THE 3IORXING OREGOXIAS, SATURDAY, MARCH 22, .1919. . .00 - 3.1 - . . 1.00 . 2JS0 l.5 PORTLAND. OREGON". ater! at Portland (Oregon) Poatofflco econd-claxa mail matter. Subscription rates Invariably In advance (Br MalL) Tal!r. Fnday Included, one year $ W Jjaily. Sunday lncluueu. six montns Xaily. Sunday included, three months . .. - Dally, hundar Included, one monia ltly. without Sunday, one year lairy, without Sunday, six months . -lUily, without Sunday, one month Weekly, one year Bandar, one year feunday and weekly ( By Carr.tr. tally, Sunday Included, one year . Iai;y. Sunday Included, one month . . Jaliy. Sunday Included, three months Jai:y. without Sunday, one year Xally without Sundry, three months , Daily, without Sunday, oue monio Rtw to Remit Send pootofflco money eer. express or personal cneca on J""' j ... i re at er a risk. Give postofftce addxeae in full. In aiadlnz county and state. Ftwtace Rates 12 to 16 pates. 1 rent; 18 to i2 pes, 2 ren:s; 34 to 4 PK'. - , rnti: 78 to 82 pages. cents. Foreign post age, uouoia rata. v . i . Conk umcri diowiu vi&m ...... . - - Jin. Brunswick bmldlng. New York: err. "onklin. Sieger building. Chicago: v ''J Conalln, Cm Press building. Detroit. Mlc n.. fcan Francisco representative. K. J- Bloweiu MEMBER Or THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Associated Pres. I. exclusively enti t ed to tho use for republication of all news oisnatcbes credited to it or not otherwise credited to this paper, and also th. local Hems published herein. . All rights ot republication of special , dis patches herein are also reserveo. PORTLAND. SATURDAY. MARCH it. 1919 WEIGHING THE ARGVMEXTS., There may be a few charges in the league or nations draft, but they will b. of no moment and in all probability iney win not Include specific reference to tne aion Hytrin, which the president regard! as not even remotely threatened. From th. Paris cablegram ot Herbert isayara owope. " The covenant, yke the sacred ark, e'nall not be profaned by sacrilegious -hands. There will be changes, but they will be of no moment. The critics .of the league demand changesand they will not be satisfied with immaterial changes. President Wilson plainly has no notion of trying to satisfy them. But the friends of the league also scree that there should be important modifications. President Wilson also plainly has no intention of trying to satisfy them. He is satisfied. Who lias a right to ask more? Is anything else worth consideration? . President Lowell of Harvard, de fending the league covenant in his Joint debate with Senator Lodge, ad vocated according to the Associated Press "the insertion of clauses in the covenant permitting withdrawals from tho league on reasonable notice, stipu lating that no foreign powers snail ac tiuire any possession on the American ontlnent, and making it perfectly Hear that immigration and tariff prob lems are to be regarded as purely in- frankly, is "very defective" and "easily misunderstood." Senator Lodge declared'for a league of nations, but he is not for the "covenant as presented." Nor is Mr, Lowell, nor Mr. Taft, nor Mr. Bryan, nor anybody on this side of the water who is entitled to a respectful hearing. Only President Wilson says there shall be no "material changes. Senator I-odge offers the "con structive criticism" that thero should le "a larger reservation of the Monroe doctrine." Dr. Lowell evidently agrees with him. So does Mr. Taft, who use ' the same language as Mr. Lodgi ""larsrer reservation of the Monroe doctrine." Senator " Lodge would "offer an amendment to-exclude questions af fecting immigration and the tariff.' lr. Lowell agrees with him. Senator Lodge would permit 'any nation to withdraw from the league without denouncing or abrogating the treaty. Dr. Lowell would permit with eirawals on reasonable notice. The differences between Senator Lodge, who is for A league, and Dr. Lowell, who is for THE league, ap pear not to be insurmountable. Now here along comes ex-President Taft, who is also for THE league, and tays it is "not symmetrically ar ranged, its meaning has to be dug out, una its language is ponderous and in diplomatic) patois." He finds fault with the method by which the decrees of the league are to be enforced against any offending nation, and he says that it should be made more definite as to when its obligations may be ter minated, and that there should be a 'larger reservation of the Monroe doc trine." Othertwise it is all right. Mr. Bryan, too. is for THE league, v ith reservations. So are all of us. 3lr. Bryan has a few suggestions to make. So have the rest of us. Mr. Bryan would specifically "preserve the Monroe doctrine," he would enlarge the voting power of the United. States in the league, and he would leave to each member nation the decision as to whether it would support the de crees of the executive council. Ob viously, Mr. Bryan is for a league with the individual right of referendum, and the implied right of secession, flood democratic doctrine, both ancient ii nd modern. He is farther out of ac cord with President Wilson than either Mr. Lodge. Mr. Taft or Br. Lowell. Yet the approach to an understand ing among the peace-loving, duty-performing and right-thinking people of America about the league is evident. They would prevent war, but they would not disarm unless all others tl.sarm. and perhaps not then, wholly. They would police the world: but they are doubtful if they would h willing for the world to police America. They