TIIE MORNING OREGONIAN, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1918. PORTLAND. OREGON. Entered at Portland (Oregon) Postofflca as second- lass mmll matter. Subscription tales Invariably la advance. (By MaiL Daltv. Jtanrta ln-liM4d. on year .....R-(' Daily. Sunday Included, six months Dally, Sunday Included, three months lai)y. Sunday Included, one month Daily, without feunaay. one yar Dally, without Sunday, six months Dally, without Sunday, one month Weekly, one year ... Sunday, one year ....... Sunday and Weekly to all peoples struggling: to win free dom 10 continue the fight. He, more than any other man, defined the issue as one between despotism and democ racy. His utterances led to the disin tegration of the Hapsburg monarchy and they did much to break the morale of the German army and people. His visit to Paris and the other allied J-H capitals will be a fit climax to Amer- H-tf. O yAl I. 111 U1B Witr. 6 00 .2 .60 1 00 2.50 2.00 By Carrier.) Ia!?y. Fniiflav Included, one year . Daily. Sunday Included, one month Dally. Sunday Included, threo months ... -- Daily, without Sunday, one year '!' Ially. without Sunday, three months .... " Daily, without Sunday, one month M How to Remit Send poatofflca money or der, express or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at own er's risk. Give postofrlce address to lulu in cluding county and state. Pontage Rates IS to 1 PI. cent; IS to 32 pages, li cents: 34 to 43 pages. 3 cents: SO to W paces. 4 cents: 6i to pages, a cents: 7H to -J paces. cents. Foreign post age, double rates Eastern BnalneM Office Verree Conk lln. Brunswick bunding. New York; erree Conkiin. S:eter building. Cnlcago; erree ac Conklln. Free Pre.is building. Detroit. Mich.; ban s'ranclsco representative, K. J. Bidwell. MKMBER OF TIIK ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Associated Press Is exclusively enti tled to the use for republication of ail news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited to this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dis patches herein are also reserved. PORTLAND, WEDNESDAY. NOV. SO. 1018. MARCH. OF PROHIBITION. Almost simultaneously with the claims of the anti-saloon forces that the recent elections resulted in selec tion of legislators who will vote state Indorsements of the prohibition amend ment in such number as to insure its adoption, comes the assertion that when the soldiers return from France they will overthrow the prohibition movement. It will require the indorsement of thirty-six states to adopt the pending constitutional amendment for proh bition of the manufacture or sale o intoxicating liquor for beverage pur poses. Fourteen states have already approved the amendment, and imme diately after the recent election the claim was made by prohibition leaders that a check on the attitude of can didates shows that more than twenty- two more State Legislatures will ratify the amendment when sessions are held next Winter. ' The states that have already ratified are, in the order of action taken Mississippi, Virginia, Kentucky, South Carolina, North Dakota, Maryland Montana, Texas, Delaware, South Dakota, Massachusetts, Arizona, Geor gia, .Louisiana. The statement that is said to have come from overseas is that the sol diers have gained a favorable impres- sion of the custom of using light wines in France, and that when they come back they will want such a custom established and retained here. Some returned soldiers have asserted that this is the view of a very large pro. portion of the members of the Ameri can expeditionary forces, and that al though they would not urge a revoca tion of the ban on distilled liquor and would not oppose a prohibitory meas ure aimed at whisky, they will actively urge defeat of the pending amendment and substitution of something not so sweeping in character. Of the states that have not already ratified the. prohibition amendment. all except Alabama win Hold leglsla live sessions beginning in January, the last to convene being the Legislature of Nevada, which will meet January 18. Unless return of the soldiers takes place more rapidly than has thus far appeared probable, not a very large proportion of them will be back in the United States and in their home juris dictions before the Legislatures begin voting on the amendment. If it is true, as claimed by the pro hlbitionLsts, that a majority of the members of more than twenty-two of the states are already pledged to ratify the amendment, the arguments of the returned soldiers would probably be of little avail, anyway. There is also the natural conclusion that even if a large number of soldiers are returned in the next few months, they will be so busy readjusting themselves to civil life that whatever impression on the prohibition issue they may have ac quired will seem small in comparison with the importance of their personal future. One might as logically expect them at once to begin clamoring for French cooking, insanitary plumbing and other foreign customs. SHOPPING EARLY. . Those who still slncerly desire to be helpful to their fellow men and women will find opportunity to in dulge their inclination by doing their Christmas shopping early. It does not particularly matter whether the mild restrictions imposed by the war are relaxed or not: the fact remains that the help shortage is still a problem that mercantile conditions will not be normal for some time, and that to go early and avoid the rush, as well as to carry the package home when prac- ucaDie. is sun a social duty. A great deal would be accomplished ir more shopping were done in the forenoon hours. There Is no danger or merely transferring the burden to the early part of the day, since there will always be enough who disregard every injunction to fill