8 THE MORNING OREGONIAN. MONDAY, 3IAY 13, 1918, (Dwjpppittan PORTLAND. ORECO!. Catered at Portland lOr'(oi) roelofflca as lMoailtM mail matter. Cuoecnpuoa retaa Invariaory la advance: (By Mall.) . Pally, Sanday Included, ona year. . . .... OS llir. Fualay tnclu1l. moatkl 4.22 lai.y. bunuay tnc.uucd. three months... 2.23 siiy. Sunday incioueu. eoe montb. li.y. a Ithout unuar. ana y.ar. . lal y. without unl.y. ail anontha... UO J op In ne betterway than by building roads over 'which long trains of trucks can haul the freight that overflowj from the railroads. I'aliy. without Sunday, ooa mourn. .. . .. TVs,ly. ena year... feunay. ana yr - auaday ana Weekly S-SV By Carrler-i Dal?y. Sunday Ineludad, ana yaar. ...... $9 CO lai.y, Sunday Included, ana month. .... .73 jr. uoda le.u.i.d. three moathlM.. J 23 iseily. witaawt ealr. aaa year........ 7 so l...y. artthout iuadr. tnrae months. ... l.WS lrsiiy. without Sunday, a&a month S4 Maw la lUaaM Sand poatofflee nony eruwr. axprvaa or personal chli oa your local baa K. stamps, rola or curroary ara at aara run. tle poatofflee addreae ta full. including county and state, ' Faataao Bet 13 ta J pas. 1 coat: IS to mi aaaaa. a caata: 4 ta Bases, a aaau ta aecee. a caata; SI ta pagan, caata: TS ta pagan, oeaia. Feraisa Boat a . double rates. EaaSsrn Itaalaaaa OfTVa Torre Ceak- Irn, Hraaroira swtMlng. New Tark; Vcrraa at Con kiln. Stager ealidtee. C a. tea so ; Vorraa d C'oaklln. Frea Ftm banding. Wtrolt. MKh.; Baj rraBCtaco npnmUUltft. K. J. Bid era 1 1, 14J alaxket etrael MKMBEat OF TBI ASSOCIATED rMSS. The Associated Pveas la eaelnatvely eetl l!ad ta tba aaa for republication at a.l news Siapatenes cradllad ta It ar a at otkarwlaa credited ta thla papar. aad alee tba local aeare puolleaed herein. All ruata a republication of special aia aatckoa Serein ara alao imii !. NO JUIHtlAL WZATtTEHCOCKS. ' The Oregonlan makes an exception of a long-established rule, today In publishing the letter from Mr. Corliss. That1 rule demands In general the re. Jertlon of communication " offering i personal, indorsement of or tribute to III 1 'o I candidates. The cause for this rule ought to be obvious. Every candidate has many friends, each of whom would be glad to avail himself of the privilege of telling the public what he knows about the good Qualities of the candidate. The - contributions would be- overwhelming. The exception made In this case need not be taken as an indorsement by The Oregontan of any candidates, but as an unqualified adherence to the profound truth that the real test of a Jdr or of a candidate for the judiciary Is' not his inclination to bow to public clamor, but his aiern '"deter mination to Interpret the law aa he finds it. . " The man -who seeks to ride ' Into Judicial office upon some such public issue aa the f-cent fare, no matter tlon of wheat and by thus Increasing the quantity exported from' America Instead of from other countries, we shall increase the number of ships available to carry troops, shall more rapidly expand our Army in France and shall hasten the downfall of the Kaiser. . . ' . It is no exaggeration to say that every grain of wheat saved in America Is a bullet flired at the Germans. Food economy is a long-range gun, which can make Germany's monster seventy-five-mile gun resemble a boy's BB rifle. Americans should continue to save food as the stay-at-homes' way of fighting the Kaiser. PORTLAND- A WOOL MARKET. The economy, of scouring wool near the field of production is so obvious that it vcua ho sooner explained to Chairman Bamch. of the War Indus tries Board, than it was recognized and acted- upon. That Is an inevitable result of a war emergency which over rules all sectional" and political in fiuence. , Boston has long .'held su premacy as -the) wool market of Amer tea because it had the financial power to buy .the clip, because it had scour lug facilities) to place clean wool be rORTLAXD, MOXDAT, MAT 13, ISIS. fore the manufacturer and because it toward which Am tia -nrafoasea t is near the consuming market. lean, is unfit for the place. .Likewise, Portland is ' now in a position to he who implies that he would favor supplant Boston partially in all these labor as against capital or capital respects. It has enough capital to against labor, or side with any other handle the clip, it has scouring mills element as against another .element, and it has a steadily growing market In his decisions, has a vain concep-1 among Oregon woolen manufacturers. tlon of the duties of a court of the I The time hould not be remote when solemnity of an oath of offlce. ' I Portland will' handle all the wool of ' Above all things we need a fearless the Northwest and ultimately all thai Judiciary, a Judiciary that will not of the Southwest as well. Boston has play politics, a Judiciary that wlllnot an advantage In being the market for heed the -clamorous counsel of those imported wool, but Portland has no who would have the courts knife the serious handicap in' distance by sea law In order to reach that which the from foreign wool-growing countries clamorers deem to be Justice. If laws and will offer a domestic market for are wrong or laws are unjust, the I all classes or wool aa more branches courts can do no more than construe (of the manufacturing industry become them. Ther cannot ladxlala. Ther I established In Oregon. Saving, of her own w!ns." PARENTAL CO-OPERATIOX. Expansion of parent-teacher organl cations In connection with the public schools. In which Portland has set a HIGHWAY XrCT-MART POB WAR. , The present