10 TIIE MORNING OREGONIAN. SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 15, 1919 ESTABLISHED BY HENRY L. PITTOCK. Published by The Oreg-onian Publishing Co.. loO Sixth Street. Portland. Oregon. C. a. Mukden, e. b. piper. ilanagsr. Editor. The Oregonlan Is a member of ths Asso ciated press. The Associated Prses is exclusively entitled to the use for publica tion of all news dlspatchws credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rlchts of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. Subscription Rates Invariably in Ad TO nee. (By Mall.) Dally, Sunday included, one year $8.00 Jaily. Sunday included, six months ... 4.25 XJaily. Sunday included, three, months. Duily. Sunday Included, one month .. -J JJKily. without Sunday, one year J 00 x'uny. witnout Sunday, six montns raily. without Sunday, one month "Weekly, one year ............... 3.26 .60 1.00 2.S0 Sunday and weekly" "! Ill . 8-5 (By Carrier.) 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If there is ambiguity in section 10 rf the league of nations covenant It has been increased by the reserva tion adopted by the senate. Section 10 reads: The members of the league undertake to respect and preserve as against exter nal assreesion the territorial integrity and existing political Independence of all mem bers of the league. In case of any such aggresHion or in case of any threat or danger of such aggression the council shall advice upon the means by which, this Obligation shall be ruirilled. Following is the senate reserva tion: The United States assumes no obliga tion to preserve the territorial Integrity or political Independence of any other country or to interfere in controversies be tween nations whether members of, the league er not under the provisions of article X, or to employ the military or naval forces of the United States under snv article of the treaty, for any purpose, unless in any particular case the congress, which, under the constitution, has the sole power to declare war or authorize the employment of the military or naval forces of the United States, shall by act or joint resolution so provide. Now the statement is made by a newspaper commentator that this reservation nullifies all obligation of the United States to preserve the territorial Integrity and political in dependence of other countries; in other words that it is a flat refusal in advance to assume any obligation to do anything about anything that menaces the peace of nations. Another reading of the reservation is that there is reserved to congress the right to determine whether the United States has any obligation to perform in any particular case. Plainly, the effect of the reser vation will be to hamper the main purpose of the league. That purpose is to prevent the making of war by aggressive nations by presenting a united front against wars of con quest. There is to be no united front. The United States will Judge for It self in each instance whether it is worth while to prevent a war so far as it is concerned. Other nations may continue to foster their terri torial ambitions and if it becomes apparent to them that the league is not to make a united stand against those ambitions they will be free to strike. The reservation i thus an Invita tion to every country with a terri torial dispute on hand to propa gandize the people of the United States. It is a bid for foreign med dling with our internal politics, . foi iny congress that may be -elected may be callea upon to decide wheth er the United States shall jon the other nations of the league in en forcing justice. Such is the promised result If the reservation be held to mean that congress shall decide ' in each in stance whether the United States has an obligation to perform. Under the other reading that the United States flatly disclaims obligation to act in any instance we choose that all the territorial jealousies and am bitions that have been the causes of war in the past shall continue to work their insidious evil without re straint from us. The purpose of the league to prevent war is thereby an nulled. . The United States has in the Mon roe doctrine announced in effect that it will resist external aggression on the western hemisphere. It has nev er had to go to war to sustain that doctrine. Mere knowledge of its ex istence has been enough. Yet if President Monroe had said that we will pass on any case of aggrandize ment when it arises and may or may not act to prevent it, we would eithet have had numerous wars or there would be few independent nations in the western hemisphere today. Section 10 is the big stick of the league covenant. The senate has whittled it down to a fragile Bwitch. ! A NEW PARTY !' CANADA. The war has not only bred new republics in Europe; it has bred a new party in Canada. This party is composed mainly of farmers and is called the United Farmers' party. It is radical, but not as much so as the current labor radicalism, and is not revolutionary. It Is not sectional for it has Just elected three members of the dominion parliament, one from New Brunswick, one from On tario and one from Saskatchewan It Is strong, for it has Just elected thirty-nine members of the Ontario legislature against twenty-six con servatives and twenty-six liberals. The planks of the new party's plat form which are of most immediate interest deal with the tariff and di rectly concern the United States, be lng in line with the policy supported by the northwest provinces when re oiprocity was a campaign issue They favor a general and substantial reduction of duties; decided decrease In duties on British goods; recipro city with the United States, putting all foodstuffs on the free list; house hold supplies, agricultural machin ery, building material and other ne cessities on the free list; special com mittees to hear claims of specified Industries to