s TIIE SUNDAY OREG ONI AN, PORTLAND, SEPTEMBER 28, 1919. " ESTABLISHED ItV HKNRY L. FITTOCK. Published by The Orecontan Publishing Co., 135 Sixth Street. Fortiand. Orrgnn. C. A. MORDEN. K. B. PIPER, Manager. Editor. The Oregonian fs a member of the Asso ciated Press. The Associated r'res is exclusively entitled to the uue for publica tion of all news di-tpatches credited to It or not otherwise credited in this paper and iao the local news published hereiu. All l imits of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. ruIrriplion Kute Invariably in AtKance. By Mail.) rVilly. Sunday included, one year $S.OO Tvaily, Sunday included, six months... 4.2.1 Iaiiy. Sunday included, three months. 2.-3 J.a:iy, Sunday included, one month... .75 P'aily.. without Sunday, one year 6.00 Daily, without Sunday, six months.... :!.-" Iniiy, without Sunday, one month.... .60 "Weekly, one year l-'0 Sunday, one year ...... -.o0 Sunday and weekly ....... 3.50 (By Carrier.) 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The prevailing sentiment of the American people is expressed in the resolutions of a number 6f members of the faculty of the University of Oregon calling upon the senate for speedv ratification of the treaty with Germany. Regardless the faults of the treaty, the resolutions speak un deniable truth in saying: Thai whether the treaty of peace with Germany, and the league of nations cove nant nre in all respects ideal or not. they constitute the best hope both for an im mediate settlement ol national and world affairs and for the permanent relief of the world from the danger of future wars. The statesmen of the allied nations labored long on the treaty, and if all its critics were to put their heads together, they could not draw a better, nor is the world willing to wait while they make the attempt. The league covenant contains pro visions for its own amendment and for withdrawal of any nation, if it does not work to the satisfaction of that nation. The league will be the means of correcting any injustices in the terms dictated to Germany. Then the choice now is between immediate amendment, further delaying peace, and immediate peace with full op portunity for subsequent amend ment. This is no question between presi dent and senate, or between republi cans and democrats; it is a question for the the united action of the American nation in conjunction with other nations to settle relations with Germany and to form a league for preservation of peace with justice. It is a question of ending the sus pense in which the world is held, and which is already frittering away the fruits of victory. The word should go out from the people to the senate to stop talking and ratify. If reservatious which would not delay actual peace are needed to quiet the qualms of some senators, make them, but ratify, for while the senate delays, new wars brew. ABSURDITIES OF KATEMAKING. Although the recent hearing on freight rates on cement directly con cerned only one corporation in Ore gon, it is of general interest because that corporation has established a new industry at Oswego, but chiefly because it brings to light one more of the absurdities of the competitive rate system which now prevails. In order to compete with water lines, yie Southern Pacific made the low rate of 22 cents per hundred pounds from the cement mills at To lenas, Cal., to Portland, a distance of 694 miles, while the rate from Oswego to Portland, only nine miles. is 6 cents. From Concrete, Wash., to Portland, 2S5 miles, the rate is 12 cents and from Metaline Falls, Idaho, D07 miles, it is 32 cents. The glaring inequality is best illustrated by the rate per ton per mile in each case, which is: Oswego 13 cents; Tolenas 6 mills. Concrete 8 mills, Metaline Kalis 12 mills. The same inequality appears in rates to Vancouver, 19 miles from Oswego, for the rate per ton-mile is: from Oswego 8 cents, from Tolenas 7 mills, from Concrete 8 mills, from Metaline Falls 12 mills. Water competition from California justifies a lower rate than between two inland points, but Oswego also has the opportunity of -water compe tition to both Portland and Van couver. Water competition does not extend up the Willamette valley and, if the accepted rule were followed. the local rate from Portland would be added for valley points. But the L'2-cent rate from Tolenas is contin ued to Halsey, an additional haul of !)5 miles without additional charge, while the rate from Oswego risen from 6 to 14 cents. Metaline Falls lias no water competition, yet it pays 3 2 mills per toa-mile against Os tyego's 13 cents. The reason given for these in equalities is that they are made in order to admit mills on each line into competing markets. A cement mill locates at Metaline Falls, in a thinly settled country, in order to be near raw material, and the railroad gives it about 200 miles of free transportation to bring its product to market. The railroads regard them selves as transportation merchants, and they fix rates according to the necessity and importunity of ship pers, not! on any principle of one price for all. The cement case is a close parallel to the Columbia basin case in the general principle for which the Os wego company contends. This is that rates should be adjusted to distance, or cost of service. No shipper is en titled to relief from the natural dis advantages of his location by cheaper transportation than his neighbor has, and it follows that none should be deprived of his natural advantages by such means. Transportation is not a commodity for sale at terms vary ing according to the particular cir cumstances of each deal, or accord ing to the oversupply which the owner has on hand; jt is a public service to be rendered to all at the same price for an equal quantity and quality. If that principle were ap plied, the Oswego mill would have an advantage within a certain radius, the Concrete mill would have a like advantage on Puget sound, Metaline Falls would hold the lead in eastern Washington and Idaho, and the Cali fornia mills would have a wide field of their own. This principle is not yet followed for the reason that public regulation has not been able to break away from the old