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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1920)
THE MORNING OREGONIAN, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1920 8 ESTABUSHKD BY HKNRY I- PITTOCK. -T Publiehed by The Oreg-onlsn Puhlu-ning Co.. lii Sixth Street. forliand. Oregon. C A. ilOKDEN. E. B. MPtR. Manager. - tailor. I", The Oregonlan Is a member of it. elated Preaa. The Associated PreM is . exclusively entitled to tiie ue fr.!'0" ,, ''. . - ,t i..tohM credited to It Uon of all news dlspatchea crediteo i to or not otherwise credited in ini also the local news published tere n. AU nithts of republication ol special dipatcnes herein are also reserved. SabscripUea Bates Invariably in Advance. . ft- Daily, Sunday Included, one year ... Daily. Sunday included, six months . raily. Sunday included, three montne Dal.y. Sunday Included, one montlx .. Dally, without Sunday, one year . ... Daily, without Sunday, six months .. Dally, without Sunday, on montn . - 2.M 6 .00 .60 ..... 1 0U r eekly, one year Sunday, on year 6.00 (By Carrier.) Dally. Sunday Included, one year . . . S 00 2.1'5 Dai:y.' Sunday Included, one month ... .W r,nn.- .iikun nn,ii.v MlilVt&r ...... l.ov Daily! without Sunday, three months 1.85 Dully, without Sunday, one month .... How to Kemit Send postodlca money erder. express or personal check on your local bank- Stamps, coin or currency are at owner's risk- Give postofflce address In full, including county and state. Poatage Kates 1 to 16 pages. 1 cent: 18 to pases. 2 cents; 34 to 4 pages, eents; iO to tt-t pages. 4 cents: b to eu pages. 4 cents; hi to 6 pages, cents Foreign postage, double rates. Eastern Business Office Verree Conk lln. iirunswick Duliding. New York: Verree Conklin. Steger building. Chicago; V er Fee t Conklin. Free Press building. De troit. Mich. San Francisco representative. B. J. H. dwell. t"! BOOT STATES TUB ISSUES. : Elihu Root has put first among; thej J;,' Issues of the campaign President I Wilson's assumption of autocratic ! power, the democratic party's sup- i port of him in so doing and the duty ; of the republican party to decen- ! tralize the executive powers in recog- ;;; nition of "the necessity that we shall restore our republican form of gov- eminent with the liberty of the ln- dividual citizen preserved by limita- ;:; tions upon official power and put an !" end to the dictatorship which we cre- ated in order to carry on the war. .', This is the great question to be I ! fought out in the campaign, for out of the evil to which Mr. Root points have grown the others for which, he tells us, the republican party must vi find remedies. He placed next In S Importance ratification of the treaty ! ! with senate amendments long before j the presidential election. But for the autocratic power exercised by the president, no occasion would have arisen for discussion of the treaty In this connection. As Mr. Root says, the president's practical die ;j tatorship was "created In order to carry on the war." It should have ' ended when hostilities ceased, - and Mr. Wilson should have called con- gress to full exercise of its constitu- tional powers. If he had done so, he would have called the senate to ad vise him and act with him In making S' peace, as the constitution requires, 'j and he would then have assured in advance its consent to the completed . treaty. Just as McKinley assured rat lfication of the treaty with Spain. By J setting at naught the constitutional ; part which the senate should have in making treaties, the president drove t the senate to assert its powers. He thus involved a question of constitu J tional prerogative with that of ratifl J cation, and caused the republican senators to Insist on points which mfght otherwise have been deemed unimportant. 1 The deadlock on the treaty is not J due to differences of opinion between president and senate on its terms, for ' they have been reduced to mere mat I ters of phraseology, but to the pres '. Ident's autocratic determination that he shall have undivided authority J over foreign affairs and to the sen- ate's equal firmness in exercising Its co-ordinate power. As both Mr. Root J and Lord Grey point out, after th i treaty is ratified and the league or ; ganized, the ..'ay will be open for re ; form of the covenant, and Mr. Root ; definitely proposes this reform aftei ' Inauguration of a republican presi- dent. Their opinion corroborates ;. that which The Oregonian long ago ; expressed, that organization of the i league should be undertaken after ; conclusion of peace. The fact thai the senate defends a vital principle of the constitution causes it to stand -,' firm. If delay of ratification should make the treaty a campaign issue, discussion will deal more with the president's assumption of autocratic power than with the reservations ZZZ. themselves. The proposals for governmental economy, for a budget system and fof revision of the taxation system deal with abuses which are the out growth of the president's exercise of autocratic power. Extravagance of the government has grown each year, and Is the Inevitable fruit of irresponsibility of the spending de partments to congress, which pro vides the money. For this, tame sur render of their legislative functions r- to executive dictation by three suc 1 cessive democratic congresses is re- - sponsible. There Is no hope of econ ; omy on the part of an executive who , lias only to ask in order to receive. The constitution gives to congress the power of the purse, and the best se- curity for economy is that this power i shall be undiminished and that con--; press shttll assure Itself that appropri t ations ure-expended for the purposes J .for which they are made and that they are not exceeded, t - The same rigid partisanship which J '"led a democratic congress to obey 1 the dictates of the president caused imposition of taxes on a lavish scale, with a deliberate purpose to make " heavy exactions from the north and west and to bear lightly on the dem ocratic south. War taxes are levied with such disregard to sound eco nomic principles in an effort to dis criminate