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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (July 25, 1922)
TUESDAY, JULY 23, 1C22. ohi:gon daily JOURNAL. o:;i:go: G Uhvm bv her father. W. H. Royer, 1 ocean, that cars are already push I collided with an automobile driven j Ins their way over- ' the crude c T. Hull. stretches of road all up and down. Near Gervaia on the Pacific high- the Oregon ;snores. ! - -t- .., a. ctmrv Anwtvt This natural Impulse of men and A? WDErEfDEMT KEWSFAPIE i.. . :..Mmh!T. Ariren the ro-eet.it nurnose of the people down by tne sea to nave ma line The list of traffic accidents in I will ultimately complete the Roose- -i'ubii,ha ewr wkuy aoa hoikmf "-"VT: f Portland over Sunday 13' sizable, i veic mgnway. xne una is a ceruunj hkli?i"rr It is lengthened by the record t rom to ultimately be a part, of the Ore- ntfMl at iha B-sttliic t Portland, OfMe I AMfaM nriintn. It is 'enormous I gen system - of , highways as that ? mm - - . - iV - w r - r .. - '?5t,LB'i,0 wowt" " - nio-fl to the accidents that the last rays of the . setting v sun "Atioal" aVvehtising KE?ESS I occurred elsewhere- throughout the I spread. their-golden aheea over the HAGUE FAILURE NO SURPRISE -JSJS.C1S- by O. M. Pulley of Ner Era, wb-k hniius. 225 nfui eeuu. Sew tort; I country. 0O Milirr rollout, iok-bi-j i bosom of the Pacific. - ww w.---- m iaiiaLris nr inn nir nwsy auu luo acc va bs,vh -sav j flcirrc coast BErRESJCNTATrvE--u. a,, ; red Sundav. do Its Dart in the great enterprise?! IV. Homines iitr., ---- urasr ...... ,r ...... .. , If It Wis Not Soviet BAd Faith, as Soma American - Editors Complain. It Was Too Much .Politics, as": Others - Allege. - That Brought Conference to Naught; and i the Same for Genoa These 1 Latter Say Uncle - Sam " KHould Prescribe Purs - -i ' tfsuneinics, and Meaa . ure Out the Dose : V - in Person. : , e-er necessary, the Detroit Free Press is convinced, because "under the- terms of the call to The liague. sepaime bargains will be allowable Whenever 'the conference is officially declared a failure. It iayJe hoped, 'r however, that the solidarity displayed thus far was temporary" thing' and .that tthe nations separately will stand" out ! for the rights which they flefended white acting together. If they were right In their united position, separation can not make that . righteous lv position wrong." . . Letters Pom the People -( Consolidated fiem ABSaoatieS) tCmiMiiifttiiMii -gut to Tb Journal for publac&tiov itt this department should S . iwrit- KursmD - - , , , : . . j M. block .the "open road" wtth Shk orIo.v yocRNAfc wwer th riht I the specter of deaj.lu, They make to mcx, Mwran, c"'.. " i the observer wonaer xne pleasure our dujy; sWl.h TViA UQpaA MnfMNmrsI the I jm mi nnW iti l tJl OBDCr. UCHLM BOt rMlu" there Is a disposition on the parti 3vJ n JntH. rf . ebiactionable. Minv that, in ttf t or that caODOt tmiiit bm rccogi dwtinns. ' Bj terrier CH and Crontrf On tlc S .15,Om month S carelessness rides at the wheeL; THEIR CORVAI-rIS MEETING COMMENT. AND NEWS IN" BRIEF;: M " SMALL CHANGE- -Useful life 1s "praised at funeral." The same old story in ; the same id way. : . ; ;.. . ; v- The Beavers certainly are gnawing at the roots of the rol their popu larity among the fans. , -. The newspapers give1 space to Ar-buckle's- denial that he wiil go to Prance. As if anyone cared a hang where he goea m - 9 Know a fellow who spends so much time worrying" about the amount of work he has to do that he never gets started at-his tasks.' ."What can we say that would be hu morous about the leasing of a corner of a university campus in Oregon for use as a gasoline filling station. ; - Most men object to odoriferous sub stances in the dark corners or me Oaa ' tiiat the time is ripe tor a it .W wiH sot print .n, mo u"' ?. '7"' i-., ;wt nolicy to be adopted in cpaoection with t ; Russia AND THE AIXIES L2Lar3Ld W .tr" 1 hTnoth Discussed-b, One Who . . .. lot we KTieiuwcsauvH iw w i - uonoios tne. soviet stejn.' j : der wry reat servics to i principle of private property rights l mind. Jvrira the Editor of Kf! "L, JiT-Vri'nA dXcrenit U fk.t AnuvHitv mkiu ilu.mrtntnl tblt Rnma H l ttMT m.. . t.t i l. .li.n. .uH. t "u"v"! 'T. . w -: v. I... about ty tno request -o oermany t .ij'tVl"..- i wwswmw ' cuies. SUXDAT i.L ; H JlU.lr au.it VMlnf Marrlin to oall amn. "u;" .vVZ o cassia, sincejt reirB.w aL ??' that The Bane. Wee 'the Geooa con- , " . On, ota -"irf.iw. -T J- Oregon tate iTress association terence ot ppn v """"S1- J vs mat -w" "f " iferenoe wUl fatff to give tiew-Ufe to 1 hton of r MiU RATES PATAFLB I rj ADTAXC I thA nntahle . thinea In to o ftilly into ths auestion of Hagne pohUcS controlled, and they eaoitahain. Th. false Inference made L-t8 .mitimes bald and - - , - r ' .. - . .. , I rML notablv toe Krooaiyn iaie, tiutvi . - . , t.j --':. uerman ' reparations, ,j eetue me i -, ; - w tK imitAri I " i pir.- ui uiu uiu B . v.. ftvltlumL SUBdT One rear ....'$? Riz rnoath 3. 3J Thrw tha . , 4.J5 Oh usnt.th . . ,' . .SO 1 rtnn Wtdmbri ' . 4 aa tiutt tvn aiyiniT As yr .i,...;.o"oThTw , BM.uif..ia.5 Oregon. - - l Bis swath. ...r .25l0e onth .'.. .731 w :a i -i nn t.cirva.iiia inccuui ffii:::::' 84"? uescnoea oy m mper, ; -.r- " - Whlch onlysecpnomlc matter, could be the state. The attendance was the! The president . should call that! ... largest', th purpose for the further conference. Tha, reparation ques- t0S .tatesman to neqnlre any les i th him may oe noa lor vn v I : .i.. t. . i.