lO TITE 3IORMXG OKEGOXIAX, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1919. iftormujj rattan been at large to poison the air with their foul mouthings. All the forces of the law, from ESTABLISHED BY HEXKY I.. PITTOCK. j president to constable, should be mo bilized to stamp out treason and sedi tion. Every member of any revolu- Publjshed by The O-eeonian Publishing Co.. lou Sixth Street, Portland, Oregon. C. a. murden, k. b. pifkr, Manager. Editor. The Oregonian ia a member of tho Asso ciated Press. The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for publica tion of ail news dispatchas credited to it or not otherwise credited in this naper and a.so the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. Subscription Raleo lavariably In Advance (By Mal!. vnily, Sunday Included, one year ... Sally. Sundav included, six months . Lculy. Sunday included, three months. P-.lIy. 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De troit. Mich. San Francisco representative, R. J. Bidwell. , .18.00 4 45 .'. ".73 . . 6.00 .. 8.2R ... .0 . . 1.00 . . -J.r.o .. 3.50 .$9 (10 . 3.1!5 . .75 . 7.80 . 1.85 . .68 tionary society, I. W. W., Union of Russian Workmen or whatever it may be, should be arrested and pun ished according to the measure of his guilt. When the law once gets its clutch on them, it should not let them go, on bail or any other pre text, unless they should be acquitted. If there is not enough law to hold them, it is the duty of congress and the state legislatures to enact laws to meet the emergency. Even if this shuld involve imprisonment of 100, 000 persons, it should not cause hesi tation. No difficulty was found in accommodating almost a million German prisoners . in countries far more densely populated. If there is not room enough in jails and peni tentiaries, stockades can be built. Plenty of ex-soldiers' will be found willing to guard them.' Men who at tack the United States from within are as dangerous as any boche who attacked it from without. They have declared a class war; let them have it not a war between labor and capital as. they falsely call it but a war between American democ racy and red communism. panying explanation that "the prin cipal obstacle in solving them proved to be the brief time allotted." No room for cart-horse intelli gence there. None of the "slow in judgment but quick in action" tem perament that we used to value somewhat, as a counteractant of the hair-trigger style of thinking that so often leads one astray. From whales to peace treaties, it is going to be speed that counts. Now who is there who will contend that we do not live in a speed-mad age? Let us concede that every intelli gent person, that every young man worth spending a college professor's time on, ought to be able to answer in .178 of a minute the question: "Is a whale a fish?" But suppose that the examiners had substituted "por poise" or "dolphin" for whale! Or suppose that they had insisted on knowing whether Article X of the covenant obligates the United States to interfere in the affairs of another continent! We dread the conse quence to future matriculation in the colleges of the United States. THE CENTKAIIA TRAGEDY AND ITS LESSON. No palliation can be found for the dastardly crime of the I. W. W. in killing four and wounding three vet erans of the great war at Centralia. The American Legion was celebrat ing victory in a war in which the rnited States had exerted its whole strength against an effort to subdue all free nations and destroy free Government, when a band of I. W. W. opened fire. The attack was plainly the result of a deliberate Con spiracy by a band of fanatics, in flamed by hatred of the American constitution to destroy the govern ment by slaughter of its most valiant champions. Although the lynching of Smith cannot be condoned, it can be ex plained. The people, not the officers of the law. drove the murderers from their hiding place, captured them and took them to jail. The ma chinery of the law had broken down or there would have been no I. W. W. at large to commit the murders. For their own preservation the peo ple of the oily had been compelled to take again into their own hands the authority which their elected of ficers had neglected to exercise. They had caught Smith redhanded, for he shot Hubbard in a final effort to escape. What wonder that, having been driven to perform the duty of arresting the murderer, they should to on to the next step and execute him? It was deplorable and repug nant to regular methods of executing justice, but the ultimate responsibil ity must be passed on from the lynchers to the officials whose neg lect 'to execute the law had left the I. W. W. free to commit other crimes. The Centralia tragedy should burn the fact into the minds of all persons entrusted with enforcement of the law that the I. W. W. and all similar revolutionary urgiAiiiactLiuii& .i e o t gaged in war on the United States. Though they are scattered through our own country, many of them American citizens and ostensibly pursuing peaceful vocations, they are as truly making war on us as were the Germans until a year ago. They are worse enemies than the Germans, for the latter were in mili tary organization, in uniform and' took the- risks of war, while these skulking miscreants are disguised as non-combatants, in civilian costume and without defined organization. They have followed guerilla meth ods and have enjoyed immunity be cause they have hitherto not resorted to the recognized' methods of war. But wrecking machinery, defiling food, spiking logs, sowing sedition, obstructing the draft are only milder acts of war than open attacks on loyal citizens. Because they have been permitted to commit these lesser crimes with impunity, they have been emboldened to the greater crime of murder. There has been and still is lack of zeal and energy on the part of officers of the law, federal, state and municipal. It springs from that tolerance for any scoundrel who yretends that his crimes are com mitted in the cause of "labor" and