13 THE MORNING OllEGONIAN, FRIDAY, APRIL 2, 1920 KST ABI.INHEO BY HKNBT L, PITTOCK. l"ubll(hc(l by The Oregonlan Publishing Co.. 133 Sixth Street, Portland. Oreson. C. A. MORDKN. E. B. Manager. Editor. The Orogonian Is a member of the Asso ciated Press. The Associated rress is exclusively entitled to the use for publica tion of ail news dispatches credited W It or not otherwise credited In this paper ana also the local news published herein. All Hunts af republication of special dispatches herein are aoaa reserve. Subscription Rates Invariably In Advance. (By Mail.) -Daily. Sunday Included, one year Daily, Sunday included, six months . Daily, Sunday Included, three months xally, Sunday Included, one moniu ... L'ally. without Sunday, one year " tailv. without Sunday, six months Dally, without Sunday, one month Weekly, one year . . . ... Sunday, one year '. .- (By Carrier.) and we may be sure that it will always be too much of one or the other for the democrats. 25 8.25 .eo 1.00 6.00 9 00 2.25 5 Dally, Sunday Included, one year ... Daily, Sunday included, three months J k. ' .- a,,,i.u in.l.,l. tn month - - Dsll v. without Sunday, one year T Daily, without Sunday, three months .. i.j Dally, without Sunday, one month .... . How to Remit Send postofflea 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. Postage Katea 1 to J 6 pages, t cent: J8 to 3 pages. 2 cents; 34 to 48 pages, rents: 60 to 64 Pages. 4 cents: 68 to 80 pages, 6 cents; 82 to 88 pages, 6 cents, f oreign postage, double rates. . Eastern Business OffleeVerree Ac Conlt lin. Brunswick building. New Tork; Verree i Conklin. Steger building. Chicago; Ver ree & Conklin. Free Press building, De troit. Mich. San Francisco representative, Tt. J. Bldwell. THE EXPELLED SOCIALISTS. Expulsion from the New Tork legislature of five socialist assembly men Is notice to all men that they will not be permitted to use office in any state government as a means to overthrow those governments or the government of the United States. They are expelled not for holding socialist opinions but as members of an organization which exists for the purpose of destroying the state. As members of the socialist party they have given' pledges to use their offices to tear up the state constitu tion; as assemblymen they would take an oath to uphold the constitu tion. They cannot at the same time be true to both of those obligations; they must necessarily be false to one. Neither the nation nor any of the states can safely tolerate officials who own a doubtful, much less a double, allegiance. The duty of their loyal servants, executive, legislative or judicial, is to defend them against enemies who would bore from within as well as those who would attack from without. For these reasons expulsion of the five assemblymen is justified. Much has been said of the charges against these five men as an attack on the right of free speech and on the right of minorities to represen tation. Association of those rights with the case betrays confusion of thought, perhaps deliberate on the part of some men. The right of free speech carries with it responsibility for abuse of that right. These men abused that right during the war by giving aid and comfort to the enemy in almost any way consistent with the safety of their own skins. Their most flagrant acts of disloyalty were to urge men at meetings and in writing to evade the draft and not to contribute funds to the war. They did so as members of their party which had adopted resolutions de nouncing the war and urging its members to oppose its prosecution, if they did not do so individually. No alien has a right t a voice In the government of the United States or of any of its states. The socialist party of this country in cludes thousands of aliens among its members and it is closely affiliated with similar organizations in other countries which outspokenly advo cate triumph of socialism by revolu tion. Men who accept nominations to office from the socialist party are required, as a condition of their nom 1 inatton, to leave a written resignation with the executive committee, which is at liberty to make it effective at any time when the official disobeys the committee's orders. An official thus pledged does not act on behal p of all the people in his district, but ; of the socialist party alone. He rep ' resents not only those members of the party who are legal voters but many aliens who have no right to a voice In our elections, also the for ' eign revolutionary societies with which the party affiliates. To permit ' ; these men to have a part in making ; and executing the laws would re ' duce the representative system to a i mockery. No obstacle ha been or ever will V be placed in the way of representa tion of minorities, provided they ex press or try to make their' opinions effective by the means which the constitution permits. Those means -7- leave wide latitude and they get re-1 suits. Within seven years they have procured adoption of three amend ments to the federal constitution, and a fourth is on the eve of adoption. I ":: No minority advocating a principle which appeals to the reason and sense of justice of the people need , . despair of winning a majority by constitutional means, for every tri 1 ' umphant majority started as a ' minority. The socialists in New Tork s have been barred, not because they ". are socialists nor because they are a minority, but because they are not content to win supremacy as a ma ; jority, by lawful means, aiming to ;- establish minority rule by means of i revolution. The voters of the districts which " these men represent have been de prived of no right, for they have no , right to elect men who are disloyal to the state. If the five truly repre sent their opinions, then the voters V.. themselves are disloyal and have no right to a voice in the government; If not, then the loyal have been y: deprived of representation for the V .. benefit of the disloyal. The five have been branded as traitors by the assembly, and it cannot be success- - : fully maintained that such men are qualified for office. ;" The New York assembly is to be ! . congratulated on having been deaf to the clamor of all the noisy ele ments of disruption