the time of clerks in the afternoons. But it would be helpful, as has been suggested, thus to effect distribution of the work. As to the kind of Christmas gifts to buy, the stocks in stores are apt to be self-regulating. More or less there a success now," can have but one pur pose. This is, to line up "the 2,300,000 employes" in favor of Government ownership. In using the recent ad vances of wages as an argument, Mr. Price is guilty of flagrant misrepre sentation. The railroad companies did not raise wages, because they could not, and their inability was due to the refusal of the Government to permit them to raise rates. Mr. Mc Adoo raised wages and then used his power to raise rates in order to pay the higher wages. He simply took the money out of the pockets of the con sumer, payment being included in the enhanced prices which everybody pays for every commodity. The railroad men, as well as everybody else, pay these higher prices, so that, to some extent, Mr. McAdoo simply put money into one of their pockets and out of another. The Committee on Public Informa-: tfon has inlnprl In thin rarrmpi ien. In order to show how the railroads under berry worm. It is not for me to say. Mr. McAdoo's direction have recovered I I'm only an amateur berry-grower. to give the fields up to the enemy, f And if you ask them if they are going ' to try again their answer will be I "What's the use?" But perhaps there is another side to this strawberry question. One grower, who had some quantities of excellent berries in the Portland mar ket this year, said something recently about strawberries, and what he said also is given here for what it may be worth. "I have heard of the strawberry worm," he said. "In fact, I have heard a good deal about it. I wouldn't say there is no such worm. I only know that I haven't seen it yet, and I have been raising strawberries here for some years. I have pulled up a good many apparently ailing plants in my field and made diligent search for the strange little pest, but to date I haven't found any. I have, however, found evidence of plant hunger. There may or may not be a straw- from adversity, it has published figures of the number of tons hauled per train and per car, revealing a large increase. To make this showing, it picked the best month instead of the whole period from January 1 to the last day to which statistics had been compiled, for which, the results were far less favorable. Both the Railroad Administration and the Cbmmlttee on Public Infor mation are using their official power for purposes of political propaganda. The Government took over the rail- was abandonment of the manufacture TAa to, wi? th,e war; bfause which must have priority, not to boost for public ownership. The committee was formed to spread information about the war and to censor news helpful to the enemy. It is spending the money of the whole Nation to pro mote a policy on which, by general The true Christmas spirit will take PT? " ,Judfment was ' b fu count not only of the prospective P"ded during the war. and which is advocated oy omy a pari, ui uic people. of useless articles on account of the superior claims of war necessities, but nothing will be gained now by com pelling merchants to carry over any sort of goods until next year. Gifts, however, will run more generally to essentials because there will be more of these articles on display. PRESIDENT'S JOURNEY TO EUROPE. The intention of President Wilson to attend the meeting of the Peace Congress at Versailles will meet with the approval of Americans. The Peace Congress will decide the future of al most all nations of Europe and of some In Asia and Africa, and will, in effect, draw up a new constitution for the world. It will be attended by the Premiers of all the allied countries. with whom the President will rank. Mr. Wilson's presence is needed be cause of the high position he holds in the councils of the allies and of the implicit confidence which all the allied peoples repose in him. He has defined the war aims of this and the allied nations in terms which have won ac ceptance among them. and. finally, by our enemies. He is best qualified to Interpret and explain his fourteen prin ciples and to bring them into complete harmony with the views of the French, British and Italian Premiers. He can render valuable service by establish ing sympathetic personal relations with the allied statesmen. There, is no force in the possible objection that no former President has left the territory of the United States during his term of office. Thl is a time when new precedents are being made in war, diplomacy, states manship and every other field. Never before was there such good occasion for the President to go abroad. Nor will the President's absence from the country seriously obstruct perform ance of his functions. He will not, as would have been the case before steam power and telegraphy came into use, be cut off for weeks from communi cation with his subordinates. The Toyage will occupy a week at most, and he will throughout be in wireless communication with both America and Europe. He will be able to send In structions to his Cabinet or messages to Congress by cable or wireless. If an important bill should need his sig nature, it could be sent to Versailles and be back !n Washington In two weeks. A journey to France will place him no more out of touch with Wash ington than wouid a Journey to Oregon. Of the nature of Mr. Wilson's re ception in Europe there can be no doubt. He will be received as the head of the Nation which came to the aid of democracy in the hour of its greatest peril. His speeches since the United States declared war have been an Inspiration to all free peoples and account not only' of the prospecti recipient of the gift, but also of the