strain on the transpor tation system of the United States may be expected to become greater as our Army grows, for movement of troops and war material will grow with the Army. The readiest means of taking thla strain off the railroads Is con- j cannot read a better d different pur I freight charges on two pounds of struct! on of permanent htchwars cap-1 nose Into them merely because atlgreafce and dirt for every pound of able of bearing the weight of large, I some late day the public becomes dis- clean wool shipped East and the con heavily loaded autotrucks. In a sin-1 satisfied with them. I sequent economy of transportation fa- i gle season such roads can be built I Oregon now has a gifted and re-1 duties are arguments which must tell parallel to railroads, of which thelspected Judiciary, one not afraid to I In the end capacity could be enlarged only at steer straight Into the wind of public I These developments In the wool several times the cost of building high-1 opinion if that course be laid by the I trade are another step In the emanci- waya, while the work would occupy law aa It sees 1L There la no impli-1 nation of the Pacltlc coast rrom de much mora time. For this reason I cation Intended herein that there are I pendence on' the Fast. They translate bntldlnr of hlrhways Is a war measure I none but Dresent incumbents who can I into fact the motto, "She files with f the first Importance. That fact has maintain that standard, but that plat been recognised by many states, for forms and slogans provide some In this year's expenditures of the states, vldloua comparisons. We want no . including Federal aid. are estimated weathercocks, at about three hundred million dollars. r That which Is true of the country . t. n.ral t. t. In r,rtW-r,l.r of TKM qCKSTIOXS STILL STAVD. Oregon; In fact, of the entire Pacific 11 WM to pected that the men conspicuously effective example, and Coast. The surest relief from car who are responsible for the aircraft the increasing part which parents are shortage oa the railroads la to be fiasco would retaliate on their accusers destined to play in the choice of voca roand la construction of mala trunk with counter charges of the character tlons made by their children are inter hlghways running east and west from which Gutxon Borglum denounces as woven in the new educational scheme, the Coast to the Interior, and north a frame-up. In considering these Society has passed beyond the stage and south through the heart of the charges and counter charges It Is not In which the son commonly followed state to connect with the highways necessary for the public to do more his father's calling, while the daugh of Washington and California. That than suspend Judgment in the case be- ter received instruction In the f emi ts the plan on which the Oregon High- tween Mr. Borglum and the men nine arts and accomplishments from way Commission la working, for It whom he has Indicted. At the same her mother, and is entering upon an propose to complete the Pacific High- time It should be remembered that era which demands complex technical way from Portland up the Willamette Mr. Borglum demanded and still de- training. Specialists in teaching as Valley and through Southern Oregon mands full investigation and publicity; well sni in industry are now needed, to California, and the Columbia River that he must have foreseen exposure It is neither feasible nor advisable Highway from Astoria through Por(- for himself from such an Investiga- that craftsmanship should pass from land to The Dalles. A large propor- tlon If he had been engaged in any father to son, with the limitations tion of these roads has been or will questionable transactions; and that the which such a policy Implies. Yet the be paved thla year, and the rest will favorite resort of men accused of custom of sending youths to school be macadamised, fit for motor t raffle wrongdoing Is to attempt .to discredit and there abandoning them to the the year round. Other roads will be I the witnesses against them, especially I mercies of their teachers also has its made In future years between the! by raising the familiar cry, "You're I drawbacks. It is the view of edu Coast and the Willamette and thence I another." I cators that best results will be ob to Eastern Oregon at Intervals through I But the case against the aircraft I tained from the hearty, co-operation li a ercauin i me state, ana pinng tuuruui uoes not reel on me untie-1 01 tne scnooi ana the Home of the entire system will be extended I ments of this one man. They might This Is particularly applicable Just from year to year. I destroy Mr. Borglum's reputation for I now to the choice of vocation, which On the Pacific Coast, however, high-1 veracity and disinterestedness, but they I is too commonly left to chance unde ways will serve a more Important pur-1 would still be confronted with the de-1 the system, or lack of system, whic pose even than helping to carry the mands he makes and the questions he I immediately followed the father-to trade arising from the war In Europe; I asks In the statement published In I son method. Recent investigations i they are necessary to defense of the I The Sunday Oregonlan wherein he I Eastern cities have disclosed that even Coast states themselves. The first line says: I "vocational guides." working unde of defense against an enemy approach-1 "The Nation demands to know why I direction of the school"" authorities, . Ing from the west would be the battle I $1.000.000. 