MOKMSO OKEGOXIAX, MONDAY, OCTOBER 21. 1921 ESTABLISHED BY HENRY L. 1'ITTOCK. Published b. The Oregonian Publishing Co., 133 Sixth Street, Portland, Oregon. C. A. UUKIIEN, E. B. PIPER, ian&ger. editor. The Oregonian la a member of the Asso ciated press. The Associated press ia ciusively entitled to the ue lor publication of all news dlt-palche credited to It or Dot otherwise credited In this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights 'ot publication of ..pecutl dispatches heiein arc also reserved. jbubecriptioD Katen Invariably in Advance. (By Mail.) Tally, Sunday included, one year $8.00 7'aliy, Sunday Included, six months ... 4.'J5 Lfally, Sunday Included, three month.. 2.-3 lially, Sunday Included, on month ... .75 really, without Sunday, one year 6.00 Dally, without Sunday, six montha .... 3.23 Dally, without Sunday, one month .... .so Weekly, one year 1 00 Sunday, one year 2.S0 (By Carrier.) Dally, Sunday Included, one year $0.00 Dally. Sunday Included, three montha. . 2.25 , Dally, Sunday included, on month ... .73 Dally, without Sunday, one year 7.80 Daily, without Sunday, three months. . 1.15 Jjaily, without Sunday, one month 66 How to Remit Snd postoffice money order, express or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at owner'a risk, tiive postoffice addresa In fu'l. inclutlne county and state. Fofttage Kates 1 to lfl pages. 1 cent: lfl to 32 pges. 2 cents; 34 to 48 pges, 8 cents; AO to A4 pages. 4 cents; Aft to 80 pages, 5 rents; e-lj to & pages, 6 cents. Ft reign postage double rate. Eawttern Bunlne Office Verree 8t Conk lln, 30 Madisoc avenu-. New York; Verre A Conklln, Steger building, Chicago; Ver ree A Conklln. Free Press building. De troit. Mich ; Verree & Conklln. Selling building, Portland. WOOLGROWERS RKSFME AN OLD ARGUMENT. There seems to be no end to the variety of forms which the efforts of InlarlAK .1 1 rl t - . 41. I nomic effects of water competition with railroads assume. One of the latest is protests against an applica tion nf IHa trflnnrnntlnpntnl rnnl. tn the interstate commerce commission for leave to make rates on wool from the intermountain country to the east as an exception to the long-and-short-haul clause of the law. This change Jn rates would enable them to com pete with the short rail haul to the coast plus the water rate to the At lantic coast. The protest began with the Washington Woolgrowers" asso ciation and the department of pub lic works of Washington, but Has been Joined by various commercial bodies in Intermountain cities, com posed largely of Jobbers, which have always been foremost In rate contro versies Involving the same question. Strangest of all. It Is backed by Se attle, which has stood with Portland and other Tacifio terminal cities In former contest It i9 not difficult to understand the motives of the Jobbers of Spo Stane, Boise, Salt Lake, Reno and Phoenix, but Seattle's reason appears to have been clouded by envy at the spectacle of great quantities of wool coming to Portland for handling and shipment by water. In their alarm at seeing 8,000,000 pounds of wool shipped from Portland In the first seven months of 1921, the Seattle folks have overlooked the fact that they shipped 2,000,000 pounds in the same period which they might never have touched if the principle which they now support had been in oper ation. They also are opposing the principle for which they have con tended for a quarter of a century, by virtue of which they enjoy water competitive rates. Woolgrowers state that practically all wool from the 1,000,000 sheep In eastern Washington now moves by way of Portland by rail or water to Boston: that large warehouses, grad ing and compressing plants have been established at Portland as the result of maladjusted rail rates; and that capital awaits a decision In this case to establish similar plants in easern Washington, eastern Oregon and Idaho. They say that. If their protest were heeded, all wool from eastern Washington would be shipped directly eastward by rail, that they wish to use this route and that the railroads need the business. How would the woolgrowers bene fit if they won their point? If the long-and-short-haul clause were ap plied absolutely, the highest rate to Boston would be from Portland,-and rates would be graded downward as distance grew less. Then, but for water competition, the farther west a grower was, the more freight he would pay and the lower net price he would receive. The grower In eastern Washington and eastern Ore gon would pay more than the grower in Idaho, Montana or Wyoming. In practice the growers with a short haul westward would ship to the coast and thence by water. A divid ing line would be found, east of which it was most economical to ship eastward wholly by rail and west of which the rail and water route would be cheaper. If no exception to the long-and-short-haul clause were al lowed, this line would be moved eastward: allowance of the exception would move it westward. The grow ers affected by the moving of this line westward would be deprived of the advantage of the alternative water route; the rail route alone would be open to them. As water rates fluctuate constantly, especially In these days of depressed shipping, that line would move frequenly, at shorter intervals than rail rates can under the cumbrous system of rate regulation. The growers who are making the present fight have nothing to gain by it, for they are in the territory nearest to the water. The prediction that warehouses, scouring, grading and compressing plants would be established in the intermountain country If water-competitive rates were not granted is not supported by experience. Such plants have been established at points hav ing the full advantage of both routes ' and have failed. They succeed at Portland, because it Is the main as sembling point for wool from the en tire Columbia basin, the point of transshipment from rail to water, and the financial center where loans can best be obtained and to which buyers resort. Kqunlly important, it is the only consuming market as well as the main assembling and selling market west of the Kocky mountains, for it Is the center of a great woolen manufacturing district, where Ore gon consumers compete with