against the rich that the price of everything that the poor consume is enhanced, that produc tion and expansion of industry are checked and that investment is dis- " couraged. The high cost of living can be traced largely to high taxes, high taxes to governmental extrava- gance, and this to the autocratic ' power which tame democratic con 1 presses have yielded to the executive I The remedy is to "restore our repub- lican form of government" in fact. Extension of the strike evil until It threatened to paralyze great lndus- tries and still threatens to stop all railroad transportation and has been seized by revolutionists as a means to overturn the government springs from the same source partisan greed of power, which ultimately be comes vested in one man. This greed led president and congress to yield to the threat of a railroad strike in 1916 In order to win political sup port of the potential strikers. It en couraged the sleelworkers to strike tinder the lead of revolutionary direct axtionlsts. It caused the coal miners to attempt stoppage of the fuel sup ply. It now causes railroad men to renew their strike threat in order to coerce congress to legislate as they demand. The remedy is, as Mr. Root says, "limitation of the right to strike at a point where it conflicts with self-preservation of the com munity." In order to enlist political support without regard to consequences to the republic, the administration has filled public offices with "bolshevikl and bolsheviki sympathizers" who thwart its belated efforts to crush revolutionary conspiracy. When new laws against sedition are proposed. these same sedition-mongers, am bushed In the offices of the govern ment which they would destroy, raise a great outcry about infringe ment of the rights of free speech and free press which they abuse. There is indeed need of Americanizing the alien population, but most of all we need to Americanize the government itself by purging it of those who destroy it from within. There Is a certain irony In the fact that democracy has learned so well the lessons of pacifism which the president instilled that, when the experience of the war has convinced him of the necessity of universal training, his party refuses to unlearn them. It continues to follow only when he persists in error; when he turns from error, It refuses to follow. Thus it is that the nation must look to the republican party for those measures of defense which alone can make it safe. PEACEFUL. PICKETING. Prior to enactment of a law by the 1919 legislature the boycott was illegal in Oregon. True, it was not a crime under the statutes, but the supreme court had held that the boy cott was wrongful per se, and was subject to restraint by injunction. The 1919 law attempted to legalize the boycott when conducted by peaceful or lawful means. Now the idea of the various labor organiza tions and that of the lower court as to what are peaceful or lawful means do not coincide. The contro versy will go to the supreme court. One circuit Judge, we think, has expressed the opinion that peaceful picketing is impossible. The major ity of the Multnomah circuit judges have held that the peacefulness of the means must be determined from the particular acts. A still later rul lng by Judge McCourt seems to hold that picketing in concert or by urg ing by word of mouth prospective customers not to patronize a boy cotted place of business is not peace ful. A lone picket wearing a sash bearing the words "Unfair to Organ ized Labor" may be stationed in front of the place of business, but that is all. If the supreme court sustains the ruling of the Multnomah circuit court much of the apprehension by employers as to the radical char acter of the new law will be allayed. Pickets furthering the cause of a strike will have virtually no more liberty of action than they had under the law that was formerly In force. That law prohibited the use of force. threats, or intimidation to prevent or endeavor to prevent any person em ployed by another from continuing or performing his work, or from accept ing any new work or employment. As already said, the boycott was not made a statutory crime, but the same section of the code made it a misdemeanor to circulate false writ ten or printed material In further ance of a boycott. It will be recalled that "peaceful" picketing was 'fre quently conducted before the passage of the 1919 law. That is to say, men carrying banners proclaiming a place unfair to organized labor would parade in front of that place. Vocal declarations to prospective customers and passersby came in largely with the enactment of the later law. It is not surprising to find courts scrutinizing with care a statute, which seemingly attempts to legalize that which the courts have already de clared wrongful and construing it as closely as possible to the public interest. ECONOMIC DISEASE DIAGNOSED. In its financial and commercial re view for the year 1919 the London Times attributes the present eco nomic troubles in Europe to short age of goods and surplus of paper money, while expenditures of eacn nation still exceed income. The true effect of this condition was concealed till war measures for stabilizing ex change were abandoned. Then it be came known that "the bloated figures of trade and wealth were not in a measure prosperity at all, but In a way an indication of the world's pov erty. The Times finds in the latter half of the year "a growing con sciousness of the need to get back to saner economic basis, to restrict public and private expenditure, to obtain an increased production and to stop the manufacture of money as a means of making good a deficiency in wealth production." The part of the united States In producing and remedying this situa tion is told by Thomas W. Lamont of New York. He says that from the beginning of the war to the end of 1918 the United States naa amassed a balance on trade of ll,- 530.000.000 and that in 1919 the government has lent a further J2, 000.000,000 to foreign nations. In the last half of the year these loans practically ceased and borrowing for the purpose of stabilizing exchange