10 THE MORX1XG OREGOXIAX, MOXDAY, MARCH 24, 1910, PORTLAND. OREGON. Entered at Portland lOreajon) Poetoffice as MCOQdlut mail matter. Cttbacrtptloa rates- Invarlablr l snVsnea (By Mall) Tall)r. Sunday Ineliderl. one year ... rat;jr. Sunday lneturte4. six months. . i Ii!y. Sunday Included, three montha Pal.y, SundaaHnc; uded. dim month lal!y, without Sunday, one year ..... Ti v nn.lv mnnlhl Imlly' without Sunday.' one month .J wefUlr. one year J-"" Sunday, one year ...................... - v ' Sunday and weekly 3.oO (By Carrier.) Party. Sunder Included, ona year e'X? Jialiy. Sunday Included, ona month.... t'ally. Sunday Included, three montha.. -- Ttal'y. without Sunday, one year t.w'i Taily. without Sunday, three montha.. !. Dally, without Sunday, ona month How to Remit Send postofflce money or der, eapresa or personal check on your local hflnb .mM rain nr fHTT.HCt MT9 at C1I' ere rtak- Give postofftce addreaa In lull. In- 4. S3 2.25 - .73 "I pac) conference bind nobody: the regular processes of law, so that upon league can be bound only by the terms the whole the incident has put a. strong of the covenant. check upon repudiation, wherever this Aitnougn toe peace commissioners may nave Deen suggested. appointed by President McKmley at the end of the Spanish war were not CQ ajnsaj,. prices WHX NOT TALL. coniirmeu oy uie KiiBie, 111a jiruceuuie was & marked contrast to that of President Wilson. Congress had ad- journed on July 8, 1S98, and did not meet again till December 5. The pro tocol with Spain was signed August 12 and required that the peace delegates meet In Paris not later than October 1, hence the delegates could have been confirmed only by hastily calling an extra session of the senate. The ar mistice with Germany was signed No- Many new buildings are wanted all over the country, but those who would build are waiting for prices to fall. Stocks are low in many stores, but merchants buy from hand to mouth. They wait for prices to fall. That is the reason for the stagnation in busi. ness which has prevailed since Novem ber. Everybody thought that prices had been inflated by war, and that now they would fall. More than four months have passed December 2 and the president and the sintc ar ended but still prices have delegates whom he had appointed sailed on the night of December 3. No injury would have been done by a day or two's delay. There was op- not fallen, except in a few commodi ties like steel and copper, which are exceptionally affected by war. Lum bermen held a conference with the eluding county and stale. M.t..nu ,a .natA n h, I commerce department about a new P... Kate 13 to 18 page 1 t Mnf tt, tha level of prices, but they could not see i to m parea; 4 cents: j to Td Pa"- I president on the terms of peace and re. double rates. Mm Bnnlnrae Office Verra Conk- ln. Brunswick bulldlne-. w York: erre ft Oonklln. Ktecer buildlnc. rhfaao: Verra Conklln. Free Pr. buildinit. Detroit. Mich. : (fan Francisco representative. . a. MrVBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. Th Associated Preaa la exclusively entl t'ed to tha use for republication of all news llrarhe credited to it or not otherwise credited to thla paper, ana also no .. yjeira ptibllshed herein. All rirhts of republication of special dis patches herein ar also reserved. PORTLAND. MONDAY, MARCU 14, 11. LAWLESS PROTECTION OF SLACKERS. One of the most serious things in regard to the conduct of the war which congress will be called on to Investigate will be the flagrant viola tions Of law by Secretary of War Baker in his treatment of fake conscientious objectors. The provisions of the draft law were plain as to what classes of men should be exempted from military ervice on the ground of conscientious objection, and the subject was fully discussed by congress. But Mr. Baker gave secret orders that exemption from any but the most nominal punishment should be given to many men who did not come within the definition which congress had made. He finally turned loose a whole gang of them with full pay and an apology. This arbitrary over-riding of the de cision of congress is one of the evil consequences of the sort of govern mcnt we have had in the last two years. Before that period opened the legislative independence of congress had been pretty well broken down by executive dictation. The emergency of war was used as a pretext to destroy it completely and to reduce congress to the position of a rubber stamp. Mr. Baker's actions have gone even farther, for they have the effect of rubbing out the imprint of the stamp. If congress had established a com mittee on the conduct of the war. this gentleness with slackers would have been revealed so soon after it began that probably it would not have been attempted, but the president sternly suppressed any move to appoint such a committee. The revelation was, therefore, postponed till discharge took the gag out of the mouths of the offi cers and men who knew the facts. Mr. Baker's conduct is an insult to very soldier who did his duty, for it Abolishes the distinction between him and the slacker. It did a wrong to those men who had to serve in place of the slackers. It is an insult to the sincere conscientious objectors, many of whom willingly exposed their lives in non-combatant service. of the league of nations, but he did not advise with the senate at all. their way to make a change. The truth is that prices are not going to fall. Professor Irving Fisher . o, .,h I read at the conference of governors and mayors that "we are on a perma nently high-price level," and we may as well make up our minds to It and of whom three were senators, and, we believe, members of the committee on foreign relations namely, W. P. Frye, v,ueu.uu a ia.io o.iiu u:u.Eo .y -j , 1,.1 n the last named being A democrat and T.r"" ' f?ein?r!.LdntI0i!