I c THE ' OREGON ' DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, OREGON. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, lS22i G 8. JACKSON i... PubUaheH i IBs calm, be confident, ba cheerful and do mtto others aa you would here them do onto ). 1 - 1 XibUAhed, every weekday sad bander morning at Thei Journal building. Broa a In- ' bin i strftet. Portland. . Orsm loitered at the poeioffice at Portland, Oregon, far tranamiaeion tb roach tbe mtUa second 1 clans latter. - iUrihsM ADVEaxiSING BEPREiSfcXTA- TIVE Benjamin & Kentaor Cow. Brons ! wk building, 22 Fifth avenue. New Xork; ' t)0 Metiers building. Chicago. PACIFIC COAST REPRESENTATIVE St (C Morg enaon Co., Inc., Examiner building. Baa. FBaneieeo; Title Insurance building. Los Angotei: Securiaca building. Seattle. itHB OK1K4VOX JOURNAL reeanee, tba nght ' i M reject adrartidiig . copy whir-h it. decma f tbjectnabUi. It alao will not print any I copy tiiat in any way simulates readme mat ter or i that cannot readily be recognised a . adTertimg "T I oLBSCEIrTION RJ I B r Carrier Crty and !-.- i Daily and sxk RATES Country Sl.VDAI Ob wees' t .lSIOne month.. S .65 DAILJ 8UM)Ax tva week.' S .lfTOne week. .OS One month 41 MX MAIh. RAITS PATABI.E fif ADVANCE I DAILY AND 8CNDAT One year! . . . . . .18-OOIThree month. . . 12.25 ' Six month. .'. . . 4.25;One month 78 i wn,r I soxDAT (Without Sunday) J (Only) fns yaart ...... $9.00 'One year. $8.00 Stx montha. 8.25 Six montha.... 1.76 ?hre montha. One month . . . 1.75 .60 Three montha. . . 1.00 i WEEKLY WEEKLY AXD SUNDAY ilKmr Wednesday) An, reap .U.oOiUM year. .13.00 8'x months. .50: ? These irate apply only ia the Weat. Rates to Eastern points famished on appH eatlon. Make remittances ' by Money Order, gxpnes Order or Draft. If your poet off ice is Sot a money-order office. ,1- or 2-cent stampe vfll b accepted. Make all remittamcee pay able to ; Tba Journal Publishing Company, Portland.' Oregon. tELEPIIONE 1WAIN 7161. All departmanta I reached by thi number. We are in each haste to be doing, to be waiting, to be lathering sear, to make oar voice audible a moment in the de riavr. ailenoe of eternity, that we (onct that one thing, of which these .are bat the parts 'namely, to are. Robert Louia Stsremoa. GUILTY AS CHARGED OME of the railroads are moving for peace with their shopmen, e Baltimore & Ohio, one of the ost important roads in America, S one. Its president is Daniel JCVUlard. one of the best and squar est railroad heads in the country. The Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul tine ia another. 1 The minority group of roads panted to settle before. But they jwer outvoted by the hard-boils. 1 Irt the attitude of the two groups you have' tbe explanation :of why there is a railroad strike. T If the minority group can afford peace on jthe .proposed plan,, the irreconcil- Dies could afford it. If it is a good ace Tor the Baltimore & Ohio, t . Would be a good peart for the ar-mad lines that are standing lit tnr mora ntrlV-A ri n r r.rc , - .. . ... . M.V. V. WVCh V, more waste. "VVhat do they care aout-cost and waste,--since the public will ultimately be forced to "ay,- on the principle f a guaran teed "fair return" on the: invest- fment. The fact that the peace group Is radical lv acccdinr to th tarmm lot the shopmen is proof that they lare justifiable terms. The fact that jthey are breaking away from the fhard-boils to make peace a very 'difficult thing under the circum ! stances to do shows peace and an honorable peace could have been made long but for the uncom promising attitude of - the hard bofts. - r; And here is "the Union Pacific paying its strikebreakers 2 to 22 cents an hour more than the labor board fixed. That is another proof that the demand of the striking shopmen were perfectly reasonable. Ifnot, why is the Union Pacific granting the increase? Tou have in this strike as the maneuvers of the railroads go on, Sv.very good example of how in fluence and insignia and pedigree and sometimes even government functionaries, hasten to the support of";the powerful against the hum bler elements in industrial strife. The y Justice of the cause or the right and wrong of the. Issue means nothing to the shoddies who ap praia respectability by the length of its purse and determine questions byrtfc rank or no-rank in the so- I clat whirl. (The Increased wages -cover those offered the striking shopmen by the I Union Pacific is a plea of guilty. I Ths j peace: moves by the minority But laU along, ultra - respectability and smart sets and the pompous ahd the pedigreed have sat at the feet of the hard -boils and licked the boots of the roads. . 1 'i STILL. UNFITS 'T'HERE has been stron g cri t lei sm ? among veterans' organizations of ) the treatment received by disabled raeni In the government hospitals. Various representations have , been 5 r&adte as to the ill-treatment meted 1 out to- ex-service men, and almost 1 as rapidly as the , representations are (made, new. cases of brutality , become public' , i r t There havs been . several such rases recently. Two attendants vre" found beating a disabled sol .1 er in .an Eastern hospital. : The ytlairaa was found with "a broken TZ r wrist anoT Tibs. . fot Ions before, an attendant was in peril 'of lynch ing for a. brutal attack on. a help less .veteran. Tbe episodes seem to follow onv upon the other. The war has . been over , for al most four years. Certainly in that time, it should have been possible to build up an organization that could provide against such bru tality. Incompetent and unfit at tendants should have been removed, and replaced with people profes sionally and temperamentally fitted for the work. Other troublesome conditions should have been reme died. Very large sums of money are be ing spent to caryfor the disabled soldiers. This money should pro vfte proper care and comfort. If those who are responsible for the expenditures and the working of the organization cannot eliminate the' attacks and discomforts the public should know why. The salmon fishing tourney off the mouth of the Columbia will