THD OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, POUTLAIID, TUC3DAY, KOVEIIi:::: 1, 1D1G. AM IKDEPCNDKN? ITXWSPApn. O. S. laCKsON........."..tPUabet PWIb rrary ear. afteraoea n . v irpt Sanaa? efteraoon). at The v"' Iiwllrtln. Broadway TembUI , ; t'urtland. Oti affix nI asoniliig journal streets. BDUrr4 at tb aoetofflea at Portland. Or.; for , tranemlaeloa UtfmB ! saue as ... ' Oaae aaitr i .r. : ; 4 -v ..- Tr.LKPHONr.S Mala tIJJi Home, A-ftL - AU aopartmaflta m(bi bf theae seubare. Tell the operate what depertSMot yoe waat, yOHgieM ADTEBTMUfO BXPRBSCMTATITbI Pnjamla Kentaar Co.. Braaawlcl . BM;, T. 26Jmui A ee.. iew Kara. Ml People's Qs BM., Chicago. v - ,..c. v-:. i Snbaartptloe tarna by Kail o ta any addreee J . a tba Halted Statee ar Mexlees ' .' PAItX (MOKNIN0 OA AFTKHJOOB) Ou rear.;... ... 4100 1 Ooa awath 5- ? OKDAT r ' l Ob yea M.80 I On Wont. M i PAXLX tMOBHIHO OH ArXKBHOOW) . A - lONDAX pita roar....... .17.80 I One fens 'would reg,uire that the lonsj way connecting the cities ot Marsh distance between tiose two places! field and North Bend, Coos" conn- bo bridged br an establishment on ty, Oregon,' Similar expression the Columbia. f Standing so near I has come, from Marsbfleld. midway , of the coast line as it I f The Journal wishes td do Its does, tie vessels stationed tnereipaft la the world' work. 1 It ex- would bare free rang either to l tjt3 for service.'' j tries to be the. north, or south as occasion Bomethlng more than. an. unrivaled migni cai in time ot necessu j. - i purveyor, of new. A logical presentation ' oi ... me claims' and ; adyantages of the Co lumbia rlTer base,; if. made to the commission; when it. visits Oregon, will. In all probability, Impress It with their justice and good sense, and result in ' ..a recommendation farorable . to it. V i ' . j prosperity - to every industry in America, yir't'--: ' ' - ThU. country In all its actirities Is on a new course is la a new era, and one of the great ' under lying activities that is to. immense ly profit from the change is the lumber industry." " - In other forma, It. has done a great deal more for other locali ties than the slight service ; f en- dered the Coos county .communi ties. The ' campaigns It has made for ' popular ' rights ; and, equality before 'the law la", Oregon were an infinitely. greater " accomplish ment. Its pure milk campaign In letters From the people tCoaatnanlcatloa east t Tba Joaraal far pobUeattoa la tola department imu v wnt teaj on only a aid of th paper, aboald V exceed 800. wrda la lentb. and mat b ae eampanied by- tba auw and addreaa er the andar. It tb writer doea sot dealr to bar tba wm fobUsliad Be aboojd ao ftata-i 4 "THmraaminm tm tha, areateat of all reformer. Tt rationalise ewytbliia it toachea. It refca priaelplea tt all falaa aaartlty aad throw tbem back aa tbir reaaooableaeea. If tbey hare a ne w eaiaer was rouKa, u'Wi pAHl.M'ma ttmiftTid-foM mor. I c5. " ,T"Ar "vi!." Otnnan TJ boat laid tWO days ,n-.Tarit: k. . fn Af wronr nd I of etHteaea and aeta op fta w eoedttalooa la to give lifeboats a smoother sea la iTZ r i-. it7.. Tnf t"-wadrowwii. r ; which to carry those on board the Columbia to safety before the ves sel was torpedoed. . . Not an Ameri can life was lost- It; is ."some evi dence that Germany 1 is i trying to keep her pledges to America In U boat warfare. ' ' it 'Often meets and merits furious opposition. That lact makes the commenda tion - from Coos l county a; most i plea8ureable episode. Coos . county Is a wonderful I region. ;It is a" coming empire. Its resources are almost unlimited. ' It is "destined to be one of the r WAS a pretty phrase that the I most important localities ; in Ore- president made in the course of igon. SIXDS OF JTSTICI3 .- America aika sotblar tot baraalf traf what U in rlfbl ta Mi for bomanltjtaelf t , -, ; -jwoouapw wiuox.v Vlllfcaa ' far dtfena. but aot a cent -foe trlbata CUAlO&S 0. PINCKNSX. I' kop 1 bn always poaaeaa flrnmaaa aad Tlrtoa anoafb to malauia what I eanaldar tba moat enviable at aU tttla. tba eaaraetar f aa booaat ma., . " .: Waahlftftoak j ' T0HT1AXD PAYEOLM his remarks to the Federation .- Va dWOAVA UVavAVwi Mr. .Oompers and some chosen men of ' his ' cohorts went to the White House to felicitate the pres ident on his reelection. ' Mr. Gom pers dilated on the mission of the labor unions, saying that they stood for freedom and Justice for the great; body ot tollers. President 1 Wilson, -caught at the word "Jus- jtlce" and took it for a text. I " There are two kinds of Justice, he told the labor men. One is of the sort Hamtet had In mind when THIS SLATJGHTEB F EJ OJNTTNO out how to increase payrolls In Portland, Fletcher 'pinn'. said last week In 'an address:' Better ;srorlty for lnyastora. Stand aCK' OI r vua Uliaj. guipiuauvu wm-( tnUsloner' and '.help him to see tnac mar promotion scharoaa tt no ptace here. v.. '"" ' ' ' There-could 4e no better advice klHARMS, during the year 1815, caused more aeatns than railroad accidents, more than five times as many as streetcar accidents, nearly as many as railroad and streetcar acci dents combined, and . more than twice as many as automobile accidents. The figures are from the cen sus. They snow, that aeatns from use of firearms numbered 7994. he said' that if it were strictly ap- or nearly 12 persons in" every piled none of us should escape 1 100,000. Of these deaths S08 were suicides, 2885 homicides and 1501 accidental. The figures are for the registration area, and cover but a part of the country. We are the greatest man-killing whipping. Portia was thinking of it too in- that phrase-maklnc speech of hers where she said that in strict ' course of Justice none of us snouia see salvation. it was .mercy we were ail praying for, not nation in the world, and we do Justice, said Portia. Mrs. Brown- the. killing mostly with concealed ling bad; the same thought in mind firearms. We blustered and Aus tin thOBe terrible" IlneS. "We TJraVltor1 rMnf1r ahnnf ttta UlTJncro Promotion, schemes that