12. THE 3IOBNIXG OREGOXIAX, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1919. ESTABLISHED BY HEXKI T-. FITTOCK. Published by The Oregonian Publishing Co.. l:;. Klxth Street, Fortland, Oregon C. A. MOSCEX. E. B. P IPt-R. Manager. Editor. The Oregonian Is a member of the Asso ciated Press. The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for publica tion of ail news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rijrhts of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. Subscription Bate Invariably la Advance. (By Mall.) Taf!y, Sunday included, one year Daily, Sunday included, six months .... .-o Dally. Sunday included, three months. . 1.2 Tai!y, Sunday Included, one month .... Dally, without Sunday, one year T " Xai!y, without Sunday, six months .... 3.5 Ttally. without Sunday, one month ..... ."J' Weekly, one year 1.00 Punday, one year 2.30 Sunday and weekly 3.50 (By Carrier ) Daily. SnsJay included, one year $9.00 TJally, Sunday included, three months. . 2.-5 H'ally, Sunday included, one month .... Iaily, without Sunday, one year .. . 7-&0 Iaily, without Sunday, three months... l.-r Xaily, without Sunday, one month .... .83 How to Remit Send postoffice money order, express or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at owner's risk. Give postoffice address In full, including; county and state. Postngje Rates 12 to 16 pages, 1 cent: TS to S2 pases. 2 cents; 34 to 48 pages. 3 cnfs; K0 ti 60 pages, 4 cents: 2 to 70 pages, 8 cents; 78 to 62 pages, 6 cents. A'orcign postage, double rates. Eastern Business Office Verree & Conk Tin, Brunswick building. New York; Verree o Conklin. Steger building, Chicago: Ver ree & Conklin. Free Press building, De troit. Mich. San Francisco representative, B. J. Bklwell. brewers get behind it. The neces sary incentive would seem to be fur nished by desire to find employment for idle tlants. And the economic possibilities! of the product are vastly enhanced by discovery that the new sweetening is made from the same grains as beer, that it can. be pro duced from any plant containing starch, that even potatoes contain satisfactory and profitable quantities and that there need never be an other sugar famine if Americans will only adapt themselves to the new circumstances. BACK TO JUSTICE. The Portland post of the Ameri an Legion, having in mind the atrocious murder of four useful citi zens, all ex-soldiers, at Centralia last Week, at the hands of enemies of the country and its defenders, has unani mously adopted a resolution for re storation of the death penalty in Oregon. The State Bar association. made up of experienced practitioners of law, took similar action yesterday. Ko voice was raised there for the surprising act of sentimentalism which served in 1914 to deprive the machinery of the law in this state of a weapon indispensable to the pro motion of real justice. The present temper of the public Is doubtless well disclosed by the general call for appropriate punish ment for murder. It is astonishing that so many people were misled five years ago by the foolish pleas of "re formers" who sought to coax mur derers not to murder by the assurance that the state would not hang them but care for them all their lives, if they did murder. The arguments for abolishment of the gallows, officially presented in the 1914 election pamphlet, were briefly that: (1) Capital punishment does not prevent crime and does brutalize so ciety. (2) Innocent men are hanged. (3) Severity of punishment has no effect in preventing crime? (4) "If you believe in it (hanging) to kill another man, would you be willing to have it in the public square and you yourself spring the trap? If not, why not?" The three first of these arguments are familiar, and to the unthinking are weighty. They have been through all history answered by the experi ence of society; and they avoid the powerful and unanswerable fact that anything less than death for out right murder is a failure of exact justice. The last - count is quite unique. It puts every citizen in the role of executioner, from which one instinctively shrinks, and is therefore an appeal to timidity and downright cowardice, based on an utterly false hypothesis. One might as reason ably advocate the abolition of all law because the majority of men and women have no desire to be either policemen or jailors. For that rea son, should there be no police or jails or jailors? The American Legion will circu late petitions to place a bill for capi tal punishment on the ballot in 1920. It should be encouraged in that hon est enterprise. COMPETENT SCHOOL TEACHERS. The public Is told, on authority of a distinguished New England educa tor, now traveling through the north west, that the public schools are suf fering heavily from 'the prevalent trend toward socialistic doctrines; that the old-fashioned teacher of the upstanding patriotic type has largely left the schools; and that the whole trouble Is due to the low pay of teachers, which averages only $700 a year throughout the United States. ' It may fairly be asked if a poor wage is the sole reason. In the fa miliar days of long ago when teaching was a profession which at tracted consecrated men and women, the scale f f remuneration was far lower than it is today. It will scarcely be argued that they went into the public school service for the money there was in it. Why should it be assumed that such men and women now are to be had If the salary in ducements are made sufficiently large? The average pay in the city school is today much higher than in the country, yet it may be questioned if the quality of patriotic instruction in any metropolis is better than in the village or the backwoods district. It will not be said, for example, that there Is likely to be more socialism in the curriculum of a school down in Curry county than in Portland. The school teacher should be ade quately paid. No reasonable person will say or desire otherwise. But the real test of competency is not In the wage scale. We think it lies largely in the spirit of service to others which leads good men and