G THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING. MARCH .19, IS22. a vs iv nrpr w nw h t re ml w h f a ri.ii -X. . jackson . rmJjAjT 7 IB rsJm. W eaeitidrnt. be dwcrfal do '! nre aa ye. ok1 a trie wwnojwj 'TuMh. eeery w sday n Waaxtar womlnt at Tb Jmmal bvJlding. Hrwlni and- I amain rt. I'ncUsnd Own. tore) at Um pUrfftc ,1 Portland. Oncooj I rlcu wates lanmgh to Btia M mcoo4 lew Butter. !FEr.r.rilrts K Uaia Till t All MnnnU re-het Anlnaulie MO-it, by theee number. fcEPRKSENTA TTTrrWTTTTrfTET3TN7r T1VE-Bnfatin Kewtawr Co.. Hranswica I walVling. 22 rifth aae, hew Ion; vw I Me lien bnlMtn. Chima. Wriino oAr Rr.pBE.sENTAtmt M. C. I - l a im. Kmaiurr boildlns. I rraaeaww: TIU limliKI rniklin. Los Aav I m-iw rarKJ fenildiM. Seattle. TTig fttlfcftftjflfiUfijI at hwmt the right to W( HnUn mo which. It ilmu oMee- ',1 Uneabi. It ale will (u prist J ooPT that i , I an way aiaralatss. md'nt aaattar of that li ran Mot readily be t-Ttsl a ertTerustn. By M'BeRlVTtOf BATES rrrWf, I'rty ind onntry. On WHAT IS GOING ON? mil y Asn ti vniT I . .lftlO Binnth .65 i.inr I . ll'NniT IUm l I .10'On week $" .Oi ' month 4BI 1ST MAIL. ALL RATKH PAVAiriJ! TW ADVANCE I . KAILT AND SUNDAY ! On er. ...... ...OOiThre wjflnths. . . Iz.SS Bit Months .Z3 on snnntn is BllMI lOnly) r year. "1 swaths. . . , Three ssootli. , .$1.00 . l.7 . 1.60 WEEKLY AND SUNDAY Om yam' I.80 M PA1I.T ' (Without Bonuay) Ona year $.0O iipii monuu j M'ThfM months... 1.78 Ona month i .601 WfKI T.Y ;i (Brry Ttaonaaoayi Ona war tl.00 Hit monthi BO These ratM apply only In Uie Wan. IlAfM in baUra Mints famiahed on appHe- nn. Maka fmitUa-ee by Ueoey Order. Kzpraaa Oder or Draft. If ynor poetoffV la not a moMT-ordrr office, 1 or 2 -cant itsmpe will ba aerepted. ' Maka All remittances payable to Tha Jnaml Puhltehtna Cornnaot. Portlsndi Onion. ( 'otaiantnafiona sent to Tha Journal for mbntloa la thta dcrrtnnt ahoold ba written n only ona aid of Uia pa par. ahoukl not axcoad tOO wonla In kncth and mnat b aignad by tha wriur, wboaa mall adrtraaa in full But accoav ajany tha onntiibotiffn. ) t; !! there underground influences at work to undermine common school In Portland, for example, It is Impossible to house the school children. Every proposition to provide; money for buildings is voted down. "Who is voting against the free public schools? !';':"- ; in this town there Is the spectacle of cheaply constructed portable schoolhouses, more flimsy in their structure than most country school- houses. They are built because money cannot be obtained for sufficient permanent buildings to shelter the children.. They are built with the knowledge that they are temporary and that after a time they will go into the discard and become a part of the enormous public waste. A time will come when a disgusted people win realize that the' most precious thing in America is the free public school. Then they will ask themselves, "Why were aft these flimsy buildings built at large cost only to be thrown away and be charged to profit and. loss? And then they will ask themselves, "What have the common schools and the high schools of Portland done to encounter this opposition and neglect?" i Out at Pendleton Wednesday several speakers before the tax investigat ing commission attacked the public schools. One said there are too many high schools in Umatilla county. Another declared that too much is taught in the public schools. i Are the people of America being "overtaught" ? Twenty-four and six- tenths per cent of the draft men in America were illiterates.. War statistics show that the Intellectual level of the minds of America, reduced to an average, is that of a child of 12 to 13 years. . It means that we are con ducting a stupendous system of self-government in America with minds which, balancing the illiterates with the educated, are, the minds of merely well Informed children. Are the people "overtaught"? Are there too many free schools? In several European countries there has been widespread confiscation of property. Illiteracy is always and everywhere the basis of mob action. The demand for anarchy, with its abolition of all laws, comes from illiter ates. Nations rise and fall because peoples do not attain an intellectual level high enough to be able to mike their governments enduring.. The wrecks of nations and the ruins of civilizations strewn all along the path way of history are a story xf illiterate and ignorant peoples. As soon as Washington, Jefferson and the other Revolutionary patriots established a free government they established also a system of free educa tlon. Why? Because they realized that widely diffused education, brousrbt free to the people, was the only way to enable the newly created republic to survive. But in Oregon, in the twentieth century, with the country suffering from radicalism and hysteria, with the struggle for the survival of white civilization coming on, there is an assault all along the line on free educa tion, from the common schools up.. It will be a good thing if the people of this state will stop and take stock of. what is going on. most drowned those aboard. The blowers were swamped and some of the men . were almost asphyxiated by engine gas. "Though not a man had slept in .36 hours they, on ar rival, went almost at once Into battle. And . it was not in faith and trust but in doubt and fear' that the government sent ' the Monitor into action. Official skepticism all but complete, and the Monitor fought tinder orders so weighted L with caution, Ericsson's biographer says, that the result was. as to the Merrimac itself, sr drawn battle, although by aggressiveness it could' have been sunk in 20 minutes, and Confederate officers who knew the Merrimac's weak nesses, wondered why the Monitor didn't do it. when they saw the work of the marvelous 11 -inch guns in the "cheesebox" and