- t w. CUNDAT . f,ftrvaltia' unr Is univer-Ustlon once and for all, and per- staUs M initiate a conference , from 'lZ.Z?jr . T" " , w t . ,, . w . . i J .. a. i . . .ilii.. i "I - V. mi an Jm 1 Was-s: aas nua aw .: - t ' s ip.go Vnm1S! maer . coW e exchange. n Joan, be- WEEKT.T AND SUNDAx One raz Headline on a railroad story. says "PranmiHiAn ta miimA hearlnfiT on twean countries - Credits - are all-suf-1 nmn TmnV Rnt it will have more - - ' I iitiK. : i au i juou vumwj v i oieillty UUUi me nttnng uu tratacr Some Will say that Lloyd George is allies in the. great -war it is isaid J box that used to be conducted in the (i9V.VVU.VVU W CAWUUEU -it-: 1 AW I wu-w. " : 8-?J development of journalism was the ( tlon just now Is sm extremely iml sons." says the Buffalo Times. But j ganda" to bring this nation into the I grocery. 8i BXHi". . ... m . - 1 . . . i m jj I .'s .rt . .'.'-w it 1 i.. hnth minintarrii bv 1 atir fmm vhnao ftfcytm th world ia I -R.taa mn Eitm Tints" fomiahod on anpH-1 , . . f , . , . I that barab schoolmaster, experience, at I now straggling to recover. i . : J entertainment proviaea oy wie r- clo.e ou. Genoa ana The Hague. It remains to -How different -is the purpose of the ' . a, . 1 -J' Xm . I .a. .m " n w ' Vast, nfnJL f!Aranftn I w ' w . . .a I . . I vains ana newpwv peopiw un i mu auu v "-- - . bft eeen wneUler he wm proui Dy tnem. j loan asked by Russia. That mecnani- "v - - SIDELIGHTS r " It the Germans .want a place in the sun they are welcome . to n ,in -t-n grain fields of Oregon, about niw Powers Patriot. v . m m w -Taxed all his' enerertek says a headline in a paper. .Well, ,ln these days that is about all thrra is left on the untaxable llstr Haines lUCorti. . rtin mat' atriV.a new. on In this country are due, in the last analysis. tO'Someuung aeeper man wages anu hoars of work. Sentiment or economic blunders will be found mixed v up in the cause interprise , .itecoro-niei.' tain. . . MiatalcM An iinvbanDen'-thev are made, and their manufacture ia an extremely- nnprontable business. A side Iitia a avsnunii connectea wmi ll as the making -of exousea There is no market for either product. Polk Coun ty Itemiseri - - K . in "VoVimnlca. 1nt fall we found farm era , selllne their corn as low as 0 mti a' bnnheL Kobodv has yet ex plained how at such a Vtime .the - pro mm1 dtitv nf , 20 cents, on corn im posed by the pendingytarlff bill is go ing, to help the farmer. Coquille Val ley oennnei. . . The last stand of the 'ol guard" to do away with the primary system re minds one" that they may be licked, Knl ittAV nr' iirrnrtpr. -Of p. cer tainty, it Is hard-for them to forget the powers shorn hy the primary, law, and they are constantly seeking its overtarow.--iineDoro Argus. ? ratloa.- Mill reraittaneea b Money .9rd rioraia Order or Dmft. If roar poatof hee a 1 a monev-order erffie. J- Of 2 -rant etanps MORE OR .. LESS: PERSONAL Z!m h. an.ntaL alike all remittaneet pa I novar haaii omialari Thk Imnrtl. i means & verV'creat 'flSal to the re .ti- TK- Imml Pnblishina ComOaDT. 1 . ,f ... . . i ...... .... ; ' sions carried away arid the deter-1 mainder of the wprld .Pnrllattil. Oreren. ,TfKi.EiuoxE maTn 7iei; ' all depart-1 rnination ly those in attendance to : nralt reariwi ly inn nnnnar. Because .of. interallied de ;ebts,'. Even now It is not too late to retrace J caliy. backward csuntry,- never lisving I his steps, although ne cannot repair j manufattured her ,-own machinery, es- the damage done by the dual ziasco, ai l pecially that needed by advanced farm- v Random Observations: About Town ln-f Genoa, and. at .The Hague.".. But be- ln- artA nw to nrnduR laree I 1Be PefP1? OL !1 f more -and more strive' for. the. ad- ternatiohal credit and-liiternatiOnal i ause of the magnitude of -the" task of aua.ntities of cereals to 'feed her town I fr? :0Tf CLJL TtinA and vancement and development of the exchange.. Germany's! future ito4rr0f3S the half -starving, people of Europe. JSTs started.' This will complete LdlC WCIC HflW. -CTV yivuuwuvcw., I TiniTJinT " T rnTTl M. ' 1 1 n.IlfJ12lVl .Blanil I a. .i. aua4 AL . w... I - - " in ITil LTuVcniCalL 1U UIQi 4.vre " .. . ' . ' V .7 .. . .."!.. ., T ica 00 .. .r""-- t eiven ter ia exchange i Ulrpa. r C... -Btv iudre. has The organization ; tn an earner point. . because . ner resources attnougn says wniie n: n j ucta -lMl produce when they are J zill Xn iTeinfVr with the highway commission relative to. tne mas mat are to be received from contractors. . " -Tr. w: H. Smith of Xakeview is at trarilner the meetina of the state hlgh- wav commission, being interested in ...... ..(.. v . v. a imnMivftin.nt nf tba DreWS is found in the fact that it involves i " P """T1 vl. V- valley section of the Kiamain aiis th. anr.nlf, f .ithr inlliilism . or on ' e : recognition of.tho old ew T.,t.viHJ. w-hwtv. - . V mmvif,lm TCRifher -Is willinar to sur-1 neois, wmcn gii.n.ii "v w , - - - . ....... a . a . , . . . MbM '. Bim rtllk a avw a aa a uaa,i , if- period was looked upon as an an- and her. economic assets, Ger- to predict with any f1 J5 suppUed. The war stopped the. fehlp- nual Junket. In a measure that many's-futures Jmportant from a wttin aafrfhe wartt ! was an accurate assessment; Rut commercial standpoint. I Because of utue annrehinsion." ; Then.agam. .5 W5 iV that impression lingers in any j her position as a nation, Germany's I the conference,-of ecessity. bad. I wbeat district an Europe is suffer. mind. It should be dismissed. lnture is important from aipomicai 1 " r.r pay there can-be . ; . . ' - . v : l n r a n. i n T?. Ti fh pcuaiilt I . . . ... . i .i n i I no onestlon. - v . - ' .. ; The 1 present up-state newspaper i iicuiw 01 we setuemeni tiui:iii - - . is a eoine business and k nrof es- not only. In Germany x but other ! atonal concern.. It has passedto Inhere on thellobe of fall into a ' George Aiken of the Ontario Argus, who attended the , editors' , meeting a Corvallis and" ?f ewpo.rt reports that he had a "glorious", time, i ne sea nreexe was refreshing to one : coming -out of the Snake -river country. .. - The Oregon Country '"uiliaol Uni.aniiui in Brief fena lor Jit -i t Faar Reader. the etite'd an aiertfand revenue- chaotic stated Germany's futnrfe nretand the conflict goes on." ct the way of-uch in all revolutions, r. W. Kellogg, Wanowa countys f nrodifcine. enterprise. . It is a" re- Important, iron a social sxanapoint. flection of theiommUnity mood snort, wnat nappens xo Germany The finish of the negotiations is not (and in France's against her king. ;Rus St. in the view of the New ToTk Post, j gu has destroyed that old csar : gbv even in our own against King George j gtneer, is among those present at; the Tt Is indeed a desirable. thin to be well descended, but the glory belong to our anceatora.