those of New Kngland for the raw product. Competitive rail rates give the grow er me full benefit of this competition between buyers. The law requires that the rates es tablished by railroads, when excep tions are allowed, shall be "reason ably compensatory for the service performed." This may fairly be con strued to permit rates leaving some margin over cost of operation, though that margin may be less than the general standard contemplated by law, when otherwise the traffic would either not move at all or would be diverted to the water. The effect In providing cars for other traffic or In loading cars which would otherwise be hauled empty, or i in stimulating- other traffic on which ; the full lawful return is earned, may surely be considered. Railroad traf fic is not divided by airtight parti tions, for each branch influences ! other branches. Thus the movement of woolen goods and of the great quantities of merchandise consumed by the persons who make them is a good reason for low rates on raw wool to Portland, for which growers should be as anxious as they are for low rates across the continent to New England. WHERE FINAL ACTHORITY RESTJS. Decision of leaders of 600,000 rail road men not to sanction a strike and of the chiefs of another 400.000 men to withdraw the strike order finds its explanation in the tenor of the messages which have been re ceived from many quarters by gov ernment officials "Let 'em strike." Tbe people realize that the strike, if It should come, would be against them through the medium of the railroads. They seek a just cause for It, and they find none. They have seen wages reduced In other occupa tions, and they see no reason why the railroad Industry should be ex cepted. They have seen prices fall and they see no reason why railroad men should continue to receive war wages while paying peace prices. They know that high rates have squeezed the profit out of many com modities, and that high wages are a main cause of high rates. Finally tliey know that full Inquiry has been made by an impartial board, estab lished by the government, that its verdict has been given, and that the proposed strike Is against that de cision. Thus the case against the strike Is clinched In the public mind. Decision of the million railroad men not to strike answers the objec tion to the labor board that it has no authority to enforce Its decisions. That authority is to be read between the lines of those provisions of the transportation act requiring publicity for its decisions. It is to publish all of them and, upon determining that any of them has been violated. Is to "make public its decision in such manner as it may determine." That provision for publicity trans fers the final decision to public opt ion. ' The decision has been given, and It is: "Let 'em strike." From early in 1916 to the present time the American people have been intimi dated by threats of a railroad strike. A craven congress, imbued with the "kept us out of war" spirit, sub mitted in 1916, and constant new demands, accompanied by the strike threat, have been the sequel. The people have been through war, through the after-war agony, and a railroad strike has not the ter rors for them that it had in 1916. They do not believe that any class should be exempt from what ill others have endured, their backs are up and, if a strike comes, they are ready to go through with it and win it not for the railroads, except inci dentally, but for the American peo ple. Consciousness of this state of the public mind has Caused chiefs of some unions to hold back their men. It may lead the chiefs of the most belligerent unions to reconsider after the labor board gives its final ver dict on October 26. If they remain obdurate, they will find public opin ion so strongly against them as to Insure their defeat. ' That Is the au thority behind labor board decisions, and very few strikes have been won against it. Those few do not stay won. ' THE TOWN WHERE DOGS GROW OLD. Hereafter the town of Lincoln, Neb., is to be noted for something more than the distinction which ac crues to It as the occasional habitat of Mr. Bryan. It will be known as the town where dogs grow old con tentedly, mumbling soup-bones, with the pound and the lethal chamber happily forgotten. Lincoln has dared to enact an ordinance which prohib its the destroying of dogs in any manner an act that implies recog nition of the spiritual intelligence of the dog. , It is the belief of the Lancaster county humane society that the right of the dog to live, liberty and the pursuit of happiness is second only to the inalienable rights of man. Acting upon this conclusion the so ciety has constructed a home and hospital for homeless dogs, ringed round with a generous acreage for the frolic of puppies. Here the broken leg is set. the painful sore conquered by skillful treatment, the belly filled and the heart uplifted. All citizens of Lincoln are required by ordinance to report to the society the presence of stray dogs, that hos pitality may bring them Into the circle of friendship. No shivering. friendless pup, his gaunt ribs proph esying death, will bay the moon on a winter's night In that dog's town. It seems a lot to do for dogs. Just dogs, yet he who has a dog for a friend will kindle to the thought. This ' altruism of the Lincoln townsfolk is not without practical worth. There will be times, though rarely, when the kind hosts shall deem death the greatest kindness for some tired charge. But only in ex treme instances will this apply, for the Lincolnians have built their home for orphan dogs on the rock of a great truth namely, that some where always there is some one who needs a dog, and who gives no thought to pedigree and the charmed talk of the breeder. To these desir ous ones, in quest of dogs to harry the prowler and drive' the stock, to laugh and leap and bark and fetch- and-carry, the society will provide dogs that are practically as good as new. There is no need for comment. save to reflect that after all our no bility is never greater than our dis position to be merciful. RELIGHTING WAR FIRES. Return of ex-Emperor Charles to Hungary as king makes war immi nent between that country and the little entente, composed of Czecho slovakia, Jugoslavia