idea that a railroad is a private enterprise to adopt the idea that it is. a public servant. Nor has government operation effected any chan-re. In spite of all the tall talk about unified operation and use of the shortest route, the roads are still operated in the interests of their separate owners, and attorneys flock to rate hearings to represent the owners. Evidence of this fact is the handling of cement from Oswego to Portland. The direct route is by the Southern Pacific to Jefferson street a' d then by the- United rail way to the North Bank yard or any point of delivery. In fact a Car is hauled over the Southern Pacific to Willbridge, then over the bridge and down the east aide to connection with the O-W R. & N.. over that road to the junction with the North Bank, then over the North Bank bridge to the freight yard or to the United r-.ilway. That car goes all the way around Robin Hood's barn iu order to secure a. longer haul for the Southern Pacific, yet Director General Hines holds a lodge of sor row over his deficit. THE ADVERSARY'S BOOK. Samuel Gompers assures the sen ate labor committee that the views of President Woodrow Wilson on the closed shop are not the views of Dr. Woodrow Wilson. In 1909 Dr. Woodrow Wilson made the state ment that he was "a fierce partisan of the open shop." Mr. Gompers also assures the com mittee that the views of "William Z. Foster, secretary of the national strike-committee of steel workers, are no longer the views of William Z. Foster, author of a book on syn dicalism and sabotage. Foster's book appeared about the time that Dr. -Wilson uttered his famous remark on the open shop. Foster's work is a text book on methods of sabotage as. well tts an advocate of industrial and political revolution. The following are choice jquot quotations from it: society is even to be perpetuated to say nothinp of being organized upon an equitable basis the wages system must be abolished. The thieves at present in control of the indtistries must be stripped of their booty and society so reorganized that every individual shall have free ac cess to the social means of production. This social reorganization will be a revo lution. Only after such a revolution will the icreat Inequalities of modern society disappear. But it Is idle to even speculate on the aroused workers cowardly stooping to buy back the industries stolen from them. When the psychological moment arrives the working class, hungering for emanci pation, will adopt the only method at its disposal and put an end to capitalism with the general strike. In his choice of weapons to fight his capitalist enemies the syndicalist is no more careful to select those that are "fair," "just" or "civilized" than Is a householder attacked, in the night by a burglar. As indicated, these were the views of Mr. Foster before he became sec retary of a very large organization, just as the opinion of Dr. Wilson on the open shop was held before he became president of a very large democracy. Says Mr. Foster to the New York Sun correspondent: It's old stuff; It has whiskers on it. I haven't seen it for ten years. We know who's now sending it around, however. They've dug it up and reprinted it to dis credit the men. In a day or two I'll have ready for you a new pamphlet. But you won't be fair. You won't print that, be cause it might be creditable. The common interpretation given Job's wish that his adversary might have written a book needs to be taken to heart by any and every philosopher who has any thought of ever ceasing to be a philosopher to become a leader of men in practical affairs. THE BRIEF AGAINST TUBERCULAR MARRIAGES. When William Forrestal, of Chi cago, sought to marry, he was ar rested on his wedding eve, by order of the health commissioner. Taken to the tuberculosis ward of the Cook county hospital, he was detained until he had given his word to post pone his nuptials and to seek health in the desert air of Arizona. The laws of Illinois held that the pros pective bridegroom was a menace to the future health of the state. Love balks at barriers, and the physically afflicted contend against any denial of their rrght to happi ness. Handicapped in the game ot life, they feel not unnaturally that the high privilege of marital happi ness should at least be theirs. Nor does medical science deny this, save in instances where the concerns of posterity are involved. In recent data collected by the health department of Colorado, it was shown that children born of tubercular parentage enter the world with a 30 per cent charge against their normal development. Whereas the world is full of girls and boys who, theoretically, have the heritage of 100 per cent physical and mental development, the shadow of the great white plague rests upon the unfortunates whose mothers and fathers cast discretion to the winds, and were wedded despite the active tubercular taint. Their children possess but a 70 per cent chance of normal development. It is not, say the men of medical research, that the actual imprint of active tuberculosis is upon the off spring of such unions. The theory of heredity has never been definitely contended for in tuberculosis in quiries. But there yet remains the strong probability that the infant will acquire tuberculosis by contact after birth. In any event, it is agreed that the tubercular status of the par entage is a fearful factor in under mining the stamina of the child. With regard to the normality of chil dren born, of tubercular marriages. there is more than a suspicion that they are predisposed to amentia, or reeme-mindedness, and it has been stated on high authority that "an cestral tuberculosis, like alcoholism, has an important indirect and pos- siDiy a contrmutory influence. It would be as well if the chain of calamity ended at this link, but it grows in length with the perpetua tion of enfeebled physique and mind oinding more firmly the shackles that science is striving to strike from the race. So it is that medical men, as a rule, frown upon the marriage of one of tubercular affliction, unless tne union is to be childless. The world owes its debt of happi ness to every mortal. Sometimes it pays, but often it defaults. Yet