000 in eleven months has I have not been altogether successful fleet, which would meet and ' attack I provided us with no planes. In turning the tide In the right direc him in the ocean and for which ample 1 fext It demands to know who la I tlon. Their mission is to study th bases on this Coast are urgently I responsible. I Individual pupil, to learn his fitness needed. The second line would be I "Who is It that is so powerful, and I for this calling or that, and to giv aircraft and submarines to prevent or I who are they that make it Impossible I counsel in accordance with deter obstruct his approach to the Coast, land dangerous to the character and mined facts. But there are several Th third line would be troop and honor of men to ask this question?" treasons why the plan has failed. Th artillery near th shore, which would I Those are the demands and that is I task Is too big for an ordinary man, enoeavor to anve away an enemy who I the question the answers to which I and the extraordinary man Is not al attempted a landing. A modern high- I must b gtven to the Senate military I ways chosen as the vocational guide- way sairung the snore from Cape I committee. I Incumbents may mean well, but at flattery to the Mexican boundary! Nor is Outxon Borglum the only ac- best they work with Incomplete data. wool a D indispensable to thla third I euser.' Others are the committee of The boy In his teens Is not an open Im. la order to give requisite mobility I the Aeronautical Society, the majority I book. No set of rules is applicable to to the guna, troops and supplies. That! of the Senate military committee, I his case. He may have a passing is vne lesson rrom me successful de-1 which Included men of both parties; I fancy for drawing without being Tens or th Ualllpoll peninsula by Independent Investigators for th New great artist In embryo. It does not the Turks. They would have lost the Tork World, a stalwart supporter of follow that he will make a sculptor Dardanelles and probably Constantl- the Administration; the New York because he has a certain aptitude for nopia u ua reuea on stationary I Times, vMct also supports the Ad-1 whittling cute devices out of sticks. guns, ror another days bombardment I ministration and Is cautious and con-I Taste for figures does not alwavs im weuld have destroyed their forts and I servative, yet takes Mr. Borglum so ! ply exceptional mathematical ability. not a good excuse for failure on the other. The -movement to make the next generation more efficient by edu cating both the adults and the chil dren of today extends both to natives and foreign - born, and to the country aa well as the city., - " . The Ideal to be sought Is the edu cated family in which there is full co-operation between the parents and the schools. This will embrace the .foundations of education, as well as special vocational training.- Parents ought to exercise a dominating in fluence in the choice of their chil drens calling, and hold them" to a definite purpose through discipline at home. Bacon was wise in his genera tion . when he urged that . parents choose "betimes" tha vocations' and courses they mean that their children should take. "Let them not," he said, "too much apply themselves to the disposition of their children, as think- j ing they will take best to that which I they have most mind to." Bacon makes an exception of those instances In which the "affection or aptness of the children Is extraordinary," but ne assumes that upon the whole the parent is the better Judge, and that more is gained by continuity of pur pose than by aimless casting about for the easy, the novel and the sup posedly "interesting" way. The edu cation of adults is designed only in part for their own benefit. It is by making them competent to co-operate with the schools in the training of the tchildren that the .greatest good will be obtained. . A Line o' Type or Two. Hew to the Uae, Let the Qulpa Fall Where They May. If it is advisable, that the Govern ment fix the prices of copper, lead, zinc and nickel ' as well as other metals, they should not be excepted merely for the reason given by Pope Yeatman that "strong Interests would oppose the measure." No Interests should . be strong enough to prevent adoption tf a necessary war measure, and, perhaps, if the Interests In ques tion, were named, they would prove nob to be very strong after all. (By B. I T. Published by arrange ment with the Chicago Tribune.) A sunny colleague refuses to be lieve that the campaign band is as bad as it blows. It is a charitable thought, covering a multitude of ' dissonances, but the campaign band is every bit as bad aa it blows. It is bad collectively because it is worse individually. One horn may be bad. two are not so bad, three become endurable, a dosen are a mild affliction. . Band players are sel dom lynched because they play in groups. It is only when they practice individually that ' they . invite destruc tion. Yon Caat Kill It. (From the Terre Haute Tribune.) Miss May I. Knott, of Staunton. Is Measures Are Analyzed. The Orraconlaa Prints Conclusions aa to City Acts Submitted ta Vote t People. , Following its pre-election custom, The Oregonlan herewith publishes Its conclusions aa to the merits of the measures submitted for,. vote of the peo ple in the special city electlony May 17. Only a portion, of the official title sufficient to enable the voter to iden tify each measure is given,, but the measures are listed in the order , they will appear on the ballot: 'Ordinance requiring any paraoa operating a 'motor bus jovt a deflnlta route to take ont llceaae. obtain bond.