woiald define .spheres of influence, but they would not turn 'hina over to Japan, nor Armenia to Turkey, nor rotund to Germany, nor Jngo-Sluvia to Austria, nor Russia to the bolsheviks. They would extpnd the Monroe doctrine to the world; but they would exclude the rest of the world from interference in North or f-'outh America. The would put eco nomic pressure on any recalcitrant nation; but they would probably re-: .ent in any circumstances the applica tion of economic pressure to America. They would have no interference with the internal affairs of America: but they clearly would reserve the right, i cither open or tacit, to interfere In the internal affairs, say, of Mexico, if Circumstances warranted. These appear to be great difficulties, nd they arc. in fact, difficulties; but their size and importance may. indeed, be more apparent than real. The an deriving moral factor in the situation, fo far us America is concerned, is that it Is conscious of the integrity of its own motives and purposes toward all the world, and would apply them uni versally, so far as may be; and. being t-ure of its own high national virtue, aind international unselfishness, it would yet be apprehensive about the power of other nations, and all of them, to guide the course of America j.salnst its will. Being righteous, it would have others righteous; but. be ing aware that others are not all righteous, it would not in the final analysis yield to any unrighteous re quirement. Yet. withal, it is the clear duty of America to enter a league of nations to keep the world's peace. It is also the duty of the American people to give the entire question their most thoughtful and prayerful considera tion; and to givedue weight to all the arguments, favorable and unfavorable. It will be most unwise and most in defensible to enter into any covenant with other nations without a. full pur pose to live up to its terms; and it will be equally unwise and indefensible not to seek an understanding of them in advance. Above everything, it will be indefensible for America to notify the other nations that it will not join them in good faith in an effort to prevent war. A DESERVING MOVEMENT. In the effort to complete Portland's quota for the Jewish war relief fund, which -has nearly been attained, mem bers of this faith deserve not only the good tvishes but also the active co operation and the material aid of all good citizens who bear in mind that Jewish leaders in the past have given loyal support to all of the patriotic and humanitarian movements in which the people as a whole have been interested. It is well to call attention in this connection to the fact that the high privilege of contributing to the relief fund is not confined to . Jews alone. out that it will be esteemed by others. The funds obtained are to be used to meet urgent requirements, arising during and since the war, in Poland, Galicia and the near east, where 6,000,000 have been subjected to Jlr usage, and now are confronted by famine. Tne purpose of their coreli gioni3ts in America is to enable them to help themselves, and the task is one which appeals to the broadest instincts of benevolence. safe" fo predict that, whatever it may I We are not. Our Chinese exclusion be, it will not prevent the voyage, I laws are a breach of treaties and our which would be made from land to anti-Japanese laws are an insult to a land in something less than ten hours, friendly nation. We can undo these In the summer time it could be made wrongs and yet can more effectively in daylight without special effort. gain the ends sought if we adopt a If the ocean can be- crossed, then I law of the kind described. The peace the last corner of the world can be explored. H. G. Wells once predicted that aircraft would permit the build- conference is more than an assem blage to make peace and form a league of nations. It is in effect ing of cities on plateaus now inacces- general summons to all nations to sible. One may wonder why anyone bring their treatment of each other would want to build a city on a re- into harmony with the principles mote plateau, but that is beside the I which the league is to enforce, point, which is that men are never! We can do this', in strict accord satisfied until they have attained the with our own rights and interests, unattainable. Development of the air- and these call for revision of immi plane will be the means to the reali- gration laws from a new viewpoint. zation of a great spiritual ambition. Hitherto the doors have been wide The mazama, the arctic explorer, the open, originally on the theory that delver into mysterious caves, and now immigrants were refugees from politi the aviator are cast in the same mold, cal oppression and came here to en- It is to be hoped that our navy de- I joy the blessings of American liberty. partment will do the thing right while I For several decades past immigrants it is making its plans. We want a I have come simply to make money, not non-stop, continuous flight from shore caring enough about our democratic to shore. This will challenge the institutions ' to learn anything about imagination of the world as nothing them or to become citizens; on the else could do. To trust to a machine contrary, after making their "pile" which would- need to pause in mid-1 ntany have gone home to buy land ocean to take fuel would be to win by and become members of the hated a fluke if we won at all.