who would, at will, for the achievement of happiness, condemn his line to the darkness of suffering and de spair? The mind turns back appalled by a selfishness so colossally un natural and unkind. It is wisdom to reflect that the bout with tubercu losis is not lost, but that medical science Is backing it to the ropes, pernaps ior tne final knock-out. Statistics show that every third per- son between 15 and 60 dies of the scourge, and that approximately one in every ten deaths is caused by tu berculosis. But they show aa well that sanitation, fresh air, dieting, and conformation to a well under stood routine " of treatment, make recovery not only possible but probable. It has been proved beyond conten tion that the white plague, like Prus sian militarism, is not unbeatable, and that thousands of lives may be spared to the full fruition of happi ness and achievement. But the hands of common sense and science alike are raised against those who meddle with destiny ere they are cured. HOG ISLAND'S LESSON. Announcement comes from Wash ington that when the Hog Island shipyard finishes its present con tracts for the government it will be abandoned as a shipyard and prob ably will be sold- to- Hie American International corporation, which has an option on the plant. That com pany is expected to tear out the ways and derricks and to erect great piers for an ocean terminal similar to the Bush terminal at Brooklyn. All ships under contract will be fin ished within a year. Thus the chief beneficiary from the Hog Island enterprise will be the private corporation which con structed it with public money at ex travagant cost, and which has man aged it for the government on the cost-plus system. Such expenditure could be justified only by acceler ated output of the type of ships which the government wanted for war and which would afterward be useful in peace output at a pace which could not be equaled by yards that fabricated the steel on the ground, and at a cost materially be low that of other yards. The output gained and the saving effected should be sufficient to compensate for the difference between the first cost of the yard and the price at which it could be sold. From this standpoint Hog Island lias not justified itself. There were many delays in construction, cost far exceeded estimates, and the first hull was not launched until August, 1918. It did not get into efficient operation until the war was over. It could have fulfilled its purpose only if the war had continued through 1919, and possibly into 1920, as was expected. In fact the best records were made at yards in Port land and Seattle, which fabricate their own steel. If much less lavish aid had been given to Pacific coast yards than was given to Hog Island, they might have outdone it. ACRE MUST PRODUCE MORE. John A. Cavanagh, vice-president of the Des Moines (Ia.) National bank, is one of the well-known finan ciers of the middle west. Also he is a farmer, owner of considerable tracts of some of the finest agricul tural land in the Hawkeye state. In both capacities he is a man of vision. Addressing the Farm Mortgage Bankers' Association of America in Chicago recently, he said: At a recent meeting of banker and real estate men. in the state in which I have the honor to- live, attention waa called to the fact that only 20 years ago a similar meeting had- beea held for the express purpose of determining the best action to be taken should Iowa farm land advance to So7...u an acre, aa then seemed possi ble. Today much of that same land is selling for ten times the price which at that time occasioned. alarm Thousands of acres of Iowa farm land this year, according to Mr. Cavanagh, have been sold at prices ranging from $250 to J600 an acre, and in the face of these phenomenal prices the activity in the land market in that state was such as had never been known before. This enormous increase in land values or prices was, of course, not confined to Iowa. It was general, especially throughout the middle west and south, the Iowa advance being cited as an illustra tion that land, like practically every thing else in recent years, has gone to heights hitherto unknown. The recent course of land values naturally has a disturbing effect in some quarters, and raises queries. "Can these prices be maintained when the world, following the war, again is stabilized? And if so, what will be the effect on the cost of pro duction for the farmer and the cost of living for the non-producing con sumer?" These are questions that are being asked. If what goes up has to come down, as some wiseacre has said, then there would seem to be in store some very considerable losses for men who last year and this invested in high-priced farm lands. If, on the other hand, the high land prices that have been es tablished are maintained, then rela tively high produce prices will be a necessity if the producer is to make good. Roger W. Babson says: "We feel that farm values are tremendously inflated; that under normal condi tions such as prevailed in 1912 and 1913, farm lands purchased at pres ent costs would not begin to yield an adequate return on the investment. Professor Irving Fisher of Yale university, on the other hand, says: We are on a permanently higher price level. To talk reverently of 1913-1914 prices is to speak in dead language. The clever man is the man who finds out the new price facts and acts accordingly."' There are the two extremes of thought at this time on high land values and the future welfare and prosperity of the people, and in this connection it is interesting to note the conclusions of Mr. Cavanagh, the Iowa banker-farmer. "The prices of farm products will decline within the next few years," says he, "but the price of farm land w-111 not decline within the next decade, and farming will continue to provide a reasonable return on both, capital and labor Invested." a. rurtner conclusion, and one whose importance can hardly be overestimated, is this: "Farming in the future will be conducted more scientifically than ever before. AJ new type ot intensive farmer will re sult from the decrease in the value of farm products and the increase In the value of farm land." Better