who brands his prosecutors as per secutors of labor, which moved Pres ident Wilson to seek clemency for the multi-murderer, Mooney, to send parlor bolshevist agents to make peace with Lenine and until recently to adopt only mild measures against tedition and even treason. That same spirit has permeated the ad ministration of the law throughout the country in these critical tpmes, which demand severity guided by strict justice. The state of . Wash ington has a law declaring member ship in the I. W. W. a crime, and at least one man was convicted under tt during the war, yet we find the I. W. W. in possession of headquar ters on the main street of Centralia, from which it extended Its organiza tion to the logging camps whence it had been expelled and from which it has now made a murderous attack on the men who have the highest claim to the gratitude of their coun try. The I. W. W. is again invading the lumber industry and has made its way into the merchant fleet, damaging engines and inciting crews to mutiny. The measures so far taken to crush this infamous conspiracy against the republic are ineffective. The de partment of justice arrests more than a thousand members of this and kin dred societies, but releases more than half of them, merely holding aliens for deportation. It obtains conviction and sentence of Haywood, but the courts set him free on bail while his appeal is pending. He uses his liberty to repeat the crime of which he was convicted, and boasts of the fact. The prosecuting officers of Washington permit the law against the I. W. W. to become a dpad letter. An I. W. W. meeting in Portland is raided and among the prisoners appear several men who have been arrested several times, but who are still at large and still spouting hatred of" the republic. All tbeir indignation is reserved for the men who hanged their fellow-conspirator and murderer Smith: they have not a word of condemnation for him and the other murderers of the soldiers. They will soon be martyr izing Smith as a hero of the "class war." and heaping opprobrium on those who hanged him as "minions d capiUi.lur-11." They should not have EASILY-MADE ANAKCII1STS. Even those who deeply sympathize with the movement to lessen the law's delays and thus make better citizens will wish that there were fewer individuals among us of so un stable equilibrium that they are lia ble to be turned from good men into bad ones by a passing circumstance. The Carnegie Foundation's report on the "Law's Delays and the Poor," to which reference has been made heretofore, relates a number of in stances that illustrate the point. There was, for illustration, a painter who had done a job for which he was to have received $6.60. Payment was refused him .by a dishonest cus tomer.. He appealed to a lawyer, who told him that court costs and attorney's fees would amount to $10. Then he went to a judge of the mu nicipal court, who under the law could give him no help unless he de posited certain sums to cover fees prescribed by a statute which is ad mittedly unwise and which it la now proposed to amend. The- report continues: "As the man told his story, sitting in the office of the le gal aid society, he was an incipient anarchist." A good many are so fortified by the inward spirit of independence that they would resent the insinua tion that they could be turned into anarchists by a dispute over $6.60, or even a much larger sum. The ad ministration of the law may be, and probably is, cumbersome enough, and undoubtedly it calls for prompt reform, but the most inadequate mo tive yet suggested for a great re form movement is that it will bribe people to be good citizens for $6.60 apiece. ' Even with its unfortunate omis sions, the structure of the law is sound, and the really essential prog ress that has been made in recent years suggests that there are better ways of obtaining substantial justice than by going bolshevik. One won ders, indeed, whether there may not have been too much harping on this bolshevik-peril string. It betokens a lack of faith in one's own neighbors and countrymen such as Abraham Lincoln never had in the nation's darkest hour. This lack of faith is almost as uncomplimentary to those afflicted with it as to those whose moral stability they profess to doubt THE AtrUEMV OF TXDl'STBT. The incident, reported in the Eu gene Register, of a fruitgrower in the bottom country near Kugene who as just received a checker $771.31 as the proceeds from a single acre of raspberries illustrates what can be one with opportunity in Oregon. This yield, as the Register points out. ; equal to a profit, after making beral allowance for expenses, of 6 per cent on an investment of $10,000 Cutting this in two, it would repre sent the equivalent of a 6 per cent on 000, and dividing it by ten would still make 6 per cent on an acre worth $1000. The outstanding fact. owever, is that land equally good for the purpose, and for other, prof- table purposes, is obtainable at prices far under even the minimum f $1000 an acre, while the market for its produce ia continuous, and the chief requirements are patience, per sistence and old-fashioned industry uch as contributed far more than the land itself to making this par ticular berry patch commercially successful. The $771 berry acre is perhaps as exceptional as the $10,000 grower who made his little garden blossom nd yield its ripe red fruit that was instantly converted "by the al chemy of industry into golden dol lars; bat both set a mark that ought to be approximately . attainable. There is no doubt at all that under skillful management even average management farming under pres ent circumstances can be made to pay. We do not, of course, make farm- ng pay by only talking about it. Without knowing all the details, one is safe in venturing the ass ;on that this particular berry grow . worked earnestly and diligently at his busi ness. It is always the way with sue- essful men. Not only is this true. but nearly always those who are earnest and diligent have a some what similar story to