collapsed ; together at the kirk for mercy, of , . when put to the test and brought mercy solely, hands weary with the the sinking of the Lusitania. But loss to anarenoiaers, cbto maae m- evil work we lift them to the we go oa constantly killing aa im : vesiors arraia o nova w0uun , noiy. and' Illegitimate enterprise .in It was another sort of Justice which stock is sold. ' j that the president described to the Too many investors have been, labor delegates. One can scarcely puien. iue;Bse w wv uiauj aisunguisn it rrom rortia's mer- corporatlons consisted mainly of a desk,' an office chair, articles of In corporation and a board of direc tors, sometimes phony, r Too many . corporations have been organized in which the pro moters got 15 per cent or 25 per cy," which falleth like the gentle dew from heaven upon the Just and unjust. It is, he said, "justice with a heart In It, Justice with a puise in it, justice with eym- pamy in it," m snort, it was that species of Justice which Joins cent as commission tor seiung men together Instead of driving Stock and another zt per cent in them asunder in hateful factions. a block of stock went as bonus Like Lincoln. President Wilson for promotion or pay for some 1 yearns for national unity. A house more or less worthless patent., divided against Itself can not stand. There is plenty of local history And our national house will ever mensely greater number with our firearm! madness, and - scarcely hear a protest over the slaughter. If one-hundredth part of the columns on columns ot newspaper space devoted In the past six months to partisan bluster about the, protection1 of Americans abroad were applied to protection of Americans at home from the pistoi slaughter, presently we would throw the concealed weap ons Into the sea and take another step towards a real civilization. in ms insistence tnat the peo ple of the United States have eaten (ha hltta, hrmaA n M. TULM mUCh ? be dlVlded ftgaIn8t lt9elf as lon " Colonel does not specify whether of the total proceeds of stock sales one class arrogates to Itself all the went to the organizers, leaving the blessings of the world, leaving to corporation oerore it eren Degan me other nothing but toil and pov- buslness with half its capital ab-, erty. It la not Justice which thus sorDea, its promoters immorally apportions the gifts of God. enriched and the activity doomed it was a Jitney loaf or loaves -at 15 per.. MAKING AKTIFICIAIi COAL to failure at the very outset We went through a wild orgy of this j kind .pf dishonesty in' pastw years. and-the sequel is that capital-is A way tot Portland to get pay rolls Is to give a quietus to bogus corporations, organized, not for useful activity but to enrich the A timid because burned fingers are , promoters who absorb big portions of the assets as commissions for Selling stock and as bonuses for promoting the organization. There afraid. ""More 'to the point, as soon as legislation was enacted In an at- . tempt to make stock enterprises Is a Blue Sky law and Its honest honest,' the cry was Instantly set and Impartial enforcement would . np - that ; legislation was driving capital out of Oregon. That cry also has its effect in making it difficult for legitimate industry to . attract investing capital. J -7 MrLinn is sound in his -Insistence V that "mere promotion schemes" should get no place In Oregon, and that the state corpora tion, commissioner should apply and be-upheld In all efforts -to apply;' v-the- law made and . provided Ao ""lieep fake schemes and bogus cor- poratlons out of this field. : 7 a. When the. Investing -public Is once assured that the corporations of j the state are safeguarded and must be legitimate and honest, it will be a simpler matter to increase payrolls In Portland, 7 go far in encouraging capital create Oregon payrolls. to ENNOBLING WAR T HERB la much to Justlff the rumors that the resources ot that WOYlf TO 1 ATYr1 VACS O Vam tfi ll lng. Their energy has been tIon of all the waste from the pa- something wonderful -and they hare NORWEGIAN Inventor has discovered a method, of con verting the sulphite refuse of paper muis into a "paper coal" which, under exhaustive tests is said to have made an ex cellent showing with the best Eng lish coaL In the manufacture ot paper, ac cording to this Inventor's experl ments, only forty-five per cent by weight of the wood used goes into the finished product. The remain lng fifty-flTe per cent passes refuse with the sulphite lye, and It Is from "this that the so-called coal is made. It Is estimated that the utiliza- husbanded their means with a wis dom that 'has often seemed super- numan. nut no art can spin a whole web out of a single thread. A time must Inevitably come when the embattled empires will begin to show signs of exhaustion. Pofislbly that time has come al ready.; Many military observers say that the reconstruction of the Polish kingdom was a move to gain-new recruits for the Prussian armies. That may or may not be so. But . A call for a contribution of $30. 000,000 for the needs of Colum- , bla university has been Issued by . the new woes" inflicted npon Bel rrcsiaent uutier. Further vital- alum, can mean but , onis thine. Jzlng ' of the functions and exten-1 Germany Is runnlnz short of men. elon of the research of the unlver- iTo eke out her supply she is driven Bity. ia'the purpose for which the j to- deport the " Belgians .and set -greai. contribution is asked. With them at work la her quarries. w rou oi lo.ooo students and the fields and shops. eervlce Columbia is rendering the country, it is probable that Wealthy xNew York,wiU find a way io" meet the request; 7 i-:xt.-:- TBCB 'TOMMITTKB COMINa : r " " ":'7' -: tarlR n mmmm i m VI M w. of comes ; from WaahInv ton.tha the naval commis sion appointed ".to Investi gate) ths- possible ( location In other words, the exigencies of war have forced, the most mili tary nation in the world back to an extraordinary move, a move direful to Germany in her stand ing before the great bar of public opinion. I - i- How the federal government under President " Wilson has co operated with lumbermen 'In seek- per mills of Norway In the manu facture of the new fuel, would re sult in a decrease of thirty per cent la the coal imports to that country.