agriculture in America is inevitable, and for the man who in sists that this is impossible the future already is closed, for in the general economic situation there is nothing clearer than the fact that. American methods of agriculture as practiced heretofore now are inadequate. In every other important industry the United States is in line with the great nations of the world, and in some lines away ahead of most of them. In commerce, manufacture, banking, invention, technical industry and other highly important fields we are well m the front and we need fea the competition of no other nation, In agriculture, it might as well be admitted, we- are in the rear. In the cultivation of the soil we have not yet made good. In the years just prior to the war on an acre of land Germany was raising 35 bushels of wheat, Austria 22, France 20, the United Kingdom 33 and the United States 12 to 15. In those years on an acre Germany was producing 60 bushels of oats, Austria 42, France 30, the United Kingdom 43 and the United States 29. On an acre in those years Germany was raising more than 200 bushels of po tatoes, Austria around 150 bushels, France 127, the United Kingdom 240 and the United States 90 to 100 bushels. The one inescapable conclusion Is that the acre in America in the future will have to be made to produce more than it has produced in the past. This will be done because it has to be done. There is no ques tion about possibilities. There is no richer agricultural domain in the world than is to be found in America. The only course open to America is to make better use of it, and this unquestionably will be done. BRAIN CHEAPER THAN BRAWN'. Is brawn worth more than brains? That question, is suggested by the appeal of Harvard for an endowment fund of $16,250,000, mainly for the purpose of increasing the pay of the faculty. The work of Harvard, as of other universities, is to produce trained men for the service of the country in industry, the professions, the arts and government. Men who have such training receive the high est salaries and profits in business, but the modest professors who train them are now paid In some cases no more than unskilled workmen, in others no more than skilled me-, chanics. After a man has studied for foul years at Harvard and an additional three years to graduate as doctor ot philosophy, he is qualified for an in structor at J 1200 a year. He is then, says the Harvard announcement, "lower in the economic scale than waiters, policemen, chauffeurs, street cleaners." While ironworkers' wage have risen CO per cent since 1916, college professors' salaries are the same as in 1905, and the highest salary to which the best of them can hope to attain at Harvard is $5500. Many can barely make ends meet Most Harvard professors receive $4000 a year, and assistant professors $2500 to $3000. They are forced to make up the deficiencies of their in come by writing and outside work, which absorbs energy that should be used in teaching. It may be thought that general diffusion of education has caused overproduction of highly educated men, but that explanation is refuted by the fact that the demand for just such men men of high scientific attainment is great and that they are often offered several times their university salary by industrial enter prises. Probably the true explana tion is that they are peculiarly qualified to teach and to conduct scientific research, and that they ove their work for its own sake. It so absorbs them that the money making instinct is never developed in them. They are content to live sim ply enough to raise a family in de cency and comfort and to keep their minds free from worry about money. n order that they may not be dis tracted from work. Probably it is because professors have this temperament that we have not long ago heard of a professors' union which struck for salaries pro pcrtionate to their superiority in education and ability over shipbuild ers, steelworkers and locomotive en gineers. For that reason the proposal to raise enough funds to increase their salaries fifty per . cent comes from the graduates, not from them selves. Because they are .self-deny-! ing, devoted to their work and not self-assertive, their service, of which the value can scarcely be measured in dollars, should be rewarded, and there should be no grumbling at the high cost of America's best asset education. DOCTORS AND THE POPULATION. The Carnegie foundation does not share the misapprehension of some persons that the country is threat ened with a famine in physicians. The difficulty, if any, lies in faulty distribution, rather than insufficient numbers in the country as a whole. The foundation's recent report is based on data collected by the Amer ican Medical association, including the total number under 45 and under 55 years of age, the total number in each county in the United States, and the number and names of physicians under commission in the United States army and navy. It appears that before the war there were a dozen counties that had one physician for every 100 to 200 people. Obviously this was a greater number than needed. There were eighteen counties in which one physi cian was called on to serve more than 5000 people. The latter num ber was inadequate, according to ac cepted standards in the older coun tries, unless the communities in question enjoyed exceptionally good health. The spirit of the Carnegie report is in opposition to relaxation of standards in the false notion that this is necessary in order to main tain supply. It seems that we can still afford to Insist on a bettor aver- e of attainment, rather than fall into a panic and adopt measures calculated only to Increase numbers. The Carnegie report says, for ex ample: The medians, half way between these ex tremes, indicate that every state la the country, even under war conattlons, was plentifully supplied with physician 'l he central tendency before the war shows that there wait one physician to about K.'iO of the population, while the withdrawal for war service raised this figure only to one physician for about ll.".o of the population. Compared with the entirely Ina'tenuate ra tlo of one physician to every 'luiJO persons which prevailed In hurope before tho war. these fiKures furnish sufficient evidence that, with our present supply of twice the European ratio of physicians, the danger of any shortage Is exceedingly remote. No argument can le maae from tnis Ulrection asainst the maintenance and advancement of the best standards in the preparation of future physicians. An additional reason for insisting on the highest possible standards in this branch of science, which is not mentioned in the Carnegie report but which deserves consideration, is in creasing acceptance of the doctrine that the physician is quite as impor tant a factor in disease prevention a.