- w therefore we cannot expect an inftux of low-priced goods. By using paper credit instead of gold as currency and mnfa 1a nnAna Immolotalv iiimt, 1 " . um.nu vjt -1"u'Li " c .. . I have changed the conditions on which senate. The other two were W. It. Day, secretary of state, and Whitelaw Keid. He announced these appoint- the meeting of congress on December S. the treaty was signed in Paris on December 10 and was submitted to the senate early in January, 1899. Presi- prices were based. Professor Fisher says that "to talk reverently of 1913 14 prices is to speak a dead language delegates and did not announce his appointments to the senate. The Oregonian deprecates all par- do is to stop waiting and go ahead on the new price-level Thou ..Tt aA ,1.. " . . T. . J!,Kif v,i f .i.a. I Pacific northwest for going ahead. above all parties, for it concerns the t" LZ.Wu Z YZlr, T.Z7a future life of this nation and the future ?!?Um.ber, 'SAn leni dmand peace of the world. For this, reason " "1. .. , . . wiia v I wool-growing animals of Europe have we regret that President Wilson has K T,,,. ? nli " rrsvA. ,an.a jM,f..ii, 1,66,1 kllled bv millions, Europe must h ",Cr ... .,: ."T ;, .: have meat and clothes, and Oregon and has thereby provoked like display I. z 1 , , , . . , i I been cut down, and Oregon can supply publican but in his own party. WHf THE COVENANT AlltMltU. SHOIXD RE A communication published in an ther column commenting on an ar tide in which The Oregonian discussed the league of nations opens the way for the following observations: Although there seem to be no sound reasons why a nation should be free to withdraw at will from the league. there may be good reasons why a nation should reserve the right to withdraw after due nottce. It is not to be expected that the nations would bind themselves to remain members -- f the league for all time: if that were proposed, none might join. In the course of events, some nation might be faced with the alternative of sac rificing its vital interest in -order to fullfil its obligation, or violating its obligation. It would desire an honor able way of escape from such a dilemma, and withdrawal after notice would provide that way. That would be radically different from withdrawal at will, which would make the league a rope of straw. But the weakness of the argument advanced by senators In favor of this point is no ground for rejecting anything they may say on the other points raised. Their argu ments should be weighed on their merits, regardless of what they may have said on other points or of their motives in making those arguments. " ' -T2ere are good reasons why mainte nance of the Monroe aoctrine should be reserved by the United States in joining the league. Without that res ervation the league might give Euro pean or Asiatic powers a mandate to adjust troubles on this hemisphere, which the Monroe doctrine makes the province of the United States. That doctrine would be strengthened by the league's support only if the league were to support it as it now stands namely, that it Is the province of the United States as the chief American power to lead in protection of Ameri can republics from outside aggression and in adjustment of American dis putes. Without that stipulation the addition of other nations' support to the guaranty of American nations' in tegrity would be accompanied by a right of nations on other continents to invade the United States' sphere of influence. Recognition of the Monroe doctrine would not open the door for other nations to make other territorial v claims, except such as will be recog nized by the treaty of peace as con forming to the principles to which the allies are pledged. It would not be a concession of our claims in exchange for which we must make like conces sions. It is not as though we had dragged Europe into an American war: Europe dragged us into a Euro pean war. and thereby made it neces 'rary for us to take a haad in settling Europe's affairs in order that this may not happen again. That situation im poses no obligation on this nation to give up any rights or policies which are consistent with a proper settlement of world affairs. There Is need to specify the general class of subjects which is excluded from the jurisdiction of the league, such as domestic or internal affairs, for disputes on such questions have been used gradually to break down the independence of a nation, or as pegs on which to hang extravagant demands backed by force. Speeches er explanation by members of the fruit. The new price-level is especially permanent for what we produce. Then we can safely build, for material prices the governor's term. 1 will not fall and the price of what we There was not a long tenure of have to sell will not fall, either. Th office at stake in the Chadwick case man who waits is like the dog who cited by Attorney-General Brown as sustaining his opinion that Mr. Olcott will serve out the remainder of Gov. ernor Withj-combe's term, but all the elements of the present situation ex. isted then with an additional one. lost the substance in grasping for the shadow. PLANTING ROADSIDE TREES. The example of a Minnesota village. which is nl .') n f i n f rrvw.q fit finnlit rrnen Governor Chadwick. who was secre- a,onff ts roadsides instead of the more conventional Lombardy poplars, Nor tary of state , succeeded Governor Grover upon the latter's resignation, About one and one-half years of Gov- way maples, box elders and white ernor Grover's term remained to be I elms, is capable of adaption to almost served. It expired on September 11. every American community. The 1878. Mr. Chadwlck's term as secre- Practice, like a good many others tarv of state expired on September 2 which