged. I therefore offer this brief analysis for general consideration. In that editorial is an analysis of the proportionate taxpaying of two men. One is rich. He spends 31,000.000 and on a 1 per cent sales tax basis pays $1000 in taxes, while the poor man who spends but 1 1000 pays but $10 in sales tax. Sure ! How wise and obliging is the Oregonian. To every rich man with ability to spend $1,000,000 there are some 100,000 worklngmen whose spending abil ity limits them to the $10 tax. making their proportionate aggregate taxes paid 31,000,000 to the rich man's $1000. The percentage paid by the workingman is 1000 to 1 of this tax bill. And the Oregonian has the assurance to call this man ignorant who opposes a sales tax. C. W. Barzee. D. C. Browneli of Umatilla is still a risitor in Portland. He 6tarted home Saturday night but when he got as far as the station he had a chanrs of heart and decided that Phil Metschan's hos pitality beat being stalled on a train somewhere en route to Eastern Oregon. Mrs. M. S. Taylor, who has been con fined by illness for some weeks in a Portland hospital, has returned to her home in Newberg. a Mr. and Mrs. Edward Pompe of Frohmai Station, in Linn county, are Portland visitors. J. A. Jensen of Tillamook is a Port land visitor. He has recently leased the Alderman mill at Garibaldi. .... Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Brigham of Eu gene were over-Sunday visitors in Port land. ... Mrs. A. M. Tillson of Grass Valley Is a guest of the Cornelius. c. w. visitor. Thomas of Salem is a Portland Noma Fultz of Bend is registered at the Cornelius. ... G. C. Drewett of Corvallis Is at the Seward. ... Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Brown of Astoria are guests of the Seward. ... Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Green of Astoria are domiciled at the Seward. ... Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Douglass of Myrtle Point are Portland visitors. ... J. R Ladd of Corvallis Is transacting business in Portland. ... MraE. J. Wilson of Prineville is a guest of the Seward. ... C F. Barela. registering from London, is at the Portland. ... A. C. Dixon, lumber magnate of Eu gene, is a guest of the Portland. ... Roland and Enoch Miller of Eugene are guests of the Portland. ... C. W. Iddings of Eugene is at the Seward. Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Colt of Cleveland and elsewhere in the East are spending a week or 10 days in Portland. Mr. Coit is president of the Colt Lyceum bureau and of the Coit-AIber Chautau qua company. From Portland they will go for a brief visit In Los Angeles. ... Miss Margaret DeYoe has returned from a trip through Eastern Oregon that included brief visits at Pendleton and other points In Umatilla county. ... Mrs. F M. Shutt whose husband was formerly a law enforcing sheriff of Mor row county, with L. G. Shutt is a guest of the Cornelius. ... Among Condon people visiting in Port land are E. H Kendall. Jack Sturgis and Mrs. C. 1L Nellon. ... Albany people, visitors la Portland, in clude Tom Powers, C. R Edgar. Miss Lucile Chesman and Walter Worrell. ... Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Devine of Lexing ton, Morrow county, are registered at the Cornelius. ... John snd Elizabeth Baker and G. G. Emery Of Hood River are registered at the Seward. ... E. L Campbell of Eugene Is at the Im perial. ... J. A. Churchill of Salem is a Portland business visitor. a . a MT. and Mrs. A. L. Baker of Mill City are at the Imperial. ... Mr. and Mrs. Nelson P. Howell of Roeeburg are guests of the Imperial. ... H. M. Browneli of Eugene Is a bus! ness visitor to the metropolis. ... H. C Atwell of Forest Grove is at the Imperial. a a Frank J. Ward of Salem is a business visitor In Portland. ... Mrs. N. A." Lockard of Astoria is so journing at the Seward. .... Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Griffin of Astoria are Portland visitors. ... Mrs. W. T. Carrolf and Miss Lucille Carroll of Eugene are at the Seward. berg is preanteat A big gold strike is reported on Soda creek near Huntington, free gold being found sticking out oC the quarts ledge ta nuggets and threads. Arrangement a have been com pleted for the erection of an annex to the bar of Battery A at Clackamas for the horses of that organisation. Invading the alfalfa fields of raarhers tn the Dachutee aectioo 18 miles from Bend, deer were seen erasing an org the cattle on several ranches last woes. A paror-l poa delivery a rvlco in the boalneM district haa been launched tn Hood River. A clerk has been assigned four hours daily to the delivery of par cels. Hanrey Bice, a Lane county man ac ruaed of the theft of cattle valued at $SO0 at Eugene a year ago. has been located atpakalla prison farm. Barnaby. B. C 9 Noi one case of tuberculosis was found among 1100 head of dairy rows teatad In Western Lena county bv Federal Tester Loder. This is regarded as a remarkable record. The board of managers of Pacific col lege at Newberg haa added to the fac ulty of the college Miss Mary H Pen nington, who will serve as assistant In English. Mrs. A. C. Marsters of Roeeburg haa been alerted president of tha Women's Foreign Missionary society of the South ern Oregon conference. Methodist Epis copal church. Rav Prultt. a Medford vnuna man I iting In Oklahoma, writes that he, his wife and two children ware Injured In a train wrern near uutnnc Dkla,. Novem ber 10. Mrs. Prultt waa badly hurt H. Cato, Deschutes county's oldest vet eran of the World war. has received word from London that ha Is heir to a tio.oco estate left by a sister. He will start on his twelfth trip across the Atlantic In the next few weeks. WASHINGTON At an auction sale near Winona last week a bunch of unbroken horses was sold at the rate of $11 s dosen. Frank Meldon. agsd IS. is under arrest st Prosser. charged with a statutory offense against a 7-year-old girt. Paving of the state hlrhwav link nnrfi of Colfax was finished last week and the road has been opened for travel. Frank King. IS Tears old. an ex . soldier, is in a Tacotna hospital suffering irom a nroxen neck received nearly a month ago. ' Plana have been completed for tha erection of a corrugated Iron warehouse at Aberdeen on the site of the old Icehouse in F Street The financial condition of Mason county is excellent s recent report show ing total assets or J ls. 744.17 and liabili ties of only I78.50 II. Albert C Hujrhea, prominent Pioneer merchant and lumberman of Eastern Washington, died at Almlra last week, following a short Illness. The Puget Sound navy yard has issued a call for mechanics, stevedores, ap prentices and laborers at Bremerton snd at the Keyport torpedo station. The first oil lease In Chelan county has Just been -placed on file, Indicating a prospective campaign for OIL The lease covers about 1000 acres west of. We natchee. The Yakima County Community feder ation, cornpoaed of commercial bodies Of Yakima, Benton and Kittitas counties, was organised at Grandvtew last Tues day night Notwithstanding the slump In wheat prices, bank deposits in Spokane have passed the S4S.000.000 mark. At the time of the September call they stood at $44,780,177. A board of appeals to review griev ances of disabled war veterans relative to their government compensation ewarda or vocational training privileges has been organised at SeatUc. Reports that elk are being casghtered In the Olympics for their teeth alone, have caused Frank C. Terk of the Port Angeles commercial club to start a cam paign to discourage the wearing of elk teeth charms snd pins. production this year reached 14,000 j wish to play their role as grandly and carloads, not to mention 1S0O cars Of pears, 12015 cars; of peaches, 150 cars of cherries, 450 cars of plums, prunes and berries, and 400 cars of melons and cantaloupes. These are but two brief chapters In the great story of reclamation. In spite of them, reclamation has doubters and even opponents. Some- of them are in congress, where they throw up obstacles in the way of the McNary reclamation bill, me of the most constructive measures ever pro posed In the congress of the United States. The United States veterans bu reau. In charge of training .disabled ex-service men In the Northwest, haa a division devoted to placing wound ed veterans on the land and to se curing their Instruction in agriculture on their own little farms. The di vision is headed by aa Oregon boy. BAD EYESIGHT IN ACCIDENTS 'T'HAT there is defective eyesight -a- in 25, 000,000 01 the 42,000,000 men and women employed in indus try In America is the astonishing es timate of the committee of Federated American Engineering Societies, ap pointed by Herbert Hoover to con sider the elimination of waste in in The committee holds that defec tive vision is a prolific cause of in dustrial waste, . It places the amount of this waste as equal in extent to that due to faulty management, idle ness of .plant and equipment, ill health or accident It Is perfectly feasible, to remedy ordinary defects of eyesight and, in view of its tremendous cost to pro ductive Industry, the committee urges employer and employe to co operate in making all possible corrections.