protection. These plans contemplate serious loss of revenue, which must be re covered by other taxation. The most radical proposal in that direction is taxation of unimproved land values. Others are an income tax graduated from 2 per cent on $2000 to 10 per cent on $10,000, up to SO per cent on $100,000 or over; income tax on cor porutton nrofltst. and inheritance taxes. Oilier planks are a broad scheme of public ownership, aboli- tion of titles, abolition of the senate, national prohibition, referendum and recall, equal political rights for women. Entrance of this party into the field may cause final break-up of the old parties. Since Laurier adopted tne preferential tariff and sent Ca nadian contingents to fight in British wars, their real differences of policy have been growing smaller. Laurier raised a new issue by opposing con scription, but he split his party and drove half of it Into coalition with the conservatives, while discrediting the part which stood by him. Thai began the break-up, and after-war problems promise to complete it. NEWS AWAY FROM HOME. The political chairman of the Na tional Woman's party, Mrs. Baker, has returned to headquarters from her campaign of the western states for ratification of the suffrage amendment with the doleful report that unless sundry governors can be forced" to call extra sessions of their legislatures the women of thje country will not be able to vote for president in 1920. Mrs. Baker makes also the damaging disclosure that the governors are "not interested in the enfranchisement of women who can- ot vote for them personally." She also uncovered in Oregon the in teresting opinion that "Governor Ol- cott, who, as secretary of state, was appointed- to take the place of the executive who died, and fears his own removal should the legislature meet." The too discerning chairman of the Woman's party has somehow ubslituted the legislature for the supreme court. The latter body is in continuous session at the seat of government, and it will determine the status of the present governor's term, provided some anxious citizen brings the question up to that body. lhe legislature might indeed im peach and remove the governor for cause, but we- venture the opinion that failure or refusal to call a spe- lal session at the behest of meddling outsiders Is not a sufficient cause. Let us add also the somewhat gra tuitous suggestion that the way to secure an extraordinary session for any purpose is to make a showing to the governor that It is wanted by the people of the state. RESTOBE THE KOCKF1LE, The county commissioners have nder consideration re-establishment of the rockpile at Kelly Butte. There is a notion that the commis sioners are in no hurry to meet an bvious demand of the times; but we prefer to believe that they mean what they say when they agree to consider the question. The time of consideration should be brief and ac tion should be prompt. It is useless to say that there are no funds. The taxpayers will justify any expense to meet the present emergency. It is said that $2000 will cover the cost of putting the rock pile in condition. Is it possible that Multnomah county is so poor that it cannot furnish $2000 as a contribu tion to a necessary plan for preserva- lon of law and promotion of order? A large road programme is conr templated in Multnomah for next year. A million dollars for that pur pose does not frighten the commis sioners nor the public. It is even said that the board has in contem plation the expenditure of $170,000 outside the county for the Mount Hood loop. The commissioners are quite calm over that unusual project. But they are in something of a panic, apparently, as to where they are to get $2000 for the rockpile. A rockpile will help divert the troubled minds and troublesome en ergies of sundry I. W. W.'s and oth ers of their kidney into useful chan nels. What they need is hard work. What the public is entitled to have 0s the product of their work. The only product now is agitation, law lessness, unrest and disorder. The rockpile, under competent manage ment, will go far toward paying for tself in its concrete output. It will pay for itself many times over in its moral effects upon those who labor there and upon others who will de sire to keep away from there. NO CAl'SE FOR HKS1TATION. Expressed readiness of the Port ot Portland commission to UBe the $1,000,000 fund in aid of shipping lines' owned in Portland and oper ated from this port should end any hesitation on the part of Portland people to invest in such enterprises. The full cargoes now taken out and brought in by every ship show that. as to the present and the immediate future, there is no cause for hesi tation. The aid which the comrais sion is prepared to offer should re. move fear Of loss in the farther fu ture. There could not be a more favor able time to launch a big shipping company. All the principal products of the Columbia basin are in un usual demand, both on the Atlantic coast and in foreign countries, and will continue so until the deficiency created by the war has been made good. This section has a correspond ing demand for many foreign prod ucts. A large volume of import and export business with the Orient from the interior should be handled through this port, if regular steam ship lines are provided. Both im port and export traffic is thus as sured for the immediate future. The nature of our products and manu factures gives promise of a large permanent volume of ocean traffic, The Pacific northwest has the larg est body of timber in the temperate lone, other bodies in this country are near exhaustion, and those of Eu rope have been depleted by the war. Hence cargoes of lumber and its products will be available. Our oth er products grain, flour, fruit, meat, fish, butter, condensed milk, cheese will always be in demand abroad and on the