now commend themselves to of the same year. State elections then I favor, is the result of individual ini. were in June. I tiative. About twenty years ago, it Thus on September 2 Mr. Chadwick I seems, a retired minister introduced was no longer secretary of state be-1 fruit trees to the roadway running cause R. P. Earhart had succeeded I through his own property. The school him in that office. In the previous I district, seeing their value, has now June W. W. Thayer had been elected I arranged for planting 250 more apple governor, but had not yet qualified trees of an approved variety and has for the office. So, in spite of the I committed itself to care for them. fact that he was no longer secretary These are theoretically the property of of state and that a governor-elect was I the lot-owner, but it Is a safe guess available to take his place. Governor I that the public will harvest a good Chadwick remained in office nine days, I deal of the crop. and his right to the office during that it Is nevertheless a pleasing custom, period was later sustained by the su- nd one which is not likely to inter preme court. I fere seriously with the commercial The opinion of the attorney-general I side of. fruit growing. The spring seems to have followed the court de- I months' must be particularly beautiful cision. Though having no quarrel with I in this part of Minnesota, to say noth- it, one may reasonably speculate why. I ng of the annually recurring harvest if it is the proper construction of the I festival every autumn. One would no constitution, the framers of that in- begrudge the passerby his share of the strument put the president of the "Pe pomes, and it is practically cer- senate in line of succession. Except tain that the privilege would not be in the remotest contingency of death I greatly abused if planting of this kind or total disability of both governor were general. The experience of or and secretary of state at the same chardists in such regions, for illus- insiant it is unnecessary. it seems irauon, as ine greai prune growing inevitably to follow that, if a secretary belts of Oregon and Washington of state who has become governor I shows that when certain fruits become continues to be governor after expira- I reasonably common loss from pilfer- tion of his term of office as secretary 'S is negligible. But part of the value of state, he can terminate the latter I of the roadside tree would be the tacit position himself by resignation and I invitation to share in the product still remain governor; he can then thereof. appoint a secretary of state who. ob- In the Pacific northwest various viously, would become governor if his varieties of nuts probably would bet predecessor died while governor or ter lend themselves to community cul became lncapaciated. I tivation. This is particularly true of But law is what the supreme court French and English walnuts, filberts says it is. If the attorney-general ana even chestnuts, notwithstanding shall be sustained in his opinion that the danger of blight in the latter va- Mr. Olcott is not ex-officio governor I riety unless extra care in selection is but governor in fact, there will be an exercised. Nut trees possess the ad- opportunity for all to smile over an vantage among others that they shed interesting and general accurate book I their fruit when it is ripe and after that Mr. Olcott prepared when secre- I the tree has outgrown the tallest lad tary of state. Mr. Olcott in the offi- der, and that they require a minimum cial Blue Book has entered the names ot spraying. A pest-proof apple is yet of both Chadwick and Benson as "ex- to be propagated. There are certain officio" governors of Oregon. The varieties of pears which develop errors one makes are seldom corrected stately proportions, an example of in such a gratifying way to the maker. I which may be seen on a business street In the heart of Portland, but the pear tree loses much of its beauty when neglected by the pruner. How. ever, it will stand a good deal of neg lect and still compare favorably with the poplar for decorative purposes. The genius of the roadside fruit or nut tree is the hospitality which it symbolizes, and the spirit of neigh an estab lished institution in parts of Europe, It A riCTlKESQlE WAR ENDED. There Is a moral, perhaps, in the tale of St. Clair county. Missouri, which agreed the other day to com promise a debt which for nearly half a century it had tried to repudiate. It is an interesting story, in any event. The county had been made the victim, brIv co-oneration It is during the railroad boom which fol- . ?E!. owed the civil war, of swindling m ir t,, lur - rmiroaa wnicn was rftl -tllH .-a TO... naval Anaeota fna a,iRta.. V. . .1 n vtrc . J". ' . would be served by general adoption nbTlli! . 8,ld lnnocfnt of the rule In communities sufficiently purchasers. The county, after paying ,,(,a ,, 1 . In.a.aa a. at , a I W (5 Oalaialt U VU 5"C UCt-CCtiHW J llv IUO 'r Vr: .T:r,- u"?.:. trees once they have been planted. ..!. Lii.u u.1 1 j u icuctai v. u u 1 1 gave Judgment and issued a mandate ordering the county official to levy! IHE CRISIS ON THE ADRIATIC. taxes to meet the judgment. The serious crisis in the peace negotia- mandate was defied. One court after tlons has come, and it realises not another was elected only to spend its from a dispute between the allies and entire term in prison for contempt. the enemy but from a dispute between That it was utterly impossible for two of the allied nations.