10 f THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, OREGON FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25. 1921. ' ! IxnEPKNIJK.XT NEWSPAPER a JACKSON ....... ilibliher t Be calm. b confident, be cheerful snd do uow Wftpri ea you would tare wm go nun y"-1 " $ubiished every wera day and Sunday morun ! t The Journal buildina, Isroadwsy' and lam- I S hi!lTet. Portland, Oren. festered at the posKMiiee at roruua, vresvo. for trarumisaion toroufh the mail as eeconu elaaa. matter. TiCJ-KPHONES Main 7173, Automatic 5S0-S1 All departments reached by" 1h nnmrxru. HiTIiivii. lliVk'KTISLMt RKPKMK.NT TIVE Benjamin Jfc Kentnor Co., lirumnx-k ' Bulldina. X2.1 Fifth arm lie, ,Kew Voiki 00 ' Mailers Buualne. Cbicaco. PAPIKin COAST HEPRE.SENTAT1VE W. K. i Bsranser Co..- Ifxa miner Huildine, Ban Fran- 'deo; Title Inaurance Building. Los Angeli i poet-Intelliceneer BuildJne. Seattle. . , JHK OUK'fON, JUL'H.N'AU reeerree the nht to reject aareriinna: copy wmca wruw J jeclionable. It also will not print any copy i, that in any way simulates -reeqinc matter ea r that cannot readily be recoeniaea aa aaer tinr. ' " ' ' J SUBSCKIF'FION KATES By terrier. City and Country IM1I-Y ASV SUKXAT : 0m wek .15 On month . .. . t .65 DAILY SUNDAY One week f One week f .10 On month. . . .4 5 .05 BY MAIL. ALL KATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCH I 1A11.I AJU aoiA n year. . 8.09 Three months. One month. . . .92.25 . -75 filx month. . . . 4.2IK DAILY (Without Sunday) Om year 0.00 Hi month..... a. 25 Three mouths... 1.75 ine monUi.. . . . .oO - WEEKLY (Erery Wednesday) One year $1.00 Bir months, .... .50 SUNDAY. Only) One year. .... .13.00 Six months. . . . . 1.75 Three months. . . 1.00 WEEKLY ASD (SUM DAT) One year $3.50 i Teeee raiea apply oniy in me ve. Bate to Eastern points furnished on applica - Hon. Mate remittances by Money Order, Exprena Order or IrafL If your postoffiee la - not a. Money Order office 1 or 2-ee.nt aUmpa will be accepted. Make all remittances payable to The imim. Portland. Oregon. There was a twilicht before the dawn and a lai before the morning- and a morning before itbe day. Gladstone. RUINOUS? YORK economist has CQme forward with the state ment tjhat rigid restriction of immi gration to this country would be ruinous. lie contends that we need European labor to keep the wheels jot industry turning and construction programs under way. Why not let American workers fcare for the construction plans? Why not employ them in industry? . There is no labor shortage now by any means, and no immediate pros pect of a shortage. On the ther hand, thera are thousands of men in this country looking for Jobs. They are looking for any kind of Job. And Just who is going to be ruined if immigration is curtailed? Is the American worker to be ruined? Will he be ruined when jobs are open to him instead of being taken away from him by cheap foreign la bor? Will he be ruined by main tenance of higher ; standards of wages and better living conditions? And after all. will the captains" Industry be ruined because they will not be able to secure labor , for a song? They A have not suffered for lack of profits, and, wlthi the in- creased buying power created by higher wages, will there not be greater markets for their products ? With! the added efficiency resultant from ismployment of American work ers. (hey are more efficient- would the einpioyers of the country not be able to compete with - foreign man . ufactiirers with equal success to that now Obtaining? And would America suffer from the higher standards of living? When workers can send their children to school, when they can buy a home and iiear a family, would America be the Worse? Would our nation be the wor8ej with an enlightened citizen ship, ijwith jobs for her own people, and with a population of home own ers ? The Journal thinks" not. At 'one time the highway bill con tained a provision which cut ' 25 per cent the tax on automobiles that had been four times licensed. A man who recently purchased an old Pierce-Arrow for $550 must pay the same f 97 license on it that is paid by the man who buys a. new $5200 Pierce-Arrow. The instance illus trates the case of thousands and gives rise to the complaint that the new law is discriminatory. There is a great deal of agitation, and some talk of referending the bill. Rather than referendrit would be better, If action is taken at all, to . propose an amendment to be voted on at the special June election. DOWN TO DIE DEATH in San Francisco has sealed the Hps that could tell a pitiable story of stolid suffering John Earle was an 84-year-old, Chinaman. He Is believed to have- served with Farragut at Mobile, and has" since been employed ' as a. cook on' revenue cutters. His' name he took from that of an. 'American-sea captain.:' V'-'-r : As the weight of the years bore him down, the aged Chinaman could not earn a living. His finances gone, and either too proud to ask. -or si j ' : j r friendless, the old man searched out a cheap lodging house, entered his squalid room, and; lay' down in a corner to dia. He was found dead from starvation. ( ' 4 ; Things are not jiet right in this country when the i aged, whether Americans, Chinese lor Hindus, seek a cheap room in which they may, moneyless, friendless,- and alone, lie down to die. ' i. "- - ' There have been several serious automobile accidents in .Portland "re cently. In most cases, the driver has not been held by the police be cause the pedestriari was believed to, do responsible for toe accident. Au tomobiles can operate only in the street. That is where they are to be found. when a pedestrian steps into a thoroughfare, shohld he not xpect to find automobiles there, and take measures to protect him self against Injury? By the way some pedestrians cross streets, one would believe motor cars were not to be found there. BEATEN WE USED to have the "straight'.' party baJlot. ; But that