lO TITE ZtfOIlXIXG OHEfiOXIAX, FRIDAY. OCTOBER 31, 1019. Jttmmw0 &&$iman ESTABLISHED BV IIKNRV L. PITTOCK. Published by The Oregonian Publishing Co. 133 sixth Street. Portland. Oregon. C. A. MOBDEN, K. B. PIPER. Manager. Editor. The Oregonian is a member of the Asso ciated I'ress. The Associated Press Is ex clusively entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. Subscription Kates Invariably In Advance. (By Mall.) Dally. Sunday Included, one year JS.0O Daily. Sunday included, six months.... 4.25 Daily, Sunday included, three months. Daily, Sunday included, one month... Daily, without Sunday, one year Daily, without Sunday, six months... Dally, witnout Sunday, one month.... Weekly, one year Sunday, one year Sunday and weekly .......... 25 6.00 3.23 .60 1.00 a. JO .. (By Carrier.) Daljy, Sunday included, one year Dally, Sunday included, three months. 2.23 Daily, Sunday included, one month....' .75 Daiiy, without Sunday, one year 7.80 Daily, without Sunday, three months. .' 1. Ho Daily, without Sunday, one month 64 How to Remit Send postoffice money order, express or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at owner's ri.sk. Uive postoffice address In full. Including county and state. Pontage Kated 12 to 18 pages. 1 cent: IS to ill pages. 2 cents: 34 tp 48 pages. 3 cents: 30 to 10 pares. 4 cents: 8- o 76 Pages. 5 cents; 7S to 82 pages, 6 cents. Foreign postage, double rates. Kastern Business Office Verree A Conk lin, .Brunswick building, Ne York; Verree & Conklin, Steger building. Chicago; Ver ree & Conklin. Free Press building. De troit. Mich. San Francisco represeniatlve. R. J. Bidwell. L W VS. FORCE. The case of the people of . the United States against the striking coal miners is to be submitted to the final test of physical endurance and perhaps of physical force. If the strikers are superior to law and to right, they will win; or if the gov ernment is weak in its assertion jof its plain duty, the strikers will also win. It is high time to ascertain who is running the United States and whose interest is paramount the strikers' or the people's. If the strikers can succeed with wrong on " their side, and with right and public Opinion against them, control of. the coal mining industry.' will have been de livered to them, and later of all in dustry to others like them; and ul timately they will be the dominant power in the nation itself. It is no use to minimize the gravity and im portance of the contest, which is but another phase of the great issue which has been obtruding itself more and more clearly into the public un derstanding and it is as to whether law or force is. to be supreme. The demands of the miners are as unreasonable and impossible as their methods are bold and indefensible. They pretend that the operators will not negotiate with them; but the outstanding facts are that the owners offered to submit to arbitration all questions, including wages and con ditions, making only the proper stip ulation that the strike call be rescinded. The operators" position was supported by Secretary of Labor Wilson, a former officer of the min ers union, but they were deaf to the counsels of moderation and reason, as uttered by him. their friend and wellwisher, and they again refused. Then the president of the United States, on his responsibility as leader of all the American people, solicited of them a reconsideration of their action, because it was both unlawful and against the public welfare: and again they had the astounding ef frontery to offer a peremptory nega- Y tive. They made no excuses for their wrong-headed and reckless blunder, except that they had a right to strike, and that the employers would not treat with them. The one state ment was deplorably wrong, and the other demonstrably untrue. They may have a fight to strike against their employment, but not against the public. It is immoral to resort to the strike against all the people in time of peace, and it is immoral and illegal in time of war. It needs but a statement of the miners' demands to see that they are not made in good faith, nor with due regard to the welfare of the in dustry. In the last anatysis no in dustry can support itself if ' it shall not be prosperous. The strikers, through their leaders, who may or may not represent them, are demanding: (1) A flat increase of 60 per cent in wages. (2) A reduction of from eight hours to six hours per day. (3) A reduction from six days to five days per week. 4 ) No mine to work more dan one shift per day. The first result of concessions to sweh extraordinary demands would be an enormous decrease of produc tion, with a resultant large Increase of prices to the consumer. Not the least of the measures to restrict out put is the one-shift proposal, which means that coal shall not be dug in any mine for more than six hours' in my twenty-four. . Many mines now .operate on a two-shift basis.. The state of Washington has many . coal mines." employing about 6000 men, with a. payroll aggregating about J15, 000,000 per annum. The .miners are members of the union, "and they are affected by the strike order. The Washington coal opera tors have issued a statement which The Oregonian has nowhere seen denied, if we except the preposterous assertion of President Lewis that $75 " per month is tfce average miner's pay that contract men who dig most of the Washington coal are making from $5.89 to as high as $16 and $18 per day of eight hours. The . . average is said to be conservatively , about $7.75 per day, and In some of the principal mines most of the men get from $8.50 to over $9, and the more skilled seldom fall below $10. Moreover, if the miners' demands are to be granted, the double-shift mines will drop from 96 to 2 5 pro ducing hours per week, and the single-shift from 48 to 25 hours per week. The disastrous effect upon output in one state is thus obvious; and other states will be similarly af fected. The price of coal, already "high, will be doubled. There is a necessary corollary to any demand for higher wages, and it ' is that an equivalent in work shall be rendered. The miners do not propose to give it. They openly insist on more pay and the right to . give less service. The two things are economically incompatible and Im possible, and there can be no result but ruin. That is what it may in fair ness be said that the strike leaders ; intend. They scarcely disguise their ultimate object to sovletize the coal industry. How better can that great desideratum of industrial revolution be achieved than by wrecking it first and seizing it afterward by the exer cise of some species of eminent do main? It the coal industry, then will follow other major industries, including the railroads. The public views the coal strike with uneasy apprehension, but with out purpose to yield under coercion, which takes the form of a threat of freezing and of universal industrial stagnation, through excessive and ruinous demands. It might as well be understood by -the people it is beginning to be . understood that they have .a vital stake in the strike and Its outcome, and that their wel fare is jeopardized and will be vastly and even irretrievably hurt if it is not settled right. It is needless to say that the right of the miners to a good wage and comfortable living conditions is conceded; but the right of the miners to enhance the living costs of all others by restriction of output, through their failure or re fusal to do a fair day's work or a fair week's work, is not conceded. The miners may not say how much or how little coal shall be produced; nor may they say that they alone are concerned in the welfare of the coal ndustry or any other Industry. The public should be, as we be lieve it is, nerved to a great test. It would better be faced now. ' A REMINDER. Mention of a resolution adopted by the Missouri Bar Association is worh while as a reminder of the en actment of an important law by the last Oregon legislature. The bar as sociation's resolution calls upon the several states and congress to pro vide by law, in substance, as follows: That any parson wh shall privately or publicly advocate, either verbally or ia writing, or attempt to bring about by in dividual action or by combining with oth ers any changes in or nullification of our laws, constitutional or statutory, state or national, by means of physical force or violence, shall be punished by imprison ment at hard labor, or, in the case- of aliens, by deportation. The Oregon law defining and pen alizing criminal syndicalism not only carries the substance of the forego ing but declares it unlawful to ad vocate physical force or violence for purpose of profit, or to attempt to justify it by word or mouth or writ ing with intent to spread, exemplify, teach or affirmatively suggest po litical or industrial evolution by such means. It is well to remind officers of the law. and to inform agitators generally that this statute exists. ELLA WHEELER WttCOX. Perhaps the secret of the vogue of Ella Wheeler Wilcox in a day not far gone is revealed in her autobi ography, in which she says that early in life she adopted the motto: "If you haven't what you like, try liking what you have." Itself a platitude, it nevertheless struck an old chord anew; there are people who do not examine platitudes very closely for vague interior evidence of their ori gin. And to a large class Mrs. Wil cox appealed through the art which is no negligible art of presenting to them their own thoughts in an attractive outward form. Her out put of some thirty books, mostly col lections of verse, revealed her as an indefatigable worker. If she never ascended to lofty heights, or showed great skill in literary craftsmanship, she fulfilled a mission a little above that of a mere public entertainer by making verse popular among a clien tele who would not, at least at first, have been won by any poet who consciously wrote "over their heads." Mrs. Wilcox began publishing poems forty-seven years ago. She was then not quite nineteen years old. Attention was drawn to her about thirty-five years ago by her "Poems of Passion," but these were evanescent by comparison with her later "Poems of Pleasure" and "Poems of Power." She occasionally betrayed am inclination toward sen sationalism by which people were led to misjudge her. In most of her writings she kept on the safer ground of her own life and experi ence. Her best-known verse was entitled "Solitude," and began: Laugh and the world laughs with yeu; Weep and you weep alone: For the sad -old earth Must borrow Its mirth. It has trouble enough of its own. There was another, in favor with the reciters about a quarter of a century ago, which concluded: I tell you the future can hold no terrors For any sad soul while the stars revolve. If he will stand firm on the grave of his errors. And instead of regretting" resolve, re solve! It is never too late to begin rebuilding. Though into ruins' your life seems hurled ; For aee! how the light of the new year ia gilding Toe wan. worn face of tn bruised old world. The "sad old world" note occurs frequently in her writing, but she was on the whole amazingly cheerful about it. She did a good deal to in culcate optimism. Her poems prob ably will not outlast her generation, but they will have served a purpose. She was one of the most widely read American writers of verse. THE ARMY'S EDUCATIONAL PLANS. The war department's announce ment that the regular army is about 10 per cent below the number au thorized for the fiscal year may in dicate that not a sufficient number of young men have been impressed by the new educational plans of the department. It was hoped that these plans would stimulate recruit ing among a class, who need educa tion, both fundamental and voca tional. But the new policy has not "automatically taken care of the re cruiting problem" as at least one of its opponents predicted that it would, and the department is at a loss what to do about it. It is not wholly the fault of the department that there has been a considerable degree of skepticism re garding its ability to fulfill its rosy promises. Many of the old line of ficers have themselves lent color to this skepticism. They have held strongly to the old traditions, which Viewed the work of the soldier as an exclusive profession, and have not been willing to admit that a school could be conducted successfully in connection with an army post. The efforts of officers of a newer school have been measurably, handicapped by lack of enthusiasm which the de fiers of tradition have put into the new policy. So radical a change as has been comtemplated could hope for success only through united ac tion. Nevertheless, it will be hoped that the scheme will go forward to suc