10 THE " MOtlXIXG OREGOXIAX, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 18. 1919. ESTABLISHED BY HENBY I.. PITTOCK. Published by The Oresonian Publishing Co.. Kl. Sixth Street, Portland. Oregon. C. A. MOKDEX, K. B. PIPER. Manager. Editor. The Oregonian ia a member of the Asso ciated Press. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the u.e for publica tion of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. Subscription Kates Invariably in Advance. (By Mail.) Dally, Sunday included, one year . . . . Uaily, Sunday included, six months .. Ilally, Sunday included, three months Daily, Sunday included, one month Iaily, without Sunday, one year Daily, without Sunday, six months . . Daily. Without Sunday, one month . .. ..$S.OO 6.00 3. Jo .60 Weekly, one year v 1.0O punuay, one. v ear ... Sunday and weekly (By Carrier.) Iaily, Sunday included, one year Dally, Sunday included, three months Daily, Sunday included, one month . . Dally, without Sunday, one year Daily, without Sunday, three months. Daily, without Sunday, one month 3.50 . .$9.00 7.80 l.lio .60 How to Remit Send postoffice money order, express os- personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at owner's risk. Give postoffice address In full, including county and state. Postage Kates 12 to 10 pases. 1 cent; IS to 112 pages. 2 cental o4 to 4S pages. 3 cents: r0 to oo napes. 4 cent: f,2 to 70 pages. 5 cents; 78 to 82 pages, C cents. Foreign postage, double rates. Eastern Business Office Verree & Conk lin, Brunswick building. New York; Verree & Conklin. Steger building, Chicago; Ver ree & Conklin. Free Press building. De troit, Mich. San Francisco representative, R. J. Bidwell. GENERAL WOOD'S CREED. General Wood's declaration of faith in the virility, the oyalty to its principles and the progressive and constructive force of American de mocracy will cheer the spirits and strengthen the will of those whose patriotism Is unshaken but whose fears have been aroused by the de structive forces that Have been at work. Through his contact with the mob spirit at Omaha and with the . revolutionary spirit at Gary, the Gen eral has had opportunity to learn the worst. His experience has but con , firmed his confidence that the spirit .' and body of the nation are sound and will bring the republic safely through troubles which are but a reaction of those which have shaken other na tions. This is "the judgment of a sane, farseeing public servant, who has successfully met every difficult situation in which he has been placed and whose self-restra,int and fidelity have not been affected by the wrongs and slights which have been put upon him. Hasees that red agitation Js a frank attempt to impose the rule of an organized minority upon the un organized majority, and that this agitation derives its inspiration from aliens and its support from abroad. The reds exploit whatever wrongs are suffered by the workmen, ex aggerate them enormously and use strikes for their redress as a means of putting forward excessive demands and of putting through their revolu tionary programme. General Wood rightly looks to the American LegiQn. which is destined to draw into ita ranks the great mass of America's fighting men, as the great conserva tive force which will combat and . crush these foes of Americanism. It will devolve upon the government to deport all aliens who have been ac tive in attempts to bolshevize Ameri- ca, and to Americanize those aliens who are susceptible to the process "and who may therefore be permitted to remain. The spirit of his great friend and fellow-worker Roosevelt spoke in General Wood's proposals for rooting out the domestic causes of revolution and sedition. Alien conspiracy could not have spread so far or taken such hold without the aid of many Ameri cans, some of whom figure as leaders. The duty of the loyal majority in la bor unions is to depose the red , leaders, both native and foreign, and to put none but loyal citizens on guard. But the general sees that, in order to deprive the reds of ma terial to work on, "we should satisfy the demands of the workers for a fighting chance in life," for the pres- - ervation of the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. This requires "keen, sympathetic relations between those who employ and those who are employed," an end to "se crecy, suppression of the truth and misrepresentation" in the relations of the two, ' recognition of the right of ihen to organize, but also the right of unorganized men to work without being subject to violence. It im plies elimination of alien poison from our blood, and Restriction of immi gration that no more such poison may enter. It demands the. services of the American Legion as a positive .force, the elevating influence of the . women voters, especially in teaching children the blessings of being Amer icans. These are the great construe five, purtrying and corrective in fluences which will awaken the great body of citizens to a sense of duty. The general's remarks about in- ternatioualism are especially timely when the league of nations is under discussion and when an international labor conference is in session Washington. When he warns us tlat 'J "internationalism put into practice means national death," he refers to that doctrine which in the professed '. "' cause of the working class would . break down all dividing lines between nations, would merge them into one under the rule of "the parliament of men, the federation of the world" C .. but would, as General Wood savs. "undermine the foundation-stones of our modern civilization." That would be the result, for the aim of its pro tagonists is to unite what they call the proletariat of all nations and to make them supreme over other classes. The full fruit of that idea would be seen if the whole world were reduced to the condition bolshevist Russia. That theory was ", deliberately propagated by the Ger - man socialists at the instigation of the militarists, to break down the loyalty to their countries of socialists of other nations, while the Germans '" stood firmly by the German militar ists who aimed at world-power. It produced nti-militarism before th wr, defetwtism during the war i ' France, it caused the disaster to Italy at Caporetto, and the labo protest