was 40 years ago. And it was abandoned, just as we aban doned the ox team and the tallow candle for, better things. Nobody would want to go back to the ox team or the tallow dip. That would be resistance to progress, re jection of ' development, repudiation of civilization. But Senator Moser stood up in the senate and declared that we ought to go back to the "straight" party ballot. In that dec laration, he rejected the united opinion voiced in the action of all those states in the Union which have adopted the Australian ballot. He repudiated the very thing that has been most vital in our advance in better government. If the Moser device of a single mark fop a straight ticket vote had been adopted, the legislature might just as well have abolished the Aus tralian ballot altogether and pro vided for the oldtime separate bal lots for each political party. The "straight", party ballot was the basis of political corruption. It was abandoned because it was the ward heeler's and the corruption- ist's best vehicle for vote billing. It supplied an easy process fori corrupt use of money in elections. Is there anyone who believes that j corrupt use of money in . elections is good for anybody except those who sup ply the money and by supplying that money buy special privileges for themselves? Only a few, a very few, want cor ruption or Irregularities in public affairs. ;The great nass wants cleansed and purified government, for they know that if the way is left open for I irregularities and corrup tion intHguers and cdrrtiptionists and conscienceless greed will get the best of t and the many pay the price. j If the legislature had passed the "straight" party ballot bill over the governor's veto, it would have been a crime against the Republican party of Oregon and a crime against the state of Oregon. To have de liberately gone back to a plan that was discredited and rejected for cause 40 years ago would have shocked the decent citizenry of Or egon and put one more ugly blot on the legislative history of Oregon. . The world is moving forward in all things, not backward. The ttmught of most men is to make thingSKbetter, not worse, because,, at best, -there . wyi be enough of the baS. A' great deal of credit is due Ihose Oregon - senators who saved the state from the odium that the "straight"-v party ballot would have brought. - Here are -their names: Eddy, Ellis, Gill. Hume, Jones, Joseph. "laehmutid, LaFollette, Nick elsen. Porter, Strayer, Thomas, Vin ton. The Kansas City policeman, six feet and nine inches tall, who died 17 years after a woman prisoner bit him In the leg, evidently required a long time to learn that he was mor tally wounded. Had he been seven feet tall his life might have been prolonged 25 years. HOWARD AND HANGING THERE is no charge that George Howard did not have a fair trial. Jt is admitted that his crime was wanton, deliberate and premeditated. He enticed his victim out on a lonely road, beat him to death with an iron tool, secreted the body and told the public he had bought the automo bile. No killing could be a more complete case of that kind tjf mur der which hangings were invented to prevent. Back of the efforts to save How ard from execution is no failure of the law or thei-eourts., ; What- the public is witnessing in his case is tha innate and profound objection to capital punishment. A great body of people shrink from having this 23-year-old. boy strung up by the neck and strangled to deatht They be lieve that killings by the. state set an! example of ! killing before the public and increase rather than les sen the number of murders. They believe that the system is the hold ing of human life cheap! by the stata and that It'tends to lessen the value that the individual places on human life.- ! This conviction is expressing itself in the agitation for commutation ' of Howard's sentence to imprisonment for life. Murders have been more numerous since the people of Ore gon, in a moment of heat and ex citement, restored the death penalty. They were more numerous in the five-year period immediately preced ing the abandonment of capital pun ishment by about so per cent-than they were during the five years in which the death penalty was not ap plied. They will continue to be more numerous 'if human expyience means anything, for ' In states and countries where there Is no death penalty there are, in general," fewer murders ' than where hangings and electrocutions are the order. 'In time, the heresy or capital pun ishment will tbe abandoned in all civilized countries, for it is a survi val of the ideals and practices of barbarism. WHY HAVE LAWS? SHOULD only part of the people who break laws go to Jail? And should others be carefully shielded from the rigors of a penitentiary cell? Abe Weinstein was convicted in May, 1920, of robbery of a govern ment warehouse. He was paroled on condition that he pay a fine of $500 in $50 monthly installments. Six months later be held up and robbed a man and his wife of more than $2000 in Jewelry. A week ago he was convicted in circuit court and sentenced to 10 years in the state penitentiary. But as before, he was paroled on condition that he reimburse his victims. Now the gov ernment is seeking him for failure to pay his monthly Installments. Perhaps there are mitigating cir cumstances of some kind. But re gardless of circumstances, "here is a man who has twice within a period of a few months committed rob bery, twice been paroled, and is now wanted for failure to meet the terms of one parole. Is the public entitled to no protec tion-from robbers? Are burglars to be haled into court, requested to pay for their damage, and permitted to go back and try the job over? Is there no punishment for crime in Oregon? Weinstein was only made to pay back what he had taken, and twice he escaped punishment for robbery. About the time Weinstein perpe trated his last offense, people were staying in