Atlantic coast. Ships carrying them abroad will be avail able to Import raw materials and will induce establishment of manufac tures. " Here is good opportunity, to secure cargoes both ways. Any doubt arising from past fail ures of steamship lines or from un familiarity with the shipping busi ness should be removed by the guar anty against loss which the Port of Portland commission is prepared to give. In that manner the entire community would take from the shoulders of the shipping company all risk of loss, while leaving open to it all the opportunity of profits The people can well afford to do this. II the entire million dollars which they have voted should, be expended in establishing good shipping connec tions with the world, the resulting benefits would be worth the invest ment. The money would come back in the shape of increased business for merchants, enhanced values, greater number and diversity of manufactures, a wider market for our products, stimulated develop ment of the interior everything that goes to make a great port. We have heard much of psycho logical moments of late years. This is the psychological moment for Portland to establish its own steam ship lines and to take a firm grasp on its share of Pacific coast com merce. Commerce and shipping are settling down into new and old chan nels, and the shipping board has a great fleet to assign to the various ports. Those ports which show their faith in themselves by establishing home-owned lines may expect to be served first and best, and those men who Invest in ships while the whole world calls for commodities which must be parried oversea will make the profits. Some ports and some men will see this opportunity and seize it. If Portland and its people do not, the commerce and the profits will go elsewhere.- . A BIG CHURCH PROGRAMME. The campaign launched at Detroit by the Methodist Protestant church in the United States is a challenge to those who have contended that the churches were not alive to their opportunities, and it stands out con spicuously because the 1917 relig ious census credits this denomina tion with only 186,873 members, by comparison with a total of 42,044,- 000 church members in the whole ountry, and with several denomina tions having a membership of more than a million each. The Methodist Protestant programme includes the world. It comprises comprehensive plans for Americanization of aliens in the United States, in co-operation with the department of the interior, at a cost of $1,500,000; educational work within the denomination at a cost of $3,300,000; and other projects involving the raising of $20,000,000 for work In fhls country alone. The item of $600,000 for "quieting social unrest" is wisely left without elaboration. The. first thing to be done in this connection -will be to determine thfl precise cause of social unrest, and, incidentally, whether in fact It is as deep-seated as some sup pose. If for this sum the cause can be found, it will have been wisely ex pended. But a good deal will have been accomplished toward restoring equilibrium by the campaign itself. If enough Americans can be per suaded to take part in an uplift cam paign that will take their minds from their own fancied woes, unrest will automatically have been measurably overcome. The foreign missionary pro gramme is calculated further to keep alive the missionary spirit which is the essential motive power of every religious movement. Two 'million dollars will be spent to combat ex- sting evils in Latin-American coun tries. Other "foreign" fields include Alaska, China, Japan, the Philip pines and Liberia. It is especially significant that the work here will nclude construction of a large num ber ,of schools and hospitals. Prac tical Christianity is the watchword of the day. If the scheme is carried through, it will mean the raising of more than $500 for each member of the denom ination, and of more than $300 per capita if all the scholars in Sunday schools .are included. It would mean a fund of $21,000,000,000 if every de nomination did proportionately as well. The mere raising of such a fund the spirit that made it possi ble would go further toward check ing unrest than expenditure of the money itself. THE RIGHT TO STRIKE ON RAILROADS. The principle invoked by the gov ernment against the coal miners' strike, that as regards public neces sities, the rights of the nation are superior to the right of either capi tal or labor to stop production, is to be threshed out by congress in dis cussion of the railroad bill. It is af firmed frankly in the Cummins sen ate bill, by provision for compulsory arbitration of labor disputes and by prohibition of strikes. The Esch bill in the house rather evades the ques tion, providing for voluntary arbi tratior and for penalties against em ployers when they lock out em ployes or against unions when they strike in violation of a contract to abide by decision of an arbitration tribunal. The railroad brotherhoods condemn both plans, stand out for the unlimited right to strike, and ask for continuance of government oper ation for two years in the hope of winning a popular verdict for gov ernment ownership and against the anti-strike clause. . There is but one possible excuse for a strike on railroads that justice can be done between the company and its employes in no other way. That Is not true. Arbitration is an effective means of securing substan tial justice. Labor unions clamored for it not many years ago, but when employers accepted it, unions began to criticize its machinery and results, Railroad men complained that the decision usually rested with the um pire, who was often a man not fa miliar with their business, either with a leaning to the employer's side of a dispute or disposed to split the difference. They have an equal voice with employers in selection of an umpire, and the