cess. In its perfection it would be a nearly ideal solution of the problem of maintaining an army in time of peace with the least possible econ omic waste. If the soldier can serve his country at the same time that he is increasing his power as a civilian, he is spending his time to good Advantage. It must have been made- clear to a good many young men by this time that lack of edu cation is a serious handicap. And the opportunity to learn the trade of a skilled artisan while being fed. clothed, sheltered and paid for their time ought not to be overlooked. Of course, there are other ways open to ambitious young men to obtain an education, but the army offers one tljat is worth considering. The short term of enlistment removes one of the chief objections formerly made to the service, and the large number of re-enlistments reported seem to show that where the scheme has had a trial it has made good. 6UJSNT ASSENT IS GOOD ENOUGH. Reservations to the league of na tions covenant may be needed in or der to define American rights and obligations more explicitly than is done by the text, but the senate leaders seem not to be satisfied with that. They attach a condition which gains nothing bat which may prove an. obstacle to acceptance by other powers of the reservations offered. They attach to their latest cata logue of reservations a preamble re quiring acceptance by three of the great powers before the American ratification may become effective. This is unnecessary. Reservations have been attached to signatures and ratifications of former treaties by individual nations and have been tacitly accepted by the other parties. In those cases silence gave consent. A nation may be willing to consent in that manner which would not be willing to give written consent. It may not object strongly, enough to record its objection formally in writ ing, but it may draw back from a formal, written endorsement. Yet if the American ratification with reser vations attached should be accepted and if the United States should be received as a party to the treaty, the silence of the other powers and the lapse of time would debar them from later protest.' By common consent the American reservations would then have been acknowledged as conditions of our participation. If the men who offer th,e preamble to the new reservations wish to pre vent the United States from taking a hand in the general settlement with Germany, they should say so. They should not attempt to bring about that result indirectly by making ac ceptance of their -conditions as dis tasteful as possiti as possible to the other powers. , A RED INFLUX THREATENS. The need of continued restriction on immigration, for which provision was made when the house of repre sentatives passed the bill continuing the passport requirement, was shown by Representative Albert Johnson. He told of reports from diplomatic and consular agents of the United States on the prospective exodus from various countries to America. In shrunken Austria . 2,400,000 of the 6,000,000 people are crowded in Vienna, and many persons, both skilled workmen and military offi cers, are out of employment. "The great bulk of this dissatisfied popu lation," he said, "looks toward the United States with hopefulness." The report reads: Much of the human material available for immigration is of the most promising kind, but some of it is permeated with bolshevism, with radical. revolutionary ideas that will not graft on American civilization, and some are otherwise un snited to become settlers.' Emigration of 10.000,000 Germans is predicted, the Swedish consuls at Hamburg and Lubeck having re fused to vise passports for 60,000 leads of families in one month. Some of these want to go to Peru, Argen tina and Chile, and the two former countries have pase, laws to check immigration. Lack ot steamship ac commodation is the chief obstacle at present, but most of the Germans will come through Holland. So many Italians have applied for pass ports to emigrate that- there will be no room for. Germans; on Italian ships. The bolshevist rulers of Russia are acquiring genuine American pass ports for use in sending their agents abroad. Kuropean countries will try to get rid of bolshevist agitators and, says Mr. Johnson, "will go to the country to which the entry is easiest and where there is the least to ex plain. . Several thousand aliens have as sembled at Yokohama from all parts of the world Russians, evad ers of military service in this and other countries, men wh have lived in the Uifited States without becom ing citizens and await opportunity to come to the United States. Japan Is used as headquarters for bolshev ist propaganda, and refugees pour in from Siberia. Spain also is a gath ering point for "bolshevlsts, other agitators, Germans and other unde sirables." Many Germans and- Aus trians are becoming Swiss citizens to facilitate their entrance into Amer ica. The United States already has its full quota of reds, and should put up the bars against more. Arrangements must be made to digest the alien ma terial that is already in this country, and the passport law should be used to exclude more until plans have been adopted to sift all future immi grants at the port of embarkation. There is no desire to exclude those who are willing to work and to be come good citizens, but this country must not be the bappy hunting ground of all the reds of the world. BOLSHEVIST THEORY AND PRACTICE, At last the real doctrines of bol shevism have come to light in the booklet which was published for the guidance of the secret council of the boviet. This Is not the propaganda which is spread throughout the world, depicting the Utopia that bol shevism builds and designed to win converts; it is the guiding principles of bolshevism in practice as distin guished from bolshevism in theory. These "protocols" excel Machia velll's prince in cynical ' .duplicityj they surpass the writings of Bern- hardl for frank justification of might as the highest right. They are Prus sianism worked out to the nth de gree. They teach that evil predomi nates over good, that violence is the one unanswerable argument, that ideas are only bait to catch converts for a cause which sets up evil as its highest aim. Here are a few ex amples: People with bad instincts are more nu merous than those with good ones, so the best result in governing