their homes at night be cause they feared to walk out on Portland streets. When they were compelled to go out. In many cases they walked in the middle of the street to avoid shadows near the sidewalks. The Portland police were falling over themselves in an effort to' capture some of the criminals, and at last the mayor was forced to go from the city hall to the police station to put the police department on an effective basis to end crime. And after one of the criminals was captured, a man who had previously committed robbery .and who was then on parole, he was turned scot free with the admonition to return what he had stolen. It would seem that the public is entitled to some little consideration and protection. The people of this state pay legislators to make laws, they pay men to record them, they pay policemen to enforce them, andN they pay judges to apply them. The laws are not established to be obeyed by some people 'and ignored by others. And they are not made simply to ornament our statute books. With brilliant promise of becoming a national figure, William F. Mc Corabs, who was national party pilot in the first Woodrow Wilson candidacy for thepresidency, is dead. His failure to remain in the public eye and why he never figured in any way in the administration which he led to victory is one of the political mysteries of the late past. At the San Francisco convention, he was a bitter, violent, but little heeded op ponent of McAdoo. BEYOND THE PALE TREACHEROUS and murderous, the Turkish government, new that the allied armies are dispersed, demands trie restoration of the com plete economic and commercial in dependence of Turkey, demands guarantees that Turkey may main tain an adequate army' and navy and insists that the Eastern frontier of Turkey be fixed on the basis of the pre-war Turko-Persian boundaries. This defiance is in striking contrast with the suppliant tone in which Turkey begged for mercy when she collapsed and sued for peace during the war. Her impudence now is proof of the wisdom of the plan under which a League of Natrons was to be the world arbiter and have power to deal with nations that re fuse to be decent. Honorless and treacherous, Turkey respects no en gagement with civilization, wants no situation in which she will be forced to live in decency, and will obey none of the ordinances of honor ex cept at the. point of artillery. Turkey" has cajoled, duped and fooled Europe for centuries into perJ mittipg her to pursue neV own 'bloody course Unmolested. She was re strained and submissive only when America's mailed hand was tempor arily waved over the world. Tbe vacant chair of America at the coun cil table of Europe is signal! for Turkey to go back to her old game of bluff, bluster and barbarity The one nation that the : Turk fears, the one nation that could end Turkey's career as buccaneer, and marauder by the mere power of diplomacy, is Amreica, and America seems out of mood for meetimr her great responsibility to civilization. DEMOCRACY'S NEW START Challenge ta Chairman White Makes Many Democratic Editors Apprehen sive of a False Start Sounder Basis of Reorganization Than I , That of Mere Leadership Is Enjoined in Any Event. Daily Editorial Digest The "threat" to Chairman White of the Democratic national committee to call a meeting of that body for the implied purpose of ousting him from office is not the kind of "reorganiratipn" the Democrats want, if most of the party organs can be accepted as authority. The majority of Democratic editors call for "principles instead of personalities" and denounce the attempt to create "factionalism." Support for "Cox and his friends' is about balanced by protests against Mr. White among those who comment upon the question of a new chairman. For the most part, the f re marks of the Republican press might be described as "silent cheers." s .. The Louisville Courier Journal (Dem.) stresses the need of "performance" and describes the "Democratic folly" in terms echoed by many other papers of similar political faith: 'The wrangle." it says, "over the question of reorganization of the Democratic national committee and the Democratic party betrays the usual shortsightedness of the usual hack poli tician." i Similarly the Indianapolis News Ind.) expresses the belief that "the Democrats will do themselves and the country a disservice if they fall out among them selves and begin a contest for the con trol of party machinery" and 1 the New Orleans Times Picayune (Ind. Dem.) doubts that four years of factional wrangling will "pave the way to con structive patriotic action and righteous victory," nor Is it "convinced" that the "Democratic rank and file want to begin the political battle of 1924 In the spring of 1921." Witile the Newark News (Ind.) remarks that "this jockeying for posi tion between the McAdoo and Cox forces Is indication enough that the party still is a pretty live corpse" it adds that "it WOUjd be a little? mnn tr th nnirt tnr the Democrats in congress to show that Democrats stand for principles worthy of support on their merits." It is upon the conduct of their con gressmen, rather -than the "premature" choice of leaders, many writers feel, that success depends. "The minority season that lies ahead" says the Norfolk Vir ginian Pilot (Demi), can be "converted into an exceedingly fruitful season." and the Richmond , 'Times ' Dispatch (Dem) quotes Representative Flood's remarks to the effect that "the winning issues in the next campaign will be made by the Democrats in the senate and the house in the next four years." Urging that "successful reorganization must come not from the leaders but from the rank and file," the Baltimore Sun (Ind. Dem.) declares that not until the sentiment of the voters crystallizes" can leaders be definitely chosen. That the "present undertaking" to prepare for the future is "based on the wrong vision" Is the opinion of the New Haven