women into the school, depending on the public sense of a square deal for sufficient remuneration. stacles yet' to overcome, and many nations have so much to learn In practice of Its principles that its suc cess will be in doubt unless the United States, the greatest of demo cracies, takes a strong hand in Its guidance. Some nations which have won their own liberty still cling to the right of conquest over their neighbors by might, and their ethni cal boundaries are so ill defined that they have a colorable show of moral right. The power, precept and ex ample r of the United States are needed to teach these nations the new -way and to prevent local wars from spreading into world wars. The league is so new that necessar ily it is an experiment fraught with many difficulties, from which the struggle in tha senate results. Only in practice can it be perfected. By practice also the United States can find its proper place and establish its proper relation to the bodpr of na tions. The leajie must therefore be a continuing subject of study to Americans, and the colleges and schools will find it a subject of grow ing interest -as events develop Its usefulness. For whatever be the fate of the treaty in the senate, there will be a league, and the United States will, now or later, be a member. SUPPRESS RED PUBLICATIONS. In demanding suppression of the Labor News, the Portland post of the American Legion will have the sup port of all the people of the city except the revolutionists and those who mistakenly regard action againsi any publication as an attack on free dom of the press. Only if it com pletely changes its policy, should publication be permitted to continue. Punishment of those who act upon the teachings of revolutionary papers while the publishers and editors es cape is not only unjust; it is folly. In order that the revolutionary move ment may be stamped out, all means of propagating it should be cut off. Many I. W. W. are merely dupes of men who write inflammatory articles in security, but they go to jail, while the instigators of their crimes re main free and win more recruits to the red forces. These red papers even have use of the mails, causing the government to circulate incite ments to Its own destruction. It should not be necessary for the American Legion or any other body of private citizens to call the atten tion of officials to acts of sedition and treason which must be obvious to any person whose eyes and ears are open. They need not fear that the public will not sustain them; the desire is for greater activity. A mw TSE FOR BREWERS' MALT The announcement by the special ists of the bureau of chemistry of the department of agriculture that malt sugar syrup has been made possible on a commercial scale for the first time in history fits nicely into the necessities of the times and the ec onomic need for a use to which to put the breweries that have been threatened with extinction by the prohibition laws. Barley sugar has long been known to theoretical chem ists, and has been produced in the laboratory for a good many years. The Importance of the new discovery is that It enables production under average conditions, out of a raw pro duct easily grown on American farms, and in plants until recently given over to manufacture of Intoxi cating beverages on a huge scale. Thus is vindicated the advanced economic dictum that nothing is ever ns bad as it seems. A market for barley is provided together with la bor for maltsters, and a threatened famine in sweets may be averted at a truly psychological moment. Our lack of sugar is not wholly due to in creased consumption of sugar in or dinary ways. Enforcement of "dry" laws has been attended by phenom enal increase in demand for sweet temperance beverages, for baker's goods and for confectionery. Our consumption of sugar, which reached Its high mark at about eighty-eight pounds per capita per annum, prom ises to rise to 100 pounds, or even more. It is important to the success Of prohibition that substitutes shall be found for harmful and inebriating drinks. 'Breweries,'" says the bureau of chemistry, "with very little change, can be used and are now being used for the manufacture of malt sugar eyrup. Up to a certain point the process is the same as the process for making beer." Only addition of evaporating pans Is required to con vert a brewery into a malt sugar fac tory. If the product is less conven ient for table use than cane sugar, it is at least pleasing in flavor, lav Ins a resemblance to honey, and it can be used without stint in cooking. lf," says the bureau, "the house wives want it, the grocers will get , it." Here, perhaps, is the real point. It takes a good deal more than a famine, as experience has shown, to pc-t us out of the rut of conserva tism'as to food. Efforts to popu larize substitutes were not very sue cessful, even with the patriotic im pulse behind them. We have sud denly relapsed now that the war is over. It may take more than an of ficial statement that "this is a case where the substitute makes so good that the regular, whose place it takes, may have to warm the bench Btu t'T" ! vti a chance that malt rugLir s tup will win a place if the THE LEAGUE AND ITS BACKGROUND Most of the misunderstanding of and opposition to the covenant of the league of nations has probably arisen from neglect to study the his toric growth of national states and then of co-operation among them or groups of them for common ends. That study is necessary to an under standing of the need of a league and of its functions in maintaining peace and in establishing justice among nations without war. A valuable aid to this study is "The League of Nations: The Principle and the Practice," edited by Stephen Pierce Duggan and published by the Atlantic Monthly Press. It Is com posed of chapters on each topic by a recognized authority and includes the texts of various historic docu ments, such as the league schemes of Abbe St. Pierre and Immanuel Kant, the holy alliance. President Monroe's message including the Mon roe doctrine, the Hague arbitration conventions