6 THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX. PORTLAND. DECEMBER 28, 1919. ESTABLISHED BY HENRY L. PITTOCK. Published by The Oregonlan Publishing Co.. 133 Sixth Street. Portland. Oregon. O. A- MORDEN. E. B. PIPER. Manager. Editor. The Oregonlan is a member of the Asso ciated Press The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for publica tion of all news dlspatchea credited to It or not otherwise credited In this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. Subscription Bstn Invariably In Advance. (By Kan.) Dally. Sunday included, one year Dai:y, Sunday Included, six months .... Dally, Sunday Included, three months. . 2.25 Daily. Sunday Included, one month . . .. ' 3 Dally, without Sunday, one year 6-O0 Daily, without Sunday, six months .... 3.-.i Dal ;y, without Sunday, one month ..... .60 "Weekly. ose year 1.00 Sunday, one year 2.50 Sunday and weekly 8.50 (By Carrier.) Dally, Sunday included, one year $9.00 Dally, Sunday Included, three months. . 2.-o Daily, Sunday Included, one month 75 Dally, without Sunday, one year 7.80 Dally, without Sunday, three months. . . 1.95 Daily, without Sunday, one month 65 How to Remit Send postofflce money order, express or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at owner's risk. Give postofflce address in full, including county and state. Fiwtsge Rates 12 to 18 pages, 1 cent: 18 to. 3 paces. 2 cents: 34 to 48 pages. 3 cents: 50 to 00 Pages. 4 cents; 62 to 78 pages, 5 cents; 78 to 82 pages, 6 cents, foreign postage, double rates. Eastern Business Office Verree & Conk lln, Brunswick building. New York; Verree A Conkltn. Steger building, Chicago; Ver ree & Conklln, Free Press building, De troit, Mich. Sau Francisco representative, R. J. Bldwell. that he has made It that much easier for his successors to make progress toward the goal. By certain conclu sions as to what the atom is not, he and that "the commission shall from time to time determine the value of the property in each district and rate-making group." The commls- has simplified the field of future In-t slon has almost completed a valua- vestigration. If he has shown that I tion of railroad property under the an element having a high atomic weight can be debased, and that its debasement involves a tremendous giving off of energy, he has paved the way to trapping that energy, and perhaps has indicated that it may be reapplied to other substances. The field of theoretical physics be comes constantly more interesting, even to the 'Thirteenth man," who must be content to stand on the side lines and await developments, while it must increasingly stimulate In him the laudable ambition to be num bered among the twelve who alone, according to Professor Einstein, are capable of comprehending such ab struse matters. FOR THE -THIRD PARTY TO DECIDE. There is not much reason to hope that the new industrial conference appointed by President Wilson will accomplish more towards ending in dustrial strife than did the first. The new one represents the public inter est only, while the first represented capital and labor as well as the pub lic. We have had several national Inquiries Into Industrial conditions, but nothing has resulted from any of them except voluminous reports, to which advocates of all sorts of economic cures turn for quotations. The controversy between, employ ers and workmen has reached a stage where the public must assert its rights as superior to those of both combatants, must make laws to govern both and must enforce them. Strikes have attained such magni tude that the damage suffered by the whole people far exceeds that suf fered by the immediate combatants. That would have been the case if n general railroad strike had followed presentation of the brotherhoods' ul timatum to tho government in 1916. It has been the case with the steel and coal strikes now ending. It is likely to be the result of a general 6trlke in any industry dealing with the necessaries of life- Both employ ers and employes in particular indus tries are so fully organized that the two might settle their disputes and make the public pay the additional cost. That is the evil against which Dr. Garfield sought to guard us when he stipulated that any increase in miners' wages should not be added to the price of coal, If It were un restrained, employers and workmen might continue raising wages and prices by means of strikes at public expense until the limit set by foreign competition was reached. At pres ent In coal mining and other leading industries there is no such limit. The injunction against the coal strike Is the first Important use of that weapon in defense of the public since the Debs strike of 1894. It has aroused labor unions to frenzy, for they term it an Instrument of op pression. Yet the first recorded in stance of Its use in English history Is of an injunction obtained by the commons against tho barons in 13S2 and it might conceivably be used to restrain employers from some act that would Injure both labor and the public. It should be as available against a lockout to force down wages as against a strike to force them up. Constant assertion by the govern ment of the paramount rights of the public, in labor disputes would be possible if backed by alert and sus tained public opinion. It might then prove instrumental In bringing both parties to settle their quarrels by ar bitral or judicial methods. Employ ers would be more ready for collec tive bargains, workmen to accept the responsibility which goes with in corporation, if both were deprived of their principal weapons the strike and the lockout. The law having deprived them of these weapons, a moral duty would fall on congress to provide means of just settlement. The main cause of strife has been that, while both employer and work roan have talked much about striv ing for justice, both parties cling to opportunities of securing more than justice by fighting out their dif ferences. That is the explanation of many employers' opposition to unions and collective bargains, and of unions' opposition to compulsory arbitration. Each party wants free dom to fight for all it can get. The recent declaration of the presidents of unions evinces