Jour nal Courier Ind.), for this contest is merely "a fight between men of ambi tion" and not "a fight between opposing principles." Without sugsesting that eitner taction be "squelched", the Chat tanooga News (Dem) declares that "re organization should not be attempted" in the "interest" of any person or per sons, but rather for the people as a whole. Indeed, the real job of the com mittee, declares the Birmingham News (Dem.), is "rehabilitating the machinery of the party" without consideration "of any one man or group of men." "Party chiefs should unite on time-honored Dem ocratic principles." the Memphis Com mercial Appeal (Dem.) concludes, allow ing "future leadership to take care of itself." However, the question of the choice of a new chairman is discussed with inter est by a number of writers. The Greens boro News (Ind.), professing a politically "neutral" view, -considers it "a matter of non-pressing importance if the Cox-White-Murphy-Taggart combination does retain control," because if the Dem ocratic party wants to commit suicide another will take its place, but it does wonder that such "a furore" has arisen over the proposal to oust "the worst dis credited set of leaders our political his tory has known." The St. Louis Star (Ind.) and the Lexington Leader (Rep.) apparently agree in part at least with this attitude, though the Star makes its appeal in more positive form : "The Democratic party needs a chairman chosen for a reason ; not a chairman against whom nothng can be said. Trie chairman should reflect a new purpose in the party. He should personify the intention to make the party command the support of the progressives, of oppon ents of the spoils system, of believers in governmental efficiency, of fair dealing and no shirking of our relations with the rest of the world." But Chairman White has hjs supporters, too. Among them is the Cleveland Plain Dealer (Ind. Dem.), which declares that there was nothing in his conduct of the campaign "that calls for his resignation now," and those . who attempt to oust him will merely Invite "antagonisms" when harmony is needed. The Memphis News Scimitar (Ind.) feels that these persons can be called "agitators favor ing continuous discord in the Democrat ic party," for, as the Columbia (S. C.) Record (Dem.) remarks: "Why should not Governor Cox's friends stay in the saddle? They are the only ones entitled to remain there."' Their removal, j in deed, the Knoxville Journal and Tribune (Rep.) -agrees, would be like punishing a man for failure to "change the laws of gravitation, or direct' the flow and ebb of the tides." , e A purely Republican view of the affair comes from the columns of the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle (Rep.) which comments : "By making the chairman ship a center of strife, the several. fac tions are emphasizing the demoralization that has made itself apparent in other directions." Curious tiits of Information Gleaned From Curious Places The gargoyles of Notre Dame are com monly associated with the medieval spirit and the queer obsessions of old Paris. As a matter of fact, while the etained glass windows date from the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, most of the gargoyles were executed under the direction of 'Violet le Due 'when the cathedral was restored, no earlier than the middle of last century. Writing in 1913, Harry Hems, who is an authority on architectural subjects, declared that most of the gargoyles carved at the time of the restoration of Notre Dame were done by an Englishman named Framp ton. "though I believe this fact Is now remembered by very few." j Uncle Jeff Snow Say?: Some of our statesmen and almost statesmen has found em a brand new way of raisin revenue, and that's by taxin' of flivvers. There don't seem to be no limit to what they can raise that away. In fact, there ain't no more rea son why there" should be a license on flivvers than on hay wagons or header beds. I notice all our big idle land spec tators is willin' to have free roads built past their holdin's by the flivver tax. First thing we know there'll be some kind ef ball-etp -with ans) of the here new fliwer-taxtn laws and the supreme j edges' II chuck 'em all into the scrap heap. Then well find out how nice it. is to have a flivver to take aigs to town 'thout no license. Letters From the People ' f Cotnmunlca Hons to The Journal for publics tkat in this department should be written on only one aide of the paper; should not exceed S00 words i length, and must be signed by the writer, whose mail add rare in full asuat accom pany the contribution. i A CHAMPION NEEDED The Journal Again Commended for Its Stand for Free Speech. Portland, Feb. 21. To the Editor of The Journal After reading the commu nication of R. A. Sawyer, commander of the Spanish War Veterans, in The Jour nal today, I immediately hunted up your recent able editorial on Mayor -Baker and constitutional larw, also your more recent article, in Saturday's Journal, concerning the effect of Mayor Baker's utterances before the Spanish War Vet erans on February 15. It is certainly gratifying to know we have a paper which will editorially stand for consti tutional rights, and which will publicly denounce any official who seeks to set himself above the constitution of our state, as well as the constitution of the United States. I also believe that pri vate citizens and public citizens as well should attend free speech meetings In force, because In that way we shall be able to reach more people and awaken them to the fact that we are not criti cizing or condemning any man or woman who demands that our liberties shall not be taken away from us, but on the con trary, that we shall be glad to work shoulder to shoulder with those who wish to retain the freedom which our forefathers fought and bled for. If thought and speech could have been' so throttled in 1776. the Liberty bell prob ably