overworked clerk. Especially because return of peace will stimulate holiday buying, it will be well to do the bulk of it in ample time. A VISION NEAR REALIZATION. One of the great results of Ameri can participation In the war is the commanding position which the United States now occupies in world affairs. To the average man this seemed im possible five years ago, but some men of deep insight and far vision foresaw it in the middle of the nineteenth cen tury, when the American people were ot sympathy with public opinion from ONLY A SMALL STEP FORWARD. The movement started by Senator Norrls to prevent any Senator who Is chairman of one of the eight principal committees from being a member of any other of those committees is a step toward breaking down the old rule of seniority. Its adoption would tend to prevent control of legislation by a small clique of Senators and to keep unfit men or men who were out But the real pest in the strawberry fields here, in my opinion, is the hook worm. In most of the berry fields about Portland at this time there is a most convincing explanation of the, failure of the crop weeds and -evidence of general neglect. "The strawberry plant is a heavy feeder. Provender must be supplied in one way or another. Fertilizers are essential, and cultivation also liber ates plant food. And food, here as elsewhere, goes a good deal farther than medicine. This hunt that is going on for some kind of spray, insecticide or powder that will kill the strawberry worm is amusing. Would you give a hungry chicken paregoric or some thing to eat?" Those Who Come and Go. still absorbed In solution of the In ternal problem of slavery. One of these men was Victor Hugo. Address ing the Peace Congress at Paris in 1849 he predicted formation of the United States of Europe and said: having charge of important bills. But it is only a short step, surpris ing in its moderation when we con sider Mr. Norris' record. The real evil is the system of seniority by which a Senator automatically reaches the I .I..I. r . i . - a . A day will come when we shall see those tuB'r "L tt """ virtue ui iuiiS immense groups, the United States of Amer- service, "mat system IS responsible lea and the United States of Europe. In face for the worst misfits in both Senate or eacn otner. exienaing nana to nana over -nJ, tt..10 i, ,. T. , j the ocean, exchanging- their products, their "fd Huse during the war. It made commerce, their industry, their art: their I me iaiu oeuaiur oiguo ciiairmau oi genius clearing- the colonizing deserts, and I foreign relations, though he opposed n-.,- " caUon uuaer m. eye oi u the war, and it affected all of our for . . . . I eign relations. It made Representa- vridt progresa iu Been maae in l t.-,,.),;. mt , !,., the last two years toward realization of an means to measures of the United States of Europe, and. , wo, ,i0 h Tonnt.tiv. . Dent, an opponent of conscription, rcpuunu. xiusua preuicuon would not. hn,p nf tha ml,..orv -nmmirtoA seem such a dreamer's vision. Almost all' of the few remaining monarchies are so democratic in fact that they would prove small obstacles, for the tidal wave of democracy would soon overwhelm any King who ventured to oppose the popular will. The most uncertain quantity is Ger many. Other nations will watch keenly to see whether that country has be come root ou lutism and privilege, will renounce aggression and brute force, or whether its republic is merely camouflage as sumed to deceive the allies into a soft peace, to bo cast off at the first ap propriate juncture in favor of restored Kaiser ism. which drafted the war Army bill. Election of each committee anew by direct vote of each House upon the organization of each new Congress may be undesirable, as it would lead to confusion and log-rolling, but way should be found to avoid such absurdities as those mentioned. This might be accomplished by permitting a oemocracy ra xact ana win at tne opeinff of each Conffres8i wlth ut tne last remnants VI auso- . , .nin. .mha. VUI) liClCICUV-0 avis kit V 0sus.ua, a-uva-u vVa of the majority party. The House elects its Speaker in organizing, and there is no valid reason why the same custom should not extend to commit tees. Then the misfits could be pushed aside, and a man of proved ability, who is In harmony with the prevailing policy of the dominant party, could be pushed to the front. PROPAGANDA FOR PUBLIC OWNERSHIP. Although the Government under took operation of the railroads solely to meet war emergencies and although Congress, by limiting the period of Government operation to twenty-one months after the close of the war, de MORE STRAWBERRIES NEEDED. There is no fruit so welcome in the Spring as the' strawberry, and not many that are more easily produced, Tn ttA ennntrv h ftrpahmita flrA tn be clined to prejudge the question whether found the conditions that make for u snouia oe continued, mere are , ev,- perfect strawberries land that in dences. In the utterances of officials every way ls sultabIei exposures that of the Railroad Administration, of a provide adequate air drainage and thus purpose to use their power to make .,,,, tha ,..!, of lata frosts and Government operation permanent. -oinfaii tht invnrinhlv Is sufficient In an interview published in several f th -rODvet thB .trawberrv here newspapers on October 6, Oscar A. Price, formerly private secretary to Director-General McAdoo and recently appointed his assistant, said: is a neglected fruit. Few if any fruits are more highly prized. It comes at a season when man has particular need for something We hare the positive Intention that never I f that nrt nnrl th Foneml verdict gain shall any American railroad, at least . ... . r1m , hile under the" present management, re. I " "-.. vert to the conditions of