- What we bourgeois class. More recently the want to see demonstrated is not that supposed refugees have no sooner ar- some flyer taking a desperate chance rived than They have loudly informed can get across, but that the venture the American people that the republic is practical and can be repeated, is all wrong and must be radically Doubtless it Is and can be. One is reconstructed according to the crude tempted to venture the guess that it ideas of these novices in freedom, will be done some time in 1919. It A SAD CHOICE OF MEANINGS. Evangelist Dickson, from whose ser mon a statement on the distribution of wealth was quoted and severely condemned by The Oregonian Tuesday, protests personally that a wrong con structton was placed upon what he said. This was his statement: In 18B0 statistics show that 2 iter e.nt or our population owned mora than seven tenths of our entire wealth. Today one per cent 01 xn. population own mor. wealth wan no in. other ya per cent. The statement is a familiar one. has been so widely quoted to purport the centralization of wealth that it is certain authorship does not lie in Mr. Dickson. It has been cunningly con ceived for the oovious purpose of ar raying capital against labor. It con veys to the casual reader or auditor the immediate impression that 1 per cent 01 inc. people now own 99 per cent of the wealth. On the theory that that was its intent, from which theory iM Uregonian does not now recede, it was refuted with statistics and con demned as pure bolshewsm. It is now insisted by Mr. Dickson that this portion of his statement be given an exact mathematical analysis. cry well. To analyze it may mean that no more than 51 per cent of the wealth is now owned by 1 per cent of the people while the other 99 per.cent own 49 per cent of the wealth, or it may mean that 1 per cent of the Deo- ple own 60 per cent, or 70 per cent, or o per cent, or 99 per cent of the wealth. Definite? Very! So analyzed the comparison with 890 statistics becomes meaningless. purposeless and asinine. If both premises are true and they are not one may deduce from the comparison that wealth is now more widely dis tributed than in 1890, or he may de duce tnat it is not. The first premise is the flat state ment that in 1890 2 per cent of the population owned more than seven tenths of the wealth. Let us use an illustration that can be understood by any schoolboy: One hundred men In 890 had a total 'capital of $100. A possessed 60. B possessed 110. These two, or 2 per cent of the group, had io or seven-tenths of the wealth of the 100, while the 98 per cent pos sessed a little more than 30 cents each. This is a correct Illustration of the rst assertion, now let us nroceed to tne second: ioaay tne same men still possess 100, but A's capital is reduced to a0.50; B's is reduced to 60 cents and each of the other ninety-eight hag 50 cents. A, who represents 1 per cent of the group, now has more wealth than the other ninety-nine. The second premise has been complied with with mathematical exactness, yet A is not so wealthy as he was in 1890, and the inety-eight underdogs have more than they had in the earlier year. The rich have thus grown poorer and the poor have grown richer. The same percentages mav be used. na Dy employing other arbitrary ex- amples the opposite in wealth distribu tion can be shown to have occurred the same group. In short, the illus tration is as clastic as a rubber band. et it was employed by the evangelist to support .the assertion that wealth as been accumulating in the hands of the few in the last nineteen years. nen, in tact, it may seem to prove e exact opposite. Nobody deliberately originates a de ception except for a definite purpose. The purpose of this one is so plain that the wonder is anybody would dare to doubt it or dare to employ the statement. That purpose, as al rcariy said, is to present a sensationni contrast, in order to confuse and sway the unthinking to array class against c'sss. No matter whether its intent or its mathematical construction be considered. It has no statistical foun dation. The figures as to 1890 have again and again been refuted by usa of government census statistics and estimates. th THE RACE ACROSS THE ATLANTIC. IT not this month, then soon at any rate, some aviator is going to cross the Atlantic in a heavier-than-air fly ing machine. The desire of the United States navy department to be first to accomplish the feat is highly com. mendable., and It is -to be hoped that its ambition will be achieved. It would be in keeping with our traditions for us to be first to cross the ocean by air, after having sent the first steam ship across the water, and after hav ing led the world in the development of transportation by rail. It is the belief of an aviator whose opinion is entitled to high respect that only three obstacles now impede the making of three hundred miles an hour by air. Two of these are me chanical; the third is the feeling akin to Htcnse hunger which attacks the aviator flying at the high rate of speed. Tho feeling, has not been analyzed; if It were simple, hunger it could be overcome by taking a supply of food along; the explanation prob ably is sound that it is an affection of the nerves of the stomach caused by excessively rapid motion. But it is CONDEMNED BI EXPERIENCE. . The rock on which the coal and oil I land-leasing bill was wrecked after the conferees had reached an agreement in the last congress was the option given the public either to buy or to lease land containing these minerals. who