stopped, yet America continued to pile up a huge trade balance. In the first ten months of 1919 our exports to Europe were $4,265,000,000, while mports from Europe were J543.000,- 000, a balance of $3,722,000,000 in our favor. , The need of financing Europe s trade Is fully realized In this coun try, but Mr- Lamont says that the. American investment market is not favorable to foreign securities, owing to heavy individual income taxes, which cut down the return to wealthy buvers. and "the investing power of the small buyer cannot be sufficiently mobilized to float large European loans if large investors stay out of the market." He reasserts the oft stated truth that "Investment funds must ultimately come from the na tional savings" and says: Tour leaders speak of extravagance in Europe. America also confesses the same inn. America cannot help Europe, and Europe cannot help herself, unless habits of work and thrift are clung to through the difficult days of reconstruction as well as through the hard days of war. Un less America works and saves so as to lend to Europe, unless Europe works and saves so as to help herself, all plans for tha restoration of Europe are in vain. In this connection he reminds the allies that "both Great Britain and France are making heavy expendi tures overseas for purposes of cap turing new markets and of obtaining large Interests in foreign enterprises" and he gives this hint The sentimental appeal to American In vestors and to American people generally to lend to Europe and so endeavor to correct the adverse trade exchanges is very much weakened by any such situation. The conclusion from Mr, Lamont'a reasoning is that the Incentive to thrift by the individual American is no less strong now than when it was fortified by the motive of pa triotism during the war. The way out of the present troubles for each individual as well as for governments and big business institutions is to work more and spend less in order to save something for the work of reconstruction and for readjustment of trade balances. Those savings can be Invested at higher interest by the small investor than ever before. As years pass, taxes will decrease and the net return will Increase; also the securities will appreciate in value as governments become more solvent and as business concerns grow pros perous. While securing the Investor against poverty, these Investments will help to restore healthy trade conditions between this country and Europe. THE GOVERNMENTAL CRAZY QTJH.T. Reference to reorganization of the government by , Governor Lowden and Herbert Hoover is a healthy sign of public Interest in a subject to which little attention has been given, though it is intimately connected with that economy which appeals to every man when he prepares his in come tax report. The government Is a crazy quilt, in which bureaus and divisions have been attached to de partments without regard to their proper functions. A degree of red tape and formality surrounds the re lations of the various bureaus to each other which obstructs and adds to the cost of public business. The treasury department is a fair example. It properly collects cus toms and internal revenue, makes disbursements and administers the public debt. It should control the bureau of engraving and printing, which manufactures paper currency, and the mint, which makes coin. The comptroller of the currency and the federal reserve board naturally come under its jurisdiction, as will the budget bureau whenever it i created. But the federal farm loan boaVd could just as fitly be attached to the agricultural as to the treasury department, seed grain loans could better be so, and the war risk bureau and soldiers' and sailors' relief be- lone to the pension bureau. There is absolutely no connection between supervision of the government finances and public buildings, public health, the coast guard, anchorage ontrol and the Panama canal. Some of them may originally have bnen thrown into the treasury department on the theory that its head had not enough to do, but that theory is long since exploded, add these side issues probably get only cursory attention. The same situation exists in other departments. Rivers and harbors and incidentally water-power dar?s on navigable streams are under the secretary of war, though they have only an Indirect connection with the army. No less than six bureaus in different departments have a part in the government of Alaska, and Sec retary Lane has exposed the absurd ity of the situation by telling that brown bears are under the care of one bureau and black bears ol another. In such a haphazard arrangement there is endless room for lost mo tion, overlapping, sinecures and waste of money. If such a merciless economist like the late J. J. Hill were given the job of reorganiza tion with unlimited power, he would root out the chair-warmers from ev ery corner and would save so many millions that the patronage-brokers would weep. We dare not hope tor a clean sweep, but we should have a president who will make a good be ginning. HOTOGBAPHING THE MOON. Professor Robert H. Goddard's in vention of a reloading rocket with velocity high enough to carry it be yond the sphere of the earth's gravi tational influence, by means of which he hopes to obtain new and valuable photographs of the space above our atmosphere, and Rear Ad miral Sims' belief that such a rocket, if successfully launched, would reach the moon, recalls the interesting theory propounded by Jules Verne In his highly Imaginative tale, "From the Earth to the Moon." The paral lel Is all the more Interesting in view of realization of the forecasts that Verne made in his fanciful "Eighty Days Around the World" and In Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea." It Is but fair to add," wrote Verne, that these Yankees, brave as they have ever proved themselves to be, did not confine themselves to the ories and formulae, but that they paid heavily for their inventions," a point that Professor Goddard no doubt would be willing to turn to ac count in connection with his appeal for a fund to be used for preliminary