time to question his fitness is before, not after, he has acted. The frequency with which umpires split the difference is evidence on its face that, when each party to a dispute stands firmly for its demands, justice is about half way between the two. It is surely practicable to provide that an um pire shall have knowledge of the railroad business gained by expe rience. These considerations lead straight to the conclusion that, when they in sist on the right to strike, the rail road men want more than justice, and that they plan to extort it by in flicting loss on the railroads or by threatening such loss without regard to the injury done to the public. In these days of political strikes and in view of the brotherhoods' advocacy of government ownership, they may contemplate much more. They may contemplate such exactions from railroads without regard to the lat ter's ability to pay as will render private ownership impracticable and as will weary the people into consent to government ownership. In short, their determination to retain th strike weapon while they press th Plumb plan on congress leads to the conclusion that they propose to bludgeon the railroads into granting demands which an arbitration court would not grant, and to bludgeon congress into passing laws against its judgment. In taking this position, the rail road unions Ignore the principl which has been successfully asserted in the coal miners' case that stop page of the supply of a necessity of life is an invasion of the rights of the public, which is superior to the rights of both capital and labor. This prin ciple applies with particular force to the railroads, for they perform a government function under govern ment regulation, and when men ac cept employment from them, they do so with knowledge of this fact and they become parties to the obliga tion to give good, continuous service. By providing means of securing Jus tice for the employes, congress will deprive them of the last valid pre text for striking. By holding out for the right to strike, they hold out for the right to extort- more than justice. Such exactions would ultimately be made from the people, for the rail roads can obtain the money to meet them from the people only and would simply be a go-between. The practical unity of the people, of congress and of the courts in con demning the coal miners' strike leaves no room top doubt of their view of a railroad strike. It would meet with general condemnation. The brotherhoods appear to realize that public opinion is now against their strike policy, for they ask for postponement of a decision till the next election, hoping for some politi cal deal or some turn of the political wheel in favor of their Plumb plan, which would in effect put them in control of the railroads. A railroad strike now or in the near future would array against them air tho forces of government with the solid backing of public' opinion. Nor would the people be so help less against a general railroad strike as the labor radicals seem to imag ine. The British railroad strike proved that. The whole nation ex clusive of the strikers and their union allies rose up to fight them. It enrolled 25,000 special police to guard the railroads and 350,000 vol unteers to run them or other means of transport. Auto trucks proved a aluable substitute for railroads. They ran from a radius of 120 miles to supply London with food, and au tomobiles carried passengers as far as Bristol. Before the strike ended olunteers were running 4000 trains day on the main lines and 1400 trains a day on the underground sys tem of London. Men of all ranks went into the fight to defeat the strike, lords volunteering for manual work. If the American people should be confronted with a similar attack on their transportation system, they would defeat it by like means. This country, is better supplied with mo or transport than Great Britain, it has made much progress in building solid highways, many loyal men have learned to run auto trucks in the war, and the people can adapt them selves to meet any emergency. A police judge in one eastern city has devised a grim ordeal for auto mobile speeders. Each' convicted speeder is sentenced to pay a visit to the morgue under police custody. There he is shown the corpses of vic timsyjf other speeders. Only a truly hard-boiled citizen is .not affected by such a test, and it is a pallid and shaky group that reappears before the judge. "Could you sleep tonight knowing that your carelessness in speeding had caused the death of one of those persons?" inexorably questions the judge. Arrests for speeding are reported to have de creased remarkably in number since this judge instituted his system. The Walnut Growers' association cannot get along without J. C. Coop er for president; but what would a meeting be without the presence of Ferd Groner, the Washington coun ty pioneer nut man, whose name is not "Fred," though the combined forces of most daily papers make it such? Everybody familiar at all with the case believes the jury trying the al leged assassin of Governor Steunen- berg was terrorized. Such was pos sible; but such is not now the case, for there is a government pretty well organized to deal punishment where it should go and with the will to do so. What business have Chicago high school boys allowing themselves to become fertile fields for bolshevik propaganda? The most notable of fenders are sons of naturalized citi zens and that fact may explain. If alleged reports of an- alleged automobile being driven about the city in' an alleged intoxicated condi tion are true, the disreputable car is becoming an alleged menace to traf fic, so to speak. London crowds do not take kindly to American adventurers in the field of prohibition. They are right. Pro hibition is a local affair and the Americans should stay at home. Convicts at