- ' More and more the world is Beeklng to save its waste products. Coal and oil fields will face ex haustion In the face of the enor mous demands being made upon them. Just as the forests have dis appeared and are ' disappearing under, the drains put upon them. And. while it may not appeal to people la Oregon, surrounded by forests and with resources practi cally untouched the time is not far distant when the American people' will cease" to be the most extravagant and welcome " every opportunity for saving "and nslng the enormous waste and by-products of ' the far extended Indus .Through, long years of commer cial "activity and upright living, Werner Breyman left his impress oa the. life of the : Willamette val ley. He snrvlved' to 'the j-lp;, old rage of 8? and left, an honored naihe to ,be ; woven Into" the "history of Jt.Myah base ? or naval . bases ; tng to . build vpi thet industry was ot 'the commonwealth.,-npoa-i the Pacific- coast' Is ta its teaW -tnlW: . ' way to California for ; the' com mencement of Its investigations. ' Upoa the . recommendations ' ef that commission will rest, in very large parV the success or failure of the effort being made by the -people of Atorla to secure the place ment of a submarine base oa the : CdThmbia- ttrw,"-' r u::-. 7 It Is difficult for the "layman to see what objection could be raised . to the selection ot the lower Co l lqmbla for snch' a base.'. ,Wlth the provision already ' made ; at Puget . sound on the north and -at San Francisco on the south, it would sem logical, to believe that the in terests of "aa'4 adequate coast de- at the various; functions given visit ing lumbermen yesterday; It' would have been .a'; graceful . acknowledg ment it some of v the r things said after election had been said by the same mea berore election. I R t ITS TOllGnT OTJTIiOOIC T 13- doubtful If the lumber-In dustry ever; presented so nope- ful a -tone as now. r,x la the meetings held la Tort- land yesterday,' some - lumbermen for .the first time realised1 to what great - lengths vthe ' federal govern- ESOITJTIONS tave been re-tment, through the trade commis sion and otherwise,: has : gone to aid-lumbering and lumber market ing.-. For; the first time it was brought . home to them that the government -.Is ' now working oa a Suggestions Regarding Cement. Corvallls. Or- Nov: lt-To the Edir tor of Tno Journal I have written two lattftra for Th Journal on the question ornme, and lime plaster. -1 thank you for vour indulgence, and now asa space ror a few woras on tne queiuon w mnt Thea letters, trlth tfcoee writ ten by other parties, have convinced the pubuo or Oregon ot tne vaue pu necessity of lime, lime plaster and ce ment. Investigation has also- proved that these necessities can he manufac tured by proper methods at prices that users can afford to pay for them. So T feel tha.t this agitation la doine; some good In awakenmg the public to tbeir need and also to their privileges, in my first letter I asked the question hr 4t wu that lomit neoble that were in authorltyVand hold positions, of trust, and also some that were not so favored were seemingly opposed to in vestigation. I ask the same question with regard to cement. I am of the citV. mnA am now cuttlna in a word for myself. Streets are needing to be improved. Anything we could do to lessen the expense (which we all Know it rrut) would be wisdom on our part. So I feel that city ana country snouia work hand in hand. Will someone tell me why the city should not also awake to Its needs and privileges T Of all the modes so far advanced for accomplish ing results, nothing is said that savors in tne lease oi a oonaea moeoiwuiM". I ask myself If It Is possible that this may be the reason of this aloofness of some parties. I hope not. How ever, we have the ideas aavancea ny B. TT boon, which I feel are right and proper. - If anyone has anything better to offer, let him bring It out. Let us discuss it. In the multitude or counsel there is wisdom. I like The Journal. X think It the best dally on the coast JOHN P. STRINQEK. Arraigns England. Reedville. Or., Nov. 20. To the Ed itor of The Journal la the British concern for the rights of weaker na tionalities sincere? Judging from the "wave of Indignation" sweeping Eng land -over Germany's deportation of Belgian working poeple, rendered idle by Great Britain's ruthless policy of prohibiting the importation of raw ma terials Into Belgium, one would act ually be led to think so, If It were not for the if act that evidence to the contrary la so voluminous as to sweep away all shadow of doubt To employ the idle Is the one big reason Germany undertakes to send Belgian workers into Germany. And also, Belgium is a war area. Its industrial centers are In the path of allied air raiders. Its civilian population has not escaped death- from the bombs of allied air ships. Great Britain's thinly veiled rypocrlsy comes glaringly to the sur face, when we study the Irish ques tion. In Ireland. Irish fathers, sons and husbands have been torn from their homes and lie In British prison cells. ' Germany seeks only to give' employment to Idle people outside the danger sons ox war.' She believes la lifting the Belgians outside the lim its of charity, and she Is right The allies are making a lot of anti-German capital out of the situation, by appeal ing to sentiment Let them seek for the "beam In their own eye." They will find It In Ireland. They will dis cover it in Serbia and Greeoe. Serbia Is today battling to recover a lost country. Instead of lifting the bur dens off the shoulders of the Serbian army, the allies -manage aomehow to hurl the remaining fragments of the Serbian nation Into the very thickest of the fighting. In this very "consid erate way, what doe the "champion ot small nations' think win remain of the remnants of a lost cause T What is poor Greece's plight today? She Is absolutely squelched by the allies, who control very nearly everything In that unhappy country. While we are (bowl ing for humanity, let us be American enougn to maae our nowi ioud enougn to cover all the ground. O. E. FRANK. The Few Versus the Many. . Portland. Nov. 20.