-.delne- route, etc. This is a measure which would re autre litneys to operate on a competl tlve basis 'fair to established transpor tation lines. ,. -4It provides a proper reg ulationr but it 5s common knowledge ElthfvanL Wilson. 1607 lte ,n faic eon.peut,: Tna meaBUre I nfr.r. tin. mnr. tHriiirAm,nt in" lirnovs A policeman on duty at a Socialist gathering Is quoted as philosophically than is found-in- present regulations under which ther will not operate It f eated. Vote 101. declarVn? thatH"thrwhoircrowd should iVfh"eror" and houli do chased out into the sunshine. Here Is a profound reflection. Our Social ists, Bolshevik!, pacifist professors, and our solmen Journals of opinion as well, all need one thing aeration. My Dear Sir, There Are Thlnars Which Cannot Be Explained. (From the Richmond, Va., Journal.) . An act to. amend the Bnarter'by adding a new -aectlon authorizing an additional levy of 4 m!'l cover - lncreaaed expensee of the city caused by the war. . 102 Yea; 103 Kft- Theneed' for this measure exists In the advancing.cost of Jiving and the . We have been thinking the Bolshe- vikl were the limit among Russian revolutionists, but there is another shade, redder than they, called anar chists,, against - whom - the relatively moderate Bolshevikl. have, been mak ing war. It may yet prove that there are reds redder than the anarchists, who would be supremely disgusted on learning that they were only moderate after all. To accuse the Alsatian, who only learned German under compulsion, of pro-Germ an Ism, is unjust, but that is one of the consequences of the mix ture of languages In border provinces of Europe and of the mixture of races in America. Opinions of people's loy alty should be founded on their acts To read in the Chicago Tribune' that impossibility of the city to retain neces- Mrs. La Baron Loring- Austen, "daugh- sary employe, at. tne salaries n. can ter-ln-law nt Jane A n.i ten. the novel- Provide under "present lax limitations, 1st." died last Saturday, at her home in Its purpose Is. to .increase the pay of the Illinois metropolis, is a trifle dls- tne ran ana me or city entpo-. m- turblng. " Her husband, we are told, eluding police rand firemen, but not was "a son of the author," and died higher paid officials.- The tax will be about five years ago. It is encumbent levied only during the period of the upon B. L. T.. of the Tribune, to ex- war. It is a matter of simple Justice plain this apparent anachronism and I and also one of necessity, insidious attemot to project the bend Vote 103. Tea. sinister across the Austen escutcheon. J P"ar the Motorist In Japan. (From the Japan Chronicle.) You must drive your automobile at the speed of eight knots per hour on the city roads and at 12 knots per hour on the country roads. An act to amend the charter bo- as to give the council discretion. In awarding contracts, to accept blda of Oregon persons when auch blda do not exceed the lowest submitted -by more than 5 per cent. 104 Yea; 105 No. This amendment would extend to city contracts a law now applying to state When von see the ooliceman throw-I contracts. It is intended to give home ing up his hand you must not drive in industry a preferential or a per cent front of him. in awards or contracts lor supplying When you get ahead of the passen-I goods, materials or construction work. srer on foot or the horse, you must I Vote 104. Yea. rlnr the horn. When you meet the cow or the horse I An act to amend tha charter by adding speed slowly and take care to ring the a new section permitting the reorganization h .nt hn frM of them. Bureau Into two platoons and Drive slowly when you meet the horse or the cattle, do not make them afraid and carefully make the sound. If they afraid the sound you must escape a little while at the aide of the road till they pass away. 106 Yea; authorizing a four-tentba-mlll tax. 107 No. This amendment authorizes the.two platoon system without the dangerous surrender of control and discipline pro posed In the two-platoon measure de- tsui i-T- .i,.. ,k. wh. von feated in a preceding election. get drunk and do not smoke on the firemen will benefit from the increases rir, ,..( I in salaries prupvacu in aiutuv unver seau I i v t h, a, a a tar "What Is the Bolshevikl national las the city should go in present cir- anthem referred to by a reporter?" In- I cumstancea. .Additional taxation at oniro. a narnlexed reader. We don't mis time snouia De reservea iw and words, not on the sound of their j know how the tune goes, but the text ters of vital need. was written by Edward Lear, and be- K'ns: ... . ... "There was an old man witn a teara. Who said. 'It is Just as I feared.'" Vote 107. o. The police found It necessary to An act to amend aectlon 220 of tha charter authorizing the refunding of water bonds. 108 Yea; 109 No. Thla provides for the Issuance of new bonds for the purpose of retiring old The country Is to be congratulated that Senator Hitchcock is the new chairman of the committee on for elgn relations. He is a Democrat of abate the xeal of a detachment of In- bonds of equivalent amount and is the right kind, a staunch American diana vigilantes." There Is a disposl- made necessary by the failure to pro- whrt nut pntmtrv artWA nartv an lion nuwauaya iu ien.u L. . ,j. .,,1. , fund tnv rut fpmftllt who, therefore, does not hesitate to 1 "'"UM ' Df water bonds Issued some years ago. express an opinion conflicting .with I T rw.f- Tn ih. viii.r. miriil u 18 a simple, grant of authority not .. . ... .. .. I In Deerfleld. 