- The report of the committee, dis closing so widespread a prevalence of impaired vision, raises the query of how many traffic accidents come from the same cause. And with accidents increasing in an ascending ratio with Increases in the number of automobiles in use, may a time not come, and may it not be here now, when some test of eye sight may be necessary in granting licenses to automobile drivers : beneficently as their self-imposed res ervations and limitations will allow. They are determined, however, that their art, so studiously arranged in every particular, may appear to he a main eent instead of what it reallyVis. an episode in the unfolding of a great drama of world democracy, in which Woodrow Wilson is the great protago nist The arms conference will succeed be cause America wishjes it to succeed. America has not forgotten the conse cration of her sacrificial moments ; has not forgotten the vision glimpsed through the eyes of her great leader, of a fair city whose alabaster walls and gleaming palaces should be the abode of all nations and in whose midst should be a temple of concord. America, the free, the young, will not dwell In the habitation of the old. She would build the new. THE "POOR" RAILROADS A Correspondent Compares Freight Bills With Values of Articles. Stayton, Nov. 18. To the Kditor of The Journal The poor railroads seem to have a good friend in President Hard ing. I should think if our president can find a way to raise $500,000,000 for the poor railroads he could find a way to raise a mite for the boys that fought in the World war. I often wonder where they get that stuff, namely, the. "poor" railroads. I recently had a minimum carload of machinery shipped from the East The poor railroads charged $791.04. About three weeks ago I had a machine weighing about 1000 pounds shipped from the East The cost of the machine was $150. The freight bill was $154.40. Can you beat it? The company we bought the machine from thought the freight would be about $40. A carload of lumber shipped from a small town in this state sold for something over $300. The freight cost almost $500. A Subscriber. Curious Bits of Information Gleaned From Curious Places OBSERVATIONS AND IMPRESSIONS OF THE JOURNAL MAN By Fred Lockley (Tha romantic story of Sacajawea i here once mora told. Mr. Lockley hiring obtained frcm tha moat reliable aoorce a document that prorides nnmeroua detail of tha brea of tha "Bird Woman," her husband and her children. Stella M. Drumm Is librarian of the Missouri Historical society. She lives in tho historic old city of St Louis. We have had considerable correspondence about historical matters, as the history of Oregon is closely interwoven with that of Missouri. Most of the emigrant trains for Oregon started from St Jo seph, Independence or Westport. Men from Kentucky. Virginia. Tennessee, Ohio and Indiana moved westward, set tling in the "Platte" purchase, or at other points in Missouri, and from that van- "' "T , tag Point formed the vanguard of U salary ' SB The Harmless, Useful Toad Lillian Trott in Our - Dumb Animals. The toad must catch his own meals. He scorns dead food. Ha must see it move to be sure it has not slipped the bonds of life and begun to spoil. In a day and a night he captures enough to stuff his stomach full four times, al though If he had to he could exist with out eating longer than any other crea ture. He eats caterpillars, moths, wee vils, snails, bugs, worms, spiders, beetles, grasshoppers, crickets, many kinds of winged insects, even wasps, and . innumerable other noxious pests, and in six months he will pwt 20,000 of them where they can harm no man's garden. Reckoning on every oae of these working a mill's worth of harm to somebody's crop, one toad prevents $20 worth of injury, and we know that one mill is a low value to set upon such individual damage. In some countries toads sell to gardeners up to $15 a head, and are shielded from prowling scaven gers the same as any domestic stock. A toad that adopts you and your gar den and makes his home in your door yard has claim on your protection. His homing instinct is strong, and you may count oa his clinging to life and your premie oa at least for a decade unless he is stoned to death, and the chances are he will outlive you, for a generation as we reckon human life, or even 40 years, is not beyond the possibilities of a contented toad. And he asks no favors. not even shelter when wintry storms sweep the fields bare of the vegetation that affords him provender. He will The bird world, like the human,, has its criminals, and no better example could be given, says a writer in the New York Evening Post than the kea or mountain parrot of New Zealand. This bird's epicurean tastes proved its undoing and launched it on its career of crime. Disdaining coarser foods, it has a penchant for the kidney fat bf sheep. It alights on the