-TO the Editor of The Journal Dr. Boyd's sermon yes terday was eloquent. He arraigned education and the laws and customs under which we live. He said the evil could not be remedied by changing the laws, hut maintained it could be done only-by organized-effort to lift an elect few above the sordid and selfish standards In the ethics of education. that maae xraud ana dlsnonesty- so alarming and general, to a higher spiritual standard. It will make char acter building the object of education. instead or the acquisition of wealth and Power. The elect few will leaven the whole mass. The fundamental' error of ohqrch and state is tne .assumption that a few are good and the many are bad. and account for the fact by the detect in human nature. It la not true, hut the belief makes class rule and special privilege .universal and concentrates wealth In the hands of the few and dooms the many to poverty la the midst, of superabundance for all. All elemosynary activities tend to aggravate Instead of cure the evils ot poverty and unemployment : There la no way . that charity can be dispensed without doing violence to the self-re- spect of both the dispenser aad the re cipient Charity la twice curst it hardens him - that gives and Softens him that takes;-and until the defect in political government that Is the cause of poverty In the midst of superabund ance is , removed bjr the' . perfect eco nomic remedy t perfect money circula lation) the universal " environment of selfishness and' competition Mnust in evitably continue-'to ' degenerate alt types of .manhood. -Did not the great Paul say he -was the vilest sinner ot all? If Paul was s degenerate, we all are. .-:.- .-- - :" - - . - V There . 1 no evil in the world but what -human law and custom are di rectly responsible for. give the rest of the world the impres sion' that we have grown as large as we care to be and have attained a de gree of progresslveness that Is per fectly satisfactory! ' ' - ' w ' ' Let's start sometblnr so startling that it will startle the Silurians who are forging ratters or conserva tive, ' sUck-ln-the-mud ' do-nothingness around this region, -Into turning up their toes or running for their uvea Let's blast their apathy wide open with-an idea and let a ray of generous optimism into their souls which win banish their fear that someone eise mav make m. dollar out of the business prosperity "they would " create should thev do somethlnr: an idea that will engross their attention so completely that : the 'natural1' march ot progress and evolution will resume Its way sim ply because they have got out of Its Have you the ideal ' it must pe one with no such limits as "Tour Portland and Mine. It must not be of the f em lnine sender, like Tor you .a rose in Portland STowa.'.. Here Is a suggestion. Let s take tne line that divides Oregon and Washing ton, stretch It a bit tie one end or it around Mount Baker at the summit of the Cascade mountains at the Ca nadian boundary, and run' It south along the summits of the Cascades to California. Tnis wm maae a siaie runnine along the ' coast from Call fornla to British Columbia, which will be of a uniform nature, with identical needs and alma. The development ana utilisation of the Columbia river would become the desire of a united people. The logical capital of the new coast state would be at Vancouver, vvaan. East of the mountains would thus be formed another new statequite un iform In Its nature, needs, alms and aspirations. - There would then be no antagonism between eastern and west ern Oregon, nor between eastern and western Washington. The capital of the Inland state should be at Umatilla, Or. The two states could retain their present names, their application to be left to the choice of the whole people by being placed on the ballot at the next election, as also, or course, tne matter of rearrangement With the - present arrangement the representatives Of the people of two widely varying sections Of the country meet in the capitals ot both states. In many things there Is rivalry between the eastern and western sections ' of these states. The representatives of the people west of the mountains have a large voice 'in making laws to gov- PEBTINENT COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF SMALL CHAXGE The ouerv might be deemed Perti nent. "What shall we 4o with Out nlx-presldents?" v;' ??;-;- Or. If the Colonel misses it aratn'ln 1120, there's 12. to say nothing of 1S2S. to inclusive., -H -jy,: -- H There is one Mace where the high eost gets a bat over the snoot That's at the well known, stage banquet Bevond Question, this Is the land ot plenty, and when everything else -is listed there are shortages a plenty. This year, aa in all close years, your opinion of the electoral, college - is likely to depend upon who gets tne di ploma u wui issue ana tne can it wiu Ue, '-,'V,- - - ' - V - - SB . f'- . When Mr ' Hughes mentioned the 100 ner cent candidate he was lust a cen tury off. Mr. .Monroe was -the last In that class. - s An shortage In the 1111 alfalfa crop could proneoiy oe maae gooa ny tne gentlemen who, made a certain style of eiecuon net. German manufacturers, it is said. have succeeded so well in Imitating Chinese lade that oriental experts are frequently t unable ? to determine "-The real from the Imitation. In which case it is ud to. tne sailed iaae to wince. - The Mammoth Cave of Kentucky, of fered 'lor sale some time ago, is -suu on tne market. And iiaeiy to stay there. ' Many a man, especially in this metalliferous west. 