and of their - wall-meaning but misguided friends. TTia work which it has begun at Albany should be continued at Wash ington, where the department of labor sadly needs purging. Talk of a third party to nominate Hoover does not suggest much con fidence on the part of his backers that he can get the republican nomination, but most significantly such talk originates with democrats. They would like to save their own party from defeat by drawing the ENOUGH IS TOO MICH. AIIIEXA, Or.,, March 31. (To the Edi tor.) In the editorial article, "Headed Off,' you say: "It is beyond our present resources for speculation as to the future to hazard a guess as to what various democratic shouters for Mr. Hoover will do, when and if he gets the republican nomination." Being one of the democrats who circulated a Hoover petition, I will say, should he get the republican nomina tion I will still be shouting and voting for Mr. Hoover, the man. Will The Oregonlan be kind enough to say what it will do if Mr. Hoover should get the democratic nomination? LOU HODGENS. ' The parallel is not exact, and the inquiry is a non sequitur. The Qre gonlan has circulated no Hoover pe titions and has not been shouting for Hoover as a candidate for president, and it is not at all embarrassed by his announcement that he will accept the republican nomination if it is "demanded." Certainly he will. We have a notion that even . President Wilson his health permitting would not decline the republican nomination if it were to be delivered to him on terms of his making. Who would? We do not affirm that the political status of the president and that of Mr. Hoover are identical. Mr. Wilson is a democrat and Mr. Hoover is not. Mr. Hoover is a republican. He says he is, and that settles it. A man be longs to the party he thinks and says he belongs to. But we will answer the question. We could fairly decline to answer on the ground that the hypothesis is unsound and impossible. Mr. Hoover will not be nominated at San Fran Cisco, unless the democratic party has lost its senses, and is willing to admit it. But if he should be in the remote and inconceivable con tingency that he should be The Oreg&nian has no present idea that it could or would support him. It has had enough, and more, or the demo cratic party and its presidents. unavailing effort to induce China to enter upon negotiations, Japan has secured removal of the chief obsta cles at Pekin through forced resig nation of the minister and vice-minister of foreign affairs, who had re fused to negotiate but had preferred to submit the matter to the league, and the Pekin government . is now said to contemplate negotiation. Japan is no doubt eager to get the job done before a new president of the United States is inaugurated. Of what avail are all the crocodile tears which have been shed in the senate over the wrongs of China? GOVERNOR LOWDES AS A CANDIDATE Mr.- Lowden emphasizes in his platform filed at Salem the salient features of his record as governor of Illinois. It is natural and proper. He would do for the nation what he has done for-a state replace in efficiency with efficiency, eliminate waste, require work, abolish sine cures, co-ordinate departments, make economy a reality and not a word, impose bearable taxes, have a budget system, give the nation a breathing spell. He is for the league of nations with reservations and otherwise he is in accord with the dominant senti ment of his party. The real merit of the Lowden can didacy is that it is based on achieve ment. He faced difficult problems as governor, and he solved them, over the opposition of the organized ap petite of the job-holders and the politicians who gave them their places. It was formidable in Illinois, as it is everywhere in America. Few governors have the nerve to with stand it and even fewer have the capacity to devise and make effective a constructive policy of administra tion -as substitute for the kind of public service it stands for. What Mr. Lowden could do at Washington is indicated not so much by his pledges as by his performances. A president must, of course, give more than a business administration The demand, chiefly from the voices or business, big and little, for a business man for president has little to commend it, if that is all the country is to have through him. It is just as much a mistake to elect a business man for that reason as it is a college president for an identical reason. If business is vital to 1 nation, so is education. ' The presi dent should be something more ; great deal more. There is a stand ard of statesmanship which must be measured up to by a president if he shall give a wise administration, and it includes business, education and many other. things. . What Governor LowcTen has done he has done well; what he would do in the larger sphere can only be determined by actual test; but he promises well. CHEAPER MILK. - Milk consumers, who are the pub lic, have gained something through the reduction, awarded by the may or's commission of two cents a quart, but they will do well to bear In mind that nothing permanent is to. be gained through the demoralization of a necessary industry. Ther is somewhere a line below which con sumers would not ask that the price be driven, since this would inevitably react against future supply. Milk men now say that, owing to the closing of certain markets notably the exporting condenseries to their product, they are left with large supplies on their bands, which the public do not consume. ' .We are not yet so accustomed to being told that there is a sufficient supply of anything that we cannot react to so important a statement. It is good news that, at least, there Is promise of milk for all who want it. But it may be well to inquire what would be the result of ruthless invo- cation of the law of supply and demand. To insist that because there is a surplus which may be local and temporary of milk, the way should be opened to unbridled competition, leading to prices that admittedly would not pay cost of production, would be to ignore the imperative necessities of tomorrow Not only in the present, but in the future, a milk supply must be pro vided for. Producers undoubtedly