doubtless prove to . be a thrilling success if the tourists don't get sea sick. - ' v OVERLOADING THE WAGON. IN fighting the proposed censor ship on ' literature George Creel, noted writer andhead of the com mittee on' public Information dur ing the war, points out that addi tional .laws have become a passion in America until the nation threat ens to be inundated under a flood of superfluous statutes. He says: There is no single possible human offense that is not now blanketed by a thousand and one statutes and ordi nances, yet every day sees new thou sands poured into the busy hoppers of city councils, state legislatures and. congress. The hour is counted lost that does not see the creation of new laws and new bodiea with new powers. Control is more and more passing from the hands of the people into those of cliques. There can be no question of the truth of Mr. Creel's statements. There can be no question as to the maze of law that is being built up to bear down upon the people of the country and their every act. Few laws are repealed, but every city council each year adds scores of new ordinances, every legislature turns out its immense product of laws, and congress year after year enacts statute after statute for the regulation of people and people's lives. Ignorance of the law is no de fense. But what layman can pos sibly keep pace with the mul tiplication of laws that he is supposed to "know and respect? Soon it will be necessary for every individual to have with him at all times a criminal lawyer, a civil lawyer, a corporation lawyer, a pat ent la-ef, an admiralty lawyer, and a law library approaching that "of Blackstone. Would it not be possible to find men to send to city councils, state legislatures,'', congress who could get along, without introducing 100 new bills 7f Would it not be pos sible to do away with some of the old and needless laws; and to create only such additional regulation as is acutely essential? The . Salem incident opens the door to a great new alibi. Convince the speed cop that you are his boy hood friend and you can laugh at 30 miles an hour. FROM THE GRAVE'S EDGE THERE had been cannibalism and eating of corpses. The horses had all been consumed to satisfy hunger's pangs. Children had been carried to neighboring towns and abandoned. All sorts of horrible things had been used for food. Then one day there came to the village of Takooshki in Russia word that a shipment of American grain had arrived at Melekes, 15 versts away. But it was suggested the people mYakooshki could not be helped. . There were no horses to haul the food. The people, starv ing for months, would be too weak to walk the distance, much less carry their allotment. But the energy of the desperate was underestimated. Old women and little children all in the little village who could move started to walk to Melekes. When they arrived the men shouldered amaz ing loads. The feeble took on burr dens that strength normally would grumble Sunder. . The children car ried bags of flour. The whole allot ment for Takooshki village was carried in a day. Then . from the land of sadness and death, where American generosity had reintro duced life and a comparative hap piness, came this doxology to the American ' people: Great land, great people. Greetings -to you from ths edge of the .grave; Only in you we. found our savior. And at the edge of the grave you saved Are these grocery store, home and ballot box rpbberies all being done by the same gang? TALLYING THE TOURISTS LIKE migrating bird that hear the north's chill-noted warn ing, motor tourists that all the summer months through have con gested Northwest highways and by ways are turning homeward, i Thelong procession-on the Pa cific or the Columbia river high way shows no break, but the Texas car will be seen headed southward, the Ohio car eastward, and- so on down the long catalogue pt vari-. colored license lags. '-' Friendly statisticians whl : now busy themselves." They will reduce the number ,of visiting motor parties to certain hundreds of thousands. :-.,T1ey.; will, estimate the millions in. dollars "by : which pre gon is richer, for. the visitors, hav ing 'come, including the 'very "con siderable sum which"' Calif ornlans received from winter tourists ; and spent here summer touring. But statistics cats tell only a part, perhaps the least important part, of the story. What a great social intermingling , and leavening must inevitably result from" the 'new but exceedingly general form "of f'tour ing! . What exchange of Informa tion and consequent broadening of viewpoint must. '..follow, roadside meetings! How 'much provincial ism, not only of the East but of the West, must diminish! ; How greatly must sympatify and understanding increase among people represent ing the nation's climatio and geo graphic divisions as each sees where, how .and why his fellow citizens exist! How much more easily should an all-city, interstate system of road courtesy and high way regulation be promoted and accomplished! " It is a thought the more assur ing because based on substantial fact that by reason of the season's motor travel vastly increased dis semination of- information about Oregon will occur. The return trail blazed by motorists will be followed again not only by those who "first came, Jnt by those to whom they described opportunities for "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness" in the virile Northwest. - In 1913, we called a hydroplane a "flying boat." What will we be Calling a radiophone in 1934? IT PAYS THE Pennsylvania railroad oper ated 1,400,000 trains over 11,000 miles of road last year without killing a single passenger. In that time, 152,000,000 people traveled on Pennsylvania trains. It is a remarkable record, attain able only by the strictest recogni tion of -eafety rules and personal caution - among thousands upon thousands of employes. Pne email defect in a track. or piece of equip ment may result in a wreck fatal to scores of passengers. One viola tion of a safety rule might take a big toll of life. One single mo ment of