exploration of the atmosphere by the method he has devised. The issue or funds was settled easily enough by Verne's heroes. It will be remem bered by Verne readers that there was an important meeting of the Gun club at which this matter was set tled out of hand. The club's scien tists had shown that In order to keep the proposed projectile within pre scribed weight it would be necessary to construct it of aluminum. Bat, my dear president," said the major, "Is not the price ol aluminum ex tremely high 7" "ft was so at Its first discovery, but It has fallen now to 9 the pound." "But still. $9 the pound!" replied the major, who was not willing readily to give In. "Even that Is an enormous price." "Undoubtedly, my dear major, bat not beyond our reach." "What will the projectlla weigh, then?" asked Morgan. "Here is the result of my calculations," replied Barblcane. "A shot of 108 Inches In diameter, and twelve inches In thickness would weigh, in cast Iron. 67,440 pounds; cast In aluminum Its weight would be re duced to 19,250 pounds." "Capital!" cried the major; "bat do you know that at 19 the pound the pro jectile will cost "One hundred and seventy-three thous and and fifty dollars I know It quite well. But fear not, my friends, the money will not be wanting for our enterprise. I will answer for it. Now what say yoa to aluminum, gentlemen?" "Adopted." replied the three members of the committee. So ended the first meet lng. v Th question of the projectile was definitely settled. Verne was a romancer, not a scien tist, but he laid his ground plans with care. He gave mathematically sound reasons for supposing that a projectile could be transmitted to the moon. He calculated that it would be necessary only to propel the mis- slle to the point where the attraction exactly counterpoised that of the earth. At forty-seven fifty-seconds of the distance between the earth and the moon, he estimated, the mis sile would have no weight whatever, "and if It passes that point it will fall into the moon by the sole effect of lunar attraction." Providing for an initial velocity of 12.000 yards second and allowing for decreasing velocity, he arrived at 300,000 sec onds as the time required to reach the point where the attraction of the earth and moon would be in equi librio. From this point it would fall Into the moon in 60,000 seconds, from which he deduced that it would be desirable to discharge the projec tile 97 hours, 13 minutes, 20 seconds before the arrival of the moon at the point aimed at Sir Frank Dyson, the British as tronomer who now disputes the the ory of Professor Pickering of Har vard that there is vegetation on the moon's surface, might without much violence to the unity of Verne's tale have been one of the strange party that so nearly reached the moon and so gravely debated the possibility that life existed there. "Everywhere and always the geological works of nature, never the work of man." There remained one hypothesis, "that of a living race to which motion, which is life, is foreign." The more recent colloidal theory- which grants motion even to infinitesimal par ticles of inorganic matter seems to have been anticipated by the French man. "One might as well say liv ing creatures which do not live. suggests Michel. "Just so," asserts Barblcane. "which for us has no meaning." Verne had a trick of topical humor that he exhibited in such parodies on the prevalent ten dency to abstruse speculation and again when -he travestied the pessi mists who are always worrying over the vague calamities of an indefinite future. His adventurers, concluding that the moon onde had been inhab ited, turned to wondering when earth, too, would no longer harbor life. "When the cooling of its crust shall have made it uninhabit able." answers - Barbicane. Michel "boils with impatience" for a more definite answer. The tale proceeds: "We know what diminution of temper ature the earth undergoes in a century. And according to certain calculations, thit mean temperature will, after a period of 400,000 years, be brought down to zero!" "Four hundred thousand years!" ex claimed Michel. "Ah ! I . breathe again. Really, I was frightened to hear you. 1 imagined that we had not more than 60.000 years to live." Verne did not originate the idea of a trip to the moon. As he him self has pointed out, a certain David Fabricus boasted in the seventeenth century of having seen with his own eyes the inhabitants of the moon. Jean Baudoin, a Frenchman, pub lished in 1649 a "Journey Performed from the Earth to the Moon by Domingo Gonzales," a Spanish ad venturer. Cyrano de Bergerac pub lished "Journeys In the Moon" In 1649 or 1650, suggested by the Eng lish Goodwin's "Man in the Moon," and Wilkins' "Discovery of a New World," written in 1638. Fontan elle's "The Plurality of Worlds," was a sensation in its time. "The Strange Adventure of Hans von Pfaal," who launched himself in a balloon filled with nitrogen gas for the Journey to the moon, a famous moon story by Edgar Allen Poe, probably furnished Verne 'with his immediate inspiration. Recent discussion of methods to make ourselves understood by Mar tians, or others, reveal a suggestive parallel with the suggestion of a German geometrician - of - half ' a century ago who proposed to draw on Che steppes of Siberia in enor mous, luminous characters, the prob lem of Euclid known to 'students as the "Ass's Bridge." "Every in telligent being," said the German, with Teutonic assurance, "must know the scientific meaning of that figure. ' It is not surprising, therefore, that Professor -Goddard's idea of im proving on the Big Bertha with the end in view of exploring the region beyond our atmosphere, if not the moon itself, should now be received with especial Interest In France. Verne combined a predilection tor science with a lively fancy; his coun trymen show that their science may be tempered with imagination. Mean while, no doubt. Professor Goddard is wishing that he could solve tne financial phase of the problem as easily as Verne was able to do. Apparently Senator Sherman does not believe the man in ordinary cir cumstances should