have their problems. It is true that feed is scarce and expensive and competent help not only much more costly than it was a few years ago but hard to get at any wage. It also s true that milk has not advanced in price in proportion with a good many other necessities, or in propor tion to the diminishing purchasing power of the dollar. For these rea sons, among others the public is not warranted, under present conditions, in expecting early restoration of any thing like pre-war prices in the milk industry. Yet there is a sense in which the milk interests are still on trial Though consumers may concede the right of producers and distributors to a fair reward for their services. they are not ready to tolerate unnecessary items of expense, o long-continued wasteful methods of production or delivery. The Dairy men's league, for example, has de clared Its policy to be one of fai play for the milk-user. In fact, all sides profess to be animated by the same feeling of concern for th people. Very well; presently we hall see what is being done about it. If, happily, production costs shall be reduced later on, we shall expect to see the change reflected in a revised schedule. And if some of the e pensive absurdities of duplication in distribution, which are admitted on all sides to exist, can be eliminated we shall expect the public to derive some of the benefit' there, as well Everyone, we take it, wants "fai play," But there ought to be a com petent as well as a well-meaning effort to see that ,there is fair play cnougn to go around. poses to leave the - Turk this last foothold in Europe. These fears are supported by a tissue of fact and fiction woven by Turkish agitators. Constantinople Is not the holy city of Islam; Mecca and Medina are sacred to Mahomet. The caliph is the successor or repre sentative of the prophet and the title was ceded to Sultan Selim I by the last of the Abbasid caliphs when e captured the latter with Cairo in 517. The sultan's claim to the title is denied by the Sunnites, who com pose half of Islam, and Agha Khan, religious chief of the Indian Moslem, pays so little respect to it that, when the sultan proclaimed a holy war in 914, he-told his followers to pay- no attention to it and to remain loyal to Great Britain. " Whenever Turkey has been in ,danger of losings terri tory, the cry about the sanctity of the caliph and his domain has been raised, with threats of a world-wide j Mohammedan uprising, but it died down when ignored. The one thing which Asiatic races respect is force, and they quickly take advantage of weakness. The feelings of the Mos lem, would be- wounded by loss of St. Sofia, but so were those of the Christians - when Mohammed the Great took it. He won It by force, and the Christians have as good a right to recover . it by the same means, especially since they built it. It is unfortunate that the United States did not win a clear right to a voice in the Turkish settlement by making war on Turkey. It is still more unfortunate that the president should have impaired his influence with the allies by engaging in a quar rel with the senate. The fact that they have asked his opinion is evi dence of their desire for American approval of their decision and of their expectation that the United States will ultimately join the league of nations and thus acquire a- right to question the justice of their action toward Turkey. BV-PHODICTS OP THE TIMES Cptoo Sinclair's Adnstare With As Ambitious, I'ssif rcrssry Reporter. However, we began with the Idea of establishing the fact that Upton Sin clair Is not devoid of a sense of hu mor, says Heywood Brown in the New York Tribune, and in evidence we offer the following extract from chapter 34, In which Sinclair tells how a young woman reporter from the Los Angeles Record came to him to get an Interview about "free love": "In reply I explained to this young lady that as a result of previous pain ful experience I had made an Iron clad rule on the subject of the sex question. I would not trust any news paper . reporter, not even the most amiable, to Interpret my views on that delicate subject. . . "'Well, said the young lady, 'will ou write an article on "free love for "the Record"?! ' 'Certainly I will," said I 'if "the Record" will pay my price.' " 'What is your price?, " "Ten cents a word." "The young lady looked troubled. I don't know if "the Record" could pay that,' said she, 'but this is my position I will explain frankly and hope you won't mind. I've Just started to be a newspaper woman and I'm very anxious to make good. I don't have to earn my living because my parents have money. What I want to do is to have a career. If I Those Who Come and Go. TAX REFORM IP TO LEGISLATURE Mr. It cost Sam DeHass several thou sand dollars when he flipped a nickel in the Benson lobby yesterday. Sam's boy, -who goes to a high school in Boston and Is captain of the baseball team and is the catcher, wants a par ticularly expensive automobile, in stead of the high-priced six-cylinder car which was bought for the family several months ago. He has been pestering his dad to sell the little old last year's car which has run 4000 miles and buy the Juggernaut. The boy wanted a reply by wire last night so Sam tossed a nickel to see whether he should wire that the new car could be had or the old car retained. The boy won, for the nickel came up heads, and with a sigh Sam reached for a telegraph blank. "And business," ex plained Mr. DeHass, "isn't any too rood, except in pecial lines." In the mail yesterday Mr. DeHass received a letter from his boy saying that the youngster has bought and charged to his father's- account a 14 catcher's glove. 1 For 37 years E. Kelly of Eugene has been scaling logs. He started in this technical branch in the forests of Michigan and continued In it when he arrived in Oregon. For the past two years he has been working in the Siletz basin, where a company is op erating in the big burn. There is enough down timber from the fire of a dozen years ago to keep the com pany operating for two years more. A sawmill with 125.000 feet a day ca. go back to "the Record" and report 1 pacity is now being constructed and that I failed to get an Interview I there Is a dam lor lours co " , ,, . ... f. , ,. few hundred acres and 40 feet deep. wont keep this job. So wont you . . h . . naVB b -hipped please . write an article for me and let , t h-bii r-itv for cuttina- tin hereto fore. Accompanying Mr. Kelly to the Hotel Oregon is Mrs. Kelly, who is a student at the University of Oregon Wlttt me pay for it at the rate of 10 cents a word V "Tou may share a smile over this .;t,ii t -..,.