the Washington state penitentiary are to take correspond ence courses in agriculture. There will undoubtedly be much interest in the growing of wall flowers. Sugar companies in the Hawaiian Islands are paying huge dividends. one plantation alone making profits of $150,000. . Meanwhile the family sugar bowl shrinks in inverse ratio Further news is anxiously awaited of the movement of walrus herds south from the Arctio ocean. Can Seattle have sent out a hurry call for the coming census? Medical students in London rode "Pussyfoot" Johnson, American pro hibition orator, on a rail. Evidently the British idea of dry humor; One of the refreshing spectacles of life is to see a practical joke turned on the Joker. That seems to "be what happened to Senator Walsh. . Texas and Oklahoma must send to Chile and Peru for a few reports for guidance in neighborly troubles. In one way the war was a boon to the south. It has renewed the supply of Kentucky colonels. How would you like to-be on Jury trying an assassin? Guard your tongue, but think a lot. The horse show opens Monday. If not out of order, we rise to inquire, what is a horse? Another grave question in dispute. Is "Little Joe" & number or only a point? By the way, where and how is the president these days? BY-PRODUCTS OP THE PRESS v Stories Told of Men Who Did Thins That Couldn't Be Done. "When Napoleon offered the United States the territory of Louisiana for $15,000,000 everybody told President Jefferson, there was no way to buy it. It wasn't constitutional, and it wasn't possible. . It just could not be done. But he did it and got for America the richest land in the world at 4 cents an acre. They are still debating whether he had a right to do it. When President Roosevelt decided the Panama canal should be built, he built it. "For two generations they had debated that canal," said Mr. Roosevelt later. "T built it and let them debate me instead." The point is they are still debating Mr. Roose velt, but the canal Is built. When everybody was worrying about how the government was going to resume specie payment, Salmon P. Chase said: "The way to resume is to resUme." The history of the world is made up of life 'stories of men who went ahead and did things that couldn't be done. Detroit News. The Liberty bell rug, over which the peace treaty was signed in Paris, is the one on which the original Lib erty bell rested for five months at the Panama-Pacific exposition in 1915. Before this the rug had a history of 100 years of love and in trigue involving Persian royalty, ac cording to Thomas H. Kullujian, its owner, of San Francisco. It became symbol of patriotism during its Liberty bell work and a Liberty loan tour, and entered politics when its present owner, Mr. Kullujian. Ar menian rug merchant, took it to Paris. The rug was used in the ceremony In honor of 1700 drafted men from San Francisco, on their way overseas. Mr. Kullujian collected the dust they left on th rug. giving- one bottle to the San Francisco mayor, another to President Wilson and the third he intends to present to Premier Katcha znooni, head of the new Armenian republic, as a symbol of America's work in freeing that country. John McCormack, the singer, was talking at a roof garden luncheon in New York about the broken en gagement of a theatrical star and a popular young society man. "Poor blank," said Mr. McCormack. He seemed hard up and terribly blue over the affair when 1 saw mm at Atlantic City last week. Cheer up, old man," I said. 'There are plenty more fish in the sea.' Yes I know," Blank replied gloom ily, "but this last one took all my bait.'" Pittsburg Chronicle-Tele graph. It is a curious fact that the effect of war upon birds is not that which one is led to expect, says the Atlanta Journal. When a Zeppelin flew over the pheasant hunting preserves in England the shrill cry of these birds warned the country for miles around of the approach of the airship. But the nightingale never stopped his song unless a flying machine was directly over his head. The birds at the front paid little attention to the din and roar of bat tle, often singing while a bombard ment was in progress. Their nests were found under the roofs of the railroad stations. The partridge and the lark often rested directly in tne line of flie. and during the intervals of firing the song of the lark could be heard. The swallows upon their return from warmer climates, finding their previous nesting places destroyed, built their new homes in the mouths of deserted cannon and in trench re inforcements. In a newspaper file of 1913 only six years ago, out wnat. a woria away" a reader has come across a Russian item that makes one smile sickly. The important news was tele graphed from the city that was St Petersburg that an issue of stamps bearing portraits of the Romanoffs was to be withdrawn since the holy synod, sitting in solemn conclave, had decided that to cancel the im perial visages with postoffice dies would" be not merely lese majeste but sacrilege! So the stamps were kept inviolate and in four years the czar himself was cancelled. A contributor to the New York Sun suggests formation of Half-as-Much clubs right now at the breakfast table half as much sugar on cereals, half as much sugar in the coffee. "It really tastes better without any, as an honest three-day trial will convince almost any one. An average family can save at least seven tea- spoonfuls of sugar each day by doing as suggested. This means one pound a week. For the whole country this would save 1,000,000,000 pounds a year. And we would set along just as well perhaps better." When the Pilgrim Fathers landed in New England they naturally knew little of the climatic conditions of their new home. With October came the first flurries of snow. The frost nipped the woods and the chill of the air foretold of the coming of win ter. "We