in Britain against interven tion in Russia. A very different internationalism was evidently in' the general's min when he said: You owe it to your brother to keep your self In such good condition that you can always render him your nest service. America is to be a great force for good i . . the world, we must maintain ourselves - - a vigorous and well balanced nation. , . . what we do for other peoples, w must do as Americans, acting" under our own volition and guidance. This is the form of international ism which the league of nations designed to establish. Each nation as a self-governing, independent unit would join all other nations to main tain the reign of neuce and justice In the world, but none would Inter- fere with the internal affairs of any other. , What the American people most need at this time is clear thinking and straight talk from such men as General Wood; men who have proved their ability to lead and have won the public confidence by their past services and by their known freedom from bias in favor of any particular interest. General Wood does not fear to run counter to any element in marking a course which will lead to peace, safety and progress both at home and abroad. NEAR THE VERGE, The you'll-take-my-treaty-or-none attitude of the president has per force suffered some modification. He will have the opportunity to say whether there shall be a treaty or no treaty. We are not to have THK league. It is questionable now whether there is even to be A league, so far as America is concerned. It is, or will be, up to the president. When the time for compromise was at hand President Wilson re fused to compromise. When the time for compromise is past the president is ready to compromise. This is not statesmanship. It is monumental perversity. It has brought the league to the verge of calamity. Nothing can save it now but concession by the senate majority. It will make none because of appeals' from the White House. It may make them on Its responsibility to the country. The moderate reservationists, the radical reservationists and the irrec oncilables are all lined up together. It is not easy to understand what has brought them together, unless it was the hopelessness of a fair understanding for compromise with the president. And perhaps the strategics to force a compromise on their terms, and not on Wilson's terms or defeat. President W i 1 s o n threatens to pigeonhole the treaty and the cove- ant because it is not his treaty or ovenant. It never was, though he thought it was. It was, or should ave been, the country's treaty and covenant. ' Never again will a president of the United States ignore the senate of the United States and the people in any great negotiation with a foreign power or group of powers. PLAYFUL IRONY? OR SOLID IVORY? The Oregonian is frankly glad to ear from a discerning correspondent that the little editorial excursion of the Reed College Quest into ration alism, or pragmatism, or whatever it was, was nothing but irony. The Oregonian sees it, now that the real quality of the literary masterpiece is painstakingly pointed out; but, ad to say, our sober-minded con temporary, the Telegram, mistook it for the shocking outgiving of an in fidel pen, and proceeded to read a ecture to any educational institu- ttfm which fosters such amazing sentiments. Can't the Telegram take a joke at least cannot it take a Reed col- ege joke? Does it not understand that no subject, even the most sacred, is exempt from humorous ex position or interpretation by the so phomoric mind? Everywhere out ride the Telegram office, we are sure, the little harmless travesty on re ligion must have been received with vociferous ha-ha's. We tan imagine the ripple of merriment .which swept the placid surface of the ministerial association, for example, when the article "was read there, if it was read. Your clergyman is always delighted at any piece of satire which inverts scriptural meanings " or theological definitions, or life-long beliefs. Every preacher in Portland knows, of course, that Reed college is a veri table hotbed of orthodoxy, and he will not lend his ear. to any rumors r opinions or suspicions or charges to the contrary. Primarily, of course, the Quest lu cubration was designed for the eyes of the elect at Reed. To the unini tiated, or the uncollegiate or the ournalistically unregenerate, it may be admitted there was some likeli hood of misunderstanding. But what of it? Reed college knew and that was enough. Or it would have been enough if everybody who read the article knew the real Reed college. There would have been no trouble at all, doubtless. If a matter-of-fact newspaper, lost to the finer practices of college journalism, had not ap praised the thing at its apparent val ue in words and not its real oh, very real value In burlesque. A HOUSING PROBLEM AND AN OPPOR TUNITY. One interesting phase of the Brit ish housing problem, which seems to be at least as acute as our own, is that, as the London Times recently remarked: "There Is a likelihood also of a certain amount of social preju dice against wooden houses." The ministry of health nevertheless has proceeded to enact by-laws which will permit construction of wooden houses by those who are willing to defy the conventions. Ameri cans, particularly of the Pacific coast, will watch the outcome with a good deal of interest. The wooden house is too common with us and its most primitive forms are too fresh in memory for us to be able easily to sympathize with those who draw lines of social cleavage based on the materials from which their dwellings were made. Even the log house has sheltered a good many men whom Americans have delight ed to honor. A statement made recently before the British ministry of health by an official appointed to investigate the housing problem indicated that the people will do well to overcome such prejudices, social or otherwise, as may stand in the way of building some kind of houses for the people to live in. The number of new houses required for minimum convenience of the people is 500.000. The number provided for in "schemes under con sideration" .is only 40,000. . But schemes under, consideration are so far from being schemes under reali zation that only S000 houses are in process of