'has nut his rood money Into bole In the ground. But who wants e noie unaer tne grounai Chlcaro has elected to go after the professional bondsman, 'which worthy lm consequently admlttlnar that he la the same kind: or an eeiemosynary in stitution that the loan shark always loudly claims to be-whenever he sees retribution aropping aown upon mm. OREGON SIDELIGHTS i -y; Pendleton is - to - have a - municipal Christmas tree, and : a. committee; to frame arrangements , is aireeay Work.' - -v .:'!,H'V-';-'5,:5:';- TK. ! li. Me Arnnlilnr a club la Coquille tor the purpose ol studyingi tne nistory or, Oregon, om oum i states. -, .- )?i xi;''" 't:-i':! There promises to be a wood and coal famine in Condon. the Times says, if the shortage oa cars does not let up -pretty soon. --.. .;..,... '-'-.';'"; Stantield. bv a vote of 'll to II. last week decided to dimmish Its corpor ate area. Something like a ' square mile or territory has thus been put out side the city limits. v . - . ,.' Many of the men emnloved the vast season on the Crater lake road work have gone out for the winter, the Kla math trails Herald reports, the snow at thelake causing work to be dlacon- unuea untu next year. "Some cold .this week, with a record of as much as 1 degrees below noth-lna- renorted. i observes the Summer American. "Nevertheless we are still firmly ot the opinion that Sumpter Is tne gem ox tne uiue mountains. ''plana for a reorganised Commercial club are shaping up at Burns, and the Tribune says that when- it becomes generally known what the plans really .-a f V. .Oluni o Rnana art 11 smh ft ; - ; RagTag an A Bobtail IT tola eelana in n. iiw....t aretoTltee to eootrlbata rlr1aal aw t tar la tery, la verae ar to pBllaeopeleal abaerritlas' atrlklnf eaotattuna, fraia ear aoaree. .r .s V,.'rp k,Ml mV Paid for, at tba ealtot'a aparalaal.1 ' , , - Pe'd Been Heading the Cartoons. BEN BiaLER .WALKER, e.ed t. son of Oliver G. Walker ot the Flsk. Car company, has a playmate of suit able age and .else whose name is BUt Ban became Interested in politics In the .recent presidential campaign.' ' One day he rushed into his father's presence In considerable excitement "Oh.. Daddy," be exclaimed;' "Bill's Democrat I" f "Well,' inquired the punled parent' rwhat if he Is t Nhy get excited about that?" - - - j Why because, Daddy, said Ben, "1 didn't know Democrats was human. X thought : Democrats was donkeys dressed up In folks elothea" Mother Needed the Money, An Alameda Park matron was re joicing that she had been appointed a clerk of election in her precinct. She stands under rive feet, and friend hus band stands over six feet They took tne citizens ox uuens wui gran it tne matter up or aforesaid friend hue- quick and Burns will have one of the finest commercial oiuoe-in tne coun-try.- - v . ' f "If the ringing of the curfew bell at o'clock has no other purpose to serve than to apprise the publio ot the time, inquires the Sheridan Sun, "why ring It? If its tinging la a symbol of an ordinance, why not enforce the ordi nance? If the ordinance is not in tended to be enforced, why not repeal it? If the council cannot answer, who lean?" -r THE REAL ANSWER From the New York Tribune (Republican), HoremDer ut. . On election night, when the re turns from those states which have hitherto . been : regarded as pivotal in national campaigns Indicated a large majority for Mr. Hughes, "the Tribune editorially wrote of - the result that' it was a repudiation of Mr. Wilson and an answer to hi declarations of policy and 'purpose. The returns which have subsequently been redved have demonstrated clearly that the ern that part of the state which lies Tribune was mistaken " In its conclu east of the divide, and vice versa. Can sions and that- far from a repudia- such an arrangement possibly work as tien of Mr. Wilson, tne returns tnat as would one whereby the people tare now at hand constitute the most well as east of the mountains ran their own affairs to suit themselves, the same thing applying on the coast? Oregon Is said by some people to' be the most slowly developing state west of the ' Mississippi. If that Is true. there must be a reason. The reason California and Minnesota fall to Mr. must be hidden from our view. It Wilson or to Mr. Hughes. The very cannot be found without doing some- fact that these great Republican thing. Let's do something, and see If states have been In r doubt .to this remarkable personal Indorsement that has come to a - Dembcratlo president sine the days of Andrew Jackson. It is relatively a minor thing whether the few hundred votes that will decide the electoral votes of we can find that reason. ILIL moment Indicates the extent of the failure of the Republican candidate and his party and not less clearly the amazing triumph of . Mr. Wilson. There is a tendency to overesti mate the Influence of the west in the decision and to Ignore -the verdict of the east of ..New England In par- Poor Sportsmanship. IWn h Rnrheeter Herald. Neither Mr, Hughes nor Mr. Wlllcox could be Justly described as an expert in popular sensibilities. The accumu lation of crude and Clumsy blunders in the leadership of the one and the timiiar. ,Tet the votes of Massachu campaign management of the other is Bfctts and Maine, the almost unbellev- no less than monumental. Republi- able figures from New Hampshire, ln- cane who were hitherto supposed -to cx, that the same spirit which be gifted with unusual skill In the me- wu abroad In Kansas and Minnesota chanlcs of party management hut who waa to be felt and seen In New were kept Idle and in tne oacKaTonna jwj. j-, .v.. Mnant Mmn&is-n. are now i - .m- " , ..tirv franki-r f It Is possible to debate the ques- the grotesque foUies of the candidate tlon aa to whether the larger partTof and Ms pofitlcal IruUer. the lwlt wa due to Mr. Hughes ' Thi. ..timATi. rrhanai not alto- personal failure as a candidate and imnartiai ajiii disinterested, and I his resolute refusal to .meet the might not be entirely convincing were great questions -of" the campaign it nn that eaDdldate and manager fairly and bravely, or ' to a general persisted In offering corroborative and enthusiasm . tor t Mr. Wilson, andfor continuing "proof of their ineptitude.