THE OREGON DAILY-. JOURNAL, PORT LAND SATURDAY, FEBRUARY '22, 1919. 7" .Publisher Fubluhed seery day, eftarixra and morning tcm eepi Bnndsj afternoon ) , at The Jcrarnsi ButtoV . in, uraad way end luaatu sues, roruanu. urecon. Entered at tha Poetoffice at Portland, Oregon, lor tranontaaloa thrones the maiia aa class matter. , aU.Kl'HO.N.a Malo TITSs Hon. A-S051. .. All departments rsche" - fey these smashes. T,D the operator what department yo want. JTOUJ5MJN ADVERTISING KEPBESKNTATIVE Bimjamin A; Kantnor Co.. Brunswick BnikHns. " 225 FUth avenue. ew Tori; 0 hlaUera Building. Cbicaao. eTMbaerlption terms by mail ia Oregon and Waab Ukjtoe: " DAILY (MOHNINO OK AFTERJJOOX) Om year ta.OO 1 O Montis $ .50 SUNDAY On, year. . . . .12.80 One month $ DULY (VOHKINO OR AFTEHNOOIO AND v- STJHDAT - On year.....8T. I Om nsontn $ .S Thera ia no truth more thoroughly es tablished than that there exists. In the economy and nmm of nature, an indis soluble union between virtue and happiness, between duty and adraatage, between the amiioe mulnn of aa honest and magnanl ioUa policy and tha solid rewards, of public -prosperity and fellorty. -George Washington. ASTORIA AND HATES FROM recent news items In the Astoria papers, it would appear that the complaint of the In .4 land Empire Shippers' league filed with the Interstate Commerce 'Commission asking for lower grain rates to tidewater have not been carefully read at the mouth of the ' ijlver. " f The grain shippers simply ask for lower rates. Their petition is for lower rates to any and all points via the Columbia route. They are not trying to take anything from Astoria. They are not Interested in, nor do they propose to take part In, any fight between Portland and A$toria. ' - ! They insist that, by reason of water grade, they are entitled to lower rail rates to both Portland an-1 Astoria, id that they should not be required to pay rates based on the cost of .haul over high mountain ranges. lf in deciding what Is a reasonable rate , to Portland, the Interstate Corn amerce commission sees fit to extend the, same rate to Astoria, no grain (Shipper is going to complain. The imorrj service he can get for his money, the more he will be pleased. , The future of the Columbia river A at A ich Inninir rnnfa HAnanHa Uniralu sr ,- a-"- - J O aw v v a. p. (tu a 0bC9 vu tidewater over the water level line i to Portland or Astoria, or both, and fchould Astoria oppose any reduction in rates via the Columbia route, it might develop that the Interstate Commerce commission may accede to Astoria wishes and reduce the Portland rate only. 1 The fight of the Inland Empire Shippers' league is just as much in the interest of Astoria as in the interest or Portland, and the sooner the citizens of Astoria awake to that fact and Join In securing a reduc tion of existing grain rates the sooner the Columbia river will come Into Its own. " - Mr. EdSon is .12 years old this month. The Evening Post remarks that he is still in the vigor of his life, "Work has kept him young." Dr. ; Lyman Abbott and Bishop Fal lows: are. each 83 years old. They aria, both great workers. "Men with plenty of work to do stay young," cays the Post wisely. Gladstone did the work of an ordinary lifetime ; after 60. People who begin to call themselves old at 50 invite death ta come and capture them. A SPELLING LESSON DR, ELIOT, the former president of .Harvard university, gave his successor, Dr. Lowell, a sentence to --Vwrite down, requiring hlra to spell 'every word correctly. We do not know why he did it. Indeed Ate do not vouch for the historicity of . the incident. It may be fabulous. ButOwe , quote it from an exchange and .leave the reader to judge for himself how probable it is. i This is the fateful sentence: "U is agreeable to view the unparalleled embarrassment ; of a harassed sad . dler "or peddler sitting on a ceme tery wall, gauging the symmetry of , skillfully peeled potato." The ex change from wh.cn. - we quote the sentence misspelled "gauging." it I omitted the "u." .Why there should be a "u" in -gauging any more than in paging jjwe are unable to say. But there Is xme; ' Suppose ,you were to see in the paper that Mr. Smith had been Vpauged" at the hotel. You- would smile. You would insist that he had not been ."pauged" but paged. But when you read that a barrei of kerosene haa been "gauged" you da not smile. tTis thus that evil cus " torn .: blinds us. . There is rno more sense in "gauging a barrel of kero sene; than there Is in "pauging" Mr. .Smith.- But-. tua .nonsense ot. the latter' spelling strikes us forcibly because' it '-' Is'" strange,- while 'th-s nonsense fqt . the- former Is familiar. " That Is all the difference; . As a rule we' favor "law and order. C . JACKSON ....... But In the matter of v saelUnK- W! have a decided inclination to advisl people to take the, law into their own hands. We confess -to .a. secret longing to see every ; person t in the United States stand up boldly and issue an emancipation proclamation for himself to the effect that hence forth and f orevermore he is going to spell words as they sound. The sentence that Dr.'