-Plutarch. INJURING THEMSELVES " for development and' is Coften vsu-1 as a republic will have a marked lhtchieuggrests that V'the larger an- ernment, root and branch. It has paid I nArlor to it Tt dallv or weeklT I effect on' the ' rest of the TWorldvl swer lies in the fact that the endof the the debt a thousand times in sweat and t"" " " v5- I . . . . i ... i . 1 m. u.mi. tha mH t. .1 -a .v.. a ,,mi. .nM h. I irom almost any standpoint. s i wmicu . - -lUiw uuumj uv "" -"'' -"".r- .. .... . . . . , .. !f .the conference. Botn sides, nave not nav. community and often is the factor!: a. Germany In ; collapse -would been testing each other's staying pow- ; Th allied ooint involved is'.the lease that - leads It.-i The i banker. ' thelmnan " a nrotraeted financial de- i era. -The non-Russians have the' bet- llf ranitaiism. . Tttiasia has set merchant; the mechanic. tow sSeee. fessional man. the,, public library MTould mean a uepressionln -cofn- I credit?" When she desires It badby i ZZZ,m m.rt.t." The and tne communuy.ousiness organ- merce- - it wouiamean toweuiig enougn sne win nna away 01. aga.s aIU s . thl ew ,est!m9 destr6yed. Kmokfield. Wash., And it might . t ?wel8. JttmfJl and their war game of market compet I- T"" euest at the Portland. - m r m m Mr. and Mrs. "P. Aw Toung of Al- meeting of the state highway commis sion. - - , -r life, amrt Mrs. It. C. Bwki -of Baker are visiting and shopping in 'Port land. - - Another SiDOkane business man who is.-a guest -of the Multnomah is -E. M. Strickland, a hardware mercnant. : Mrs. . J, G. Megler, who operates a totlAWo tVioia- 'f3nr:Viin Knj'.lA lontnli inn 1 mtcrVif I tO Wnat tlM DOWerS OemanO. , VVAUe ' . ,v .. .. j.. ..w, il neither is as Imnortant and often vArv-easilv meart another war. J I if 18 may.be Ahwrt A1!6 .H2.-ie Uon restored, unqualifiedly. ' They of . - f-- Vourier , journal points o I f er i-r a moratortum that would imake is I iar less vaiue-in leaaersmp i ua tne otner .nana, a, uermanr tathe Keds learn and practice me les- i t-- t a. - i i. . nwn A th nvrrnnolla - - - , - i,h.n h i,v.i-.mrn. ni.Mi.h.r: u.v h.r tt ar b.r taison of simoie morality wrhksh was read 1 """-'t"" V" i ' IT".' DLOODSHED is always regret- p"-" T " f 71 " ZZJZZ'Z to them by Lloyd George at the close l"r f"w v ""i . . JL table. t never helps any cause. - The Oregon istate press asso ,F Q Atkinson of Redmond was ,rew things are held forever by tlon.Of today is coraposea pt sen-i "Jot obtaining fhmk! recogniwon. to j- .. . . , "r rI f tha wortd.i . But there nas Deen recent diooo- . a..cu r-"" rTV'"""- 7 .C . " -' 1 the Cleveland plain Dealer . suggests I i w cent arrlvaU fn PorUand. ct4ir. Tta Irlealaara ascendlmr and ItalSPeed the day .of U return "to nor- Uh ,.- tm nmhaJiw. even I from Floyd.Ramp. who Im now survey-1 , , ul " vilaw, -.tr,fi irt.r.r mar worloT conditions; : L 1 i.iovd Geonre is convinceo that the IngAid Tielping to restoreaf ' and u. W.JSchauer of Baker is a guest .ing rauroa men v -s " TIT v,.. k fc 'li-inoh ludement is correct and that drouth destroyed product on im that at the Multnomah. and . caused bloodshed. 4 Digger , ana oeuer ,uregon.; jm - ?' L" ".-rT n -n4 mmon TOuntryl havine received 'his creden- - 'property ; striking ,s miners have damaged l community societies, development sition from ejvery standpoint, is the L,onnd bnishevism for doiae busi-1 Uals via theljLeaveaohh penitentiary I . . . i.Ji..... ..J .i.i. n. I naflnn tht Mti hiirrv th Aav nf.lT: ; i .j.l for vlnlotkm nfthn psninrnr. ft cava. i !cbo ui iui vwct.v avr& i - ' . iniv9ttn" j " --. . . 1 "Help starving . Hussla iow. and she i I a: ; -a. '- - , ;,' :r; . : J wlll-rretyia.' thousandfold" whe: her This likewise' seems 'to be the view of aI. aeetroyed- railroads, farm machin the Grand Rapids Press, Which asserts w and .dreuth-stricken-districts: come property and taken lives. It hasIeagues fl, other stated-wide or 5 oeett' dohe In the struggre for' a ffanisaUons fclay j their part, but fair '.wage ami fair working condi- here'ls an association that in-its tlona : ' 1 -. ' . - potentialities is without a counter- JThe miners have .. a ( grievance, part or cojpapeutor. nation that can. hurry the day of normal conditions. ; We can such a conference. ; We can con- tribute morevthan any other nation to its success, without undue sacs-ftliatBatlons are like Anvididuala, They jag-ain nto production" which they? G. S. Smith pf Arlington Is registered at the Imperial..' ' - - , - - O. K. Johnson ot Heppner and J. C Palmer of Fossil are. among Eastern Oregon stockmen " transacting business in Portland. :y m m f A. A. HOlstrora, A, Voglund and S. S. Johnson are visitors from Marsh field. - ' - c Wesley Vandercook of Kelso, man ager of the Long-Bell interest there, is in Portland - on business. . ; V. E. Clarno of Antelope is visiting Lin Portland and registered at the Im perial. Colonel E." R. Budd of Ilwaco Is transacting some railroad business while-in Portland. , . : , .. m - . Mr. " and Mrs. R. P. Land! a of La Grand a,re among those registered at the -Imperial. : -. j" - ..v-'v' -"...i.!'" t'E. McConkie of Heppner is among out of town visitors. ; i a a T. H. Parry Af Condon is transacting business In Portland. .. . - . : - ... :... - m m An out of town visitor is J M Bled soe of Wallowa. ; N.E- Dodd of Haines is in PorUand on business - f. W. "HlUstrom Of Marshfield Is making a business visit to. Portland i . -a . a " T.T. Holton,-a Tillamook merchant, ta transacting- business in- Portland. v- OREGON - ' Trhlta' Ha Tliw Rlwr vallM - ha9 had nami'n Kln- Mav 20. annle orch- aiui nd other fruits and general crops are- in fine condition. ' r - - - Two steamers. :' the Piorldlan . and Robin xGoodfatlow. left w Astoria this week with 800 cases of canned aalraon for San Francisco and New York. At an exnenaa of more than 3100.600. the Goose Lake Valley Irrigation com pany is constructing Cam ana reser voir 13 miles west of Lakeview on Cottonwood creek, . t -.