tell. Success n such commonplace ways is no esoteric mystery. The recipe is within the reach of nearly everyone. ndustry, it will be found, is the chief ingredient. MORE TESTS OF INTELLIGENCE. It is a good sign that the move ment for substitution of psychology cal tests for entrance examinations for colleges is itself to be put to a further test before final adoption. The purpose of the so-called psycho logical test, as has been explained heretofore, is to determine the de gree of Intelligence possessed by the applicants rather than, as formerly, the precise amount of information that he may have stored away by cramming or otherwise. And re cently 1.600 undergraduate students of three departments of the TJniver sity of Pennsylvania, besides students in twenty-seven colleges and univer sities throughout the state, have been called on to serve as educa tional guinea pigs for the purpose stated. In a list of questions included In the new intelligence test we find this one: "All fishes are cold-blooded The whale is not cold-blooded. There fore the whale is not a fish. Under line true or false." The logic of the proposition is faultless, yet the state ment as a whole is confusing enough Modern zoology sets the whale down as a "cetacean," and the dictionaries define cetacean as "an order o completely aquatic, mostly marine, mammals." But the dictionary also defines "fish" as "in the broadest sense a designation of any exclu sively aquatic animal, vertebrate or invertebrate.". This "usage is tech nically obsolete, or is becoming rare among educated people, except in certain phrases." And again, as to fishes: "Their blood is cold (in some large forms somewhat warm)." Th point here is not that the whale is or is not a fish. It will be conceded that in the view of educated people it is not. But what shall be said of the question as a test of intelligence rather than of information? Psychology becomes more inter esting when it is made concrete. From a statement by a well-known public man, the following is taken as the basis of further examination of the candidates: The day of conquest and aggrandize ment is gone by. as Is also the day of secret covenants entered into in the in terest of particular governments and likely at some unlooked-for moment to upset the peace of the world. From the following interpreta tions, the student is required to choose two that are applicable: Secret covenants are no longer to be tolerated. This is an age of conquest and aggrandisement. Secret covenants are likely to lead to wars. Nations should not have secret understandings with other nations. Probably this test is fair enough. Yet it will not have escaped obser vation that a number of United States senators, judging from the difficulty they are having with in terpretation of the peace treaty and their failure to agree upon issues not less fundamental than the foregoing, would not be able to pass a psycho logical college entrance examination in Pennsylvania. The essence of intelligence is quick thinking, it seems, from the circum stance that the student is expected to read, ponder and inwardly digest 168 questions, of which the foregoing are said to be fair specimens, and write his answers in 30 minutes. We are not much surprised by the accotn- bodies. It must be apparent to those who desire to preserve the unions but who oppose revolution that, if the radicals remain in control, ar- rest and prosecution of their leaders with public approval will end in de struction of the unions. The true unionists may be impelled to gather their forces for a new fight to win control of the national and local fed erations or may abandon them to th radicals and form new, rival organi zations. No opinion could be more errone ous than that employers in general or the people at large are hostile to labor unions. .All recognize that the Impulse to combine is so strong and universal as to produce some form of organization among workmen. With few exceptions, employers would gladly deal with a strongly or ganized body of the best workmen in a trade, which would make and keep a bargain like a responsible business man and which would in good faith arbitrate disputes when direct nego tiation failed, since the alternative would be mushroom, secret, ill or ganized and irresponsible unions which would spring up suddenly and announce their existence by a strike. The source of most of the opposition to unions has been that their meth ods seemed to put a premium on strikes. They sought quantity in stead of quality of membership, be cause officers wanted to make sure of their salaries and of a big strike fund. New members joined in ex pectation of a strike for more wages. Officers are paid while members arc on strike but the latter get nothing. and in some unions certain officers are paid double salary during strikes. If all is peace and relations with em ployers are harmonious, interest lags, some members drop out and others, itching for a strike, think they get nothing for their money. Such a condition made the field ripe for the activity of the radical, whose aim is to use the union as a means of revolution and to destroy it. at the same time as a part of the hated "capitalist" system. That fate may be averted -only by forming new unions which make skill and charac ter qualifications for membership, avoidance of strife their main object and the interest of their officers, and amicable settlement of relations with employers their method of operation. If such unions proved themselves responsible by keeping their con tracts and disciplining members who broke them, if they relied on these qualities and the skill and character of their members, they would prob ably find employers eager to deal with them and a demand for the closed shop would be unnecessary. There would be no room for Sam uel Gompers in these unions, for they would resist radicalism, while he has yielded to it, perhaps against his convictions, in his anxiety to hold his job. Unions of this type could and should be a positive force for support of the government