. Eliot pro pounded to Dr. Lowell contains 19 silent letters. ; Its: total" number of letters Is 116 7 The ; silent letters are, therefore, - almost exactly - 16 per cent of the . whole. The same percentage probably runs through most English print. In terms of money this means that the manu facture of our books, and papers costs at least 16 per cent more than it need on account of our unscientific spelling. A FUTILE -SHOT T HE irrationalism of the reds is evidenced In the attack upon the life of Premier ClSmenceau. In effect, it was an attack upon the peace, conference itself. The assassin's shot was fired at .a peace tribunal which is the first con cerned with the welfare of man kind. All other peace conferences have been guided ' by the greed of powerful governments: for the ag grandizement of powerful chancel leries. This is a peace conference that is the first to base its settlements upon the self determination by races, - the first to listen to the appeals of subject peoples" in arriving at its decisions. All other conferences have used weak peoples as pawns to be traded off , or swapped about between chancelleries, annexing them here or putting them under dominion - there, accenting to the wishes and projects of the bar gain drivers at the peace table. It is at this new and higher pur posed tribunal, with its principles of justice and concern for the rights of man, that Co tin's revolver was leveled. It was the presiding officer of this great council with it3 plan for permanent peace through a League of Nations, that his smok ing pistol struck down. It was not Clemenceau but a great idea, not the man but the most exalted movement of all time on which the mad anarchist trained his weapon. It is example of he folly and futility that are abroad In theso troublous times. The state senate has again voted down the bill to make incurable in sanity ground for a divorce. We do not suppose thefbill is of much consequence. When one spouse wants a divorce from the other, ground for it car usually be found, pr manufactured, law or no -law. In Jane Eyre there Is an Illuminating exemplification of how the union between an insane woman and a sane man works out in actual life. MAKING IDLERS A' NEWS item on the market' page of The Journal Thursday says: Nearly a dozen people are em ployed by the government in the bureau of markets in Portland to fur nish information to the newspapers and trade that ia already supplied by newspapers, which only employ a sin gle man. each for this purpose. That the bureau of markets has been wasting huge sums of the people's money has been reported for some time in the trade. Complaints are coming from various parts of the country that not only are many of the reports unavailable for general use because they are not given out promptly, but that many more employes are util ized in giving out this information than is necessary. One of the besetting sins of gov ernment is the multiplication of em ployes. And the strange part of it is that public men who attempt to cut out the useless ones encounter op position. That was what happened to Congressman Borland of Missouri, who proposed an eight hour day in stead of a day of only seven hours for employes in the departments at Washington. A destructive effect of too many employes in the public service is the encouragement of idleness. Where the volume of work is not sufficient for the number of employes, th tendency is to create a tribe of idlers. When the work to be done is fin ished there is nothing more to do, and idleness begins. Your ultimate result is that government depart ments thereby become schools for instruction in how to be idle. It Is destructive to employes In another way: It lessens the average wage of government employes. The government can afford to pay about la certain total, and the larger the number of employes, the smaller the allowance to eacli. The multiplied employe system is a wage killer. It is probably absurd to Imagine that the murderous assault on Clem enceau was "part of a great plot." The man who shot him was mani festly a crack-brained adventurer who acted on his own responsibility. In the French revolution Marat was stabbed by a girl, Charlotte Corday, who Insisted : that she did it "for the good of humanity." Such assassins seldom ;. have ' accomplices. THE TRANSGRESSOR'S WAY ICHIGAN like other prohibition states has been rather diligent In its quest for contraband booze. Cellars, trunks mobiles have 6een invaded-by of ficials and their Intoxicating de lights ruthlessly exposed and con fiscated.. - . j . Under these conditions the booze Ites Vtfe ; UT despair. Thera mm plenty of joy just over the Ohio line in Toledo, nut bow to bring it home to Detroit and other Michigan towns was ; an insoluble, problem as long -eV the search was so strict. Happily the state supreme court came to their rescue. It decided the other day .that an automobile laden with booze could not be stopped and searched at the Ohio line on . its way to Detroit without a regular search warrant. The boozeites of Michigan ' broke . Into frenzjed rap tures. To celebrate their emancipation, as it were, they formed" a long pro cession of booze laden cars" stretching from Toledo, Ohio, to Monroe, Michi gan, with every car running at top. speed In close order. No doubt the drivers were laden as heavily as their cars. It was a gay affair. When Michigan's silk-hat mob set out to celebrate a' victory, over a law and order they make a brilliant Job of it. It is a pity to have to mention that an unkind fate turned the celebration into a tragedy. Some thing happened to the head auto mobile. The drunken driver killct his engine, perhaps. " At any rate the car suddenly stopped, and the long line of speeders jammed into one another like' great logs in a swollen stream. It was a literal car Jam. The wonder is that so few of the law-defying maniacs were injured. The automobiles are said to have strewn the highway with their wrecks for many a rod, but the boo addicts escaped harm for the most part. The incident is instructive. It shows how a state prohibition law, like any other good law, can be as sassinated by the stroke of a judge's pen. It is, of course, impossible to swear out a search warrant for every automobile crossing the line between Ohio and Michigan. Hence it is impossible to enforce the Michi gan prohibition law. The booze orgy which the Michigan court has set going may continue until na tional prohibition goes into effect. When the crUics went to the length of blaming the American war department for the mud at Brest, they raised the question if they are not somewhat short of material. Nature, not the war department, made the soil and provided the al most incessant rain that converts Brest soil into mud. If Secretary Baker can be held responsible for the rains and mud of Europe there is no doubt that be will be proven to be a bad actor. THE