readiness to change base in holding out for this freedom. While cost of living rose. It was a good cause to demand higher wages; now that it is stabilizing and is likely to fall, they reject it as "pernicious and intolerable-" Employers are also ready to charge all that the markets will bear, but they do not on that ac count pay labor more. It is high time for the third party the public to step In, act um pire and enforce its decisions. It cannot do this through any such body as the industrial conference, for it is small, appointive, will serve only for a brief period and has power only to deliberate and resolve, not to act. The only body fully representa tive of the public is congress. It was elected to serve all of the people, has power to act and can enlist all the forces of the government behind Its decisions. Its weakness is its prone ness to yield to the importunity and threats of small, highly organized minorities, rather than to the huge, but unorganized and almost voiceless Lmajority. If the people unite and exert their power on congress, they ran force it to enact laws forbidding inroad and coal strikes or other inflicts which paralyze entire in- listries, and can force the executive put those laws in operation. Thus lisarnied, the combatants may get together on the basis of justice. SOMETHING DIFFERENT. Chairman Hays purposes to set every ambitious young man and woman in the country at work ham mering out a platform for the repub lican national convention. The idea comes from Mr. Truxtun Beale, once in the diplomatic service as minister to Persia, who has $10,000 to spare for this highly unique, exciting and laudable project. Undoubtedly the result will be the greatest outpour ing of literary masterpieces the world has seen. Our only fear Is that the wealth of talent usually devoted to commencement orations and prize essays will now be withdrawn, and that disaster will overtake the an nual feast of intellect and flow of genius which marks the graduating exercises of every well-regulated ed ucational Institution. However, we shall bear the loss as cheerfully as we may, in view of the greater compensations to be fur nished our political literature. There has been a fixed notion too common among politicians and those who frequent state and national conven tions that anybody can write a politi cal platform. The result is that the usual platform is written by nobody in particular. Somebody from the back-country, who has had not a great deal to do but to worry about the welfare of the country, has shown up with a platform draft that "pointed with pride" and "viewed with alarm" In the orthodox fashion, and It has been submitted to the committee and adopted by the con vention with an enthusiasm greatly accelerated by its ready recognition of the old familiar phrases. To be sure, anxious hours of the night have often been devoted to consideration of some particular plank about which there was a real division of opinion: but the decision is usually- reached in the early hours of the morning, and the convention, after a decorous wait for the platform committee to report, takes the offer ing as it is framed. But now there is to be a new re gime. The republican convention is to have a chance to adopt a genuine platform not written by the politi cians but by the schools and colleges. It will be something different, of course. It is high time. law of 1913, which will serve as a married In the beginning; the rule does not hold good as the age of re tirement is approached. The striking difference between the kind of dependency calling for help from the married and from the unmarried constitutes the difficulty guide. The railroads will not be per- of arriving at an equitable solution. mitted to earn revenue on watered The wife, rated as a "dependent"' in the case of the married man, is often, as a matter of fact, as the investi gator points out. and as most persons will have observed, a helpmate in the sense that she Is able to make many economies possible for her husband which are not true In the case of the dependents of the unmar ried. The married man frequently lives with his dependents, thus ef fecting many other savings. The un married who do not live with their dependents are put to greater ex pense In being compelled to main tain more than one domestic estab lishment. The question Is admittedly com plex. The Carnegie foundation un doubtedly has been inspired by de sire to do the greatest amount of good possible with the limited funds at Its command. It does not seem feasible. In all the circumstances, to make an invariable rule that will not work Injustice In some cases. Yet an incidental fact obtrudes itself that is almost as Interesting as the main question, and that is that, while thirty-eight forty-fourths of men teachers are married, only seven two-hundred-and-thirty-nlnths of the women teachers are so blessed with normal family ties. Evidently, un less we accept a mlsogamlst view, the career of teaching Involves for wo men a greater social sacrifice than It does for men. The question arises whether equal pensions would do more than atone for the greater sac rifice thus made. stock; their rates will be based on the actual Value of their property as determined by the Independent au thority of the commission. Throughout the bill are precau tions against watering of stock or bonds. The section authorizing con solidation of roads says that bonds and stock at par "shall not exceed the value of the consolidated prop erties as determined by the com mission, including a reasonable working capital to be prescribed by the commission," and value is to be determined under the law of 1913. Railroad companies are authorized to reincorporate under federal law and may exchange bonds and stock of the new corporation for those of the old, but the par value of the new securities "shall not exceed the value of the property represented by the capitalization as determined by the commission." The cry about watered stock Is out of date so far as railroads are concerned, and It Is kept up by the Plumb planners for the purpose of creating prejudice against return of the roads to their owners. The bill that is finally enacted