and would not accept leaders of the Gompers type. Stars and Starmakers. , By Leoa C'aa Birr, BY-PRODUCTS OF THE PRESS. AMERICAN TRADE EXPANDING. Americans are not waiting for completion on a large scale of ar rangements to finance foreign trade. They are reaching out into the tjew lates or Liurope ror development en terprises and into Germany as well as the allied countries for markets for manufactures. The American Czecho-Slovak corporation has been established in Czecho-SIovakia to conduct import and export trade, and American engineers have prepared! plans for railroads in Jugo-Slavia, tor which both capital and -materia: are to come from America. Another American syndicate has bought all the stock of Serb and Croat shipping companies on the Danube and its tributaries. American automobile tires are be ing sold in Germany, though German lubber factories have enough raw material to supply the market. American chemical manufacturers have driven the Germans out of the home market and are invading Hol land and Scandinavia. There is also a growing market for American coal in Europe. Labor troubles have reduced exports from Britain to the point where Danish railroads are run with American coal, Italy calls for 500,000 tons a month and France must draw heav ily on this country until- Germany makes shipments required by the treaty. If adequate credits for Euro pean nations shoulrr be arranged there would be no practical limit to the market for American coal except. the capacity Of railroads and ships to transport it to seaboard and overseas J his is an added demonstration of the absurdity of the miners' plea that it was necessary to reduce working hours in order that there might be enough work to go around. The prime requisites to swelling of foreign trade to full flow are ratifi cation of the German treaty, stabili zation of exchange by giving Europe long credit for what it wants to buy, cessation of labor disturbances and capacity production. There is abun dant demand for all that we can pro duce. The obstacles to sales are ob stacles to placing the goods in the hands of would-be consumers and to financing the sales. There is work f.nough for all, not only for five six hour days a week, but for six eight hour days a week. By doing that workmen can most effectively re duce prices and thereby raise wages. The Boy Scouts are campaigning to urge better books for children's reading, but what is a "better" book? A man can remember "Rollo" and "Sanford and Merton" of the days of his youth, but he would call his wife into consultation if he found his boy reading them. What the boy of 1919 wants is something with action and there is plenty of the sort, with the moral a bit obscure, but there. A woman suing for divorce com plains that her husband made her sleep on the floor. Yet Chief Ulla latum, of the Warm Springs Indians, attributes his 106 years to the fact that he has always slept on the floor. Mayor Baker should not vex his soul in wrath because his constitu ents are slow about saluting the flag. The right-minded man does It in pride, but what can be expected of a feeble mind? Perhaps when a prosperous-look ing man is asked to buy a Red Cross button, a dollar may be all the mon ey he has and he hates td let go. Yet the Red Cross never hesitates to let go. A COINCIDENCE, during our stay In New York, I met the three Tittel sisters Minnie,. Charlotte and Essie Portland's histrionic favorites of yesterday. The trio have maintained a Lillian Russell attitude toward life and their complexions and figures. and folk who knew them 25 years ago and know them now say that they are as youthful, almost, and as stun ning as in the days when Cordray's theater housed! Essie and Minnie, and Charlotte was playing with Madame Modjeska. Charlotte is Mrs. Wallace Munro, and we had dinner with them and saw other theatrical celebrities one evening at their hotel. Mr. Munro is the manager of the Criterion thea ter, where "Thunder." with Burr Mc intosh in the title role, is playing. Mrs. Munro played a New York en gagement last season and has been highly successful as a wrrter of mag azine articles and sketches. Her big gest venture in a literary line is a play which will be produced In Janu ary, with herself in the title role Essie Tittel is now Mrs. George E. Crater, a sister-in-law of Mrs. Fred Stone, wife of the comedian. Essie has forsaken the stage en tirely for the studio. She has con tributed some fine canvasses to the academy and is now at work on a prize sketch for the Roosevelt memo rial. Minnie Tittel Is the wife of Captain C. M. Brune of the quarter master's department. United States army, and returned to America from England the week before our arrival in New York. She is a handsome, mentally alert woman, who saw four years' active, valiant service as, an ambulance driver and community service worker in the world war. Prior to the outbreak of the war Mrs. Brune had achieved enormous success In Australia and Britain in the plays of Sardou, Barrie and Pinero. Robert Blei, another old-time the atrical man of Portland, was in New York sight-seeing. Mr. Blei owns a huge ranch in southern California and goes to New York twice a year to see the various lights o' Broadway and take a look at the old location of Koster & Blals, where he made a bar rel of money when a New York im presario. m Another old-timer from Portland's theatrical colony Is W. H. Lytell, Billy" Lytell, mellowed by the years. He la now promoting a big spectac ular pageant to be given this season under ' the auspices of various fra ternal organizations which partici pated in the welfare activities of the American expeditionary forces. Mina Crolius Gleaeon made an Indi vidual success in a motherly role in new play called "Five o'clock." Frank Bacon helped write It, just as he helped write "Lightnin'," but he was going to withhold, he said, any prideful boasts about being a part author until after the opening night and he saw how New York received the play. "If it's a success 1 helped write it," he told me. "If it's