the nimble ma neuvers of the "raft" about its bulky and sluggish foe. One Confederate critic, a witness PRESS OF OREGON I CONGRATULATES ; THE JOURNAL Twentieth Anniversary Evokes Highly Appreciated Expressions of Approval and Good WU1 The Journal's Con Sistentiy Followed Purpose to Serve the People Recognised and Lauded by Sincere and Faithful Fellow-Workers. A maa'a fiat oar ihooid ba to trofcl U reproaches of hi own - bemrt; bis next, to eetdo til eeosoxas of the world. If the 1 interferes with tb former, it ought to be entirely eeclected: bnt otherwtae thor eeanot be a greater satisfaction to aa honest mi voaa to see tneee approbations which it giree uaetf aeeotxiea by the applause of tb pobhe. Aoaaoo. COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF And etmbttttJ of aad knowledge ah ail be the thy Una. Isaiah :. THE COMING BATTLE ! rpHERE need be no Illusions about 'J- the battle that will be waged i against the proposed Income ax for ! Oregon. In strategy and in execu- tlon it will probably be the most t brilliant campaign ever waged I against a measure In this state. II ' The farmers and various other groups want the income tax. It is N H one way in which the farmers, in p. particular, can get a part of their ; ikx burden shifted from their land, i in that respect 10 or 20 times as f much relief can be afforded the ! farmers and all other owners of real , estate as In any other way tlon without advocating an income tax he can be set down as either,: an uninformed or an insincere advocate of a reduction of taxes that will re duce. In some instances, he may be the private representative of those who want the income tax defeated: It is sometimes easier to beat a plan by appearing to - favor it than to come out and fight it in the open. Owners of land and other real property have been bled white by taxes, only because they have been made to pay their own taxes and the taxes of others who ought to do their own paying. Any proposition to cut taxes by merely making small cuts here and there in existing things is a proposal to reduce taxes but to still make the farmer and other realty owners bear 85 per cent of the burden. It is a proposal to clear the way tor those who have not been paying taxes to go on without paying taxes. If we watch the maneuvers of some of the gentlemen in the public eye on the tax issue we shall see what we shall see. to the movies and to the country in his new position. He can keep the movies inside the pale. He can do much to prevent the scandals. He can remove the unfit in pictures and provide only the wholesome. And he can reach millions of people through the movies that could be reached in no other way, and by reaching millions daily with the proper standard of pictures, the movies can become one of the great est forces in American life. of the battle, says the Merrimac had no chance at all if the Monitor had made a target of its water line, had rammed its totally unprotected pro peller and rudder, or had planted shots three times in the same spot tn its armor. The Merrimac -was altogether . unseaworthy, and was never a menace to the sea coast of the North. But the North did not then know that. But, with the Merrimac, not posi--tively to win was utterly to lose. It drew off in the afternoon of that Sunday, and was never in action again. When the Confederates evacuated Norfolk they destroyed! the Merrimac As for the Monitor, sea going had from the first been to it most peril ous. It went down, December 31, 1862, with 16 of itstmen, off the North Carolina coast, but not until it had yielded its full value in fame to its builder, succor to the Union and doom to the wooden ship of war. WHICH ? TT IS not infrequently that church A- circles are stirred by so-call sensationalism of pastors. Not long ago such a situation was present in Portland. It has been otherwhere. Now New Tork is gasping because of the withdrawal of prominent mem bers of his congregation on the 1 ground that the pastor is "too sen- Salem Capital Journal : ' The Oregon Journal has just celebrated its twentieth anniversary. From hum ble beginnings. The Journal has in the brief span of its existence become a recognized power ir the Northwest. It owns and occupies a magnificent build ing, its plant is the most complete and up to date possible, its employes num ber ' hundreds, and its subscription list has passed the 100.000 mark. It is one of the great Journalistic successes of the country. The success of The Journal in no small measure is doe to the en terprise and vision of its founder. C 8. Jackson, his financial ability, business acumen and the fidelity with which the paper has lived up to its homely motto. Tote fair." The Journal has always stood for the square deaL It has coura geously fought the battle for reform against, civic and political corruption. and championed men and measures which made for decency. It has served the people of Oregon faithfully and reaped a rich reward. Established at a psychological time. when the Oregon people were in revolt against enthroned political corruption, it led the battle for the overthrow of the old regime and the establishment of the "Oregon By stem" of popular government. It filled, and still fills, the field of a progressive newspaper devoted to liberal and democratic policies, and no worthy cause has since lacked a champion. May The Journal continue to prosper and widen ,its field of usefulness and public service with the coming years. SMALL CHANGE Sprlnr is coinr to slip up" oa as un aware some of these fine rainy mornings. At that we've known some folks with very sour faces who still had sweet dispositions. o Portland, as usual, is denied the spec tacle of the "first robin." because we have them with us always. '. . Wonder what kind of ' a result we could get if we'd try to put some of our