- - " Robbers entered the hardware store of A. Ceiarter (X at Falls City. last Tuesday night and carried away tooled cutlery. ; guns and ammunition to the amount of $&0. The. Central - Ore eon Development league has been organised at Burns by representatives ot Vale. Burns and On tario, the object being the development ot that section of the state, -v - .' Tfn white-nine blister" west exists in Central Orejron; so far as the United states bureau or plant industry j nas been able to ascertain In investigations covering more thaa a week. The national record - for . butterfat production among cows during the last . month was won by - Poppy Lora, - a thoroughbred Jersey cow owned , by Wilt Bchrman of Forest; Grove. When road work now under way In Clackamas and adioimnc counties is oompleted this fall, -Oregon wtli bave a nard-surraced road teaamg tome, coast- via Newberg - and -McMinnvUle. f O. H. ,Todd of Eugene, who has been 5 irrowing peppermint oil since 1868. re-; norts - that -. mnv Willamette valley mint fields are being plowed up because some unknown - person opened the First NaUenal bank lock-box at the Marshfield postofficaN Friday and de stroyed the contents,' among them a lot of non-negotiable papers and mort gagees -- ' -F J.5 Peterson.1 a young rancher near Newport,. Is In a precarious condition at hi home .j the result of a wound inflicted upon him by bis wife, who stabbed him with a paring knife during a ouarrel. - ... Last Thursday at the University ;of tendent or schools at Tillamook; Av brey Q. Smith, superintendent at Med- lord, ana Max , Himm, supenntena ent at - HqseburA were initiated , into Flu Delta- Kappa, .- - OBSERVATIONS AND IMPRESSIONS : OF. THE JOURNAL MAN :; treatment-bs' the operators. The slonal andTother activities In Ore- the day wfita fhe peoples of ; the them. Only thus can . they become -omran nds out r railroad worker have a. Just cause. I gon. as well as newspaper menH earth return ta a peaceful and pilstroaar.'i Amerlea. baa the lataotrfeet! v soviet' Russia-askVv for-: ahy': iualble .But however lust the cause of the themselves, members or non-mem- perous existence. IVULZi ''iMm real from hammer, saw or plane to. ' Vorkln forces, .that cause is Im- be place a; new Ration on """ t!!1: ?' ?!m TrK Xo .measurably Injured by resort to the Oregon Press association. (viewpoint, it ,is our duty to i ty- Jtmay appea generally .know, and net the By Fred Lockley ..... ; - . - . I . - , . - . . . , . . - auuuiu : swwraiiT ; allow. anu nut luc thatffourse.,rlt;is our duty to hn- ment o keep ' contribute to the. Woodsneq an violence. . . " . " ZJZmA a' el thatklnd of treatment will be theihd- r P' .W"VYJ.U-", -Leaders of the working men-have j.rjr in,ivu ,u i ...m, . ti of hese days the .Russian ""'V1"'' " " , , nn vn,i.r. viniencA -. ThW have Oregon ana w asningtonj snores kit is one oi jtne greatasi .oppojrtuni-1 n-onle will overthrow the Bolshevists, ' rrn- - i, I nnf- (ha mniith if th r!nltimhi I ties for lerviee that ver came to al ai ibev overthrew uier cur. Then, and 7 iea.: hav; not pU,lla Mvoca'ted.. Why Ther. 1. Uation.If ;we.dodge 1 tlclpated in violent action. .But j doubtless traffic enough to make! screen of isolation. we shaU yet have coma soon," Krassin's promises G. W. Barsee. ho few workers who take n It profitable. There Is already too to pay the prtce for-one-of the most the un. i who deliberately destroy I much loss pf time on the part 6f J destructive . International policies ! rn.,i. whn ltV 1lf tin vervJ traillC along tne ' coast m UUting ever ruuraiauaj . Aiucncttii mit" iniurv to the cause of work-1 the ' long lnlandvruns-' in: order to government' J lg vmen in general ( and to those get -over the river.- The' time is 'others on strike who respect ''the coming; and is not -far - distant, - law of thsJand. . t ;' - - when the growth, of population ": it in true that others thai the near the .Pacific; will force Im- ; : workers may be responsible for the j provem en ts of this nature atrlke. It mav be that the7 men . vlln,- t ctokm Inluatlce: Butt . DOWN BYlTHB SEA - t r ia Tint the eiuu of th erhnlnvers f . " - ." A i'. "h.s .nrvinr mn 'iniurs? -whin 1 'THE people aftm fhe "Oregon ganlzed Inlands, chased tha calves i thaw '.Msort to violent activitv it .- w7wma" "f untw, tney were; exnausieo, ana - -. . i- . ..--. linen gnawea tnrougn -ine tenaons Than iVa vnrlrlnr fne-'it - T'Vi- f l..nfa J i -. t " w -- -.