ride in his own ear. and blames Henry Ford lor prevalence of what the senator calls nest." xet he must aamn it is a fine machine to learn with, and, if he knows, will also admit the own er soon graduates into something more costly, if not to say better. Jack Dempsey is quoted as saying he'd just as lief fight for one cent as for $1,000,000. No doubt that's why he is so anxious to boost the purse to $500,000, a compromise be tween the two. Senator Sherman declares the Ford automobile is an international pest. It Is Indeed to some men of Fierce Arrow fortunes who want all the roadway to themselves. Report of a prairie fire sixty miles- wide sweeping Argentina recalls old days of the "Great American Desert, when such affairs were too common to be news items. A Chicago judge rules that what a man says in his sleep cannot be used as testimony, but the man with that habit should be wise to sleeping alone. Judge McCourt has ruled that women strike pickets must keep silent Really, this is too much to ask of any woman, picket or not When you read that Germany will prosecute Its own officers for war crimes; just remember Germany has her fingers crossed. A sharp rise in canned goods is predicted for the coming summer. This should be encouraging to ex cabinet members. That taxes are higher is to be ex pected. That they haven t doubled in the general trend is matter of congratulation. Some of the testimony In a current divorce case goes a mile beyond movie close-ups In the matter of osculation. It's a wise director who dodges a school board meeting in these parlous times of near-politics. Another holiday stretch starts this noon for many. SPECnrEJT "OLD-TIME PLATFORM" Log-leal CoBclnsion From Mr. Mar ball's KeeeBtlr Fxsrrssrc Desire. POR'TLAKD, Feb. 20. (To the Edi tor:) Vice-President Marshall has a ; JeTegateUlaVVto the national Ten,: ocralic convention upon an "old-time democratic platform." He should be encouraged. The revamping of one of those oli platforms, or a composite platform made up of a selection of the most distinctive planks of a number of them, would add greatly to the inter est of the coming campaign. We mltrht begin with the fierce de mand of the platform of 1856 for the vigorous enforcement of the fugitive slave law, and its declaration that "congress has no power under the constitution to Interfere with or con trol the domestic institutions of the several states," and "that all efforts of the abolitionists or others made to induce congress to Interfere with questions of slavery or to take Incipi ent steps in relation thereto are cal culated to lead to the most alarming and dangerous consequences." Plank No. 2 would embody the vig orous demand of the platform of 1860 for additional safeguards to prevent the abolition of slavery. Plank No. t would repeat the decla rations of the platform of 1864 that the war to restore the union was a failure, and denounce Lincoln's "ad ministrative usurpation of extraordi nary and dangerous powers not grant ed by the constitution," his "subver sion of the civil by the military law," his "suppression of ffeedom of speech and of the press," his "open and avowed disregard of states' rights," and his "interference with and denial of the rights of the people to bear arms In their defense." Plank No. 4 would repeat from the platform of 1868 its denunciation of the republican party, declaring that "its corruption and extravagance have exceeded anything known in history; and by its frauds and monopolies it has nearly doubled tne burden of the debt created by the war. Under Its repeated assaults the pillars of the government are rocking at their bases; and should it succeed in November next, and inaugurate its president, we will meet, as a subjected and con quered people, amid the ruins of lib erty and the scattered fragments of the constitution. In 1872 the democratics surrendered to Horace Greeley and Gratz Brown and indorsed their platform bodily. Aa thev have now practically con- 1-ceded that no democrat can be elected in this campaign, plank .No. 0 in Vice- President Marshall's platform, laneii from Greeley's in 1872, would apply beautifully. It reads: "Recognizing that there are In our midst honest and irreconcilable differences of opin Ion with retrard to the respective sys terns of protection and free trade, we remit the discussion of the subject to the people in their congressional districts, and the decision of congress thereon, wholly free from executive Interference or dictation woourow, however, would demand the ellmina Mnn f thn last c:1a.use. Plank No. 6, from the platform of 17 wmiirl read as fellows: "We rinniinr- tha resumption of 1875' (providing for resumption of specie payment) "and we here demand its Fnnfll." Plank No. 7 will appeal strongly to every voter having a sense of humor. It is from the platform of 1892 and reads as follows: "The democratic party is the only party that has ever given the country a foreign policy consistent and vigorous, compelling respect abroad and inspiring conn dence at home." tjikt.1t No. 8 should embody two dec- lar-afinna from the platform of 1896. These are, first, "we demand the free and unlimited coinage of both gold and silver at the present legal ratio of 16 to 1 without waiting for the aid nr r-onaent of any other nation," and. second, "we dciare it io me un written law of this republic, estab lished by usage and custom of 100 years ana sanctioncu u? of the greatest and wisest of those who founded and have maintained our government, that no man eligible for a inira rm m J ,1.1 n,fll, If Mr. Marsnau win these planks in his "old-time demo- rratie olatform," and wind up witn . wn,n ripnunciatlon of the out rageously damnable attempt of Sec retary Lansing to usuip ....c .i i .ic-hta nt the oresident, "guar anteed by the constitution." it will J r.nr.iHra.hlv to the entertainment of visitors at the coming convention c frinrian. and probably pre clude the painful necessity of making any reference to ine owui. -,..j.w , madi. of everything be has had anything to do with during the past seven years. tne past CHAS. B. MOORES. JUST WEEDS. Emblematic of