most aggravating bills through con gress? .'' Since market roads are ta receiva, a $900,000 fund, we'd like to suggest about $9 for expenditure on some of our abused streets. , Middle West farmers see better times, the paDers renort. No doubt they're standing en a knoll looking toward Ore gon s i air neras. Secretary Mellon predicts that the sen ate will pass the soldiers' bonus bill. Some other great scholar once predicted ine millennium. It is fortunate for our peace of mind that We don't know where, when, bow nor wny the big climax in life is com ing nor what it will be. It sometimes happens that parents who rail at certain entertainment as not suited for children are partaking alone while the kiddies are safely at home. : ; SIDELIGHTS ' Strike three ! BiUy Sunday Is out Jim Jeffries to the bat ! Fatty Arbuckle on deck. Bah- for evangelism. Medford Utnon, www Uncle Sam is going to be disappointed when he reads some of the income tax reports from Umatilla county fanners this year. Pendleton East Oregonian. -First It's "smile week." and then It's "something else week. and next "canned food week!" Now let s have a "giveusarest week." Carlton Sentinel. Many Lebanon parents are getting so blamed independent that they pick right up and go to church without ask ing their children about it- Lebanon Express. Strange it did not occur to President Harding that by coming to Oregon for his vacation he could have got farther away from the United States senate. Weston Leader. President Harding is completely cut ore from the world, says a news item. The trouble with the rest of us poor mortals is that we can't go fishing or play golf while the senate la wrangling over the four-power treaty. Eugene uuaro. - The public official who encourages anything that promises to make more taxes these days will find hlmseir ai DODUlar as a wet dog. The average tax payer figures that the limit haa about been reached. union Republican, The fair miss who missed the kiss s"0111-" sent her by radio telephony shouldn't complain. It was spread too thin to have a kick anyway. THE GREAT DUEL O1 MOTORS AND CRIME IT HAS been proposed in Portland to go to greater lengths in motor- The in-' t.-ing the police department. Un- eome tax. drawing heavy revenues doubtedly it was a move in the right irom a source tnat nia noi ueen pay- direction 1. .... . .... ing taxes, win ao more to cut tne The automobile is fast becoming burdens of those now paying taxes tne J l! than can btr done by nil the other proposals combined. It To begin with. Ujletely new source of revenue. trusted aid of criminals. It threatens to approach the revolver as the great accessory of gunmen, murderers and thieves. Almost all of the recent spectacular crimes of the country have been carried out with the aid of automobiles. The will be a com- It 111 be a large and Inexhaustible source of revenue. In excess profits K tax and Income taxes, principally in- daylight holdups, the bold murders ""come taxes, the federal government and most of the other crimes have collected In Oregon for 1920 around been followed by speedy escapes in twenty-odd million dollars. That is I motor cars, to say, from Income taxes alone the federal government collected In Ore ' gon more than the amount of the . entire state tax How are the police to cope with automobiles on foot? How are they to capture criminals who flash down the highways? How are they to get This shows the poasibUities of the quickly to the scene of a crime? plan. It shows how much of the tax in the detection and capture of burden can be taken away from the criminals, few things are as essential land, which Is not paying profits. aa speeds Moreover, it would seem and be placed on Intangible wealth that fewer men would be required, which. U paying good profits as and therefore there would be fewer shown by the income returns. salaries to pay in a well motorized .The feasibility of the plan cannot police department. ( be controverted. What the federal Automobiles, of course, cost money, government haa done with the fed- The purchase price and maintenance ral income tax in Oregon is the 0f a lot of machines would run into proof. The millions gathered in at the Internal revenue office in Port land are facts which cannot be Challenged. . Compared with what the Income tax will do in cutting the heart out small fortunes. But a saving in salaries could be made, it would seem, and a police department of great efficiency is, after ajl, worth while. The Portland department has sev- of the cruel system of taxation as now eral automobiles, and a large quota applied in Oregon, the proposed cuts of motorcycles. It has added" some in existing state expenses would be recently. As funds are available, it trivial, if.au tne proposed cuts tniwould Beem to he the course of ealaries were made they would make ganjty' to add more a difference or but a few cents in a ear to tne average taxpayer. The A man once entered a Portland same is true of most of the proposals hardware store and asked to see a ,maae ror pruning oown preeent costs. revolver. After the proprietor had It is. of course, well enough to make Uxtolled and loaded a hefty weapon, cuts in ail tnese expenses wherever the customer asked if it was a gun a possible, but the big. outstanding. man might commit suicide with, overwhelming plan for cutting down "suref said the hardware merchant, taxes and giving relief to those now rlslnff to the spirit of the Jest. Where . paying them, is through the income upon tne man put the gun to his " lAX head and .blew out his brains. "I ; It is because the plan would shift dldn.t rauch mind his not paying a big part of the present taxes to for the gaia the store proprie- people who have been paying no tor relating the affair, "but he fell taxes on large blocks of wealth that on the stove and broke one of its the proposal is resisted. That is why legs." r the income tax bill of Senator Pierce " in the 191 session, after passing the senate, was stealthily smothered in the house. The Job was done by cer J tain representatives from Portland. 