- i auv . v a.vvau. Wharf " rats - transported from their lurking ' places ? under ; the docks are resourceful beasts if one may credit a story that trickles down from, Umatilla county. The rats? at Stanfietd .torero found kill ing calvesv Wolf fashion, they or- ; is the cause of the workers them selves. "They not only violate law, t but they as well stimulate a pub- Jn lie sentiment, against -the purpose r they seek to achieve. . . ' ' V . Strikers would do far better were ; they to eliminate violence in their ' campaigns. They would command -' a' public respect that they forfeit spending their, money, for it. They j THE TRANSFERRED PATjSNTS are bonding themselves for It. They I 'a ' . J are bullding'part of ',Tt.' by short 'T'lIE American public would feet stretches 'and' at "great sacrifice. : ' L far better about the dye con They preach" the gospel of the troversy between , , the Chemical Roosevelt highway to all who Jour-1 Foundation. of, which -Francis P. v v rlW ney coastward.t They presented It t Garran. former Alienor operty Cus- T.u.uu.w th Orator. ' Uw, RED SUNDAYS! to the Oregon newspaper men at J todian, is the bead, and the govern- Newport Saturday .evening. Iment were Mr. Garvan to get down r They vision a fjnally. completed I to the;tacts' of the transaction by line when travel by automobile I which, the foundation gained sn I . v. - - . . I Mi Ma tt.. .aAw.a OTk. aw a.BH -vw .rf.ia r.rUnirrpm rrunu,owo me waai iui .v v .,aw.v " II ,1T,awM trrn a,.PMnt rc- J California will be on smooth roads! waste time talking about .German I ord In the Monday papers as "that with easy grades. They know that agents and J;heir part In the cage. i raanaitiea win follow battles. it wni mean tne opening hp of in- Ultimately . the , issue will be de- i tmm- TTifiRb ' sAAav.ft molo'ri numerable -small Valleys ' to; pro&uc-1 cidI In a court of law. At present t cycle carrying -Arthur Gritsmacher tlon. and the, support of a popula- the publio statements are fappar ancp Frea Bishop lorashed into doubledr "trebled and quad- ently an appeal for ?a; favorable - truck. Gritzmacher and Bishop rupled. They know that the acces- pnhHd. sentiment, and the public la .'.r, dead. Tha motorcycle is re- atbUIty of thousands of acre or ex- not nearlyao much Interested, Just i ported to have 'been traveling at eeedingly fertile f but ; now virgin now In how he case came up as high speed on the wrong side of land to railroad termini and ocean It Is In knowing;! the transactions - therroad. t ! . ' : ports would Instantly change the between MrGarvaij aa .alien prop I civilization from that of a frontier I erty custodian,;. and Mr.. Garvan's Veveninx. Miss Anna Donnelly of-Mel to a busy modern lif e. ; : j company, e -Oiemlcal , Founda "- linnvillei William Walah, an Oak-j With such help as the state high- j Uon, were in keeping wjth the heat land udenW and Walter Wahle of! way. commisaton nas wen ame xo j puonc nwuw. glve the constmcuon or the nign- J Maybe German agents Drougnt up way , by short stretches :.'ia already I the" issue. That can Jbe settled la progress,; The; line is being laid I later. If necessary. .In the meanr out by engineers ' with-' a view to a I time ! the fact ; remains ; that Mr. scientific construction and ultimate I Garvan, as trustee of seized patents'. permahency.; The line south from turned -over those patents to Mr.. Tillamook Is rapidly approaching Garvan's company. , If the transac the Lincoln - county line cm the tion was . ethical and according to north. engineers - are now setting law and the public -interest : was stakes near the -south line of Lin-j protected, Mr. Garvan's company cola county. A recent convention! will not have great'difficnlty In re- of the Roosevelt Highway 'association- was one of ; the , most ' largely attended and - most enthusiastic road conventions ever held on the Pacific coast-' L ; -The coast line : highway cannot be headed off." tt Is one of those things that are Inevitable. Foreign I cars and Oregon, cars are at every accessible point 'along the ocean. litis so human and so. natural for i people . to seek the rreeneryKthe seemed In Tpood faith in the '-opinion of ttoet Nashville Banner, and it reeails that behind them are the murder rec-' ords of Lenin and' Trotsky, but it also suggests- that "the size and importance of the very land itself. , and the vital heed ' of having it - producing ;for the feeding of the lands which surround it. make it imperative that something be done, and- we can only hope -that a. sane and satisfactory ..conclusion " Is reached." - - -;ir''... - r Because : 'Russia was . Impossible, the St, , Louis Globe Deraocrafc'is' convinced-there could e -"ho agreement reacheda. Jnasmuchias "there could be no hope of success, either at the Genoa or Haarue - conference unless .all' the delegates were amenable to reason, and sincere in their" efforts to come to' a settlement of the..problems thatsn fronted ) them. The Russians ignored every 'reasonable proposition from-be-fcinnln to end and they were oirecUy responsible for defeating their own in terests in both codferencea" However, the Rochester Times Union thinks that the Russians feel nhat ,m. all negotia tions -with the .Western powers yiey have the whin handV--They believe that aooner'w later the-woria win nave, to do ' business with Russia on Russia's terras. ,Will th fnfluenoe of Western ecverftments preventvindividual bar gainings between the -capitalists of the "West and ; the; Russian government? .That is" ' Question, which only -time r.n. definitely answer." There are. How ever, . compensations for the failure, 4n the helief of the Mobile Register" be cause had the conference . "succeeded lnvloaningr money to Russia" it would have failed more Abjectly than is now the. ease. Let Russia come, humble and suppliant, -willing to accept the. terms -ot the civilised world ; or .let her still wallow in her wretchedness until she comes to appreciate succor.' -Alberta, ; Canada, were, all more or less serlouslys Injured , when their automobile t overturned at a curve. It- appears that the lights had been extinguished and; the machine was belnar run'; ''dark," V-" Mrs. J. H.