- I and will graduate next year. inem are ineir l w u bviiq. ridw Mestfre Calls for Eleetlom af , Candidates Fled-ed to Act. PORTLAND. Or., April 1. (To I the Editor.) I have read with deep interest and concern the comprehen sive article bv Assessor Henry E. Reed in The Oregonlan March 21 and 1 28, recommending tax reform, and have also studied carefully the re port of the tax supervising and con servation commission of Multnomah county as published in full in The Oregonlan February 1. Both artlcl"". If read by property owners, should awaken them to the necessity of taking action ere It is too late and their property has been confiscated by taxation. As the remedy lies with the legis lature, if the taxpayers would for their own and the community's in terest see to it that none but the best fitted, sincere and determined men are erected to the next session of the legislature, unquestionably such leg islation can be enacted as will accom plish the end desired. It is high time that those who should have the real interests of the community at heart take an interest in matters political, as through this channel, and this alone, can at least a check be put on extravagance and waste of our tax moneys. Let no man go to the next session who has not pledged himself to fight for such legislation as is called for by the report of the tax supervising commission and As sessor Reed, herein referred to. Let's all take an oar and pull together and the result is easy of accomplish ment. Let no one go to the incoming ses sion who is not broad enough to look after the taxpayers" interests and who will treat with the usual "log-rolling as a secondary consideration. v e certainly have such men here and they should be asked to serve and be backed up by the taxpayers. J. P. ME.N'EFEE. More Truth Than Poetry, Br James J. Honligsc. JAPAN GRASPS OPPORTUNITY. In what position does failure to ratify the treaty of Versailles leave Shantung? Clauses regarding Shanf tung were one of the chief reasons given by the death battalion for kill ing the treaty. China is not a party to it, therefore has not recognized the rights which it gives to Japan and has not consented to negotiate with j that country for return of the prov ince. The United States is not a party, therefore is in no position to enforce the pledge to return Shan tung, which President Wilson ex torted from Japan at Paris. The United States is not a member of the league, therefore cannot set it in motion on China's behalf. The treaties by which the allies agreed that Japan should retain German rights without restriction are still in force and are executed by the Ver sailles treaty. What backing has China in holding out for return of what Germany stole and Japan took from the thief? If President Wilson had assented to ratification with the reservation which withholds American consent to the Shantung deal and with the other Lodge reservations, the United States would now have been a mem ber of the league and would have been able to use its powerful In fluence on behalf of China. It would doubtless have been supported by other American nations and by some European states. Senator Borah said that Japan agreed to return only the shell sovereignty and intended to Keep tne Kernel economic con trol; but the United States could have insisted on return of the kernel with the shell. In a position of isola tion, this country can do little, if anything. I Mr. Wilson, so anxious for the rights of China, has lost the power to help that country by his policy of "all or nothing." The irreconcil abies, who were so indignant about the. wrongs of China, have joined him in destroying the most effective means by which he might have b.Clped. The force now exerted on behalf of China is the passive re sistance of its own citizens, to which is added Japan's expectation that the United States will yet become a member of the league. Time has been gained by japan to bring China to terms directly be fore the United States will acquire the right to intervene as a member of the league. At least a year must elapse before that right can be ac quired. Japan is making good use Hooverites away from the republi can party on the pretense that it is of this interval lo force China to a nther too radical or too reactionary, I settlement. After four months of THE PATE OF CONSTANTINOPLE. American public opinion will In stinctively endorse President Wilson's protest against the plan of the allies to leave Constantinople in the hands of the Turks. In the minds of Amer icans, Turkish rule is associated with everything that is detestable in gov ernment massacre, tyranny, extor tion, corruption, fanaticism, social and industrial decadence. Some con quering nations have justified their presence in the conquered land by amalgamation with the subject race, by admitting its members to an equal part in the government, by enacting beneficent laws and by promoting progress in every field. The Turks have done none of these things. They remain, as when they first en tered Europe, a race apart, claiming the right of - might to rule, and dwelling there only for purposes of murder, plunder 'and oppression, By that fact they - justify their ex pulsion. Constantinople in particular should be delivered from the Turkish blight. It stands guard over -the gateway between Europe and Asia by both land and water and is the outlet to the ocean for Russia's only Icefree ports In the south, but the Turks have used its possession to blackmail the nations that must use the land and sea highways passing through it. By closing this gateway in 1914 Tur key hastened the ruin of Russia, ag gravated - the scarcity of food in Europe and probably added a mil lion to the number of lives sacrificed in the war. This splendid city of Constantine, which