a by-gone era fullest possible way. xne. strawoerry. when "public be damned policies prevailed. jn fact often is referred to as perfec l-ersonany. i leei sure in., m. va.i ma- ,, , mrt,ar. T.,j,,f tfcot e omy of the 2.300.000 railway employes In I " his country feel at the present time that all virtue SKiniess, coreiess ana, so hey are more on their mettle than ever. In I SB.ri. Brt s. drawback, seedless talking with them In all sections from coast I . ,. ,. . l. . - , to coast I come to the unmistakable con- a fruit all good Vet the fruitgrow- lusion that, as a body, they are determined ers in these parts appear to have to make the present test of Government con-I "nnsspd It ud " rnl end operation a success. It Is but I , . . m . atural that this should be so they never xnere la u uuii muis " uciuo.nu. fared so well tinder private control and op- I its season is a short one far too short eratlon as they are faring today. Their d , recebt years it has ended with nrosoerts for the future were never so bright J . ..... , as they are now. I am sure that they are the demand lar irom sausiiea. nis more anxious to obey, not only the letter, year, last year ana tne year Derore seV'than trTiLl there was an Insistent call for straw been to obey the orders of their respective berries in the Portland market. Every- revious executives. ... I body wanted strawberries, ana tne lew Railroad employes are not devoid of a I . in rvnm nmo-nro.-a knowledge of politics, a. their past record w.-w proves. They are thoroughly aware that if were picked up almost before they Government operation and control are to reached the market. And with Port- c7nowPeTnh:rar.tnowr"iadath.i; land's increasing population the de- success or failure, to a large extent, ls in mand naturally is growing, yet straw- the hands of the 2.300.000 employes. berries do not seem to be available. The reference to the "public be The prices that have been obtain- damned" policy is a perversion of the able for strawberries the past few truth and is an unmerited slur on the years one would think would stimu railroad executives who are managing late production. In June of this year the railroads under Mr. McAdoo. Tears good berries were readily salable at before the war Howard Elliott, presl- $2.50 to $3.60 a crate, and last year dent of the Northern Pacific, adopted the price situation was about the same, the motto, '"The public be pleased," The few sellers in the market reported and required all his subordinates to buyers not only not demurring at the put it in practice. Railroad man-1 price but rather clamoring ror more agers in general followed his example, I than were to be had. Clearly enough and the relations between the railroads there is money in strawberries yet the and the public showed distinct im- supply Is wanting. provement. Men who persistently re- The situation would appear to be a fer to the "public be damned utter-1 strange one, but there ls an expiana- ance of the long-dead Commodore tion perhaps a lame one and it is anderbilt deliberately Ignore the fact given here for what it may be worth. that a radical change came over rail- Many of the sinall fruitgrowers, if road policy after passage of the Hep- you take the trouble to ask them why burn rate law of 1906. The railroads they cannot or do not raise straw- ubmitted to public regulation and berries, will tell you that in recent thev turned from the secret methods years a very small but marvelously of the lobby and the caucus to the vicious white worm, known to many open methods of publicity In the effort as the strawberry grub, has been to Influence public opinion. They have ravaging the strawberry fields in as much right to set their case before every direction, attacking the center the public as any other citizen, for of the root system of the plants and they are simply large aggregations of in a little while literally eating away citizens, mostly of moderate means. It the vitality and life of the plants, and ls unjust to appeal to obsolete preju- so making strawberries all but lmpos- dice, the cause for which has disap- sible. peared, in order to sway the public on These growers, further, win tell you present-day railroad problems. that in the past few years acres upon The references to the high wages acres of strawberry plantations nave nd bright prospects of railroad em- had to be plowed up, all because of nloyes and to their "knowledge of l the pernicious activity or tnose pesny politics," and the statement that "they microscopic nuisances. They will tell are thoroughly aware that, if Gov-1 you they have tried every imaginable ernment operation end control are to insecticide and spray to eradicate the become permanent, they must prove I pest,, but that la spite of all they had The death of the head of the Mor mon church is a reminder that, quite apart from the religious phase of the movement, the Mormon leaders cher ished certain economic ambitions which were among the most interest ing developments of the last century. It was their aim to create a "self- supporting state." Brigham Young, under whose direction the great emi gration to Utah took place, was an organizer of marvelous capacity. He projected cotton, woollen and glass factories and dreamed of the time when everything that his people needed or desired should be produced by themselves. Co-operation In buy ing and selling was practiced in high degree, and settlers were always en joined to practice thrift as one of the cardinal virtues. President Smith who has just diedf was a nephew of the original "prophet," and the last of those who were prominent in the church before the movement to Utah, which occurred in the late '40s. Reports from Bohemia say Jews are being assassinated. It ls likely true. A disorderly crowd