and Roumania, which is pledged to prevent by force of arms restoration of the Haps burgs. Fall of the Wirth cabinet brings near a monarchist uprising in Ger many, to be followed by civil war and, if successful, by restoraion of the Hohenzollerns and repudiation of the Versailles treaty. Though force alone will avail, the exhausted and divided allies send notes and ultimatums in protest against Hungarian seizure of the Burgenland, which was an insolent violation of the treaty of Trianon and was a preclude to Charles' adven ture. Distracted by Internal troubles, the allies lack the will and grudge the means to crush this revival of autocracy and militarism. In this crisis, it would be futile to ask France or any other of the coun tries which fought against autocracy to reduce their armies. Either In company with the other Allies or alone, France could find safety only in an advance to Berlin and Buda pest, in the final crushing of mili tarism In its breeding places and In the captivity of the heads Of two im perial dynasties on another St. Helena. Unless some such forceful action Is taken by the powers of Europe, the United States may at no distant day face ' the necessitiy of deciding whether it shall veto the restoration of the deposed dynasties and be pre pared to use its army in finishing beyond danger of renewal the war that was left unfinished in 1918. A LABOR ORGAN'S RIGHT TO DISTORT Because the Journal took the same po sition (that of the labor board and farm bureau federation) It Is called an "organ of class prejudice" by the Portland Or gonlan. Should not some newspaper sometime speak for men who work? Are tne men and women who do the world's work to be without right to have their side pre sented in a newspaper? How long would this republic last If all the newspapers in America suppliant!? sat at the feet of big and powerful Interests and arrogantly sneered at all who dared present the side vi muse woo loll I What better than the foregoing from the Portland Journal could be said to foster the charge of I. W. W. and communists that publications are divided into two classes a kept press and workers organs? No newspaper with a spark of self-respect sets out always to de fend capital, right or wrong; no similarly constituted newspaper ever sets out to support labor, right or wrong. One is as contemptible as is the other. Only that publication which sets itself up as a newspaper not a class organ and forms an honest opinion and honestly ex presses it is worthy of or obtains re spect. It can almost be said that all the newspapers of America newspaper as distinguished from class publica tions have condemned the railroad strike as a strike against the wage award of a government arbitration board, as a strike against even the right of railroad executives to apply to this government arbitration board for authority to reduce wages as a strike, in short, against the govern ment itself. 'North, east, south and west, newspapers generally are in accord. Throughout Oregon, even to the remote towns where influence of "big business" does not penetrate, they are of the same mind. The Portland Journal stands almost alone in state and nation in lending moral support to this blow at the industrial life of the people. Are all other news papers but this saintly one members of the kept press? Tet in no large newspaper are the workers denied a hearing, as this Portland newspaper implies. Every statement from those authorized to speak for the brotherhoods is given pot only space but prominence. The columns of The Oregonian are open not only to these statements but to communications from those who wish to defend the railroad brother hoods, excepting only that this news paper will not print vituperative let ters on that subject or any other. Nothing could be remoter from truth than that The Oregonian re ferred to its neighbor as "an organ of special class prejudice" because it endorsed the position of the labor board and the farm bureau feder ation. The Oregonian grants to any newspaper the right to speak for the workers. It speaks for the workers Itself when they are in the right. But it denied then and it denies again the sincerity of any newspaper which, in purporting to speak for the workers, distorts and misrepresents the facts and uses its columns to provoke class hatred. What else than a deliberate provo cation to class hatred can the Port land newspaper's reference to the Erie scandal be? The Incident oc curred long before the days of public regulation of railroads. It' is an in cident of more than fifty years ago and the railroad manipulator who perpetrated it has been dead nearly thirty years. It has no more bearing on the present crisis than the Punic wars or Salem witchcraft. The Portland class organ has said that the 12 per cent wage cut of last July was accepted by the railroad workers, when in fact it was the basis of tbe strike vote. Therein it denied even that which the brother hood leaders themselves say. It has said that the strike was against, the proposed additional 10 per cent cut; against mere announcement of an intent to apply to a government arbi tration board against that which had not happened. Later, in referring to the latter point it has said that the employes could not strike against a windmill or a rumor or an apprehension and that the strike was in fact predicated on the 12 per cent cut. It ha no settled mind on tbe strike issue, ex cept that whatever the issue may be the workers are right It has pretended to see in orderly applications for authority to reduce wages and to alter working rules, made in the manner required by law, an attempt by the railroad executives to break down government regula tion of rates and government super vision of wage controversies, mean while excusing the general strike, which is the only concerted act threatened by either side to destroy government railroad wage arbitra tion. It has denounced the railroad ex ecutives for opposing the translation of the 12 per cent cut into a rate re duction as a, means of settling the strike, but it has not had one word to say against the brotherhood chiefs for taking the same attitude. It calls loudly for greater indus trial development in one column and in another