will doubtless be a combination of the Cummins and Esch bills, but It will certainly contain the Cummins precautions for true value as a basis of rates. Less progress has been made in this direction, and It ts now the mark of experience In traveling to be able to hold onto as many seats as possible until the last possible moment. But the great blessings which the Pa cific railroad brought within the reach of so many people, chief among them that of betng able to live on the Pacific coast, will not be denied either by the sociologist or the his torian. It Is well to reflect occasion ally on the possibility that It may have been some subconscious vision of vast benefits bestowed on poster ity that made the humblest work man on that great project one of the most enthusiastic and contented la borers of modern times. only of the hardships of the pioneers, but of the spirit in which they were endured. It will be hoped that the proposed curriculum for education of minis ters in social service will not omit BY-PRODI CTS OK THE 1'IMW la Fanons I nth r Asset or Liability r A alts "Writer. "Theodore Roosevelt was perhaps the greatest all-around American BUCKWHEAT AND PROHIBITION. It is important news, from the viewpoint ofhe economist, that an overwhelming demand has developed In urban eating places for sausage and buckwheat cakes, which some observers attribute to the coming of prohibition. Their logic will seem sound to those familiar with the ways of drinkers and non-drinkers. Breakfast has taken its old place of Importance because men are now eating it who a few years ago had no appetite until they had taken a few drinks, and. as is well known, buckwheat cakes are at their best when eaten before 9 A. M. Sausage naturally "goes with" them, for sci entific as well as epicurean reasons. There will be automatic restraint on consumption of sausage if the price of pork keeps on mounting, but there ought to be no difficulty about meeting the demand for buckwheat. Our grandfathers valued this grain almost as much for its beneficial ef fect on the land as for its caloric content, about which they did not much concern themselves. It was a prime "loosener" of tight soils, and a sovereign restorer of wornout acres. We produced 17,672,000 bushels Of buckwheat in 1859, and only 19,573, 000 bushels In 1918, an Increase by no means corresponding to the in crease in population, which more than trebled in the same period. It would require about 60,000,000 bush els Instead of less than 20,000,000 to feed the people at the rate of con sumption formerly prevailing. A NEW COMPLAINT. The Oregonlan finds Itself so greatly surprised and flabbergasted at the newest complaint from up state against Portland and the Port land papers that It gives space to Its full text. This from the Lebanon Criterion: According to the Portland dallies the city of Portland must be situated In a most favored comer of the Willamette valley. In Vancouver, Oregon City and other nearby towns, during the recent cold spell, the mercury fell to 10 and 12 below zero, while in Portland it got no lower than 12 above. A warm town we would say. The rest of the valley experienced a fall in tempcratura as low as 15 below, also such streams as the Willamette do not freeze over at 12 above. Verily, tho writers of fiction are not confined to the small towns. The Portland press has stu diously misrepresented western Oregon in Its climatic and other conditions, until at the present the people In the middle west believe nothing they hear or send about the state. It is very evident that a coun try where mercury will fall to 15 below it not In the torrid zone, yet the press Is trying to impress the country that Port land is In the belt of perpetual summer. This kind of talk deceives no one. but re flects discredit upon the valley at large, all to the purpose that Portland may profit thereby. If there is a person in Portland who does not know that the pros perity of the city cannot be secured at the expense of the Willamette val ley and the state at large, let him be taken to some Institution for the feeble-minded, where he belongs. It is a strange thing that the notion still persists in some Oregon towns that there is a studious aiyi most diaboli cal purpose in Portland to hold the valley and the stale back. Why and how? There is no ideal climate. Just now New York is suffering from the severest Christmas snow storm In a generation; yet people persist In staying there by the millions. We have a notion that If a climatic Utopia were to be found It would attract the Adullamites of a restless world, and would become intolerable. People stay where .hey have a chance to prosper. They know that every country has Its storm and other meteorological troubles. The fact that there were some thermomet- rlcal variations in Oregon during the recent little flurry Is of no mo ment whatever to any sensible per son. They will not keep anyone away from Lebanon and at Portland. Let us whisper to our Lebanon neighbor, for Its greater satisfaction, that It was lower than 12 above In Portland. The mercury registered 1 above, and the Portland papers all duly reported It, with much prominence. Let us recommend to the Criterion that It read the Port land newspapers, so that It may cor rectly report what they say. Or does It care t report them correctly? We are not surprised by the state ment that Professor Ernest Ruther- Vfbrd did not lay claim to having dla fcovered the secret of the transmuta tion of metals; that this was the work Of over-enthuslastlc friends. The so-dp-lled friends of scientists have been flinty of similar performances before aad are likely to be again. But there little doubt that Rutherford ha PLUMB PLAN PROPAGANDA. A fair sample of the mendacious propaganda which is put out in sup port of the Plumb plan for soviet operation of railroads under govern ment ownership is contained in an article In Tho Dalles Chronicle. The substance of it is In this paragraph: The bill provides that the government of the United States must guarantee an an nual Interest of G per cent to those roads after they are taken over. The valuation Placed on the roads by the Cummins bill Is $20,000,000,000. The