back of a sheep or a Iamb and with its curved, cruel beak tears through wool and flesh until it reaches the kidneys, while the un happy animal, after staggering weakly around for a time, collapses and dies. The ea is supposed to have first formed this curious taste through hovering about slaughter yards where sheep were killed. Once having tasted kidney fat it .became as voracious in its pursuit as the drug addict seeking dope. Finally it began to do murder in order to satisfy its de sires. Its carnivorous tastes have re sulted in a bounty being placed on its head and it is being rapidly shot out that vast slow-moving fleet or praine schooners which made their way from the frontier of civilization ever west ward to the borders of the western sea. A day or so sgo I received from Miss Drumm a book of intense interest to Oregon. enUtled "Journal of a Fur Trad ing Expedition on the Upper Missouri in 1K12-1S." It is the "log." or dally record, of J. C. Luttig, the clerk of the Missouri Fur company. The journal has been eolted by Miss Drumm and It gives a graphic picture of the' incidents and ac cidents, the hardships and adventures. cf those early day traders and travelers to and through the Indian country. The frontispiece is a picture of Sakakawea (the spelling Is hers, not mine). Fascin ating as is the Journal. I am going to confine this article to but one subject and that Is the discussion in the volume of Sacajawea, her owner, Toussalnt Charbonneau, and her son, Toussalnt example, Charbonneau decided to settle dewn and enjoy life In the settlements. ana bought land In St Ferdinand town ship, on the Missouri river. Tiring of civiiisauon. he sold this land for $100 to William Clark, March 2. 1811. Three days prior to this sale ha had purchased 60 pounds of "hard blsault" of Aususte Chouteau. On the deed filed in St Louis to the land sold to William Clark the name of Francois Rubldou appears. On August 2L 18I. Charbonneau. at that time 80 years old. arrived at St Louis. without a dollar, to apply to Joshua Piicher, commissioner of Indian affairs, for tha payment of his quarterly salary as government interpreter to the Man- dans. He bad traveled 1600 miles to a quarter, so Uncle Jeff "Snow Says When Old Billy MacGregor managed to make a fortune spec la tin' in cotton and mules right after the Civil war down on the Red river in Arkansaw he sent his boy, Washington Pitt to a hlfalutin college up north and lowed him $200 a month fer expenses and re sponded generous to the 'rush telegrams and sight drafts that Wash fired in extry. Then all of a sudden the old man died snd the lawyers couldnt find enough of the estate fer to pay the debts, let alone helpin' Wash on his oollege ex penses. A old farmer uncle hvMlxsotrry seen him through, howsumever. to the tune of $400 a year, and no more. Wash had to cot out the etceteries and git down to business, If the people of Ore gon wants to git taxes rejuced they'd better cut off all our legislatures and councils to list so much a year, no mat ter Sow they holler they can't make it. sad thereby make 'em cut out the etceteries and frills. THE REWARD Praam Ufa Our statesmen- declared that we fotight provide himself with a winter barrow 1 ta get nothing out of the war : and then just as easily as he hides under a damp j made a present of it to the soldiers. Major Piicher paid him" $100 for six months' services and informed him his services would no longer be required. Smallpox had wiped, out the Mandan tribe, so the government no longer needed an interpreter there. "Sakajawea" Is a Shoshoni word meaning "boat-launcher." while "Saka kawea" means. In their tongue. "Bird Woman," so probably this Is the correct form of spelling for the Indian girl whose statue stands in the City park In Portland. LutUg in his journal speaks of the Bird Woman as being "the best woman at the fort" Bracke&rldge. who made a trip up the Missouri in 1811. also met her and says the wife of the Frenchman who, with his squaw, ac companied Lewis and Clark. "Is a good creature, of a mild and genUs disposi tion, greatly attached to the whites." She died December 20. 