seeks the most inoffensive victims. This war has shown the Jew can fight, and some day the baiters will find themselves up against the real article. Speed the day. Release of I. W. W. disturbers at Spokane is decidedly premature. They can do as much harm during peace negotiations as during war. Germany will surely start a new peace offensive through secret agents, and would find use for these American Bolsheviki. Descriptions of Scotch banquets re mind us that the Scot in business and the Scot in social life are two distinct persons. In business he Is keen and will hold out for the last bawbee, but as a host he is most generous and genial. The navy of Great Britain, largest in the world, will be more so by the Hun surrender, and there is none to say she does not deserve the power and glory. If It were not for that navy, all of us would now be doing some powerful scratching. Colonel Faville. editor of the West ern Farmer, called to Washington by Secretary Houston to tell of agricul tural conditions In the Pacific North west, probably is the best-posted man that way of all in the Oregon country. There ls still much work for the allied armies to do In Russia. The right of nations to self-determination is being changed there to self-exter mination. William Apperson, old Portland resi dent, who has been with the Rainbow Division in France for the past few months, was the happiest man around the Multnbraah Hotel yesterday. The War Department cheered him up with a wire advising that he need not return to France and that his discharge papers would be forwarded here. Mr. Apperson went back to his fruit ranch near Spokane last night, but will be back in Portland for the Winter. When the war began he joined the United States transport service and made 12 trips across the Atlantic with American troops. Then he was transferred to the Rainbow Division and went into the first battle which the boys from this country participated in. He recently came home on a furlough and expect ed to return immediately. "I'm glad to ibe out of it. That work is too rough for a man almost 40 years old," said Mr. Apperson. August H. D. Klie. of Hoboken. N. J., the expert curer and Importer of her ring, is at the Imperial Hotel. Mr. Klie has been in Alaska instructing students for the United States Bureau of Fish eries in the Scotch cure of herring. He visited all the principal salteries in 1917 in this work and ls in Portland this season for the Government, to further encourage this work. Wf M. Klinger, of San Francisco, arrived yesterday at the Benson. Mr. Klinger ls representing an automobile concern and is on a business trip to the Northwest. Charles A. Murray, of Tacoma, and C E. Arney, of Spokane, both promi nent in railroad circles, arrived at the Hotel Portland yesterday and will be here a day or two. a Arthur - Jerome Beecher. an adver tising expert of wide fame, is at the Multnomah. He is here to aid the Chamber of Commerce in making a market lor Oregon products. Henry CMalley, formerly fish war den of Oregon, has returned to the Pacific Coast from Washington, D. C. Mr. O'Malley is now in charge of the Bureau of operation, with headquar ters in Seattle. O. A. Wamsley, of Hamilton, Mont., Is the first of the big Influx of wheat growers to come out for the Winter. He arrived yesterday. J.- H. Porter, of the contracting firm of Porter Bros., came up from Seaside yesterday. He is no longer supporting his fftictured leg by a crutch and all that is left to Indicate the broken leg is a football player's limp. J. T. Varkalay, accompanied by his family, came to Portland yesterday morning and devoted yesterday after noon to a trip over the Columbia River Highway. Mr. Varkalay was represent ing the International Harvester Com pany, at Warsaw, when the revolution broke out. He remained until ordered to leave the country by the America authorities. Arriving in Chicago, h was granted a furlough of 45 days and is using it to see the vvest Coast. lii. S. Kobe, manager of the leading hotel at Prinevllle, is registered at the Hotel Portland. A score of men from the Spruce DI vision came to the Imperial yesterday. They have been working in the camps around Newport and vicinity. Withou .exception, every one of these soldiers is an Eastern or Southern man and most of those who came to the hotel have not been out of the woods for th past eight months. They expect to be discharged from the service within a short time. Americans are as ready to cheer for King George V as they were to fight against King George III. Progress of British democracy has much improved the breed. It was a Roosevelt boy who said when dad was at a funeral he wanted to be the corpse, and when at a wed ding the best man. There are others. Assurance is given express business will not be merged with parcel post. People are not ready to surrender the greatest convenience ever given them. The Germans may soon eaf some of the Australian wheat which their sub marines kept out of England, if the rats and mice have not eaten it all. The kernel of truth In recent and current affairs is that Oregon is being paid In backhand slaps for voting the Republican ticket. The Kaiser can gain nothing by re turn to Berlin. The lowest in the land will kick him in the ribs if given opportunity. With two-thirds of a million slain. and Miss Cavell, Great Britain will not be disposed to lighten the terms to the Hun. There must not be question of Teu tonic ability to pay. Just make them pay, and so answer the propagandists. The automobile followed the bicycle of thirty years ago in natural progres sion. Soon airplanes will be common. When a million Chinese are arrested for gambling there will be another million playing the game. Portland swings Into the decency column by declaring off a peace jubi lee