PORT BILL T HERE has been no public de mand for a change in the mem bership of the Port of Portland commission. The Portland Chamber of Com merce has not proposed it. The Portland city council has not sug gested it. No one of the many busi ness clubs in the c'ty has even mentioned it. From no public or private organization of anykind has there come demand for the change. Why should the legislature be en gaged with the active process of changing the personnel. Especially, why should a proposition of the sort be brought at the eleventh hour into a legislature already over whelmed with a calendar congested to 'the breaking point? Who, if anybody. In Portland is being represented by the Multnomah delegation in this enterprise? Are the legislators acting for the people of Portland or merely representing themselves? Representative government is not personal government. Representa tives of the people in a legislature who are good representatives, arc mainly guided in their action by the wishes of their constituents. With no demand from any source or by anybody for the proposed change, the bill at Salem affecting the Port of Portland is untimely, and out of place. If a change was-to have been at tempted, it should have been pro posed earlier in the session when there was yet time for the public to make its wishes known. In time for the change, to have been dis cussed pro and con through the newspapers, in time for the subject to have been given the consideration to which a matter of such vital im portance as the Port of Portland is entitled. In recounting that the National Dry federation has given Mr. Bryan, loving cup to celebrate the tri umph of prohibition The Independ ent speaks of hhn as "prohibition's pioneer." One can only hope that the spirit of Frances E. Willard dwells where, she can not hear such things or see them in print. Mr. Bryan has served valiantly in the cause, but its' great pioneer was Miss Willard- STATE - SCHOOL BOOKS T HE sovereign state, of Kansas publishes its own textbooks for the . common schools. ; Capper's Weekly prints some particulars about-, the working of the C method. It says, that "state publication has given Kansas the best textbooks tho schools ever had." It also: claims that the cost Is 40 per cent less than it was when the books were bought of Eastern publishers.;. Senator' Capper assures the ' country that state publication has saved the people enough in the last year to pay for the entire printing plant, building and grounds." This is assurance from nigh au thority. -Mr. Capper ia now governor of Kansas. He : was elected Uni ted States senator - on the Republican ticket' at; the late election with an enormous pluralit. His Insistence that the school books of the - staf cost 40 'per w cent .less- than when bought ' of Eastern - publishers ' is a matter for sober reflection, t Nor is the Kansas statement an Isolated instance. The state. of Cali fornia is publishing its own text books. Accounts from there - are very similar in character with those that come from Kansas. - The Albany Democrat -remincTs u all that February 22 has more than Its usual claim upon the public this year. It is Washington's birth day, as usuaL The war has brought no change in that particular. But this year it is also the centenary of the birth of James Russell Lowell, a, poet and statesman. Lowell won renown in Civil war times"1 by his satires on the profiteering patriot who was as much in evidence then as he has been lately, though his spoils were not nearly so imposing. In New York a great international celebration ist being planned for LLowell's centenary. THE BEGINNING OF A NEW ORDER League of Nations Is Good If Human ' Liberty Is Good From the New York World.. 'The impossible will happen tomor row," said Disraeli, and the impossible has happened. The constitution of the League of Nations is a living, organic fact. It has been drafted, it has been made pubUc In all its sections and clauses and submitted to the judgment of civilization. What happened in Paris yesterday could not have happened at any other time in the history of the world. Even five years ago such a constitution wpuld have been received with derision as the work of amiable and impractical dreamers. Today it is not only the most important but the most profoundly serious political document of the cen tury, for it marks a new stage in the political and social progress of mankind. When Gladstone declared that the constitution of the United States was tne most wonaerrui worK ever struck off at a given time by the brain and purpose of man," he did not wholly un derstand the origins of the constitution. What he said applied only to the work Of putting it together; but the constitu tion Itself was not the invention of the men who framed it. It was a product of the actual experience of the colonies with self government and sprang from the necessities of a successful revolu tion. e e e The constitution of the League of Na tions is a similar achievement. Prac tically every clause in it proceeds from International experience of one kind or anothey. The structure as a whole rep resents the first intelligent attempt that has been made to translate this ex perience into a working code designed to prevent war in so far as war can be prevented and to localize the effect f hostilities should all efforts to maintain the peace prove futile. In framing the constitution of the League of Nations the peace conference at Paris has had tq meet obstacles that at any period previous to this war would have been insurmountable. But after 51 months of the most devastating conflict that history records, the nations are not quite so jealous of all their real and assumed sovereign rights as they once were. They are in the position of the American colonies in 1787, when the danger of not surrendering some of these powers became immeasurably greater than the danger of merging part of them into a central government.. But even here the conference had to deal warily with the matter