-, in the alleviation of maladies once they have manifested themselves out wardly. The term "cure" has under gone a change in the medical lexicon in the past few years. It is less often misused than formerly. Medical science more and more directs it energies to the study of fundameiv tals. Congestion of populations en larges the community, and therefore the political phases of the general health problem. We are finding out that it pays better to take care of mothers and their babies than it does to try to patch up adults in which the seeds of woe may have been sown before they were born, or very early in their lives. Physicians are less inclined to give long names to dis eases, as if they were something spe cific, and to treat whole sets of con ditions, rather than isolated symp toms. And this presupposes not only such technical education as will be indicated to every observer, but a kind of intellectual training which tits the man of science to think broadly, to reason widely and to view disease as an evil to be combated at a source which may be far outside the range of vision of the ordinary man. The same is true, of course, of other professions. The Carnegie foundation is principally concerned with the advancement of teaching, with education in every sense. It will foster, consequently, such a pol icy in education as will train the in tellect of the student, and strengthen his ability to think for himself in large terms, as befits the times. The argument which it presents for a solid foundation for education is as applicable to any other vocation as it is to the profession of medicine. PERSHING AND THE BELT. 8 AM BROWNE Twice since the chariot of Mars trundled away has General Pershing defied the lightning. With the stern Ban? froid of the veteran campaigner he turned from the congressional committee of inquiry when it visited France. And when he led the First division through tumultuously ap preciative New York, he wore the Sam Browne belt banned by Gen eral March, his superior as chief of staff, from the equipment of officers returning from foreign fields. Sartorial effects of soldiery are mysteries to the mere civilian. He looks upon them with the kindling eye of one who feels they would be come him but the spiral puttee has never an end to it, so far as he di vines. It is a bit of. trapping that lends swagger and dash to the lad with the gold chevrons of overseas service. He pictures it grimed with the soil of Flanders more often termed "mud" and torn by the enemy wire in some stubborn taking of the last desperate trench. And part and parcel of his worship is the Sam Browne belt. They say that a humble buck private, who must have been either harness-maker or hostler in the days of his civilianship, designed the sin gularly martial bit of gear that bears his name, and that served his supe riors so well in lifting the heft of their sidearms and in distinguishing them from plain privates with belts as in the case of the British "Tommy." With all the eager romanticism of an unmilitary nation. America warmed to the Sam Browne belt when it was adopted by our overseas forces. The most prosaic business man of those who kept the home fires burning was in accord with General Pershing's reiterated request that returning overseas officers be permitted to retain that classic touch of trapping the Sam" Browne belt. But a cold, unfeeling war de partment, aghast at the prospect that home service officers would present a beltless contrast, vetoed the recommendation. In the strict military sense General Pershing is insubordinate. Reckless of war departmental instructions, he wore the leather circlet of his service when he came home to sundry mil lions of wildly admiring Americans. And the officers of the First division. stepping along tho New York pave ments, they wore the proscribed belts as well. Like to the Sam Browne belt. these matters military are mysteries to the fortunate ones who never had to "go on k. p." who never delved into the fascinations of "a. w. o. 1.," or watched the star-shells burst above some field of deadly struggle. They are but unscathed civilians, stilt mildly envious of the panoply of those who followed the colors. But they are quite ready to concur that the Sam Browne belt is heart's de sire raised to the nth degree. What veteran could part with it without a pang? Not General Pershing, evi dently. HOME AGAIN FROM TIIE PACIFIC. The automobile has been named the annihilator of distance. Vaca tion haunts that were removed by long days of travel, not so long ago. have been brought near to the city, and their enjoyment is no longer oc casional. The length and breadth of the land is veined by new highways, routes that penetrate the wilderness at a thrust and place the city within an hour or so of forest and stream. Vacationing has been made various and easy, through the necromancy of the motor. Yet distance is not all that dies when the.invading motcr-car reaches its objective. Before it the game falls back, seeking safety in more impenetrable seclusion, fastnesses that are not yet tapped by constant travel. The -hill streams, stocked with myriad trout, come to know well the swish of the line and the splash of the lure. Depleted and dis couraged by dally toll, the trout be come scarce in a few brief seasons, and the white water and tho deep. meditative pools hold but fingerlings. or an occasional wary old warrior who has escaped capture through a blend of luck and sagacity. There isn't an argument permissi ble over" the statement .hat