actual value of the roads as shown by government reports is between S12.000.000.000 and f lo.OOO.OOO.OOO. The guaranty Is not permanent and is not 6 per cent. It is temporary, and is an extension of the rates of compensation paid by the govern ment during the war until new rates have been approved by the Inter state Commerce commission under the Cummins bill. The provision for income subse quent to the period of guaranty is not, strictly speaking, a guaranty. It is that the commission shall ad- Just rates so that the roads of each district "shall earn an aggregate an nual net railway operating income equal, as near aa may be, to 5 per cent upon the aggregate value, as determined in accordance with the provisions hereof, of the railway property." The commission "'may In its discretion" add one-half of 1 per cent to make provision for "non productive Improvements, better ments or equipment," but such ex penditures "shall not be capitalized or used in any way as a basis for in creased rates." The government is not required to make good any deficit on 5 per cent, but the railroads are to be given the opportunity to earn that rate and then must earn it in order to get it. The bill does not place on the roads a valuation of twenty billion dollars or any other sum. The esti mate of twelve or thirteen billions as the actual value was made by an advocate of the Plumb plan at a hearing beforea house committee. Whatever may be the present cap italization or whether It is excessive is Immaterial, for the Cummins bill provides that rates shall be based upon the aggregate value" of the RESPONSIBILITIES OF THE UNMAR RIED. The common supposition that mar ried persons have a greater number of dependents than the unmarried receives a partial setback from the result of a survey recently conducted in several eastern educational Insti tutions by an Investigator who was inspired by desire to ascertain whether a system of age retirement pensions which discriminated against the unmarried was founded on equity. Tho occasion for the investi gation was the announcement by the Carnegie Foundation for the Ad vancement of Teaching that for the unmarried teacher or the teacher whose wife Is not living it had adopt ed a retiring allowance of two-thirds of that paid to the married teacher. The conclusion reached by the In vestigator Is that the responsibilities of tho unmarried teacher are far greater than they have been assumed to be. The Inquiry proves interest ing, without reference to whether it is conclusive for the unmarried in all grades. It Is deprived of some of its value as a basis for generali zation by the circumstance that It Involves an abnormal proportion of unmarried women. Of 283 teachers Included In the survey, only forty four were men, and thirty-eight of these were married; and 289 were women, of whom 232 were unmar ried. Data as to this group probably have special rather than general significance. Yet they possess value even then; the problem of equitable provision for teachers In their old age is admittedly an Important fac tor In solution of the entire question of teachers' compensation. The problem is not altogether one of statistics. The almost obvious conclusion that the married have "dependents" In greater proportion than the unmarried la not always supported by investigation into In dividual cases. The children of the married, for Illustration, are In the dependent class nearly always In the earlier life of the parents. As the latter approach retirement age, re sponsibilities lessen; the children grow up, become self-supporting, and even give material assistance to their parents. The character of re sponsibility assumed by the unmar ried Is different. This may consist of an invalid member of the family, a constantly increasing Durden, or of parents or other dependents who cannot be expected, as in the case of those of married teachers, to make later return for the financial tnpport iffc'lo i omc Droareas tov.aid discov-i etjig the u&lui e oX llie &tumt and I royerti t oot upon its capitalization BUn.DINO A GREAT RAILROAD. Edward L. Sabin, who writes the story' of the "Building of the Pacific Railroad," describing an event the semi-centenary of which was cele brated last May, observes that one of the striking facts connected with that great enterprise, which deserved to be called the "eightn wonder of the world." was that the labor which made It possible was then "100 per cent efficient." There was far less machinery in use then than there is now. The steaapi shovel had not been invented: the fiction dredge was un known: the eight-hour day was not the basis of calculation of the rate of wages. It will be granted that the meth ods which have been perfected In the half century since the historic golden spike was driven, some fifty miles west of Ogden, Utah, have been altogether desirable, but the picture which the author draws of the attitude of the wqrkers on the Pacific railroad will be particularly interesting to those who like to moralize. A leading railroad official, speaking at the semi-centennial cele bration, attributed the present de crease In human efficiency to de velopment of and dependence upon machinery almost exclusively. But Mr. Sabln, himself a close student of social affairs, ascribes the greater relative accomplishment of the men then to the fact that they were more contented, and he attributes their greater contentment to the fact that they were deeply Interested In what they were doing. The workmen were not all Chinese coolies, al though the latter were employed to the number of some thousands. But even these were not without a cer tain enthusiasm over the magnitude of their task, and realized that they were taking part .in an epochal movement. It was something to fire the imagination to know that when the work was completed, people could "cross the continent comfort ably in six days. Instead of spending thirty days on the ocean, with ah the discomforts of such a voyage." This sense of sharing In a great achievement made It possible to ac complish feats that seem amazing even now. Tho last three years, when the two building companies were racing to meet each other, were full of