erection, while the num ber occupied since the government began to make plans is represented by zero. - Meanwhile . winter ap proaches and the situation becomes more acute Social feeling is certain to give way under pressure of stern necessity. The British health ministry already intimates that it is more concerned with the economic feasibility of the scheme than with its adventitious as pects. Bidders with practical plans, whether -these involve use of wood, terra cotta blocks or concrete, may be sure of a hospitable reception. I These are bidden only to bear - mind that the "frame or shell of a J house, whether it is of brick or tira Jber, costs only one-third of the total. The government has had an unfortu nate experience In having expended upwards of 2000 each to convert army huts into civilian dwellings. It has been unable to find bidders who would undertake to construct simple dwellings of wood for less than about $3600. The type for which bids were sought makes provision for "three bedrooms, one sitting room, bath, scullery and copper." Yet "it seems, perhaps because they are less conservative, that the Nor wegians are able to do better than the English. A factory near Chrls tiania.ls already turning out ready made houses of six rooms and not at all unattractive specifications at something less than $2400. An almost-unnecessary provision (in this servantless age) is made for a serv ant's room, the living room is large and commodious and the bedrooms much more commodious than any modern flat dweller is accustomed to. The Norwegian builders promise delivery in six weeks after receipt of order. . It looks as if the Norwegian build ers had beaten Americans into a highly promising field of industry. No country in the world is bettet supplied with the necessary raw ma terials, or better equipped with labor saving machinery and skilled work men for this very kind of enterprise than is America. The wooden house is an institution with us and we ought to be .able to reintroduce the fashion into Europe. It is a fine task for American initiative and pluck. Yet unless we bestir our selves the market will be gone. Other nations, it already is plain, are alive to the opportunity. FICTION FROM MEXICO. There Is Ho limit to the lengths to which President Carranza will go in his attempt to escape responsibility for outrages on Americans in Mexi co, but his explanation of the Jen kins kidnaping about reaches the limit. This is that Jenkins conspired with a bandit chief to kidnap him in order that they might extort money from Carranza to pay his ransom. If the money was obtained in the first instance from Jenkins' family or from the United States, it was to be recovered from Carranza afterward. Mr. Jenkins has lived in McVico for many years and is reputed to be rich. In view of that fact, the scheme attributed to him is absurdly Im probable. He knows Mexico too well to trnst a bandit to- divide the plun der or to release him if it were not obtainable. The other explanation is far more reasonable. It Is that Carranza's authority extends no farther than his troops can shoot and that AmerU cans are afe game for bandits be cause their government never does more about it than, to write notes and because their friends readily put up ransoms. Finally, any fiction is good enough to stand off the United States and to cover the very narrow limits to vhich Carrana's authority extends. LETTERS ON IRELAND. Irish independence is a subject which few who are interested therein can discuss soberly, whichever side they may favor. And despite the enthusiasm of the great gathering addressed by Ir. de Valera, there is in Portland a considerable number who are not in- sympathy with his cause and a much larger number who have formed no enthusiastic opinions on the subject- ' Incident to his visit' The 'Oregonian :received numerous letters for publication in which he was assailed with bitter invective. ' Now letters are coming from the other side in which the flag incident is discussed in immoderate language. One correspondent frankly states that he is at a loss for proper epithets to apply to certain individuals. Use of epithets is not argument and in most instances injures one's cause Moreover, few journals are willing to be the medium for name-calling by correspondents or for publication of personal abuse. These remarks are in partial ex planation of the non-appearance pn this page of the several letters on the subject submitted recently. There are other reasons. At the time of Mr. de Valera's visit there was pub lic tension over the Centralia mur ders. There is' no conceivable con nection between I. W. W.-ism and Irish independence, but when a whole people's nerves are on edge from one cause it is unwise to rub any part of the public the wrong way, even though It be over a mat ter entirely remote.' It was a' bad time to encourage quarrels of ' any kind. -. : . . Finally, those who are immediately interested in the Irish' question are ready letter-writers.. One letter on either side -or the subject -calls out ten replies. To open newspaper col umns to its discussion means "ex clusion of practically everything else Whatever may be the sympathies of the general public, we think it would not welcome subordination o our own problems wholly to those of Ireland. It is not pleasant to The Oregonian to have to restrain its correspondents but it sees no other way out, at present. TEACHERS' PAY AND VACATIONS. Dr. David Snedden, former com missioner of education of Massa chusetts and now professor of edu cation at Columbia university, writ ing in School and Society in advo cacy . of organization by teachers, takes pains to distinguish between various forms and purposes of or ganization, and makes an interesting suggestion as to a "concession" which teachers might make to the public furtherance of the proposal that teachers should be paid on a twelve onths basis. "It is in the highest degree desirable," he writes, "that teachers' compensation should be es timated by the year, and so given that it will bear the least possible resemblance to weekly or monthly pay for the few weeks or months for which casual laborers are employed." Vacations. Dr. Snedden points out in this connection, are a relic of the days when teaching was