supports an unreasoning attack upon that same industrial de velopment. It is strong for present wage schedules and working condi tions for the railroads' employes, but it is silent as to tbe same schedules and conditions for other employ ments that are comparative in skill, experience and intelligence require ments. Notwithstanding, it Is a labor organ. It impliedly but nevertheless certainly admits it. It is welcome to Its proud status. Meanwhile public trust and public support will con tinue to go not to prejudiced class publications but to newspapers. One error of strategy on the part of the railroad men is that they threaten to strike too soon after the war. The people have not yet for gotten the expedients to which they resorted to provide food and to avoid buying clothes, and could use them again. If city supplies should run short, they could take the family flivver and go foraging in the coun try. Long trips might have to be cut out, but it will not hurt any of us to stay home for a few weeks. SWORDS FOR SALE. Most potent is the advertisement. Among other wares It sells logical arguments. Why, indeed, should it not sell to the war-weary world the truth that disarmament cannot fall of returning titanic dividends? It Is surprising that this question, ad vanced in all its simple force at the press congress in Honolulu, has not been asked heretofore. The proposi tion easily Is demonstrable. It can be shown that the bulk of the tax burden is carried at the behest of the classic loafer. Mars, and that the cost of a battleship would build a highway through some baffling swamp. The proposal Is most en ticing, yet obvious as it is it faces difficulties still more obvious. The advertising of disarmament arguments must needs be at the suf ferance of the nations in which the advertisements are published. It miiat have the sanction of govern ments, and the fact is that those governments which might reasonably be relied upon to favor the dissemi nation of truth already are converted, together with their peoples. There is little need to advertise the advan tage of peace in Great Britain, France, Italy or America. One doe not seek to convert the converted. The most that could be achieved in these countries, and an undeniably beneficial lesson it would prove to be, would be the quickening into activity of a sentiment that la pas siveboth as pertains to the gov ernment and to the individual citizens. The awakening of this moral force for disarmament might serve to press the argument upon less enlightened and considerably less compliant countries. Neverthe less it would be necessary first to procure the permission of militarist nations, before their conversion by an advertising campaign could be attempted. All of the nations are armed and arming, but four at least are def initely committed to militarism for the advantages they affect to see in such a policy. These are Japan, Germany, Russia and Turkey, in each of which there is no talk or thought of a continued peace. Greece might as well be added to the roster of the rebellious. In at least two of the five the popular sentiment la for continued militarism, Japan and Germany- In every instance, however, the spirit of government is com mitted to arms. Though all the rest of the world were brought to repentance and light by the admir able arguments for disarmament, blazoned in the newspapers of the willing nations, there would yet re main the problem of persuading hos tile governments to introduce or per. mlt propaganda, directly opposed to their point of view. The power of publicity is tre mendous, yet it is rendered impotent when it strikes the citadel of stub born disbelief. It cannot convert governments who, already cognizant of every fact, pin their faith to war. Failing to persuade the militaristic over-lords, it follows that it will not be permitted to preach discontent to their peoples. Disarmament in such instances must be forced by the ex ample of other nations who, as they disarm. Insist that the movement shall be general and that positive guarantees of good faith shall ac company the act- Recently a Portland detective pleaded guilty by proxy and paid a fine of $25 in a Polk county court for simple assault on a farmer on whose land he was hunting despite trespass notices. The aggrieved farmer says the officer pointed his shotgun and displayed his star. Naughty! Naughty! Portland po lloemen should behave better when away from home. The man who robbed the Jefferson bank a month ago lost his head. Now he will lose his liberty. Again it is demonstrated only a master mind can pull off a crime deal, and all the master minds are dead. Progress of the strike of trainmen on the Texas road that began Satur day will be watched. It will forecast what may happen in a week. If com petent help is secured the same will be obtained elsewhere. The Jollet girl who offered to marry a man who would give her flOOO to complete ber education found it fcasy to marry a man who "fell in love at first sight." He is wealthy. The latest burglar who robbed a woman in daylight in her home "spoke with a foreign accent." Let us hope he some day meets with a gun that speaks pure American. The Idea of a food show is not so much display of what to eat as how to eat it. Variety spurs the appetite and various ways of cooking an article of food puts jazz Into it. Secretary Davis is coming west next month "with the horns on" as head of an extensive fraternity. He should drift north on the way home. Portland would like to see him. Coos county is coming down here with an exhibit at the big show next week determined to win. Coos has the goods and does not fear others. That is the proper spirit. "Irish negotiations barely miss wreck." says a headline. Two or three head-on collisions may be ex pected before that subject :is settled. Great Britain has ordered four more battleships. Now who's been tipping off the verdict of the dis armament conference? "Last dam unit begun," says a headline. It may be the last dam unit, but we'll bet it's just a starter of the dam expense. The main Idea in the Balkans seems to be to sign the peace treaty In a hurry so they can start another war. The Turks were perfectly pleasant about it until the Greeks tried to get