thrills, and remind one of the spirit in which engineer companies entered Into patriotic competition during the war, and ship-bulldlng crews were inspired by the spirit of friendly rivalry. In thirteen months, approximately 1100 miles of track were laid, which was at the rate of about three miles a day and would look well bestde a track-laying per formance In 1919. To the Individual worker on the Pacific road the pres ent generation owes more than it appreciates. The road might have been a failure If it had not been com pleted within the time allowed by congress There were a good many skeptics In those times, and the poli ticians in the east were ready enough to throw cold water on the scheme. When the workmen showed that It could be done, it was easier to get backing for other railroads. Plans for the Northern Pacific received a hospitable reception because the first railroad had been built. It and other railroads launched under govern ment patronage within two or three years after 1869 probably would have been Indefinitely postponed If the Pacific railroad had been per mitted to drag along. It took thirty years to Overcome the opposition that the first sugges tion of a transcontinental railroad aroused. Some of this undoubtedly was due to Its being too far in ad vance of the times. It is plain now that in 1832 the time was not ripe. Asa Whitney, who was one of the first manufacturers of machinery In the United States, suggested It again In 1845, but was ridiculed. He wasted a fortune on tho idea. Senator Rusk called the scheme the "Colossus of Rhodes," which someone turned to advantage into "Colossus of rail roads." General William Tecumseh Sherman said that he would hate to buy a ticket over the road for his grandchildren. But General Sher man was particularly pleased when the work was finished. He saw at once that troops could be trans ported at the rate of 600 miles a day, and he foresaw an early end of In dian wars. The Indian question was destined to stimulate, however, the building of other railroads before it finally was solved. Necessity for a new train etiquette arose from completion of the Pacific railroad. Mr. "Sabin notes that one bit of counsel published at the time was: "Prejudice against sleeping cars must be conquered at the start. They are a necessity of our long American travel." Nowadays preju dice Is confined chiefly to upper berths, and this has been overcome to a large extent by a price differ ential. "It Is not customary. It Is not polite," was another exhortation, "for a lady to occupy one whole sent with her I'lounce." and herself, and another with her satchel, parasol, big A PIONEER TYPE. "All kinds of labor," wrote the Rev. Ezra Fisher, in a letter dated at Oregon City, on January 8, 1850, "are richly rewarded except that of preachers and teachers," which re minds us that the problem of com pensation for these professions Is by no means a new one. Nor is that of high prices, for In the same letter Mr. Fisher tells how "flour is worth $25 per barrel, potatoes $4 per bushel, and all other provisions pro portionately high." Lumber was $100 a thousand feet. Carpenters' wages ranged from $8. to $12 a day. In these conditions this pioneer Bap tist missionary to Oregon laid his plans to further not only the inter ests of the church but. In general. the cause of public education. "We Intend," he declared, with confi dence, "to make vigorous efforts the coming summer to erect a good wooden school house, perhaps with two apartments and a boarding house, notwithstanding the enor mous price of materials and labor." Although he had then dwelt In Ore gon only since the latter part of 1845. a little more than four years, he had seen the vision of a greater Oregon country, requiring not only mate rial aid, but also culture. "I have a rather promising school," he wrote. How long it may remain so is with the all wlso to disclose. He con tinued: appropriate chapters from the lives ..... rjr. piin,,. ttn.n ( p ', of the early workers in me t-'regon vineyard. There are especially in terestlng letters written In 1849, In which year Oregon suffered with the California gold fever, and the Rev. Mr. Fisher Joined In the rush to the mines. "I went to the mines," he says, "principally to give my family the bare comforts of life, hoping, however, that I might In some meas ure unite bodily labor with the du ties of the ministerial office. God has mercifully blessed me with about $1000 worth of gold." A consider able portion of this fund went to further plans "to secure If possible a site for a literary institution," and was expended in purchase of a claim which was donated as a site for a Baptist college. Faith in Oregon, in mankind, in the ultimate triumph of civilization, and culture, and all that goes to make life worth while, is exhibited throughout this truly remarkable volumo of letters, written long ago with no thought of publication. They would be less Impressive, however. If they were the letters of a wholly ex ceptional man. It Is not disparaging Ezra Fisher to say that he was a type. He and others like him made not only Oregon, but America, the land they are today. The moral. which Is nowhere obtruded in the simple annals themselves, will be ob vious to thoughtful men. ple'a Magazine for December. "T. R. of the large heart and strong hand had a son. Theodore Roosevelt. Jr.. whose shadow already is beginning to cast across the realm of things politi cal. "Will that shadow reach far? Ia Theodore Roosevelt like his father, the ex-presldent? Is his inheritance an asset, or liability? Will It help or hinder him? " 'Young Teddy already has paid his inheritance tax. He remitted the initial installment at the first Platts burg training camp and the rest of it overseas with the A. E. F. The re ceipts are sealed with three gold service stripes and two wound chev rons and attested by numerous thou sand men and officers of the first di vision In general and the twenty-sixth infantry in particular. "Did I tefl you,' wrote the old colonel at home to the young colonel in France, "that Peter Dunne met me the other day, grinned and remarked: 'Well! the first thing you know your four sons will put the name of Roose