despair . Ragged weeds grow everywhere. Trampled o'er and trodden down; a. Ill T,oreiatant- living on. Crowded, stunted, starved are they Only weeds; they're in me way. Mongst these weeds perchance there be Plants of wondrous rarity. Yet we're prone to pass them by With indifferent, scornful eye. Brief their lives, they fade away Only weeds; and in the way. Men, like weeds, are often seen., Lost to all that might have been. Creatures of environment. Stifled their development Loveless, friendless, sad and lone; Men whose hearts have turned to stone. Hope and faith within them dead Men whose self-respect has fled. Deaf to music's subtle lore. Blind to beauty, clean and pure. Livlng sepulchers are they. Just like weeds, they're in the way. Perchance they once did catch the gleam Of ideals' iridescent dream. Perchance they thrilled to martial air; Perchance they gazed on beauty rare. Now forlorn,' they're old and gray Only weeds-nd in theway. Law om FlaK Design. PORTLAND, Feb. 20. (To the Edi tor.) Among long-cherished treas ures I find an old envelope with this printed thereon: A blue sea with the world bobbing around in it, and this surmounted by the U. S. flag:. In the flag are 34 stars and 12 stripes. On the "world" appear the words "Our Country," and beneath the design, 'Its Constitutions and Its Laws." It was in 1861, I believe, that Kan sas, the 3h state, was admitted to the Union. Was the custom then ob served to add a star to the flag as each new state came In? I thought not. so far back. And are the 12 stripes en regie? Any further Infor mation of this old envelope, its use or derivation. wUlb. PPated. The present law governing the de sign of the flag has been in effect since April 4. i81S. It provides for 1J stripes and a star for every Btate In the union, each new star to be added on the July 4th following the state's admission. Kansas was a mitted as a state in January, 186L Dncrst el Property. PORTLAND. Feb. 20. (To the Ed- ltor) if a husband dies without a will and there are no children, does widow get all of his property, or ca hi, relatives clairrnyy t? The widow gets alL i Those Who Come and Go. To mark 200,000 bluebacks at the Herman creek pond of the Bonne ville hatchery, Dr. W. H. Rich of Stanford university, arrived in Port land yesterday. Dr. Rich Is one of the chief authorities on the blueback salmon. The markings on the 200,000 fisb will be the removal of the adipose and ventral fine, the same markings as placed on 60,000 bluebacks in 1916. Those fish returned in 1918 and a few straggled back last year. The blue back is a lake fish and before the lakes in the Takima country were devoted to irrigation purposes, the bluebacks spawned there by the mil lions. Bluebacks go from the eea up the Columbia and Into the Snake and get Into the lakes In the Saw Tooth mountains In central Idaho, hundreds and hundreds of miles from the Pa cific ocean. With the stoppage of the natural outlets of the lakes in Wash ington Oregon and Idaho, the runs of bluebacks are not as large as they were in former times, nor are the fish, on the average, as heavy. In mark ing fish, Dr. Rich has trimmed as many as 2000 a day. "Did you know there Is an opal mine In Oregon?" Inquired William Crofton, sitting in his accustomed chair in the Imperial lobby. "When I was buying sheep 26 years ago, I was In the Deschutes, near the Hay creek ranch. With another rider, we passed a cliff which my companion said was an opal mine. Falling from the sides of this ollff were round rocks fike baseballs. These were the opals. The outside wae black and rough, but when we chipped this rind off there lay a pure white Bubstance like chinaware. The farther toward the center we broke the rock the more color developed until beautiful opals were in the heart of each balL I put some in a tobacco sack. Business got bad. I couldn't buy any sheep, for someone beat me to every good band. Someone said that opals were unlucky and I remembered the tobacco sack I carried filled with them. I threw the sack away and thereafter bought some good sheep. I'd probably have bought them anyway if I hadn't thrown away the opals." J. Hender son of Opal City, so named because of the aforesaid opals. Is registered at the Multnomah. The city has a population of about two dozen. "They are spending " money like water in the oil towns of Texas," as serts E. H. Bloom, a New York traveling salesman, who Is at the Multnomah. "I saw In one town a man who looked absolutely broke, and so did his wife and boy. but I watched them go into a jewelry store and the man bought his wife two dia mond rings, one for $600 and the other for $800, and he bought the youngster a diamond stick pin for $160. The hotel lobbies look like the stock exchange and although I wrote three weeks ahead for a room at one hotel, there were no accom modations when I arrived. I saw a family of Indians arrayed regard less, riding in a big automobile with a white man driving it. Many colored men who owned land on which they could not make a living have bene fitted as oil was struck on their acreage and they march around with silk hat, silk shirt cutaway coat and gold-headed cane. These colored peo ple are having the time of their lives and enjoying every minute of their prosperity." "Cattlemen in Crook county haven't neen making money on their stock, and the same condition is general throughout the cattle country," saye James Wilson, banker of Prineville, who is at the Imperial. "Buying hay at $20 a ton and feeding through the winter isn't what It's cracked up to be. The alfalfa farmers are the men who have been making money and lots of it The stockmen had to have the hay and the alfalfa men were prepared to supply it. Why don't the Btock men quit? They can't. They have big ranches and these must be kept going, so the owners simply have to stick to the game and hope for the beet." "The first -f March we will resume paving at Athena, Milton and La Orande, on state highway Jobs," says C. P. A. Lonergan of Pendleton, who is at the Hotel Portland. "We have 16 miles to finish on these contracts and with three plants we should be able to