and the league cove nant. Review of the background of the world situation in which the cove nant was framed shows the league idea to have been the product of evolution. Rome with its world-wide empire and Roman peace gave birth to the idea of a world ruler as the peacekeeper, and the confusion of the dark ages was followed by the effort of one despot after another to become that ruler until the balance of power was set up to balk the am bitions of Louis XIV. ' Napoleon made another bid for world power, which would have leagued the na tions by force under his sovereignty, but was wrecked by the combina tion of monarchs and by national love of independence. The holy alliance aimed to exercise through a partnership of . three monarchs the power of guardians of the peace, but it endeavored to trample out both democracy and nationalism, the tide of which was beginning to rise. That tide has continued to rise until in the great war it has engulfed all the three empires which formed the holy alliance. Former attempts to form a league of peace were doomed to failure be cause the conditions essential to sue css were absent. States then were formed by violence and ruled by des pots in contempt of the right of the Individual to liberty and of each na tion to unity and independence of foreign rule. Monarchs knew no limits to their ambition, and did not accept restrictions on their right to military conquest and to breach of treaties. Not until democracy began to revive in Europe was the Idea born that nations should be subject to the restraints of law and justice but that idea could not become su preme until democracy, in which it is inherent, itself became supreme. Having been fought and won in or der to establish good faith among na tions and the right of each nation to independent existence, and having destroyed the powers which denied those principles, the war has cleared the ground and made the league of nations possible. In fact a league is Impossible un less it be a league of self-governing nations. There are so many ob- OBEGON'S LABOR LAW. Criticism by President Hayter of the Oregon State Bar association of the law legalizing strikes, boycotts and picketing revives interest in one of the outstanding acts of thf 1919 leg islature. The law in question does not use the terms "strike," "boycott" and "picketing" but .resorts to elaborate legal verbiage which means the same thing. For example: No restraining order or injunction shall prohibit any person or persons, whether singly or In concert, from terminating any relation of employment, or from ceasing to perform any work or labor; or from recommending or advising or persuading others by peaceful means so to do; or from attending at any place where any person or persons may lawfully be for the purpose of peacefully obtaining or com municating information; or from peace fully persuading any person to abstain from working: or from ceasing to pat ronize any party to Buch dispute: or from recommending, advising or persuading others by peaceful or lawful means so to do; or from paying to or withholding from, any person engaged In such dispute any strike benefits or other monies or things of value. All these acts are, in addition, de clared to be lawful and it is further provided that no restraining order or injunction shall be granted as af fecting any labor dispute unless necessary to prevent Irreparable in jury to property. The right to labor Is declared to be a personal right, not a property right, and the injunc tion is forbidden as a means of pre venting violations of contracts of employment. The law Is notable in its recogni tion of a labor dispute as a matter of interest solely to the employer and employe. The interest of the public upheld In the federal court In In dianapolis recently in the coal strike, is wholly ignored. It is a point of interest in discuss ing the law to recall that the su preme court of Oregon held, prior to the passage of this act, that while the boycott is not prohibited by statute it is wrongful per se and that a re straining order will lie against it. Probably when the constitutionality of the new act is fully presented to the court. Inquiry will be raised as to Whether by legislative fiat that which is wrongful per se can be made legally right. Probably, too, the courts would have ' previously held that the labor leader who col lected money for the specific purpose of relieving the need of strikers and withheld that, money committed a wrong. Yet under a strict construc tion of the law the courts are charged not to consider unlawful the with holding of strike benefits. A case has already gone into the courts over the picketing provision. In the decision which has been ap pealed, one of the circuit court judges who sat in the trial held that there could be no such thing as peaceful picketing. If the legality of picketing and the boycott shall be fully upheld, it is not fanciful to predict that those devices will ulti mately have a much broader appli cation than at present. The con sciousness of the public that it is Interested vitally in every strike of importance is becoming stronger and there is no apparent reason why pub lic support should not be sought by every legal means. For example, the open-shop organization of employers could logically picket closed shops in the effort to divert public patron age from them, or vice versa. When employers as well as employes en gage in picketing and boycotts (and why not?) then will such outgrowths of industrial warfare be in full flower. around space as to put a period at the end of time. The discoveries made possible by development of the infinities upon infinities of the mathematicians have had their place in the scheme of things, but they must ever remain the exclusive property of the elect. Curi ously enough, it is the common mind, the mind once content to let others do its thinking for it, that now re fuses to be confined. It is bound by no philosophical niceties of defi nition. It listens with impatience to the statement, for illustration, that "infinite time does not now