for.centures was adorned with masterpieces of sculp ture and architecture and was the center of Greek learning, has been defaced and made foul by the gang of robbers miscalling themselves a government who have made it their haunt. ' The reasons given for permitting the sultan to retain the city as his capital are of a piece with those which have restrained the European powers from ending Ottoman rule long ago. They are the reasons of short sighted, : shifty policy unredeemed by any decent motive. One, though not ncknowledcred. is that n naiinn will yield fhe prize to any other and that each fears to seize it because war would result. It is also held that the sultan is caliph, or religious head, of the Mohammedan faith and that therefore his expulsion and the restoration of the mosque of St. Sofia to the Christian church would wound the religious sensibilities of every Moslem in the world and pro voke them to- revolt against non Moslem rulers. The British flag waves over mat)' more Moslem than Christians, and John Bull is intimi dated by protests from India and by days of prayer in Bombay. France has Moslem subjects In her north African colonies, Italy has some in Tripoli and Eritrea. The Turkish nationalists and the Russian soviet are conducting widespread propa ganda and threaten to unite all Mo hammedan nations for overthrow of British power in Asia and Africa In fear of such "a league Britain pro ' FARM SUPERSTITIONS. It will not be surprising if the experts of the department of agri culture discover that there Is sound reasoning behind some so-called farm superstitions. Agriculture Is deprived of the quality of exact science chiefly by the variability of seasons. It would be possible to pre diet how a certain system of plant ing would result if due allowance could be made for a number of con ditions, wnich, however, are never successively the same. The diffi culty always has been to lay down rules in which scientific allowance was made for all the factors neces 8a ry to its operation. It is believed possible, however, so to co-relate observations of the be havlor of the natural flora of a lo cality as to permit practical general Izatlon. Our pioneers attempted this in their own way a good many years ago, the product being a collection of maxims the value of which de pends on the completeness of the natural data of the original ob servers. If the department can es tablish, as an example, that the leaves of the oak tree are always the size of a squirrel's ear in a given neighborhood at the particular time when soil and season are best for corn-planting, it will have elevated an adage to the rank of scientific statement. Early gardening, said our forefathers, might safely be be gun when the catkins were about half formed on the maple trees. There was something in the old lore about the relation between time to plant beans and development of wild blackberries. It varied, however, in different places and it will be part of the department experts' task to discover the truth in it. It is not unreasonable' to suppose that some tree or shrub in each com munity may hold the secret of the best time to begin some farm opera tion. But since the ordinary run of untrained observers are wont to re member the exceptional and to for get the unimpressively obvious, and since data of this kind depend for their value on elimination of mere coincidence, tne department has a huge job on its hands. Yet it will be worth while. Maxims are exceed- ngly easy to remember, a fact that accounts for the vitality of those that experience has discredited, as well as those that have borne the test of time. ment; I argued with the young lady that I couldn't possibly take her' money. But she argued back very charmingly; she said she would be heart-broken if I did not consent. . So at last I said: 'All right, I will write you an article. How many words do you want?" v "The young lady meditated; she figured for a while on the back of her notebook and finally she said: T think I'd like 60 words, please." Doughnuts are paying the expenses of eight Kansas boys, students at the Kansas State agricultural college at Manhattan. These young men were organized February 10. 1920, as a corporation called "The Perfect Bakery," with a capital of $15,000 150 shares at J100 each. Their bakery turns out all kinds of bread, small cakes and cookies, but the specialty is doughnuts. The bakery is situated close to the college campus and the best buyers are the students, going to and from classes. They simply can't resist the sight of the crisp, brown doughnuts, and the biggest sales come in the afternoon, when the hungry students are going home from afternoon classes. This business venture has the un usual feature that all the corporation members are fraternity men. Some of the boys are sons of wealthy par ents, but prefer to make their own way in college, rather than be de pendent on their fathers. Doughnuts are sold at 3a cents a dozen. Since they are cheaper than chocolate, it is becoming quite proper for Aggie men to buy a sack of doughnuts to appease the appetites of co-eds. Kansas City Times. HOW DOTH THE LITTLE BUST BEE? A busy insect is the bee: A thousand bards, I guess, havs said it. But just the same, we cannot see That he deserves especial credit. Xor shall we waste our readers' time With fulsome and enraptured phruM And make of them a fawning rhyme To sing the small imposter's praises. The bee does work: that's true enough; He violates all union hours In batting round the fields to stuff Himself with honey, culled from flowers. But if he paused upon a limb To rest, or gossip, or palaver His fellow bees would light on him And he'd be left a cold cadaver. He never quits or goes on strikes Or visits with his idle neighbors. But that is not because he likes To be engaged on toilsome labors. He never loafs, but that's because The craven creature is afraid to. He knows the Apiarian laws And only works because he's made to. So often he's been sung about That, in his silly little noodle. He hasn't got the slightest doubt That he) ia an industrial model. We'll never praise the priggish bug; The industry he makes such show of Reminds us of a lot of smug, Vain