their Angora. One month from today will be Thanksgiving day. Will it, though, for many? The lobster season is on at Los Angeles, especially outside Hollywood. BVj PRODVCTS OF TRB PRESS Live Coyote " Preaeatee to Coast? Clerk for Bounty. Moss Averill. well-known Curry county resident and hunter, brought in a live coyote to County Clerk Walker, relates the Bandon (Or.) Western World. Mr. Averill said that tbe bounty law requirements were so complicated that he did not want to take any chsnces of falling to collect the $75 reward offered for killing them. The coyote was about two thirds grown and was caught in a trap. Averill put a collar and chain on the animal and released it from the trap. Lugging it into the county clerk's office, he alsiost caused .a bargain counter rush in the exodus to escape from the room. The coyote held back on the chain. "Well, here is a coyote. Walker, and it -is up to you to perform your duties .of stamping the hide and see ing that it is legally killed," declared Averill. Walker insisted that bis duties did not begin until the coyote was killed and the Joint debate aroused about as much interest as a sensational trial. Anyway the coyote was legally slain and Averill received, his S7 reward. Germany suffers in nerves as a result of the war quite as much, ai the rest of the world, avers the Ne braska State Journal. One of the odd manifestations of this national hysteria is the enormous Increase in the number of people who live by feeding the credulity of others. An Investigation of mysterious advertise ments' shows that there are not less than 600 people In Berlin engaged In interpreting the stars at a few marks per head. Their victims are drawn from all classes, but a majority ap pear to be poor people who find It difficult to provide themselves with the necessaries of life. In their des peration they turn to the soothsayers. Just as the British people gave them selves over during the war depres sion to the comforts of spiritualism. Germany is a particularly fertile field for these charlatans because the people under the empire were so protected against fraudulent opera tions that they quite lost the power of discrimination. So they support about 100O people in Berlin alone who pretend to read character and forecast the future by interpreting handwriting. Doctors of hypnotism and magnetism abound, preying upon rich and poor alike. The entire world is afflicted with more or less of this sort of thing, and such conditions will last until stability is restored in the world's thinking. The Lore of the Ring;. His nam la e thoueand years old. And the title h held In fee Is an asset to turn into sold. , H comes from over th sea, A wooer to woo comes hen He brings, as they wed to bring Th gem to th maid of Chaldo The lur of the lordllug's ring. Oh. maidens of delicate mould. Bid boldly! Though such as ye May never hi station hold. H offer a pedigree! The bondag to Infamy Of tainted caste Its sting What matter? For who would fie Th lur of & lordling's qagt Hit father, swashbucklers bold. How proud their stern ghosts must b Of th son, the patrician, sold. With a prise, by his family! Oh. y capLalns of Industry I wealth not a sovereign th.ng? It will buy the nobility. The lure of tbe lordling' ring. Envoy. Fair lady, for such as she. The gutter-girl trafficking For bread, you have pity! Ah ma, Th lur OX a lordllng's ring! STOKtLT 8. FISHER. In Kansas City Star. Bees have a language and a system of telegraphy, according to Profesoot Francis Jager, chief of the division of bee culture at the University of Pennsylvania farm. Wonderful prog ress has been made in bee culture, but their means of communication still remains a mystery, according to Professor Jager. - Professor Jager has conducted many experiments in an effort to learn something of the bee's mysterious form of communication. In one of them he took the queen bee out of a hive, which was fjur or five feet high. As soon as the working bees discovered their leader wag missing they began "crying." The noise was audible four or five feet from the hive. Within 36 sec onds after the queen been had been replaced at the bottom of the hive the sound subsided st the top of the hive and they showed their Joy by standing on their heads, according to- Professor Jager. Philadelphia In quirer. When President Harding drives a golf ball into the rough he might as well consider it lost and shoot an other, says the Lincoln Journal. The caddies search for these Presidential balls with tremendous seal,- but with little direct result. The reason is that the president uses a special ball marked with IS start, and his initials. When a caddy runs across such a ball it offers him an almost irresisti ble temptation to slip it into his pocket or under a stone, for he knows he can get 50 for It from some tuft hunter. The fact that as much as this has been paid for these souvenirs is responsible for the circulation of the foolish story that President Hard, ing uses balls' costing 1-50 apiece. e Thirty-six bottles of Ink were con sumed by Mayor James Rolph of San Francisco in two days In signing his name to the I13,!i00,000 worth of Hetch Hetchy bonds, which are being placed' on the market. He signed his name 13.500 times. . His ink well was filled 36 times during the process. It was figured that he signed his name 340 2-3 times with each filling. "I wonder how Solomon got his reputation for wisdom?" said the large wife, according to the New York Globe. "I am sure, Susan, it was not through anything he thought out for himself." said the meek little hus band. "Tou see he had a great many wives, and he must have listened very carefully to their advice." Anxious to secure three more chil dren for the district so money may be available to start a school, the resi dents of Lovelock, Nev have appealed to the San Jose, Cal., free employment bureau to find a father with that number of children, and have agreed to supply him with a job paying la a day as mucker or tramway man at a mine, and to supply him with a bouse. partly furnished. Those Who Come and Go. Tales of Folks at the Hotels. Portland must keep Its eyes on I Idaho, for that state is going to bring its products her, according to George F. Bruce of the Boise