know nothing of democracy by experience. These are sufficient reasons for wholesale deportation of would-be reformers a la Karl Marx and for total exclusion of any more of their kind. If they want to. mak.e com munist experiments, all of Russia is open to them and they may get a chance in Germany, the German rem- or.e of the most staunch upholders of nan' ? Austria or the Magyar rem- the conservative policy, has been con- Those Who Come and Go. verted by a letter from Secretary of the Interior Lane, in which the latter says in. regard to the experiment with j leasing coal land in Alaska that it is I "not entirely suitable to conditions" and continues: nant of Hungary. They need a prac- tioal, forcible demonstration that the American people do not intend to make this country a socialist, com munist or bolshevik! experiment sta tion. As a safeguard against such at tempts the bill suspending immigra tion entirely for four years should be passed pending enactment of a re- There has been but little inquiry for these lands and onlv limited rinvnlnnmpnt Fmir leases were granted under the present law I strictive law on the lines proposed, ana out two ot mem were aDie to .xtnance the small operations that had bezun. After further study of the situation I have come to the conclusion that perhaps the field would be more inviting to coal oper ators If title were granted as in the states, especially since Alaska'n operations are so xar away from the bases of labor and supply. I I therefor, recommend that Alaska be I placed on the same footing as the states in the pending bill, and that operators in that ! tieia nave the same choice of lease or pur chase as granted elsewhere: otherwise. Alaska coal lands will remain In a disad vantageous position. What is the value of the national forests of the United States from the point of view of health and recreation alone? Frank A.- Waugh estimates that 3,000,000 persons visited there forests in 1S18, and that they spent there an average of twenty-five hours each, hunting, fishing, picnicking, etc. At 10 cents an hour the total would The proposed bill would give miners! amount to $7,500,000, but who is there the option of either buying or leasing who doubts that the true estimate in AlasVa as in the states, and would would not be vastly higher than that? thus let experience prove which is the The "woods" of America surpass those better plan to promote development, of any other part of the accessible Mr. Lane concedes that experience has world. Our national forests are not already condemned leasing in Alaska, only forests, but they also contain which is one reason why tho optional I mountain scenery which not even in system is proposed for the states. I Switzerland can be surpassed. We Without regard to this unsuccessful I should be inclined to agree with th experiment, Gifford Pinchot and his estimate of another-advocate of out- diminishing coterie of fanatics Insist I door recreation that it is worth at upon leasing exclusively for the states least a dollar an hour to the person as well as Alaska. The purpose of the! enjoying it. and that on this basis our bill and of Mr. Lane and the desire I forests yielded at least $75,000,000 last of the people is that the coal land be I year from this item alone. developed. The determination of the t-mcnot clique is tnat it shall not be one of the wonders of the interval developed at all except on his plan. 1 hWRen -,nr Hnd rteace is the sneed xiieir persistent looDying nas reaucea wth which the Czecho-SloVak state to -waste paper ail oi tne worn done na8 become established in authority Dy congress in tne last two years, ana I a rinonniii nnwer. Tt -has floated haa condemned the coal and oil Indus- ijDerty loan, which was oversubscribed tries ui mo west to stagnation lor an- neariy four times by 191,410 persons, other year. I and it has adopted a currency system. The Pinchot crowd are nothing but pPonle are f lockine from Vienna to obstructionists, and it is to be hoped prague by" tens of thousands in the mat tu new congress win seno. uiera belief that the Bohemian capital will to me rear ana mane tnem stay tnere. become the commercial capital of cen tral Europe, and probably because MAKE the SAME LAW FOR ALL. I large numbers of uzeens wno rormeriy Viscount Ishii's nlea for action bv lived in the Austrian capital are going M r - . . . ... . the peace conference to do away with nc-me to enjoy noeny. race discrimination brings to the front an additional reason for adop-l Antwerp has come to life again as tion by this country of an immigration I a port after four years of suspended policy based on the fitness of the indi- animation. The Germans did not do vidual for citizenship and on the abil-1 as much damage as expected, though ty of the country to assimilate him they stole twelve electric cranes ana for its own benefit, not on the aues-lother things. Steamship lines are tion whether he is a member of any again running to New York and Phila- .particular race. Any valid objection delphia, and they wear no camouflage, to Immigration from any race or na- Great changes among the business men tion can be met by conforming to are in prospect, for the Germans who these rules. Japan protests against formally held a large place win not go exceptional treatment of its people, I back, many Belgians were killed in not -because it wishes them to come the war, and British and French firms here but because our law is so framed I will be more numerous. as to