a flivver, why the identity of the author will be covered in a fictitious name." The play is a really delightful thtng, with a dozen children in it. and lots of homely comedy, but it didn't make a big hit and will probably be re-written and tried again some where. Met Bide Dudley, who used to write a column of clever observations for the Denver Post, and is nowdoing the same clever work on a New York newspaper. A new musical comedy called "The Little Whopper" was one of the good things we saw. and we appreciated it possibly the more be cause Mr. Dudley had written the song lyrics. Otto Harbach wrote the book and Rudolph Friml the music. Sydney .Grant was in the cast, and Vivienne Segal. Kaiser Devoted to Crude Pranks on Official Staff. Captain Lothan" Perslus, German naval attache at Washington for a Those Who Come and Go. Centralia is more inflamed than j Skagway was when the Soapy Smith gang was cleaned out and I was in number of years long before the war, Skagway at the linm, and I was in and subsequently Germany's leading I Centralia when the armistice pa- naval critic, devotes a good deal of I raders were ambushed by the I. W. space In his "Personal Reminiscences" " . Bas petite sutler, nanKer oi to acrid ridicule of the once sacred " . lne f.enr person of the kaiser and to advocacy noori. vvh-r, i i..ft i-,r.n, of the proposition, that German of- body of Brick Smith, who killed Hub- ficers guilty of atrocities -should be bard, was still swinging from the punished, says the Berlin corre- bridge, and I guess it is still there, spondent of the New York Sun. Cap- Smith taunted the men who took him tain Persius says, "There are no great Jhm J" a"d "ald ey d'd. not ve , . . . , the nerve to hang htm. He mad a men in the eyes of their valets. Btatement before he swung off whicn tr:i i ; n , n ... . . . iinaiu ii. ncvei was a s,i cv ' nis executioners nave not made pub- More Truth Than Poetit By James J. Montague. Wouldn't adoption of the metric system be rather a dangerous ex periment? Just think of all the dry goods clerks who have their arms ad. justed to measuring out yards. In the eyes of anybody, although he was ever assuming aaheroic pose, whether the occasion was solemn or ridiculous. But William 11. in the eyes of his valets and attend ants was not only not great, he was even contemptibly small, mean and cowardly, enjoying the humiliation, degradation and pain he Inflicted upon those in his power. With my own eyes 1 have seen him dash the contents of a half filled champagne glass into the face of an admiral who happened to be standing near him on the bridge of a vessel. 1 saw him scrape the caviar off his sandwich and fling the mess into the eye of some officer of high rank unfortunately within reach of thei -imperial "joker." Of course, all these 'pranks' were perpetrated when his majesty was in a state of intoxica tion, which at times happened to oc cur early in the morning." Captain Persius states that Tirpitz remained so long in power because he would "stand for anything," even to permitting the kaiser to pull his whiskers and kick him in the stomach. Consumers of coal are advised to take warning from the case of Adam Williams, a farmer in Kansas. The case is reported by a physician in Wichita. Williams went to a coal deal er and asked what it would cost to heat his home for the winter. The coal dealer told him and Will iams fell dead. Physicians said his death was due to heart failure. lie. The man who killed Warren orimm . was seen by several oeoole who recognized him. He escaDed. There is another man the citizens want. It required the highest tvne of courage for citizens to persuade the crowd not to hang every man ar rested, and Smith was hanged because there was no question about him. and there are two more regarding whom there is no question. Lists of the wobblies' were found on the pris oners and on Brick Smith and they are being rounded up. I was tolrl there were 30 or more I. W. W. in jail when I left for Portland. Condi- tions-Jiave been bad in Centralia for some time past, and an ordinance which was prepared for the city com missioners to pass, under which the radicals could be dealt with, was -not passed. The massacre was deliber ately planned, the gunmen being planted in hotel and rooming house windows, and they opened fire on the unarmed, defenseless service men in the parade. I'm a law-abiding citi zen, not inclined to be blood-thirsty, but when I saw the crowd have a rope around the neck of one prisoner I felt a strong temptation to help pull the rope. The prisoner was rescued by the police." "Eat eggs and encourage produc tion," advises Professor Dryden of Corvallis. Yea, at 7 or 8 cents each: but why not put the butter and salt on the money and eat that? A University of Illinois professor says he has discovered an alloy sub stitute for gold and platinum. What more folks would be interested in is a substitute for money.' Just a suggestion to sheriffs and jailers for the coming Thanksgiving day dinner: Omit the turkey and trimmings this year. Why coddle the bad men? - .. Just about everything else has in creased in price but Red Cross mem berships. They are still the same old figure one dollar each. Get your button. The Japanese are reported to be no longer content with a rice diet. They have developed more refined tastes among others, for Hood Riv ;r apples. A 'vVncouveri Wash., man adver tised "100 year-old hens for sale." No doubt this was a misprint. What he meant was eggs. FUTURE OF LABOR I'MtkNS. Prohibition of a strike by the courts in defense of the public in terest as superior to that of the direct parties to the dispute and submis sion of the union in question while the Federation of labor and other unions urged defiance may prove a turning point in the history of labor unionism in the United States. There are already evidences of open divi sion between the members of the old established unions which believe in American democracy, sanctity of contracts and peaceable settlement of disputes and the new radicals who advocate