Stone company of Boise, who Is registered at the Multnomah. He is here endeavoring to supply the contractors for the pro posed new Elks' club with Idaho stone. "The people of Oregon little realize the possibilities that there are in Idaho," said Mr. Bruce. "Business men of Salt Lake have their eyes on the state and see in it great oppor tunities for development snd Invest ment. We have some of the greatest building stone In the world in Idaho. Our fruit industry is developing. None of the orchard men of th state bad any complaint to make of their crops this season, for the fruit has been wonderful. Sheep men have been badly up against it, but there is a strong indication now that there will be an Increased demand for wool at better prices than for some time." The "Cafeteria King" fs the title that has been given H. Boos of Los Angeles. He owns a large chain of cafeterias In the southern California city and now, In company with J. Hansen, a restaurant man of Ban Francisco, a tour of the northwest ts being made by automobile. Satur day they drove down to Seaside over the Columbia river highway, and Fri day they visited the upper highway, taking in Multnomah falls and other places of scenic interest along the route. "Of course we Californlans will never admit that Oregon has scen ery that surpasses ours," said Mr. Boos, "but I will admit that th Columbia river highway ia wonder ful. Proper advertisement will bring thousands of people to the state. Al ready many people of our state are making tourist trips here to see what you have." In the days when "Wee" Coyle played quarterback for Gllmore Dobie's University of Washington football eleven. Oregon Agricultural college made no such oors as they made Saturday when the Fuget sound varsity men went down to de feat. Coyle was one of the best players ever turned out on the Pa cific coast. He is now lieutenant governor of his state, but his duties were not so exacting that they kept him from going to Corvallis to see his alma mater trampled tn the mud. Mr. Coyle came to Portland Saturday night following the game and reg istered at the Multnomah. He was asked to participate in the res planting exercises yesterday, but could not spare the time and left for Seattle. He served as a captain dur ing the war and went overseas with the tlat division. Financial conditions throughout the nation are improving, according to H. J. Taylor, commercial man of De troit, Mich.-, who ia at the Mult nomah. "The worst stages of the financial depression which has en veloped the entire east have passed and business men all over feel en couraged," said Mr. Taylor. "The railroad trouble is coming at a bad time, for It Is unfortunate when euch troubles arrive Just at the time when a better feeling has started." Unfortunately a policeman was hid ing behind a telephone pole when L. A. Duncan, insurance ian of The Dalles, "out" a corner in Portland yesterday. The policeman halted the visitor from up the river and es corted him to the central station, where, without payment of a fine, he was given a mild lecture of the whys and wherefores of traffic ordinances as applied in Portland, presented with a copy of the traffic laws, and per mitted to go to the Imperial hotel, where he registered. Mr. and Mrs. George V. Marsden of Canyon City are registered at the Imperial. Mr. Marsden is a stock raiser in eastern Oregon and Is one of the best known citizens of Grant county. His grandfather, William Byram, went to Grant county many years ago when the district was first opened, and when the principal In habitants were coyotes snd Jack rabbits. Ther the family, has re mained following the business of raising cattle. .There Is little concern expressed by the traveling men at the various hotels of the city regarding the threatened strike of the railroad com panies. There have been a few men who have hurried up their business affairs here and left for the east in order to get to their homes and of fices before there can possibly be a rail tie-up.. However, the most of th men are of the opinion that there will be no strike. Pear growers of the Rogue river valley have no complaint about the prices of their fruit this year, ac cording to Bon C. Sheldon, member of the legislature and one of the leading citizens of Medford, who is at the Imperial. Bozc pers are sell ing for .25 a box In Chicago. "We raise the best pears In thu world down In the Rogue river country," said Mr. Sheldon. Governor Olcott, Mrs. Olcott, Dr. end Mrs. W. H. Lytle snd Mrs. George Rogers motored fram Salem yesterday afternoon to participate in the rose planting exercises They registered at the Multnomah hotel. After witnessing the O. A. C.-U. of W. football game at Corvallis Satur day. Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Johnson and family of Cottage Grove motored to Portland. They registered at the Benson hotel. Mr. Johnson it in the lumber business in Cottage Grove. Ben Collins and son Fred C. of Grants Pass are registered at the Imperial hotel. Mr. Collins is en gaged in the automobile business in the southern Oregon city. The Aberdeen High school football team, which played Vancouver High Saturday, spent Sunday in Portland and the players put up at the Oregon hotel. Lee Hersberger, a grain dealer of Hubbard, is spending a few c'ays In Portland transacting business. He is at the Oregon. Mrs. E. E. Johnson, wife of one of the leading lumbermen of the Coos bay district, is registered at the Im perial hotel. George X Wendling, one of the leading lumbermen of San Francisco, la registered at the Oregon. George H. Graves, a broker of Salem, Is in Portland for the week end and he is at the Oregon. F. E. Shaw of Salem, examiner for the corporation commissioner, is reg istered at tbe Oregon. The name of Frank C. Bramwell, state superintendent of banks, is on the register of the Oregon. A. E. Crosby, a druggist of The Dalles, with Mrs. Crosby, it at the Imperial. C. VV. Barrick, one of the leading attorneys of Tillamook, is registered at the Imperial. Mr. and Mrs. Pat Lonergan of Pen dleton are at the Portland hotel. R. L. Good, a business man of The Dalles, is at the Multnom&n. NOW NOT TIME TO SELECT SITE i . Mr. Moo res Tell War and Also Dla ' rasses Harden Island. j