on Thanksgiving day. The cost of the war is figured to be $175,000,000,000. but the right kind of debt is healthy. - Discovery of a cure of "static" is slow. Bryan found it long ago, politi cally. ' What do you think of the little re public of Uruguay lending to the allies? Portland ls. over the top with the war work fund. -Next! Must we beware of the Hun yelling "Peace!" T BRAGGADOCIO IS OUT OF PLACE. Unpardonable to Ignore Deeds of Other - Nations In Great Wnr. PORTLAND, Nov. 19. (To the Edi tor.) Hearty congratulations and warm compliments are overdue, and are hereby tendered my long-time ac quaintance and friend, C. B. Mooree, for his timely and genuinely humane article in The Oregonian, November 13 on the perfidy of a more than senseless braggadocio about .what the Tanks did" in the late great war. It is far beyond question the right, privilege and duty of American patri ots fully to appreciate and duly pro mulgate the fact of American patriotic heroism and efficiency in the activities of the war.. Nevertheless, while so doing, it ls most decidedly out of place wantonly to ignore, and thereby deny. by any phase of unfair braggadocio, the eacred rights of those of our allies who merited as much, if not more, than did we ourselves in the glories of the re cent victories crowning our united ef forts in the world s greatest and latest struggle for human liberty. The spirit of brotherhood, so beautl fully exemplified in the activities of the allied forces, representing universal human liberty, was such as to make the unfair spirit of self-laudation seem if possible, more repugnant than ever. What a paradise on earth would be brought about if for once the spirit of brotherhood should become universally prevalent in which alone the "Golden Rule" can ever become the abiding habit of all the people. If the war now, so signally won, may be the means of such reconstruction, and reformation, its red-handed cruelty in which huge villainy reigned will not all have Been In vain. A. J. JOSLTN. HOW TO PRESERVE SALMON EGGS Simple Process Keeps Them One Tear tn Prime Bait Condition. ELMA, Wash., Nov. 18. (To the Ed itor.) I note an inquiry from one ot The Oregontan's subscribers at Kerry, Or., asking for a preservative for sal mon eggs, and your statement that you did not have a satisfactory recipe. I am assuming that the Inquirer de sires to take the rolls of eggs as they come from the fish and preserve them so that they will last until the follow ing season, that is, for one year. In this section of Washington we handle it in this way: Secure a wooden receptacle, prefer ably an old candy bucket. Take, two quarts of finely crushed rock salt in which ls mixed four tablespoonsful ot saltpetre. Place some of this mixture on the bottom of the bucket, then place a layer of the egg rolls; then place a coating of the mixture, and so on. Variations of quantity may be mixed in same proportions. When completed keep the eggs covered with a damp gunnysack or other cloth. Eggs treated in this manner and kept in a cool place will keep for one year, and as thej cover themselves with a liquid, they are admirably adapted for bait. They hang to the hook as well as the canned eggs and are more efficient as a bait for they throw out a milky juice when they hit the water, which the fish readily detect and follow up to the eggs. a- AVJKr. Singers' Inflamed Throat. SALEM, Or., Nov. 18. (To the Edi tor.) Please describe "singers' throat." How does it start and what is the cause? MRS. H. It is misleading to speak of "singers' throat" as a disease, because singers have the same kind of throats, gen erally speaking, as non-singers. If you mean inflammation of a singer's throat, that affliction may be caused by faulty voice placing In singing, by singing to excess and causing inflam mation of the vocal chords, or it may be due to adenoids, catarrh or in fected tonsils and Is often caused by colds, 1 WOMAN IS SUPERIOR TO UA9T Sex Rivalry Will Vanish When Men Understand This, Says Writer. PORTLAND. Nov. 19. (To the Edi tor.) You encourage one to make a frank statement and clear up one's own ideas on the subject by your edi torial on sex rivalry or co-operation. I am a self-supporting single woman, a college graduate, with an income which gives me a measure of inde pendence. I work because I like to, not because, as things are, I am abso lutely compelled to do so. Hence I bring more than ordinary enthusiasm into my work. I think myself compe tent and capable far beyond the aver age, and so I have positive opinions on what women have the right to be oc cupied with apart from being wives, mothers and housekeepers. Let it not be suspected that I am averse to any part of housework. On the contrary. I have conducted a household on my own responsibility in a manner to satisfy the most1 critical standards. I yield second place to none in the field of housekeeping, ranging all the way frtfm selection of interior decorations to scientific food preparation and dishwashing. 