carelessness on the part .of one employe could result in a dis aster. The record means a great deal to the Pennsylvania railroad. It saves thousands of dollars in suits and litigation. It places the road in an extremely favorable light to the traveling public. And it sets an example that ' other roads will strive to emulate in order to se cure the patronage of people who desire to travel in safety. The record of the road is in strong contrast with the . tremen dous toll taken at grade crossings. Nearly 7000 people were killed and injured in .crossing accidents dur ing .1921. " This year he fatalities promise to mount even higher. The Perfniylvania road avoided the tolls on" finance arid life be cause every precaution "was taken to eliminate' . accidents, - Motorists could by the same means greatly reduce the injuries and s killings at crossings. It pays. - 'l;f Moonshine and murder are much more than -mere-alliteration. RISK OF THE ROAD CAMPAIGNS against yellow fever, . tuberculosis, typhoid fever and typhus have won ground. But au tomobile accident campaigns have not. Twelve thousand lives Will be the automobile accident death toll this year at the present rate. . This is a ihousand more than a year ago. Property damage due to automobile accidents is in the 'neighborhood of a billion dollars a year. There is a careful crossing cam paign which pledges motorists to make a full stop before crossing any railroad. . ' , There is an automobile courtesy campaign which invites motorists to abstain from country road rac ing and to go a little farther than obey the rules of the road. There is a uniform hand signal campaign which has' as its objec tive universal turning and stopping signals. There is an anti-headlight glare campaign designed to persuade au tomobile owners to soften the rays of their headlights. But 30 lives a day is the penalty which fate imposes upon automo bilists as penalty for their sins against safety, according to the rec ords of the National Safety council. America fights disease and wins. Oregon solves problems of govern ment. Portland. .Wins;1 reforms in public interest. But nation, state and city stand appalled, apparently hopeless, in the presence of the red trail of motor accidents. WlmfcJs to be done about it? Curb the heedless? Punish the reckless? Impose fines? Deprive old offenders of their right to drive? Yes, all this and more. There is a class of drivers who heighten the hazard of every motor Jaunt. . .They crowd cars off the right of way. They speed where the road is narrow . and traffic dense. They strike down pedes trians and rush on their way with out giving aid.' They Jest at law. They rob automobiling of its Joy: They tend to transform! motor trav eling into a; grim' gamble. Of such drivers the president of the American Automobile associa tion says, "Jail sentences are the only argument this class listens to." Why not, then, start a nation wide jail sentence campaign ? "' OR EVEN FRESHMEN'S t From - the Chattanocra Xewa The people would rejoice if they were conceded even Juniority rights. SO HE TAKES BOTH Frora the .NarfSTille Tenneaeeeaji T:A Toad hog, cea'tjdecide which "half of the road he wants to use.- -, COMMENT OF THE STATE PRESS : Highway Officials Told That Oregon Needs Permanent Settlers as Well as Tourists-i The Passing of He roes sad Heroines The Novem ber Election and the 1925 Fair . . Wonderful Resources of the Umpqua Valley. Pendleton East Oregonlan : There are many angles to the tourist busi ness sad some' features are being over loelced.by enthusiasts who would run wttdfeyer the idea of concentrating all funds upon main tourist roads to the nnglect of connecting roads and regional roads of extreme importance to farmers and businessmen. The tourist who merely jazzes through the state at 40 miles an hour, bumping others off the road and stayk ing overnight at a Portland hotel, is of no great value to Oregon. He is not worth : a E7 million dollar invest ment. , What, Oregon needs and what the Northwest needs is more people, more development and more money. We must adapt our tourist road policy to such ends if we are to secure the results wanted. j At this time the state is building an expensive east and west highway through Central Oregor the John Day highway and it has built an expen sive cast and' west highway through this region. But there is no north and south road connecting the jtwo high ways ? At a result, people who enter Oregon via the Oregon prkXX or the OregoYi-Washington highway find the interior closed to them. 1 Those who traverse Central Oregon oA the John Day highway route f ind Jthemselves shut off from our section. That causes inconvenience and loss. . While that situation continues much of our high way investment will be wasted. It is certain we will not get the results to which we are entitled. If our state highway officials are wise -they will study the situation more deeply than they have been doing. They will give at least a little consider ation to: our home people and they will look to making the tourist policy build up the state through settlement. They will not serve merely the tourist who gets into the state and out again as quickly as he can. If our highway policy does not build up the state's permanent population and does not improve our basic industry, which ia agriculture, ft will fail and sooner or later there will be a house cleaning. ; Baker Herald : The frequency with which newspapers are called upon to announce the passing of some aged veteran of the Civil War or the death of a pioneer who crossed to the Oregon country In a prairie schooner over the Old Oregon Trail Impresses us with the thought of the rapid passing of time : the rolling by of the years which means the time is not far distant when these people who have done so much in the making of the history of our nation and the upbuilding and de velopment of our own immediate com munity will have passed from among us, having gone to their final reward, i The history of the community is the record of the work of these early pio neers, as is the