finish this paving this sea son, unless something interferes. We have a city paving Job at Enterprise and we will probably begin on It next month." Mr. Lonergan says "he ex pects the labor situation to be a little tighter this year than it was last, ae there appears to be some what of a scarcity of common labor. "They thought 1 was dead one morning, but I fooled them," says William Pollman of Baker, who has arrived from Roseburg, where he had a severe attack of pneumonia a few davs ago. "I guess I was worse than I imagined." Mr. Pohlman is one of the best-known residents of eastern Oregon and he was at Roseburg look ing after his Interests in tne power plant there when he became ill. A. Overstad, who is vice-president of the Hancock National bank of Han cock, Minm, arrived at the Imperial yesterday with his wife. Mr. Over stad is looking around the country to see if it compares favorably with Hancock. In addition to being in the banking business, he also deals In farm lands. Accompanied by his wife and a shipment of stock, John Williams, a stockman of the lone country, is at the Perkins. lone Is watching with interest the work of preparation for the feradine of the Oregon-Washing ton highway through that place. The contractor is now showing signs of activity at Cecil, a few miles away. Dr. L. M. Sims, who does not claim relationship to the admiral, lsa phy sician of Kalama, Wash., the place where the railroad rerry used to be. The doctor is in Portland, having prescribed for himself a change of scene for a few days, ana is at tne Perkins. Raloh B. Lester, who registered at the Multnomah from Spokane, is here to give the young Americans at Hill Military academy tne line points oi Uncle Sam's army. He was stationed at Vancouver several years ago and during the war was under General Liggett. Looking around in the west for a place to locate. Dr. F. R. Linton of New York has arrived In Portland and Is at the Hotel Washington. He liked the looks of Seattle, but is now smitten with the appearance of the Rose City. . "We drove J20 miles from Bend to Klamath Falls in eight and a half hours, making sometimes 50 miles an hour and sometimes five miles an hour, so you can judge what the road is like, sale. Denton Burdick of Red mond, who is at the Imperial. Leonard W. Riley, president of the McMlnnville (Or.) college. Is regis tered at the Hotel Washington. Rev. George W. Kennedy, a pioneer minister, is at the Hotel Washington on a visit from Hood River with his wife. A. W. Middleton, a lumberman from Aberdeen. Wash., Is In tne city on business and is at the Benson. Tom Thompson, one of the well known wheat men of Pendleton, Is at the Imperial. - In Other Day. Tweaty-Flve Year Ac. From The Oregonlan of February 21, 16U5. Washington. Frederick Douglass, the noted colored orator, who was born a slave, dropped dead In this city last night Tacoma. It Is announced here that I an immense electric power plant will be built on the Stuck river, 10 miles east of here, by the newly organlxed White River Water Power company, capitalised in New Jersey at $2,000,000. The final day's session of the Mult nomah County Sunday School asso ciation was held yesterday. Sheep on the eastern Oregon ranges wintered well and owners' reports In dicate that the entire average loss will be not more than one-half of 1 per cent Fifty Tears Ago. From The Oregonlan of February 21, 1870. Chicago. Admiral Farragut Is seriously ill and fears are felt for his recovery. Professor S. H. Marsh of Pactfie university arrived on the steamer Ajax and reports that be succeeded in getting about $20,000. which brings the total endowment to $65,000. We heard a rumor yesterday that the Oregon Steam Navigation com pany had sold or Is about to sell its Interests on the Columbia river. Workmen are busily engaged re pairing the Hibernian hall for occue patlon on March 1. PROM SUBLIME TO RIDICULOUS Easy EnoDith for Poet U Bi Serloaa, Yet Produce Bad Lines. PORTLAND, Feb. 20. (To the Ed itor.) In The Oregonlan recently, ii "By-Products of the Press," appears a paragraph wherein are quoted ex amples of bad lines by great poets. I am guilty of being an amateur poet and would like to explain how easy it is for a poet to lose himsell In the realm sublime and yet produce the ridiculous. For example, 1 worked long and Beriovnly on a poem recent. y. In th first verse appeared the line "When from the dregs the new wine flows and farther on I wrote "When my full hour comes and I have drained ths cup." Here I was suddenly brought to earth by realizing that what I had written seriously might after alt sound like a drunken spree and yield to the ridiculous. Recently I read this expression "The debris on the mental floor." Sure!; this expression (as your critic words it) "scrapes the earth." In tome very old poetry I find the poet described as "one who hath mental sore"; Is it not very amusing? Yet Many thlners that never Could be told In prose, From the poet's daring Through the whole world goes, AMATEUR. DISCRIMINATION IS APPARENT. Why Censor Movies Whes Same Plot la Sold In Book er 1'lnyf PORTLAND, Feb. 20. (To the Ed itor.) I am against arbitrary censor ship of pictures or any other form of public amusements. I do so for ths reason that without rigid censorship they have greatly improved and 1 feel sure that producers and theater men are Just as much Interested in keeping pictures clean as alleged re formers. As I understand It, picture plots are taken from books., magazine stories and big plays. Why then allow ths books to be published, the magazines to be seen and heard by millions and then on these same themes discrimi nate against the pictures? Let us be fair with the picture ex hibitor, but demand that he In turn be fair with the public Let him not for the sake of mere gain run sale olous and suggestive material. If he does let the law mete out severe pun ishment. One good example of this kind would do more good than the en tire Portland board. MARIE COOPER, 695 Lovejoy at America's Finest in Autos and Trucks Invade Portland for Annual Auto Show . From the moderate-priced to the most expensive, from the