glorious people tha we know of! A aother Rejected Article. No doubt Mr.. Lansing's candidacy is also marked "Not acceptable. W. W." Mississippi is true to that peculiar brand of southern chivalry which cannot tolerate woman suffrage. Some enlightened northern state should be given a mandate to bring such backward states up to the American standard. Lloyd George and Sir Edward Carson show that John Bull can make a vigorous kick back at the senators who tacked the pro-Sinn Fein reservation to the treaty, and the trans-Atlantic debate warms up. The Mississippi state senator who declared passionately in the course of the debate on woman suffrage that he would rather die than vote for it may get his wish when he goes back home. Federal reserve bank officials say high prices have reached their crest ana mat gradual relief, may be ex pected. Very gradual, from present indications. There's one great merit in the four-wheel "phaetons" on some of the city lines. They cannot be hopped" while In motion. Harvard university reports the dis covery of a new planet. Interesting, indeed, but it doesn't reduce- the price of shoes. Even the stork must have a grouch on Oshkosh, which made a gain of only three-tenths of 1 per cent in ten years. "Occasional rains," quotes Mr. Wells, who makes the weather. He is disposed to give the sun a chance. Good plan to bunch all the "drives" Into one week, and still better to make that week in vacation time. Representative John H. Gardner of Uvalde. Tex., has again risen to deny that he is a "goat king." Moreover, "the leading Texas congressman," as he is known, says that he does not understand how that story keeps bob bing up. The late Sereno E. Payne, when handling his famous tariff bill, made a speech in which he said there were 3,000,000 goats in this country, and J:hat 2, 999, 999 were owned by Garner. "Hampie" Moore, now mayor of Philadelphia, who was the "poet lau reate of the house," took the cue and wrote some verse about the "Garner Goat of Texas." which was embalmed in the congressional record as a part of the tariff history. Mr. Garner awoke his muse and replied in kind, to the effect that "Hampie Moore is a heleva pote. He don't know a sheep from a goat." As a matter of fact, Mr. Garner solemnly avers that he never owned a real goat in his life, but he admits an extensive knowledge of "angoras." Mr. Garner is the democrat "whip" of the bouse, and there have been numerous occasions when this agile legislative acrobat and politically pre cocious Texan has owned the "goats" of Frank Mondell, Jim Mann. Nick Longworth, Joe Fordney and other republican leaders. The (ashion of eating typically English meals is steadily growing in Paris says the continental edition of the London Mall, and nothing is more common than to see in the big busi ness restaurants at lunch time Frenchmen enjoying what is known as the "asiette anglai.se." This is a generous helping of assorted cold meats, and with a salad and cheese is Immensely popular as a practical business man's lunch. In several quarters the French taste for mutton chops and underdone steaks is stead ily increasing, not only in Paris but especially In the commercial towns where English habits have taken hold during the war. While in London tbe taste grows for luncheons on French lines, with omelettes and sev eral light dishes, in France exactly the reverse is the case. "Yes," said the traveler. "I had an amusing journey up to town. There were two Scotsmen in the carriage." 'How do you know they were Scotsmen," asked the cashier curious ly. "By their accent, I suppose?" "No; you see, they both happened to take their pipes out together. Well, they filled them, and then each calmly waited for the other to strike a match." "Well, what happened?" - "Oh, I brought out my pipe, so both of them waited for my match." London Answers. dents at the university. Since the marriage of Mr. and Mrs. Kelly some 27 years ago, this is the first trip they have been able to take together from home. There are fewer Fords and more high-priced cars in Pendleton and Umatilla than in any otner city or county in the state, the number of automobiles in use considered,r- de clares W. P. E. Pruitt of Pendleton, who is at the Seward with Mrs. Pruitt and daughter. "Umatilla county is wealthy and the prosperity or tne people is evidenced by the class of cars thev use. The bitr. hisrh-Driced cars are most common, for the wheat ranchers can afford them." A Port lander who visited Pendleton a few davs aero says that in a tour around Umatilla county he saw only two of the tin Lizzies, and all the other ma chines were the costly ones. Mr. Pruitt says that while there has not been much snow in the mountains, there is ample moisture in the soil and everything looks good for a fine crop this year. Motoring in California is delightful at this season, the golden state ap pearing at its best following spring rains that were most welcome after a long-period drouth, according to J. C. Ainsworth, president of the United States National bank, who has just returned from a -acation trip south. Accompanied by Mrs. Ainsworth. he made the trip south- from San Fran cisco over the coast route, returning via the new highway through the in terior, by which a mountain pass is crossed at 51000 feet elevation and attained over a paved roadway with maximum grade of 6 per cent. There is a vast amount of differ ence between Portland. Me., and Port land, Or., as E. R. Baxter, at the Mult nomah, will attest. Mr. Baxter is head of the Portland Packing corn nan v. which has canned goods of all sorts. While Portland, Or., was named after Portland. Me., it has far out stripped the latter. And. if the his toric coin had flipped the other side up. the Rose City would now be Bos ton, Or. Among the Hotel Oregon arrivals is E. L Masterton of Molalla, named after th Molalla Indians. The price of civilized colonization at Molalla was the extermination of the aborigines. The Molallas, which were not a very strong tribe, are supposed to have been an offshoot of the Cayuse In dians, who crossed the mountains and preferred the Willamette valley to the desert country. Robert A. Booth, member of the state highway commission, is regis tered at the Imperial. Mr. Booth, since his former visit to Portland, has swung around to Chicago and then down to Lk Angeies. tie nas jusi completed making a trip over the Pa cific hisrhway from the state .line to get a personal idea of the condition of the roads and the progress 01 me highway work. SERGE A XT PUSS ALSO HONORED Retirement of Gersias-kors Soldier Is Occasion of Sissial Ce-rensooy. CAMP LEWIS, Wash., March SI. (To the Editor.) The Oregonian's ar ticle describing the high honor paid a retiring sergeant by the first United States infantry impressed me greatly because the preceding afternoon the 55th artillery, C A C, also stationed at Camp Lewis, Washington, had paid a like honor to a retiring member. First Sergeant Wilhelm Pluss, of the headquarters company. First Sergeant Pluss was born in Kiel. Germany, on October 8. 