permanency of our nation the monument to the heroism of men who fought in the Civil war. Thousands of these veterans following the war eniigrated to the West and took up with the other pioneers the worit of building the West- Their work for their country has been double. ' ' Bakerr Democrat : The paradoxical situation" is presented the people of Oregon of Portland heada and mem bers of civic associations preparing to tour the state to boost the 1925 fair and at the same time being confronted by an Initiative measure on the Novem ber ballot that offers an obstruction, if carried at the noils, that will make the attempt to hold a 1925 fair ridiculous in the extreme. If the so-called leading citizens of Portland really would have the fair: a success they must first assure the country that Oregon is against in iquitous laws being placed on its stat ute books and assurances given capi tal that it will be safeguarded in its Investments in this state. It is silly to talk about a fair under the present conditions confronting the people of Oregon, thousands of whom will pull tip stakes and go elsewhere if radical, racial and religious laws are to control its destiny. The eyes of the nation, too, are upon Oregon and the result of the Novem ber election will be watched with in terest. If Oregon comes out of the dirty political mess in which she has plunged, with clean hands, it will be a glorious victory for progress. Otherwise- the state will be shunned by all right-thinking people, for they will have nothing to do with a state that offers no safeguard to legitimate in vestment or to the peace of mind of taw-abiding citizens, Roseburg News-Review: One of these days when Umpqua Valley people arouse to the point of thorough ap preciation of the wonderful climate and boundless resources here, and the facts are heralded to the world, there will be an influx -of Easterners that will rival the annual exodus from sec tions, east of the Missouri river to the Golden State. In addition to climatic assets this county has big game hunting, fishing, mountain, coast and river resorts, scenic attractions that rival a world field, and a class of people who are mostly American born, and In whose hearts lies a real wel come, and not merely a greed for the gold the traveler may bring-with him. Nature has lavished her blessings in the Umpqua valley, and these good things the people now here will gladly share with others who may come, i e ' Polk County Itemizer: The state bonus board h found from a pre liminary examination of veterans' bonus applications that the great ma jority of men and women who enlisted from ' this state for war , service re turned to their old homes after being discharged. Complete figures are hot available, hut the comparison between places of .enlistment .and present place of abode, as shown by the records, will prove- that Oregonlahs are convinced, after seeing a great deal of the world, that this is apretty geed state. It is e video t that some of- those who went from farming sections have gone into the cities but even these cases are not as numerous as expected. . The Wil lamette valley especially seems to hold its young men and women exceedingly well: However, nearly every country on. the ; globs : now is represented i on the list of Oregon hoys to whom sol diers bonuses have, been paid. Cor respondence shows many, restless per sons stiU are wandering,;. ' f. ' " ' t " u Enterprise "' Record-Chieftain : Let nobody. be discouraged;-" the dsyf of Wallowa -county's best growth and 'de velopment is almost at hand. This is the day of small things, the day of intensive labor and - production, j of thrift, of work-every-day, of save-w&at-you have and waste nothing, the day of general and substantial prosperity. Behind us lie the dreams of easy money,: of bonanza farming and stock raising, of . wwkiag iajix months Sand loafing six months on grain farms, of getting rich by epecsjation er by easy profits of dicker and - trade. Behind . us also - lie the disappointments - and the failures which were "the offspring of these unhealthy dreams. . Think of it, Wallowa county, an ag ricultural region, ships in hay and grain in the spring to feed stock; ships-in potatoes to feed its population ; ships In fruit and vegetables the year around. How can an agricultural . community prosper under such conditions? It can not buck such a game and Vget away with if for any length of time, and it has been making a poor attempt at it long enough. Imnaha produces fruit as fine as that grown at LewUton. but has hard ly any to sell to the uplands and towns. Lost Pfairie raises vegetables and fruit of most excellent quality and can get them to market over almost level roads. Many kinds of fruit and .vegetables can be raised in the uplands, but nobody has had time nor patience to - grow them for a dozen years past. Pro ducers in other counties gather in the Wallowa county dollars for these foods while the local people complain that they are bard up and can get no cash. J . f A community, like an individual, has its fortune in its own 'hands. No mat ter how trite and old the '-saying, it still is true . that intelligent industry and . thrift will make' any man or county prosperous. La Grande Observer : One of the best Indications of lumber prosperity Is the little sawmill, which has been dead so many years, now taking on life. In the vicinity of La Grande there are many such little chaps which When lumber is good disburse a lot of money for no one can run a sawmill without handling lots of money and these small 'concerns have fire under their boilers and the scream of the saw Is heard through the can yons. All of this is fine, for every mill that starts reflects its part of prosperity on, the community. . Letters From the- People Communications sent to The Journal tor publication in this department abould be writ ten on only one side 'of tbe paper, aboold not exceed 30O words in length, and must be igned by the writer, whose mail address in fall mnst accompany the contribution. WHAT SINGLE TAX IS Distinction Between