exist, never has existed, nor ever will ex ist," because "at no moment has it completed its unending course." These, as has been suggested, are quibblings with diction, with the nomenclature of a philosophy which has no short cuts, of a process that has nothing in common with any- thing else that we are able to com prehend. While certain geometricians are proving to their own complete satis faction that there is a place (though it be in "infinity") where parallel lines do meet, and others are forming one another that infinity is finite, and therefore non-existent. and while another sets down in fin ite feet, and miles, and light years the boundaries of the illimitable, average man, still calling his soul his own, insists on soaring' to greater heights and penetrating greater dis tances. Professor Einstein and Sir Joseph J. Thomson and all the other physicists to the contrary notwith standing, he will continue to insist that there is always something be yond the beyond. What do we care for a mere sphere with a radius of only 100,000,000,000 times the dis tance between the earth and the sun? The question still recurs: What is there on the other side of the fence? Men with souls above mathematics will never be persuaded that there are limitations to either space or time. BV-PRODrCTS OF" THE TIMES Mysjtessousj Force Operates In Jersey to Confound Commuters. With mica schist boulders smoothed and refined and polished the inhablt- nts of Englewood, N. J., have or rather thought they had perpetuated the fair name of Englewood for all time on the greensward abutting the nglewood station. The boulders were arranged In let ters 6x2 feet, so that folks who lived in Englewood, as well as those who happened, to be passing fast trains, could look down on the ground and be brightened and cheered by the knowledge that this place was, in truth. ENGLEWOOD. But while all Englewood slept a power mightier than the glacial pe riod stepied in and shattered Engle- ood's faith in Its fair name. When the first of the day's commuters reached the north platform of the Erie station, they found the old boul- ers still there, whitewashed and beautiful aa ever, only the tidings those boulders spelled out to a wait ing World was no longer Englewood ut WOODEN LEG. The mystery Is too deep for the tatienmaster, who says the fair name f Englewood was O. K. when ha brushed off the boulders and went home for the night. It is true, he ays, that the Englewood branch of the American Legion held a meeting that night, at which lemonade was njoyed by all, but that doesn't seem to have any bearing on the case. Old timers say ft looks like the work of Jersey lightning. Is it wonder there is contempt of law when cases of this kind happen? A rich broker of Chicago deserted his wife and two children in New York sixteen years ago, later acquir ing another wife and, progressively, three children in Chicago. Being ex posed and brought to court, an ac commodating judge gives him until today to pick the wife he prefers or go to Jail. Perhaps the term "rich broker" contains an explanation. Consular Agent Jenkins, held fo alleged swindling in connection with being kidnaped by bandits, is not passing any chances. The Mexican government refuses to put him in jail, pending trial, though he made such demand. Every day in confine ment might mean more damages. People who lived in the mountain country to the eastward years ago paid a "bit" a pound for their sugar and thought nothing of it. Now th price here is due to be higher, and conditions are much different with out a remedy in surlit. Now that the senate is enforcin the cloture rule, we can readily im agine that any regret the Honorabl Milton A. Miller may entertain at never having been chosen United States senator has considerably lost its early poignancy. The last chapter of an interestin tory was completed yesterday when settlement was made of the contro versy with the Pacific Livestock company over lands that soon will be omes for hundreds in eastern Ore gon. Who says the worlft. is getting low brow? With Poet D'Annunzio Italy, Pianist Paderewski in Poland and our own Professor Wilson, in ternational styles in foreheads have gained at least an inch. Nevertheless and notwithstanding, there is a coal strike in progress an steel strike as well, but the bod politic is less disturbed than the body physical with a small boil. According to their own reports all the drivers who have run down and killed people were going "very slowly," whereby it is a wonder th victims did not dodge out of the way. A FENCE AROUND SPACE. Laymen unversed in the subtleties, say, of the Einstein theory of rela tivity, may be less deeply impressed than they ought to be by the an nouncement made by certain British scientists that as a result of the ob servations made of the total eclipse of the sun made last May they are convinced that space has its definite limitations. "The greatest discovery in connection with gravitation since Sir Isaac Newton enunciated that principle " which, incidentally an Italian scientist of note has re cently disputed is hailed by no less personage than Sir Joseph J. Thomson, formerly Cavendish pro fessor of physics at Cambridge, also as "one of the greatest achievements in the history of modern thought The astronomical observations al luded to are said to have shown that rays of light from the stars are de fleeted in their passage past the sun in a manner which does not accord with the Newtonian theory, but which supports- the hypothesis Professor Einstein instead. To the man in the street all this means little or nothing. To the philosopher of science, however, it indicates that space "does not extend out indefin itely in all directions." The straight line is abolished. If one travels far enough in any direction, he is bound to re-enter the same field. Not content with repealing infinity, one Investigator goes so far. as to attempt to measure the finity that he has given us in its place. He cal culates the radius of space at about 100,000,000,000 times the distance from the earth to the sun, or about 