-Gilllhan of Portland sustained very serious injuries and Mrs.George Neurer, also of Port- " land, severe ; hurts - when, ' Sunday, their; automobile overturned . not " fa from St. Helens. Their steer ing, gear -gave way. i Waldron i Watson, S years old. was lacerated about- tha face . and stunned. Sunday, .when the bug- driven by his uncle. J. B. McCurdy, ran. from the road. Into a telephone pole.. -That the machine struck a rock and became unmanageable, is the testimony. -. "' r W, Y.Roysdale. a Texan. - was badly hurt and two machines were smashed In-a Sunday collision. Ann Eojer, an Jlycax-olJ irlk was cut ty Cilrs glass when-the naciiae l;ne, the thunder of the surf and the majestic movement ot the taining the- patents. But rlf -Mr, Garvan took advantage of his public position to feather the private nest of Mr. -i Garvan there ' will be . a considerable difference. That la a matter-for the proper officials to decide After that, Mr. Garvan's charges about German agents and activities at Washington - might be taken seriousTyy but; Just now Mr. Garvan is on'trial, not" the administration. cone and the beauty of the toast land the question is the transfer of certain patents,- not -who raised the Question.: :. - -.. - -. 1 The "CnUed States mieht now inUiate a - non-political method -, which : would brins results, in the view of the Brooa- lyn Eagle,, which suggests that fnf the Barding f administration -will propose such .-a. conference, or indicate ItS'Wlll- tngness to participate in- a gathering of this-kind. tne wnoie aspect ot vra-ia conditions would T change over-night. Both PresiBent Harding and Secretary Hughes -are committed to the principles of - conferences and have Intimated tneir neaira. a m , ta imt vr- nomlc conference. Why not take steps. without further - delay, to bring - it about?" ' As to' this the Christian Science Monitor feels convinced- that "the gulf between the two systems is etili imnassablv . wide.' while the Roanoke Times asks, "What next? Will tha allies -failure be the Germans- op- oortunity.' . i v- - . - tjiikkIb. hv her own actions has raised an - impassable farrier, the Janesville Gasette tsolnta out, because were can be no recognition of a nation without morals tn business, devoid ot the mm men principles of honesty among them the payment of obligations and a guar antee that there will be protection to commerce in the future. ' Russia is not aisnosed to do this, and therefor, the nations will have vto wait until she does." -But to have agreed to Vpro- viA wavs and means to settle her obll r ations would. the Wilson N. C Times believes, "have reacted against tlie power of the Soviets insRusBia. . Sor.Jatity .cf'the naf.'sns In their fa- tura .f'raUts with Russia. is core tcaa a- rw WrmaM-'dlMlnjraiabed lineara teui Mr. Locker about h aiMMeter and about bie ooatioc to Oreioa ia 1S61, irin to Crater Uka- at' tSma whaa few mhitm mca bad eeea that Vf" rS-Tta nacratira .ot thi pioneer wul ba concluded la r a a horn- in -Ray -county: Missouri, September 1845,said Judge William M. Colvig, when I visited him recently . . x.,- kn. u -Modrnra. "Mr father. HIGHEST PAID WORKMEN'" I ,."-.t , wut horn at This .Writer Asks Why Workers on J aeesbur-.. va September 1 19, 1814. My uiumj, mnraiii iiuvimr I mother whose maiaen n&me wh mou Portland. July Hs-To the, Editor- of -nrAfrsrA horn-at Hartford Conn, The Journal-i-The railroads Jwve Been j Mv father's father, Jacob Xynga Col- the .wages offered tOk thcsesWhom " they j jean Baptists Colvlnge. married Zeles-seelr-to take- the plaeea Of shoprpen. , To l T'ara, the 'daughter of a Greek sea Rome -th sal tif waa-os advertised J ..ni,ii, sk. wan horn -in Athens. My seems rather appealing. - SeVejj dollars j grandfather. Jacob I Colvinge, served. a eay iooKSDig to a lot ot peopie,- even as a soldier- nnaer sowparw. to h , writerTake s a man, for In- were sent to the island of San Domingo stance, who. is'able lo look over ian en- to quell a slave lnsurrection.i In those gine such as move the neavy trains on days . Britannia r ruled the waves and. the railroads, ; discover where repairs j not wanting to oe atpmrea u ;are needed, and then make tha repairs and put the engine tn -proper shape tor wotk. wnat is sucn a man wortny.ana wnat ought he to receive as compen sation? - Not only is his employer inter ested m, his work. but. the- public has an interest,' because lives and property depend upon .- his skill. - -How are we to determine whether or; not his serv ices are worth 7, or J10, per day? We might make comparison of such a xage with those received by experts-in other vocations. ! A man who . can build - a j house thaf is xatproofv,: rain-proot nnd j storm-proof, -cpnimands?from: f7: to ,$10 a nay after anarchltect nas designed a plan for him to work on.- A brick-J mason or stonemason awould' command at east as much- under like circum stances.: Go on dftwn the line plumb ers, paperhangers, tc.;. and we find the skilled shopman is receiving: no "more pay than the. ordinary ski lied laborer. The shoptnan i should receive, niore. wageef as compared -with those others, because of the increased responsibili ties Of his position. The Uvea and. prop erty of the general public jdepend upon his skin. " And as the responsibility In creases, so-should the pay. And so It does. We ? hear It " stated .. frequently at this particular time,, "Why, what's the matter with the railroaders? :They are the best paid, workers in the. coun try." well, if they are. is there any good reason why they should 'not (te? There - are many - reasons r whyi.tiiejr should be. As farmer. I am in sym- patny wita tne idea or -good -wages for all workingmen,' with the View that they will be enabled thereby- to purr chase and consumo- my surplus farm products, and as a good American citl- sea 1 believe that all workers should receive a reasonable share of the prof its of their handiwork, with the end in view that, the standard of" living of the great mass of . the people shall be kept at the highest point ..Equity and Jus tice demand that the present strike be decided in favor of the strikers. . ' ' - B.. F. Wilson.- ' HUMAN VANITY " . Fred Selly in The atn'a Busiaeea ' Ostrich feather, fans, priced in one New Tork 'establishment at Sl30. may be had at another, place, only . a few blocks away lor 130. The fans "are bought at Identical prices in .th -same wholesale establishment.