them is obtained by intimidation and violence and not by academic arguments. Few would not sacrifice the good of oth ers for the attainment of their own ends. Right !s might. Political freedom Is an Idea and not a fact. It is necessary to know bow to ap ply this idea when there is need of intel lectual bait to gain the support of the people for a party. Bolshevism has autocracy's con tempt for the people, for It describes them as: Guided by exceptionally shallow passions, beliefs, customs, traditions and sentiment al theories. In justification of forcible seizure of power it Is said: The blind force of the people cannot be tolerated to remain without a leader for even a day. The word "right" means nothing more than "give me that which I want that I may have proof of my super-strength over you." Our pass-word la power and hypocrisy. There; 4s nothing more dangerous than private initiative. We must foment dissensions and ani mosities through Europe, and with their kelp in other countries. We will come to parleys and negotia tions armed with cunning and evasiveness. That Is the theory by which bol shevism is guided in winning supre macy. Now for the practice by which that theory is put In effect. Quoting Paul Dukes, an Englishman who escaped from Petrograd on Sep tember 2, the London Times corre spondent at Helsingfors says of the proceedings of the extraordinary commission: Suspects are cross-questioned, perhaps 20 times running, by different inquisition era, the same questions being repeated till the wretches drop fainting. Then they are pricked with bayonets, and. if still obdurate, are subjected to the well-known medieval torture called Little Ease, starved, given salt herring without water, or have needles driven under their nails. In the end barely any escaped death. Mr. Dukes, disguised as a bolshevist, with" smazlsg intrepldy. was present at the execution of three officers in a cellar of the Goroho vaya. The victims were first stripped, then beaten and mocked. Their clothes and other possessions were distributed among the executioners, who received, be sides these perquisites. 100 roubles per head, a bottle of spirits, two pounds ot bread and a pound of lard. Supremacy of might is practiced by the railroad men who haul food trains to-Jhe cit for they plunder the train and sell the food in the suburbs. The consequence of terror Ism and starvation is that so many have fled, died or been murdered that the population has been re duced to between 300,000 and 400, 000. It was 1,908,0.00 in 1910. . T i m e 8 correspondent who closely followed Denikine's army Into Kieff says that on every one of the 200 days of bolshevist occupa tion of that city there were execu tions, and he estimates the total at 2000 at least. In the anatomical theater of the university the volun teer army found about 200 corpses "in a horrible state of putrefaction" and "in a room In a private house 140 more were found, locked up and left to rot." From another house were taken "the bodies of 124 per sons who were murdered a few days before Kieff was captured one night's work." He continues: Many of the bodies were mutilated by having pieces ot skin In the shape of epaulettes cut from their shoulders and strips from the thighs in Imitation of the stripes on an officer's trousers. - At one side ot the garden is a garage or coachhouse. This was used as the place of execution. The walls are pitted with revolver bullets and splashed with red tains; the floor is still glutinous; the smell makes one turn away sickened after a very short Inspection. Testimony to the close alliance between Russian bolshevism and German militarism is borne by Gen eral VaKsilkovsky, commander of the Petrograd forces during the early months of the revolution, who has escaped from bolshevist territory after working as a spy. and who has been thrice condemned to die and each time has escaped. He Is quoted as saying: You think you won the war. No. Ger many won the war. In July, 1!17, a Ger man officer serving in a .Russian guard regiment told me that Germany had lost her colonies but won Russia. I did not believe it then. Now It is sn accomplished fact. The correspondent also says of the general: ... He Is full of fiery denunciation of the Germans, whom he ao-uses of working hand-ln-hand with the Bolshevists. The -Germans, says the general, have now taken Russia entirely into their own hands. German shops In Petrograd are open. German trade is protected, and It Is proposed to remove Krupp's to the Volga. According to General Vassilkovsky. Ger man staff officers are now directing the bolshevist army, and the Lithuanians who took Dvinsk were in reality Germans act ing in concert with Von der Goltx. The bolshevist received enormous German sup plies through Dvinsk. and the peace offers In Evtbonia were made to give the pro German elements In the Russian army an opportunity, w-hen abandoned by their Eathonian allies, to appeal to Von- der Goltz for issistance. who will also take Petrograd and restore'" . Ruasia according to the German programme, combining with the eastern enemies of England to obtair. revenge on the allies. The directors of the soviet have followed out the course of argument by which the Prussians support their doctrine of world power founded on ruthlessness. and have worked hand in hand with them, but have out done even them in the hideous thor oughness of their execution of those teachings. By their failure to sup port the forces of democracy before bolshevism became entrenched, ths allies have delivered Russia into the hands of Germany, and may prove to have provided Germany with the means for another bid for world em pire in the next war. It la not too late to say that Pa trolman Pratt did what he was ex pected to do when he tackled the Piedmont hold-ups, armed as they were; neither is it too late to say there is "nothing the matter" with Pratt. Wounds do not count with him. If it be fact that the railroads have a month's supply, the coal strike ia lost before it begins, for the public will not stand for suffering, and a way will be found. It is doubtful ' if the miners themselves have any big individual supply. Crossing calamities never will be eliminated until there is a law like that advocated by a prairie-state legislator long ago, whose bill pro vided that neither shall pass until the other has proceeded. Government