1 can do it all and do it well. But this field is too limited for me. It is too narrow for thousands, even millions, of the most intelligent, most ambitious and enterprising women of America. They can no longer be re stricted to the necessary but rather dull routine of housework. Education and training have given them a glimpse of other work to be done, work more interesting, more stimulat ing to their latent capacities, and more remunerative than housekeeping or rearing a family. It can be seen from this that I have no objection whatever to married wom en, working outside their homes. For one thing. I do not fear their compe tttion. I could probably go into most of their houses and improve vastly on their domestic management. So why need I fear a married woman as a wage-earner in the business of pro sessional worm, wnere standards are more exacting than in purely domestic work? There need be no rivalry between women as workers if the less compe tent are willing to take orders from the more competent, and faithfully carry them out as directed. Neither need there be sex rivalry between women and men. if men are prepared to recognize and render obedience to the superior woman when associated with her in an industrial, professional or business way. Sex rivalry is likely only when men go on the theory that being a woman ipso facto disqualifies her for doing certain kinds of work. I admit that is a prejudice among men which dies hard. This war. however, has given it a bad Jolt, although it would be going too far to say that the prejudice has been entirely destroyed. I do not hesitate to say that women can do all things that men do, and many things that men cannot do. In a word, woman is the superior sex. My biological studies at college proved conclusively that in all animal species the female is far more important for survival purposes than the male. This is just as true in the human family as In any other, although the world seems Just waking up to the fact. Males of all species occupy a relatively depend ent and subordinate position. Humanity is no exception to this rule. The sooner this fundamental fact is recognized and fully understood, especially by men, the less sex rivalry and more co-operation we shall have. D. H. B. In Other Days. Twenty-live Years Ago. From The Oregonian, November 20, ls!3. The roof is being put on the .new City Hall. Fire-prooling covers one-third of it, which is now ready for the con crete and composition roofing to cover all. The roof cannot be completely finished until the red granite pillars for the lodge on the west side arrive from California. John T. Conley, assistant general passenger agent for the Chicago, Mil waukee & St. Paul Railway, with h headquarters at St. Paul, is visiting the Coast and spent yesterday in Portland. The old People's Theater, at Third and Couch streets, which was recently closed by the authorities, will be dedi cated tonight to the use of the Pacitio Gospel Union of Portland. There will be nearly 100 singers on the stage, un der the leadership of Mr. Wadhams, of the Calvary Church. El Paso, Tex. The Mexican revolu tionists have scattered circulars throughout the valley on both sides of tne ilio uranae. oncring each man $2.50 a day to fight, each man to fur nish himself 200 cartridges, and J5 a day to all men with both rille and pis tol. The Idea is to offer inducements to the great army of the unemployed which is passing through this point from California. The paper is signed by Santa Ana Peraz, General-in-chiet of the North. WAIYTOIV DESTRUCTION1 OF TREES. Highway Brnnty Sacrificed to Engi neer's Mania for Straight Lines. OREGON CITT, Or.. Nov. 18. (To th Editor.) The Oregonlan's splendid editorial on planting shade trees alon our highways can not fail to meet with the hearty approval of all tree lovers in Oregon, but I can not refrain from alluding to the ruthless destruction of seven of these grand old walnut trees about 50 years of age on an old farm 1 Clackamas County which is situated on the Pacific Highway. Their grand old trunks from three to four feet in diam eter now lie abandoned by the road side and the towering branches have been burned and destroyed. We were told by the road builders that a slight curve needed to preserve such trees would spoil the scenic beauty of the road. If you could pierce the intellect some of the self styled "engineers" em ployed in the building of our publi highways In Oregon and impress upon them the Joy and beauty of motoring on highways lined with shade trees such as one sees in England and th rugged and wonderful highways Switzerland, the property owners and home builders would enter into th movement with zeal and make Oregon roads the prettiest in the world. Bu while we are called upon to submit to such practice as I have refprred to above, it ls well nigh useless to start such a movement either through legis lation or concerted action of tree lovers. In countries where some Intelligence is exercised, the trees of good old age are walled in, protected and if neces sary. watered by paid care-takers. In Oregon if they fall in a line of road ways they are cut down and burned, On our new Pacific Highway south of Oregon City we have a long stretch of pavement, glaring in the hot Sum mer sun, stripped bare of all that Isa- ture added to its usefulness and beauty After one has planted and cared for trees for 50 years and witness their wanton destruction, one ceases to be arduous in the cause as it truly merits. . A TREE LOVER. Fifty Years Ago. From The Oregonian, November 20, 186S. The contractors for the new wharf at the foot of Main street are putting up a very substantial structure and they havo nearly completed the job. The grade from the street down to the wharf is easier than that leading down to the others. Salem The work of grading on the railroad -is being rapidly pushed for ward, for the purpose of getting as much done as possible before the con tinual rains set in. They have graded some nine miles south of Salem. Since the beginning of the agitation of the project of a railroad to Puget Sound the value of lands in Washing ton Territory have begun to advance. The Commercial of last evening says it is informed that In the town of Ta coma lately Commencement City lots are rapidly taken. The purchaser pays $50 down and the balance to be paid when the railroad terminus is lo cated at Tacoma, taking a bond for a deed. The Postmaster-General having or dered Postal Agent Brooks to take charge of the Postoffice in this city until further instructions, we are pleased to