- Italy insists an entire community to prosper out- firmly on its claim to the port of side of the pale of law dawned on oth- I r lume and the province of Dalmatla, er counties which had been in the and threatens to withdraw from the same boat with St. Clair and these, one I conference if it is not conceded. The after another, settled their debts. St new Jugo-Slav state asserts its claim Clair meanwhile made no industrial with equal force, and appeals to the progress. It was impossible to build peace conference to maintain it. new buildings or roads. Every private The embarrassing fact to the peace activity languished accordingly. The I conference is that both parties to the factor which probably most greatly in- dispute base their claims on the prin- fluenced the citizens In abandoning ciple of self-determination, which was their stubborn resistance to the due expected to be clear and Just enough processes of law was the contrast be- to satisfy all, and where this falls tween their condition and that of their short, claims of the Jugo-Slavs are neighbors in adjoining counties. I backed up by reference to another of It is a strange story, and one which the fourteen points, which requires cannot fail to awaken some sympathy I that Serbia shall be "accorded free for the people who thus are paying I and secure access to the sea. Italy for something which they clearly nev- looks to the allies to support its claim er received. The fault was primarily I y reference to the secret treaty under tnat of corrupt county officials who I wnicn it joined them against Germany In 1870 permitted the money to be paid and Austria, but that treaty is in direct 10 tne railroad 'promoters without ex- I conflict witn the first of the fourteen acting requisite guarantees. Citizens I points, which pledges the allies to are made responsible for the conduct! open covenants of peace openly ar of the servants they have elected, rnted," also with the covenant of the which ought to teach a lesson, albeit league of nations. an expensive one. to the voters of St. I Italy founds her claim on the fact Clair county. Incidentally it has stim- I that Dalmatla was under Roman and ulated greater Interest of individuals then Venetian, which was Italian rule, in details of governmental affairs. I down to 1797 except for a brief period The obstinacy of St. Clair county has I of conquest by Bosnia and for a period been widely advertised, and also the I or nominal sovereignty by the Byzan blighting effect of resistance to the I tine emperors. Throughout those cen turies the language, literature, art, in stitutions, in fact the whole spirit of the country was Italian. Croats and Serbs came in as invaders from the seventh century onwards, but they chiefly occupied the back country. while the ports and the coast remained predominantly Italian. The Slavs did not resist Italian influence or object to the Italian language until Austria and Hungary stirred up their peace consciousness after the struggle for Italian independence began in 1843. Flume has had a succession of alien rulers. It stands on the site of an ancient Roman town, was destroyed by Charlemagne in 799 and was ruled successively by the Franks, the bishops of Pola, the counts of Duino and the counts of Wallsee, by 'whom it was surrendered to the Emperor Frederick III in 1471, to become a part of the Hapsburg dominions. The Hapsburgs permitted it to retain a large degree of self-government under the old Ro man laws until 1848, when it was oc cupied by the Croats and annexed to Croatia. Then began systematic op pression of the Italians, suppression of old rights and efforts at extinction of everything Italian. These efforts were more determined after the city was annexed to Hungary in 1867. Italians were forced out of public offices and replaced by Hungarians, they were re fused admission to the schools unless they would renounce their nationality, study of the Magyar language was made compulsory, Italians were driven out of business by unfair competition and census reports and roll of electors were fraudulent, the purpose being to understate the number of Italians and to reduce the number of Italian voters. The Slavs answer the plea of Italy by pplnting to the fact that, taking each province as a whole, they are in a large majority. They refuse to dis tinguish between the coast and the ports, where the Italians prevail, and the rural sections, where Italy con cedes a Slav majority. They reason ably assume that possession since an invasion which began in the seventh century gives a good title. They ignore the Italian charges of artificially stim ulated immigration, of fraud in the census and in elections and of perse- cution which has driven many Italians to emigrate, and they quote election returns to prove their numerical su periority. Against Italy's claim of eco nomic necessity for harbors, and that the Julian and Dinaric Alps form a natural frpntier, they set up the claim that Fiume and the Dalmatlon ports are their necessary and natural outlets to the sea. This is the worst of many problems of the same kind which the peace con ference must solve. It proves that the wisdom of Solomon is required to de cide what is justice. One party, per haps both parties, is likely to be in clined to contest the decision by force of arms, and only superior force can restrain them. Is the league of nations at the outset to call upon its members to exercise their combined force against a recalcitrant member? If so, it will be put to a severe test, and the spec tacle will provoke a broad smile from the woodchopper of Amerongen. The proposal to amend the Texas constitution so as to require that a person elected to office shall take an oath that he never has participated, directly or indirectly, in a lynching appears to be a constructive measure in the direction of abolishing the prac tlce which all good citizens abhor yet confess themselves impotent to deal with. It runs parallel to the oath still required in many states, that the person has never taken part in a duel. This undoubtedly had a salutary effect on dueling. The merit of the pro posal is that it is so self-executing. Rival candidates can be depended upon to ferret out the record of the individual taking the oath, and to call him to time if he swears falsely. And since most lynchings have the tacit consent, if not the active co-operation, of some leading citizens, it would seem that by removing them from partici pation a real motive for establishing law and order would be created. Those Who Come and Go. Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Davis of New Haven, Conn., have tarried in Port land for several days, midway upon a tour of the coast states. Though they leave this morning for Salt Lake, ac cording to the desk clerk at the Mult nomah, they have promised to return within the next month or so. "Then we are going to look around a bit," laughed Mr. Davis, "until we find an acre or so that suits us for permanent home building. A few old apple trees, a pasture for the cow and we will be back to the land in earnest. Oregon, of all the west, appeals to us." One of the absurdities of the law is that after convicting a man of sedi tion, it releases him on bail to vent more sedition while it deliberates whether he should be tried again. Debs, St. John Tucker and Joseph Coldwell are examples. There Is a gleam of reason in letting Scott Near ing go on talking after his acquittal, for he may say something which will cause his conviction. Jewish residents are not clannish in raising the $100,000 for the Jewish relief fund, and any Gentile who so desires may contribute, but the people of Hebraic blood went about it in a nice way and are to be congratulated on their success. The American people went down into their pockets for one billion dol lars of income tax without a visible wince, but they have to do it three more times before the year ends, and the last will be just before Christmas. Just watch them squirm then. Government at Washington can rest assured that no Swedish subject in Seattle will be arrested while he be haves. That is not the way of our neighbor city. It has a heavy hand for the bad fellow, an example that well might be followed. . It Is to be hoped nothing happens to that trainload of insane, Seattle to New York for deportation, that passed here Saturday. An accident that would turn loose that crowd would set the unfortunate township crazy. Recall how, eight years ago, every body "invested" in the Elks reunion, and recall how, the next year, .'every body realized T It was a great time for Portland. Now she will go to the end of the road with the Shrlners. Louise Bryant should not be per mitted to speak until she is in the middle of the ocean on the way back to Russia. If she loves bolshevism so much, let her go to the land where it grows, fertilized with blood. The Bulgars tried to make a friendly majority In Macedonia by killing off the Serbs. The objection to self-determination is that it tempts such primi tive races to massacre. Brownsville maintained its health during the war with but one prac titioner, an osteopath at that, but now with five all the aches and ailments will have their innings. Handy little oligarchy we are liv ing under, according to the deposed Mackay. Tet orders are orders, even coming from Burleson. It is the irony of fate that the mint crop of the south this season promises to be the biggest in all history. "Red" Rupert Is where yon find him. Phil Metschan will celebrate his 79th birthday anniversary today and Phil Jr. will register about 43 on the same day. The five sons and four daugh ters of Mr. Metschan Sr., as also his sister. Miss Anna Metschan of Tacoma, will be present. Out-of-town relatives who have arrived are Mrs. George H. Cattan ach of Canyon City, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Flanders, who have the U. S. A. as their home since Mr. Flanders is In govern ment service; Mrs. Emella Meredith of Yakima, Wash.: Mr. and Mrs. Frank Metschan of Klamath Falls, and Mrs. Ia. F. Griffith of Salem. The problem of finding lobs for those who want them occupies most of the time of Frank E. Manning, assistant director of civilian relief. In the Red Cross service. Mr. Manning, who is at the Multnomah, recently returned from Astoria, where he conferred with local business men and employers. Dur ing the war he saw overseas service with the 834th aero squadron. Prior to going overseas he spoke throughout New York for the third liberty loan. The green links of Weverley Coun try club call first to three New York book salesmen who travel In trio and who always manage to "make" Port land Just about the time the swallows are beginning to twitter. They are Harry F. Hull, George V. Seiffert and Harry V. Patterson, now registered at the Multnomah. All three are ardent fans of the golf links and amateur play ers of ability. F. C. Cole and Mrs. Cole of Seattle, C. F. Newson of San Francisco, R. D. Miles of Seattle, and E. B. McClure of San Francisco are at the Multnomah for a few days' visit to Portland. All are in the auditing service of the West ern Union and are now in conference with local officials of the same com pany. - W. F. Elliott, former traveling pas senger agent of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul, Is at the Multnomaji from Spokane, while attending to business connected with the federal railroad administration. George L. Burtt, who buys onions and potatoes in Oregon for Californians. is at the Imperial, registered from San Francisco. He is here to meet commis sion men on Front street. Covered with mud, the result of dig ging their car out with pick and shovel between The Dalles and Hood River, Mr. and Mrs. S. L. Morgan have arrived at the Seward. Colonel E. Hofer of