Taxing Land and Taxing Land Values. , Portland. Sept 5. To the Editor of The Journal Our good neighbor C W. M., who writes from Oregn City mak ing inquiries regarding the proposed single tax, is unwarrantedly alarmed by a misapprehension of what the taking of ground rent for public pur poses really Is. If he has read the many letters from advocates of the principle he has apparently not yet noticed the distinction between taxing land and taking land values. He is under the Impression that .those who are not title holders to land pay no taxes. There is not a human being on the whole earth who has the least social connection with his neighbor but pays his share of taxes in some form or other, and over 80 per cent of us pay more than our share. Besides keeping up the state through taxes on the things we consume, we are paying to landlords, anyway, what the advo cates of single tax propose to take into the public treasury. His reference to the city folk who have good positions seems to convey the idea that he views that part of the salaried man's income above what he pays for foodstuffs and clothing produced by the farmer as pure velvet. He seems to forget that by the time much of the farmer's prod ucts reach the maioritv of it has received a good padding of taxesJ ann mac no man can escape his need of land, even though he be not a title holder to a portion of it. He pays more to the land speculators for the privilege of remaining on the earth than what the normal ground rent would be to the state, besides the shove, mentioned .taxes on things heV con-! Bumesv - -xms doable taxation only re duces the buying power of those who are not locked out of employment by the present system, so that the farm er's products beg for would-be buyers who cannot buy because too much of their income is thus absorbed, and others cannot buy because of enforced idleness. Xt the same time we see many idle acres and city industrial sites held for speculation that would give employment to the idle army. The incentive for holding land idle for speculation is the state's negligence in exercising its right and duty to take ground rent for public purposes. Both Blackstone, the great legal light, and Justice Miller of the U. S. supreme court. 1887, teach this. If Brother C. W. M or any others who are not clear on the subject, wish it and will address me at 816 Stock Exchange building, Portland. Oregon, I will see that there is mailed to them some facts of public record regarding the land values in the city of Portland, and why the owners of the big city buildings gladly Join the uninformed farmers and workers in opposing the abolition of taxes on these buildings. It Is money in their pockets for the voters to only see the buildings and not the value of the land they stand on. C. a. McLemore- DOES NOT UNDERSTAND Portland, Sept. 6. To the Editor of The Journal In The Oregon Journal of September 5 appears a letter by a person signed "C. W. M" This per son ' admits he is a farmer, owning his farm. He does Jiot understand the purpose of single tax and writes in a doubtful and critical way about these wonderfully constructive measures If C. W. M will take the trouble to read the text of these single tax meas ures we are to vote on next Novem ber, he will learn that single tax is intended to appropriate by taxation all the rental value of the lands in the state. If he has no copy of these measures, let him apply to the sec retary of state at Salem, who will giaaiy mail him one, as he did to-l sji or us. If C. W. M. will also drop in at the library nearest to where he lives, he can doubtless obtain a copy of that monumental work entitled "Progress and Poverty." written by the original discoverer of the great idea. He will find in that book the same thing or worse. In bis desire to criticize. C. W. M. misses the beauty of the scheme. Cannot he understand that when single tax is put into effect he will be re lieved of all further worries about his land and its taxation? When the state takes the full rental value. of his farm it will after a time be borne in upon him that, there is no use in any further concern about the prop erty. Even, If they should afterwards attempt . to further Increase the tax rate, he will be indifferent When a fellow la on the ground he can't fall any further. In that happy position C W. M. will be in company with all his fellow farmers, owners" of city lots and other plutocrats. One of the chief merits of the single tax scheme is that It is expected to "T-elieve the minds of such as C W. M. of unneces sary worries, so that they can de vote themselves to cultivating the soil . - E. G. Hopson. -'. . PRIVATE SCHOOLS Why Many Parents Support and Patronize Them. Portland. Sept. . To the Editor of The Journal I am a reader- of The Journal, an American-born citizen and a Catholic I wish to make a few re marks in regard to our private schools, la answer to C T.' Christian's letter of -August SL. " - .' Why do so many parents send their children-to -private schools? , .We send our children to private schools to have imparted to thenv side- COMMENT AND SMALL CHANGE , What a good old world this would be Jlf no one lived in it, . - y - Fortunately no prises are Offered for the lovelies njenv If nations did trust one another it would be more surrrising. - The great family question now Is; "Can he make the football team?" Old age condemns the flapper, but the flapper will get over it. Old age will not- The man who thinks he likes to work Is probably misjudging his other mo tives also. . ?xt holiday will be Thanksgiv ing Jf the railway strike is settled be fore that time. - . The real cause of divorce seems to be that the two parties cannot stand each other any Jongert The man who talks much about how poor he once was is merely calling attention to how poor he now isn't. The second chapter in Mr. Daugh erty's thrilling industrial romance ends with the "finding of the mysterious JewelL" MORE OR LESS PERSONAL Random Observations About Town Motoring down, from Boise Saturday was a party composed of Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Niday. Kathleen Niday,' Margaret Klday and Elclse Brooklns. ' .