put a brand of inferiority on them. We can practically exclude! The greatest difficulty about devis- Japanese and yet remove ail appear- I ing a fit memorial to Theodore Roose ahce of placing this stigma upon I Velt is that he shone in so many ways them. 1 as to render impossible a representa- This can be accomplished by re-1 tion of all his many sides. Perhaps striding the number of immigrants of I as good a memorial as any would be any nationality each year to a certain I a family of stalwart sons so .well percentage of the number of that na- trained in citizenship that, if another tionality who are already citizens, I war should come, all would volunteer either by birth or naturalization, as I to fight for their country, as all of proposed in the draft of a bill made I Roosevelt's sons did. That is the Kind by the national committee for con- of memorial that any man and woman structive immigration legislation. Not can raise. less than 5 nor more than 15 per cent of the number from each race which Almost all Datrons of utilities, cor. had already been naturalized would porate or governmental; can complain De aaumteu, uie exact percentage to i 0f ill-treatment received some time. be iixea rrom year to year oy an lm-1 rr.i,e wrathv Datron never gets "chief, migration commission, which should and the man at the stamp window nave regard to tne labor conditions pta t slammed shut in his face at in the United States and to the main- quitting time, regardless of the size tenanoe of the American standards of of tno jine. one might complain to living and wages." This commission prcsident WiVson about these things might admit skilled labor of a craft anH no harm. He likes to keep in which it was scarce or exclude la borers of a kind of which there was a surplus. There would be added to the present literacy test other tests in the principles of personal and public hy giene, the history of the American people, the methods and ideals of the government of the United States and the rights and duties of citizens.- One of the chief merits of this plan is that it meets the Wishes of those in touch with the people. One of the first tasks for Adjutant- General May in reorganizing the Ore gon national guard should be to form an airplane squadron to be manned hv some of the states most noted highflyers. While we are' establishing memorial . . t . , , . i nienwa.vs. wjiv uui uavo - wno oppose Japanese, imuese anu i - - - . .,,:,. f Hindu immigration and at the same a"7 i T ' tVin to if K..rfi r.r I Admiral Sims?. It will cost nothing to nationalities to nrpsont lu-a fnr their Pvc -"" exclusion. Fewer than 2000 Chinese and Japanese combined would be ad- Every Presbyterian church In the mitted yearly on a 5 per cent basis, land will have on its war-bonnet to that being a smaller number than is morrow afternoon, and, it is needless now admitted. We should no longer to add, the $39,000,000 .will be a fact deny citizenship to these races, while by night. granting it to Tartars, Turks, Syrians, Sure thing. If gambling is to be done by white men, the Mongolian must not be allowed to profit by it. Keep it for the dominant race. Hindus,. Persians, Mexicans, Zulus, Hottentots and Kaffirs. On the con trary, we should guard against whole sale immigration of these latter races, as well as Chinese and Japanese, by establishing general rules with which Any American who is tempted to but a limited number of them could sen supplies to the bolsheviki should comply. remember that their gold' is stained -ine American people are called I with the blood of millions. upon to adjust their treatment of other nations to sound general prin ciples of equality and justice. We in common witn other nations have a duty to make our practice square with these principles. By Insisting that the terms of peace shall con form to our principles of. "consent of the governed ' and by raising the ne gotiations to a high moral plane, we have turned attention to our own practices. When we call upon other nations to forsake territorial greed and punitive indemnities, they nat urally turn the searchlight on us and inquire whether wc are without, fault. Government must "dig" to the tune of $70,000,000 next month to help in railway financing. Good old govern ment! And easy, too! Germany can take it or leave it. The allies have had a good rest and can renew at any time. Thev yet may need Henry Ford and Jane Addams at the peace table. Mayor Baker finds New York a bit more rapid than Portland. "Mr. Spence, t master of the state grange, came into Tillamook county to knock our proposed $430,000 for road bonds," explained Senator Thomas B. Hanley at tho Imperial yesterday. "He also said 6ome harsh things against the state highway commission. I heard he was billed to talk at Wheeler and went up there in the afternoon with members of tho county court, but when we entered the hall Mr. Spence began talking oleomargarine, and then an nouncement came that it was to be a closed meeting to discuss grange mat ters. When we were starting back home a telephone call stopped us, say- Ins to meet Mr. Spence that night. when he was advertised for a road speech. Lj-e turned to meet him and as I fortunately had all the road record of the legislature and the statements Mr. Spence had made in the committee meetings at the legislature, I soon had him on the run. He finally threw up his hands and said that if Tillamook wanted the bonds instead of taxing themselves, tbey may as well bond." Yamhill cojmty