of coercion in respect to recalcitrant countries that defy the league. It became evident that no international military forces could be placed at the disposal of the league to enforce its decrees and that nations like Great Britain and the United States could not constitutionally bind themselves to employ troops in discriminately in carrying out the pro visions of a treaty without waiting for the consent of the lawmaking authority. This has been avoided by providing for the severance of diplomatic relations and the employment of economic block ades, leaving to each of the signatory powers final freedom of action in re spect to a formal declaratioivof war if circumstances so require. There will be criticisms of this consti tution because it does not go far enough in this respect, and these criti cisms will come mainly from opponents of any League of Nations, who will com plain that the covenant .Is worthless be cause it is without teeth. We have to remember, however, that it was . 76 years after the adoption of the consti tution of the United ' States before the principle was established that a sover eign state could be coerced ; yet in that period a great and wonderful govern ment was built up which proved in the crisis that it could sustain itself. All this may come about again in respect to the League of Nations. Coercion is the last resort, not the first resort, and what the Declaration of Independence calls "a decent respect to the opinions of man kind Is something that cannot safely be defied, as Imperial Germany learned to her complete destruction. 0 The great guarantee for the perman ence and stability of the League of Na tions rests upon the character of the executive council which is to be the ad ministrative body. This council is to consist of representatives ot the United States. Great Britain. France, Italy and Japan and of Jour other state to be selected from the membership of the league. This means that the great na tions which have won. the war are to eet&bH4hhe league and keep it on a working basis, and it happens that these nations control not only most of the wealth, and the natural resources of the world out that they represent the ruling races. ' They know what orderly, table, progressive government means and in their new. function they make themselves trustees for international law and international, justice. ' No League of Nations can rise hTgher than Its source, and in this instance its source is the best that human govern ment and human experience have been able to produce. Therein lies the guar antee of this colossal undertaking, and however great the difficulties may be. they are small in comparison . with the . benefits that, win be realised if this mighty machinery Is made operative. It is a colossal experiment, bat .it is en experiment that ia in harmony with all the traditions of free government and with all the traditions of human liberty. Retufcriing Soldiers Doing Their V Own Celebrating : Ftm the New York World. The returned soldiers who are welcom ing themselves to New York and doing their own celebrating seem to be a-eHin- tv tood deaj of enjoyment out of lu Thus 221 men of Company G, S47th , infantry, taking $1000 they had saved from their mess, had dinner at a Fifth avenue ho tel and went in a body to a musical com edy. The Eighth mortar battery of the Eighth' division, 13 strong, used their mess savings of JU00 for a hotel dinner and a vaudeville performance, ending the day with a visit to the movies. These soldiers were passengers on the Northers Pacific The audience at the theatre stood up for them and sang "The Star Spangled Banner," and some informal speech making gave an additional touch of warmth to the extemporised wel come. ,v Are not th.e the essentials of home coming? What need they care who com poses the reception committee or wheth er or not they march under triumphal arches, so long as they can see the sights of New York and get the glad hands everywhere from citizens? The boys in khaki who have Bet. out to entertain themselves here give another example of the 'initiative and self reliance which .have characterized their military serv ice. Fifth avenue and Broadway are good sights for American boys to see under any conditions, and why lose time waiting to be personally conducted? Letters From the People (Communications sent to The Journal for pab 1'cation in this department should be written on only one side of the paper, should not exceed 800 words in lenffth and atosa be aisncd by tha writer, whose mail address in full must aecoaa pany the contribution.) Opposes "State Medicine" Portland, Feb. 20.-0 the Editor of The Journal A number of bills are be fore the legislature which aim to give greater power - to the regular allopathic school of medicine and "supreme con trol" to the state board of health In matters pertaining to the public health. The recent epidemic showed whether health boards make good use of power when it is given to them In a recent bulletin on influenza by the California state board of heajth. some of the very measures demanded with vehement clamor of health boards all over the country a few weeks ago to "stamp out" Influenza, made com pulsory with drastic penalties, and en forced at a- loss of millions of dollars. are now rejected as-unavailing. Stock' ton had a universal masking ordinance, and enforced it. In Boston masks were not required. Throughout, Stockton had a higher death rate than Boston. In the San Francisco hospital the nurses all wore masks, yet 78 per cent of them had influenza. New York is cited as one of the cities that did not prohibit pubr lic gatherings andcdid not use masks. Its death rate was lower than that of any other large, city. The health com missioner there (a homeopath) refused to whoop up a scare by resorting to alarmist measures. Charts" showing the death rates in various large cities lead the writer of the bulletin to the "obvious conclusion that closing, "at least i large cities, avails little or nothing" and that "the case aeainst the mask as a measure of com pulsory application for the control of epidemics appears to be complete." The bulletin frankly admits that the cause and mode of dissemination of in fluenza are unknown to the medical profession. As to vaccines, the bulletin says : "The hygienic laboratory of the California state board of health, yielding to the popular clamor for vaccine (who is re sponsible for the popular clamor?), "pre- pared and distributed free of charge many thousand doses of the influenza vaccine. The manufacture of the product has now Been discontinued, as it was conclusively proved that it has no protective value.' Reports of committees of the Amer ican Public Health association, which met in December, are included in the bulletin. Those committees reported ad versely on vaccines for both influenza and its complicating infections, gave no preference to disinfectants as against soap and water, sun and air, and said that sprays and gargles do not protect the nose and throat from infection. Since medical theories are fleeting fashions, like bustles and stovepipe skirts, wouldn't it be better that every school of healing should stand on its own merits, with favors and state sup port granted to none? State medicine is a worse evil than state religion. HELEN S. GRAY, Voting As the Wife Says Portland, Feb. 21. To the Editor of The Journal I note in report of'legis lative proceedings that more than . one member has excused himself for going against the expressed wish of the peo ple by saying, "My wife tells me to vote against this bill." This is particularly noticeable in the matter of the jury bill, introduced by Mrs. Thompson at the re quest of practically every organised body of women in the state. The need for this legislation is so apparent that it seems to me that "the wayfaring man. even though," etc, could not be blind to it. Did the honorable member who made this excuse for voting adversely think he was representing his wife as legislator, or the people who elected him? Or was he, like a coward, nidlng be' hind his wife in voting his own sen timents? If the latter, I submit that it would have been a braver thing to take the blame. "I happen to know that a great ma jority of the thinking women of the state have come reluctantly to believe that the path of duty in the direction of the juryroom ia a very plain one and one that they can not longer consci entiously ignore. I would humbljr suggest that from this day the women of the state who contemplate asking for any progres sive legislation should either elect women to the state legislature or make sure what are the sentiments of the wives of the candidates, even before the primaries, that the path of progress may not in future be blocked by such puerile excuses. ADAH WALLACE UNRUH. Hurrying the Soldiers Rome McEwen. Feb. 16. To the Editor of The Journal I am interested in getting my boy home, out of the army, and I believe there is a cause not concurred in by the general public for this delay. And as the president wUI soon be home, I ask every man or mother-that has a boy in the service to write him a letter, asking him to give this matter his ear liest consideration, and that he see that their fare is paid home, which is not the case now. J. Ij. iiUMisiufl. rRT- inUWi furs "is rja id bone. It ia not only paid, but the mileage allowance leaaea hist a balance for incidentals. President Witeom has done all in his power to hurry pmceedinca at the peae conference in order that the peace treaty might be aicned at the earliest moment and the way .be thereby opened for the quiokeat possible return of the American army. By nesntiationa at Paris he secured consent of the allies for American use of German ships as a further means of increasing the number of soldiers that can be transported home.) Hawaiian Motto Sherwood, Feb. 14. To the Editor of The Journal What are the names of all the republics on the earth today, and their presidents? What do these words mean, on the Hawaiian seal : Ua man ke ea oka. atna lka pono? A READER. f The Hawaiian inscription is Ta man ke ea o ka aina i ka pa no." It sicnifiea. "The Kfe of the land is ta ncbteoueneaa." If tSe inquire arm send The Journal hi eenplete mail ad dresa he will be assisted ia obtaining the hats of names desired,! - . Discusses Profits r '"' . Portland. Feb. IS. To the Editor of The Journal I have read the editorial in The- Journal of February 15 under the title. "Owners and Workers. It seems that a ' lot of you people . with J COMMENT AND SMALL CHANGE Today is the day for the old cherry tree story. Just as we feared. The state legisla ture is going to run overtime. .-e.ee The Rotarians have completed their business sessions. Now for round of pleasure. e e Ex-President Taft brands the Poin dexter . charges as "atrocious lies." That's cutting mighty close to the "short and ugly." Headline : "President Center of Huge Fete." The spelling of the last word is all that prevents us from attempting some wheeze or another about corns. If the prince of Wales and Princess Yolande of Italy are sure enough, in love, they won't let mere difference of religious convictions interfere with, their wedding. a We fail to see Just where the Rose City will get $1000 worth of entertain-, ment out of an airplane race from Cali fornia to Portland, a feature being con sidered by the Rose Festival committee. Notice that theUlnofs Retail Clothiers' association announces a reduction in the price of clothes within the next year. Now if Oregon clothiers want to make a hit and put one over oh Illinois .they need only announce a reduction In price, effective at once. JOURNAL MAN AT HOME By Fred Lockley. ( Reflections upon possibilities inherent ia the fact merely of beins an American youth are pre sented by Mr. Lockley today, in connection with a. review of the career of George Washina-ton. appropriate to this, the natal day of the Father of His Country. Yesterday forenoon I talked about the Father of His Country to the students of