Salem, Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Hofer, and the children of the latter, are registered at the Hotel Portland, being here for a week end. Mrs. E. M. Coffman, wife of a prom nent real estate operator of Chehalis, Is at the Seward accompanied by Miss Marian Coffman and Mrs. H. A. Camp bell. H. S. Gile, the man who put the Juice of loganberries on the table of the na tion, is at the Seward from Salem, where his plant is located. State Senator Walter B. Jones of Eu gene Is at the Imperial. - Mr. Jones served as a representative in the 1917 session of the legislature. Perry KItzmiller of the salmon hatchery at Bonneville, came to town for the week end yesterday and was at the imperial. e Mrs. Silas Christoffersen, widow of the aviator, arrived at the Portland from San Francisco yesterday to at tend a wedding. Randall S. Pratt, representing the Pa cific Motor Boat, a Seattle publication, is at the Perkins on a business trip to Portland. Frank K. Lovell, for more than 30 years employed in the office of secre tary of state, was at the Imperial yes terday. Mr. and Mi-s. Ted Preble of Pendle ton are in town for the week-end and are registered at the Multnomah. Gale S. Hill, an attorney of Albany, was in town yesterday looking after highway matters. Dr. Ralph Matson and wife regis tered at the Benson on their return from Camp Lewis. Mrs. M. Mahon of Bridal Veil was at the Oregon yesterday while in town shopping. J. H. Dunlop, lumberman from Lit tell. Wash., is registered at the Hotel Portlana. Attorney-General George M. Brown Is at the Seward, accompanied by Mrs. Brown. D. R. Grove, a mining man from Mill City, Mont, is at the Perkins for a few days. William Hartong and William Leigh, mining men of New Plymouth, Idaho, are at the Perkins. Howard Layton. timberman of Bridal Veil, is a new arrival at the Perkins. James Wilson, cashier of a bank at Prineville, was in Portland yesterday. R. A Foley, a merchant of Canby, was registered at the Perkina T. J. Gill, a St. Helens attorney, ia among the arrivals at the Perkina Ia N. Plamondon, banker from Wood land, Wash, is at the Hotel Oregon. A M. Prlngle, who has the ware house at Bend, is at the Benson. Library Source of Information. BAKER, Or., March 22. (To the Edi tor.) Would you please tell me how I mav secure the publication ana tne copyright of a popular song? Go to your publio library for this in formation. It cannot be satisfactorily given within the necessary space limi tation of a published answer. War Not Over. SALEM. Or.. March 22. (To the Edi tor.) To eettle a business deal: Is the world war over or not? A READER. It has been held In connection with a. wage award made "for the duration of the war" that the armistice techni cally did not end the war. A state of war continues to exist until the peace treaties are signed. a 1 t Is This Irony or Fact? Exchange. "There's nobody." said a Washing ton, D. C, lobbyist, "who can get rid of an importunate caller so quickly and at the same time so smoothly as th oresident. Once at a reception a man held up the long line of guests waiting to shake the president s nana while he recounted some tedious yarn or other. The president stood about four minutes of this. Then he gave a start. 'But, my dear eir, I am monopo lizing you!' he eaid." NO NEED TO CHANGE COVENANT. RosebuTg Cltixea Finds Lodge A Knox's Criticisms Are Puerile. ROSEBURG. Or., March 21. (To the Editor.) In an editorial Wednesday The Oregonian gives tne New York World's summary of arguments advanced by those who oppose 'the league of na tions. According to the World the ob jections of the protesting republican senators simmer down to three de mands: (1) Guaranteeing the preserva tion of the Monroe doctrine; (-) Spe cific recognition of the United States to control its internal and domestic af fairs; (3) The right of withdrawal from In Other Days. Twenty-fire Year Ago. From Morning Oresonlan. Marcs 24. 1S94. Washington. Leading silver men appeared before President Cleveland today to urge him to sign the Bland bill. The veto of the measure is now generally expected. Washington. Terms of the treaty between the United States and China have been agreed upon and the treaty submitted to the senate. Chicago. Passenger traffio officials the league in the event of necessity or of the western transcontinental rail- desirability. The Oregonian dismisses clause 3 and agrees that the "doctrine of secession" applied to the league would render it worthless, and in so doing it intimates the flimsiness of argument against the league on such grounds. The Oregonian then asks those who support the league through "thick and thin" for a candid statement why Pres ident Wilson should not accept clause 1 and clause 2 of the senators' plan. Presuming that The Oregonian's ques tion is asked in good faith, and not with the intent in this instance of heaping abuse and ridicule upon the one who ventures to disagree with its opinions and policies, may I venture to suggest, in the ffrst place that The Oregonian sufficiently and aptly an swers its own question. For if those presumed paragons of erudition, the "than-whoms" of the republican party, Senators Lodge and Knox, offer as one of the serious reasons of their sten torian opposition to the league, such puerile argument as suggested In the above clause 3 of their demands, then why should President Wilson or the American people give ear to wnat rur ther objections may be made by these adepts in sophistry?. As to clause 1: The general inter pretation of the Monroe doctrine is that It is a self-imposed guarantee ana protectorate on the part of the United States against territorial aggression in this hemisphere by any foreign power. There Is nothing in the league as pro posed to abrogate this doctrine in any way. On the other hand, under