has the road fever,' admitted W. B. Dennis of Carlton, who was in the city yesterday. "An im promptu meeting was held a few days aKo at which about 300 people attended. They wanted a road built and the coun ty court explained tnat tnere was t shortage of funds to carry on the pro posed project. Someone moved that a bond issue of $400,000 be voted, and then someone else moved that the is sue be $200,000, and the crowd hooted down the $200,000 man. A standing vote was taken whether the people wanted a road bond issue and every man pres ent got to his feet. And this hap pened in the ultra-conservative part of Yamhill county, the most conservative county in Oregon." Ketchikan "subscribed to three times its quota in the last liberty bond drive," said Warren Lucas, who came in from California yesterday, ana is at the Imperial. "Ketchikan was ex ceptionally prosperous last year as there was a big pack and everyone was makinsr money. It was the most pros perous part of Alaska, owing to the large number of canneries in the town and in the distriet. This season the packers do not expect such a heavy run as they have enjoyed the past two years, but no one ever knowe what the fish will be like until the pack has been made." Mr. Lucas left Ketch ikan a few weeks ago and dallied in California before heading back toward the north. "I understand that the third wave of flu is coming to the coast," announced B. J. O'Reilly, traveling for the Boze man, Mont., Milling company. "I had four months of it myself and want no more. I found out something during my tussle with the disease. The medi cal men have an apparatus, something like an X-ray, by means of which they can look at your insides. They can see your heart and lungs working. That's going some." Mr. O'Reilly left the Benson last night for Puget sound. "I'm going to drop off at Chicago to see my old f Hands, Hinky Dink and Bathhouse John." declared Douglas Fuller, last evening. "I have received my orders to go to Camp Meade, Mary land, and enter the ordnance depart ment." Mr. Fuller was clerk at the Hotel Marion during- the recent session and got to know most of the legislators and all Of the third house members by their first .names. "I gave Portland its first motion picture show," was the statement of Joseph A St. Peter, who now operates the Rose theater at Everett, Wash. "I operated the Nickelodoeon opposite the Oregonian building on Sixth street, and I also had a show up where the Pantaires now is." In his Everett the ater Mr. St. Peter is playing Hippo drome, circuit vaudeville acts. , Once upon a Rme F. H. Hoillster of Coos county ran against Congressman Hawley in the first district, but there were not enough democrats to put Hoi lister over the plate. However, he is convinced that someone will yet get Mr. Hawley. Mr. Hollister is at the Imperial on a business trip. "Two-thirds of our county Is In for est reserve and we want the Roosevelt highway -to open up the county and show the world what we have," said J. C. Johnson of Gold Beach, Curry coun ty, who was at the Imperial yesterday attending the road meeting. A California millionaire. Joseph W. Sefton, president of the First National bank at San Diego, was at tne Benson yesterday. He is a man in "his 30's and succeeded his father as president of the institution. This is his first trip to Portland. - Mr. and Mrs. Frank Metschan have arrived from Klamath Falls to partici pate in the birthday anniversary of Phil Metschan next Monday. They are registered at. the Imperial where the family gathering will be held. G. W. Griffin of the Commercial club at Eugene- is registered at the im perial. He was selected as -onS of the delegates from Lane county ta partici pate in the discussion of a. .proposed coastal road " - Mayor E. N. Hurd of Seaside,', mem ber, of the legislature, was registered at the Multnomah yesterday, with D. J Moore, E. S. Frouty ana jvi. Mar aesty. They were on hand to boost for the Roosevelt highway. Mrs. W. F. McGregor and daughter, Miss B-jrneica, are at the Benson. They are well-known residents of Astoria. State Superintendent of Public In struction J. A. Churchill is 'a Multno mah arrival from Salem. . Syl Jones, -who was christened Syl vester, a timber man rrom tjoos say, Is registered at the Perkins. To buy a new stock of goods, G. W. Cooley, a merchant of Paisley, is in town. He is at the Perkins." I. W. Lester, a Salem merchant, is at the Imperial, accompanied by his wife. Unsatisfied Patience. By Grace . Hall. I first met Patience when as a child sitting beside the window in a tiny bedroom of a. dreary home I watched the sun sink below the horizon beyond a skyline of giant Cottonwood' tree. I watched that scene full many year, yearning for the west and the beyond; yearning for knowledge of that great unknown world outside the con fines of my narrow sphere; yearning for the Somewhere wherein I should figure and play a part in Life, as others unestimated distances beyond my view, were already playing parts. I met Patience again when Love went away bruised and suffering and hid its broken pinion from my longing, search ing eyes. Long years I waited, hoping, with Patience ever nigh to urge and comfort; but both of us gave up, for Love died. The third time I met Patience I sat by, the couch of one who was near and dear and watched the shadows turn from gold to gray and from gray, to black, while the glow on that loved face went out, hour by hour, until only a thin ashen shell remained. Patience