Lincoln high school. I hope they en joyed it. I know I did. One cannot face a thousand students without feel in sr thrillad. A n von look into their Tfaces you think ahead for 20 years and try to pick out the future leaders. Here before you in embryo are senators and congressmen, ministers and college pro fessors, authors and physicians, and, for all you know, you may be talking to one who will sit in the presidential chair. As your eye picks out the racial types Scotch, English. Irish. Italian, Jewish, and a score of other old world types you see how they have been poured into the melting pot stamped with old world traditions, beliefs, hatreds and preju dices, and how they come out loyal Americans. In the -mints at Phil adelphia and San Francisco I have watched worn-out gold currency stamped with the superscription of many an old world country, go Into the melt ing pot, and then I have watched this same metal come from the coining.press bright and shining, bearing the image of Liberty, with the motto, "In God We Trust." You can't help thinking of the all American stamp that our schools put upon the children of those who came from old world lands. e e e Professor Davis, principal of the school, took me to the platform and whispered: "How shall I introduce you? You are on a paper, are you not? Is it the Ore gon lan or The Journal? You write, don't you?" I told him who I was and in return he told me he had been teach ing school In Portland more than 25 years. What a wonderful opportunity he has had of impressing thousands of students with ideals of service to their country and their fellow men. with ideals of hard work and fair play.- What a chance to show them that they are learning for life, not for school. Good training in the home and in the school ia the solution of future good citizen ship. e ' e When one studies the limitless possi bilities that are available to the children of America there Is no room for pessim ism nor reason' tor social unrest. Wash ington. Lincoln. Roosevelt, Wilson all names, that will live in history all of thera came up from the ranks to the highest office in the gift of a people. George Washington was a farmer's boy, born at Bridges Creek in West moreland county, Virginia. His mother wrote in the family Bible that he was born "about 10 In ye morning of ye 11th day of February, 1732." (This "11th" signifies old style.) He had little or no education except as he picked up his education from reading and from con tact with educated men. He never at tended school after he was 15. His half brother, Lawrence Washington, who owned the Mount Vernon estate, beins the son-in-law of Lord Fairfax, got his brother George, who then was 18 years old, a job as surveyor of theiFairfax properties, and soon thereafter an ap pointment as public surveyor. George went west, to the Ohio valley, surveying the wild western lands. i TRANSATLANTIC FLIGHT PLANS By E. Percy Noel Special Correepondenee to The Journal and The Chicago Daily News. Parle The official news from Wash' lngton that the United States navy has confided to Commander John H. Towers preparations . for a transatlantic flight has provoked lively interest In the allied air services represented at the peace conference because of the friendly rivalry thus . aroused between the Brit ish air force assisted by the navy and the American naval air service to be the first to cross the Atlantic in the air. Neither will compete for any prize but for the glory. Should the Italian or French navy enter the race it would be even more Interesting, but I am told that there Is no possibility of either doing so, although in France and Italy, as - ell as in Eng land and America, constructors will be given every assistance by their govern ment. The general opinion, however, is that either the British or the American air service with the collaboration of the navies will be the first to accomplish a crossing. Although- the windb are less favorable for flying toward the west, it is believed here that Britain's chances of being first are equal to those of America. e e I am Informed that three types of I British craft have already been tested capitalistic ideas cannot do away with the thought oi proiias. vno geie tne profits from the public roads? Who e-ets the Drofits from the public schools? Who gets the profits from the fire de partment? . Who gets the profits from any public-owned utlHtyt If the gov ernment owned all the raw material and the machinery of production, who then would get the profits? If tome of the leading journals wouia AvrkAte a system of voting whereby aa American citizen could vote .without Jiv- inar in a community a certain tengtn or. time, and win for them their right to vote. I think they would find there would be no Bolshevism. I. W. W.-ism or A- F. of L.-1-rm. for the government (meaning the people) would then own and control, and the industrial disputes would end. WILLIAM CHADWICK. Ample Wheat and Sugar Now -Gateway, Feb. -18. To the Editor of The Journal I anV a housewife and don't like to cook with substitutes or eat war bread any better than anyone else, but I cant see why it is we are not mixing them with the good food yet and comerving on the food, as there are famines and ' near famines - In . Eurone. while we can get all the flour lad sugar NEWS IN pRlEF OREGON SIDELIGHTS "With snow piled deep In the rnoun talns," says the Baker Democrat, f arm ers have little to fear that there will be a shortage of water for irrigation the coming season. It was ever thus and history will repeat itself n .that 'crops never fall in Baker county.' Postmaster Cain reports over J1.000 pounds of parcel post matter in the Crane office awaiting transportation to outn Harney county and the Catlow country. The bulk of it is flour and feed and two carloads is yet to be sent from Harper to .interior points in Harney county, the American says. There has not been a race meeting at John Day for several years ana tne peo nl an now ready for a bis? meeting. which is to be held