essentially casual labor. "No other real voca tion," he observes, "has so much va cational season as teaching." It is true that progressive teachers use their vacations only In part for rest. Some engage in -other occupations; others' devote themselves to study, the benefits of. which clearly accrue to the public if it is wisely pursued, but "the whole matter is utterly without standards or regulation." The writer has a plan, presumably tentative. He m suggests that the teacher be employed and paid for fifty-two weeks each year; four weeks in the summer and the holi days shall be devoted to rest; two weeks at the opening of school and two weeks at its close to preparatory Vnrlr " 1 1 n .1 n r- ttia ili,-... ti.i.i r f sihnnl i work "under the direction of school authorities"; thirty-six weeks to teaching during the period of com pulsory attendance; and the rest to professional study or. in part to va cation classes in the fourth or "empty" quarter of the school year. This may be one of the roads to public approval necessary for teach ers in order that they shall obtain their just reward. Their relation to their employers differs from that of other employes. They are "in the main public servants," and "the pub lic is almost necessarily a poor em ployer, whether it acts directly at the ballot box or indirectly through rep resentatives." Republics have other shortcomings than ingratitude, it seems. The public is "too many thumbed to discriminate nicely in the characteristics of those whom it em ploys": it is slow to reward the de serving and it dismisses the faithful with little reason. Yet the modern world knows no effective substitutes for- democratic collective employ ment, and the methods of autocracies and bureaucracies would certainly not be acceptable. Teachers, consti tuting the largest branch of the pub lic service, must face these facts. The exactions of working for a many headed employer are inherent in the situation. They are among the fac tors to be considered before adopting teaching as a profession. Dr. Sned den goes on: It may well be doubted whether pub- llo employment can ever become si dis- rimtuating, as appreciative, as well-re warded and as free from vexatious restrlc- ions as private employment. Hence- of- ice-holders, including teachers, whether elected by the public at large or appointed under more or lens of dictation from these in restrictive rules and laws, if in noth ing else) must be prepared to accept their positions- with these limitations in mind. lhey may not expect to treat the public as employer as they would a private em ployer. The public s sentiorlum of re sponsibility is too widely diffused. It Is now agreed by moat competent students of sociology or public science that it is neither expedient nor right for the em ployes of the public to coerce their em ployer through the medium of the strike or of sabotage. Grievances of workers must be expected, but only educational measures can effect their alleviatl- Educators, If strong In public confidence. are in a peculiarly strategic position to conduct such education If they are patient and relatively unselfish in their aspira tions. It is peculiarly their function to be thinking in terms of the public wel fare and the conditions making for a next generation of better citizens than those of today. . Dr. "Snedden "makes a strong point against class alliance on the part of teachers when he states a fact taken for granted, that it would "be folly, as well as a social' offense, for teach ers collectively to ally themselves with the democratic or republican party, with the Methodist or Catho lic church, with a suffrage or with wet' partisan group." For the moment snch an alliance might pro cure them various gains; in the long run they would lose public support and confidence, and in this it mat ters nothing that each group sin cerely believes itself to be right. The respect in which the American Fed eration of Labor is quite generally held does not obscure the face that it represents from the standpoint of 60,000,000 or more productive workers of the nation only a part of the population. "It is impossible to see," the writer concludes, "how teachers can benefit . , . by close or exclusive alliance ... at least until the latter shall have ceased to reflect class or sectarian interests.' The writer ' sees 'no prospect of permanent improvement of the teacher's situation through selfish policies, threats to coerce the pub lie,"-morbid dwelling on grievances or shortsighted alliances which em ploy methods alien to public educa tion. It will be noted, however, that he does not deprecate organization along professional lines, which is a very different thing. Russia will provide transportation back some for Russian undesirables not wanted in this country, says the representative here of the soviet gov ernment. This sounds too good to be true. Better make sure he issues no round trip tickets. A young man is under indictment in Grant county for passing a forged check for $10 and it is charged he bought whiskey with. the worthless paper. A keen attorney should be able to make a great defense in that case. The most helpless person is an In sane patient and anything that sav ors of brutal treatment must have rigid examination. There are two sides to everything, of course, but the side of brutality is weak. Ohio "drys" want a recount, basing the demand on the number of alleged errors found, but they will" get little from it: In general a recount reveals enough errors on both sides to leave the result about the same. Secretary of the Treasury Glass has thrown up his job in the presi dent's cabinet for a seat in the United States senate. He must have in mind that 1920 is presidential elec tion year. Wonder if It couldn't be arranged with Von Tirpit to resume subma rine warfare fox a few days along about the time we start deporting I. W. W. members? Those women who were fined for taking things from Portland depart ment stores at least deserve credit for doing their Christmas shoplifting early. "Pulpit raps I. W. W.," says a head line. About the only kind of rap that an I. W. W. really heeds is a rap with a night stick. The president basked in the balmy sunshine yesterday and so did many Portlanders. Washington has noth