2 7he same deadly medicine was given to a former income tax bill proposed L by Senator TMercJ. The battle against the proposed measure haa already begun. Dust is being thrown In the eyes of taxpayers 3 by telling them thst full relief can be given those whose property is Z almot confiscated by taxes on their visible property; that the only way for them to get relief is by attacks on present expenses without seeking ; new sources of revenue. Whenever any leader In tax reform proclaims his devotion to tax reduo- WHAT MR. HATS CAN DO TN TAKING over his new position a of director-general of the movies. Will Hays hastens to christen the industry the national stabilizer. The movies can be Just that. They can be of infinite use as an educa tional medium. They can be a tre mendous. force for good. Ttrey can be one of ye great creators of pub lic opinion r X Ana tney can be or enormous harm. Risque plays, blood and thunder pictures, plots featuring faulty principles, and scenarios of a low ' order can -easity breed crime. Immorality and disrespect for order, Mr. Hays can be of great service N A Sunday morning in March sixty years ago a great fear was in the land, and in the cabinet room in the White House there was panic. Were the states of the old Union to continue as one nation or become two? On scarcely any other day of the four years of the Civil war did the North seem so near defeat. The long-dreaded Merrimac the day before had come out to battle. It was playing with the navy of the Union as cats play with mice. It had already sunk two good ships; others were aground. And what should save the day? A shot through the walls of the White House itself from the terrible ironclad would have sur prised no one. There was full occasion for fear. There was the frightful havoc this new monster might work upon war ships, fortresses and land batteries on river courses and sea ways, with the incalculable damage to property in the rich coast cities of the North. That were calamitous, but following such a demonstration of Southern power there was foreseen a practical certainty of European recognition of the Confederacy. For the blockade of Southern coasts wpuld have been broken. That blockade was the hand that. Instantly upon the attack on Sumter, went to the throat of the South, and there clung. No matter what blows reached one body or the other, .nor what stabs and strains were mutually en dured, the clutch of that strangling hand was ever tight and. grew ever tighter. There is no deadlier thing in war than the effective blockade But in the very hour that the federal government trembled its champion appeared, a doughty little David of a champion, the Monitor- at which the men of the Merrimac, Goliath-like, laughed. To those who loved the Union this apparition was as if heaven-sent as if it had come from nowhere in particular to meet a malign antag onist that also had come none knew whence. ' They saw in it the hand of Providence, and such it certainly was if timeliness be taken as con clusive proof of the providential. But, humanly speaking, there was, after all, no mystery. The great Merrimac had not come unheralded, and the government had for months been preparing- the little Monitor to meet it. The Monitor itself was no over-night Inspiration. In it con verged the labors not only of Erics son but of many others whose partial or ineffectual though valuable de vices he had the genius to -make finally effective in combination with his own surpassing accomplishments. The "cheesebox on a raft" was towed from New Tork to Fortress Monroe in rough weather. - Officers and men were totally untrained in navigating or maneuvering the craft or in working its guns. The govern ment, through its secret agents, had from the first watched the Merrimac as it took form, and so fully had it sensed the peril of the ironclad that the Monitor had been built, and rushed to Hampton i Roads in what was v literally r a; race with' death. Therefore -x: the Monitor, t Diough staunch, was crudei l Evenly- itirode waves that - tossed , its convoy ships like toys, '.but , water : flooded in through unguarded openings and al The New York minister .has taken occasion to briqg to the attention of his congregation and to the public generally, through newspaper re ports of his Sermons, conditions ex isting in the metropolis. He has fought vice where vice existed. His voice has announced its presence. He has caused it to be advertised. It would seem that the church is serving the Lord when it seeks to reclaim to Him all his children. It is a simple matter for a pastor. to preach weekly to his congregation. But what of the people who are not present? What of the people who need Christian aid? What of those who are not present? Is a pastor doing his full duty, is he doing all he can in the name of Christianity when he confines himself alone to those who: come to the church door? Or is he attaining a broader field, spreading the gpspel in greater meas ure, by going outside as well and seeking to attract to the Christian faith those who have not voluntarily sought it? Are the girls in the slums and the men in the tenderloin Christ's chil dren, as well as those who on Sun day come to church for worship? Are the1, tob, not to be brought into the fold? Or are they to be forever abandoned? There will be none to deny that it is the duty of the church to fight sin wherever sin may exist. Can sin be defeated by refusal to recognize it? Can it be swept aside by blindfolding the Christian forces to its existence ? Or should the church fight sin where sin is and