never would have pealed forth the glad tidings that a new and mighty na tion of freemen had been born. Is it not better Americanism to show proper regard for our written law than to try to override it by denying that which is guaranteed us in that immortal document, the Constitution of the United States? H A. Howard. A DEFENDER OF FREE SPEECH Barlow, Feb. 20. To the Editor of The Journal I should be remiss in what I consider a duty if I did not heartily commend you in your excellent and fear less editorials-cm free speech and mayors. It is evident that the G. L,. B.s are as det rimental to society as the I. W. W. in that they go to too great extremes. R. E. Cherrick. QUOTING THE CONSTITUTION Spanish War Veteran in an Open Letter to Commander Sawyer. Portland, Feb. 23. Commander R. A. Sawyer, City. Dear Sir : I wish to make a few remarks in reply to your letter in last Monday's Journal. During the Spanish-American war I served in company L, Second Arkansas volunteers. At that time I enlisted under the colors for three reasons. One was to avenge the sinking of the battleship Maine : another was to put to flight that butcher Weyler, who was then conduct ing a reign of terror throughout the Spanish West Indies, particularly In Cuba ; and the last reason was to ex tend to those sorely tried inhabitants the hand of brotherly love and charity, and to induce not coerce them to adopt American institutions. I don't lay any claim to being 100 per cent American, any more than I claim to be 100 per cent Infallible or 100 per cent Christian. Also, I don't flaunt my Americanism to the high heavens amid a blare of trumpets.' My actions speak for themselves. When my country called I did not wait to be drafted. That is a matter of record. But I find that the Americanism I fought for and that which you appar ently fought for are of different char acter. I fought to spread the benefits of American institutions, not forcibly nor coercively, but rather through kindness and illustration. An army can be suc cessful combated with, an army, but an idea never was, is not now and never will be successfully resisted with force. The experience of the late czar ought to prove to you that. The only reason he succeeded so long was. that education was not so widely diffused as it is in Anglo-Saxon countries. The American constitution, in which we all take so much pride, was the product of mortals, and I would like you to point out one thing that mortals ever created that was infallible. In the na tural evolution of the race, as we march towards that millennium spoken of in the Holy Book, all mortal made instru ments must fall by the wayside. The framers of that excellent instrument themselves admit that it is not perfect, for they provided machinery for its amendment. Not only that, but in order that it may be intelligently altered or amended, they specifically guaranteed to posterity that "congress shall make no law abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press, or the right of the people peaceably to assemble." Now you- at tempt not only to violate that excellent document but also appeal to the hoodlum element to break up lawful assemblies. There is nothing to be gained fiy re pression. Just about 20 years ago I joined the " United Mine Workers of America. At that time to belong to a union was to be an outlaw. But we claimed that we had as much right to organize as the. employers. However, we were blacklisted. Our leaders were fired and jailed and sometimes we were jailed too. We were driven from pillar to post ; but the United Mine Workers of Aitoerica today is the answer to that repression. President Wilson says: "Revolutions do not spring up overnight. Revolutions gather throughout the ages. Revolutions come through long suppression of the human spirit. Revolutions come because rnreit know they have rights, and that those rights have been disregarded." I dislike the term revolution, for revo lution usually results in bloodshed. I much prefer evolution. Evolution means Instruction and intelligent decision, which can only be gained by the exercise of those Inalienable rights guaranteed by the constitution free speech, free press and lawful assemblage. . George P. Falconer. INCOME TAX ' f Com mn nica tions concerning income tax prob lems will be answered by The Journal. All com munication"! should be addressed to the "Income Tax Editor" and should bear the writer's name and address. Question Is interest paid on mortgages among the amounts deducted when com puting income tax? Answer Yes. Question Is a girl considered a minor after she is 18 years of age? Answer No. Question Do her parents have to pay Income tax on her salary after she is IS providing her salary is less than $1000? Answer No. Question When a car is used about equally in business and pleasure, what part of the expense, if any, is deductible? Answer The proportion applicable to the. use of the car in business may be deducted as a business expense. Question Can storage, oils, repairs of tires,- etcx, be dedueted exs part of the expense? - Answer Yes, to the same extent as set forth in the answer to the last ques tion. ' Question Is license tax on autos de ductible the same as any other tax? ' Answer Yes. Question Do school teachers have to pay income tax? Answer Public school teachers are COMMENT AND SMALL CHANGE ' What's happen id to "Shadow"? - . . ,., ; The reform element hasn't prevented the old moon from getting full. Disarmament: More " than $462,000, 000 in navy appropriations for 1931. . s f The squirtless grapefruit Is to be ex pected in an age of kickless grape juice. Hoover has not been elevated,-but by his appointment the cabinet' is apt to be. Curtailment of the sale of firearms would curtail our crop of murder mys teries. - e What do an the men who attend mid week matinees do with the rest of the week? "Centenarian slashed brush on Broad way." Crowded out of his Job by the barbers. e Really, It's wonderful: but what good is to come from a 22-hour transconti nental trip? The rule that the "Lord helps him who helps himself is the only thing that saves the lout who steals a newspaper man's shears and paste pot. r And since an "estate" is a possession, maybe the paste pot and the shears are the "Fourth estate" we hear so ever lasting much about these days. The radical Mr. Tucker scorns reporters.