ing on us. No need to waif for steam heat and other nonessentials at Kelly Butte. The main idea must be to get going. Now the Pacific coast league um pires threaten to go on strike. After all, this might not be an unmitigated evil. Do you hear "the kaouck and chuckle of the strutting turkey cock" this week before Thanksgiving? Everybody with pride in Oregon will go to the livestock show, not once, but often. . The visiting stockgrower can have all he wants if it be procurable. Hop a Kenton car and meet him at the livestock show, BY - PRODUCTS OF THE PRESS OH Strike Makes Socialist Baseball Club Wealthy. Several years ago Eastland county was the hotbed of socialism in Texas, says a Texas correspondent of ths Milwaukee Journal. It was during those days that the socialists of Dt- deroona then it was called Hog-town rganized a baseball team. And they made a very good job of It. Nearly every team that played with ths Desdemona lads was defeated. Finally the democrats, who had man aged to keep a lead in pfolitics, de cided that something must be done. They organized a rival team and after much practice played the socialists. The radicals won easily. At that time there was no regular ball park at Desdemona and the so cialists had clearecU,off a small space n the pasture of Dr. S. E. Snodgrass. That was the scene of the democrats' defeat. I Snodgrass was a democrat and af ter the ball game other leaders of his party appealed to him. They told him that the socialists could not be beaten at baseball, so they ought to be stopped. The only way was to prohibit them from using the Snod gress pasture. So Snodgrass gave the order. Then ths socialists offered to buy the small tract where they had been playing-. Snodgrass told them they could nave it for $50, this being considered a pretty steep price for ths acre or two of ground. Ths so cialist players and fans, however. chipped in a dollar apiece and bought the ground. Now this old diamond is in ths heart of the Desdemona field and the potential oil production of the site la worth millions. It belongs to the so cialists, but which ones? Many other socialists around Des demona have made lots of money in oil. The same Is true of the Ranger district, the northern part of East and county and in Stephens county. Scores of these former socialists now are independently wealthy. Will they divide? Somewhere in America there is a nurse from overseas who wears a short strand of Bmall, round pink beads. She calls It her "Croix de Guerre." Just before Chateau Thier ry, when the refugees were pouring out of eastern France, a young girl with big, dark eyes came with a sick baby to one of the hospitals behind the lines. During the first few weeks at the hospital the baby whimpered and wailed constantly, but with the nurse's unremitting care it gradually grew well and strong. - The day the little mother was leav ing she sought out the nurse whose untiring patience and kindness had meant the return of her baby's health. "This, ma'm'selle," she said, holding a string of'pink beads in her out stretched hand, "I want you to have it; it is the only thing I have left besides my baby, and you have saved him for me." "Just a tiny happening in the big story of the world war." says the Modern Hospital In relating: the inci dent, "but one which will long; live In the memory of the nurse whom it so closely touched." At a dinner In Washington' the wife of an attache of the French embassy turned to Secretry Lansing and re marked: "I never can make out you Amer icans. You measure everything by the dollar, you name everything after dollars, you even count our great vic tory in dollars and yet you gave your lives and your dollars cheerfully for a principle."- "Yes," replied Lansing, "though 1 don't know what you mean when you say we even name things after money," "Your doughboys. Only yesterday I heard a man say he got his dough from the government." Dr. J. J. Monahan of t. Luke hos pital staff, Chicago, says that if women continue to wear high-heeled, pointed-toe shoes the human race in time will develop single-toed feet like the horse. To support this theory that the race is already on the way to a single-tied foot he says that Dr. Reuben Gross of New York has a pic ture of a nine-toed foot, that he found on one of his pationts, a boy in New York city. No use to lose sleep over the dan ger of this physiological transmogri fication, for some wise authropologist who writes editorial comment for the Boston Transcript asseverates that the single-toed " human being is at least an ultimate possibility, yet it would take about a million years to effect the change in a general way. So toothpick shoes will stay in vogue until fashion says otherwise and the chiropodists will be busy with the corns on five toes not one on each foot. . Scientists say that the horse once had five toes on each foot, but that was countless years ago. The scien tists say that the horse's foot grad ually hardened from running swiftly over stony or parched ground and the compression finally eliminated the toes. As a throwback now and then a domestic horse has an additional toe with a complete hoof at birth, and sometimes three or more toes occur. Marguerite L. Smith, elected to the state assembly from the 19th New York district. Is 25 years old and a specialist in physical framing and her election Is, she believes, the nat ural outgrowth of the work she has been doing In her community all through the war. She will not give up her work as physical director in the Horace Mann Elementary school, where she Is also supervisor of girls' clubs. In the summer for several years Miss Smith has been director of ths nhvKical training and dancing at Camp Hanoun, a girls' camp in Ver- Onalaska, Wash., at the Benson. He . .i..ls still in the lumber business. mont, ana sidu Duyci inicuucu ill. girls' hikes through the White moun tains. U When she was in Teachers' collegs Miss Smith was president of the ath letic association for two years and received the highest individual score for athletics in her senior year. "I never had any legislative or po litical plans for myself," she says. "1 haven't now. But I want to keep on working for the people of my own community in whatever way I can." Thosa Who Come and Go. Ths whole Kuhn