in an effective way? Then, is the pastor who merely talks to his congregation and forgets the rest of the world and its iniqui ties spreading the gospel of the Lord to all his children? Or is it the pas tor who goes beyond the reaches- of his church, who Indicates the exist ence of sin and works for its eradica tion, who endeavors to reclaim the sheep that have wandered from the ' fold, who is doing the fullest work in the service of the Lord? Hillsboro Argus : The Oregon Jour nal last week celebrated its twentieth birthday with a just pride in its achieve ments. It entered a field against a daily newspaper which carried a splendid news service at all times, and yet The Journal thrived and grew, and today stands as a newspaper institution de luxe. And "there's a reason." Besides carrying a news service that filled the bill. The Journal always has had that little thing so desirable in a big success that little quantity known as the "common touch." It has had a broad sympathy with the masses of people ; a feeling of warmth for the "under dog." It has made some mistakes, it is true, for all newspapers are human to the extent that a news paper Is a human production. But, by and large. The Journal instinctively has been true to conscience. And that, after all, is what counts. A newspaper that first consults its accounting department before It expresses itself editorially never gets Iartber than that same counting-room in public estimation. Con versely, The Journal "shoots" and then squares Itself with the business depart ment afterward. As an Oregon institu tlon of merit. The Journal has earned its decoration. Baker Democrat: The Oregon Jour, nal last Monday celebrated its 20 years in existence. Entering the field of Port land Journalism In that day, C. S Jack son, its founder, was not the least de terred by the strong opposition, but with, indomitable' will power, energy and brains so well directed his efforts as to gradually gain public favor and sup port, until today he sees the realization of his dream to have one of the best newspapers in the West. It is a great newspaper, and the people of Oregon can well feel proud of its existence and its commanding influence. MORE OR LESS PERSONAL Random Observations About Town Mrs. Willis Pearce of Portland will sail for France from New Tork city for visit to, relatives. Miss Margery Belts will sail on the Cedric for a visit In England. She will leave New Tork city April L A. W. Stone of Hood River is a guest of the Portland. e e Dr. W. J. Kerr, president of Oregoiy! Agricultural college, is registered at the Portland. M. L. Shepard of Salem is at the Port land. K. R. Bartlett of Astoria la domiciled at the Multnomah. R. D. Pinneo of Astoria is in Portland on business. Robert Carlson of Wheeler is at the Imperial. M. F Hamley of Medford is a guest of the Multnomah. a a H. C. Topping of Madras la transact ing business In Portland. F. J. Flck and family of Jacksonville are sojourning at the Imperial. J. R. Coleman is here from Eugene. Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Lenox of Rose' burg are visiting in Portland. C. )J. Anderson of Astoria is stopping at the Imperial. Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Webb of the Round- Up city are guests of the Imperial. a H. L Wall of Wasco Is registered at the Imperial. Mrs. J. G. the Oregon. Rankin of Pendleton is at The Oregon Country Knh Tli,iMina im Bnef Term for Bway Basilar. OREGON Bend mill mnA Inavinr ramn rv-mll for the past month reached a total of 160,000 E. W. Miller has reelmed his msition as secretary of the Cottage Grove Cham ber of Commerce and has taken ever a note ouslrree in Grants Pass. Between 20 arut s Mnnhm . t tit state motor vehicle department were re- easeQ rrom service Wednesday nignu Struck bv a nlnnfc- l iK r V Gn. u lit- ing mill, at Salem. H. a. Patterson was knocked unconscious and may not recover. Joel Halstead. who ramo n fmaUfla county in 1SS and had lived continuous ly at Echo since that time, ta dead at his home ta that city, aged- Si year. Taxpayers of fnion hlrn aritMi ilia. trict No. t, la Columbia county, have voted bonds to the amount of Ha.000 for u erecuou di a new nigh school at Ver-noaia. Setting of the new tH- i. the Lower Columbia oil Gas company" - . . ... Dwn completed and a M start In drilling is made from a depth of 2111 feet. A 14-page citv directorv fnr Pnm. yUle and the adjacent communttv has been published by th BrownsvUk Time. j. copy oi it rree or charge has been put into every home. After a week' trial tha rv . 'eve- plan of charging for roovi shows has been abandoned In Bend. Too many " iuu iTisnieg uie pian as aa op portunity to enjoy a free show. .An Industrial survey shows that Marty 10.000 people are employed In the various Lane county Industrie, with payroll amounting to more than l ooo ooo. and business turnovers of J! 1.000 000 anaa-' ally. H. T. Howes of Hood River Is a guest of the Oregon. H. T. Gabel of Corvallis is registered at the Oregon. Mrs. F. E. Selover of Eugene guest of the Oregon. Is a 4 E Edwards 'of Astoria Is a guest of the Benson. Mr. and Mrs. W. L Forsythe of Marshfield are registered at the Benson. J. B. Weller of Corvallia la stopping at the Benson. Elisabeth L. Hendrick of Cascade Locks Is a guest of the Benson, a Mrs. A A Woolpert of Hood River Is sojourning at the Benson. W. P. O'Brien of Astoria Is stopping at the Benson. e e e Evelyn Carlson of Bend Is registered at the Imperial: C. W. Friswold of La Grande la at the Benson. H. J. Child of Pendleton is a guest of the Benson. Work and tfi krr of work, and loe the lev of man for fellow-man ar emphasised by Mr. ""1T ia an admonitory article today, tie illustrates by qootang aa raum aramauc prodncsr. Observations npon to character and ear of tn great i-meoui. wua unrroun matter rerardiDg Lincoln