1812. leaving her son Touiaaiant and a baby girl, Llxzette Charbonneau Jr. As the references to! "fj-fc L V..,1: b.rouht On August It 1811, Luttig spplied to these three historic characters that mean so much . to the student of Oregon his tory are too long to reproduce I will in my own language give a brief account of them from the many authorities quoted. When, Sacajawea was 10 years old she was captured by the Gros Ventre In diana Charbonneau bought her from her Indian owners and she became his slave and the mother of his children. Charbonneau, the purchaser of the "Bird Woman," was born In Canada In 1759. In 1792-94 he was in the employ of the Northwest company at Pine Fort, on the Assinlboine. Two years later he was the trader for this same company at Metaharta, on Knife river", with the Slln nctarees. The year before the coming of . Lewis and Clark he was with Alex-, ander Henry, In charge of Fort Pem bina. When the Lewis and Clark party reached the central village of the Minne tarees on Knife river. In tha winter of 1464-05, they found Charbonneau. Cap tain Lewis employed him as an interpre ter at $23 a month. In speaking of him he sayS: "Charbonneau, though a man ot no peculiar merit; was useful as an interpreter only, in which capacity he discharged his duties with good faith." Charbonneau lived among the Mandan Irdians more than Is years aud during this time he was frequently employed by Indian traders, hunters and others, and seemed to. give satisfaction. From the old records in 8t Louis much light Is thrown upon Charbonneau. For IDAHO Firerom defecUve wiring a few days sgo completely destroyed the cattle bams at the Vnlversity of Idaho, caus ing a loss of $16,000. Dr. William Knapp. veteran of the Civil war and a practicing phyaielan at Hope for many years. Is dead In that city after a brief illness. Frank Dlsno and Oscar Grow II have been placed under srret In connection with tie shooting of J. Orito. a Japanese, at Glenns Ferry oo the night of Novem ber t The Gooding Cattle Grazing associa tion has brought bark approximately 1000 head of cattle which have been on the semmer range in the Sawtooth na tional reserve. Minidoka county farmers have formed an, organization to take advantage of the opportunities o flared by the war finance corporation toward the purchase of dairy cows. Contract has been let for surfacing with crushed rock 8.7 miles of highway known as tha Oreer hlU in the Clear water highway district nr Lewis Km. Cost of the work la $14.9:4. The reclamation bond commission has spjwoved s $150,000 bond issue of the Poat Falls Irrigation district In Kootenai county. The area embraces 8SM acres, water to be taken from Harden lake. the orphans court st St Louis for ap pointment aa guardian of Toussalnt Charbonneau Jr., a boy 10 years old. and Liszette, a girl about oae year old. Toussalnt Charbonneau Jr however, was only t years old at this time. The court appointed William Clark guardian of the wo children of Clark's guide, the Bird Woman. Sacajawea was 26 years eld at tha Urns of her death. Toussalnt per son, was educated by the Rev. P. Nell, a Catholic priest in St Louis. In listing the expenses of his guardianship Captain William Clark mentions the purchase of ' one Roman history, one dictionary, Scott's Lessons, paper, quills, slate and pencils. The son of the Bird Woman was in Idaho In 1830 and was with Bridger at Fort Bridger tn the sum mer of 1832. In 1842 be was em ployed by Bent and Vrain. Sage In his book. "Rocky Moentaln Life. published in 1857, says Toussalnt Charbonneau "proved to be a gentleman bf superior information,'" and he further says that tn addition to several Indian tongue he could converse in English. Spanish. French and 'German, and that bis mind was wsll stored with choice reading. On April 22. 1842, st W eat port Mo., there was baptised Vlctotra VerUfeullle, daughter of Joseph VerUfeullle and Elizabeth Charbonneau. who. as a baby, bad been caHsd Lizxette by her young mother, the Bird Woman, the lover of the white race, the slave of Charbon neaa and the guide of Lewis and Clark. .... What I Like Best In The Journal L M. ED ELM AN. Blind Slough, Orj We like every thing In The Journal, but best of all the way it expresses tha people's opinions. We have read The Journal for XI years. We particularly approve it stand on disarmament. MRS. H TUCKER, 151 Third street The adverti se gments. L. R. - LANG, 106S East Twenty-first street north Editorials. "Bed Time Sto ries, markets and comics. if. B. GREEN. 810 Smith avenue Its independent and unhesitating courage in re spect to the labor question, the recent railroad strike and the disarmament conference. O. C. BELIEN. $60 Clinton street The market page, the funnies, and the honest edito rial appeals to gentle nature and finer instincts. E. G. LaFOLLETTE, 111 East Ninety-third atreet Its many good features, its-Interest in education. Its kindness toward the common people, and the general news for quickness of report, correct . ness and variety. MRS. F. CHE8MORB. 2914 Sixteenth street north The advertisement O. KKIPER, TI1V4 Savter street The magazine section. What do yoa approve most in The Journal? Youfj opinion, to be published, must be aooom- panied by nam and address. v A. i i