1871. and started his American army career in company A, 16th United States in fantry, on March 29. 1898. He was credited with double time toward re tirement for more than eight years' service in the Philippine islands. With their army savings, this faith ful soldier and his wife have pur chased a ranch at Tuckwila. near Se attle, and have entered the chicken business. Your readers may decide what oc cupation he could have entered that would ha?e more thoroughly Amer icanized this good citizen than the j flickered out ui:i:upi)un lie Uliut. scrvufl ill vu American army. JAMES S. DUSENBURT, Colonel. 55th Artillery. C. A. C. Simplicity Itself. The reason the price of milk is advanced in the spring is because it costs so much to throw away the over supply. (Copyright. 19I0. the Bell Syndicate. Inc.) Storm Pictures. By Grace E. Hall. It was a fierce, wild day. The snow, each flake a sharpened pellet stinging like a whirling lash, scur ried before a frenzied gale which seemed to blow from all directions at the same time and from which there was no escape. On such a day I saw a dog crouched beneath a tumble-down shed as the icy wind swept by; a dog unclaimed of man and recent target of untaught and unheeding youth broken and bruised and hungry, alone in the storm with less of shelter than had the rabbit yonder in the bleak field. I saw him crawl forth and from be neath the sifting snow dig out a frozen bone and gnaw it intermit tently, too nearly paralyzed to greatly care whether the life-spark kindled or Looks as if the democrats will have to Hooverize o n . Hoover whether they want to or not. specials in .Hosiery, quotes a store ad, and most men have theirs. for a fact. The frek spelers hav dropt thair noshun to reform the English lang- widg. Quite a bit of gun play locally these days, but it clears some situa tions. "Rastus. how Is it you have given up going to church?" asked Pastor Brown. "Well, sah," replied Rastus, "it's dis way. I likes to take an active part, an' I used to pass de collection basket, but dey's give de job to Brot hah Green, who jest returned from Ovah Thaiah." "In recognition of his heroic serv ice, I suppose 7" "No. sah, 1 reckon he got dat job in reco'nition of his having lost one o" his hands." San Francisco Argonant. Hoaglin blossomed on the register at the Imperial. T. H. Hill is respon sible for putting it there. A search of the regular maps failed to show Hniclln anvwhere in sijrht. but the postal guide proved a. better source of information. Hoaglin, be it known, is a postoffice in Douglas county, on the Umpqua river, 24 miles northeast of Roseburg, with plenty of mountains in the vicinity 3000 and 4000 feet high. The country is adapted for stock. Salesmen for cloaks and suits who are in Portland hotels visiting the trade complain that business isn't as good as it was. They haven't decided whether the dealers stocked up too much and haven't got rid of the mer chandise or whether the prices arc too hisrh. Anyway, they say they are not selling anywhere near the. goods they did on their former trips. S. Saburl. first assistant secretary to the Japanese embassy at ash ington. D. C, is registered at the Multnomah with Mrs. Saburi. They are beinsr entertained by T. Suge- muri. Japanese consul, who gave a luncheon for them in the gold room yesterday and later took the visitors for a drive over the Columbia high way. One of the best known citizens in the state is William Hanley of Bums, who is an arrival at the Multnomah Mr. Hanlay Is not likely to attend the democratic convention In San Fran cisco because there is a strong re semblance between Mr. Hanley and William Jennings Bryan, but the re semblance is facial, not political. From John Day comes A. A. Dean, on business bent, to the Imperial Grant county hasn't an extensive population, but It has an active one, judging from the number of people from that county wno are arriving In Portland every weeK. Frank Creasey. president of the Kiawanis club of Astoria, is at the Benson on club business. In the City by the Sea he is a hardware dealer, a line he followed when in Portland. Mrs. J. M. Murray, wife of the man ager of the O. & W. hotel at Hunting ton, Or., is registered at the Mult nomah. Before the days of the rail road. Huntington was a station on the stage line. State Highway Engineer Herbert Kunn arrived yesterday to attend the meeting of the commission. He has been touring eastern Oregon road work. F. M. Skillern. a merchant of Boise. Idaho, is registered at the Hotel Portland. Bis; Mas 'Wasted for Vlcc-Presideot. KELSO. Wash., March 31. (To the Editor.) There appeared In your pa per a letter written by Charles 1L Carey of Portland regarding the nom ination of vice-president, I concur with Mr. Carey in every particular. It might be added that we need a man for vice-president who is big enough for the presidency, and it might be further added that the con stitution should be amended to the effect that if the president became Incapacitated from sickness or dis ability to perform the duties of his office the vice-president should im mediately perform the duties of president. In nominating a president and vice- president men should be nominated I who are philosophers, politicians, statesmen and diplomats, especially t this time of reconstruction and economic unrest. We have just been through a period that