a linng aesoanoani. complete the article. Roseburg News Review : The Portland Journal celebrated its twentieth anni versary today. This fine publication has grown from a "two-by-four" 'to one of the best metropolitan newspapers is sued in the United -States. The great strides made during 20 years of success ful operation ia an achievement worthy of more than passing interest. The paper is a fine monument to its builder and his loyal associates. Aurora Observer: The Oregon Jour nal celebrated Its twentieth anniversary on March 10. The Journal is nearly old enough to vote now, and has been an Oregon booster since its birth. Only 100,000 people "take" The Journal, and they are all healthy, robust people at that ; the big daily and Sunday wisitor hasn't harmed them a bit The home office of The Journal employs 321 more people than the Observer does. Letters From the People OBSERVATIONS AND IMPRESSIONS OF THE JOURNAL MAN By Fred Lockley (Communications sent to The Journal for publication in this department should b written on only one, sra of the paper, should not ex ceed 300 words in length, and must be signed by the writer, whose mail address io full moat accompany tha contribution. 1 TO CUT TAXES, CUT SPENDING Make Everybody Hate Spending by Making Everybody Palpably a Payer, Is Advised. Portland.' March 15. To the Editor of The Journal There is a lively Interest in taxation Just. now. The tax commis sion is Journeying about the state to sound public sentiment on the question. It would appear that a good deal of sen timent is expressed toward "reduction of expenditures." It is too true that ex nerift Ituren rtav ricMin nnrmmilv- Rut wa an Bxeiiiiiiuiuauoa ui me wpm how are we going to get reductions? It of the Multnomah Amateur Athletic i is true that . enormous sums have been club with particular reference . to ! voted by the people, for various purposes. BALANCED MN SCENES at the Portland Auditorium last night carry a thought. It junior members. Here is the thought; It is a natural and admitted law, that man is at his best when there is equal development of the mental, physical and spiritual. The perform ance at The Auditorium was an ex ample, of the "effort. of an organiza tion to carry on one part of this na tural development. . City life is artificial. It does not lend itself to that physical exercise necessary to scientific living. The farmer is longest lived because his Physical is nourished by. exercise and fresh air. Most city men feed well, exercise little and have their wits under con slant strain. It, is a nerve-racking existence. It is the spawning ground of ill-balanced lives, the headauar ters of insanity, the- clearing house for early death and the rendezvous of nervous prostration. Why do people vote for these eipendl turea? One reason is. that there are too many non-taxpayers in the state whose vote generally is cast for expenditure of money. The way to stop a lot of this voting is to make everybody taxpayers. If everybody over the age of 11 years. and even, under, who possessed any kind of property, paid taxes a halt would soon take place in expenditures. A head tax Of $3 tb $5 would not only be a source of large income, hitting several thousands of aliens who at present pay nothing, but is a Just and equitable tax Every patriotic citlxen ought to be wilt ing to bear a portion of the tax burdens. and It he is not willing he should be made to do so. An income tax should be on the statute books. Thousands of persons have incomes of 92000 to $10,000 yearly from which no taxes are derived. These salaried men and women, many of whom pay no taxes at all, should con tribute to the support of government, the benefits of which they share. Give us a head tax and an income tax and then we shall have a united people en the I subject of reduced expenditures. A thing How rich are you? I don't mean in stocks and bonds and mere money. . I mean, how rich are you In friends. In the good will of those with whom you work, in the love of your family and of those who know you best? How rich are you in your work? Does it build you up and refresh you, or does It drain your strength and exhaust your vitality? Do you love work, or loathe it? Is the work you are doing building up and help ing humanity, or is it hindering human ity's slow and upward march? Are you an asset, or a liability? Are you a producer, or a parasite? Here Is an ex tract from an address delivered by David Belasco at a dinner given In his honor in celebration of his fortieth year as a producer of plays. He didn't mean it for a sermon, but it is. He said: In all these years It stands to reason that 1 must have learned something, and It takes but a moment to say it: Love is the only thing that matters, the one thing that counts. Another thing I have learned In my experience in New York, and if h grown to be my creed : I believe that God made us to work. I believe that He meant that we should earn our living by the sweat of our brows. But I believe that He made us to love our work so much that we might play at It ; find real and profound pleasure in It, and so labor on until, tired out. we might sleep like little children at the end of each day. People say to me. the doctors and my friends: "You work too hard. 1 say "No I play a little hard, perhaps my work is my play." And it. is such good sport that I love It more and more. The man who does not love nis work wno finds no pleasure in it who cannot toil at it till he drops is a slave. The curse or our times is tne vast army of people who care nothing for their work wno labor solely lor money. No one can do this and succeed. We must carry affection into our work to bring inspiration, because "all that happens, happens again." as Peter Grimm said. The appeal to love is not only neces sary to the drama It is the keynote of all