will now have winter," it Is related that one of the band re marked. But the friendly Indians pointed to the skies and to the west and told the Pilgrims that summer would come again before the winter. And they were .right. In the last days of October it grew warm again. The air was filled with slanting sun shine. The world seemed wrapped In an atmosphere of sleepy warmth. The Pilfrrims looked forward and re marked, "Lo, the Indian's summer This may or may not have been the origin of the term. It is an expres sion, however, that is applied t6 a short season of pleasant weather which commonly occurs in the lat ter part of October or the early part of November. James Whitcomb Riley's grave on the crest of Crown Hill cemetery is to be marked by a beautiful memorial, a Greek peristyle of light gray gran ite, which is being erected by the poet's heirs, Mrs. Mary Riley Payne, the only living sister; Miss Lesley Payne, a niece; and Elizabeth and Edmund Eitel, niece and nephew. The memorial will be completed in about even months. The peristyle will be about 12 feet high, 15 feet long amd 11 feet wide, with 10 Ionic columns supporting a canopy. On the south facade will be the simple inscription, "James Whitcomb Riley," in classic letters. The same inscrip tion, with date of birth and death, is now on the slab which covers the grave. The memorial peristyle will be visible for some distance away from the cemetery. Indianapolis News. Thos Who Come and Go. "Never sell the soil," is the advice Mrs. Howard, 80 years old, gives to her son, E. J. Howard, of Drewsey, Or., who is at the Imperial. The par ents of E. J. Howard were in the party which discovered gold on Can yon Creek, and his mother rode into the country on a pack mule. Tom Howard, the father, w-as the first sheriff of Grant county, and he also conducted a butcher shop and had as a helper Phil Metschan, Sr., who later became state treasurer. The Howards moved over to Drewsey In 1884, be ing the first people in there, and they prospered. The elder, Mrs. Howard always advises her son not to sell any of his land, declaring that her parents did so when they lived in the middle west and they never found anything else that repaid them as well as the soil. "As people can't rent, they are buy ing and it is the easiest thing In the world to soil real estate in La Grands and the surrounding valley," says J. D. McKennon, one of the city commis sioners. "There is little building, for the price of lumber is too high and carpenters want $7 or $8 a day. Peo ple wanted automobiles for a while everyone wanted a machine and now they have the cars they are thinking of buying a home, and they are doing so." Mr. McKennon is one of the commissioners about whom there are rumors of a possible recall because the commission is not providing a new water system for La Grande. Douglas Pine, who Is at times stu dent and at times instructor when he Is attending O. A. C, is in town for a few days, renewing acquaintance made during his stay In Europe. Mr. Pine went overseas with Company D, Sixth Battalion, 20th Engineers, for estry, which battalion went most of the way on the ill-fated Tuscania. He served in southern France, where the 20th made a wonderful record sawing French pine trees Into trench lumber. Mr. Pine was commissioned a second lieutenant shortly before the armistice, but tailed to lose the friendship of his former comrades Being a nut grower has its compen sations. Mr. and Mrs. Ferd Groner of Hillsboro. registered at the Mult nomah, are planning a trip to France and Egypt within the next six months. an indication that the nut crop and the' prices must have been good. It is the intention of Mr. Groner to buy an automobile, ship It across the At lantic, and then make his tour in his own car. Although the manufacturer of silk and the price of silk and the silk market are matters of general in terest to the public these days, E. H. Kluge of Englewood, N. J., does not his wife. Mr. Kluge arrived at the Benson yesterday with fearsome tales of adventure stalking big game In the Canadian Rockies. The popula tion of wild things in the C. R. has been greatly decreased during the campaign of the silk-maker. The "million dollar kid," Joe Richardson, breezed Into the Hotel Oregon yesterday from Salem. Joseph has a little habit of toting a million or so of road bonds around with him when he is making deliveries for the state treasury to the bond dealers. He had a bag filled with the securities when he arrived yesterday and he also had a body guard, to-wit one C. K. Knickerbocker. Edward S. Hough, a ship designer from San Francisco, is registered at the Multnomah. Mr. Hough designed a type of ship which met with the ap proval of the shipping board and about 23 of the Hough-type vessels were built in the Columbia river dis trict. In the lobby of the Multnomah is a model of a Hough ship. John Philip Sousa, sans his whisk ers, is at the Benson. When the com poser of American march tunes last visited the Hose City he had his popular and well-known beard, but since then he has fallen into the hands of a barber and sports a dec oration on his upper lip. Mr. Sousa discovered how to make the public step lively before the traffic officers or the street-car conductors did. Highway Commissioner Robert A. Booth was among the arrivals at the Imperial yesterday. Mr. Booth came to Portland from Eugene to confer with a delegation from Malheur county who wanted to discuss ways and means for a road from Ontario to the Jordan valley country on the eastern edge of Oregon. Bernard Daly, who Is doctor, lawyer, banker, stockman, landed proprietor and a few other things at Lakeview, is at the Imperial. There Is an unconfirmed rumor that Dr. or Judse Daly bought more liberty JjonUs than almost any other person in Oregon. The Judge, or doctor. Is here to meet Mr. DeValera. the absentee