has demon strated the lameness of our constitu tion, especially on the above point. Whoever is nominated for president at the republican convention, and whichever candidate receives the sec ond majority vote, should be declared nominated for vice-president. REPUBLICAN. Llnrola Critics Shame-less. ILWACO, Wash., March 31. (To the Editor.) Please permit me a few lines commending The Oregonlan for its defense of Abraham Lincoln as an emancipator. Whoever wrote that article, man or woman, was in small business. Every school pupil of a reasonable age knows the character of Honest Abe. We are all familiar with his Gettys burg address. Read his letter to the mother who sacrificed her sons in battle; also, remember his debates and still he was always broad enough to hear and admit of constructive criticism. Let the writer who wrote condem natory of his emancipation principles hie themselves to Rhode Island or New Jersey, for probably rhey still believe in secession. Shame upon them! As you say in your closing phrase, "The test of greatness of mind is greatness of performance. By these tests Lincoln lives in the hearts of mankind." MRS. ED HAWKINS. And 1 said In my heart that this was the saddest sight on which my eyes had ever rested. But on another day 1 saw a woman, gray of head and sad of face, going out Into life in her early winter sur rounded by the fragments of her shat tered faith, a sacred thing which once despoiled is never again made whole. I saw the merciless winds of gossip and scandal and censure sweep madly about, though not against her; saw her crawl forth alone, figuratively bruised and beaten and maltreated, into a world which has but too often only a gibe for the victimized; Saw her hesitate in choosing be tween the frozen bits of sustenance of an occasional friendly word and the oblivion so near at hand in the river's sweep And then I knew truly that this was the most pathetic thing which I had ever witnessed. And then I saw a spirit of divine healing steal softly over her sick ened brain; saw hope revive within her tortured soul: saw the daily growth of a great and touching sym pathy for those in sorrow, and her merciful understading of humanity's frailtie!?. I watched the ministrations of her gentle hands in new-found tasks of mercy; saw the transformation of a human soul as it stood forth purified, refined and made strong and tri umphant through suffering: And. having seen, I realized that only through having followed the path which leads through a Gethsemane are we made broad and fine and firm, capable of a great and tender under standing and of a perfect sympathy for our fellow men. In Other Days. Meaning: of Megalomaniac. ILWACO, Wash.. March 30. (To the Editor.) What is the meaning of the word "meglomaniac?" 1 cannot find it in the dictionary. Is it a word coined during the war? READER. The- word, correctly spelled "mega lomaniac," is derived from the Greek "megalo" (greatness), and "mania," and is defined as one possessed by a mania for doing great things, or laboring, under grandiose delusions concerning himself. Let Each. Salt Himself. CORNELIUS. Or., March 81. (To the Editor.) You are right. There is altogether too much telling the other fellow bow to do it. If the old gen tleman of 80 wants to get up at 3 A. M- and the lady, who, naturally. does not state her age. wishes to have her breakfast at 10. let them suit themselves. Why is it necessary to do the silly, make-believe baby act of putting on the clock to pull a man out of bed at a A. M. when be does not want to get up until 6? READER. Tweaty-FlTe Years Ago. From The Oreironlan of April 2, lSt5. Aberdeen. Hegular train service was started yesterday morning on the extension of the Northern Pacific into this city, a consummation for which citizens here have long labored. Major B. B. Tuttle of Portlana was yesterday appointed adjutant general of the Oregon National guard by Governor Lord, succeeding Colonsl K. W. Mitchell. The annual commencement exer cises of the medical department of the University of Oregon were held last evening in the high school assembly room, six young men receiving diplomas. J. T. Hayne. editor of the Port lander, will not be school clerk of district No. 1. b"r he was unable to file the required bond and resigned at yesterday's meeting of the board. PREJUDICE. It has no eyes, no ears, no heart. No brain, no soul this thing called Prejudice But heavy-lipped and with obdurate Jiw And eyes obfuscate it walks the round Of martyrs' pyres. Nor obsecrate hands Which plead for pity its dark breast may move. " To it there Is no beauty, truth or love; No praise for virtue and no pride in worth ; But, dead to these and dead to God and 'right. With brutal brow and squalid shuf flings. It hovers at the van of all progres sion And with ape arms and fist of wick edness Strikes every angel of Advancement down. GUY FITCH PHELPS. Fifty Tears Ago. From The Oreffonlsn of April 2. 1S70. Washington. The president. Gen eral Sherman and several members of the cabinet attended the funeral of General Thomas at Troy, N. Y. One hundred and fifty students are now enrolled in the Portland acad emy. 10 of whom entered in the past week, the term being just half ended. It is reported that one of the wood en tenements being removed from First street will be taken to Third, between Alder and Morrison,, and fitted up as the German school. Hon. A, B. Meacham arrived in the city last evening from east of the mountains and will, it is said, bring bis family to Salem. WHITHER AWAY OX THE WANDERING ROAD f Road's end Is the hut in the wilderness, where all trails grow faint and cease to run. It lies at the end of a thousand roads, broidered with leaf and turf, and laced with laughing streams. And that's why it's fun to be a motorist to slip away some morning on a road your car has never taken. In quest of road's end and wayside adventure. And all roads. In their mcan derings, are sometime subject to discussion in the columns of the automobile section of The Sunday Oregonian. where Lair H. Gregory holds forth for many an interesting paragraph and page. You'll find the road you're looking for. with data invalu able, somewhere in the Sunday auto department.