velt on the map'? "Can't you see the famous grin as Mr. Dooley himself chaffed the 'best known man In the world," and the twinkle in his eye as he penned those lines to young Theodore?" Who has not felt your lure, brave stripling gay? As, heedless of your forbears, old and dead. . You come with promise new, as If to ; say What they have failed In. you will do instead; You rouse with sudden warmth swift impulse bold; We grasp ambition's broom afresh to sweep From mental ceilings cobwebs gray ana cola. That o'er our faded dreams have seemed to creep. thus given. The burden of depeu d&ucy oX wUitus ia rea'i ugou tka , boj UtUe box, bauauox ud buadie. We shall much need classical books, such as are In use In our best schools In the states, among which we must have a few L.atln nnfl ".reek grammars, lexicons and such preparatory books as are required In fitting for college In the old states. Also Romsn and Greek antiquities and classi cal dictionaries. We hope to make such arrangements as we can to order such books as we shntl need. But should you find any liberal friend of education In Oregon. I hope you will do something for us by way of securing a few books of the above description. The "Correspondence of the Rever end Ezra Fisher," consisting of his letters to the American Baptist Home Mission society, covering a period beginning September 22. 1832, and Including March 31, 1857. has been printed In larger part In the Quar terly of the Oregon Historial society, and now Is published by his descendants In a volume which is an Interesting and Important con tribution to the memorabilia of pio neer times. It Is nearly contempor aneous with the history of the Bap tist Home Mission society itself up to the time of Mr. Flshers death, the society having been organized in April, 1832. and it sheds much light on the state of the church In those days. Beginning with his pastorate in Indianapolis, Ind.. then a frontier, the letters depict a chaotic condition of affairs that makes us have a deeper respect for the organizers who have brought about the present relatively high efficiency of church work. Tho church at Indianapolis consisted In considerable part of members who were opposed to the support of the ministry. "Baptists from the several parts of the union have met In this place and brought with them all their prejudices. At first our feelings revolted at the thought of uniting with a church of this description." But the policy modernly known as "boring from within" prevails. "Upon more ma ture reflection we think the most ef fectual way of doing them good Is to conform to the present state of things as far as practicable, hoping that the constant exhibitions of the humiliating doctrines of the Cross will melt their stubborn hearts and mould them into the likeness of their divine master." There are eight or ten brethren who "have tolerably correct views respecting the support of the gospel, but they have never re duced their principles to practice.' But "these are mostly poor." A suf ficiently optimistic comparison might be made between the state of the church then and the hopeful frame of mind In which Its leaders now plan a "drive" having millions as its goal. There waa further preparation for the missionary's labors In Oregon in his subsequent sojourn In other fields in the Mississippi valley. None of his charges can be said to have been liberal in treatment of their minis ters. The constant allusions made to money matters are graphic In the emphasis laid on small sums. His salary from the Home Mission so ciety on his appointment to the Ore gon field was fixed at $300 per an num, with an allowance of $50 for an outfit. "Destitution" was a word to bo employed only In describing spiritual poverty. He was willing to serve gladly In "some destitute part of the great valley." Later he was to find destitution farther west. He taught school, and did It cheerfully to make up for deficiencies In salary and In one quarter (ending Decem ber 10, 1841) traveled 750 miles, a good part of the distance on foot though horses could bo hired at 50 cents a day. In April, 1847, being then at Astoria, he found that "our whole country Is oppressed by an excessive monopoly OI our mer chants, so that most of the people are unable to meet the pressing wants of their families." If they could sit down at night as they eome In from their dally labor, take up a religious periodical and read to their half-clad families some of the Interesting triumphs of graces over depravity, instead of meditating and teaching the principle of revenge, how would the family circle b cheered and the lowering cloud of our western sellttioe be dlsslpateal The qu tion Is settled that Oregon Is destined to bs numbered among the states of our great American republlo; the scenes of our early privations and sufferings will soon be known only as they are engraved on the memory or the eurrerers, or re corded on the pages of history. Contributions of clothing were sought. "You can have no concep tion." he wrote, "of the manner In which we are clad In our ordinary business. We are still wearing old clothes which we had laid aside as unfit for use in tho western states . . We still prefer to practice this kind of self-denial to the aban donment of our enterprise. . We wish not to make the gospel an item of merchandise. Wo trust we shall soon have regular mails at least quarterly from this to the states. And "our eTeatest embarrassment 1 that we are doing so little Phrases like these, abounding in the HOW TO END A FEW TROUBLES. A few facts were stated to the senate by Senator Jones a few days ago which are very much to the point at this time, when the threat of a coal famine has Just been lifted and when sawmills are closed or running part time for lack of cars. For ten years development of wa terpower on government land and on navigable streams has been practi cally prohibited by restrictive laws. In consequence only about 5.000,000 horsepower have been developed in the United States, when the total might easily have been 20.000.000. Actual projects await legislation which would develop 2.122.000 horsepower on navigable streams and would Improve 1160 miles of In land