revolution and regard strikes, violation of contracts, resist ance to law and violence as parts of their military strategy. The con Fervatives have so far fought a losing battle, for the radicals refuse to ac cept defeat as conclusive and come up for another battle tintil the con servatives give up in disgust and leave control of the organizations to the radicals. The tactics of the radicalHhave now aroused the hostility of the peo ple and have stirred the government to vigorous action against them and Mayor Baker wonders what's be come of the patriotism of yesteryear. Let someone start another war, and he'll soon find out. Ohio is "wet" by a few hundred majority, which is sad to contem plate: but a recount might make it sadder. To "be neighborly. Oregon will ap prove San Francisco's plan to get the republican convention. The miners' sun-tender rather left Jlr. Gompers in the air. A cold place in November. While we were at Niagara Falls the king and queen of Belgium and Prince Leopold were also seeing one of the seven wonders of the world at its. best. A mist had hung over the falls all morning, the natives said, but dramatically enough the sun came sailing through a billowy bank of clouds and made a rainbow above the thundering cataract just as their majesties reached the railing. They both had their cameras along and took a flock of pictures. The king said it was "wonderful." The queen selected another word. She said it was "grand." An airplane had es corted their special train into Niagara Falls. Cigarettes are due for another ad vance, but who cares? Not the smoker, at least. One touch of Nature makes the whole world kin. So does a crap game. Raid them off the earth is the law ful way. their allies, thu frankly revolutionary delay ? Start that rockpile. Whose is the Mildred Keats is doing a dance specialty with Raymond Hitchcock in "Hitchy Koo" at the Liberty. It's a musical piece and Miss Keats' artistry is notable and she is exceedingly pretty. Ona Munson, who was Owrna Wolcott before she changed her name for professional purposes, is on the road with George White and Ann Pennington in "Scandals of 1919." but a dozen newspaper folk told me that little Portlander is a capital dancer and the next sensation in stepping. Frances White's star is setting. She is getting fat, has a roily chin and is lazy in her movements. I saw her lead the chorus numbers at Zi-g-feld's Amsterdam roof, "Midnight Frolic." She never could sing, but she certainly could dance. She and William Rock have divided their ways and Billy has married a lovely young Knglish girl and Frances is doing a single. Fannie Brice in her trave"sty of the "Dying ' Swan," burlesqueing Pavlowa and the lesser Pavlowas who lio in for Saint Saens classic, is the comedy hit of the "Midnight Frolio." Sophie Tucker has her name in elec tric lights for the first time in New York and the whole place is crazy over her. She has a flock of new songs and clothes and is thinner. She Is featured in "Hello. Alexand?r." and after the show is over she is hostess ;;t. Ueisenwebier's supper-dance on the j.-cond floor, where she sings a programme betwreen dances and where the festivities are heightened by the impromptu performances of other professionals who drop In as srucsts. One night we counted two dozen, all well-known vatidevillians and legitimate performers, all through their own work, who acted just like children let out from school, and con tributed original acts that would have been knockouts on any circuit More next week. Speaking of the scarcity of houses. read this" from the London Daily Mail It was a small shop in a small side street, and I don't think I should have looked twice at It had it not been for the fact that I had run short of cig arettes. But when I saw "Tobac conist" over the window I pushed open the door and went in. I had to wait some time before any one appeared and then, to my sur prise, an immaculate young man came forward. "Hullo, hullo, hullo!" he said. "And what can we do for you today. old thing?" As 1 had never seen him in my life before, I was rather taken aback by his breezy manner. "I want some cigarettes," I said: " 'Diplomats.' if you have them." "Diplomats" Good gracious, no They've not been heard of In this be nighted quarter of the globe. 'Yellow Perils" are our limit. Suppose I can't tempt you with a pocket of thos what?" I smiled and shook my head. "Frightfully sorry, old thing." he went on. "Here, have one of these and he took out a silver cigarette case and offered It to me. "They aren quite as poisonous as some." I thanked him and took the ciuar ette. "rsothing else in our line. 1 sup pose?" he said. "We've got bags of snuff. Chocolates jolly old oranges and all the usual debris. Frightful old dump of a rhop. isn't it?'.' I had never met a Miopkeep-r quite like this one and I was interested. 1 took a long shot. "1 suppose you've hardly settled down yet?" I sf: id. "You're absolutely right, old thing." he replied. "I haven't, and, to be per fectly frank, I don't think T ever shall l m quite new to this game and it's about the mouldiest life I've struck so far. Perhaps you wonder why I'm doing U?" I made polite noises. "You see," he said, "while I was in the army I got married and ever since I was' 'demobbed' I've been trying to find a house. But it's a hopeless bus! ness. You can't get 'em. If any one makes a noise like moving furniture a queue forms up outside waiting to snatch the edifice as soon as it's empty. "I'd very nearly given up hope, when a man I know told me about this. The house part of it is quite good. The only drawback is the shop. I had to take that and the stock or else 1 couldn't have had the place at all. So I took it and here I am. I don't mind selling th stuff if anyone wants it. but, honestly, I haven't the least in terest in it. However, I've got house, and that, after all, is the great thing, isn't it?" "The shooting was in the street back of my house, and I heard it all. only. I thought it was a celebration going on during tiie parade" says Mrs. R. M. Wasson of Centralia, who arrived at the Hotel Oregon yester day afternoon. "Things have been pretty bad in Centralia for several weeks and have been getting worse. l'he officers haven't done right. The trouble seems to have started when the agent for a Seattle newspaper was ordered out of town. The offi cers had warning that something was going to happen on Armistice day, for five men stoie a taxicab in Port land, seized the driver when he was rear the interstate bridge, and drove to Centralia. where, after driving around the town, they threw the driver out. They told the driver they had committed 20 crimes in Portland and were icoing to Centralia 'to pull off something,' as Monday would be a legal holiday. The driver said that one or two of his kidnapers vvere service men. 