-. - . . ' Visitors from Spray are C. W. Walls and family, L. H. Wilkes and Ruby Steiwer. - Dr. F.. W. Kellogg of Newport among out of town visitors. is E. L. Olsen of Pendleton is visiting in the metropolis. e - Among out of town guests is C. "A. McDermott of Grants Pass. Mr." and Mrs. Madison Cooper of Wasco are visiting in Portland. W. C. Bolton of La Grande is among those transacting business in Portland. F. M. Painter of Coos Bay is among out of town visitors. OBSERVATIONS AND IMPRESSIONS OF THE JOURNAL MAN By Fred Lockley "We were dreamers, dreaming gently, in the man-stifled town. We yearned beyond the skyline where the strange roads go down. Came the Whisper, came the Vision, came the Power with the Need, Till the Soul that ia not man's aoul was lent u to lead." Recently I, read an article about vagabonds that set my feet to itching for the feel of the road. Frederick O'Brien, vagabond, soldier of fortune and author of "Mystic Isles"' and of "While Shadows in the South Seas," 'in a recent article in the Mentor says: "In the heart of man there is an in stinctive urge to seek the unknown and mysterious lands beyond the horizon. Man's greatest and most enduring leg- ends, songs and stories have been about heroes who went beyond the confines of the known, and brought back tales of marvels they had seen or dancers they had Survived. The blind Homer chanting his wondrous epic of the wanderings of Ulysses, Virgil's inscribing on tablets the ex alted narrative of Aeneas' hazards were epochs in the development of the intellect of man. by making his noblest an most "secret thoughts available to the many. A thousand years ago the mystic East conjured Slnbad the Sail or to express for the people of Araby the same spirit that animated Ulysses and Aeneas, t The Wandering Jew for six hundred years has been the sym bol of wandering and suffering. The knitted fabric of Europe, accustomed to printed fable and grown used to novels, called for real men to go out into the distant lands and upon the uncharted seas, and bring back aston ishing stories of strange peoples. And eager humanity demanded more as it became more sophisticated. It wanted wanderers who were not the scribes of orderly research, naturalists, mission aries, and diplomats, but chance hap peners upon the exotic, the sensational ; vagrants for the sheer love of vag rancy, and. generous sharers of their treasure-trove for the very joy of re cital. Thus the vagabond came Into his own ; the vagabond who could give to the stay-at-home the color, taste, and feel of the awe and delight he had himself . had ; the vagabond who crossed mountain and ocean with no mere determination to set down on paper, for gain, the attraction of dis tant zones, but to whom the horizon was a magnet ever drawing him toward it, without rhyme or reason." He tells of the wonderful wanderings of Marco Polo who more than six cen turies ago started out to see the world when all of his friends -warned him that if he persisted in his foolhardy endeavor he would come to the edge of the world and fall off into space. He visited Cathay, Persia, Palestine, Tibet and a score of other little known lands. His little jaunt to see the geog raphy of the world at first hand took 25 years and he came back laden with honors and treasures and by telling what he had seen gained the reputai tlon of being the most . monumental liar that Venice had ever seen. Today we know that he did not tell half of the wonders he must have seen. . If fyou want to know what a real wan derer and vagabond is read the diaries of Giovanni Jacopo Casanova do Sein galt and learn of hie duels, love affairs, narrow escapes, honors, kingly friends and hobo acquaintances as he by turns was soldier, spy, abbe, courtier, preacher, diplomat and director of the French gambling concessions. Sir Richard Burton. Lafcadio Hearn. Bayard Taylor, Charles G. Leland George Borrow. Paul Verlaine, Jean Arthur Rimbaud, world wanderers all vagabonds par excellence what sights they saw, what adventures they took part in; how often they have looked cool-eyed into the eyes of death and successfully defied him. Take Rimbaud as ' an - example a brilliant poet -and author, soldier in Sunda Isies and Java, a servant to Cyprus, by side with their secular studies, that branch of education which our public schools cannot give religion. We be lieve that knowledge of God and his precepts as revealed to man are neces sary to true "living "and Useful citizen ship. We believe- -far out- public schools and pcove It by our loyal support. We do not believe in a .religious test for teachers of our public school as our old friend from Milton would have. He deplores the fact that our school boards are broad-minded enough to employ men and women in our public' schools for their- qualifications as teachers, rather than submit them to a religious test. I wonder if he would be as will ing to exempt from taxation for the support of our public schools those same persons be is so willing to de prive of eheir right to teach in the same, if so qualified. AU honor to our school-boards and honor to the gray hairs, of our Milton octogenarian, but may he live to be double his age if needs' be that the' spirit of -rue Amer NEWS IN BRIEF SIDELIGHTS They have nominated ' a " oountry newspaper publisher for governor of California. Here in- Oregon none f the boys want the Job. Eugene Guard. Wonder what has- fceeome of old man Normalcy who has been reported "com ing! back" ever since the . war closed? Reckon he's now marooned by the rait. way traffic trouble. Polk Courityj Itemizer. Now and then an old-ttmer longs for the return of the old-fashioned girl. But if she-would corns back- .nd take a stroll down the street, wouldn't we all laugh at her ? Washington County News-Times. , , - v- The big town men too often think they are the .big idea builders. That is their big mistake. It is the small towns that both make and rave the big towns. It is the small towns