president of the "Irish re public. "Never saw the Willamette valley looking better or more prosperous," says Milton A. Miller, collector of in ternal revenue, who is back from a trip to Lebanon and way points. Mr. Miller is rooming at the Hotel Ore gon. V. N. Johnson, whose sheep ranch Is on Girds creek or maybe on Shoo Fly creek Is at the Perkins, regis tered from Fossil. The sheepman 1b accompanied by Jack Cassel. who is in town to look over the livestock ex hibit. With a car of big type Poland China hogs and Cotswold sheep, O. T. Mur phey and son of Hubbard, Or., are in the city. The livestock Is for the show next week. The Murpheys are at the Hotel Oregon. Proprietor of a clothing store at Spokane, R. J. Hurd. is at tho Multno mah with Mrs. Hurd. Another Wash ington clothing dealer at the Multno mah is C. C. Caveness of Centralla, the town where the I. W. W. is in dis repute. Captain Howard R. Lyons of Seat tle, who has been in a local hospital, was well enough to be discharged yesterday, and he went to the Hotel Oregon. To attend the livestock show. Lea Caldwell and Mr. and Mrs. Herman Rosenberg of Pendleton came to the Hotel Oregon yesterday. M. D. Scroggins, a contractor of Hermiston, Is at the Perkins. Mr. Scroggins has been engaged in high way work. E. H. Epperson, northwest manager of tho Delco light system, is having a convention of salesmen in this terri tory at the Multnomah. George Stmenstad, a dealer in ready-to-wear Jewelry at Pomeroy, Wash.. Is at the Multnomah with his wife. J. H. McCune, a stockman of Moro. is among early arrivals at the Perkins for the stock show. Mrs. H. P. Husband and husband from North Platte, Neb., are regis tered at the Multnomah. Manager Hlte of the Hotel Wash ington was reported on' the .sick list j yesterday. The Tickle-Fairies. By Grace E. Hall. Did you ever hear of the tickle fairies that bring all the smiles we see? Why, they are the busiest sprites on earth and labor unceasingly; And sometimes they lift 'til they're - , , , , I uiuck in me luce . On & frown that they mean to com pletely erase. Or strain every nerve to make a glad curve On lips that of cheer have lost all sign and trace. Why, haven't you felt them boost up on your lips "Til your face seemed 'most break ing in two? And haven't you known them to come with swift skips When someone told something to you? And oft when you take up a nice book you'll find The fairies are lurking the pages behind. And they creep up your chin with a big, merry grin. And they change all the thoughts in your mind! Oh, let them come play, without hindrance or pause, These blithe jolly sprites that adorn Our faces with twinkles that chase away wrinkles. Nor greet them with sternness nor scorn; And when you are frowning and feel ' no desire To purse up your lips in a smile. Remember each fairy becomes quite contrary. And ceases to help, after while! LIBERTY BELL MAY TOLL AGAIN It Will Call New Party Into Being; If Old Ones Uo Hot Rise lo Issue. FOREST GROVE, Or., Nov. 12. (To tha Editor.) We have dealt too gently with the unpatriotic alien nuisance. It is disturbing the In dustrial situation. It Is blockading prosperity. It is sowing" the seeds of revolution, it is inspired by the bol sheviki and the I. W. W. It must be abated. There has been too much "pussyfooting." There ha? been too much catering to the army of aliens that has poured In on the United States with no other purpose than to seek the benefits of our free land, and to give nothing iu return. Strikes In our great industries are not inspired by patriotic Americans; neither do the. latter contemplate vio lence; this is' usually the work of aliens. The names of men arrested for in citing riots, disturbing the peace, and Intimidation around Pittsburg are significant and include the follow ing: Kamisjtia, Kaurich, Troski, Gorles, fciloviki, Jerkovich, Yehovick. At the West Penn Steel company's plant 700 American employes were at work with only six foreigners out of 600. This tells the story. It is high time that these undigested and uniii- gestible should be measured for what tney are worth. They show no loy alty to the country that has riven them a home, a living and wases be yond the wildest dreams of their avarice. They seek no permanent abid ing place here. Fealty goes to for eign countries. It is time for the Liberty Bell to be rung again. We welcome the im migrants who come to make this their home, to give allegiance to the American flag and to stand fast for the principles of our government. These have been an important factor in the upbuilding of the new land. We recognize their worth. For years they have been welcome. They are among our best citizens. Our doors have been wide open to receive them, and we will welcome strangers to our shores as long as they blend with our population. accept American principles and follow the American flag. But those who will not seek naturalization, who despise our con stitution and spit upon our flag and are at the beck and call of the soap box orators and false leaders of the bolshevik and I. W. W. stripe should be driven from every factory, shop and office. They have been fed. clothed and enriched only to turn and bite the hand that feeds them. We have dealt with this unassimi lated element too gently. If neither of the great parties arises to the emergency and seeks to put an end to the malign influence these aliens have been exerting In our industrial fields, a new party of greater politi cal influence will arise, made of true Americans whose motto will be, "Our Flag, Our Country and Our Freedom." Roosevelt, "We need thee, oh. we need thee; every hour we -need thee." W. .1. R. HKACH. I ' Oregon Hens Fight to Protect Ham-and-Eggs Partnership In the rush to the Yukon for Alaskan gold, eggs sold in the north country for a dollar a dozen, and dull nuggets and glinting grains of the