family of Suplee arrived In Portland to take in the stock show and all hands are at the Imperial' when not out at the exhibit building. J. V. Kuhn. head of the family, has lived in Grant county since 1882 and while he registered from Suplee, he lives on the south fork of the John Day, in the country where General Howard chased the Indians under Chief Joseph. "When ever the soldiers would catch up with the Indians," says Mr, Kuhn, "Gen eral Howard would have a pre yer meeting and when the prayers were over the Indians were on their way. The Indians called him 'Old Day After Tomorrow'." Mr. Kuhn special izes in sheep, although he runs stock and has some extra-fancy hogs. "Grant county," says he, "ts an ideal sheep country, so that's why I like 'em." Mr. Kuhn had some trouble getting herders until after the war, but when the boys returned from oversea service they headed right back to the ranch and that trouble was eliminated. T favor a general tax len-y on Clatsop county to raise funds to pay tor the site of the proposed naval base at Tongue Point," says E. P. Noonan, of Astoria, registered at the Benson. "The owners of the site cannot be expected to donate it and they are entitled to compensation after holding it all these years. As Clatsop county will be directly bene rited by the establishment of the base, a tax levy on all the assessed property tn the county strikes me its a fair proposition. i et. m a tax payer myself."' Speaking of Astoria, Mr. Noonin declares that everyone has money and is spending it and the shutting down of the shipyards has made no apparent decrease in the business activities of the community. "This paper money has no value." he says. "A $20 greenback doesn't seem like real money like a $5 gold piece and maybe this is a psychological phase of the spending fever. "While thousands of cattle have been shipped out of Lake county in the past two years, It will not affect the resources of the county." explains Judge- Bernard Daly. "The cattle were tent to California and sold be cause Lake ccunty has had a couple of dry years. The stock brot ght good prices. I, myself, sold yearlings at $56 a head. The breeding stock was not disposed of and in a year there will be as many head of catUe in Lake cointy ns before the movement started toward California." . Mountain climbers are supposed to be ttll. thin fellows, but J. T. Haz zard. of Rainier, Wash., who is at the Hotel Portland, is about as broad as he is tall. Mr. Hazzard is all muscle, however, an! even when a rock fell down the side cf the mountain last year and hit him on the head, the rock broke, Mazzard was knocked out, but' the stone failed to dent him. Mr. Hazzard came here to look up a Swiss guide, who lives near Hiils boro and who is said lo be one of the most expert guides in the coun- JY- "Practically all of the paving plants in the western division have been shut down." reports C. H. Whicmore of the Mjthway engineering depart ment. "Oskar Huber is still paving near Aurora and has about 2000 feet more before finishing. Normally, this stretch will be finished in a week. The Hillsboro-Forest Grove section is also being paved and the Warren company will complete it this season if the weather holds good." Governor Hart, who became chief executive of the state of Washington when Governor Lister died, came to the Hotel Portland late last night. He is to make a speech for his state at the stock show. The governor was quoted a" few months ago as not wanting to serve after his present term expires. 'but since then he has let it be known that he may Tun for governor. Loaded down with 57 big wild geese, shot in the vicinity of Arling ton, Or., William Bender of Victoria, B C. came to the Hotel Portland yesterday and began a distribution of the load. Mn Bender is in the city for the livestock show, but had an in vitation from a friend to do a little shooting in Gilliam county) so he took advantage of the bid to go gunning. "Paving In Eastern Oregon will continue until December," states C. P. A Lonergan of Pendleton. "They are paving from La Grande toward Hot Lake and from Milton to Athena to connect with Pendleton. This is about done and the paving is going on now between Athena and Weston. At En terprise the plant has shut down, after laying about 20,000 feet." Frank Farrell of Medford, who was a naval aviator when the war was In bloom, is in town for a few days. The former lieutenant went to Eugene Saturday to root for the Oregon Agricultural college and con sequently is not particularly satisfied with the result of the game. Portland looks good to Horace M. Hall and so he fled Seattle for this city. Mr. Hall wants to live here, at least for a while, and has been trying to engage an"' apartment, thus far without any more success than other house-hunters are having. With Mrs. Hall he Is at the Benson. Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Standisb of The Dalles, who are at the Imperial, are entertaining J. P. Conroy, father of .Mrs. Standish. a well-known cattle man of the middle west, who is here attending the stock show. Mr. Stan dish Is a prominent architect of The Dalle's. Antone isn't much more than a dot on the landscape In central Oregon, but some pretty good stock is raised up that way and a carload has been shipped to Portland as a sample by R. N. Erlckson. The Antone animals are on exhibition at the show Captain J. W. Ciemans, president of the First tSate & Savings bank of Klamath Falls, is at the Imperial. He is here to look over the stock show. The captain went into the Klamath country when he was In the regular army and liked the place so well that he remained. All the way from Fort Bidwell. Mo doc county, California, comes R. R. Baker to buy some breeding stock at the livestock show. Mr. Baker drove by machine 210 miles, at which point he took the train, at Bend, for Port land. He Is at the Imperial. Stockmen from Spray, Or., who are here to look 'em over at the show are C. F. Waters. Stewart Grant and E. E. Mathews. They are at the Perkins. C. W. Emerson of Maylvllle is also at the Perkins on 'the same mission. A. M. Hagen, who up to a few months ago was superintendent of a ill at Astoria. Is now registered from F. M. Rothrock of the Rothrock stock ranch near Spokane is at the Hotel