111., the village marsnai, .m (hffmh In hnnded ln- the constable, the deputy Sheriff, the debtedness and is necessary to preserve Inan'Artnr of water mains, the reader I. , .,... ji. If the United States' Is to assume I of water meters, the fire department,! . va- exhaasted their ammunition. It was I seriously that It bases a demand for .mobile artillery hauled along the high-1 grand Jury Inquiry on hla statements. way ana posted on the heights which I If all or these should be disposed held off the allies and finally com- ( of. the accuser who cannot be silenced pclled them to retire. ta the fact that after blng at war for IZ an enemy should effect a landing thirteen months our Army in France In force aad the American Army lis still practically without fichUng anemia oe driven mck to Lhe Coast I aircraft of American make and la de. range of mountains, a main highway I pendent for aerial defense and recon up the Willamette Valley with laterals I naUsance on the French the rescued running westward would be Indlapen- going to the help of the rescuer, sable to serve It. and that function - hostile advance Into tha Wlllaznatta Favorable forecasts of the Winter Valley, the Cascade Mountains would I wheat crop are no cause for relaxation become the natural line of defense, I In economy of wheat. Tha Oovem and the Army would need solid roads I ment estimates an Increase of 14 J.- acroaa tneir passe and a main north 000.000 bushels over the Winter wheat and south road along their eastern! crop of last year, but the latter was base. This Is the system of military far below the average and left only a signwaya propewea oyine racine coast small margin over normal domestic Helena league, wmcn is to hold a I consumption. That margin was only convention In Portland on May 24 and I Increased br the practice of aavlnar SS. It would constitute an Integral and even then was not sufficient to part or our aerenaca, would facilitate make good the deficiency of Our allies, movement of the present war trafflc who are still on short rations of wheat and would form the skeleton of a state We have no cause to expect a con- neiwora oi nignways xor me usee 01 slderable Increase In the crop of Pc- I Spring wheat, and many risks of Then mgnway construction Is a war drought or wet weather. Insect pests measure of the first importance and and labor shortage have to be safely should be prosecuted with even greater passed before the larger crop for energy ai me present time tnan oerore I which we hope will be harvested, the war. Bonds for the purpose should I If our highest hopes ahould b real have the favorable consideration of lxed by the harvesting of a bllllon the War Finance Corporation, with- bushel crop In I18. several Items out whose aid or Indorsement they must be set on the other side of the a-annot be placed on the market. The account, and they prove that we shall plans on which the Oregon Highway have none to waste. Our Army In Commission is at work were adopted France la growing ranidlv and must by a decisive majority of the voters be well fed. though the stay-at-homes at an Initiative election. They are go short Food production of France opposed oniy Dy tne agitators wno and Italy Is half to a third below nor hav allied themselves with the dls- mal because the men of those nations loyal Non-Partisan League and who are under arms and because rich see have been repudiated by the Oranges tlons of their territory are occupied of the most populous counties. An by the enemy or have been laid waste, attempt to call an election on repeal British production Is Increased only of the road-bonding law has met with by herculean effort, pastures and so little encouragement that" Its fall- parka being plowed up and women tire seems assured. . and boys being drafted; to the farms. Road-building should go on because The allies are deprived of the supply It is an Immediate and valuable con- which they formerly drew from Rus- trl button to our war activities. The gla and Roomanla. Wheat could be war dictates that It be confined almost shipped to Europe from Argentina, entirely to mala highways, but that Australia and India, but the distance It should be pushed with redoubled from those countries Is so" much energy. Capital should be released for greater than that from the fnited this purpose as readily as for the Ira- States that tonnage would be em- provement of ra'lroada. building of ployed which could be better used In ears and locomotives and construction shipping troops and munitions to of ships. War work can be speeded j France. By reducing home consump- It is true that the professional voca tlonal guide Is presumed to know these things and to make due allow ances, but It Is also true that he often falls. Parents still occupy the favored po si tlon in respect to educational guid ance, notwithstanding the tendency In some quarters to trust everything to the schools. Their lack of special pedagogical equipment is atoned for by greater Interest In the Individual pupil and by exceptional opportunities for observation. It has been the ob serration of schoolmen that nothing quite takes the place of intelligent home guidance not even the pater nalism of a benevolent state. But not all parents are as wise, or as well Informed, as they ought to be, and It Is for this reason that the schools. with the welfare of the coming gener ation rn mind, are seeking by methods both direct and Indirect to Include fathers snd mothers In the scope of their work. The benefits of education are cumulative. One need not