16,000,000 light years. Space is gigantic sphere, suspended in th middle of what? Though it be con. ceded that the distance measured by 16,000,000 light years is so vast as to pass the ordinary capacity for mathe matical comprehension, it .does not pass beyond the indefinable yearn ings of the human mind. These will be content with no less than infinity, and eternity. It will be as futile for the scientists, with their refinements Great Britain and France are un easy about the peace treaty and may not await our action. This matter of keeping us at war is worse than keep ing us out of it. Thosj Who Come and Go. "Cattle stealing has been practically stamped out in Oregon.", said S. O. I Correll, with a sigh of satisfaction. Mr. Correll is secretary of the Cattle & Horse Raisers' association, or ganized six years ago to aid in the detection and assist in the prosecu tion of cattle and horse thieves. "There will always be some stealing as long as there are calves," says Mr. Correll, "but while the associa tion is on the job there will be no wholesale rustling, as in other days. The cattle thief, however, doesn't re form; he simply awaits his opportuni ty and seizes It and the cattle. We had considerable trouble in keeping the thieves in the penitentiary, for they would be pardoned out, and one man we sent there three times was pardoned out as fast as we'd convict him. The thieves were very actives for a while in Harney. Lake nd Klamath counties. The seventh annual meeting of the association will be held at Burns in May." How long can hay keep? The ques tion has never been settled, but hay 18 years old and still good sounds like a record. George Bloomingcamp, who with his brother has been run ning a stock ranch on Sprague river In Klamath county, had hay that old. When George who is at the Imperial was a boy. a barn on the ranch was filled with hay and It lay there ..ntil the bad winter of three years ago, when cattle were being lost because of feed shortage. The Bloomingcamp boys, however, did not lose a head. The hay was taken from the barn. where it had been stowed away 18 years before and was fed to the stock, This experience is said to be a con firmation of the assertion tnat tviam- th county can grow the finest hay In the world. The Bloomingcamps have sold their Sprague river ranch but still own a large alfalfa farm in that county "There was a regular old-fashioned republican banquet In Umatilla coun ty Saturday night," "says Bruce Den nis, who Is at the Multnomah. "All the enthusiasm of the daya of Grant and Harrison and McKinley and the rest was brought down to date. never attended a republican meeting which had more of the republican snirit. At this meeting the boys de clared their intention to get behind Frank Curl as a delegate to the re publican national convention from the second district and Frank agreed to lake the run. It looks as though the republicans of Umatilla county are getting ready to do their full share In the coming campaign for even some With silver selling at or above $1.30 H an ounce, at which price the metal in a silver dollar is worth slightly more than SI if sold as bul lion, banking circles were today de bating the question whether American silver dollars would disappear from circulation. There Is no law against melting the coins, the only prohibition being directed against their deface ment with fraudulent intent. In the opinion of men familiar with the bul lion market and with conditions in China, where most of the silver ex ports are now being sent, silver would have to advance a good' deal higher before the coins could be profitably melted. The cost of melting and of eliminating the alloy would probably of the boys who have been off the reservation tor several years v ei s m attendance at the gathering. cost about a cent an ounce. It was said, and the cost of making ship ments to the far east would probably require a price of about $1.33 before it would be possible to mske much profit out of converting dollars Into bullion. Moreover, it would probably be difficult to collect any great amount of silver dollars fcr this pur pose, according to bankers familiar with the situation. Among the visitors to the stock show is William Miller, who comes from Paislie. in the Chewaucan val lev. one of the most beautiful and fertile snots in the stf.te. Paislte the headouarters of a "Jig cattle com pany which runs abou: la.uoo neaa or cattle. There Is a story to the effect that when the assessor first went to Manager Fitzgerald and asked him ' SAITH THE OREGOX NEWSPAPER Corn Husk, Gweniie t Co. Predict i Mild "Winter. Salem Statesman. The corn husk, the goose bone, the squirrel and muskrat all proclaim an open winter In the balmy Willamette alley. Crane American. The first snow of the season ap peared last Saturday night. Old- tmers say this is a forerunnner or some fine weather before winter sets in. Sclo Tribune. The recent warm rains, which brought much snow out of the moun tains, are rather indicative of a mild winter. Er Vet! O. "Vest Harney Valley News. There are some tormenting influ ences from the biological situation that as yet are unreasonable, but as the desires and purposes of the bio logical department of both state and government are met with even better and more permanent conditions for the propagation of birds in the fresh water reservoirs of the several rec antation projects, leaves the situa tion with nothing but arbitrary minds on the part of the biological bureau that have the temerity to oppose this logical solving of the problem and a conducive situation culminated that will redound to the benefits of all interested. New Angle on Compere. Woodburn Independent. Instead of fighting Samuel Gom- pers. president of the. American Fed eration of Labor, the big employers should work hand in hand with him. He is the conservative head of a great crganizatlon which the I. W. W. rad icals seek to control, bring on revo- tion and destroy the existing govern ment as well as eliminating capital. The selfishness of capital., the encour agement of the "reds" by certain par lor