Portland. With him is Henry Thlessen of Sweetwater, Idaho. Heading a party from New York, K. S. Breckenridge, a director in the American Can company, arrived yes terday at the Multnomah. One of the big sheepmen of -Montana Is E. O. Selway, who has arrived at the Hotel Portland from Dillon, his headquarters, JUST BIT OF REAL SATIRE Tkat Is All There Was to the Reed Quest Article. PORTLAND, Nov. IT. (To the Edi tor.) "It is to laugh." as the Danes y. when one views the work of ths "heresy hunters" hereabouts. It is but a short time since Dr. John H. Boyd was so futilely attacked and by quotation, removed from Its con text, made to appear as lacking In orthodoxy. The latest exhibition In this line la contained in an editorial in the Tele gram which quotes from the Reed College "Quest." (See editorial at tached.) It is of course obvious that the writer in the Quest wrote in sarcas tic vein after the manner of George Bernard Shaw and with no other ob ject than to increase the interest of the student body in religious matters. By adopting the tone of the occasion al student who assumes this superior attitude toward religious matters the article was much more effective than would have been a straig! t-out appeal to the students to attend chapel, and It is said to have gone far toward producing the desired effect. " It was not for a moment misunder stood bv the student body nor the faculty nor indeed could it be by any one else who possessed even the rudi ments of a sense of humor. The Telegram says the Quest needs a censor. Does it, or does the Tele gram need a saving sense of humor and a modern rather than an ancient viewpoint? Reed college needs no defense as to Its attitude toward religion. It has just voted $300 to send delegates to a religious conference, but for fear there might be others among the public as lacking in perception as the writer of the Telegram editorial, we ask you to give this space so as to set the matter right. M. W. HOWARD. Following is the article from the Quest, to which Dr. Howard refers: Any student who comes to Heed college with a re.igloua enthusiasm loses it. hides it. or gets out. Even in this day and an some people who are cultured euuf toKvant to go to college nave aeep rtufiiuua re liefs. Rec-d pets pome of these, and under her nurturing hand they either lose what they had or they hide it or they set out. Of course, as an enlightened group we, students, faculty and all, do not deny that much good has cunie to the world from certain religious enthusiasms Christianity, for instance, civilization has been greatly benefited by doctrines which It fosters. On the other hand we have caught a glimpse of a rational existence, and to us much of the so-called "spiritual" in religion ap pears unjustifiable in view of the inde structibility of matter, the conservation ot energy, etc. From our mature standpoint it is "so obviously unscientific for a man to prav that we we wonder why people don't use better judgment. We Imp.y as much to our college friends, and they well, no matter! CHRISTIANITY GOING FOllWAIlD Truer to Name- Than In Any Othe U17 of the Era. ALBANY. Or.. Nov. 16. (To the Editor.) Your reference in Sunday's Oregonian of the 1903 New Year poem of Ella Wheeler Wilcox, the beautiful sentiments of which ending in "we are climbing, we are climbing, as we circle on our way." brings to mind the wonderful intellectual and moral climb made during the last -00 years. Even Christianity has become more like the loving and merciful Christ, and the different Christian denominations instead of torturing each other for variance in religious opinions, or burning so-called heretics at the stake for no other crime than a doubt in the creed of the church, are now to some extent practicing the good doctrine of brotherly love. Many cf the professed Christians' of todav are occupying about the same ground occupied by the heretics of a century ago. Only a few genera tions ago. people were afraid to ques tion the king or priest; afraid to in vestigate or denounce a church dog ma. - Before great wealth the people bowed, and before kings and priests they were prostrate. Happily the world now is more inclined to pay homage to intellectual and moral worth, to real Christianity, and to all those great virtues that go to make up the truly great and noble men and women. It would take a book to enumerate the progress made intellectually, mor ally and religiously during the last 200 years. Separation of church and state: the right to worship God or not to worship him; the abolishment of slavery; the uplifting of women the right of woman suffrage: tne prohibition of Intoxicating liquor; the laws against white slavery, and against vice in all its forms, are but a few of the great blessings enacted into law. May our federal constitu tion and good laws be ever preservea is the sincere wish of every good citizen. GEOGE W. WRIGHT. WHY WORKMEN GROW RESTIVE Average Toller Has Hjjji to Reduce Standard of Living, Says Vtritrr. PORTLAND, Or., Nov. 17. (To the Editor.) The vitriolic letter or Colo nel W. H. Bowen, who charges the "proletariat" with "extravagance and insolence" and wants it "taken down a peg," Is only another sample that goes to show the oblique view of the specialist expert, the professional soldier's Ignorance of civil life andi the unwisdom of a nation s giving its destiny into his keepirg (except in actual time of war). Perhana the colonel has been re ltovri , I0112: from the necessity of providing his own mess that he doi not know what every workingman above 40 knows, namely, that the av erage toiler consumes less good 100a than formerly; less eggs, less butter. leB meat, -ream and cheese: that meals at heme and in "cheap" res taurants have become smaller be cause the prices of even the substi tutes to which he is more ana more forced to turn are aiinormallj nisn He also wears lets woolen clothing ai d he dwells in the same-old shack. No wonder he is getting reslive. The ec-lonel has hitched the cart before the horse, has mixed cause and effect. It is just such blind torylsm as his which has recited in the violent revolutions of the past PAUL W. EBERSOLL, 254 Vi Market st WHAT HOt LD ROOSEVELT SAVf Kins Carrie-SNly taed in Collection of Memorial Funds. VANCOUVER. Wash., Nov. 