sub. scribe to any special theory of hered ity to realise this. Men and women who have tasted of educational oppor tunities are usually keen to give their children still better ones. It has been said aptly that the father who has been to college will send Jils son to college If he can find a way and that the college-bred mother will find the way. It Is not this class of parents with whom school authorities are con cerned, but with those who are apa thetlc either viewing the whole sys tern with suspicion, or regarding it as the duty of the teacher to assume the whole responsibility. Our habit of ascribing our educa tional difficulties to foreign immigra tion has suffered a shock as the re sult of revelations in the training camps under the draft Tbe percent age of adult Illiteracy Is shown to have been larger than had been indi cated by statistics, and it also appears that there are a good many native Americans who can neither read nor write. In proportion to population. the country districts are as backward as the "congested districts of the cities." to which we also have been accustomed to ascribe an undue share of educational shortcomings. The foreign population, in fact, has seemed wider awake to its opportunities than many of the home folks have been. But s deficiency on the one hand is the burden of building ships for the! the weed eradicator, and the Janitor of allies as well as for itself, there will I the school has resigned, - we are try An act to amend the charter by repealing be PlentV of work not onlv for exist-1 Ing." writes M. W. R., "to find a man three sections and substituting therefor , pI7nt or wora not OEiy lor exist- ; k M Diace " . . three new sections authorizing a levy of not ing plants, but for aa, many ttiore as laKe nla exceed 1 mill for a free garbage collec- can be added. It is time to turn Ore gon loose as fast as new yards can be manned. Life. tlon system. 110 Yes; 111 M Increases In taxation at this time In Other D7. . Tweaty-Sve Years Age. From Tha Oregonlan. May 13. 189S. ' Chicago. The gates of the World Fair will be open Sunday, but the vexed question of Sunday at the exposition-is not yet settled. The buildings will remain- closed. . . . Washington. Herman Wise will be appointed postmaster at Astoria in a few days It is reasonably safe to an nounce. ,- A wedding occurred the other night at Yaquina Bay as the result of the re cent meeting of the Legislature. Two clerks, W. E. Baxter,, of Salem, and Miss E. M. Lewis, of Yaquina, are the contracting parties. The W. , C. Noon Bag Company has Just been Incorporated, . , Miss Helen Dun, daughter of the new Minister to Japan, Is described as close ly resembling her mother, the beauti ful Japanese woman whom Dun mar- Tied, while he was secretary of the le gation in Toklo. Dawn, and the day that follows after; lBh0urd be reserved for matters of vital Time, and the hours bleak and slow; f nnflpniiPTipfi. . Frea collection of c&r Th. man ar-rr H ,.v. 1 lc"' w,l" ' ' " Oafre aoes noc seem now i " " " " - s-ive. I a lul IDA nu In T n M T W I I I DHL eUIlAV. .I.olelnarlan less driving, one result being a white Tork. 'and the simple Joy In doing; ,.. victim with a fractured skull. Is for- Hone, like a sons: that will not -cease; - . tunate in residing in a Northern state, Dreams, that have mocked at your pur-I An act to amend the charter by adding o-t.. o , i i, I ' I a new section providing an additional sometimes mean, a war or two n Death, and the tender stars, and peace! method : of . . . uimurni uu w . I -J " - stir. - I - . 1112 Yea; 113 No. This, in the long run. Is merely a re- DOROTHY DOW. "I do not drink, nor do I smoke. I x aw 1 1 v i 1 1 iii., ... . ........... , . , M - The President's proclamation call-1 writes Thomaw Burke In the esteemed funding proposition. The proceeds o ing for real observance of Memorial Herald-Examiner. And so, naturally tne Donas win db nseu 10 " day should be enough to bar the enough, the accompanying picture of erty for the amount "hlc h it is ,, it nHmaT, .hnvi him with a saeaar delinquent on street Improvement as- apuru.o niia. cuotomnniy tnauigea Bessment. These assessments are now by people with no reverance for the in hu mou"1 glorified dead. . . rmm .nd the Canine. (Roanoke, III.. Item.) represented by issuance of city bonds. The result in the end will be to retire the old bonds with the further merit While driving in his Ford north of that resales or redemptions will ultl town Bun Trantena ran into a dog matel, retire , the a cunaay paper until next aay, now ana upset n can, "'" jl .,,if.rA in navlnsr in think nothing of a more or less Joyous lTatl? ZTT otM: ride on a fine SundavT Thev are none Uisnjured as ran IOr nu n, "U," the worse. tho tln can waa "21 to m" laM- We shall have a united country when When Lloyd George said the Amerl-1 everybody has invested In a liberty can troops marching throujrh London I bond; for then everybody will reel will not be increased. Vote 112. Ye had the same swing as the Welsh, he obliged to defend his coupons. meant to compliment the Americans, but he actually complimented the Welsh. Aa Embarraaameat of Rhea. An mn a ,m,nri section 11)2 of tha char- t.r an n. tn authorise transfer to the general fund of balances left In special lunda no longer needed. 