the league the territories of Central and South American countries are even more secure against European and Asiatic aggression, and the United States can bring to it3 support the -full power of the league in enforcing the recognition of the Monroe doctrine. Why jeopardize the formation of the league by insisting for sophistical reasons the inclusion in the covenant of that which Is already included and strengthened? Why specifically name the Monroe doctrine, which European nations, in the light of past history, are wont to interpret as an American, riffht to exclude the nations of Europe, while helping ourselves to portions of Mexico and Colombia? Why open the door to Japan's preferential claims in China; the claim of France to dominate Northern Africa; of Italy to the land bordering: on the Adriatic, etc., etel Where would this specific inclusion of one nation's pet doctrine lead to? Con fusion and disruption is the only an swer. As to clause 2: In our own constitu tion those powers not delegated to the federal government are reserved to the states, and such fundamental principle must needs be recognized in the affaira of the league. There is nothing in the league's constitution to indicate that the league will participate in the do mestic and internal affairs of the sev eral nations. In the absence of spe cific mention of such restriction on the part of the league, the opinion and statement of President Wilson, as chief proponent of the league may be taken as sufficient guarantee in this matter. He stated that the league would have no voice in any matters that are domestic. Further, Lord Rob ert Cecil of the British delegation stat ed that nothing could be included in the covenant that would interfere with internal affairs in any way. While the inclusion of some specific article bear ing out this idea may seem necessary to some timorous soul affected by the Japanese immigration bogie, or some profiteering tariff-baron, yet when even so learned and judicial-minded a man as ex-President Taft, himself a staunch protectionist, vouchsafes the opinion that under the league our do mestic affairs are secure in every re gard, it .would seem the height of folly at this time to open the way to every nation with a pet idea. Confusion would replace the unanimous vote by which the constitution was adopted by the commission in charge. It is in the closing paragraphs of its editorial that The Oregonian tacitly suggests the real cause of the opposi tion to the league. It is a matter of opposition to President Wilson a mat ter of personal animosity ana politic: an effort on the part of partisan re- nublicans and two or three disgruntled democratic senators to discredit the president and his efforts, regardless of the consequences to peace ana pros Derltv the world over. And much ado is made ot the ract that the president has not acted "by and with the consent or the senate.' In this connection as a matter of infor mation, may I ask, were the American Deace commissioners of the bpanisn American war appointed by President McKinley "by and with the advice and consent of the Senate?" (2) Did these commissioners advise with the senate as to what should be contained in the treaty with Spain? While sitting at Paris Mr. Wilson Is acting in the capacity of a peace commissioner. When the treaty and covenant are com pleted and placed before the senate, it is then that the senate may advise and consent as to its adoption. Respectfully, R. R. TURNER. roads held a conference yesterday in an effort to adjust the existing rate war. It was-reported that the Union Pacific is, through brokers, making a rate of 129 from San Francisco to Chicago. A banquet was given at the Hotel Imperial last night in honor of John Barrett, the new minister to Slam, who will leave for his post of duty at Bangkok in a few days. Fifty Years Ago. From Morning Oregonian, March 24. 3809. Washington. Secretary of the Treasury Boutwell announced his pur poes to use the treasury surplus for the purchase of government bonds to be canceled. Boston. A local firm ha received an order from China for 600 cases of boots and shoes. This is probably the first order of the kind ever received by an American house. Alexandria, Egypt. The waters have been successfully admitted from Bitter Lake to the Suez canal. There are now in port the steamers Oriflamme, Gussie, Telfair and Geo. S. Wright; the barks Helen Angler and Falconberg, and schooner Alaska, Cyrus A Dolph was admitted to the bar In the United States district court yesterday, Judge Deady presiding. "Tins NATION" AND MR, VTLLARD Iarae Not Permanently Denied Mails- Editor Gets to France. The Oregonian February 2, 1919, con tained a news dispatch from Washing ton stating that "The Nation was de nied the privileges of the mails be cause of some alleged Bedltlous utter ances, but a miia-mannerea ana un- revengeful state department granted Oswald Garrison Villard, its editor. nassports to go abroad as a Journalist to attend the peace conference. The British authorities, it appears, accord ing to reports which reach here, take the position that the international con fab now going on at Paris is a peace and not a pacifist conference and have refused him permission to proceed fur ther on his Journey to France." The Nation feels that it has been in jured by publication of the foregoing and is agrieved thereby. The follow ing is believed by The Oregonian to be an accurate statement: On Sentember 14. 