waterway. On non-navigable streams over 2, 000,000 horsepower would be devel oped In California. Oregon, Wash ington. Idaho, Nevada, Montana, Utah, Colorado and Arkansas. In 1913 the United States con sumed 570,000,000 tons of coal. which required for mining and trans portation 1.500.000 men, 1,000.000 cars and 40,000 locomotives. Each water horsepower wasted by non use represents consumption of five ind a half tons of coal a year. Each fifty water horsepower releases the labor of one man. and each 150 water horsepower releases one freight car. Development of the 61.678.000 wa ter horsepower in the United States would bo equivalent to consumption of nearly 780,000,000 tons o coal a year. Owing to the deficient supply of print paper legislation is proposed to limit the size of newspapers. Tho pulpwood timber of the eastern and middle suites Is approaching exhaus tion, and Canada has forbiddejaex- port of pulpwood. The paper indus try Is fast being transferred to Canada. There are west of the Rocky mountains and In Alaska 244.000. 000,000 feet of pulpwood timber. That In tho United States proper is adjacent to 36,088,000 water horsepower. These facts prove that our troubles in, regard to coal, car shortage, water ways and paper supply are of our own making. Release of waterpower for development would save our In dustries from being prostrated by miners' strikes, would give the rail roads an increased supply of cars without building more, would open waterways to cheap transportation, would stop the emigration of the aper Industry to Canada and would save many country newspapers from extinction. Congress has been quarreling for ten years about how to do it. The house has agreed on Its plan, and Senator Jones will call on the senate to act after the railroad bill Is passed. Inaction should end before January ends. Palestine may regain its ancient fertility and wealth, if favorable ac tion is taken on a project suggested by Albert Hiorth. a Norwegian civil engineer. Mr. Hiorth suggests the construction of a subterranean can.nl. 37 miles long, running east and west, and conveying water from the Medi terranean to the Dead Sea. The dif ference In level between the two seas would be sufficient to carry the water on its long Journey. At different points, pipe lines and pumping sta tions would be used to obtain irriga tion and electrical power. If Palestino should retain its old fertility, it would probably soon at tract a large population The people of the Jewish race would especially be likely to colonize in Jerusalem under which the canal-tunnel would pass. Moreover, with electric power available. Industrial enterprises might be undertaken. Including the exploita tion of asphalt deposits on th' plains of Sodom and Gomorrah. Agriculture would, however, probably bo the most important Industry In Palestine, as successful system of Irrigation would make available a large area of for tile land. Turning the Joke back on the othe fellow was a great stunt for Barnum the circus king, and recalls an episode of his tour of England. One day he met a man named An dersen, who was a magician and billed himself as "Tho Wizard of the North." Anderson lured Barnum to a dinner at which both were stranger, and thinking tohave a little fun. Intro duced Barnum to the assemblage as "The Wizard of the North." Not the least taken aback. Barnum gracefully acknowledged the Intro duction, and bowing to the assem blage, said: "Ladies and gentlemen, . as you ki.ow. 'The Wizard of the North' gives hla first tshow Monday night, and as : ou are now all my friends. 1 would iKe to nave you accept pesses to see the opening performance." and he be gan writing passes as fast as he could. Anderson stood It as long as he could, but. finally, with visions or having to do his first show to a dead head audier.ee. he weakened and confessed. New Year. By Grace E. Hall. You lad- virile are a sprightly youtn; None look with dread upon your fu ture reign. Nor doubt your glowing promise or its truth To waken new endeavor in man's brain; None pause to ruminate that yester years Were Just as debonair, perhaps, as you: None ask to see the cup of human tears That you may see quite filled, ere you are through. What of your pater, recently passed on? How did he keep the pledges made to man? Let each recall that other New Year's dawn. With earnest leal behind each new made plan; No broken vows the year Itself has brought The days, full-measured, have been born on time: The sun has yielded warmth: the sea sons wrought Their miracles in growth, through force divine. The dreams that faded, like the leaves that fall. Enrich where'er they lie; we know each one Makes stronger, sweeter, truer, after all. Those mystio things of life, when once begun: l-'or dreams are tender thoughts that make a trail Through many a gloomy labyrinth of the brain. And though perhaps In action they shall fail. Their sacred memory ia a moral gain. New Year, we know full well the things you boast; Know, too, the brevity that marks your stay. And so we welcome you with ardent toa'st. That you be started brightly on your way: We drop a silver bead upon the bier Of your departed sire, who served us well. For tears and smiles co-mingle every year When we must voice both greeting and farewell. 