most of those who toss the duffle in their autos, and whirl away to forget busi ness and town for a day or so, are bent upon fishing. Nor can there be any controversy over the f requently repeated assertion that "fishing : not what it used to be." So it is that the streams near at hand, those most readily reached by an hour or two of travel, have lost the glamor of the days when every cast produced its suicidal rush and flurry of tossed foam. faster than the hatcheries can put them back, the rainbow and cutthroat are taken from the streams of their nativity. Were it not for the fact that the fisherman never lacks a friend, more potent than a dozen commisaions for the restocking of Oregon rivers and creeks, the fuli creel would have gone the way of the dodo long since. That friend, never failing, is the Pacific ocean, from whose illimitable - reaches the replenishment arrives season after season. It is to the so-called salmon trout, (rey of the salmon-egg angler when the fall rains swell the coast streams, that the debt of replenishment is in large measure due. When streams grown quiet with drouth, denuded of sport by the constant demands of the summer angler, feel the rush and i vigor of the first lains of autumn. the tingle of an urgent message races down to the sea. And weather-wise fishermen, looking- with approval at the pouring skies, remark that the salmon trout will be running soon. Nor do the trout fall them. Up from the Pacific, drawn to the veriest trickle of fresh water that enters the breakers, the lusty sea-trout begin their pilgrimage to the spawning beds. Fat and full of fight, gleam ing with the brilliance of newly minted silver, they follow the run ning salmon Inland. On riffles brown with silt, riffles that were barren aforetime, there springs the radiance of leaping litheness again. The trout have come home! Like to the salmon, whose nests they raid with the sangfroid and enjoyment of so many small boys in melon season, the salmon trout are answering the matrimonial urge. Late in the winter, or through Janu ary or February, they will drill their own noses Into the gravel, deposit their own eggs, and charge the hungry grayling with ajl the venge ance of alarmed parenthood. Thus is the stocking of Oregon coast streams accomplished, in large part, at least. With the coming of the salmon trout nature laughs at the inroads that men have made upon her larder, and struggles to main tain the people of the streams. That she does so successfully is attested by the fact that the winter brings al ways its quota of finer fishing, and leaves for the spring an abundance to delight the early angler. To the average fisherman the sea-run trout is always a "salmon trout," a fish of unknown and mysterious genesis, sent from the bountiful sea for the delectation of anglers. His simple name suffices, and the silver mail that sheathes him that fairy gleam of tiny velvet scales is sufficient to mark him as a species apart. But close observers agree that the salmon trout, in most instances, is merely the adventurous cutthroat or rainbow whose girth and spirit sent him down to the ocean the season before, wild as any sailor for salt water. He ia the piscatorial "tar." of the coast streams, back from his cruise, when he returns. It is significant that the smaller creeks tributary to the Columbia, entirely drained of large trout during the summer months, become by mid winter, well toward their head waters, the residential quarters of large cutthroat trout, black of spot and vivid of throat slash. Whence came the replenishment? The only answer is that these are the sil very "salmon trout" who passed upward a few weeks before, and whose inherent markings have been restored in full beauty by the caress of their native waters. As a matter of record, the actual test has been made. Sca-run trout, typical of their kind, have been imprisoned for a fortnight on their return to fresh water. The observers agreed that the transformation began almost at once, that the tribal markings passed from faint blotches and hints of color to the full regalia of the spotted cutthroat. Tests of this character, it goes without saying, have nothing whatever to do with actual infant salmon, possessingethe evident char acteristics of the salmon, and which are in some localities referred to as salmon trout. So long as trout run to the sea and they will run to the sea while there is a trout to answer the call the coast streams of Oregon are as sured of annual replenishment, and anglers may look toward the morrow with a reflection that nature, like mere mortals, has a tolerant regard for the fellow who fishes. By refusing assent to the new wage scale agreed on by Pacific coast shipbuilders and workmen, the shipping board forces a strike on ships building for itself. This is doubtless in pursuance of the general policy of President Wilson to resist demands for higher wages while he endeavors to force prices down. The effect is to stop government ship building on the Pacific coast while it continues on the Atlantic. It also speeds up building for private own ers, for the shipbuilders .are free to pay the new scale on them. This would be ept to have an unfavorable effect on the price at which the board can sell its own ships, but it may meet that difficulty by refusing approval to private contracts regard less of the need of vessels. As a de vice for obstructing industry, the shipping board takes the palm. If the British government's plan to maintain transport by meuns of motor vehicles should even meas urably succeed, it may prove that the railroad men have struck a dead ly blow at their own industry. The government's action is equivalent to saying: "(Jo ahead and strike; we will get along without you." Progress of invention is so rapid that few in dustries are indispensable. A boy who was born in the year when the iirst airplane flight was made is not yet through high school, but a trans - Atlantic flight has already been made, a trans-Pacific flight is projected and before the boy is old enough to marry a flight around the world may have become a fact.. Yet we are less than a cen tury distant from the stage coach era. Probably one reason