- Wonder If his own ears burn from the things reporters think about him but are too self-respecting to say. MORE OR LESS PERSONAL Random Observations About Town "The stockmen have lfteen harder hit than anyone else In bringing the coun try back to normalcy," said a prominent stockman from Eastern Oregon who is stopping at the Imperial for a few days. "No, I would rather you wouldn't men tion my name, but here is an item. which I clipped last week from a farm paper that helps to explain why the producer is receiving so little for his product and why the consumer Is paying so much. Here is the item and it Isn't at all exag gerated : "When M. E, Haskins, Kansas farmer, shipped 155 pounds of wool to. a commission broker in Kansas City two weeks ago, he asked the broker to send him n sweater and buy and pay for it out of the wool money. After the freight. War' tax, commission, storage and insurance were paid Haskins had $11.40 coming for his wool, but the sweater and express charges cost $15.15. It takes only one pound of yarn to make a sweater ! As the account stands now, Haskins owes the commission man $3.75 and has $4 to pay for shearing"." Mrs. F. K. Booth, Mrs. Mary Handley and G. G. Thornton of Astoria are regis tered at the Imperial. L. A. Stanley of Baker is a Portland visitor. H. R. Jones of Salem is in Portland. V. J. Walker of Moto is at the Im perial. L L. Baker of Grass Valley Is a Port land visitor. S. D. Peterson, well known attorney of Milton, is at the Oregon. George Larsen of Siletz, Lincoln coun ty, is a Portland visitor. N. B. Bounty and R. A. Lewellyn of Bend are guests at the Imperial. George F. Osburn of Ashland, the sum mer capital of Orepon, is in Portland. J. S. Dellinger, pioneer newspaper man of Astoria, is at the Imperial. . - Mrs. Fred Currey of Juntura is a guest at the Imperial hotel. Theodore W. Case of Klamath Falls Is domiciled at the Imperial. J. W. Richmond of Condon is a guest at the Seward. e L L. Stewart of Salem is a Portland visitor. Charles S. Hanson of Ashland is a guest at the Seward. L, W, Neilson of Medford is at the Seward. E. E. Barr of Seaside and R R Dear of Albany are guests at the Seward.5 H. F. McGrath of Kings Valley is a Portland visitor. OBSERVATIONS AND IMPRESSIONS OF THE JOURNAL MAN rj . .By Fred Lockley ' Reminiscences of a pioneer of pioneers in t'matilla courety are here recorded by Mr. Lock ley, who stresses the .means by which his sub ject msde his way to distinct success in the world. J 1 , J. T. Lieuallen of Umatilla county is spending a few days in Portland on his way home from Southern California, where he has spent the winter. "How long have I lived in Umatilla county?" said Mr. Lie,uallen, repeating my ques tion. "I have lived there more than 67 years. I decided to com to Oregon when I was five years old. We came across the plains from Missouri, where I was born. I started for Oregon in 1863. Oh, sure ; I brought my folks along. Father settled on Pine creek, above Weston. After a year there he found a homestead, which he took. It is one mile east of the present city of Athena. In early days our place was always known as the Done Pine Tree ranch. To my certain knowledge this place has been farmed more than 50 years and we are getting just as big crops of wheat as in the year the eod was first turned. We get around 40 bushels to. the acre, and that is what it yielded when first farmed ; all of which goes to prove that the soil of Umatilla county is wonder fully fertile. "I went to school at. the old Rawhide 'school, midway between Weston and Athena. When we took up our home stead there was only one house on Pine creek, which was at the Taylor Green crossing of Pine creek. Taylor Green later became the father-in-law of Bert Huffman, editor of the East Oregonian. There was no town of Athena but near where Athena is now located was the Mitchell Richards stage station. There was a house, a stable and several cor rals. This stage station later became Centerville and was the headquarters for Hank Vaughan in the days when he was at his wildest and wooliest. Center ville later became Athena. "In those days ' Pendleton was also a stage station. The first time I saw the place there were not' over half a dozen houses there, a' saloon or two. Aunty Raley's eating place, a blacksmith shop and a store. In those days Umatilla county was a stockraising district. Dave Taylor, father of Til and Jenks Taylor, was in the stock, business, as were most of the other settlers. We used to cut the wild hay for winter feed. When we considered employes of the state, and compensation tor such service is exempt and need not be reported for income tax I have three sources of in come poultry,, fruit and .my salary as a. NEWS IN BRIEF ; -SIDELIGHTS A man in Portland Is unirl tn liiv. jbeen boss of bis family for 28 years, and w now insane, success like that would drive any man insane. Cor vail la Ua-sette-Times. , If there is a place on earth where bone-dry prohibition for the United States Is unanimously approved and be lieved in. it is Havana. Cuba. La Qrande Observer. e Cheer up! We're not so poor, after all. Europe owes us $20,000,000,000. That's nearly $200 apiece, or $1000 per family. And all we've grot to do Is col lect it. -Albany Democrat, e We have traveled a long way since Washington's time and entirely iost sight of Jefferson's doctrine that the best government was the one that governed least. Salem Capital Journal. There is a move on foot to lengthen the