1918, an issue of the Nation was held up by the post master at New York on the grounds that certain articles were objection able under the espionage act. On Sep tember 17 the solicitor for the post- office department, after considering the matter, permitted the issue to be mailed. The Incident has been re ferred to on a number of occasions in the public prints. Mr. Villard, on his way to Paris, was held up in England under a regulation which prohibited a person either of whose parents was a German to enter France. He was held in England ap proximately two weeks because his father was a German and finally an ex ception was made and he was vised through to ranee oy Amn-uaaor Jusserand. Paling Will Case. DAYTON, Wash., March 22. (To the Editor.) Kindly inform us if the Fallng will contest has been decided, and if so, what was the decision? R. L. No decision has been given. LAWS CANNOT MAKE MEN EQUAL Government Can Do no More Than Give Men Equal Opportunities. MARSHFIELD, Or., March 22. (To the Editor.) The Oregonian's recent editorial, "How to Fight Socialism," more nearly states essential subjects which we must keep in mind and un derstand, if democracy is to survive, than anything I have seen elsewhere. Socialism is as much German propa ganda as Prussianism and much mora dangerous for us. Any scheme that fails to take into account individual selfishness is worse than folly. Selfishness is the force that drives the world. "Self-preservation is the nrst law of nature" and s$lf -preservation is but selfishness in action. The foremost desire of every human being is to better his own condition. Ig norant selfishness leads one man to de stroy another, but intelligent selfish ness teaches us that our own best in terest demands that everybody shall prosper; for when the individuals pros per the community prospers. The in dividuals make the community and what is best for all is best for each but people are not equal. They are in dividual, different, unequal and can no more be made equal by law than a black man can be made white. All government can do is to give everybody, an equal chance. Law can not make a man wise, nor good, nor industrious, nor frugal. Government can only give opportunity. Of course it would be foolish to claim that our government is perfect. There is some cause for the spread of uniest and discontent. If the body politio were entirely healthy the germs of such diseases as bolshevism, I. W. W.Ism and socialism would not find lodgment In It, You say "Revolt is born of ideas which spread without regard to na tions and boundaries and lodge In the minds of men who feel a sense of wrong, whether real or imagined." It is indeed true but ret us not imagine that the wrongs are all imaginary. No impartial man can believe that a healthy condition' of society exists where one man can acquire $1,000,000 while 10,000 others are acquiring J100 each. There is no such difference in the value of their efforts. There is something wrong with the system. Simple creative force does not get enough of the product. Intelligent di rection of force gets too much. One is as necessary as the other neither can succeed without the other. They are interdependent and intelligent selfish ness would teach them to co-operate for the good of both; but ignorant selfishness makes war between them, which is likely to destroy both. Force without intelligent direction is destructive. Force intelligently direct ed Is productive. The trouble is that the director gets control of the product in the first instance and divides it much as he pleases.' It should be more equally divided not only because that is right, but because it is wise. It is wise because unfair division breeds dis content and discontent breeds war and war means destruction for the direc tor as well as for the producer. There fore intelligent self-interest demands co-operation. The grasping director who Is getting more than his fair share is courting trouble. But, above all and worst of all and more dangerous to all Is that made-in-Germany, unAmerican. false and hypo critical doctrine called socialism, which would destroy the individual and make all equal by making all mere ciphers. AUSTIN S. HAMMOND. No Error Made. RAYMOND, Wash., March 22. (Tn the Editor.) ; (1) For some years I have derived so much pleasure and, I might say, liberal education from your editorial page that I have come to consider information there furnished as not subject to challenge for its cora rectness. It comes as a distinct shocK, therefore, to find within the week what annear to be two errora Answering a correspondent's inquiry you state in to day's Oregonian that "bolsheviki" i "pronounced boi-sne-vee-Ki, accent on third syllable." Webster's new Inter national dictionary, 1918, copyright, gives the pronunciation as "bol-she" ve-ke" first and fourth syllables ac cented, with emphasis on the fourth, and short sound of "e" in "she." 1 would like to ask whether you base your pronuncation on an author.iy you consider superior to weDsters, ana, ii so, what is it? (2) An Associated Press dispatch carried in Sunday papers March 9, re porting a meeting held in Chicago, mentioned "Howard Elliott, president of the Northern Pacific railway." Edi torially, March 15, The Morning Ore gonian referred to Mr. Elliott in same capacity. Several years ago Mr. Elliott left the Northern Pacific, going to the New York, New Haven & Hartford railway, being succeeded In the presi dency of the former roai by J. P. Han naford. Has Mr. Elliott returned to the Northern Pacific? STEADY READER. (1) The pronuncUtlo'n given was based on the authority of the editor of the New Standard dictionary, and gen eral acceptance thereof. (2) Howard Elliott returned to the Northern Pacific as chairman of the executive committee about two years ago and recently acquired the addi tional title and office of president of that system. Ant Hill Has 9.1,000 Ants. London Echo. An ant hill two feot in height con tains about 93,000 ants, according to the observations and counting, extending over two years, carried out by a well known naturalist.