know that the agent has designated our worthy townsman, John R. Prindle, Esq., to act as postmaster during the suspension of Mr. Randall. SWIFT PUNISHMENT FOR CRIMES GERMANY MUST SHOW PENITENCE Return to Family of Nations Depends on Real Reformation. FOREST GROVE, Or., Nov. 18. (To the Editor.) The present temper of America and the allies is that Germany should be punished for her crimes. Just how long this economic punishment should last depends on the German peo ple. So far as the American people are concerned, unlike Germany, we are ineinsr no "hymns of hate. If Germany shows repentance, if sne repudiates the false leadership of the Hohenzollern. the Junaers ana tne mm tarists, if with a chastened spirit she reates a government genuinely reRpon ible to the people and shows a desire to make amends for the past, she will he sooner be received back into the familv of nations. It is with the German people we snail ave eventually to deal, and it may be years before they reach the Etage where they can be trusted. The pres ent temper of the American people concerning trade with Germany is re vealed in the universal protest against receiving a shipment of German-made toys from Rotterdam and the resolu tion of the toy manufacturers of the United States that Congress pass a law prohibiting the entry of any German made goods into this country until the central empires have submitted to an allied peace. Had Germany fought fair in her trade methods before 1914, if she had been an honest and clean fighter In the war ad If there were reasons to believe she intends to fight fair in trying to get back her former world trade, it might then be safe to treat her as President Wilson suggests in the third para graph. W. J. R. BEACH. When Soldier Is Wounded. McMINNVILLE, Or., Nov. 18. (To the Editor.) Please Inform me where to write to get information regarding a soldier wounded in France. A SUBSCRIBER. Take up the matter with your Red Cross chapter. I Kalner and Gang Should Be Handed Over Promptly to Justice. SALEM, Or., Nov. IS. (To the Edi tor.) Usually, when a murder is com mitted and the criminal escapes, posses are formed and he is hunted until takpn, dead or alive. Why not apply the same to this hellish Hohenzollern, who Ir the direct cause of more deaths, suffering and misery than all the murdet-ers and pestilencies in the history of the world combined? A fugitive from Justice, we read of him living in a castle, surrounded by luxury and a retinue of servants and bodyguards, right under our very noses, so to speak. Being one who has lost many rela tives through the crimes of this Berlin beast and his gang of Prussian pol troons, I voice the sentiment of mil lions of othfrs, similarly afflicted,, in demanding that they be handed over and receive adequate and swift punish ment.' In order to guard against any ten dency toward leniency at the peace table I suggest that the following list be given prominence in daily papers: Ravaging of Belgium. Lusitania. Treatment of prisoners of war. Edith Cavell. Sinking of hospital ships. Bombing hospitals. Crucifixion of American and allied soldiers. Firing on lifeboats. Mutilation of babies. All of which crimes have been proven beyond the shadow of a doubt. HENRY LEE. KAISER WILL NOT BE EMULATED To Punish Him Deservedly Would De grade Us to Hun Status. PORTLAND, Nov. 19. (To the Ed itor.) There is a great deal of discus sion at this time as to the proper pun ishment that should be given to the ex- Kaiser. We all know that any pun ishment that could be indicted upon him would be far too mild in compari son with the suffering and sorrow he has caused. If the Kaiser could live a million years and were punished all that time. he could not make amends for what he has done. But as I said before, there Isn't any kind of punishment that could be put on him that would be equal to the mis ery he has caused the people in this great war. But we, as civilized people, can we inflict upon him any such punishment as he has caused to be inflicted upon others and be classed as civilized peo ple? I say "no." And do we wish to emulate the Germans in that respect? Everyone no doubt would answer in the negative. I would suggest that the Kaiser be tried before a Jury, preferably an in ternational one. LURA L. WARD. Appeal From Classification. MAYS VILLE. Or., Nov. 17. (To the Editor.) A young man who ls now in he service was farming and had been for four years before the war and owned part of the land he was farm- ng. and was raising all kinds of live- tock, but on account of spite work by the local board he was sent to camp with his card marked farm hand.' They wouldn't even give him credit as being a producer, and he has affidavits rom the best men of the city to the ffect that he was and had been producer for four years. Would there be some way to rectify this wrong, which was willfully done? . AN OREGONIAN READER. The district board, not the local board, passes on Industrial claims. The nly remedy of injustice is through ap peal to the President; but there ls a I hort time limit in which appeal may be taken. Upon a showing that he was aeded In agricultural work, the in- ucted registrant might be able to ob- I tain a furlough. Questions of Cltlaennhlp. WESTLAKE, Or., Nov. 18. (To the Editor.) (1) Foreign-born parents I come to mis country ana resiao nerei ontinuousiy, but never take out their I aturalizaticn papers. Can their chil- ren. born here, enjofr all the rights of I i American citizen.' (2) A foreign-born man comes tol this country and marries an American I woman. He does not take out his nat-l ralization papers till his children have I become of age. Does It make his chil dren, by that act, cltiiens? A SUBSCRIBER. (1) Yes. ( 2 ) The children ar citlsens if born in this country. J 4 v