waits outside my casement still, struggling ever with a spirit with in which will not rest. Years, like fallen leaves, lie all about me, a fading carpet of one-time brightness; the sun shimmers downward towards a skyline of frazzled pine; "and beyond is the west, still the west! ' I yearn as of old for a more imposing role in the play which is going on be yond the limits of my restricted view; the restless spirit which even patience has never conquered, presses onward towards a visloned Somewhere when Patience itself shall be absorbed and cease to be a factor, in a great and un fathomable Peace! In Other Days. HOUSEHOLDER SAVES NO LIGHT Another Woman Protest. Against Be ginning Day's Work in, Dark. HOQUIAM. Wash., March 20. (To the Editor.) They say every little bit helps, so I will "do likewise" and add my objection to that of "Former South ern Girl." Like her, I kept still about it when it was a wartime measure, but I must say if it is meant as a daylight saving plan that it dismally fails of its object. At present I arise and dress by day light. This has been the case for two weeks. On the first of April I will have to go back to dressing and also cooking and eating breakfast by electric light, for at least three weeks. It may save daylight for someone, but not for -me, and besides it is more expensive, for my electric light bill, instead of dimin ishing, as it ought this time of year, increases again. It is too early for us to make garden. and so the gain is "nil" for at least three weeks. Before the war my hus band and boys worked a short time, an hour or so, evenings, in the garden. After-the time was changed- last year they worked about the same length of time and then there was nothing to do but go to bed by daylight! ' As for the industries, I do not know how those in Portland were affected, but those on Grays Harbor did not save daylight so you could notice it! Those that ran two shifts had them from 8 A. M. to 5 P. M. and from 8 P. M. to 4:30 A M. If the government would put off this changing time till May 1 it would not meet with so much opposi tion, for many of us like the early day light hours, but really it would seem to an observer that the necessity for it is Dast. I do not believe we improved on tne old order by the trial last year, but perhaps those in power know a .whole lot more than I do. I would add I object to a statement vou made Sunday editorially. Was it Wilson who defeated Taft. in 1912? 1 am not politically partisan, but I do read the papers. A HOUSEWIFE.- Tweity-flve Years Ago. From The Oregonian, March 1894. Washington. President Cleveland is very much disgusted with the Oregon Democrats and that is the reason why appointments have been slow at Port land and Salem. Three days mail and a number of passengers arrived yesterday over the Union Pacific from Nampa, Idaho, where they were delayed eight days as a result of a break in. a long trestle, which tied up main line traffic. Washington. Representative Her mann haa had reported from the com mittee his bill to throw open to settle ment land3 in the Siletz reservation amounting to 175,000 acres not allotted to the Indians. The nomination of Eugene C. Protz man to be postmaster of Portland has been confirmed in Washington, D. C. Validation of Marriages. PORTLAND. March 21. (To the Edi tor.) Kindly tell me the meaning of senate bill 242, passed by the last leg- slature, and where I can get a copy of this bill. E. . C. R. Marriage entered jnto within less than six months after issuance of de cree of divorce is now illegal. Senate bill 242 will legalize such marriages when contracted prior to the passage of the bill if they are otherwise regu lar. By "passage" is meant the day the bill becomes law, which will be 90 days after close of the legislature. The sec retary of state, Salem, can probably supply a copy of the bill. SPRING COMES TO IVMBEB CAMP Cries of Hungry Cougar. Give Place to Twittering of Bird. DEE, Or., March 20. (To the Editor.) After months of isolation, marooned in several feet of snow, and aroused every night by the blood-curdling screams of numberless cougars and mountain lions, which threatened to raid the quarters, the monotony was broken today when the winter keeper for the Oregon Lumber company of camp No. 1 and two companions heard the welcome scream of a locomotive whistle, which Was sufficient evidence that the deep snow which has hidden the ground since early in January had given way to Oregon mist, which has fallen in torrents for more than , n week. The winter keeper and companions felt somewhat relieved after suffcrinpr the hardships of hermits for the past two months to see a real locomotive In camp and to feel that the presence of a crew of loggers would come in handy in battling with the vicious cougars which had a trail packed hard in the snow around the building in which the men were housed, as they patroled the building at night watching for a chance to feast upon the inmates. Mingled with the screams of the hun gry cougars could be heard the howling of timber wolves and the barking of great bands of coyotes on every sTde, while the winter keeper and his com panions, with doors and windows barred, stayed inside and wished for springtime, when they could hoar the songs of birds and see the beautiful sunshine Instead of gazing at the deep snow and listening to- the cries of the wild beasts which Inhabit the moun tains in northern Orceron. ' H. T. L..