'We have to feed the lion es when we can't get horse meat for him. At present prices I haven't the heart to stand around and watch the keepers beat up the egs," sighed Harry F. Hofer of Chlcaco. who ar- ived at the Hotel Portland yester day to remain here several months, as the show he is with is winterinz in this city. "We do our best, how ever, to provide horse meat. lor It is cheaper than eegs and is more fill ing, but with horses eoing out or date because of automobiles, in a few years we'll either have to put the i;on on a straight egg diet and go into bankruptcy or else slaughter the lion. The only other alternative is to edu- fite the monarch of the wildenress to feed on gasoline." The menagerie of the show is to be turned over to the Shriners for ceremonial parade pur poses. "A flour mill with a capacity of 150 barrels a day is a new industry startinar at Vale. announced Julien A. Hurley of that city, at the Imperial yesterday. "The mill cost. I should guess, about $r,o.iHu and is in a thrnc story buildiutr on the main str,t. This mill is the direct rebult of Iht? Warm Springs irritration project, for this project will produce wh-at and the mill has been started to grind it into flour. It is the old story otie ndustry attracts another. The irri gation project will have 40.0(H) acres under water next spring, of which Jti.iMio acres are new and the re maining JU.OdO have been partly irri gated in the past." THE VOICE IN THE NIGIlf Upon a midnight, cold and clen When slumber marks you fi own. You waken, with a start, to he. The tinkling of the telephone A sound that, heard in broad da: Possesses a peculiar charm. But, in the watches of the nigh Invests your soul with wild A You rise with palpitating dread And, through the deep and sp gloom You stagger from your downy Insteadily across the room. And, standing in the wintry br lour nightie flapping to and Athwart your weak and tren-l knees You feebly cry. "Hello! Hello "Hello! Hello" you feebly cry With chilling shanks and risln But you elicit no reply Except the singing of the w Lntil in soothing tones and low As if your troubled soul to ea A lady answers your "Hello" And softly says, "Excuse it,, plot "Excuse it. please!" when one Is From gentle slumber's tw zone As frightened as if Gabriel's ho Its awful reveille had blown! When ripped untimely from his W hen every nerve that he ha Is set on edge with cold and dr W ill he excuse it? He will N Alibied. There is a woman judge on th York bench and one reported ha called her a Portia. He is on a tion in the Adirondacks. If It Can Be Done. If Mr. Hoover wants to make hit he will do something abou conservation of after-dinner o. Eaay Money. Mexico will soon make enougl by selling our consuls back to us to fctart another war. tCopyright. 1019. bv the Bell Syndicate, Inc.! Modesty. By Grace E. Hall. Modesty is a jewel of unlimited value bestowed upon woman kind in tiie beginning of time, by the lapidary of the universe: It is ever at par in any country on the globe, and is correctly ap praised without knowledge of that country's language. Modesty is never mistaken nor mis interpreted, be the observer brilliant scholar or mental dullard: It is a passport to admiring respect among all men and in all na tions, and it is pointed out to the oung with loving admoni tions; She who loses this jewel or ignores it at once becomes an object of doubt and too often of unchari table suspicion: Forever after, her worth is ques tioned and her genuineness made a subject of speculative discussion. Substitute gems, worn in lieu of the one lost, deceive no one and make of the wearer a target for cheap jesters. No other adornt ent so well becomes womankind as does this perfect gem which is hers invariably at birth; other loss so pauperizes her in the marts of the world where characters are measured and weighed. wise indeed is she who cherishes this priceless gift above all others with which she has been blessed! More fortunate still the woman young or old. who wears it with an unconscious grace; is the dignity of genuine and lofty character insignia un mistakable of the true gentlewoman. No Oh. 11. In Other Days. From Andernach. Germany, to Little Rock, Ark., is a long leap, but that is the jump made by The Watch on the Rhine, an eight-page weekly newspa per that the men of the third United States division edited, printed and supplied regularly to 30,000 readers during the six months previous to the departure' of the division from Ger many In -August. The publication, be sides recording matters of interest re garding the troops still with the third division, which is located near Little Rock, at Camp Pike, aims specially to keep fresh the memories of the days with the A. E. F. and to echo the spirit of all those who have at any time been members of the division. The new office of the Watch on the Rhine, which is in room 306 Board of Commerce building. Little Rock, was opened October 18. and the first issue of the paper at its new location ap peared November 1. It is quite remai'Kaoie how a sons can gain popularity merely by its being sung In a good show by a gooa performer. Eddie Canton, singing "My Baby's Arms" in the Follies one week, shot the New York sales up to 15.000 over the previous week