17. (To the Editor.) Are some people losing their minds entirely over this Roose velt memorial fund? I was dum founded Saturday while attending one of our picture shows to see cast upon the screen a picture of students hold ing a large American flag, which held quite an amount of money for the memorial fund. Then our flag was stretched on the ground and the boys sat down on the flag of their country, while they gathered in the shekels. Soiled clothes, dirty shoes were placed on the colors, tne boys forgetting their manhood in the excitement. Can you see the horror in the ex president's eyes, were he alive today, or do you think he would be "de lighted" at this desecration of the flag in his name? And again one of our splendidly loyal orders subscribed from their funds to the Roosevelt memorial, but "did not feel able to subscribe to the Red Cross," which has Shelped, and still helps, the widows and orphans of the defenders of this same flag. Which is the most essentia, caring for these needy ons or th Roose velt memorial? AN AMERICAN. More Truth Than Poetry. By James J. Montague. LINES ON FATING FIFTY CENTS FOR A TEMPERANCK DRINK. When entering an ex-cafe. Without a flicker of an eys-ball Tou call a waiter up and say: "I'd like to l.ave a Bourbon hich- ba!V You don't get hectic In the nock And wilt a brand new Quarter collar When you discover that the check Requests you to dig up a dollar. Instead you mutter to yourself "A dollar for a slug of whisky Is quite a tidy bit of pelf But violating laws is risky. I'll pay it with a cheerful face. The wealth of which I've been di vested May go to square a fine In case The owner of the joint's arrested." But when you get a temperance drink; Like grape juice, lemonade or soda. From some young lovely thing In pink Presiding .at a glass pagoda. And get a check for fifty cents You loose a flow of conversation Which thrills and vibrates with in tense And wholly righteoua indignation. For those who needs must break ths law Must run. of chances course, uncommon And though they get a little raw In instigating price advances Upon them we are not severe. Hut honestly, it's simply awful When fellows start to profiteer Whose businesses are strictly law ful. No Other Apparent Reason. With national prohibition impend ing the states that voted wet or dry apparently did it merely to give a little needful exercise to the elec torate. "Warning. Better double the insurance on rour Automobile. It might collide with a milk trtrbk some morning. The l.iinohorralgn'a Ttew. Perhaps they are called donkey en gines because they do all the work given them to do and never strike or break an agreement. (Copyright, 1913, by the Bell Syndi cate. Inc.) When Ghosts Intrude. By Grace E. Hall. From out of a drawer or a box or a book In confusion, thev fall at our feet. To gaze with what seems a long lin gering look. And to hasten our heart In its beat: The place and the time are forgotten; we gaze Through a mist at old scenes that we' knew. When in startled surprise there Is dropped 'neath our eyes A picture long hidden from view. . They returr. ta their own o'er the trails of the years. Though their footprints are dim on the way. Though the paths have been drenched with a rainfall of tears That have dried to salt dust day by day; They .regain for a moment their once tender hold. Meet our own with their eyes brown or blue. As wo c; tch to our heart this mock ery art The picture that falls Into view! Oh, where do the wraiths of our mem ory hide. That they came with such haste at the call? Are the loves of 'tTTe past evermore to abide. In the etchings on memory's wall? We lay them away in the tomb of the past. - Mark the spot with both roses and rue; Yet no claim of today ever keeps them away When the pictures of old meet our view. In Other Days. Twenty-five lean Ago. From The Oregonian of November 18. lRn4. Syracuse, N. Y. Fitzsimmons, the pugilist, who caused the death of Con Riordan in a sparring exhibition, was arraigned today in police court on a charge of manslaughter. The state university football team met defeat at the hands of the Port land university eleven on Multnomah field yesterday by a score of 12 to 0. The fete Breton and Kirmess closed last night in a blaze of glory and the Portland Woman's Union will be benefited to the extent of about $4000. Thirty-three Indian war veterans yesterday attended a meeting In the, city hall, presided over by Captain Thomas A Wood. Fifty Years Ago. From The Oregonian of November IS. 1SH9. Washington. The post mauler-general is preparing for letting the great mail route contracts next spring, and among those to be let are 41 in Ore gon. The Emmet guaVd will hold their second annual ball at the Washington guard's armory this evening. The Cambridge, sailing for Hono lulu, takes as part qf its cargo -947 sacks of flour. 85 sacks of wheat, 43 barrels of salmon and 147,239 feet of lumber. RHODES SCHOLARS WELL CHOSEN Reed Graduate Defends Oresron Selec tions for Oxford. HALFWAY. Or., Nov. 14. (To the Editor.) May I beg to differ with the correspondent signing himself "Student." whose contribution ap peared in The Oregonian November 10? I am a recent graduate of Reed college and am personally acquainted with the two men selected to repre sent Oregon at Oxford. First let me say that the requirement of a Rhodes scholar in the past has not demanded an athletic prodigy as a Bill Sjtars or a "Woo" Coylo, nor a social lion, a junior prom chairman (we all know them), but a man pre-eminently fitted for research in an intellectual sphere. Rhodes demanded the acme, not of the scientific, but of the cultural, ths philological, the classical which this country .produced. These two men are that. In them are embodied ideals which have been taken as the stand ard of a Rhodes man. I'll back them against all Oregon in scholarship and zeai in the required endeavors. We will grant that the committee may have erred in their Interpreta tion of what a Rhodes man should now be and what a Rhodes man of the future will be. When Oxford in ths time to come asks for an all-around socialized, democratic man, the com bination of student, lover of outdoor sports, and true patriot, then we still feel assured that Reed will again bo represented. : NON-PREJ CDICBS.