why the French government sells American tobacco at such an enormous pre mium is that it is so far superior to that manufactured by the govern ment monopoly. One who smokes French tobacco is tempted to smoke any kind of dried weeds in prefer ence. The stuff which some San Fran cisco men made for sale as whisky was a reflection on the honorable calling of the moonshiner. It in a great promoter of prohibition, for it is a warning to avoid anything that is called whisky, except for the pur pose of "cirte. In bringing suit against tho gov ernment. John D. Spret-kels is true to the family tradition, which is never to lose an opportunity of litigation, even if it is necessary for two of the brothers to sue each other. Revelations of cruelties in Amer ican prison camps in France suggest that some disciples of Bernhardt strayed into tho American army. If the other caulkers' union gets into the labor council the delegates will prove themselves "corkers." Make a state fair date for the week end If you did not go earlier In the week. Bohemia is playins game on Vienna. freeze-out BY-PRODUCTS OF THE PRESS ' Cryptle Date mm Modern Stone Chap lin Acknowledges Defeat Antt tiolf Crusade. It is a venerable tradition of monu ment-builders, as old as the earliest civilizations, to work In cryptic date among the ornaments or inscriptions of monuments. The "Number of the Beast," or Apocalyptic Number (Rev. xili:18), in Greek alphabet numerals is one of the famous puzzles of scholars. Bacon-Shakespeare research for ci phers in the Shakespeare reprints have made the game familiar in our own times. Canada, in her great peace tower of the government build ings at Ottawa, hands on the schol arly tradition. The inscription runs thus: This Stone was laid by Edward. Prince of Wales. September 1. In this Year of Victory. Finis Coronal Opvs. Apparently the year is not recorded. But certain of the letters have a dent underneath them, and if these letters are taken as Roman numerals, they read thus: ILIDDDICLI1IVICIICV. If these Roman numerals are added together they total: 1313. In a London club a lively political argument had sprung up between a well-known Irish nationalist and an English unionist who holds a chair at r.ne of the universities, says the Manchester Guardian. So long as the argument remained purely political the third member ot the party, a clergyman of the church of Ireland and an ex-chaplain in the Ulster di vision, remained silent. But the ar gument drifted, as such arguments will, and by and by it was the nation alist who was silent while his fellow countryman fiercely contested what he considered the professor's belit tling of Ireland. Finally he said: "Look at all we've done for ye. Why, we Christianized ye!" His momentary dramatic pause enahled the professor to interject: "What nonsense! Ion did nothing of the kind." The ex chaplain put his hand out as it to acknowledge defeat, and went on in a quieter tone: "That's true! You are quite right but we did our best. The Saxons standing round laughed heartily. . The Congregat ionalist sees no indi cation, outside a little group of older men who deplore almost any modifi cation of old-time Sabbath customs, that the churches are ready to get behind Secretary Kneeland of the Lord's Day league in any vigorous and far-reaching crusade agalust Sunday golf. It is too touchy a subject for the average Christian man today, who has outgrown the traditions of the earlier times. The suggestion is of fered that church people think out afresh their own personal convictions regarding the use of the Lord's day. Then, in the light of their own theory and practice, let them confer concern ing the extent to which they will un dertake to regulate the activities and diversions of others. Robert Underwood Johnson, editor and author, has been designated di rector of New York university's hall of fame for great Americans. Dr. Johnson, who will conduct this year's election to the hall, succeeds the lata Henry Mitchell MacCracken. former chancellor of New York university. Selection of names for the hall is made every fifth year by a committee of 100 or more electors. No person can be considered for election until ten years has elapsed atter his death. Grover Cleveland becomes eligible this year. Only seven presidents of tho United States are in the hall of fame. and none since Lincoln. King Albert, as military leader of the Belgians, is immortalized in the new Belgian postage stamps. The series portrays the king iu active service kit, wearing the familiar steel casque of the Belgian army. A new issue of 15 Abyssinian stamps also is out. Each shows the possibilities of the country for big game hunting, with elephants, tigers,lloiis and other M ild animals handsomely printed in two colors. Jamaica's victory stamp is another newcomer. It is an obluns label, printed In dark green, showing troops on board a transport above the inscription, "Troops departing." A strike of grave diggers in Dublin maintained for some weeks at Glas nevin cemetery caused much incon venience and some risk to the public health. It was mitigated, however, by the decision of the cemeteries' committee to permit Interments by people having plots in the cemetery provided that they opened and closed the graves themselves- The grave diggers then appealed to the hearse drivers, who declared a sympathetic strike and refused to convey bodies for burial. liana Shlniozumi, the young Japan ese prima donna, now attracting at tention in New York, is Japanese only in name and birth, bavins come to this country as a tiny baby, where she was adopted by a 100 per cent American family. Beyond the faintest suggestion of slightly tilted eyebrows there is nothing oriental about her. "What is your favorite dissipation?" a New York interviewer asked. "Well," came the hesitating answer, "1 thought until yesterday that it was Sherry candy, but Mr. do Angelis brought ine iu something last tils 'it in a paper box that he called chop sue), and I think it was simply heav enly " "Chop-suey." shrieked the In terviewer, "why, that Is the native Japanese and Chinese dish." "Is it?' came the wondering reply. I never heard of it before, but it sure is