monied influentials in New York, aim to knock the props from under this republican form of government. More Truth Than Poetry. By James J. Montasjne. bow manv head there were for as- Now the tall of his shirt is threat- I sessment purposes. Fitzgerald replied: ened. The combination of shirt and tail. revered as highly as the time-honored combination of mocha and Java, ham and eggs, half-and-half, ' whisky and soda, and fair and warmer. Is threat er.ed with final and absolute di vorce. And the trouble-maker is a man. W. B. Jackson of Chicago, secretary of the Federal Plate Glass company, says that part of a man's shirt below th'3 belt must go. He Intends to manu facture the tailless shirt. "Igot the idea from a friend of mine in Oak Park," he said, "a prom! nent man there. He wears a rubber band about his waist, and has his shirt cut off at the waietllre. When the advantages were shown to me I decided It was only right that some one should start to manufacture them. A many is inclined to grow stouter as he grows older. You have no ldi what a lessening effect, the tailless shirt has. In summer the shirts are cooler." Six thousand." 'Well." the assessor Is reported to have said, "if you don't round 'em up and count every head. I'll assess the company at 20,00" head." "Put 'em down at 20,000 then." snapped Fitzpatrick. Wearing a big hat and a flam boyant tie. A. Hendericksen, a stock man of Cecil, Is among the arrivals at the Hotel Oregon, here to look at the stock on exhibition. Cecil, In about year, will have a good road con necting it with the Columbia river highway at one- end and Heppner at the other, a contract having been awarded a few weeks ago for the grading of most of the distance. This Is the Oregon and Washington mgn- way, which hits Washington state line near Walla Walla. Believing in safety first, an auto mobile party cancelled a trip to Salem from Portland Monday night. Frank Schmidt, with his wife and baby, and J. H. Race, started from the Hotel Oregon for Salem, but after making a short distance found that the fog was so dense that it was impossible to see half the length of the car ahead Rather than take chances in run ning blindly, the Salemites back tracked to the Oregon. Mr. Schmidt Is Interested in the fruit juice busi ness. Editors' Errors and Doctors'. Tillamook Headlight. A Portland doctor sends us a long scolding letter because a trivial typo graphical error appeared in his ad vertisement. When an editor or printer makes a mistake he anolo- glzes in a gentlemanly manner and I corrects the mistake. When a doc tor snakes a mistake it Is put into a coffin and nailed up as soon as pos- ! sible, buried in a grave and covered up in a cemetery where nobody can find it. That's the difference in dif ferent kinds of mistakes. Small Town Editor's Kindness. Junction City Times. Ths small town paper has often been accused of being too conserva tiLe, because It refuses to publish all the scandal and horrible details which accompany some unusual and unfor tunate local affair. But in the first place, the small town editor is nearly always acquainted with the people concerned and, sympathizing with neir reeiings, cannot add unscrupu lous publicity to the already oppres- lve burden. A Few Dollars. Forsooth! Astorian. Two men who endangered life and liinb on the Columbia highway sev eral weeks ago were yesterday fined $37.50 each In Justice court. We doubt if the imposition of money penalties will ever stop this sort of law viola tion any more than it has curbed bootlegging. There will alwas be someone willing to take a chance for a few paltry dollars, especially when they have an employer who is willing to stand the gaff." THE WAIL, OF THE HEELER. A woman assemblyman. Elected in a New York district, bought 100 pounds of candy for distribution among the families of all the men who worked for her at the polls. News Item. I voted for Mrs. McMbney For alderman down In de TheiS;" She was open an' free as a lldy can b Wlf de little long green, so I hold. An" when de election was over. An' de lady finds out dat she oops. Wot she sends to my house was a chocolate mouse An' a bag full o' peppermint drops. I voted for Mrs. CLearr Who was out for ths magistrate's court- Tim Clancy, me boss gives th word. t-ome across An' hand the ole duns 90121 support." An when all the ballots were counted I gets from de petticoat Judge Some nutty fruit bars an' some candy cigars An' some stuff m old woman-calls fudge! Now women is runnln for offiesj De candy store keepers will soon Be dotn' as good at their garn as they would If they owned a good corner saloon. I'm starvin' to deat' as a heeler, No skolts on de ticket for mine. I loses me goat when' de Janes gits de vote. But me wife an' me kids likes it fine! a No Wonder. The farmer didn't want to nave daylight. He would have had to work Just that much longer. Content. The wages of sin is death, yet sin never seems to go out on a strike. Stupid. What we can't understand is why a burglar should spend a night break ing Into a bank when he could break into a milk wagon in ten minutes. (Corrrlght. by Bell Svndlcate, Ine.) better than I emotions that When there is work of soliciting for funds in Salem, F. G. Deckenbach always one of the "go-getters selected for the task of tempting the dollars from his fellow citisens. At other times Mr. Deckenbach Is an active member of the Commercial club and is a merchant. He has been at the head of four of the liberty oan drives in Marion county and Why doesn't some enterprising restaurateur increase his profits by painting the butter pat on the dish? His patrons would never know the difference. The man who drives an automobile about town while under the influence of liquor is as bad -as an I. W. W., and deserves not one whit more consideration. Some of Britain s most valuable books are leaving these shores for the United States, writes a London corre spondent. During one week a small bundle of rare editions was sold to an American dealer for $125,000. They Included a rare edition of "Robin son Crusoe," some works of Eliza bethan dramatists, and early poems of Rosettl. So great is the demand in Amer lea for European antiques, either in china, pictures or books, that Amer- put them over the top each time. lean dealers are opening places in London to keep in touch with patrons of their own firms in America. American dealers are anxious to buy Keats' or Blake's first editions. and some of Shakespeare's first fol ios have already left for the United States. Bidding runs high for Lamb's letters and any works with marginal notes by the author. For first edition of Keats' "Endymion" about $3500 was asked. A few years ago they could have been purchased for less than $2.50. Larger sums than this have been paid for rare books recently. Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer is indeed a bold young man if he really expects to run for presi dent with his name parted in the middle. Astoria will get the naval site without help. That s the proper spirit. That's the way Portland does thlngs when she is in the doing mood. Bull fights have been resumed in Mexico City after an interim of three years. Does this mean the Mexicans are becoming civilized again? Suppose we cease calling these affairs "drives." The gait is too slow. "Jogs" is better, though not literally perfect. The worst has at length happened in the progress of the high cost of living. Chinese noodles have gone up. We sometimes wonder what Gen eral Denikine expects to do with Petrograd if he gets it. One job we wouldn't care to tackle Is that of umpiring the League of Nations. Judge Gatens gave an automobile thief three years. Good work. That is a mean thief holding up working girls going home late. Perhaps Zama Is where all the yama-yama girls conTe from. Take the boys to the livestock show. Take the girls, too. House the visitor if you have a of logic, to attempt to put a fence room to spare. All the hop growers are adding five or ten or more acres to their fields for next year." says' Judge E. C. Kirkpatrick of Dallas. "There is good market for hops, notwith standing that the United States has gone dry, for the British buyers are active. Hop growers are looking for ward to good prices. Judge Kirk Patrick Is an enthusiastic good roads man and is one of the regulars who attend every meeting of the state highway commission. Thirty-one years ago Edward Egll was born In Lake county. Now he Is a stockman In Harney, with Burns as his postoffice address. "Weve got the finest country that ever lay ou of doors," proudly asserted Mr. Egll at the Imperial yesterday. All we need are good roads and more water. We need roads for transportation pur poses and the county is talking of is suing a lump of road bonds to bring Forbes Robertson's letter declining an impossible piay. Bays me sen York Globe, is laconic: Dear Sir: I have read your play. Oh, my dear sir! Very truly yours.' Did he have in the back of his head about the desired result." the story of Talleyrand's two-word note of condolence to a widow: Inmates of the penitentiary win "i-t, mnflitra'" l nave tneir eyes exammwu auu n .iuc ' .. . I need glasses the lenses will be pre In less than a year tne woman naa lb d Will Peare of La Grande, married again and then Talleyrand's secretary of the state board of opto later of congratulations was: etrv. who Is In town attending a meet "Ah madam!" g of the board, says that tne boara The limit of brevity In corresnond- will go to Salem in January to look ence was attained by Victor Hugo and the publisher of "Les Miserables.' When the book came out Hugo wrote anxiously from his place of exile in the Channel Islands: "V He expected detailed statement of the book's sale. The publishers answer was simply: "1" In American annals what is more concise than the Indorsements of President Lincoln and Secretary Stan ton on a letter of application for the post of army chaplain In the civil war? "Dear Stanton: Appoint this man chaplain in the army. A LINCOLN. "Dear Mr. Lincoln: He is not Dreacher. E. M. STANTON." Dated a few months later: -"Dear Stanton: He Is now." "A LINCOLN.' "Dear Mr. Lincoln: But there Is no vacancy. E. M. STANTON. "Dear Stanton: Appoint him chap ain-at-large. A LINCOLN.' "Dear Mr. Lincoln: There is no war rant of law for that. "E. M. STANTON "Dear Stanton: Appoint him any how. . A. LINCOLN." "Dear Mr. Lincoln: 1 will not. "E. M. STANTON". The appointment was not made. after the vision of the convicts, after which some of them the inmates, not the board may see the error of, their ways. Eastern OreKon men arriving 1 Portland yesterday were pleased ana surprised to see M. J. Buskley boss ing a wrecking crew at Troutdale. "He went at It." explalnea a union resident, "as he did in the old days at La Grande, when he would direct work in the Telocaset cut when tne snow would be as high as a tail Indian's shoulders." J. E. Clinton of Boise, Idaho, left for home last night after attending the stock show. Mr. Clinton, who was at the Hotel Portland, is one of the most active business men of the Gem state and he is one of the largest sheep owners of Idaho. Also he is vice-president or one 01 tne Boise banks. Rev. Mr. Jones of Baker and George Small, who for years was part owner of the Baker Democrat, are at tne Benson. They are arranging to hold a class to initiate a group of Masons in eastern Oregon in tne thirty second degree. ' Ben Sheldon of Medford. member of the house of representatives, who probably introduced more bills In the house In the 1919 session than any other man, is in the city attending the stock show and talking politics. Birds of Like Feather. Powers Patriot. The labor agitator has as little connection with the source from which employment flows as the sDar- rows have with thir supply of ber ries. iature supplies the sparrows witn berries just as stored capital and experienced brains plan Indus tries and make employment possible. The sparrows and the agitators enjoy maKing tne big noise and eating the berries which they do not provide. Gompers' Beer Propaganda. Oregon City Enterm-ise. The laboring people of the country are not benefited by Mr. Gompers' attitude. His