1 GRACE E. HALL. England is solving the housemaid problem by employing returned sol diers as "men of all work," and with the discovery that they are more efficient than the housemaids used to be the feminist movement is likely to take a decidedly surprising turn. The bolshevik! who are predicting that the end of 1920 will "see the end of bourgeoisie rule on earth" should remember what has Just hap pened to the reputation of Professor Porta as a prophet. With a record of $8,711,937 ex pended for relief of families of sol diers since February 1, 1918, the Red Cross again invites attention to Its record for functioning In peace as well as In war. Inasmuch as Bermuda has prohib ited Introduction of automobiles. It is proaably the safest place In the world to send that surplus stock of 70,000,000 gallons of whisky. Will the champions of vested rights Insist that those liquor cure estab lishments ruined by prohibition ought to bo recompensed by the government? It Is getting to tho point where it Is more blessed to have refused a naval war medal than to have re ceived one. In calculating the high cost of liv ing, don't forget that the high cost of strikes has to be figured in some where. The habitual early shopper already has his pair of automobile plates ready for January 1, of course. Just think of the trouble D'Annun- zlo might make If he had adopted Amy Lowell's style of verse! No one will blame Lady Astor's little son John for not wanting to be known as Jack. Anyway there Is one thing we don't need to swear off on this coming New Year's day. France evidently has a high re spect for the staying qualities of cojeresjgondeucet sua alviMueut cieuiaaeeau, . . . By sounding with sound waves in stead of a steel cable, a Frenchman has been able to-determlne the depth of the ocean In a few- seconds where the ordinary proeem requires minutes or hours. In contrast to the usual equipment of cable, reels and donkey engine, he equips himself simply with a quantity of high explosive, a micro- Phone and a chronometer. Detonating a charge uf explosives in the wake of hla moving vessel, he hears In his 1 microphone both the nolso of detona tion and the echo produced by re flection from the bottom. Reading the time interval from the. ehronom etor and knowing the speed of sound in water, he is able to calculate the ccean's depth at that point. Tusts have shown that the method yields sufficiently accurate results for prac tical purposes. Popular-Mechanles. The bird with the longest tall comes from Japan Some of them have tails as much as 12 feet long. When they go for a walk In the open air they are accompanied by special train bear ers who keep the tall from touching the ground. It la a variety of the barn-door fowl. In the same way that pouters and fantall pigeons have been developed from the common pig eon In Europe, the long-tailed cocks are carefully reared In Shlnowara, a village of the island of Skikoku. m Lord H ug s staff car is not to be a companion to Napoleon's Waterloo coach at Madame Tuasaud's. after all. It waa bought for 3600 guineas by Mr. W. S. Luton, who announces that he Intends to use It to travel around va rious confectionery stores. Manches ter Guardian. Aa Wells Would Do It. Our "Jack and Jill." that simple tale, How Mother Goose did slight ltl Ah. how her careless lines would pale If H. G. Wells should write It! First, take the hour when Jack was born, How mucus papa waited; Describe that age with bitter scorn; Tell bow Jack's parents mated. Then analyze Jack's Infant bean. Recount hla careful schooling: Sketch Jill's arrival on the scene, And paint their childish fooling. State how the buckets were procured; (Describe a bucket shop); See hew the Ill-starred pair were lured ' To tempt the fatal drop. Give all the croaklngs ere the spill: The w-orda of faithful granny. Depict the aspect of that hill With every coign and cranny. Tell how thev clambered up the slope. Observing all the strata. And canvassed England's future hope With economic data. Say how the first misstep waa Jill's; Fcor Jack fell down like Adm: They 1 it the road beneath the hill (The pavement was macadam). E-eith Ftcatuu in "Types of Pan." TONY'S (ir.H-MlCIDE. l.eesten meester. If you please, .Me I splkka fine Inglees. Hy my splkka no can see I cooin fromina Italee. Me I'm smart Italian. Reada mooch American. Keada once fly take de feet (rrabba boog up In de street. Roog ees vera, vera small. Heem you see no not at all. l-'ly pack tousand boogs alone, Put heem on de macarone. Hoog ambish set queek buses Italse tremenda famllee. You eat mac maybe all night; Next day maybe wanna bite, Maka rough house right away. You die maybe nexta day. Me de leetle boog don't trust. Make heem vera dtssagust. Disappoint and vera blue. No ambish can nothing do. Vera soon he faint and die. Meester boog iss gooda bye. .Me I feexa heem allrlght. Million boors me no exclta. Fata mac a blgga pan Kata moocha as I can. Kata garlic wanna hlte: Meester boog say "Gooda night." WILLIAM VAN GROOS. why hocld i mm Why should I weep for Guinlvere? Why should I weep? She la not here. Phe trails the night, the stars, the sea. She is not here to walk with me. Why should I wait forevermore Her dainty footstep at the door? Why should I reach to find the place Where she abldeth yet In apace? Why should I stand Irresolute. As if that broken, silent flute, Her voice, could speak from out the air. Enpalpltant, here, everywhere? But yet. but yet, I see her etlll. In wreaths of radiance on the hill. In trees afleck with Christmas snow. Or roses flushed with summer glow. Reminders all I hear her alng In every birdnote of the spring: She laughs, behold that gladsome smile Of her whom I had missed a while. No perfect thing Is lost, and here Still lives and loves my Guinlvere; Her shining self from out the sod Speaks in the sunlit smile of God. EVA EMEKY Oil. CANT. Did ever some little thing haunt you And come, O so often, to daunt you? Tho you cried In despair tins thing is unfair. Undismayed It lingered to taunt you? One small, hateful word has stayed ncur me And managed so often to queer ma; Affixed is one latter that makes It a fetter. If that could ba banlahed 'twould cheer me. llttla word. It Is Now this mean "can't." Its last letter gives It the slant. The first three are great and oft de cide fata, But all four together mean sha'n't. JANETTE MARTIN. HAPPY' XEW YEAR, Ring the bells now loud and clear; Ring out tho old and tlr:d year. Time with acythe and hourglaaa. Let him exit, let him pass. Taking with him all that's bad Disappointing, mean and sad; Leave In memory behind All that's pleasant, good and kind. Yesterday died pain and sorrow, Joy and hope ara born tomorrow. Time, whose form Is bent, alas! Let him exit, let him paas. With the gladsome nolsa and din Little cherub enter in. Ring the bella now loud and clear, Fsher In the glad New Year. RUTH FLEISCHER. Seattle. Seems Like Old Tinea. Louisville Courier-Journal. "1 hope you will pardon me for shooting af you. I didn't mean " "No apologlea necessary, stranger." declared the guide. "It aeemed Ilka old time la the Arsouue."