arts, of all science, or an Dusineas. It is the foundation, the mortar, the bricks, the beams and the thing Itself. Someone asked Queen V ictoria to write her favorite text In the Bible -.she wrote: 'Love never falleth Ixve suffereth long and is kind." To which I add: "Many waters cannot quencn love. neither can the floods drown It. If t man would give all the substance of his house for love it would be utterly con demned." I have an Indexed Bible on my desk. which I very often consult, and I find a great space given to the word love. There are not enough Multnomah !tl clubs. But such of them as are toloOTte to have everybody paying taxes. existence are doing a wholesome and I : ; ; B. F.Wilson., indispensable service. They are mak ing! careers more poised.; The busi ness men who frequent its plant and employ Its facilities are stronger for service) . and. safer: In their' thinking and wider open to spirit oal Impulses. AN OLD MAXIM REVAMPED J . , . , Fraaa . the - Kalaaaaaoo Gaaette - - Every day It Is estimated 250ft to Chi cago have their hair bobbed. Never pat off until tomorrow what you can cut off today. - . .. ". . Tears ago Horace Walpde, in speak ing of his riches, said: Old friends are the great blessings of one's later years. Half a word conveys one's meaning. They have memory of the same events and, have the same mode of thinking. I have younr; relations that may grow tmon me. for my nature is affectionate; but can they grow old friends? My axe forbids that. Still less can they grow companions. Is it friend ship to explain half one says? One must relate the history or one s memory and ideas; and what is that to the young but oia stones i www The next time you feel blue and won der why fate has it In for you, and think that Old Man Trouble has your street and number ia his address book. Just think back to the bed of roses that Abraham Lincoln reposed upon. . He was ia love with a young woman who had plighted ber troth to him. but she died before the marriage day arrived. He married -a woman who felt she had mar ried beneath; her and who felt that her husband was of the earth earthy. He ran for the legislature and was badly beaten, lie Tailed In ' business and took him 1? years to pay -up his own and ala partner's aebta. He ran for nwigriaw and . was defeaUed. He tried ta. ssluj i S4fwntnent as of the general land office, but was side tracked. He ran for the United States i senate and was beaten by Douglas. He was elected to the presidency and was lampooned as the baboon of the White House. McClellan referred to him aa a useless busybody. He was attacked and humiliated. But he kept his poise and his love of humanity. He bore in his heart the burdens and griefs of the loss of the flower of the manhood of America. His character was assassinated, and finally an assassin took his life. But as long as the English language is spoken he wilt be revered, loved and looked up to. A. IL Ulm In a recent Issue of Leslie's Weekly tells something of the martyred president's son, Robert T. Lincoln, who Uvea in Washington, D. C. He says : ' Once there was a mid-wesfern vimiir- rlding" lawyer who resolved to provide ior nis eldest son something that cir cumstances had denied the father. It was a good school and collere edoea uun. ai i uie ooy was sent to a school In the East for preparation to enter narvara. That was In 1S5J. Early in the following Year the father peatly desired to visit the boy. But he hesitated on account of the expense of the trip, for the father's means were not large, men mere cam to tha muntn lawyer an offer of a fee of $200 to make one speecn in a lyceum course conducted by a Brooklyn church. He readily ac cepted, for It meant full expenses for the visit to the son at school. On second thought the lyceum mans r era deHded that the country lawyer out of the West wouldn't draw sufficiently in the blaae city of the East to make the venture a safe one for them. A political club in New xork took over the contract The speech was staged at Cooper Union. It attracted national attention and proved to be a great political aad historical event It caused the country lawyer to be asked to speak at other places on the way to and from the school in New Hampshire where he visited his son. And thus crystallised a movement which carried the country awyer te the White House to serve as president during the most critical era m the country s history. The lawyer was Abraham Lincoln. The son. Kobert Todd Lincoln still livea Home say he is the last survivor In the maie line or the family from which Abraham Lincoln sprung. He and two daughters and three granddaughter are me only living Tjescendants of the Great emancipator, or all the cases of man and great father this is probably the moei singular. In Washington, where he now live Robert Todd Lincoln, now approaching his eightieth year, is seen frequently driving through the parks or poring over old manuscripts and rare books in tne Library or congress. But he is rarely recognised. It is doubtful If more than a hundred residents of Waahington know him by sight Hla name rarely appears in the newspapers, never in con nection with any public or social activi ties. The old Georgetown mans ion. where he and his family maka their home, ia one of the meet picturesque in uie national capital : it was built in the eighteenth century by a wealthy Scotch shipmaster. The Lincoln live In digni- 1 rted elegance. But a society editress of, long experience In Washington was un- able to supply the names of the daugh- i ters and granddaughters. Another did not even recall that the Lincoln now make Washington their home. When tentative plana were being outlined-eome time ago for the dedication of the great Lincoln Memorial, the su preme national tribute to Abraham Lire coin, it waa suggested that special pro vision De tnaoe ior ue attendance ox Robert Todd Lincoln and his family. Accept, my appreciauon for the thought" be stated when the sutesUoa was conveyed to - him, "but - under bo drcumsrtaoces must you carry it out We of oouise shall attend, but only on a oar with the general public We wa fer that no notice whatever be taken of us.