during the first four days of July. "There are a number of good horses In Grant county tiat' hve never been tried out on the track, says the Canyon City Kagle. "and this will give them the opportunity to show their speed." , . "With Umatilla the terminal for pas unar nt frAiarht traffic with the open' ing up of new gravel pits and .the re sumption of those already . installed, there nin ka itv built uoon the shells of a passing generation." is the giving pre jmIak nf ih Psmdleton East Oregoni- an's Umatilla correspondent, who further refers to the town as umauiia tuumjr seaport. When he was 19 he was a major in the militia, and in 1753 Governor Din widdle sent him on a military mission to western Pennsylvania. Upon his r turn he was commissioned lieutenant colonel of a Virtrinia resiment. In the spring and summer of 1754, In com manu of two companies, he carried on a, vigorous campaign against the French and Indians. He was but 23 years old at this time. Early In 1756, when he was 23, he was appoint ed a colonel on the Staff of Gen' eral Braddock. Colonel George Wash ineton was one of the few officers un wounded at the disastrous defeat of Braddock. Rev. Samuel Davis, later to become a college president. In a sermon preached shortly after the bat tie. ::ferred to "that heroic youth. Col onel Washington, whom I cannot but hope .Providence has preserved In so signal a manner for some Important service to his country. e Rev. Davis hunch was right. Wash ington served throughout the Virginia war and resigned in 1758. He was 27 when he "married Martha Dandridge Custis, whose former husband had left her very wealthy. He inherited the Mount Vernon estate from his brother Lawrence, and for the next 15 years he lived there quietly. He served as a delegate from Virginia to the Conti nental congress that met tn Philadelphia on September 5, 1774. e e . When the British soldiers and the col onlsts came into armed conflict at Lex ington and Concord, Virginia decided to appoint Colonel George Washington commander-in-chief of the forces-from Virginia, out on June 15, 1775, John Adams of Massachusetts moved to have Colonel Washington appointed commander-in-chief of the armed forces -of the United Colonies. He accepted the position with the understanding that he dould serve, as long as the war lasted without pay, and on June 17, 1775, he received the commission that changed his title from Colonel Washington to General Washington. He was over feet tall, weighed 220 pounds, was splendid horseman, a good shot and natural leader,, and hence made an Ideal choice for commander-in-chief. e e e : Washington was killed on December 14, 1799, by being bled for a cold. In addition to being "cupped" and bled, he had to take molasses, vinegar and but' ter, gargle with vinegar, drink sage lea and be blistered with Spanish fly. These remedies not proving helpful,- he was lanced and more blood was let from him. The bleeding and cupping caused him to grow weaker and he embarked on his last long journey after less than one day's sickness. e e a John Marshall of Virginia, who later became . chief justice of the supreme court. In a resolution adopted by the house of representatives, quoted from "Light Horse Harry" Lee's eulogy of General Washington. In which ho had said that Washington was first in war, first tn peace and first in the hearts of his countrymen." "Light Horse Harry" Lee. the friend of Washington, was the father of Gen eral Robert E. Lee, commander-in-chief of the Confederate forces. Lee's characterization of General Washington will stand for all time as the verdict of the American people. and arrangements practically completed for the attempt, which may be made, ac cording to weather conditions, within the next six weeks or three months. All three of the craft will start, approxi mately at the same time, so as to utUize the safeguards which the British navy win provide, sues destroyers and crul-ters along the route and kite balloon buoy with vertical searchlights. One of the British craft Is a large rigid air ship which theoretically is capable of voyaging from London to New York and return without stopping. Another is a huge flying boat with two pilots and two mechanics. The third is the small est and fastest high motor airplane. which Is capable of carrying sufficient ruei xor a, non-stop crossing. e e I am told that all three will follow the shortest and most direct course across from Cape Mizen, Ireland, to Cape Race, sewrounaiaaa, wnere, in case of emer gency, it could land or. else follow the coast to Halifax or go farther according to the weather and the amount of fuel remaining. The distance is about 2000 miles. The Azores route is 2425 miles. or 1000 miles from Lisbon to the Isle of St. Miguel in, the Azores, 450 miles from St. Miguel to the isle of St. Fibres, and then 975 miles to Newfoundland. (Copyright, 1919, by Chicaso Dally hears Co.) w want .All we need is the price. Re member, I am not criticising at all. Let Hoover managW this to suit himself. But this is only my opinion, which we are all entitled to. ETHEL GEDNEY. Mrs. Roosevelt's Pension Portland. Feb. 2L To tie Editor of The Journal In connection with the let ter of "A Soldier of Democracy" In re gard to Mrs. Roosevelt's pension, X wish to ask; la it a fact that she dees get this pension?,. I am under the Im pression that the bill was defeated. Who i right? J. O. .A. f The bill sranrlne a pension to Mrs. Booae velt has beam passed by both bouses of eoneresa. Final action was taken ea January 28. Olden Oregon First State Seal of Oregon Bore the Device of the Salmon. The seal of the Oregon provisional government was : called the "Salmon seal,' because it contained - the figure of a salmon. Above the salmon were three sheaves of grain, symbolic of agri culture. : In the form oX an arc above the sheaves "Oregon" was inscribed. Ragtag and Bobtail Stories From Everywhere. Th Real Magna. Charta TVR. CHARLES R. BROWN, dean ot the school of religion of - Yale uni versity, a member