That Is why Tin Pan alley puts out the plush chair and the fat cigars when a stage singer drops In for a call. How ever, the song must have quality or it will not be sung, for the singer knows that -in the end he will lose. There are some actors who pick up extra money mentioning various articles. One got J101 a week for referring to a certain make of talking machine until the author of the play dropped in one night and heard the line. He almost slopped V'e. show and it was cut out after lhat.r V. P. Hubbard of Centralia. whose n was shot and killed by Brick Smith, the I. W. W. who was hanged for the crime, left the Hotel Portland yesterday for home. He had received a long-distance message Monday night saying that his boy was wounded, but was not informed that the wound was so. serious. Mr. Hubbard said, betore leaving for home, that he had "felt it coming," as there were serious condi tions existing in Centralia on account of the I. W. W. activities there. Mr. Hubbard declared that he went to the chief of police a week ago and urged that something be done to curb the reds, but the officials were weak kneed. Major Barney Day and Mrs. Day. who are at the Benson, are on their way to England. While in Los An geles some enthusiastic citizens sup posed the British major was Kins: Albert of Belgium and pelted htm with flowers, blooms. stems and thorns. The major was a liaison of ficer attached to the American expe ditionary forces for 17 months and wjts recommended Tor the distin guished service medal. Mrs. Day was Belgian girl was escaped through the enemy lines in the early days of the war. In advance of nine carloads of Herefords and shorthorns. Will Hen of Kansas City, arrived at the Im perial yesterday, via California. The stock has been on exhibition in Salt Lake. Los Angeles and San Francisco and will be at the livestock show in Portland next week. Mr. Hen states that there has been a wonderful at tendance at every show he has at tended this season. This building boom, caused by the demand for houses, has brought ac tivity for M .1. Campbell of Clats kanie. Mr. Campbell has a shingle mill which is so rushed with orders that the plant is operating at top speed. Mr. Campbell is registered at the Ho tel Portland. Owning five acres of walnut trees. Seymour Jones, former speaker of the Oi egon house of representatives, was in the city yesterday to look over the nut exhibit of the walnut grower' convention at the Multnomah. Most of his acreage is in prunes, says Mr. Jones, and while be did not get the top price for bis prunes by about S cents a pound, because he sold too early, he has no complaint to make at what he did receive. Among the walnut gtovrrs m the Multnomah are Mr and Mrs. L. S. O'is of Newherg: Mr. and Mrs. Fred tinnier of HiUshoro, Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Gilds of Yamhill and Mr. and Mrs. L. Herner of Carlton. Or. Two clergymen from ( 'oos county arrived at the Hotel Washington yes terday to attend a conference of the Episcopal church. They are Rev. W. E. Cooper of Coquille and Rev. .1. C. Black of Marshfield. W. J. Mariner, former member of the legislature: advocate of the "open river" and enthusiastic irrigationist, is registered at the Hotel Washington. Tvent-five eara Ann. Kroal The Ore.nian of November 13. lSt4. limlun a Shanghai dispatch says that Port Arthur was taken yesterday by the Japanese without resistance. The fete Breton and kirmess, given by 300 of Portland's best-known young people under direction of Miss Mar garet Mel Eager, was opened auspi ciously at the exposition building last night. The old Ainsworth residence at Third and Pine streets, occupied by the Arlington club until its new building was completed. is to be moved and a row of stone buildings will be constructed along Third street. W. 11. Doolittle of Tacoma, con gressman from Washington, arrived in Portland last night and will leave in a day or so tor Washington, D. C. I- r. l-'lfty Ycnrii Aku. in The Orefcoiiian f November 1.. Ihti'.f. Philadelphia General Ben K. Butler, while coming here rrom Washington, was robbed of his overcoat and undercoat in which there was $700 in cash and between $3000 and tlOOO in checks. J. N. Dolpii and family, who have been absent in eastern states since July, returned home yesterday, ar riving by steamer Ajax. The dedication of the Hebrew synagogue on Sixth street has been postponed until December 2 because needed paraphernalia has not ar rived. The steamer Ajax brought up two or three coops of pigs of the White Chester breed, imported from the east by Dr. Hawthorne. I'EOIM.l-: KAU. TO SAl.l'l'K rXA OniixKion Pnrtieularly Noticeable o line bu Haa Bern Oversea. PORTLAND, Nov. 12. (To the Edi- lor.) 1 have recently returned from two years' service in France and Ger many. In 'he former country the rev erence of the people for their national colors is extremely noticeable. I have seen numbers of parades when the colors were carried past but cannot recollect an instance when any civil ian has failed to remove his hat or a soldier to salute. It is inspiring. In Germany the rule is so strict that when otir colors were carried passt it large percentage of the German civ ilians removed their hats, partially from custom and partially out ol courtesy to any national colors. ThU did not, however, satisfy the American soldiers in Germany to have only a portion of the civilians saluting the flag, and biter guards were placed who walked abreast of the colors and removed, not too gently, any hats which did not come off more grace fully. Our soldiers learned to salute the colors and any who had failed to come to attention and snap up would have been frowned on by their companions. Today when the colors were carried past in the Armistice parade, it was extremely noticeable that very few civilians removed their hats and, Qf the men in uniform whom I saw amontf the spectators, not one saluted. It must be dimply thoughtlessness, and if such is the case little pub lb ii In established practices would bo in order. K. D. WOODRUFF. V I