coveted metal were eagerly bartered for spheroids of doubtful virtue. The dollar-a-dozen egg has come back, but the hens of Ore gon are fighting to depose it. The would-be poultryman's chances of amplifying his menu and pocketbook are discussed in The Sunday Oregonian by De Witt Harry. Photographs of barnyard champions and barnyard scenes enliven the page. WHY DO GIRLS RUN AWAY? "Girls want excitement," says Miss Josephine Kremser, 23-year-old woman detective on the New York police force. Miss Kremser blames the discomforts of home life in the cities for a good deal of the social unrest in America. Her remedy is a supply of old-fashioned fathers and new-fashioned mothers. Dr. Max Barff, who has held a sphygmomano meter on the fair sex for two years, says that but for conventions that hold her, woman would roam more than man. Both authori ties speak in the Sunday 'issue. WHAT IS HIGHEST GOAL OF MAX'S LIFE? "Service," replies Edward Bok, editor of The Ladies' Home JournaL who is going to retire on January 1 and devote the rest of hisife to "play." Mr. Bok believes there is nothing to the dollar chase, anyway, and that there is not bo much virtue in the writing of checks for philanthropy if the hand that writes the checks does not give further service. In The Sunday Oregonian the retiring editor af firms his intention to try to serve his fellow-men. THE VICTORY AT SEA. America's best beloved admiral, who en deared himself alike to jackies, doughboys and civilians while he commanded the American destroyer force in European waters, tells of the institution of the convoy" system on the Atlantic, in tomorrow's issue. Historic conferences which decided the 7ate of thousands of Yank soldiers are recounted for the first time. MILADY AGAIN HUMS SIREN SONG. The chic ladies with their tiny accents and their foreign luggage are returning to Wash ington, D. C, after three years' absence, to slip into their former places next door to the United States government, where they can peek through the keyhole and listen to the discussions of state. A thrilling tale of the Countess Carolyi's arrest is fea tured in The Sunday Oregonian's article on the lady spies in the national capital. THE PHONOGRAPH SHOP. Is invaded by W. E. Hill, the artist who draws those wonderfully true-to-life cartoons of people and things but mostly people. Officer Hennessy, Arthur, Miss France, the Bowie family and others are caught hearing their fa vorites. Briggs is there, too. All the News of All the World THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN. More Truth Than Poetry. By James J. Montague. THE TURK AND THE SERVANT PROBLEM. In the far-away town of Stamboul Where the popular customs axe strange. " nen a weii-to-do Turk needs lady vkj worn At his washtubs or over his range. He hurries her straight to tho Mosquo hero he joyfully takes her to wif And she cooks his ragouts and pilaffs and beef stews For the rest of her natural life. And in case any richer Pasha Endeavors to lure her away (As sometimes it's true they art will ing to do) With offers of much bigger pajt Her husband appeals to tho law Which sternly refuses to brook Any stealthy attempt (great Pashas not exempt) To steal a connubial cook. And if tho young woman herself. Another employment should seek With some opulent Turk who will give her lees worn And moro evenings off every week. Her husband will take her to court Where tho Ottoman statutes are read Which set forth, to-witt "It a cook tries to quit Her husband may chop off her head." We never were strong- for tho Turk. He's a rough and cantankerous cuss But in some things he's got, wo will own. quite a lot On civilized people like us. When the Reda Get There. There is little color in prison life, but that now promises to be changed for'the better. Beating Htm to It. The Prince of Wales will limit his stay in the United States to ten day. The King of the Belgians played all the best territory. o Lost ArtH. Wining, dining and mining. (CopyrlKlit. 1919. by Bell Syndicate. Inc In Other Days. Twenty-Five Tears Asro. From The Oreitonlnn of November IS. The grand Jury spent the greater part of yesterday Investigating the gambling situation in Portland and the city is deeply agitated over the matter. It is estimated that ISO carloads of dried Italian prunes will be shipped from Oregon this season and dealers predict a great business for the future. Water came through the Bull Run pipeline and was pouring into the Willamette through the Sunnyside sewer, yesterday. largest crowds of the week yes terday attended the kirmfss. where many enjoyable features were pre sented. Fifty Year Afro. From The Orenonlan of November 15. lS'il. Washington. It is staled that al though General Sherman has written the annual report of the war depart ment. Secretary Belknnp repudiates it and will write one himself. New York. A Mormon temple is to be erected here within the next year at a cost of $500,000. A rumor that the Gussie Telfair has been lost Is abroad but is discredited in marine circles. The first term of the Seminary at Orrpon City closed Friday. The at tendance registered was 241. "And" or "Hut f" BAY CKNTliR. Wash.. Nov. 12. (To the Editor.) in an editorial in The Hresonian of November tt you quote Cromwell as saying, "Put your trust in God, but keep your powder dry." I have usually seen it "Put your trust In God. AND keep your powder dry." The difference is small as to words, and either would serve tho practical purpose with his soldiery; but the choice of words might be quite significant as to the quality of the faith behind thein. Which is the correct wording? L. L. BUSH. In "Oliver's advice" (Colonel Black er) the sentence is, "Put your trust In God, my boys, AND keep jour powder dry." In "Ballads of Ireland," Hay is quotes Cromwell as saying: "Put your trust In God. BUT mind to keep your nrwrlpr. dry."