- - hii 'Ipollclesi But such' a disousslon The finishing touch, that is needed is In - the main academlo. However to establish all that the Republican much importance one may attach to whihoria are savins: of the candl- Mr. Hughes' . failure, ' only deliberate ttA ajd tha. manager is furnished by land Intentional Injustice could 6b- tha accused themselves. The most un-1 score the extent ot the personal trl popular thing in th world, of politics, lumph of Mr. Wilson. He' has done as of sport is a poor loser, to neaten i wnat none out ma xnena ana paru candldate who grudges the simple. J sans believed he could do, and he has manly acknowledgment of his defeat is 'rated everywhere along with . the owner of a losing entry who tries to get the winning horse .disqualified on soma cicayune technicality. Naturally this parallel is one tnat wouja not oc cur to Mr: Hughes, but it U one tnat is occurring with increasing frequency to persons who voted for him a week ago, and now wish they hadn't ' The reluctance or Air. uugnes to sena tne customary telegram to President Wil son admitting defeat and expressing good will Is. perhaps, more revealing ef his measure than the precipitous haste with which he dispatched that other telegram accepting the nomina tion because of ' a "grave national emergency,"- that he later f orebore to discuss -or mention. Some Other Missing HamTshakes. From the Detroit News. Had Candidate Charles E. Hughes made no other campaign blunder than to tail -to shake hands with the domi nant Hiram Johnson when he visited California, he would still have been guilty of a tactical mistake tnat wui live long In political history.- But that omission wast only the surface indl cation of a general course of conduct which Progressives suspiciously viewed aa unsympathetic sticking to the tanxx. ana tne unin spiring Wllson-appointed-eueraoerat-to-ef r lee Issues, he - failed to - elasp hand, with the liberal feeling of the I po"ts them to their fcomee and buys day. . ' J blev -noh of their portable possessions . xlm vwictw " ww .M-i'.uy i ,,- mav nave acauireu in u w Mmt PASSEVQ ceiyed in which the city council of Nortb. Bend ex presses appreciation because. at its own expense,: The T Journal "recently and unsollcitedly t sent to our community- an- eminent I broad Plan of using the national highway- engineer,' Samuel C Lan- J power as far as posslbleto ' bring caster, to lay out a" scenic high-1 helpful conditions and a permanent I to k iy:'-v- ,. . v. . . . . . ' - Proposed as m Radical Remedy. r PorUandT Nov, .SO. To the Edltbr of The Journal Is Portland "Tour Port land and MinaT Is it .your pol ic that nearly every time 'a representa tive of eastern capital comes here to investigate the feasibility of locating a rectory In this : city, . conditions aa presented cause him to return' whence he came a sadder and a wiser man? Is it agreeable to you that we remain bottled up and" submerged ' under the waves of ignorance caused by a pe culiar disease locally known as the Oregonlan? . Do- you and I really want to keep Portland all to ourselves and won an indorsement in portions or the nation which have , never before given a similar tribute to a Demo cratic Candidate for the presidency. save in years of Republican factional strife. Long before election day there ceased to be any question about an affirmative vote for Mr. Hughes. Long ago the single question of the canvass became that of the rejec tion or Indorsement of Mr. Wilson. On election day the real problem was not whether Mr. Hughes or Mr. Wilson would.be elected,-but whether the public would accept or reject Mr. Wilson. In the first hours ot the count when Mr. Wilson's defeat was conceded by the newspapers which had supported blm most loyally and was written In all the returns then available, the Tribune said that Mr. Wilson had been rejected and his policies repudiated. In all this the Tribune was mistaken, and it does not believe that any such conclusion can now be drawn from the election. even If Mr. Hughes succeeds Mr. Wil son by virtue of the turn of a few hundred votes In two disputed states. Such personal satisfaction as can be drawn, from the result belongs to Mr. Wilson; he is entitled to It The Tribune hoped - there would be e straight out Issue - between Mr. Wil son's policies and those that it be lieved were braver and better. such issue was raised because Mr. Hughes steadfastly declined ' to raise it ' Had' such an issue been fairly raised " the Tribune believes that a different answer - might have been had. But even this la open to chal lenge and permits no proof. Whether Mr. Wilson now wins or loses the count the real honors of the election are his. Because the Tribune has opposed him most bit terly, it feels that it should recog nise this fact, most frankly. If Mr. Wilson finally loses the present elec tion he will remain the strongest man politically in - the nation, as much stronger than his party as Mr. Hughes was weaker than his, a man to be reckoned with politically be cause of his bold upon popular im agination and publio approval. band took It up, to be more to the point and su treated that , the. . two children might need mothtr, as their. nousemaid was "greenr - Y ' " - -very well," stated the mother . of the small flock, "you are probably right, but 1 want to earn that money. . Somehow I feel that Is. X have? a ; hunch that it is going to be a two or three days' Job this year, and, to come straight to the point straight from the shoulder, sir what am I of- fered to retire from, we will say, three days' well-paid work?" Nine dollars good, big, silver ones were accordingly collected fully three uays Derore tne election. I N. Just as Well Tell a Big One. . Dr. Horace Brown of Milwaukee, a much traveled man. once found him self in Livingston, an Atlantic port ot Guatemala. There were only