of the Congress for a ieafue or NaUom, told the following story In an address in Portland ; "A high school teacher. e-Ivinsr 'an examination to the first year class." asked thera to write what they knew about Magna Charta. and the following : was : me production of one young woman: 'Magna Charta was a soldier In the Revolutionary war ; he was shot in a battle and his wife went to the front to take care of him. but when she found that he was already dead Mrs. Charta took up his gun and said: Shoot If you must this old gray head. but I will fight It out on this line If it takes all summer," " 9 Caa You Tell? Why is it v a fellow will take such terrible 4'hencesr Why is it be runs the , HUk Of police courts, divorce courts. Newspaper scandalaf . Why is It he sallies r Forth And gets himself shot ' Throoeh tha left lung J nst to kiss some, other fellow's - When all tha Urn 'hie own wife Hits at home WaiUuf to be kissed f And Kissinc her wouldn't coma half ' So higbl Why ia itf ' Cartoons MacasJne. " . e Uncle Jeff 8novr says: Anybody that wants to bust ua a trust Is a traitor to his country and wants to ruin its industries. You can ask any trust "president if this ain't right. Also he'll swear he ain't In no trust and his trust ain't no trust and there ain't no sich animal in existence nohow. The News in Paragraphs World Happenings Briefed for Benefit ' of Journal Readers - GENERAL The trsLvellnar rnna-ntaa fn, a T a. mi. of Nations has moved on to Salt Lake city. - The $750,000,000 railroad control ap propriation bill was passed by the house Friday. ; , It is now said In Paris that the peace treaty will be an accomplished fact by May.l at the latest. Cable censorship between the United States and the Island possessions was suspended February 20. , Eight Japanese enlisted men In the United States navy were naturalised at Philadelphia Wednesday. Henry N. Schuyler, Republican mayor of Pana, 111., for 32 years, announces that he will not again be a candidate. The annual report of the Pressed! Steel Car company shows earnings In 1918 of 14,762,030, compared with 12,909,-' 093 In 1917. During the last year of the war the San Francisco district produced 12.000 airplanes. 30,000 aviation motors and 700 kite balloons. Aircraft contracts totaling 1169.000, 000 have been cancelled or suspended by the war department since the sign ing of the armistice. Representative Fees, chairman of the Republican congressional campaign com mittee, has announced his withdrawal from, the speakership contest. John M. Browning of Ogden, Utah, who was paid more than $1,000,000 by the government for his Inventions , of machine guns, must pay more than $700,000 as income tax. NORTHWEST NOTES The last case of influenza In Kutrfne was released from quarantine Thursday. Yakima boosters are asking conarrens to create a national park Including Mount Adams. - The Home Builders Loan company has been organized at Pendleton with a capital of $00,000. j. ' Petitions upon closing the theatres of Yakima on Sunday show 5307 signers against It and 2999 for It. The first planting of sugar beets has been made in the Yakima valley by the Utah-Idaho Sugar company, Eugene will build a concrete flume 400 feet long in the hills tn double the capacity of the municipal electric plant. For hunting Hungarian pheasants out of season. Arnold Allachul and Edward Weetergard were fined $10 each at Vancouver. - Patrick Murphy, accused of the mur der of Joe Cartpr, near Kennewlck. last Sunday, has been apprehended and is in Jail at Pasco. . William M. Grlssom. formerly cashier of a Chicago savings hank. Is under ar rest at Seattle, ehnrjred with embezzle ment of funds of the bank. It is estimated that the proposed freight rate advances and oh an ires in refrigerator tariffs will cost the growers of Yakima valley $1,260,000 annually. A trunk fontalnlnir a" 10 rrallon keg of whiskey was captured at New Era Thursday night by Sheriff Wilson of Clackamas county. The owner was not found. Mr T TCnrlish of Chehalls has re ceived a dispatch from Washington an nouncing the Ot'.in or n on. iiarnia English, while in the United States service. ferencA of cltr officials and irui rillusv companies will be held at Tacoma February 28 for the purpose of readjusting etreeicar lares uirougn out the state. Twn itlaharred soldiers. Wllford J. Jones of Welser and Henry Ballard of Caldwell, got Into an altercation on the train at Huntington, when Jones stabbed Ballard through to the cavity in fmnt of the rirht shoulder. : FOR EI ON -nrinoe Jonrhlm and his wife, arrest ed In Bavaria, have been- deported to Prussia. wtivM tit the Sinn Fein organiza tion In. Ireland have voted to make " Easter Monday a holiday. ttania nt Bulcariftn marauders are ,riv, in dreek territory north of Sa- loniki. and also In western Thrace. Communal feeding on a largfl scale he establishment of 4000 na tional restaurants tn planned for Lon don. Thirty officers and men of the Amer ican forces in Northern Russia , have been glyen French war crosses for gal lant service. Tha carnivals of dancing, wine drink ing and expensive night revels In Berlin and other farsre cities in Germany have . .3 .. ...... . - S ... favorable criticism abroad. George Washington Knew Value of Thrift. , ' The one hundred and eighty-seventh anniversary of George ; Wash ington's birthday Is being celebrated today. Washington, the successful builder of a nation, gave voice to rules for personal and national suc cess which are as applicable In this 3919 year of necessary thrift as in his day. Here are some of his words on the use of money and resources that might have been written for the" present situation In America: I am no more disposed to squander than to stint. Economy makes happy homes and sound nations, d Instill It deep. ft Is not the lowest priced goodr that are always the cheapest. I cannot enjoin too strongly upon you a due observance of. economy and frugality,1- , Thrift Stamps and 191 War Sav ings Stamps now on sale at usual agencies. - : ..5:: sj ,