114 Yea; 11 J ro. A grant of power which will enable Sir: When I saw In the war news the city to use and conserve its re- The most misguided of all men that the British had improved their position at Hinges, I didn't know whether to "try to aret across with sources. Vote 114. Yea. wereHhose who assumed that all the something about the hinges of tall. mothers of America were pacifists. They want peace, but not a German peace, for they know what It means. or to ausrgest t,hat the action of the British was perhaps preparatory to a turning movement. Please take your choice. . CAiXJiTKOSua. An ordinance requiring operators of mo tor veblclea to file bonds- 118 Yes; J.1T No. A Harvard man named Frankfurter! - This is a proposal to reduce the pres ent adequate Jitney Bona to an mauo ouate one and thereby permit irrespon- ihl persons to engage in the jitney Lord French, the new Lord Lleuten- business It ;U . a Propo-ai to Is the gentleman wno ""-" . ..,;.::r. j . H Himmel! has been made Adminls- "t of J- re?:'T JheVe terests of a few individuals and to de trator or Labor Activities, but he Is all "Ported from the estern front "Tnre principle heretofore adopted by right despite nomenclature. LSi.rheretnt0ffiaerdtUhen may nnS'a hint "m. ' """ America Is expected to build all the I a 1 j ...... V..n -. iiifiimn I W ITC 111. VI UBUCO, A amo s,sa,a ua, ss sa ' " " I . a. a. - A K a akka-ra h -Weftar f r) sT shipping for the-European allies, and And Then the Kdller Had to Explain. (n tb councl, power to relieve transporta will do so. Japan, however, will build From the Bushnell, I1L. Record.) tlon agenclea of bridge tolls, paving costs her own. and a lot of It By request. Rev. Charlea Walters, a .d otb.r extraordinary chargea. US Yea. arunaara miniBi.i, aimcu i c,.tH vnitnn vemntion board in Lew- I Thla amendment authorises the city The President has been offered $5 a I i-town to explain alleged utterances of I to sacrifice certain needed revenues pound for his wool crpp from the I disloyal nature attributed to him. . now derived from the street railway White House lawn flock, but he Is not I . company and offers an additional tax profiteer. I wen. nv i k-"i to mtLlle' UP lne aeiictu " in o on i in njviuu, . mv.w 'line old eupenitiai hdui.. th. Xf miner " and In Kouta Ind.. "Kuss, I , for the neoole bv According to custom of little na- j the Butcher." Did you ever? L. B. P. I shifting taxes about but collecting them Just the same. Vote 119. Ac tlnns tha nw TMttrianv fit Pnrtu tra I has released all the nettr nrlsonera of "Heaven, help her pupils!" saysMon- hls republic I ltor- referring to the fact that uetn Damages by Government -rruesc PORTLAND, May 11. (To the Edi ts excess baggage by the wayside. The . "Vr- -rtni ataSt 0 mUes per with your flngera" Doc Evans. Hour in inia cny, im -" " M dear. If that doesn't reduce you, of the intersection and smashed into The third liberty loan campaign offl- nothing- can. I my auto wmcn was iiamuos nn " dally ended on May 4. but It ignores curb. How do i go aoout it to s It is suggested oy x. a- r wno mwn i Qiinagu num " L T; to give us half the prise, that tne own- i aoiaier saya x cannot u era of the Bismarck translate the name iu. u. tAjtitiu.i. into Mara lwain. rlni.e. or Adiutant- In -HV.v.n mav protect the wolklng znruca production headquarters in Battles teachea in Ferry Hail, Lake Forest But we venture the hope that. Pershing's Army does well to drop I jn this case, there is nix in a name. Romans rightly named It Impediments. The third liberty loan ca clally ended on May 4. bt dates and keeps tight on. For his Impertinence General Mau rice Is retired to the Club of Old Filers with blank ammunition. I . Half a Century Ago. From The Oregonlan. May IS, 1888. ' R. V. Short has left with us, says the Enterprise, a fine sample of almost pure copper, which is found in this county near Boone's Ferry. The sam ple was given to Mr. Short by T. M. Shaver, who found It about two feet under tha surface of the ground in a place where he was excavatlnar for gravel to put in his dam near the river. It is stated that the nruMant anil ehlef engineer of the Oregon Central itaiiroaa nave requested Philip Rita, of Walla Walla, to make an examina tion of Salmon River this season, with a view to locating a road through that way. All information from parties who have been through that country, if forwarded to Mr. Ritz, will be grate fully received. A challenge: Tha tlrat nln f tv. Athletic B. B. Club has chnllenireH th. first nine of the Spartan Club to play a match game at the picnic grounds on Ross Island next Saturday. The latter club will hold a meeting this evening to consider the challenge. First Public Telea-ram Tiv Th. rt.Tt.. Line. The following dispatch from the Cascades was received last evening: " ic8iapn to tnis place and of fice opened this da v Th. rnir.n. River .is epanaed by two wires stretched a distance of 1000 fet Th.. were , run by the atea.mer Ji,n. tain Smith. - An excursion party com posed of Army officers nri f.in.. and accompanied by a brass band visit ed this place today from Vancouver Barracks. The telegraph is constructed five- miles beyond this point today " FIRM AND FEARLESS JUDGES OtfLY Mr. Cerllaa Deelarea Aaralnat Election . Political WeatnercocKa. PORTLAND, May 11. fTQ th. v.!. tor.) The Republican voters of Mult nomah County will soun be called upon to mane their choice for the three Re publican nominees for tha nffira f Circuit Judge. lhe importance or a wise choice can irdly be overestimated. Th. Judge is the exception, but it Is always possible for the people to select a-onrt Judges if they will only exercise intel ligent judgment in voting. One of the most vital Qualities of Judge Is courage of a high order. Un- lrss ne possess such courage there is no real administration