statements are silly ana untrue, it was only a few years ago mac uregon city Had 16 saloons, and 75 per cent of the mill checks were cashed in them, instead of gol- 10 tne outcner ana the srrocer ana tne wile and children at home 1le saloon is a social evil and will never appear again in this country. Pnrice for Peare. Marshfield Record. It is significant that this enidemic of strikes is likely to lead to a ner- manent law for the deportation of aliens who are anarchists or onen violators of American law. That would be a very desirable purge. It might, for a time, reduce the labor force In some Industries, but it would tend to industrial peace. No High Cost of Hides. Blue Mountain Eagle. Tnere Is no use to attempt to ascribe the high cost of shoes to the price of hides. That is ridiculous. In the first place, there is no high price of hides in the cattle country. Grant couhty, for Instance. And in the next place, there is very little leather In shoes, as they are made of paper and wood. The Alien's Code. The Dalles Chronicle. Aliens and vice go band in hand fr.very time an alien comes to this country, crime is likely to increase. according to the police records. The reason is simple. At home these men were not taught high ideals. The Held the idea that anything one could get away with was right. Two More Holidnys, Please. Forest Grove News-Times. noimays are getting so numerou tnat it is pretty nam to keep track of them. Might It not be better to get aown to business and let a few ot tnem pass by celebrating with worx inateaa or so much play? Last Court of Appeal. Hillsboro Argus. ine murneroua element will fin alter a wnne tnat a court of last resort win mean tne great hpurt the people and that heart will not listen to appeals for changes of venue. Thins That Were. Hillsboro Independent. There was once a time when the man who couldn't afford shoes could wrap his feet in gunny sacks, but now gunny sacks are in the shoe class when It comes to buying. Blue Mountain Dreaming". La Grande Observer. It wouldn't ever do for retailers to follow suit immediately when whole salers lower prices. These things have to be conducted with due deliberation. Neighborly Suggestion. ' Warrenton News. - We need an Astorian in- congress. must In truth be know. Because of sweet arise. Mystic as incenss. Dure aa falllnr snow. From inner depth I do not rrillr. Til at the call of music's voice divine T-here echoes vibrant tones I never knew. Sounding like sliver bells within a hnne. Where one kneels softly, knowing God is true. TJnuttered thoughts lu laungage never oressea, Wild impulse and emotion, nude of word, Sweet longings like a bouquet closely pressed Against my heart, lest they be called absurd. Alt gentle, unvoiced better thoughts awake When harmony in tender accents speaks. Tea, e'en beyond my trend these voices make For better things than I was prone to seek! Oh! he whose miracles in sound por- tray The gripping melody that stirs his soul. Is greater than mankind shall ever say, And higher than mere recompense, his goal; A million hearts have quickened in their beat, Beneath the golden magic of his thought. And those unborn shall tenderly re peat The name of Sousa, loving what he wrought. Sousa: A Tribute. By Grace E. HH. In Other Days. Twenty-five Years A go. From The Oregonian of November 19, 1804. St. Petersburg. The last state serv ice for Alexander III, whose funeral is to take place tomorrow, was held today. C. P. Breckenridge, the new American ambassador, represented President Cleveland. Dr. Charles Edward Locke, at ths Taylor-street Methodist church, last night spoke for complete suppression of the Sunday saloon and resolutions were adopted approving the commit tee of 100. Among the distinguished visitors in Portland today Is ex-Senator John C. Spooner, prominent lawyer of Hud son. Wis., now attorney for the re ceivers of the Northern Pacific The chrysanthemum show, to be held under auspices of the Oregon Horticultural society. will . open Wednesday at the A. O. U. W. hall. S1REET PERILS DRIVE HIM AWAY Newcomer Declares He Will Lfbtc Because of Auto Menace. PORTLAND. Nov. 18. (To the Edi tor.) The "joke" is that notwith standing the most extraordinary num ber of auto accidents here each day. and the wail that the pedestrian pub lic is sending forth, they still continue to speed 'em, just the same! By ac tual count, from St. Louis papers re ceived daily, you have nearly 300 per cent more auto accidents here than they have In that city of over 1.000. 000 population each day. Trouble seems to be that no auto driver here takes the matter seriously. You coax and you shame them, and your special writers put out enough sob stuff to drive a brass monkey to tears, all to no avail whatever, when a brief crusade of arrests with heavy fines would stop the menace instantly. I travel a great deal by auto. We get to a town "Are they strict here?" if "Yes," we are mighty careful as to speed and traffic rules. If "No," it is of course different. I micht add, I came here to make Portland my home, with my family, but I wouldn't think of subjecting them to the daily auto menace here. Therefore I am locating elsewhere. DISGUSTED. Population of United States. PORTLAND, Nov. 17. (To the Edi tor.) Kindly inform me what the population of the United States is at the present time. NELL NORDQUIST. There has been no enumeration since 1910. The population is esti mated to be at present about lui,-000,000. Governors of Colorado. STEVENSON, Wash., Nov. 17. (To the Editor.) (1) Who succeeded Gov ernor Waite as governor of Colorado? 2) Was Governor Waite a candi date for re-election in 1894? (3) Who defeated him? (4) When was Alva Adams gov ernor of Colorado? GEORGE F. CHRIST ENS EN. 1. A. W. Mclntyre. 2. Yes. 3. A. W. Mclntyre. 4. From 1887 to from 1S37 to 1899. and again Information on Mexico. GOLD HILL. Or., Nov. 17. (To the Editor.) Kindly inform me whom I could write to In Vera Cruz or Salina Cruz in regard to land areas In the Tehauntepec Isthmus. SUBSCRIBER. Aihlitss the United States consul. Vera Cruz or Salina Crux.