and the farmers of the land who put across the big ideas. Condon Globe-Times. .' The German crown prince has ex pressed a desire to visit America, and somebody hastens to assure him that he'd have "a perfectly rotten time." Oh, we don't know! Many a royal remnant just as rotten as he is has had a perfectly lovely time in this demo cratic land. La Grande Observer. ' R. V. Jordan of Prineville is regis tered at the Imperial while transacting some business in Portland. e - e A visitor from The Dalles la E. K. Walton. e A. W. Oliver of Corvallis Is among out of town guests. . Registering from Corvallis is Guy H. Booker. see Mr, and Mrs. A. R. Baker of .Hood River were among the week end guests. Among out of town visitors Is H. E. Peterson of Junction City. - W. C. Bellows . of St. Helens was a recent business visitor to Portland.. Among out of town visitors are Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Beats of Riddle. H. B. Chess of Lebanon is among reyt234.000 last year. - ' - cent arrivals. a trader in gold, incense and ivory In Abyssinia, a chieftain in Africa and one of the organizers of the Kingdom of Ethiopia, dying at the head of his army of native savages when he was 37. . You don't have to seek the pages of romance or fiction to run across men who have felt the urge to seek the un known. Scarcely a day goes by that you do not brush elbows on the streets of Portland with men who have heard and answered the lure-of the far hori zons. A day or so ago when I paid my fare on the Georgiana from As toria to Portland I . began swapping experiences with the purser, L. W. PownalL He is reserved, fond of f children and flowers, hot the type of man you would nick' out as a e-iohe trotter, yet before the evening was over he bad told me things that I have never read in books, about -the an cient roads in the Andes and about the customs of the natives near the headwaters of the Peronne river, pne of the tributaries of the Amazon. "Where do you hail from and when?" I Inquired. "I am a Buckeye, 1883 model" he answered. "When I- was 23 I was .working at Eureka. Califor nia, and decided to see something of the world. -I shipped on a lumber barkentine for Australia. We received telegraphic orders as we were about to get under way to go instead to Callao, Peru. It took us 74 days to make the trip. When f was paid off I decided to use my roll in seeing some thing of Peru. Drifting inland. I landed a Job as foreman of the smelter owned by the Hagen-Hearst-Morgan inter ests. I had 300 peon laborers under me, so I lost no time in acquiring Spanish. Later I wandered by trail on a mule pretty well over the coun try to see what I could see. In fact I spent seven years there. Americans go to Europe to see the Alps when the Andes are almost ' at our door. The railroad from Callao to Ticllo rises 16,000 feet in a distance of less than one hundred miles. The smelter where I worked Is located at an altitude of ieet nicn is a coupie or thou sand feet higher than the summit of Mt- Hood. Cerro de Pasco, a town as large as Astoria is located at an alti tude of over 14,000 feet. Lima is the size of Portland. I wandered" through an old church down there that was built in 1538 ; so it is no new country. "I made a trip into the back of the beyond once where the natives have so little to do with the rest of the country they still use the old Indian dialect and do not understand Spanish. In place of modern firearms they use a six foot blowgun in which they use poisoned darts, tiny things tipped with feather by which, with their breath vig orously expelled, they can do execution at a couple of hundred feet.' In their country they still use swinging bridge? made of vine and fiber.' Their roads were hewed- out of solid rock by the Aztecs., They 'have tunnels through the cliffs like Mitchell Point on the Columbia Highway. Yes, I ate what was set before me roast monkeys, giant lizards, wonderful fruits and luscious vegetables. They are good cooks down there. They have unlimit ed country on which one can' raise ongar cane? . The mountains are rich In copper, silver and gold. It la Ameri ca's opportunity, but we shall never get their friendship or trade so long as we think we can hustle them into buy ing and unload our poor stuff on them. The French, British, Belgians and Germans pack their goods well. I - have seen Columbia river salmon come there with the cases gone and the labels missing. It had to be un loaded by shovels into coffee bars. Stoves shipped to South America for shipment Into the interior " resemble scrap iron and have to be sold to the Junk dealers. No. I cannot tell you in an hour what 1 saw In my seven yea.- there. muK go ana see for your- self. icanism may enter into his heart. Yours for both public and. private schools. ; Mrs. M. Reisenauer. BETTER THAN THE ECHO From London Paaaing Show ' Guide: Sir," there .-la sn extraordin ary echo to be heard, at this spot. For instance, suppose you shout "Two mags of beer"" as loud as you can and listen. - Simple Tourist : Two mugs pf beer (Pause.) I can't hear the echo. Guide: No, ir? Well, anyhow, here comes the beer. . ' . ' l-envoi '-; ; . ; ;v. .'. Trosa- thm St, Louis Globe-Democrat . i rjf In emulation of the California ship builders who named, their first - con crete vessel ''Faith.' the first "Missis sippi river barge that is to begin the renewal of river traffic should be called "Faith." In Rudyard Kipling! phrase, ""Faith,- we ahan need it." The Oregon Country KorUrwaat Hastening la Brief Form for the Jtoay Bssdas. ' , OREGON. . Charles 'Magiiire. son" of 3. F. : Ma. guire of Klamath Falls, has received an , appointment to the military academy at West Point. . Prune picking' will begin in Marlon county in about 10 days. The crop is said - to be , the . heaviest for several years. ' A ponderous tooth of some prehistorlo inut, iuiiim near r:ia oy reier , i ley, has been sent to the Smithsonian institution for classification. . A. telegram received at Salem States that Harry iBaileyc S3, a former resi dent of that city, wss accidentally killed in