of iustlre. but only the weak yielding to some un worthy influence, oftentimes a popular clamor. It is because three of the candidates for nomination, the present Circuit Judges Morrow, Stapleton and Ganten- Dein, have recently exhibited thi hiarh order of courage that I feel that they should receive the support of the voters at the primary. I refer to their deci sion in the recent rate case. Their decision sustaining the power of the Commission to raise the rate would, they knew, be unpopular. Here was the great test of the true Judge. Will ne stand up and do his duty aa he sees it under the law, or will he be borne along by the current of public opinion? These three Judges stood this test. They rendered an unpopular de cision. My opinion is of no importance to any one; but it can do no harm for me to say that I am in full accord with their ruling and believe that the Commission had the power to raise the rate to six cents. These Judges were not called upon to pass upon the rea sonableness of the rate; but only to decide whether the Commission acted within its power. The courts are still open to the investigation of the ques tion whether the 6-cent rate Is a rea sonable rate. In view of the rights of the public and of the traction company as well. All attempt to mislead the' neonle Into believing that these Circuit Judges held that the 6-cent rate was a reason able rate are dishonorable and should ruact ujon the heads of those who are making the attempt. And speaking for myself. I wish to say that I regard it as equally dishonorable to try to stir up prejudice against judges because of their rendering a decision that the public may not like. If the people allow themselves to be deceived by such tactics the blow they aim at the judges who had the courage of their convictions will ultimately fall upon their own heads. I know of no greater political ca lamity that can befall a people than to place upon the bench a weathercock ruetead of a fearless and high-minded Judge; and weathercocks will come if judges are to be punished for their fearlessness in the discharge of their duty. On this one issue of courage alone I believe that all three judges should be renominated and re-elected. GUY C. H CORLISS. Star for American With Allies. TROUTDALE. Or., May 11. To the Editor.) My brother Joined the Cana dian army In 1914 before the United States entered the war. He was born In this community and his folks still live here. Tbe high school Is making a service flag and there Is a question as to whether he has a right to a star in the flag. Can you tell me about this? A READER. We see no objection to including a star in his honor. There are no official or fixed regulations governing tbe matter. a-oiL but in Edgewater they take no T.nn hiilldlna-. In few day. now th. "agony" will SL. A.N.V" be over, for some, but a little soreness will continue. The boy who this week " eats the most potatoes la entitled, to the biggest Af ni. ' 'anu Offered for SoMlera. Accordingly It 1 s nilptabaHoIFT HOOD RIVER, Or., May ll.-(To the retaoinsh." St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Editor.) The writer would respectfully America Is stripping- for the dire submit the name of "War Kagies" or Biennial elections are great times for the man who wants his picture in the paper. The Coos delegation ' looks like i million dollars "and keep the change.' A Red Cross quota cannot be too high, considering the object. Who licks the thrift stamps that the epers of Molokai buy? Phlletalists will grab the new 24- cent aviation stamp. bUtaa on one ETht-.rI0ON7A9 eta- oinn." Charleston Gazette. PI the Kaiser! When Germany begins a peace offen sive' the civilized world reaches for gas masks. "THE lth German reserve division has received a company of 258 boys of the lH9-'20 class." The Kaiser is beginning to rob the cradles. "Eagles" for our fighting men of the United States. With us the eagle stands for liberty and holds his place in the sun against all despot foes. The writer has composed a war song entitled "American War Eagles," in which we carry the fight up to the despot Huns from start to nnisn. WILSON ROSS WJJSiAINS. Meaning of Wireless Term. PORTLAND, May 11. (To the Edi tor.) Can you tell me what is meant AMONG those adhering tenaciously i py aerial leads in wireless teiegrapny to their occupations is Charles uunxer, I . . Y. MATSUL who works on the cinder pit of the Red Plush line at Clinton. I The connecting- wires which received ' THE Shah of PerTa lsnf crasy about tBf, fJ""??1 'ro Us ,oufce a" democracy, but he knows a good thing called the lead, and the ones through when he sees it, so he has taken a hun- which It flows back are known as the drcd thousand of the third loan. 1 "return." Largest U. S. Cantonment. SALEM, Or., May 11. fTo the Edi tor.) For the purpose of eettling a friendly dispute, will you kindly ad vise which is the largest cantonment in the United States, and which canton ment has the largest number of sol diers? H. C. B. Writers on military matters state that Camp Lewis is both largest in ca pacity and In the average number of men under training. Because of cen sorship on such military Information this is probably as close to conclusive determination of the question as the public can get. Allowance to Drvereed Wife. PORTLAND, May . (To the Editor.) Please state how much the Govern ment allows a divorced wife and child of a soldier. She gets $16 a month ali mony. A READER. The Government allowance and sol dier's compulsory allotment together cannot exceed the alimony.