cannot say that a man must work if he does not so desire; but it does say that a man shall work if he wishes so to do; and government will see that he has the opportunity. What a fine Halloween prank it will be to put in the wood of a sick man or a widow. That would make old John H. Hallow smile. If that rolled down stocking fash ion spreads, some people of 200 dis placement will look shocking in socks. It may be another sign of the times, but a look ahead reveals five Sundays in February next year. Last day of a long month and only four paydays! The calendar needs revision. Judge Lovett finds his railway pastures out this way flourishing. Perhaps the miners intend it only as a Halloween 'prank, JAPAN'S SINCERITY IS DOUBTED Mr. Allen Relieves We Should Not Acquiesces as, to Shantung. EUGENE, Or, Oct. 29. To the Edi tor.) In an editorial The Oregonian touches again upon a matter that Is of grave concern to a good many of us, viz., the propriety of America approving the Shantung transfer. You seem to agree with us as to the wrong of the proposal, but you seem to think that we are justified in ap proving It because of some agreements made in Paris and entered, as you say, upon the minutes of the treaty-making convention. Will you please give us the wording of this agreement? IX limitations are there imposed on an otherwise absolute covenant, it is highly Important to know the lan guage used that we may judge whether or not it constitutes a def inite limitation. But this only brings us to the weightier Inquiry: Can any promise made by the representatives of Japan in Paris and entered upon the min utes of the treaty-making; conven tion be in any sense a limitation on the treaty as actually ratified by the governments through their proper parliaments and legislatures? It seems to me that you are asking us to rely on a manifestly inadequate remedy for what you seem to admit to be a grave wrong. Did not Japan refuse to be a party to the league of na tions and peace treaty unless she got this Shantung concession? And did she, not insist in having it in absolute form? Are we to believe that she thus affronted the world's highest ideals for a mere formal, temporary gain? Or that she has departed from that policy of scheming aggression that has characterized her for years? By treaty made with Corea In August. 194, she stipulated: "The ob ject of this alliance is to maintain the Independence of Corea on a firm footing." In April. 1S98, ia a treaty with Rus sia she stipulated: "The two gov ernments recognize fully the sov ereignty and independence of Corea, and pledge themselves to abstain from all direct interference in the internal affairs of that country." In 1902 in a treaty with Great Britain she stipulated: "The high contracting parties, hav ing mutually recognized the inde pendence of Corea and China, declare themselves entirely uninfluenced by any aggressive tendencies In either country." In 1904 In another treaty; with Cores she stipulated: "The Imperial government of Japan definitely guarantees the independ ence of Cores." Notwithstanding all these definite pledges Japan shortly took over Corea and has been ruling It and Its Chris tian Inhabitants in a manner that has shocked the world. As late as August 1. 1915, our own government addressed this language to Japan: "The government of the United States cannot recognize any under standing between China 'and Japan Impairing the territorial Integrity of the republic of China.' In view of our traditional attitude to China, in view of the known ag gressive character of Japan. I am un able' to understand how you can ad vise that we formally assent to the Shantung grab, in the most solemn form of international agreement, ex pecting to break its force by some In formal agreement, if there be such, that can have no really binding force Can we serve world democracy bet ter than to stand resolutely to that clause in the old declaration "'gov ernments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed"? S. D. ALLEN. The Japanese programme regarding Shantung as announced by the Japa nese peace envoys is In substance to restore Kiaochow; to operate the Tslngtao-Tsinanfu railroad as a joint Singo-Japanese enterprise without any discrimination against other na tionals. Chinese policing the road; to establish in Tsingtao a general for eign settlement, instead of an ex clusive Japanese settlement: com pletely to withdraw the Japanese troops now guarding: the territory upon completion of these arrange ments with China. Since assurance of this programme was given at the peace conference it has been affirmed by the Japanese foreign minister. In view of the correspondent's own citations of disregard for written stip ulations in the past by Japan, we fail to see how a more formal understand ing would be more binding. Japan is in actual possession of the former German leasehold In China. It re fused at the peace conference to re linquish any part of its control ex oept on the terms herein related. We can accomplish nothing by refusing assent to the Shantung portion of the treaty, but by ratifying the treaty, together with the league of nations covenant, we acquire a position in which we can see that the terms of the supplementary understanding are carried out. Our benevolent attitude toward China, la protecting It from foreign encroachment is not so clear as the correspondent makes out. The Portsmouth treaty was concluded through the good offices of our own president. Instead of protesting Us terms we took consid erable pride in the achievement- Yet that treaty transferred to Japan the Russian leasehold of Kwantung, in cluding Port Arthur; actual exeroi.se of sovereignty over that region; con trol and management of the South Manchurian railway, and the right of Japanese troops to police the line. WAITING. He Is goi-e; "The hours of waiting grow ever longer. The memory of what he was to me grows ever stronger. He never will return, 1 know It now. He Is gone; I pass him room a hundred times a day. The things he valued moat have all been laid away. I know he'll never use them any more. Yet there they'll wait and wait. He is gone; Here is his desk, and here his big arm chair. I used to sit upon the arm. and there Is where his slippers hung, he loved the fireplace so! He gave it up. he felt that he must go. Now he is gone. He Is gone; I'll