Los Angeles Wednesday. Thirteen carloads of livestock were shipped this week over the City of Prineville railway, all -but .four of which were consigned to Portlands ' The annual meeting of the Oregon Purbebred Livestock association will be held at Salem on the night of Sep tember 27. when officers foe the year will he elected. " - Bids on 9.200,000 board feet'of timber on the Siusiaw national forest will be opened September- 26, according to Fred E Ames, assistant forester In charge of timber sales. - Formation of the South Unit Im provement district was' decided upon at a special election in Prineville Tues days The district includes approxi mately 80,000 acrea ' Although there were several fires In Tillamook county forests during the past summer; little valuable timber was destroyed, according to Frank A. Elliott, state forester. After severs! .weeks of , efforts to secure a lower freight rate on grapes, the Grants Pass chamber of commerce is notified that a reduction of 22 per cent has been granted on shipments to Portland. . The captal stock of The Dalles Na tional Farm Loan association has been Increased fsora $10,000 to $20,000. About $300000 is now .loaned out by the as sociation under the federal farm loan plan of amortization. - . -. a meeting at Salem Thursday - night and adopted a resolution demanding a minimum price of 6 cents a pound tor their berries next year. This ,,year's average was 4 cents. WASHINGTON. The Aberdeen school budget this year totals 121 4.881.81.. as compared with n,sumatea on tne oasis or. tne num ber of telephones in service, Seattle la claiming a population, of 339,434. C. F. Schwald, lumberman of Sno qualmie Falls, was held up and robbed of $1170 in cash id Seattle Wednesday night by two masked bandits. Railroads this year have granted ex cursion rates - of one and a - third fares to the Yakima state fair instead of the one and a half fares heretofore given.- The first day's registration of Seat-' tie's schools showed a total enrollment of . 43450, an Increase of 448 in the high schools ad a decrease of 38 in the grades., A class of more than 75 candidates will be received . Into the Aberdeen Moose lodge at a special meeting Sep tember 1$. John Rellly and O. Blttrasn. each 19 years old, students of an eastern col lege, are in jail at -Everett charged with stealing tools from the Great Northern shops. Olympla commandery No. 24 was instituted at Olympia Thursday night by Wesley C. Stone, of Spokane, grand commander of the Knights Templar of Washington. Grand larceny charges against King county's three . commissioners were dismissed in superior court at Seattle Thursday shortly - after, having been City and county health authorities at Seattle have declared that further diversion of sewage Into Lakes Wash ington and Union must be prohibited as a public health measure. Pleading to the Illegal transportation of whiskey. Jack Best has been fined $500 and sentenced-to- SO days in the county Jail at Bellingham. Best, was a deputy under Sheriff Callahan. . Seventy-five hotel- proprietors. amon whom was Phil Metschan of Portland, were tendered a banquet Thursday night by the National Park company at Paradise Inn. in Rainier national park. A fire at Pasco Thursday night that did some damage was caused by B. H. Cady, proprietor of the United States laundryt who lighted a match to see if he had sufficient gasoline in the tank of his automobile. IDAHO. The University of Idaho has Tost re cently a score or more of valuable sheep by the ravages of sheep-killing John Stuart, 75, one of the earliest pioneers of Idaho, died at his home In Sandpoint Thursday from cancer of the throat.- y . Fourth class postmasters 'appointed this week include Joseph B. Irvine of Clearwater and Mrs. Lilian Coon of Steele. Idaho. . - - . After doing business In a tent since the destructive fire of last June, the Moscow Union Warehouse company has moved into its new building, erected at a cost of $30,000. Camas county win recover from four bonding companies more than $40,000 county funds deposited - in -the First National bank of Fairfield when it closed its doors June 19, 1920. . TJharles M. Johnston, 76, veteran of the Civil war, died suddenly at Wal lace Thursday of heart trouble. He was formerly a resident of Portland and went to the Coeur d'Alenes during the mining rush of 1886. Twenty Years Ago From. The Journal of Sept. I!,! 1902 Second street looks - like a Castle Garden in Hongkong today. Several hundred Chinamen who have been at work In the canneries British Colum bia have returned and are filling the air with their Jiboeringa No little discussion is to be heard among the business men of the city on tha conditiora of Portland's streets. A very strong feeling is observable that .the time has come for paving them, ia view of the Lewis-and Clark fair. The streets of Portland present a re markable appearance at the' present time, they being covered: by a coat of fine white ashes, caused by the fires now raging north and south of Port land. Such a state of affairs has not been seen in Portland since 1894. - . e : a- . Corvallis wyL.ln all probability, put in a new waterworks- system in - the near future. . , -..-'-. Grand Master W.' Fv Mutcher.of the grand lodge of Masons of Oregon is la from. Baker .City-. He has been insti tuting a , lodge at Moro, Sherman 5-'; -'J . The Civic Improvement association ia going, after . the. firms who have signs andotber. obstructions along the streets and sidewalks. - ' : i - '. ? The oldest Mason on the Pacific coast has moved to Portland. Thomas LD- Elliott, who claims that honor, has removed from Katnarum. Idaho, ana is now a resident of Portland. Sixty carloads of packed salmory are at the Ainsworth dock ready for ship ment to the Eastern states. The prod uct represents this ' season's Alaska catch., j ' The state encampmnt- of the Spanish-American War Veteran's has elect ed the following officers : Department ct mmander. General C. U. Gantenbein ; senior vice commander. Major . C. E. McDonell ; " Junior vice commands, Richard Delch. r- . v