TORTLAXD. Oct. 22. (To the Edi tor.) Like former Governor Geer, the writer is considerably interested in learning, in what way and by what route, Ross island, sometimes under water, is to be "linked up" as an exposition site with Council Crest which Is across the river and 1200 feet high, but he differs from him In think ing that a selection of a site in ad vance will make votes for the exposi tion tax. It will have exactly the op posite effeot, for the site rivalry ts al ready so acute thaf threats are being made that if this or that location is chosen a fight will ensu against the whole proposition. The voters, in the very nature of things, cannot select the site. It must be left to a commis sion of responsible men, and selected after long and careful consideration. In reading letters as to the advan tages of the various sites one can al most determine where He the homes and property Interests of the writers. Ross island pleads that it is near th business center, and a location ther will bring more trade to the shop keepers of Portland, and that to locate It at Hayden island might help the stores and hotels of Vancouver. This, although we are asking for the help and co-operation of Washington snd the whole northwest. Think of it! How will this appeal te voters In out sides counties? Fortunately Portland has outgrown th small town fear and Jealousy of Its suburbs. The very thing we do not want la to get too near to the congestion of the business center which is already a very serious problem. Today th population center of Portland is said to be at Sixth and Holladay avenue on the eaat side. This Is nearly two miles north of Haw thorne avenue, and for the last ten years the trend of th city's growth has been north and east. To reach Ross island mors than four-fifths of the population would have to concen trate on Hawthorn avenue Just eaat of th bridge. No location would tend to greater congestion. The serious problem Is not distance but avoidance Of congestion. In spite of its greater distance Hay den island can be reached sooner than Ross island for the great majority of Portland people. Congestion is i greater consumer of time than die tance. There are today two straight car lines through to Hayden Island one of which crosses it, the Kenton and the Union avenue lines, which would carry fair visitors from the business heart of both the east and west sides to the exposition grounds without a transfer. There are already two continuous paved streets to the same point. The North Bank and all of the Puget sound railroads cross the island, and a branch of the O..W. R & N. passes within a short distance of it. It is the front door of Portland and at the gateway through which every river and ocean steamer passes. Immeasurably the greatest volume of travel comes Into Portland over these lines. The prestige of Portland a a port, the one thing we wish to advertise, Is based, not upon the Willamette, but the Columbia river. There ia no broader or more majestic sweep of the Columbia. this side of Astoria, than at the Inter state bridge. There is no view of the river on the Columbia highway that equal It, and there is no more beauti ful and impressive view of the river and the mountain than there Is Just east of where the) two river mingle their water. While the view' from Rocky butte la wonderful It affords a very unsatisfactory view of the Co lumbia, and here too comes up another problem of congestion. The Columbia highway Is already so congested that many timid drivers avoid it. The shortest route to Rocky butte snd the one which nearly all will travel will be the Sandy boule vard. To the congestion already ex lsting on that highway the exposition travel ahould not be added. We are told that to redeem Mock's bottom will require from 13,000,000 to $4,644,000 (and no cents) and that Hayden island will have to be protected by a cement wall 30 feet high or more, but no en glneer is or will be sponsor for the figures. A few day ago a statement was published that the owners of 4000 acres of Sauvles Island were ar. ranging to dyke the whole tract by a wall 25 feet high at an expense of $200,000. Hayden Island comprises 800 acres. The cost of raising the site of terminal No. 4 to a height of 20 or 30 feet was a very small part of the cost or that Improvement. Few realize the capacity and speed of a Port of Portland or government dredge, or with what ease they can profitably reclaim the waste places Hayden island can be made the equal of Belle Isle in spite of the alleged marvelous assistance of the Detroit climate. Th Broadway bridge even now Is not the north boundary of Portland. In ten year Los Angeles has added a city a larg as Portland to her population and Detroit has done twice as well. In another generation no one will dare to refer to th peninsula as foreign territory and a generation is a short tim in the life of a city. All bf our great national expositions have sought a water front. Portland ha special reasons to do so. CHAS. B. MOORES. POIXTS OVERLOOKED BY CIUTIC Fair Has State-vtlde Endorsement and National Recognition. PORTLAND, Oct. 22. (To the Ed itor.) I read the letter of Henry S. Mean in The Oregonian and the in ference from It Is that Inasmuch as he falls to appreciate a far-seeing suggestion, making for the welfare of the people of this state, it must be a boyish action, or as he further adds, an impulse of mob psychology. He falls to realize that over 100 of the most prominent organizations, with a total membership of at least 10,000 people, have already indorsed the 1925 exposition organizations composed of many of the leading men of the state and that the exposition has received national recognition, and ha emerged from a suggestion of ideas to a concrete proposition. The general benefits of exposition seem to be world recognized, and our national congress only the other day appropriated by taxation the million dollars for an international exposition to be held next year in Brazil. This Brazilian exposition will un questionably receive indorsement and financial support from the leading countries of the world. It would cer tainly be in bad taste to assume to say governments lending aid to ex positions are moved by mob psy chology. I believe there