presidential term to six years. Don't do it voting for a change is about the only Interest a majority of the people take in government. Eugene Guard.: It is high time Chief of Police Wilson stopped such .disgraceful scenes on Main street. Yesterday a woman, lost to all sense of modesty, walked through the business district with both ears ex posed. Klamath Falls Herald. It will be wise if under the Harding administration Mr. Hughes runs the state department and the senate holds to its constitutional duty of backing up the executive department instead of try ing to run that department. Pendleton East Oregonian. - Walter M. Pierr. wha wnuM h,v. been governor 6f Oregon once if he had only: had a few more votes, Is In town on business and is a guest at the Seward. He is a good loser, for he always bobs up serenely and doesn't cry over spilt milk, but goes ahead with all his energy at some new Interest. e e Robert C. Paulus of Salem is a guest at the Seward. He has just returned from a three weeks' trip to New York city, Washington and other Eastern Cities in the interest of the fruitgrowers. e e John F. Forbis and John Forbis Jr. of Forest Grove are at the Multnomah. Mr. Forbis formerly lived at Butte, Mont., and is well known to many old time residents of Montana. Judge R. R. Butler, lawyer, orator and: booster for his home town, is down from The Dalles and is putting up at the Imperial. j i F. L. Knight of Anchorage, on Ship oreek, near the entrance of Knik arm of Cook Inlet, in Alaska, is transacting business In Portland. . Mr. and Mrs. George Bain of Castle rock and. Robert Andrus of Cascade Locks are at the Cornelius. Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Wilson, Mrs. Frank Anderson and Miss Emma Bergstrom of Heppner are jruestsat the Imperial Mr. and Mrs. E. D. McMillan of Lex ington, Or., are registered at the Corne lius. . A. J. Bollens, hailing- from Grass Val ley, is transacting business in the me tropolis. Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Morton of Kodiak, Alaska, are registered at the , Mult nomah. A. R. Baker Multnomah. of Astoria is at the Mrs. L. W. Robbins and daughter of Molalla are at the Multnomah. e. -' . W. B. Hancock of Seaside : Is a! Port land visitor.-: , P. E. Burke of Klamath Falls is at the Multnomah. M. F. Hanley of Medford is a guest at the Multnomah.. - - Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Miller of Salem are guests at the Seward hoteL Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Carter of Albany are at the Oregon. Judge Lynch .of Eastern Oregon Is a Portland visitor. e e - W. L. Kimble of Hermiston is visiting in Portland. ' -, George Hennlng of Juneau is in Port land on business. had a hard winter and the snow was crusted we rarely had enough hay to winter our stock, so we would hitch up a span of mules or "oxen and, with a V-shaped scraper, drive over the -range and scrape the crusted snow away so the hungry cattle could get at the dried bunch grass beneath. When I was a boy the 'two towns of consequence In Uma tilla county were Weston and Umatilla. On October 29, 1879, I married Miss Lucy Adcock. We have had nine children. Lawrence, my oldest boy, is farming on the home place. My next, Fred, is a doctor. ; He went to France and won the croix d guerre for gallantry under fire in attending to the wounded. I have 10 grandchildren five boys and five girls, "You have to stay on the job to amount to anything in any line, so I have bought out homesteaders who got cold feet, till I have about a thousand acres of wheat land and also some tim ber and range land. My boys and I had 2500 acres in wheat last year. It yielded 35 to -45 bushels to the acre. The year before we had 1920 acres. We sold at $1.90 a bushel, though if we had held it a month or so we could have got $2.50 a bushel; but even at $1.90 it runs into quite a bit of money. Not over 25 per cent of last year's crop is still in the farmers hands!" Speaking of staying on the job and making good reminds me of a bit of verse I ran across a few days ago in Forbes Magazine. It is written by Dale N. Carty and is enUtled "One Way Traffic." There is only one load to the town of "Success." The name of the road is "Work." It has room for only honest guvta,. Traffic's blocked to those that shirk. The read is open all hours of today. It heeds neither time nor date. And now ia the tirrm to start on yenr wsy. For tpmorrow will be too late. Nearly sin of! the way is an uphill road; It will seem like a toueb old fnht; But one, on your way just bear up your load And keep 90ms with ail your miarht. Tpn will paa thmnirh many towns each day. Such as Failitre. ;ico:n and In-mair; ' At each of these stations Just keep on your way. For "Work" doe not tarry there. ! After you bare entered the town of "Swfta." Though your load may have been bard to bear, Onre innde yon will find both comfort and rest: Just be thankful yon started for there. teacher in he public school. Shall I in clude teacher's wages in my income tax return? , Answer No ; that amount should not be Included in, computing your taxable income.. ; . The Oregon Country Northwest Hajin4ncs in Brief Form lor the Busy Header. OREGON NOTES . . The Lacomb oil well is down 840 feet and stockholders are optimistic as ta final results. j , Application for' an increase of rates has been filed by the Lebanon Electrio Light & Water company,, Albert Peterson, KoVernment trapper at Ukiah, in Umatilla county, reoorta a month's catch of 19 coyotes and three bobcats. The new Methodist church at Suther lin was dedicated Sunday. The wrmon was delivered by Dr. W. W. Yeungaoo of Portland. " j j Steinhoff & Jackson, who have built a sawmill at Myrtle Point, have started cutting fir lumber and are employing a full crew of men. j r Wilbur Clayborn Doak; for many years a resident of Lane couity. died sud denly on his farm near Coburg while feeding the hogs. i W. B. Andrews, for &6 years a resi-' dent of Eugene and a veteran of -the Civil war, ; is dead at his home in that city, aged 82 years. i The Union mine and stamp 'mill at Halfway has closed down and all the crews have left the camp until it re opens in thesprlng. J S. B. Powers, a pioneer farmer, of Fhedd. is dead at Ashland, aged 64 yearn. He was born on his farm near Shedd, where he resided all his life. The summer of 1921i promises to be an active i season in the building line in Gladstone. At lyesent four modern dwellings are under construction. The Umpqua Savings & Loan company at KosehurK has increased its capital stock from $200,000 to $500,000. The com pany was organised three years ago. The -number of farms In Oregon, ac cording to the recent rensus, 1b 60,206. These farms contain 13,542, 318 acreH, of which 4,913,851 acres are improved land. 