throe other white men in town who were not Central Americans. One was also . from Milwaukee, another was an Eng lishman and the third a German; Somebody suggested a game of cards, says the Chicago Herald, and a can vass of the place brought out a venera ble deck. The German dealt four whist hands, and Dr. Brown, first to lead, picked up IS spades. - Each player bad a complete suit. The Englishman- immediately wrote an account of the deal to the London Times, the Oerman apprised the Lokal Anselger and Dr. Brown communicated with the Police Gasette. The doctor has been getting away with this story for years, because he has a blue-black beard of ferocious curl, and cutting off a leg has been a pastime with him. Cruel and Unusual. Orlie Chase and Dewey lnman, while up the creek last Sunday, encountered a flock of wild geese, says the Dallas itemiser, and -succeeded in killing one -by throwing rocks at it The young men and a number of their friends en Joyed a feast from the wild fowl Mon- No ' day evening at the home of Marshal prison colony which la self-supporting, and which sends a man out after his term of servioe. a better cit&en than when" he entered. At present there at 1400 colonists located on 100.000 acres. Rv.rr nrlsoner with more than a year to serve must learn a trade. Prison ers enter the colony tnrougn ineir good behavior in tne otner- prisons on the Islands, and are ranged In four classes, entering as a member or the fourth class and earning the right to advancement When a prisoner bas been a year In the colony, he may send for his runny or mar If,4 in the choice of trades, he elects the study of agriculture, he is given 12 acres, and the government fur nishes a work animal.' implements, seeds builds a house ror aim, na t.'.n inatructor to teach him. There Is a cooperative store at which he can trade, and he snares wnn me Bvtc.u--n half until It Is reim bursed for the goods furnished him. There is a market for au me prouuc he can raise. If he has children old enough to learn a trade they are ad mitted to the trade schools of the col ony. ' Fifteen per cent of the Prison ers stay on at the colony after they have-served their terms, continuing to workon the farms, and those who leave receive additional good conduct allowances, and the government trans- mass of Progressives of 1012. He withheld a merited recognition of the really remarkable ' legislative rec ord' of a Demoeratlo congress under Mr. Wilson and gained nothing thereby save the reputation ot an un construc tive critic. ; ; i ony. The colony Is governed under the honor system, and thefts are rare; All the business or me coiouy by the colonists, wno "i"""" lighting and water systems. Those who do not work the land, work, In the power nouse, ana m m w .hnni?- There is 'work for alV'work Im atat as where half the. Republican 1 MMna better ' efficiency v and party was struggling for freedom from j greater earning power when a sentence the hoped-for message that would have o tne prison does not cling to the turned the scales toward the forces of prisoners when they return to their publio service, maintaining Instead a homes, and that the prison is -"really cold ana teennica noainunj. lan open door to. nonest enuearor, ouu- Beeklng to conciliate uou- Branches i cation and thrift A majority or. tne of his party, he merely Impressed reg ulars as a man hard , to handle, and Progressives as a pale memory of the Hughes or Js. - . . ' ' Where, asked rrogressivee and in dependents, , was the courageous -leader unafraid to 'offend party bosses In the public Interest? Where tha brave determination to risa party ana per sonal advantage for publio good? Where the- crusader for broader pop- niar rights.- for puouo' morality,- ror dean,' free-handed government? mitnttti of the Prison are self-re specting cltlsens from the day of their discharge; for they have Jeaxned how to live honestly. . v-'-' - V.. Cooperative 'Buying Clnbs. i Tram the Spokane Spokeaman Review. Thirty months -ago ' American coop erative clubs of consumers who pur chased food directly from producers or large wholesalers were a negligible fluantityr' Today,; according to 'John t rvvit.r toe such clubs flourish at Puzzled, they waited long for, one j Chicago, 100 more at Philadelphia and word of recognition ana sympathr. ona handclasp of 'welcome and greet ing, remembering the Inspired leader of l08. Like the greeting that should have been Johnson's, it was restrained In ' the supposed Interests of c party solidarity.'' Distrustful - of- the-Old Guard, "apparently in control,. PrOgres- over tOO at New York, while the larger cities east of the Mississippi have thousands of them, ' - ' " The cooperative : buying club - has eaad to be an experiment in the United States.. -Scores of thousands of housewivea'- lactory nanus ana em ployes -of banks.4 department stores slves and 'independents east one more and business firms buy through these vote of protest' K , ' A Prison College. 1 rram the Cbriatlra Harald. According to Dr. Waller H. Dade, director of the bureau of. prisons in the Philippines, - this bureau is con ducting "at Iwahlg, - near Paiowan, a I clubs every week. Their -savings aver age 20 per cent wmcn is no small amount at ' any - time and is a large. amount in these times. The eastern club buys eggs by the hundred 'dozen from producers as far I west as Iowa. Its butter comes from the creameries of Ohio or Indiana. It obtains beef, lamb, poultry or pork In lots of CO or 100 pounds from western packers. It purchases fruit honey, nuts, vegetable and a dozen other products of farm or orchard la bulk. It eliminates whatever middlemen are superfluous. In effect It 1 long dis tance marketing and covers virtually the entire country. Mr. Colter gives twe factors as the causes ot the purchasing club and its growth. One consists of the express companies Unking county producers and city consumers in order to gain business to replace' that taken by the parcel post The other Is the sudden