never see his face by firelight glow, Somewhere he rests, it must be damp and low. But seas and dreary lands lie all be tween And no one knows the place. Yes. he Is gone. I couid not bear to wait his lost foot fall. To think I heard, yet know It was not he. But' there are thousands more who wait their all Like me, where empty sounds alone will be With them I wait. .RAYilOSD Ji BAKER. Those Who Come and Go. "With the modern methods now em ployed, any precious metal that es capes will be awful tired trying It," declared Hal J. Slsty, at the Hotel Portland. Mr. Slsty is operating a mining property 14 miles belpw Grants Pass, which he bought last spring. Next year he will have a six-Inch stream of water, with S30 pounds head to squirt at the ground and this will make the dirt fly. He Is also Interested In a clnnlbar prop erty In southern Oregon. The man from whom Mr. Sisty bought the gold mine used an old hand cradle along the creek for six weeks last sum mer and took out $400 in gold and $70 In platinum. For a generation the -miners along the Rogue river dumped platinum-bearing sandB into the stream and probably thus threw away more of this metal than they recovered gold. Mr. Sisty's property is supposed to be an extension of the same formation as the celebrated Greenback, which has produced many millions of dollars in gold. While Mr. Sisty says he doesn't expect any thing remarkable, he looks for a good revenue from his enterprise. Having sold $25,000 of apples from his 40-a.cre orchard at Yakima this year, J. O. Shadbolt. accompanied by his wife, and Miss A Shively of Los Angeles, are on a motor trip to the south. They arrived at the Mult nomah yesterday and intended driv ing to San Francisco, but the road construction on the Pacific highway has Inducted them to alter the plan, so they will ship their car and re sume the gasoline route from the Golden Gate city. In addition to the Yakima orchard, the Shadbolts also own an orange farm at Redlands. CaL They spend each winter at Redlands. The recent freeze did not hit the ap ples In Yakima valley. "From Glen dale to the Columbia river," says ths tourist, "we came over two stretches of country road which for a long dis tance had no turn out. but fortu nately we did not meet any rig or car. It was a relief to get on the pavement of the Columbia river high way." Master of the State Grange Spence is preparing to leave for the east next week to attend the annual meet ing of the national grange. Mr. Spence says that he does not expect any action to be taken relative to a triple alliance meeting in Oregon before his return. The triple alliance is a plan proposed by the executive board of the State Federation of I-a-bor to include that organization, the state frrange and the farmers' union. Nothing has officially been presented to the officers of the state --grange on this matter, explains Mr. Spence. although there have been rumors of such a possible alliance for some time past. Regarding the national grange meeting. Mr. Spence says he does not know of any special matter which is to be taken up by that body. "More houses are needed In Corval 1 is." says Sam Elliott, a merchant of the college town. "Houses are at a premium and there in a brisk demand for real estate. The college has a record attendance of students and all the business men report conditions at high tide. Corvallis always attracts a large number of families, the par ents wishing; to be in town while their children are attending the agricul tural college, and with the increased enrollment there Is an increased num ber of families seeking quarters. Scores of people were unable to find houses and had to return to their home towns." If anyone in Portland has a hollv hedge that he would like to have neatly trimmed. Fred Marcus of Salem is willing: to do the Job. Mr. Mangus arrived from Salem yesterday to scout around and see if he could ...... .iw.ij . . . ' . o lu3uw. ms object ia ulterior, for he is auixlous to secure a large quantity ot noiiy cut tings for commercial purposes. He is shipping out carload lots and, hav- able supply in Salem and vicinity he ncaucu lur ruruano to aiscover new sources. What the people of Burns are very much interested In at present is bet ter mail service. C. A. Smith of Burns, who is at the Imperial, wants to see the time when the mall is brought across country by auto from Bend. When this Is accomplished Burns mail will he only one day late, instead of two as at present. The Oregon state chamber of commerce is now trying to brine this about. "Tillamook Is doing very well, in deed." nays p. J. Worrell, proprietor of the Tillamook hotel, who is regis tered at the Hotel Oregon. The hotel business In the cheese county Is more thriving now than ever before and In this respect reflects conditions throughout the state, and for thai matter, throughout the United States. At 4 A. M. yesterday the hotels had unexpected guests. The train from Astoria had something wrong with II and Instead of arriving at 8 P. M. Wednesday night it ambled in Thurs day at dawn, unloading a very tired and uncomfortable crowd of passen gers. . Frank Wrightman, one of the best known lodgers, or lodge men, in Salem, is in the city. Mr. Wright man had charge of the celebration the day that the bridge across the Willamette connecting Marion and Polk counties was opened. , J. S. Hawthorne of Astoria, and Alex Gilbert of Seaside, have been in Portland attending the cement trial In the federal court. They were sum moned as witnesses by the govern ment to testify as to the prices of cement In their respective towns. W. M Ryan, who served as an over seas secretary for the Knights of Co lumbus and had charge of the wel fare work of this organisation in Italy, will go to Mount Angel to morrow to give a talk to the stu dents at the college. Mrs. G. W. Short of Wilbur.. Or., registered at the Multnomah, is one of the most active wo'men in the re publican party In this state. She Is a member of the Douglas county com mittee and has never failed to attend its meetings since her appointment Mrs. B. O. Shuckllng of Salem Is registered at the Benson. Mrs. Shuck ling was connected with the home service department of the American Red Cross during the war. Herman Wobbler, general manager of the Paramount pictures distribu tion on the Pacific coast, was among the Benson arrivals yesterday from San Francisco. Since he has commenced working his mining property in eastern Ore gon. Harry M. Qulnn no longer reg istered at the Benson from Seattle, but from Baker. H. R. Hoe fie r, who is building a new hotel In Astoria, is at the Ben son. Also at the Benson is A. G. Hoefler. his brother, from Buffalo, New York. Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Hudson of Bend, are at the Benson. Mr. Hudson ia In the banking business in the central Oregon metropolis. E. B. Lockhart of Salem, who has been soldiering in France. Is on IS is way home. He registered at the Per kins yesterday. TRAFFIC LAW AT ITEBSECTIOXS Daty Is WHk Car sit Ieft Avaslel Collisions 1st All Cases If Possible. PORTLAND, Oct. 30. (To the Edi tor.) It seems to me that the traffic regulation regarding right of way at street Intersections should be more explicit. Just merely stating that the car coming in from the right has the right of way means, if understood as stated, that the relative speed as well as position of the cars must be taken Into consideration by the respective drivers. Driving north on Sixth street, I en tered the Burnside Intersection at ten miles an hour. I saw a Hudson "speed er" about half way down the block coming west on Burnside at about 25 miles an hour. We met about even on the north line of Burnside. Which of us had the right of way? The fel low on the Hudson abused me and threatened to have me arrested. My understanding of the regulation is that If the machines enter the in tersection at or about the same time the right Is with the machine on the right: but if the car on the left enters the Intersection while the other car Is still on the street, the car on the left has the right of way. This Is an Important point and a ruling on it should be published broadcast. P. J. HOLOHAN. Municipal Jut ge Rossman, who has studied this question at length and has passed on innumerable cases In volving intersections, says: When two machines are so situated at an Intersection that if both continued to progress they would collide, it is the duty of the machine to the left to allow the machine to the right to pass through the intersection In safety. It makes no dif ference whether the one is In the Intersec tion or not. If they are so situated that they would collide If both kept on going at a lawful speed the machine to the leit must avoid the collision. Even If the ma chine to the right is speeding, the machine to the left of it hss sn opportunity to avoid a collision, must do so. Judfre Rossman said that there are a great many instances where more than two streets intersect at the same place or where an extremely narrow street intersects a wide one or where there is a jog in one of the streets at an intersection, and consequently the strict letter of the law providing that the machine entering the intersection first has the right of way cannot be adhered to. Lieutenant Davis, head of the traf fic department, said that !t Is cus tomary for his officers to consider the machine entering an Intersection first to have the right of way. He said the matter was one of the big questions in traffic work, however, and there were many cases where judges had held against this. In a damage case in the circuit court the judgment was given against the owner of a car who was inexpe rienced and was driving rapidly, al though he collided with a car which he approached from the right. In that Instance the collision was unavoidable 1 by the car to the left, which was driv en with proper caution. tiRKATKIt IK.X C'K IX SHUDUIKS Oreacon (ireiter More llar,mel There by Than by Foreign Wol. I PORTLAND. Oct. 3'). (To the Edi j lor. I In The' Oregonian 1 noted re 1 ' e -t'.y that the Suite Chamber of inerce had wired to Washington otent against the auction sale of uuls announced by the British gov I ernnient. The intent of this, of ; course, was .to protect the western v ool grower againn competition. Much an the sheep men of the Pa. cilic coast would like to eliminate competition with foreign-grown wools. Hnd muc-h as he must aunrcci- ! ate the assljiiance the Slate Chamber of Commerce is trying to uive him, he would do well to ask this hedy to snd its protest to Washington against his greatest of all competi tors, namely, shoddy being sold as wool. This competitor i four times greater than all the foreign wools, as what is sold 'he world over as "'all wool" Is only 20 per cent virgin wool. The olher 80 per cent is shoddies made principally from old. worn-out clothing and rags often gathered from the cutters and ash barrels. The selling of these i-hoc dies for wool is what has done so much harm to the sheep and wool-growing in dustry In the past, and is r.lso one of the it-fat -auscs of profiteering in the piesent hi;h prices of clout ing, as the consumer is sold Rood and clothing labeled "ll wool" (which, of course, he takes to be "vlrRin wool") that are often made wholly or partly from thfse shoddies that n.ay have been worked and worked over again many '.tmes. Of course, they have lost most of its vi tality and wear resistance. Ana yet the law allows these man ufacturer! to make up this stuff and sell it as all wool, and the wool grower of Oregon I. as to meet this competition. the consumer buying this stuff at the hlsh prices, thinking he Is getting virgin wool, and only finrhs out he has been fleeced when the garment do's not wear. As there Is no known chemical test that will tell shoddies from virgin wocl, and as the State Chamber of Commerce. 1 am sure, wishes to pro tect one of Orison's greatest Indus tries, and aluo wishes to protect the consumers against this fraud and de ception, and put them in a position thut they can get cheaper clothing. I think It would be well if we were to ask that body to wire Washington asking the goveti-ment to compel the manufacturers of these fabric-, to mark their goods, whether made from virgin wools or shoddy, and if part of each, state the quantity, as the manufacturer is the only one who can tell what the cloth Is muCe from. This would protect the sheep indus try, the honest manufacturer, the re liable merchant, and the great mass of consumers who would then oe nble to buy the quality of gocds they wished. CHARLES COOKF.Y. Chairman Merchandite Committee, National Association of Merchant Tailors. Dealer 1st Rare Boska. PORTLAND. Oct. 30. (To the Edi tor.) I have nine volumes of the works of William Shakespeare, with the corrections and illustrations of Dr. Johnson. G. Stevens and others, revised by Isaac Reed. These were taken from the fifth London edition and printed In 1S10 at Boston. Would you kindly advise what you think these books are worth now. and who one would want to see in regard to selling them? P. N. Send your Inquiry to Brentano's. New York. The address given Is sufficient. The Oregonian cannot estimate the value of rare editions. Relative of S t onev n 11 Jarkaon. ROSE BURG. Or.. Oct. 29. (To the Kditor. ) Please tell me if any of General Stonewall Jackson's relatives are living and their addresses. MRS. t. K. MAY. The widow of "Stonewall" Jackson. Mary Anna Jackson, died March 24. 