jaunty runabout to the luxurioua limousine, America's best on rubber tires will be on display at the Portland automobile show, which opens here Monday. Every man and woman interested In motor cars will want to visit the show, and every prospective Bhow visitor will want to study the wealth of advance informa tion contained in the speaial Eleventh Annual Automcbile Num ber of The Oregonian, issued tomorrow. Three heavy eectione packed from front to back with automobile features, articles and pictures, tell the story of the biggest show Portland has ever had. SUFFRAGE FRIENDS CELEBRATE One hundred years ago, when Susan B. Anthony was borrl, women were like the .youngsters of today when election day came around to be seen but not heard. Maybe Miss Anthony and her famous disciple, Dr. Anna Howard Shaw, were a little ahead of most of the common folks, but the caravan has caught up at last and the world is willing to recognize the leadership of both women. The women folks of Oregon, known as one of the moRt progressive of suffrage states, will find a wealth of interesting rending in the account by Miss Helen Johns of the life and works of the two women, whose birthdays came this month, just a day apart, February 14 and 15. DANCERS, ATTENTION Some people of late have been averring that the pendulum had about bumped the top in this dance craze and is due to tumble backwards for awhile. But Paris says 'tis not so. Enter tha "Scissors," the craziest dance ever danced. We know it because the Parisian dance masters acknowledge it themselves, and if they say so we believe it. This latest in the terpsichorean is whispered to Oregonian readers to morrow in another of the exclusive features of the magazine section. A whole page, with a group of photos. CLIMATE BINDS UP WOUNDS OF WAR A second article on what Oregon is doing for the boys who h3ve come back from the battlefield as wreckage of the titanic struggle. Maybe your boy is still paying the price of devotion, a price which can only be measured by the rule of life itself. At any rate Uncle Sam is doing a lot right here in Oregon to show that he is an appre ciative old duffer and ready to help his boys. DeWitt Harry told only part of the story in last week's issue. The humanest part of the narrative is yet to come. Be sure and follow it up tomorrow. WIVES OF FOREIGN NOBLES DISILLUSIONED The glitter of the crown, the lure of the title in the lands where aristocracy knows its inferior, how often has it brought only sorrow to the rich American girl, instead of leading to the rain bow's end. Had you supposed that these matches, bom of ambi tion and clouded by the glamour of royalty, were like those in the story book, "living happily ever after"? The divorce courts are telling a different story. These women, scores of them, are now seeking to rebuild their lives in the land which they wanted to forget. You'll find this feature worth attention, giving inside glimpses of the lives of women whose family names are almost household words throughout the land. With illustrations. All Ihe News of All the World THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN More 1 ruth Tun Potrjr. By Jasaea J.-Meats. ADY1CK TO TIIK LOVI'.I.OHI. If a lover comes a-woolng, aa a lot of them are doing. With the manners of a moving-picture earl. Though his clothing Is expensive end his methods are Irtenslve, Don't be sure that you can trust him, little girl. For some lovers purchase raiment en a trifling weekly payment. And. although they have the airs of gentle folk. Talk about Charles Dana Gibson and' the plays of Mr. Ibsen. Men don't make the best of hus bands when they're broke. If a lover unassuming, who betrays a lack of grooming. And is destitute of graces as churl. And, though fond and true and tender, isn't what you'd call a ppendi-r. Do not fall for him too quickly, lit tle girl. Though he speak of his devotion with a fervor and emotion That appears to be sincere and fine and deep. Love don't buy one sable collar that takes round, hard. Iron dollars. Men don't make the beat of hus bands when they're cheap. If some evening you discover yoa've a cave man for a lover. As he holds you In the walti'l glddj whirl. If he swears he's wild about you and he cannot live without you, Just go home and think him overt little girl. Love that flits from flower to flowef often gets a trifle sour, Though your lily hand he squeeios till It hurts. Better ask your little sister who that fellow was that kissed her; Men don't make the best of hus bands when they're flirts. If some honest chap Impiore you vowing softly he adores you To become his crown of crowns an priceless pearl: If he swears that you're a treasure far beyond all earthly measure. Better check him up at Uradritreets, little girl. All of them can pass the honey, but to harness up the money Is more difficult than making of a vow. And if they go off and leave you ds not let the parting grieve you. Men don't make the best of hus bands anyhow! see ' The Jewel ef iHeonalatrary. The prohibitionist Insists on drug gists poisoning alcohol before thee sell It although they maintain at tin same time that this is wholly super erogatory. see Tree Rosnanee. The convicts who dug a oave In tin Sing Sing prison yard had all the thrills of an escape without the Bur row of leaving the dear old place. e e Nobody K.lse Cmm. Mexico has excellent vision. She has recognized the German govern ment (Copyright. lflJO. by Bell Predicate, lno.1 Lost. By t.rere K. Hall. She came to live with me one day, 'twas several years ago. A dainty little maiden with a smlltnt face a-glow; Her eyes were like the corn-flower. her cheeks like blushing rose. And O, she had a little cute tlp-tllted saucy nose I She left me one Fall morning and started off to school. A most demure maiden afraid of every rule; But someway from that hour she seemed to faster grow. And soon I'd most forgotten the babe I used to know. Today I searched the playroom and Beheld her dolls and dishes and llttt rocking cnair; And peeping from behind the screen l eaw iinun wivr.ii . O, tell me, have you chanced to see my long-tost nmo a-inr i