eagerness of great producers of foods to sell - directly to retail customers. The carriers have published quotations of prices, details of quality and pack ing and other essentials of successful direct marketing. Reputable farmers and large wholesalers have been de sirous of tapping new" markets. The ultimate consumer has ,r been 'de termined to break the back of the ever rising cost of living. - The' result of these forces bas been the first-really cooperative movement, la the , United States on th part ot consumers. The ' clubs "range In . membership from 10; to S00 members. One club's order ' for Thanksgiving - turkeys ex- oeeas ; too pounds. . sa Chicago- club spends nearly. $1000 weekly and" saves 25. per cent on retail-prices.' The 40 clubs at Port. Wayne one day ordered a ton of fish, 100 dozens of -eggs and large consignments ot California dried fruits, honey, smoked ham and strips of bacon. ; V 1 saasMMesMHBMMMiaaaMMM And This, Too, Is - War. frea the Popular Science Monthly. The soldiers who fight with least recognition In the battles at sea are the -stokers ot the destroyers running at full speed. Eight men work under the command of stoker petty of ficer. In a space so narrow that move ment ot any kind seems impossible. 1 There Is a furnace in front and one in the back. Sanwlched In between lr a maze of levers, pipes, pumps and gear. Tet within these close quar ters the stokers find space to per form their heart-breaking toil in. aa atmosphere almost too hot to breathe. When the men are at their posts, the iron batch is closed down and the air sucked In through a' ventilator bas to pass through the furnace before its gets' to 'them.'-.- So long as - the pumps work well and the evaporated water1 Is displaced with automatic regularity by fresh, neither the tubes nor the boiler casing can get dangerously hot ; "But 'some times : without apparent cause,', the water 'slowly descends' below the level. 'Sometimes the cause of mis chief is a leakage a pipe broken or a joint strained that allows th water to escape. If It can be remedied. Well and good. Bat If not arid the water continues to drop steadily,- th stoker petty officer has but one duty to per formto keep the hatchway from be ing opened by the 'frenzied stokers. thus allowing the flames to escape and destroy the entire vessel. ' The ; her oes who perish In the stokeholds Uk iso many rats caacnt in fiery trap - . mm. ...n mmm ... - . - " . . L - mmf MV mf wSrtm ' - - - r O. P. Chase. Toning the Flag's Gorgeous Dyes. An American flag with pink stars and otherwise peouliarly picturesque in appearance hung from a pole 1n front ot the consulate in London. A laundress hired to wash and Iron the consulate's flags had boiled them, says the Chicago Tribune, causing the colors to run. George Washington. Consul General Skinner's colored messenger and who formerly saw service la 'the Tenth cavalry during the Spanish war, up braided the laundress. She replied that she even had thought of putting starch in the flags, to which Washing ton indignantly replied: "Madame that's one flag doesn't need any starch in it" " The consulate now is appealing to Washington for new flags. Soot and fog make it necessary to use about six flags yearly. An Election Outrage. . C, W. Dent, rancher of Warner Val ley, arrived in Lake view yesterday. Mr. Dent ' Warren Laird and some otner party are accused of pilfering a goose which waa being prepared as lunph for the election board, says the LakevJew Examiner, The ' bird had been placed in a barbecue pit about 10 o'clock on the morning of election day and about 11 o'clock the same evening the three miscreants made away' with the bird. J. J, Van Keulen, of the store at that place, came to get the bird for the election board and when he found It missing he went on a still hunt for the mauraders. He saw sparks shooting from the chimney of Frank Roggers' house and immediately went there and knocked at the door and n a subdued tone of voice asked to be let lu. Upon getting ho answer he profanely stated that If the door wasn't unlocked in a mighty short time he would break it In. He got in and assisted in tne eating ot the goose. What the election board had for lunch has not been learned. ' The Janitor's Alibi. The big smoke on Tuesday after noon was caused by janitor waixer burning the leaves on the Congrega tional church square, says tne sorest Grove News Times, and was not caused In celebration or wnion vic tory, ti Mr. Walker is a staunch Re publican. ' ' 4 ' Bat Couldn't the Hen OackleT With a wild sweep the wind tore round a corner and removed the hat from the head of a respectable. and near-sighted citizen who happened '. to be passing. ,- .--- V r. Peering wildly around., the .man thought he saw his bat in a yard, be hind a high fence.. "Hastily climbing over, . be startea - to ' cnase it says -Titbits,, but each time be thought be had caught it it got another' move on. Then a woman's angry voice broke on - Iris ears..-;. ,V-ta'. - .' 'What are yon ; doing . there V she demanded, shrilly. ' He ' explained mildly that tie was only - trying to ' retrieve ' his bat Whereupon the woman said, tin won der: ;.-,.. jV- . "Tour hat? . Welt I don't ' know where It is. but that's our Utile black . hen you're cbaslngT --r- ' ' v ;iuggeBUDg m C3uag9. - Willie Is six years old andwhen'hls -mother punished him -recently he 'did not resent it but decided to have It out with ber H " if-- '' ' It' hurts you to whip me doesn't It motberr'ha said.' H "Tea dear,"; said his mother; ; "It hurts me' very much," : t ' ' t"And yoa wnly do it .to' .make" e goodr. . -- v-H'-, ,-"".v4 f -:: -' s Tes,' dear." fi7 hk V V -V ; WelI, mothr, forget It iext time and' It wPl make me gooderyf i-$iwteU Jeff Bnow Savt?- , -J Over ' Iri Europe ' the.' soldiers are slaughtetin one another Just 'alt they liked it; but all the same I b'leve all of 'em would like to have somebody come along and make 'era quit Trouble : is there ain't no police, tor raid tb Joint i;-',m ; ;, . '-