are many thought ful men who appreciate by past tests the value snd worth of holding ex positions, and I rejoice to think such a body exists in Portland who are ac tively at work in a cause which will bring results for the improvement and betterment of the state. Mr. Mears is no exception to others "who do not wish to argue against the fair," and at heart really would enjoy seeing the exposition progress with success if a means could be reached whereby he and a coterie of others could be e.evmpc from a tax necessary to accomplish a great good for a great number of the people of the northwest. Tbe public at large will indorse a tax measure as the most equitable means of reaching a result giving the greatest good to the greatest number and a boon to civilization. LEO FRIEDE. More Truth Than Poetry. By Jane J. Montague. A LONG NBF.DED REFORM No longer the fair and beribbontd co-ed Or the lovely young visiting dame. By the freshie or Junior or soph can be led To her seat at th critical game. No longer her voice eh can Joyfully raise In the lttlng and rollicking song. Or fix the great stars with her glo rious gaze From the seat where the under grade throng, C - -... V. - - . ... ....It.. -1 A 1 -s.cn in. ius u i in uuujr viu wi Will slip from an undergrad's mind. When he sits by the ld of a beautl- xut aou Unless he should haply be blind. He often forget to get up on hi toe " jm in me general oncer. If a damsel in pink with a face like I sitting a trifle too near. The cheer leader moan that a (tapd full of Janes So affects th young fellow around That in spit of the rushea and 20 yard gain They seldom will utter a sound. A fellow Intent on th bright shining lamps. Filled with light as ftulgnt as dawn. Which gleam from th face of charming young vamps. Forget there's a gam going on. And o in th future if ladles appear On occasion when games may be tight. They shall not b permitted to put on . the chser A heavy and dangerous blight. Of course they won't bar from all seat In th bowl Th radiant wonderful elves, But the squads with the lung will be kept in control For the girls will be parked by themaelv. HI Own Fanlt. How can Obrgon expect us to rec ognize Mexico? It doesn't look, like the same old place since he' been president Of it. Kfflcleney. The I. W. W. certainly know how to operate recruiting stations for the army of th unemployed. s e I nfrrltng. Apparently Mr. Hays expect post master to deliver Sunday newspapers before they have had time to read the comic supplements. (Copyright by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) Burroughs Nature Club. Copyright. Hooahton-Mlfflln Co. Can Ton Answer Theae Questions? 1. How many kinds of fishes are there? 2. How fast' can antelope run? 1. I have a small turtle sent me from West Virginia, about 6 inches long, oval shell, prettily marked on back. It stays In the shade under vegetation, and I never see It eat any thing, but it drinks water. What shall I feed it and how care for it next winter? Answers in tomorrow's nature notes. Answers to Previous Question. 1. How did the petrel get its name? According to legend, from that of the Apostle Peter, because the bird appears to "walk on water." It feeds on floating marine forma near the surface, and does not dive, but dips Its head, meantime fluttering its wings to keep poised and dabbling Its feet. There are several petrels. The common stormy petrel or Mother Carey's ohicken, is Wilson's petrel, with sooty plumage and a quarter moon white band between back and tall. 2. Kindly tell m how to make a sun dial that works, and how to make an instrument to take the latitude of a place from the stars. Impossible to attempt anything so elaborate in these notes. An excellent article on makinir a sun dial is found in Comatock's "Handbook of Nature Study" page 815-917. A sextant would b almost too difficult for amateur construction, but about a year ago a magazine called "The Rudder" gave directions. What Is a Phoby cat? Is it reaJly a skunk? N Phoby cat is a local name, with Hy drophobia cat, for the small spotted skunk. This name Is based on report that Its bit Invariably produces hy drophobia. The notion Is untrue, gen erally speaking; but If the animal has been bitten by a rabid dog or wolf, of course its bite (or that of any Infected animal) ia a mean of introducing rabies. In Other Days. Fifty Years Ago. From The Oregonian of October 24. 1S7I. The iron work for the new peni tentiary at Salem has been completed at Drake' foundry in that city and delivered. An order has beeen received by the mall contractors from the postoffice department directing them to carry the mails on the route between Port land and Olympla every day. Cars on the Oregon and California railroad now run to Red Bluff. This is somewhat more than half way from Sacramento to Yreka. A new Invention called "love letter ink" is said to be a sure cure for breach of promise cases, as the Ink fades sway and leaves a perfectly blank sheet after about four weeks. Twenty-five Years Ago. From Th Oregonian of October 24. 1R96. . Montreal. J. J. Corbett, pugilist, and his wife had a fight last nigH In which dinner plates were the chief weapons, after Mrs. Corbett received a letter about her husband. Corbett is said to have left the hotel on the run. The postoffice department has made arrangements to carry letter mall from Juneau, Alaska, to Circle City four times 'during the coming winter. The Chinese gamblers, whose fan tan game was raided because they refused to contribute to the campaign fund for Bryan's election, were ar raigned in municipal court yesterday. The elevated roadway on Union avenue and other places on the east side Is being examined to determine the condition of the planking. "Billion" in America and England. TILLAMOOK, Or., Oct. 22. (To the Editor.) To settle a friendly debate nlease staU how many figures are re quired to write one billion. "A" con tends, for instance, mat t.uuu.uuu.oiio is one billion and "B" contends that it Is ony one thousand million and that one billion must contain at least 13 figures. J. McCOLGAN. Probably the difficulty Is that B learned the English system. There under a billion Is a million millions. In the United States and France a bil lion is a thousand millions.