- Because Of human vanity, the proprietor of 1 a store which sells- to one class of peo ple would, no more dare to charge 'too IHfle than -: another would - dare to charge too- much. The woman who pays 930 for a feather, fan fa ja un important shopt might -not-be willing to pay much more than that ; . but the woman who deliberately goes to the most, expensive store in town might feel only contempt" for- the establish ment if she found luxury articles there priced within the pocketbook ranje of the masses. - - ' - - - - f7no-llali. ' .TMnme ! BonaDarte. - with my Hmdfather; and other French soldiers, came to America. ' ' 7 -: f Jerome Bonaparte was the youngest brother of Napoleon. He was corn n -i7a i na TWwnber 27. 1808.' be mar ried absabeth Patterson; ne -of the f Baltimore. His marriage was more or less of a tragedyi as Napoleon refused to. recognize JU, tie maao xus krY.ih .Ternme klritf 'Of "Westphalia. His Mfe was a stormy one.; xMapown refused to recognise, his , marrUge i to t-K.flh.th -attrmru and comDellea mm to marry Catherine daughter of King Frederick!- Of? Wurttaraburg, .With aii f Nanoleon. he went to wltx- .rioA -f' TCanoleon's' return from Elba resulted : in Jerome's bemg raaoe m. peer. With Napoleon's defeat at Water loo, he went to Swltserland and later to Florence, where .he lived 'in exile for the next 80 years. , His jetiioa to vn. 1847.' was denied by the. chamber of -peeraVHowever, he was later aiiowea wnw w nm. Mtnntnr:, where ' he " died In I860. There-was torn-., to Jerome Bonaparte and. Eliaabetb Patterson a son, who was named aerome Napoleon. .He was born in 18ofcand died in 1870. One of his sons. Charles "josepn tionapw. became a well known and .successful lawyer of Baltimore and was a mem ber of Roosevelt caDinei- -tm- grandfather. Jacob- Lynga Col vlnge, settled' at Leesburg. Vs- where h married - Winifred Hoffman.. He became an Americant Citisen. In mak i. , m naturalisation papers the clerk by accident wrote bis namaCol- tg instead of Coivmge. so our wmij name became wmtij jmuam v . m father. William- Lynga Col vig, married Helen Mar - Woodford, whose people came to America from Banbury, Kngano, iav. -...r , mother's family tree -1 found the; following reiauves serveu ta ie Revolutionary war: ;. aoci,. - a, Enoch, Isaac, Jonan, josepu, juu.hi, x--k Samuel. ., Selah and Zebulon Woodruff. Tou - see my moxner mother was a Woocrull. ne inarri-w a wooaioro. -''"antr-. athr stid mother met In Ohio, where they were married In 1838. From Ohio they moved to Richmond, alo. That was in 184. X was' born there the fouewing year. 'Jesse James was also born there, and was about a year .-, t was born. - His people were fin neonie. :t Bad companionship when he was a boy led Jesse . James astray. ' There were 10 of us chiidrett. Mother felt she ought to have noagh to make i. while, so she took three of her brother's children. Their 'mother died when they .were -crossing me plains, so- mother reared these chil dren, and' they were the same as our brothers and sisters. This made It bovs and two girls laHir family. Of these 11 children : three are still alive. Mv brother-Volney lives at 'Ashland. my brother George at Grants Pass, and live here tn Medford. : We left Park- vine. Me Mijr 5. 1851. We had twd wagons. iOur provision, wagon and three - yoke- of oxen - and the family wagon At wo- yqke.' We reached The Dalles 1 October 5. We left, our heavy wagon at Fort Hall,' on account of los ing some of our cattle. Mother and the children cam down the Columbia in canoes with Indian, rowers. At the foot of the Ciseade rapids they transferred to" the" Steamev Lot Whitcomb.' We were met at 'Portland- by : Tom Carter; who took us to his home, which at that time was one of the best in Portland. His daughter Nancy married 'i. Lafayette Grover, later Governor G rover of Ore- gon. :She. not lives la Portland, iln tne winter or 1 sol 1 went to school w Portland to John Outhouse.' 4 We had left father at The Dalles.. H was go ing to bring the cattle downithe tralL For five weeks e thought he-wu aeaa, ss We beard nothing of blm. lie. had been caught by a heavy snowstorm in tne cascades, ana an nut three of our oxen starved o death. ; O "A man who had a donation land claim in East Porflahd said to father. fn give, you my claim for tout -two Oxen, your" light wagon and your Ken tucky rina. Father said, T haven't come from, across the. continent: to set tle, in the dense forest. So he turned the offer- down. Father put in that win ter "working In. a sawmilL The next spring we . struck but f for California. Our team - played out at Canyon ville, so father" took -up a "claim where the team lay down on him. - This was In the summer of 1851. Another man' had squatted on the claim, but was willing to relinquish fits ngnts for. xoO; so father f paid, him; $50. for hi 40-acre WASHINGTON " Fir last Wednesday ' destroyed a whole block of l buildings in the town of Mansfield, . Wash. A' deelaratioh of her candidacy for the state senate has been filed at "Bel- lneham bv Mra.Kdna W. Bebe.JJ;ra Beebe is a Republican.. - : - . . Patrick.- Reardon. 55 years' old. wa" round unconscious, in a 5eatue street and is believed to be dying in the City hospital from - poisonous liquor. . - Despondent because of illness. John H. Dawson.. 49 years old. a resident of Ticoma, shot and killed himself st a summer camp- at Redondo Beach. - . Struck On the head bv a flvins sttunn which he was assisting; in pulling, Jas per Honn, . 6u -years old. was aiiiea Wednesday : in Cherry Valley, -near Seattle. ... : ' .-:" -, .- - -- Doubleday A Co.. with a capital of 850.000. will start this week the publica tion or a- weekly JLemocrauc newspa per In Oiympla, the Washington Slate Journal. 