heav enly." "Many motor speeders arrested in your town. Uncle Si?" "No. There used ter be. but we set tled them fellers, all right. Hain't been hardly an arrest in six months. How did you manage it?" we Jest fixed the speed limit at 75 miles an hour, an' domed few of 'em kin make it. b'gosh:" Boston Transcript. During the uerman occupation of Lii-iie the police arrested a parrot on the cor.iplaint that it had repeatedly called out. "Down with the boches According to the story, tho parrot was kept prisoner for a month. The wom an who owned it finally convinced the German authorities that the parrut could not pronounce "B" and the bird was released. Here is a bit of Inside Information: "To broadeu his knowledge of human nature and compute his education, every man who aspires to personal j achievement should put in at U-ast a I year in prison." Sing Slug Bulletin. Brotherhood. By Grace E. II all. Whence came Intolerance, condescen sion, patronage? Of what de scent, and on what claims es tablished? Why the glow of indignation when one of less pretentious mien but ventures to Intrude upon the attention of the self-estimated autocrats? Came they then to earth by more fa- Torea route than I? Were those from whom they came of greater worth than those whose name I bore? And hv? Perchance Dame Fortune smiled be nignly on forbears, who early followed the trail-blazers to new and untried fields: Perchance mere circumstance has in terceded and brought results most unexpected and stupen dous: But once again I nner-s- vhv i- condescension, the patronage, the assumed suoerioritv? Is a man-made medium of exchsnve then, to be the entree, and its lack the exit, to "better" soci ety? And asrain. whv? Oh, how foolish is this Hiinfrf.aHi v this self-agtrrandizement based on tinsel that shall be taken away at the yawning grave dour! Conceding that another shall be hap pily, fortunately circumstanced by birth how great, then, should be his thankfulness, his charity. toward those less lessed! " Each man by Nature's methods was endowed with life: each one by Nature's methods shall be de prived thereof. All wander un known paths toward unknown destinations: Strange fates exist but to eonfusx. and everywhere is pain and struggle and labor: Each one at last shall but yield up his hoarded store and sink to oblivion beneath the sod he onco so proudly trod. Gold, the idol of the living day. passes, with the fading life, into new ownership, there to find new uses and new outlets, ac cording to the individual bent. The ideals and purposes of the one time possessor are forgotten or ignored. But one thing is cer tain in each man's lire; that he who lives it shall die! Then why. I ask again, the conde scension, the patronage, the self-apportioned importance? Rather should men. marching blindly o er untried trails, clasp hands, mingle affections, and urged ba ttle exigency of self-preservation Press forward, a united whole, to ward a common end. made the more tolerable by a cheerful, joyous passage: Trusting, as they may build their faith on evidence, that the one who gave the life-spark in the beginning of time Shall husband these sparks In the groat forever awaiting, that not one jot or tittle shall he detracted from the immeasur able, light eternal. ADELIA. Last night in my flower garden, when all was still and white. And the air was sweet from the flow ers' breath, by the silvery moon made light. There came n my flower garden. here softly and silently came. A lady more fair than has ever been teen, like a shining silver flame. She sang a soft, sweet melody, as she her vigil kept. But wren she came to the larkspur bed. she bowed her head and wept. And as she stood there weeping, her face turned to tho skies. I look.Ml again, and swear I f.nv Adclia's blue, blue eyas! But all too soon the morning broke, and she was there no more; "She is gone." I said to my aching heart. "Ttvas a dream and noth ing more." Y'et v er the flowers and brambles where her slender feet had parsed The dainty lace of her gonu had caunlit and was lying on the grass. And as I passed the larkspur bed with its flowers of heavenly Mt.e. I saw the crystal tear drops from her eyes of the self-same hue. When again the evening fell and all was calm and still. I heard her song from a thrush's throat, upon a neighboring hill. I saw that she had left to me, ray gtiulc. loving wife, A thousand things in nature to ro- ir.ii d me of her life. But this was outward beauty, and the Steatest charm of ail Was her Gear, childlike faith in "One who marks each sparrow's fall." I looked into the heavens wide, and p learning there afar, I saw her radiant soul shine forth from out the evening star. JEAN SALLSBCRY. THUT SHALL NOT PASS. TUeso are the words the leader srvid. Gazing across his fields of dead; "liny -shall not pass!" the sacred sound Seemt d io call the dead from the ground. "My iisht is crushed; my left is gone; or.iy the center can still fight on. It must advance!" At the command railing, risii.g, staggering on. They did advance, tho world was won. The Marnd'a red stream In fullness runs, Tl-.o thirsty earth drinks the blood of . her sons None feels his wounds. In rank; and ma ss They fall, but cry: "They shall not paso!" This their reward who won the ftoht: A bed for each in the pale moonlight. Wooden crosses and poppies strown To show where France has laid her own. Close in her bosom she holds eu h one. Above their beads pale clouds arc blown. And the hushing whisper of tne grass Still lepeats. "They shall not pass RAYMOND E. BAKEK 1 SIMMER. It's almost sunset. Mary. Come ai.'l walk with me Along the country road. The clouds will soon be turxiing r.tse Against the gray-blue sky. And tho fields of clover and green wheat Stretch far away toward the purple hills. A little gentle brezo is blowins, tow. And we will gather armfuls Of wild, sweet, orange blossoms To carry home with us. It's almost sunset, Mary. Come and walk with me Along the country road. DOROTHY HALL. A. PLKA. Birds of the wilderness. Blythesome and cnmberless. Sweet be thy matin O'er woodland and lea. I'n.blem of happiness. r.le?sel be thy netting place. Oh. to abide in the desert wi thee! rrrD. FRANKLIN. lb