-,--- Thus it would seem that Robert Todd Lincoln will maintain to the end the modesty of attitude toward his father's fame that has characterised his long life. There Isn't t of record a single utterance ever penned or spoken publicly by him oa the subject of Abraham Lin coln, ue nas never oeen "lntervtewea on the subiect or many other subject. For long be has been regarded as among To rettev the house shortare at Pen dleton, the Progressive Business Men's association will build a $1000 house foe rent or sale. Should the experiment prove succeasful. the club will build roore houeea. H. E In'.ow. for the past two years city school superintendent at Pendleton, wtll serve In that office for the nest uiree years, accord ing to a decistoa of ue acnmi Doaxo. The Bandon Cedar Maaufaetnriar company, recently organised, has pur chased the plant and equipment of the " " v-roar uinber company of Co quUle and will open the factory within uw utn w oays WAJSinxGTON Improvements of a substantial rfcae. acter are planned for White Salmon streets and work will commence soon. The Orondo ferrv at Wiunrtiu e, being tied bd aeveral vwki . ice, is again making regular trips aero uw uHumnii river. A plan is under way to organise the Stevens County Potato Growers' aseocia tlon to stimulate the product ton of pota toes and seed potatoes in thai county. Three out of four horses were klUed on the railroad track when struck by a southbound freight train at the first crossing north of Woodland Thursday rooming. Because of the long winter and the heavy snow the hay supply on the Col ville reservation is exhausted and many cattle and other stock are reported to be starving. According to announcement mad this week by the executive committee the annual state convention of the Waahing ton State Press association will be held at Pullman. July 14 to 1C The general fund overdraft of 91.029. (45 that existed in the Washington stats treasury April 1, mi, wil have entirely disappeared on the first of next month, according to Stat Treasurer Babcock. , vma ki. bcou, age zz. son ox Mr. ana i nuusun pcou, nas oeen a p pom lea postmaster at Tekoa, having the highest grade in a recent civil service examination. When the 9200.000 addition to tha war. house and cold storage plant of Rlchty k. Gilbert at Yakima is completed, the com pany will have cold slorag. capacity 590 The A. Jackson estate ta Colmnbla county haa contracted to sell Its wool clip of 122. which will aggregate about a.uw pounoa, to a .roruand firm tor za cents a pound. For the eight rears the inltlaflv and referendum has been in effect Secretary oi Diaie xunaie snows tnat It has cost the state of Washington 91St.405.ta. Only two Initiative bills have been approved uy uie people. While a number of loners were adttinar around a table after dinner at a loererinr camp 'five miles north of Enumciaw Wednesday night two masked men en tered, neia up the diners and escaped with about tiOO. Edward Owens, age C5. for many years a prominent figure in this sec tion of the state. waa found ' dead, in hla bed last Sunday by his brother. George Owena Ha had suc cumbed in his aleep to a heart attack. After a chase of 200 miles la a small automobile. Sheriff Rolph of Benton county returned to Prosser Wednesday wiui jonn Asomson. is. i. forter aad John Burke, charged with being the men who attempted te rob the White Bluffs bank. IDAHO J. E. Ryan, for 19 years supervisor of the Kanlksu forest haa been trans ferred to the Cabinet forest of Montana. : H. J. McCoy, manager of the Boaoero Ferry Lumber company, announces that ' the sawmill will start April 1 with a large supply of logs on hand. A fire Wednesday at the home ef J. E. Lanier in Moscow, started br chil dren playing with matches, destroyed the nouae, together with its entire conteota A report from Wallace states that tb Western Union Mining company has a report from Wallace stating that ther struck a rich body of ore in Its Ne. 9 turtneL The aporoximiats cost te the go warn - ment of the summer encampment of the Idaho National Guard wUl be 915,000. There wiU be (Sfi enlisted men and IT I Dorses to feed and care for. Saturday when C..F. Bottger was drtw Ing a sled and team over the toe ta tha St Jos river near St Martea. the te broke, the horse waa drowned and Bott ger narrowly escaped with his Ufa. . Smythe Brother of Pendleton and the Pendleton Sheep company have appoed for a permit to run 6000 head of abeep on the Peod Oreille forest near Napteat, last year they ran 11.000 bead oa the forest Uncle Jeff Snow Says 3 In France our boys got gassed, sore of 'cm purty bad. But la conrrese they're e-bein' gassed agin, some of 'am purty bad. And In the senate them ' there highbrows is a-gaasin' the whole American Deoote. aad wo aiat got gas masks, nutber. Ode to Wood row Wilson By Edna Smith Little. AO bail t thee, and ax taxraMDt AI Wall AH bail V the, aad a' fafwwwfl! All fcalif anal, with far-fhsng etatoa af a day fear aoaat ana all ssaa rtoved, beak t throe thy srrrlo is (he Ce v thy dream tailed war awfTaawa Uras far of a war-mad wwrtd. mu1 faith rvsd. forever ykaad. . Of eerfert peen and lew. Is iiea. tarrock ansa w i Bat, ever yaovsaag Waewaly sbseps ef agbt -A Lsaga ef uu Be so r the ngfeU Ceaat wairtar of a tlioaias war gbti Great bar of tr tna1 aean nlwuu,l -. LsewJ bm ef a gratofal wertd today! By aom anreaa. sorsot. Bast aw, tar ay I - lariatJbaat - We the behead. We AH ' wru sack II AB baft! las erf asaUl ASkaU Ibm moat tnnrnssaitin ox prominent mea,