1915. There was one daughter, but available biographies do not give in formation as to her whereabouts. You may possibly obtain information by writing to the Observfr. Charlotte. N. C. that town having been the home oX Mrs. Jackson. More Truth Than Poetry. By James J. Msatajtar. TAKE YOCR CHOICE. Don't take all your trivial troubles to bud Don't let email annoyances fret you. Don't think that some day you are bound to be dead. There is nothing that worry caul get you! Begin every day with a snatch of s song Whatever the load that you carry. Have a smile, on your lips as you Jour ney along. Success always pomes to the) merry. Nobody can gain either wealth, o re nown Who travels through life with a groan and a frown! Don't take things too easy in this vale of tears No trial Is so light yon can flout it. Success will not come with the flight of the years Unless you get worried about it Remember no great man has ever been born Who wasn't a martyr to sorrow. The serious men are rhe. ones who'll adorn The roster of glory tomorrow. Wherever you're placed you are cer tain to need Abundance of grief if you're coing to succeed. The opening stanza an optimist wrote The second, and rather the worse "un, We have, taken the liberty freely to quote From the pen of a pessimist person. You may get along if you follow the plan That's laid down by tbe optimist brother You may be a famous and prosperous man If you follow the rule of th other. We're badly mixed up by the words? of the two And therefore, dear reader, we leave It to you! Ask Si, He Knows. Since the prohibition law went into effect the farmer's hops are wonder ing what has become of all the apples that used to be left under the trees. Itonrness Genius. 1st Fart. The 4-months-old calf which Is worth $75,000 already must have been singularly frugal and industrious. Hardly W orts Considering. The New London builder who offers his carpenters beer and sandwiches every afternoon at three will have to go to terrapin and champagne if he wants to get any help. (Copyright. 1919. by the Bell Syndi cate, Inc.) Moods. By (.race K. Hall. Swift winged and fleet, with the racing breese And never a thought of fear. The bird on his fragile pinions flees Ahead of the gale's rough blast; There's a swerve and a dip. now there, now here. As over the writhing trees He circles wide in his aerial pride, Eluding the storm at last. Some hours go by in the eelf-eame way. With laughter and dance and song. With never a fret the livelong day And emileo at the danger flag: The heart is a-wing with happiness. Sheer joy is speeding along. And we best the gale when we blithely sail With spirits that never lag. Then again: in a dungeon dreary With a hall to his ankle caught, A prisoner sad and weary Lives dismally through the hours. And oft are our days as heavy. With anguish and long-ire fraught. As the chain and ball wits, their grue some pall That sap all his splendid powers. In Other Days. Twestj-flve lean Ago. From The Oregonian of October 31. 14. The final order of the court for the sale of the-i)regoit Pacific road -December SI at Corvallis has been given. Tl Is rumored that Marcus Daly. Mon tana millionaire, may purchase the line. The Oregon Railway & Navigation company has launched a new boat at Rlparia to take the place of the Snake river boat Annie Faxon, which was blown up a year ago. K. B. Hardt. manager and financial backer of the Portland Holiday ex position, arrived yesterday from Ta coma. - Markets of the city are full of game, including venison. ducks, grouse and quail. Hewer of President. PORTLAND. Oct. 30. (To the Kdi tor.) Under the constitution of tie United States has the presiderit the power to employ the entire stand ing army and navy any time, any place, anywhere without the consent and acquiesence of congress? C. E. ROB EN SON. Such power is not specifically given to the president, but its exercise in certain cases Is plainly implied in the provision that "'the executive power shall be vested In a president" in con junction with the purposes of the con stitution stated in the preamble. Among these purposes are to "estab lish Justice. Insure domestic tran quillity, provide for the common de fense, promote the general welfare." These words imply that the presi dent has authority to employ the armed forces in enforcing the laws, in suppressing rebellion and in re pelling Invasion, relying upon con gress to validate his acts and ex penditures. If they exceeded his legal authority but were obviously neces sary to the purposes named. As to the employment of the army and navy abroad, the president may lawfully .do so In fulfilment of the terms of treaties. whi.Jt have the force of law. This would cover the many Interventions in Panama before that republic became independent, also the occupation of Santo Do mingo. Troops were sent to Arch angel nd Siberia for the purpose of prosecuting the war on Germany, which was declared by congress. In case of war the president Is pre sumed to have authority to attack the enemy and his allies at any point, and there Is no reasonable doubt that the soviet government of Russia is allied with Germany. It stands to reason that the neces sities of the case sometimes demand action so prompt that it cannot await a formal declaration of war by con gress, as In the case of attack on the American flag or American forces. In such cases the president may act first and obtain authority afterward, subject to the restraint arising from the knowledge that he would be liable to impeachment for an arbi trary exercise of power against a country with which we had and ds siccd no quarrel.