1 ' Miss Nell Walker has arrived in Seattle after having hiked all the way from her home in Boston. She proposes to cross Asia and Europe and then, re turn to her home. - ; s ..,t- Jesse Donnell. nronrietor of the Mum xanita hotel in Seattle, was seriously wounded with a Tasor when be grap pled with a burglar who was robbing bis apartment Wednesday night- , County" Atrent Robert Cowan a Montesano believes th - dry -weather has reduced the hay crop of ther county hv . full it ntu.ha.lf-, Tha not tn cToq. however; -shews no-signs of damage, . -Lr-Cr-Oootiwlnof Sattle-."bast com mander,.. is in a critical condition at Yakima, having been taken suddenly 111 while' attending the state encamp ment of United Spanish War Veterans. : Lvmarf W.' Bodhey. senior member of the Bonney-Watson" company, who came to Puret- touna wnn the ssner wood and Bonner families in 1852, died suddenly Wednesday - at his -home in Seattle. .. .:-' -.- . -. Chester Woodall." 28. was probably fatally Injured, near Yakima when he was caug-ht ins a -tractor he was driv ing. When found, he was unconscious, pieces Of his flesh being torn out and his clothing stripped from. him. . -.. - , ' IDAHO - T ' Harvesting is in fun swing in the Lewlston country and wheeft crops are yielding from 10 to 20 bushels to.the acre-- :,a-. -, iw j..v . :..? ;'-""-f The civil service commission has been requested by the postoffice department to hold -an examination -for. selection of postmaster at Kooskia. - , - - Gradinar hast been com Dieted 'for- new sidetrack 100 feet long on ? thj Naropa-Murphy. branch of the Oregon? Short Line' near Bowmont. ,r - Frank - Burns, formerly -of Dayton, Wash., died at his home at Arbon, Idaho, last week, of 'spotted fever, . re-Sulting- from the bit of a tick. - - Between 800 and 400 men are flghtinsf a fire covering a atrip 15 miles wide and 82 miles- long on Russell creek, about 15 miles northeast of-,Ciarkiav--r,'. The Jerome J.; Day scholarship in the school of -mines at the University of Idaho, for the four years beginning September- 15. has been -awarded- to Otto Huefner,. graduate of the Kellogg'" high school. T Muriel-Wegman, 24 years old. "was saved-from drowning , in an .under ground irrigation culvert at Boise by Matt Bargaeh. who dived ' into the. ditch, swam a Ionic distance into the culvert and rescued the child. : - ciaim. j, ,: -. ST:--a-:-- 'r-a-- 'I look back upon my -bovhood as a very happy time, for In these days the. whole country was -full 'of deer, elk ' and . smaller 'game, while the streams were full "of trout and salmon. I went to school to Rufus Mallorv in 1843. Later I went to school to L )fc Oioynski. This teacher was a rather timid man.: He was no fighter. The larger boys in school threw him out of the window and kicked him oat of the School yard, so our school quit before th term was balf over. His son Joe was of a vary different type, for Joe Choynskl became - a famous prize fighter. -. '.1 snlisted on April 5. 18S8, in Com pany C, First Oregon volunteer cav alry. ; company C was recruited at Jacksonville. Colonel C SL Drew r in, command Of the regiment. ' W wit to' Klamath lake where, tn the summer ef 18(3 w built Fort Klamath " In the summer of 1864 we rode ' across country to Fort Boise, returning that fall. I spent part of the summer of 185 at Fort Douglas. In Utah,; on de- tached service. When .we came back. to Fort Klamatlv hi the fall of 186. Captain F, B. Spraguev who had been looking-for a better rout across the Cascades, told-us he had seen a won derful lake. . One : of his men- - while honting had glimpsed Crater lake. Dad Rosa, our snide, a most excellent guide but : a very illiterate : man, said, 'I beam tell of that there lake way back in 1852. from Hillman. but I ain't never seen it The following Sunday, wnicn was early, In October, about 25 of us. on horseback. - went up - Anna Creek nunin- and reached the - rim of the lake at about where " Crater. Lodge new. is, Colonel John K. . Ross was with as-'. He said. 'Hillman stayed at my bouse and told me- about this lake. hut I didn t believe ru ninman aiea a year or to ago in Louisiana. We ttamed'the lake Lake Majesty, though some Of the men wanted' Jo call it Mystio lake. However, later it was named Crater lake." Twenty Years Ago "rom-The Journal of July 25, 1902. ? San Francisco James ' Jeffries and Robert . Fitssimmons - meet tonight in the arena of the National Athletic club, to battle for the heavyweight cham- -ptOnahlp of - the worldC The betting is 10 to 44 In favor of . Champion Jef fries, iir -iv'-- ''-f - -" - ' ' : " , , :' - : - . ;- . w Director-Harvey W. Scott Is strong- , ly In favor of Hawthorn park as the sit for th 190S fair,: Chairman Wes slnger at the meeting last night made an -elaborate report , in favor, of the Guilds Jake, tract. - i ' -. ' Chicaao President Mitchell of . the United Mine Workers has left Chicago for Wilkes-Barre. Pa. to take active charge of the big atrlke. The price of coal has Jumped to 88per ton. The bridge' at Rocky Point,'near"Hol-' brook; gave way yesterday and Gustav Leben -and two horses were, instantly killed and Anton r Spaldenberi; very had;y- injured. - - ; ,'' , . . " W :li w- . .... . . - '- , 1 ' "j r Grants - Pass . - Jefferson c Gibson, found guilty of murder id the first de gree for the killing of 'John Schon bacheler. - was -. sentenced; today by Judge ' Hanna JLo be hanged Friday, September i. Z ; , - The city council has decided to have a- temporary elevated roadway con structed on Hawthorne avenwe to ac commodate traffic until the street can be filled withgraveL. , ... . . ... .-.. . a " "The "Pertland postoffice has received, from Washington a consignment of thet new wstai cards. 'iTbey are Jcnowri as the JcKlnlay cards, a bust cf Presi- derit McKinley replacing mat or wasa- tngton. '- .. . - .! - 5 . ,Codcty Treasurer. "Lewis' gives nctice tfcat there is between 10,iu0 and ll OflO in .county, warrants outstancmg hich shouid be presented for fayt-iiw -4