'An increase of 41 per cent In the val ue of farm property in Marion county has been made within the last 10 years. Farm land and buildings now are val ued at $46,393,558. j Work will be started as soon as pos sible on' a new suspension bridge con meeting Oreftun City ! and West Linn. This undertaking will employ a large force for asbout a year! A fire department consisting of two hose teams and a hook-and-ladder team has been organized at Monmouth. Plans are being imaiia for the construction of a fire hall iujd the installation of modern equipment. i I WASHINGTON Fully 51000 jackrabhits were slain In a drive held near Kllensburg last Sat urday. ' Shopmen In all the railways operating through Spokane are ; now on the five day weekj The dance hall at Heisson In Clarke county burned to the ground last week. The building and contents were a total loss.' j , Eugene IE. J. Lair, a Reardan farmer, convicted 1 of second degree assault on a 12-year-old boy, hanged himself, in Jail at Davenport. i Fire starting from an overheated stove- destroyed the cookhouse of the Western Logging company near Win lock. The loss is $6000. Unless unforeseen disaster happens to the apple; crop of the Wenatchee dis trict, the syield this year will ba 16,000 carloads or 12,000,000; boxes. The Cascade company mill at Yakima opened Monday for the first of this Bea son'B run and will employ 300 men for the first part of its operations. Elery H. Holesapple of Dryad has Just received a citation from Uie war department for "gallantry In action" during the Meuse-Argonne offensive. Mrs. John R. Neely of Spokane has Deen unanimously elected president or the women's auxiliary of the American Legion of the department of Washington. Plans for bulldlnjr 125 new residences, together with extensive improvements and enlargements of) the water system are features of municipal activity at Maiden. j Creation of a state commission to pro vide for state improvement projects to relieve unemployment is asked in a reso lution passed by the Spokane central labor council. j Chief Bill Mason ! and wife of the Quinault 'Indian tribe at Taholah are preparing for a trip to Washington and hope to pay their respects to President elect Harding. . j A report from the forest service States that ,8.000,000,000 board feet of timber were destroyed by the hurricane that swept the Olympic peninsula in Washington recently. In the absence of State Senator Guy B. Oroff of Spokane., now attending the session of the legislature, his home has been stripped of alii its rurnlslilngs, in cluding even the chandeliers. To repair partially the damage done by the disastrous windstorm that swept the Olympic national forest on January 29. the senate committee on appropria tions recommends the- appropriation of $100,000. j . IDAHO P. T. Fortner, former assistant farm agent in Lane county. Oregon, has been appointed county Bjrent for Bonner county, I 'Irrigation ditches 'as now constructed in certain streets of : Caldwell have beffn declared a public nuisance by the city council. j - The bridge across the Snake river at Grandvlew, which was built jointly bv the counties of Ada and Owyhee and the state, has been Completed. : Heavy snow on- the large packing house of Jess Meckwith at Fruitland caused the roof to cave in, seriously damaging the contents and wrecking two autos. - : Mankin Roby Davis, locally known as "Jeff" Davis, died I suddenly at F'oca tello Sunday. He was born in Virginia 63 years ago and had been a resident of Idaho for 40 years. According to the 4-Ity welfare director, nine-tenths of the families who are be ing assisted by the lAssociatcd Charities are from other parts of the country and are not citizens of Boise. Kiirh't thousand feet of movlnir niclurea of the Hnake Itlver vallev have leen completed by the Hnuku River Valley Community club in cooperation with the united states reclamation servlee. icnow I youiv PORTLAND Community Service, an idea, an ideal and an organization born of war experience, designed to promote email town neighborlineasj in big cities, has become an accepted organization among the many of civic character in Portland, It is Identified by its use fulness, i Last year, which was really its first year apart from the War Camp Community Service, was apparently a strenuous year of neighbor-making. There were 76 sessions of commit tees and the board of directors, and an aggregate of j 1013 in attendance. Fifty-nine military drill and phyal cal training classes for girls attracted an attendance of j 447 4. Twenty-nine girls classes in folk and esthetic dancing had an attend ance of 1142. - Girls were Initiated into the enthus ing influence of booster club, and 12 clubs of such character had an en rollment of 384. j Thirteen swimming classes for girls were popular, for they had an attend ance of 1509. i There were 42 mixed classes in dra matics and pageantry, with an at tendance of 1676 ; 26 mixed short story classes, with arv attendance of 255, and 67 mixed classes for choruses and rehearsals, j with an attendance of 2617. j (To be continued.)