- Timekeeper Camp No. 1. A SEW BATTIjE IIVMX . OF THE RKPl'BMC. I can hear the mslrching millions With their babylon of tones, I can hear the crush of legions, and the crash of falling thrones. But I hear the captain's "forward. march" above the yells and " groans. For God is marching on! Refrain, Glory,. Glory, Hallelujah, etc. In every moor and mountain from the pampas to the pine. In the ships that sailthe ether, and In boats beneath the brine. There are God's benighted children, "and jewels all are mine," For God is marching; on! , A hundred years of training in the"; art of holy war! A hundred years of gazing on the glory of a star! A hundred years of halting at the golden gates ajar! But now we're Inarching on! Thou hast led us o'er the battlements ' of freedom's brazen foe, Thou art leading us to victory o'er rampant rum and woe. We re-enlist for service, and our mil lions we bestow. For God is marching on! I can see the league of nations with the flag of Christ unfurled. The badge of human brotherhood upon the cross impearled: I see .the conq'ring army as it swings around the world, For God Is marching on!' WILLIAM STEWARD GORDON. Income Tax on UO.OO0. GRAYS CROSSING, Or.. March 20. (To the Editor.) (1) Do all public of ficers figure their salaries in their in come tax report? (2) The president of the United States draws a salary of $75,000 a year and $25,000 expenses and various extras. How much income tax would- wooorow Wilson as a citizen under the law of his country pay? L. M. H. (1) The salaries of public officials and employes are exempt from income tax, according to the ruling of the treasury department. (2) If there were no deductions for interest on indebtedness, taxes, chari table contributions or other specified payments, a married man with no mi nor children, whose income was $100,- 000 in 1918, would pay a total income tax of $35,030. ' When Does Albatross Sleep f London Tit-Bits. The albatross spends its life, with the exception of a few weeks given each year to nesting, entirely at sea, and is on the wing practically all the time. Furthermore, it does not progress by flapping its wings, as most birds do, but seems to soar at will, rarely, if ver. eiv-nig a stroke of the wing, seem ing to need no impetus. At nesting time, which is early in the year, the al batross repairs to an isolated island, such as one of the Crozet islands, in the Southern Indian ocean, or Tristan da Cunha, in tins South Atlantic ocean. "With the Help of God and a Few Marines" , 'APPEARING IN THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN When the children. of today are telling children of their own, how America tipped "the balance in the world war, fighting and dying for the cause of humanity, there will be one word, one battle, above all others Chateau-Thierry. Magnificent as was the victory at St Mihiel, glorious as was the stubborn, desperate drive through the Argonne tangle, the Chateau-Thierry fight will be first on the shrine of memory. Brigadier-General Catlin, commanding the 6th regiment of marines at Chateau-Thierry, tells his own story of the fight that saved Paris and determined the issue of the war. The first installment appears in tomorrow's issue of The Sunday Oregonian. HOW WILL YOUR GARDEN GROW? Now comes the season when the rake and spade and hoe are burnished again in the good, " s brown soil of the old backyard. Everyone will be planting gardens. Gardening is as inseparable from spring as is the first twitter of the birds. In the Sunday issue The Oregonian presents a garden section, with articles of informative value on the subject of what, when and how to plant. It is not exactly a text-book on the subject, but all gardeners will find it replete with helpful advice and timely hints. TWO ARTICLES FOR LAND LOVERS Poplars are lovely trees, tall ' and graceful, and court-lady-like, with a pleasant shade; about them. Albert Radding Sweetser, professor of botany at the Univer sity of Oregon, tells about them in the Sunday. issue. "Outlawed Weeds " is the subject of a valuable article by Helen M. Gilkey, assistant professor of botany at the Oregon Agricultural College. Those who read either, will find it wise to clip them and file away ' for reference as many readers, particularly students, have been' doing with the Sweetser series of botanical talks. "THE GERMANS MAY YET WIN." Before you poo-pooh this amazing statement, pay reflection to the faqt that it is made by Mary Roberts Rinehart, foremost of America's women WTiters, teller of delightful tales, and one of the most astute of her sex. No real regeneration exists in Germany, declares Mrs. Rinehart in an interview appearing in The Sunday Oregonian. Unless America and her allies move warily, despite their military success, the fruits of that magnificent fight for freedom may wither before they are attained, warns the celebrated author who . knows a great deal , about present conditions in Germany. . ' AROUND TOWN. Take a jaunt around town with W. E. Hill, that most frantly human of all illustrators, whose series, " Among Us Mortals," has long been a favorite feature of the Sunday issue. You'll meet a lot of people you know, and there is both laughter and thought in their masterful depiction. For the matter of that, you may find yourself. x CHURCH AND SCHOOL. A page to each in the Sunday issue, re plete with up-to-the-moment information about Portland's houses of worship and Portland's public schools. All the News of All the World s THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN.