Tirr; n::rno?i daily TOURNAL. PORTLAND. FIUDAY. i GCTOBIin 17, IS ID. uu ' ' ' - - - 1 ... ..J a mntmom jrtrwsrat'M ('. R. JACKSOX . . . Pabltehet i Jbllibad w dT. afteraoea. nd BJofBto lij.n 8oi.d srtarneoB,at The Journal Butlfin, Biwdnf ud , TatabiU I'ortisnd, Or-on. - ' ;'-. . .Intend at the roetoftlee - IwttleaaV Orege, (or ttaa-mleilo ItnHl tM Baatat ea cinm nUr. . ,. J ILKHONKS Mala TITS: Roeae. A-608t. U eVpsrtatente Teeehe by these Msbm. T-H Ik ergti tor whet Itptroww yon " ruRKIUM ADVEKTUINO BEFBESEWTATlVB n .!.(.. a. a.ntanr Bo.. nmnnrVk BnHdin, 22 e rift aveneo, Kew To; . SOS UtUan uber1roa mm by anil, ar to say address la the YJaHe Btatee or mki - - , OATI.T (llOBMINQ OE AfTlHSOOH) On iter. ,...$8.00 Om onU.....l .10 - . eCKfMt - -sv . ': II III f One month. . . . .8 .25 r.ilT.Y iifOBMINO OK ArrBBW0O AX0 . , ... ... IOD1T :, One iwr,.,..ltll I Dm SMOte... .66 Learning will te mat 1st the our and . trodden ow kvdf the feaoU of swiaita multitude Barte. BEATEN one wfco believes In the economic In terpretation of everything and every body. If hi cream sours it U due to class Interest ; if he falls to get a letter, capital' has been intriguing against him; If, he stubs his we. It la due to "these labor disturbances." Politics and , economics have,: it ; is true, t matters ; for which to answer before th bar of history. But ; if the ; report of the Housewives ' Is true, Dr. : otg - has, no right to use either as a scapegoat from" the West once confessed that I it odd times to help out.- Tb.ere are while he has heard ' many 'eloquent few callings that flo not appeal to and well reasoned speeches .in tno i tbe- Jaur aay ; woman, senate .which had changed ills con vicUon, he thanked God he had never heard one which changed his vote. s Like beauty, senatorial oratory is Its own excuse for existence. A resolution in the1 senate provides tor a complete' report from all the oU&r-ayear men and the war prof its of the concerns In which thef were Interested. v "Why net pass tt? K tbalf record are clear, no harm will be done. ' If not clear, the conn try Is entitled to know It. A good war "to provid against profiteering In any future crista to to publish to the country the names of those guilty of It lb the late crisis. , THE RED RIOTERS 'T rIIE bankrupt leadership of Mr. itodge was displayed in the senate yesterday, when 14 of his - Republican colleagues repudiated the ; madcap assault of himself - and hi foreign, relations committee oa the League of Nations. His sole following was the bour bons with a wretched spectacle of three Democrats trailing on 'behind. Their entire number .was 35 against the" 55 V who voted to reject the Shantung' amendment reported for , passage by Mr. Lodge's foreign re lations committee. : ' in the final, alternative when sena tor ' must ' assume the tremendous responsibility of coming to the show down with a vote to reject the first pact ever made for ending war, many shrank: from taking the step. It is a dreadful thing for a senator to actually vote that no attempt must be made to get away from the old order of butchery of men like oxen. After' great group of leading states men of the world have adopted a plan by which international disputes may be settled by organized arbitra tion instead of by the barbarian system of going to war. It is an appalling responsibility for a senator to vote to kick the plan overboard and undo alt that has been done in t great peace conference lasting many months. :v "' Making a noise against the League of: Nations IS one thing; to publicly and . formally veto against It and .thereby assume the frightful respon sibilities and terrifying consciences Us . defeat might entail, Is quite another thing. Were the truth known It is wholly probable that '-there are senators who voted for the imendment -who would have . voted the other way had theirs been the deciding Votes ' ; A , conspicuous fact In the prelim inaries to yesterday's voting was that i number of senators, while express ing dissatisfaction with the Shantung provision, declared that they would not be party . to ny senate : action that would lend the treaty back to , Paris. That attitude by those sena tors is the best of all Auguries that have; oome but of Washington Indi eating that no action Is likely to be taken that will send the treaty back for acceptance by . other nations of ch anges made by America. A : reassuring incident In yester day's proceedings is the smashing tt party nines, s it gives us proof that this great enterprise on which th test nations and the best statesmen Irv the world are engaged Is not party issue in America. The 14 Re publicans,' despite Senator : Lodge's efforts to. whip them into tine and make a party question of the greatest treaty ever negotiated on the earth have kept: the Pct out of partisan ship and made it's question of con science and human welfare. It ' : is. a , further ' gratifying fact mat Senator McNary of Oregon is among. the fourteen. Jt is hard to understand why a. Umatilla county farmer became tianXrupt in these flaVS when It eaown that be is possessed of two suits of underwear,' on pair Of eox and one pair of shoes. ! BURLESON LANDS ON HIS CRITICS I there, aa-dty Health ; Officer Parrlsh contends, insufficient lnspec- Br Cart SmittU' Waahington Stair Correspondent ot Th Journal Waahlnrton. Oct. lTPesUnater.Gen- erai Burleson nas returned to the speak- tion in the Portland public schools? J er of the hottse an answer to charges As much la Indicated by the dis- made by foiroer Commisaloner Gllfy covery yesterday of 1 S dlpntherla ,fco. , hmra th martt carriers In a single Portland school. m w the appointment of first, sec- To neglect or. waive Inspecuon is I end and thtrd class postmasters, : ana to invite epidemic InspecUon costs I his statemsnt shows that since the merit llttia comnaratlvefv ' and If it saves I rBiem WM pp,1b w c""'" ww. mue comparaxiveiy, ana u iv saves i in M.tmutri eat One life, it Is worth All it Will COSt Cf appointed, or per cent, were for a decade. SAFE OR UNSAFE? S' men who were . sraded highest la the examinations. - ::,pt:-i:- Galloway recently ( retired , from the commission, after, his reslr nation : had t been . asked for by the president s He I has been greatly disgruntled,' and some congressmen nave seen f- ...... . ' "- IE . mistake which . seems to have been made by many who have come, to America re cently from other parts of the world Is this: They affect to be lieve that the general movement ' for better conditions In life in other parts of the world must have Its counterpart In method in this newer world." - ,...!: These are the words of Attorney General Palmer in an address at La fayette college Wednesday. Speak'ng of the alien agitator, he said: His time for the use of force Is be hind him l his time for the use of In telligence has oome. This Is an accurate analysis. Most of ' the agitators come here from a lifetime of experience under govern ments wholly different from Our own. They were under kings. They were reared under oppression. Their edu cation Is deficient. Many are illiter ate. They do not even understand the government or the institutions of . America. v . They have lived under government by ukase and government by force They are accustomed to conquest and subjugation Of peoples. Peoples governed by force adopt force in re sisting established order and in their efforts to remedy conditions. Not .understanding America and having no education with which to comprehend the processes and plan of America, they corns - here With their propa ganda of force and red riot -Their entrance here is the signal for the same secret plots, the same resort to bombs, the , same misguided and unreasonable methods with which ihey resisted kingcraft and oppres sion in Europe, They do not know that this is not the kind of country they have been Used to. They do not realize, and their associations here are such that they do not seriously try to find out, that the citizen here is sovereign, that the ballot' Is In his hand and that there Is remedy for - every wrong in the court houses or, In the election booth. , They musk be taught. They shbufd be rounded yp and be given instruc tion In what this country is, Instruc- lon in what a government of, for and by the people lsj and Instruction in law and order as compared. with violence, bomb throwing and Bol shevism, such -of them as refuse to learn these things and persist in practice of force as contrasted with he ballot, should be sent away. And the arrival of their kind Of re cruits should be checked until there a sufficient .organization here to tame . them and civilize them and educate ' them into the ways of Orderly citizenship as fast as they arrive. , we have too many , pressing do mestic problems of large meaning. to suffer illen agitators, untutored and crude, to go on adding to our responsibilities with their hallucina tions and plots of violence. . i ... i in.. i.-V OME authorities say the Morrison and Burnside bridges are not safe I Keoubiican for heavy traffic. Other authari-1 eager to give publicity o hie charges , 7 to the' hope that they, could make a 111"" . : ? ; ; Domical case against Burleson. wny'permit tne matter, to . remain I .The nostmaster aeneral is having Dra in doubt t Shall we have to Wait J pared a complete statement with names, frt ti.aaiw o! ti rtctinne aatee and the reasons the first There must be way to arriveat ltSk wfil bV nt in' whS a definite and dependable conclusions i completed. Pending that, he has sup- Rnlf arte holta imii l (prtnnd wnrtd olted a tabulation, which shpws the - . . ,-. number of cases tn, which there was A u wooa. yvneiner or no we oo. 4eTtttfcm from the .rule of naming the iron ana .wooa in tne structures are man who came first in the examina- still sound or whether they have be- tions. come defective tnrougn tne pro-sses l when the executive order was issued .of? time Can certainly be ascertained it was recognized that it would not be. bv- Intelligent and interested exami- proper , to appoint the highest eligible nailOn. ' . ' 1 th.rf p marlA that th narnA of the On the various PUbliO payrolls "here I highest candidate should be submitted p Anrfnmra e-alnro. Thv miiRt hd 1 to the president "unless It is established ... . . ,ii., i that the character or residence of such cinuicu cuamcc.a wi nv, v . applteant disqualifies him for appoint wouia not De reiamea. me mfiniment.' thing necessary seems to be an ex amination that will examine and a conclusion In which all will agree. s. If the engineers cannot agree, then doubt will continue, and the public which, in such matters mUst trust- Itself and its safety to lis paid servants, cannot know whether or not to use the bridges. The one positive thing in the situ ation is that there should be , no wait for a disaster to show us The summary of appointments, made -since the executive order went into ef fect shows that 1188 postmasters nomi nated were those who qualified first under civil service, and '26 others who were first on the list were not appointee because Of 'death or refusal to accept. This makes a total of .7 per cent in which the postmaster general cannot by any possibility be charged with discrim ination. The charges ef the critics gave the Impression that there had been wholesale refusal to appoint the first eligible. A3 a matter- Of fact, there were Just S3 cases out of 1267 where the first man SINGLE TJUCK MINDS -lFr"0HTS to reduce the high cost . i ' of living f v aro an attempt . to i mate political Capital for Wilson and the Democratic party, sug gests Dr. H. P. Ong, landlord accused by- the housewives council of profit eering. , A peculiar kind of single track, mind is betrayed here. It Is. that of the individual who Is always looking for r ciitical motive behind everything that displeases him, or .runs contrary to his Interests. If It rains and spoil's crop of wheat, or potatoes, or rrnlng glories he scents secret wires , Washington. , If the wrong team : 3 the world tserietv he , suspects ;i from" the Capital. If he slips i the sidewalk, be blames the White :se. ' ." .. -. - '"s--' ' ccai cousin to this man is the whether the bridges are safe or. Ian- on the list was not appointed, or where gafe. I ms appointment was prevented ny seath or aecunauon. i surteson reports tnat 3i of those, or 2.8 per oent of the total. Ida Burnett Callahan, newly I were not appointed because of the char- lptd resident of the Federation acter or residence of the applicants. af Wamm'I clubs la the daughter Of ,vcr' now " applicants. iaae me women s ciUDS, is ine oaugnw oi j examinaUons who are found later not me laie jonn nnraen, lormer jus- qualified because , they do not reside tlce of the Oregon supreme court, within the delivery' district of the office. "TT " T This leaves a residue of 18 postmas- teacher In the English .department ters, or 1H per cent not first ellgibles, at Oregon Agricultural college. She who were named because the first man Is a woman Of high Intelligence, on the list was refused appointment be- v a .,i v. kA.n I cause of some reason involving health. uivu Tivu, I .,.- Monno" Tt I. hl.lK prominent as a woman's Club Work- that in a small percentage of cases the er. As president or tne organisation successful candidate in the examination h should h an able administrator was found to be suffering from tuber of the affairs of the. women's clubs. '-J. "i" "8ase-. examination paper he was regarded as an improper choice. The next res.ult shows that If the postmaster general has discriminated in a political way it must fiave been In an extremely small number of cases, and T HE discussion Of the labor con ference now in session at Wash lngton" BCemS to be ' harrowing his friends assert that he can justify down to the auestlon of whether e7e,T appoinunent upon a full review of or not workers should be represented I - by outside agencies. . . One of the disputed eases Is at New- . - . urn, a -i. j. ine nignesi canauiate re- Tne.pnnoipie or coiiecuve nargam- ceived a civil service rating of 7fi.-and ing Seems tO be pretty Well estab- the second highest 74. 40. The high man HohArf hut It la AnnUnHM that thl I WM lormer postmasteB, and tbe rec -- I nM- V. umuing wiuum ue w .wic uauua tfo poStofflCe Inspectors had recom Of those WhO are actually employed mended his removal for pernicious pe rn tha hnn. Utical activity. This, taken In connection " I t-W n Jl.Kii. A a.1 j a i m - It can be easily conceived - that in SnA 7 EZ&ZZE large shops where there are hundreds friends of the second man contending Of employes this condition might be he was entitled to the higher rat- ppiied but how would it. work In nT TaSZSJa.2rZ Zl. small shops where the workmen may the few cases in which Burleson used his discretion against the man with th not be qualified, to present their own caser v ,' Are tfiey td be debarred from seek ing assistance outside t Would employers be willing to act without 'the aid of their lawyers or would they agree not to enter into agreements with other employers? It is a big question. It lies at the very root of industrial disputes. A Wyoming farmer has a new lrri gating scheme. H would pipe water ftom . .mountain streams In winter, pouring it from the pipes in ouch a way that it, Will drop several hundred feet, freeilhg In the process and forming huge ( Icebergs. ' The Slow melting process as summer advances win supply the irrigating water. What a chance, says an exchange, to get iced watermelons direct from the farm! : S : - SENATORS WILL TALK w HILE other nations are ratifying the treaty of peace the United Slates senate continues tP talk. The treaty Is still unfinished business, taken up after the senators' private bills are disposed of. Senator Lnderwood Is reported to have declared the other day that the senate has become the most ridicu lous legislative body in the ; world, Unable to stop talking and get down to business. He added that every body knows that tee unending debate never changed a single vote. ., it has been suggested that senators are merely discharging air obligation to the faithful and laborious private secretaries who write their speeches for them. It would be a crime to lay aside .the vast undigested . mass of statistics, extracts from, the speeches of the fathers . of - the republic, -quo UUons from the country press, cita tions 'frdht former speeches, and repe tition of documents which have been read to the senate thousands of limes before. -, - 1 " ' . - - It would not be so bad if the entire senate body, Were compelled to listed to the speeches which under existing rules are usually f delivered to empty benches and sleeping galleries. ' It is on record that a noted senator A big question highest rating. Letters From the People build a sugar factory and have nothing to say in the management, why not Con tribute the whole 100 per cent and have all to say In it? A going concern, built and managed by the 'producers for.the benefit of the producers., and not for a foreign syndicate, should he established Instead' of the nsual concern, which would squeeze every penny of profit asd would have the power to close shop at any time, to the detriment of the farmer and-everyone else. - ' " . ' :' " -r - - 'Z ' ' The enterprise hi feasible and therefore there would.be no difficulty tn capital ising it It is probable that th farmers could swing It ' alone, and If not and they found It necessary to sell stock,. It ought to be easy to do so, K When onoe It is established that the soli la adapted to sugar beats, and that they contain, th necessary content of sugar, there is no risk -whatever, Out Side capital likes a good thing, and they pretty nearly have It In a, sugar fac tory On a Si per cent basja Th farmer and community cannot af ford to take less than their product U worth and that Is 100 cents on the dollar of all of-the profits, and not 41 cents. The people of Portland cannot afford to let outside capiUI rule an industry that home enterprise should. F.'.B. WOOD. : . The" People for the Lesgue . . Portland. Oct. IS. To the Editor of Th JournalThe opponents of ' the League of Nations are atlU busy with their nronaranda in stirring ud strife among people botn at home and abroad. and certain Bepubucans are wailing loud and long' against any and all things don by the present administration for the benefit of man. The Democratic party, under the leadership Of Wood row Wil son, has enacted more Constructive legis lation i 7 years than th Republican party has done since the time of Lin coln. The predictions and hopes of the Republican party that the country would go to the dogs under a Democratic ad ministration has resulted in keen disap pointment. They are jealous and envi ous On account of great deeds done' under JVilson. and especially the League of Na tions, the greatest of all things enacted for" the benefit of the human race,, and they would defeat the league and eventu ally plunge the world into another war and surrender their own country to the enemy If by so doing they could shift the responsibility ' to - others -and put 'the Democratic party out of power. Wilson Is Just getting the United State started on the straight path, in spite of an the knockers - of the Johnson, Borah and Poindexter type. These men never had any conception of fair play Or justice and always considered personal ambitions above the general good of the people. The American people as a whole, re gardless of all things political favor the League of Nations without amendment, by an overwhelming majority, and any :who fight, the league for political pur poses will only plunge themselves into political Oblivion. When ratified by the senate, the league will be a foundation of great things'1 fiir the human race. Who knows but the brotherhood Of man will eventually become a reality through the League of Nations, the greatest -merely civil instrument ever written by man. OTTO D. DRAIN. Would Restrict Agitators Portland. Oct. 7. To th Editor of th Journal Holding political meetings on the streets ought to be prohibited, es pecially the socialists. To my mind the socialist street meetings are nothing but I. W. W. in disguise. The world Is In turmoil. There never was a time whn there was . so much unrest everywhere, and for this reason' and many others extra caution ought to be taken t nip Lag! tat or s and anything contrary to -the government If this is not don some thing is going to "bust" and Portland, with other cities, will see something even worse tnan war. . ' i Streets were never mad for meetings. anyway. ..-If politicians want to hold meetings, let them hire a halt To sup press or prohibit street talking or ora tory does not prohibit freedom of speech. by any means. Any person is xree to talk to an individual any Where, bat strictly speaking th streets are for traffic. This la a free country and peo ple are free to express their feelings if It is not against the government or Is net offensive to the individual, out if we' anew one party to use the streets for political meetings, w can't deny it to another, so It would be best to prohibit it entirely. Preaching the gospel is a different thing ; yet there is danger m allowing the gospel to be preached, be cause that gives people a chano to work in many things that look like the gospel that are In themselves nothing but devil ish propaganda. " A J. CLARK. COMMENT AND NEWS, IN - BRIEF ; SMALL CHANGE is du soon - to : stop Its Bhantnng wacrarlnc Baron Goto visit Portland and where does he go to from her ?v ;: ; Th Hungarian Mac treaty has been completed. With th "Hun" taken out. w trust. - . a - a , ' There's one Mrson that doesnt car a hoot how high coal is, and that's th hay fever person. , ; . Nlnd aviators dead In the first trans continental airplane race. I the goal worta tn sacrifice? - J: . ' - J- AU Russia Is ihltu With War."-. Headline. Let 'er-burn until the last of the Bolshevists -is consumed. - - - - ; a. ... :-- "Letts Han Baa-un : Ntw AffamaiVa Along Dvina." Headline. Being . urged on, probably, by the rallying cry, "Letts -.sr. . a. I n . , If w bIiVd thera was an hone that w might win th many nice things asked by the coal miners, we'd go on Strlk ourselves.- . . If the government had been running the chariot of fir there are people who would criticize th way it handled the Elijah traffic. " ' ' . Had a broken crankshaft not .forced th flying parson down near Wahoo, Neb,, we never would have known that there was such, a place in th United States. - , - .-a No doubt the poor young man in love continues to recite that ancient maxim, "Two can Uve as cheap as one." And they can. If it's "cheaply and not "Cheap", that he's talking about ' OREGON SIDELIGHTS rTh death of Tang Toy Kay, S4 years old, for many years engaged in mining at Auburn and Mormon . Basin, is re ported. , , , Th executive " council of th ' Polk county agricultural council has decided to reestablish th vacated position of county agricultural agent the Tlaker Demo crat, "ha produced 80 per cent otT all the aold outpurMrom the mine In Ore gon for several years, and from ui mining, acUvlty that I manifest, will continue to do for years to; com." Of Roseburg torthcoming com show, the Review, among other things,-says: The prospects are for a large number ..hikita a nA ' u there will b no admittance charge it expected that unnl , thousand people will visit tn show during the 24th. and 2Sth." ir tin A TTvda Af Baker, wife I of the assessor of Baker county, U is claimed by th Baxer ijemocrai. na the dlstlncUon of being the only woman in Oregon this year to secure a prise, having killed a four-point buck last Sunday evening In the mountains at tne head of the Grande Ronde river. JBhs shot him through the head at the first hOC. ' alia 'a. ,. ' T1 usual method pursued In con struction work," sagaciously observes the Bend Bulletin, "is to plan during thos months, when building Is easiest and then to build during th other months when building is most difficult Th city councils, in arranging to get preliminaries attended to this winter so that improvement work can be begun early In . th spring, is doing, a good work." "fEe Oregon 'Country artBeat Bapptatec to Brial rorm i U .r Buy Xda ' IMPRESSIONS AND OBSERVATIONS J 'OF THE JOURNAL MAN By Frd Lockley T tTha rt 180S u gfnd eld mr for lirmg Double to the World, sad 1S1 aa earcelj law ). If it had no Lincoln. Dar win or Gladstone, a 1809 had. It bfouctrt out a lixt ot Americana whora namea an dia tinraished to this day. Mr. Lockler ha aoma- thlne to tj of them, and of a number old tiaag at veB at pannna. besldas,j v fCorannnteatiotia tent ta The )nnl lo PSblieatfam in this dpaftJtaot honld be written oa only osa iMe f tha papw, bouM sot exeaed SOO mMi In Jhgth, and ntut ba licned bj tho writer, wbOM Hail addrea la fail aiiut Scooei' pftoy tie contribution. ) -The Farmer's Profits Portland. Oct. 13. To th Editor of In a Pennsylvania court two I Th Journal I noticed an article in Tha Women recently disputed the owner- Journal by Mrs. A. tt Cas con- - I aaarft I n SP f-Vl A tteft MAat 1i-wa4aaw aVU .miViaa .u.u.r, ucU. juugo bi; profits In farming. IShe seems to directed a constable to liberate the think the farmer makes an excessive fowl a short distance from- the profit and is the cause of too high homes of the two contestants. The P'lces,, But ! thmk not, and I hav hen promptly walked into the yard KSVrSKi vioiuiut, iwu w uo-1 givea iigurea o snow product and re- fendant .was assessed ' 14.00 and turns, ana says, "I am sure of my fig Costs. Could th method be heed Me" '.B.tSAlA h left oot successfully Jn settling the owner- o? pMon6 to gtfTor Ship Of husbands? practice there? are insects, blicht and various other causes to cut down th COtTtr OF CONOIUATION W acre. I have known thVto- ' , . mato mignt to take half and even all .. ... . . . I Of tha Inmit V.ir. T,la t Wwtiu or tne industrial peace didn rfcn, the Thigh cosi donferehoe now In session at of farming did. Mrs. Cave says it cost .Washington David Lawrence th grower u cents a box to pick, crat aaVs- ttnd eh,p tomatoes to Portland. But la says All groups setm to be agreed on the principle of a court of conciliation to Which disputes can be carried.. Out of that suggestion will grow a concrete plan. ' - - '.v tt ' i , -!"' The establishment of general prin ciples is what is ' expected , of the conference. It was not the Intention that it was to take up specific eases but it was hoped that it would outline a geherat policy which would apply ' la ' the settlement of specific disputes. 4- '. -;--'V? Given an industrial : Cbde a,, court of conciliation could Interpret and enforce it, and by dealing with specif fie disputes as. they oame xon gradu ally br.'ng about a better condition in the-Industrial world.; In framing thds odnstituUon of the United States It was not attempted to settle particular controversies but rather to establish, a. "general - law which would cover any possible con tingency. ? "- J ' s -,t . V ' A 'court of eoneillallon for capital and labor would . ba In accord with American tradition'" land American policy. , , . - v. ; There are BOO.ftOO women working continually as farm laborers in the United States, and there are 466.000 women who own Ad Work their farms,' making nearly a million en gaged In' soil production: The. fig ures do ot Include those who work Hood River this yar tomato boxes cost llhi cents In knockdown condition. They must then be nailed up, hauled heme ana the tomatoes picked, packed and hauled' to the boat. . And freight on Doai (tne cheapest there is) and cart. age at Portland, and the coat f about so cents a oox. Then add commission and retailer's profit, and whatever . is above this will go to tho farmer for his years wont alter he has paid taxes. In terest and possibly other-expense out or it. i tsjnK he is usually not ovar. paid for hi work. The fact Is, moet of the. tomatoes pro- aucea m tne nooa Kiver ana Whit Salmon districts at present are amwn by Japan, who practice oriental, not American, standards of living. .But as to the high cost of Hvine I think ihaa Is too much expense between the farmer and the consumer. If this can b cut down to a. minimum and th farmer can increase the production of his farm, then the man id tha city can troct a bat. ter living at: a reasonable cost. - V r E. C COOtf. ' Home-Owned . Sugar Factories . Athena, Oct 10. To the Editor Of The JournaH-Ia North DakoU the farmers have a statewide organisation called the Non-PartlaaitBleague, for th marketing of their products. The fruit growers in all the large fruit districts of the North west have organizations for th market ing and manufacture of their -products. Everywhere they are a Success. Ifcthere la any reason why th beet Industry can not be handled in the same way, it does not show ,on the surface. ; Why - cannot th producers of beets organize and build their own factory? True, It would take considarabl money, but they could capi talise, and raise money. Instead of con tributing 'ii per cent, of . the capita, - Paying for The Auditorium Portland, Oct. IS. To the Editor of The Journal I writ this from a desire to express my appreciation of your edi torial In Monday' Journal headed The Pound of Flesh." I am also convinced that the editorial meets general ap proval, as it advocates that the city should pay for The Auditorium what It cost, instead of letting the two local bondsmen, N. A. Schanen and J. P. Kelly, pay the deficit and thereby be practically ruined financially, v It is wrong In principle to get something for nothing, and, surely the city of Port land should not get Its auditorium for 160,000 less than it cost and require the bondsmen to pay this large sum, saying that It was - nominated m the bond." Upon investigation I have , learned that The Auditorium cost over $416,000, and the city has paid for it only $347, 000, or $63,000 less than its actual cost. I hav heard no one say that th 1 416.606 was not -honestly spent In erecting the building. - Who should pay the dflcltt Surely not the bondsmen, ' who were not responsible for the great war which Increased the cost of the structure. Yet strict adherence to the bond they signed would make them, responsible and force them to pay for what the city is receiv ing. I believe the least th city council can do is to submit the matter to arbitra tion, to the end that simple Jostle be done to two of its citizens who have lived m Portland for nearly 40 years and contributed to its growth. - : H. N. BURPEE. t 3 ; Roosevelt on Germany Chehalls, Wash.. Oct. It. To th Edl tor of The Journal I am sure that i Short time after Oermany Invaded Bel glum, Roosevelt made a speech in which he braised th German army and said h was proud of the Oerman Mood In his veins, - Now I am sure that he made that speech, - but don't remember just where or when. If you can get me that address X shall be grateful. GEORGE ROMAN E. (Ilaaettelt We the regular contrlbnter to tha Outlook. The inquirer 1 referred to the lero ot the Outlook for Septstabe zS, 11. Oa paste 170 and ITS, paauaae eomepoedins te tha f&atier eUttKed in bk htauuy are to be . t A Valley of Optimists , ' - Pmar tha Road Rirer ltewa - A pesfdmlK in Hood River at this time would be a very lonely man. Everybody one mU od the street IS an Optimist, and there is evry reason why he should be. Even if he la not the owner of an orchard, be Wilt Indirectly benefit- from tjie wonderful crop Which Is now all bat safely .housed. Day and night, for th past Week, trucks hav been - bringing in big. loads of apples from the valley and hav 'returned, with vn bigger load Of box "hooks. Oood news from the East Is another cause for eptlnv Um here, and It would b difficult la deed to persuade any-of our;.: ranchers or eitlSeb that the 1919-1926 season Is not , going ' to be the year which all have looked forwaad to during tha lean years that have gone- before, . r. There are many who can still remem ber the thrill they felt at the announce ment that the Atlantic cable had been successfully laid and the messages, could be flashed across the sea from America to England. , When I was In London last fall I was invited to a luncheon to meat Marconi We Wr greatly disappointed to be- told that Mr. Marconi had sent his regrets at being unable to be present, as h was detained by a matter Of great , im portance: We learned next day that th "matter of great Importance" was the successful sending of a massage by wireless to Australia, a distance of over 13,000 miles, which broke all distance records for the transmission of wireless messages. , ..v What a thrill Cyrus W. Field, who laid the Atlantic cable, would- feel could he bat know that today we are flashing meesagee across th ea without wires or cables ! r The one hundredth anniversary of th birth Of Cyrus W. Field occur on De cember IS this year. Th year 1911 is the centennial of a very large num ber of distinguished Americans. Mrs. E. D. E. N. South worth, who ir. her day wa such a popular novelist, was bcrn December 26, 1S19. Thomas Eng lish, author of "Ben Bolt," was borA June 29, 100 years ago. Other dis tinguished authors, poets and scientists,' whose centennial occurred this year, are: Walt Whitman, the "Good, Gray Poet." who was bom on May 21 : James Russell Lowell, February 22 ; Juua Ward Howe, whose "Battle Hymn of the Re public." stirred the - heart -of millions Of Americans, May 27t J.,0. Holland, founder cf scunners siagastne, wnicn later became th i Centura July 24 j Charles A. Dana, for many year editor Of the New York sunf- August 8: th sculptor, William WY Story February 12 General w. S. RoSfeoran. September i i Vice president Thomas E. Hendricks, September 7. "'"'ly- " e e Not long ago some writer whose hobby is digging up curious myths and cus toms assembled a gxount f interesting facts about, our popular, superstitions relative to Friday and the number U. He aayst. . "It take American history to sweeo away the ' Friday as an unlucky-day proposition. For It was not only on Friday that- Columbus sailed tot Amer ica but he discovered land and actually landed on FrICay, Nothing " unlucky about mat: Tn Maynower, too, maae Provtiicetown harbor on a Friday, and ft was on a Friday thats the Pilgrim Fathers landed on Plymouth Rock, George vTashihgton elected to be born on a Friday ; St. Augustine, Florida, th oldest settlement tn the United States, was founded on a Friday : and tt was on a Friday that John Adams made the motion that these United states -should b mad Independent, So Friday has not been an unlucky day for this coun try. u. . "The : so-called unlucky number 13 played a curious part tn the life of Richard Wagner. He was born in lilt. The numeral of the year of hi birth added : together make IS, an,d he was given a same (Richard) the letters of which, added to those of his family nam Warner also ma'c IS. At finished The Flying Dutchman' on September IS, 1841. and completed Tannhaueer on April IS, 1844. . The scoring of Das Rhelngold was finished on May 13, 1854. and that of 'Parsifal' on January IS,-1882. He was exiled from Germany for 18 years, and his long-cherished plan of giving his own operas in Paris was carried out with a production of Tann hauser on March 13, 1861. Th first performance of The Ring couiplete, at Beyrouth, wii given August 12, 1878. He composed It. complete operas, ajiiT he passed away On February 13, 1882." a a a One of these days someone will b Inspired to write th words and music for a national hymn one that has the fire and U.rUl of Th Marseillaise. At a recent public meeting on old gentle man stood- up and looked reproachfully at thos sitting- near him because they did not vis. - The band was playing, "Auld Lang Syne." I was interested in the spontaneous mass singing that occurred at The Aucltorium when Pres ident Wilson spoke on th League -of Nations, and also a few days later when Colonel . Roorevelt spoke on The American Legion.- On both occasions the audienc . started out bravely on "The tsy,apangled Banner," but by the time th last stanza was reached there were but few survivors. James Jtode meyec givss a laughable ' but true de scription of how the typical American -audience sings the national , anthem, thua; t- Oh. aar. eaa yea sins ttom the start to t.he and, ' VTast so pfoudlf yon. rtttd fof when or- etlaem nlav It! When the whole eoDgrecatlon, la voices that blend, ' Strike up th mod aysin Bd this torture . and (1st itf - Bow they bellow and snout when they're flrtt atartlns oat, X But "the daws7s eif Hsht" nods them floundrina about. "Tie "The Star Spans-led Baaner they're try- tn to suit. . But they doa t know the words at th - pteclotss old thine Hark! The "twilight's last leaauag" ha some of theta stoDDtd. Bat the valiant survivoit sress forward serenely To 'the rampartl w trstebed." ' Where sbm others are drODMd " And the loss of the Wien is menlfsst keenlr. xoe tae rockets- red ciare ' gives ut brav est a ecare. And there's tew left to tare the "bomb but- thg In alr Tie s thin Use of heroes that rftanags to sere ..Tha last of the versa and "tha home ot the - .... - OREGON NOTES ' . . Snow and minlatur blizzard hav hit the Santlam national forest, and very , , little land oan be planted thls.falL ' The Clatsop , County.- Bar. association has decided to raise all the fees for legal ' ' services approximately - SO per cent,. - , At its closing session in Salem. Cor-, valiir w-as chosen as the next meeting -pace of the Presbytery of the Willam- The arm of tanll Frther. a Browns- -ville contractor, was mangled and crushed by being caught In a bean threshing machine. Albany to Portland via the Pacific highway will be possible by th nd of this week, according to Engineer Cau- ' field, la charge of the work. X . John W. Gruner, geologist from Mln neaota, baa arrived to take up hta duties as professor in the school ot mines at Oregon Agricultural college. ,. . When Loula Villor tWtA .i r.h.,ht While hunting near Eugene, th bullet glanced and struck John W. George in ww ng in eye. ueorge wiu recover. Th 4 Var old at.n nf Mi. ., trm Frank Bailer at Eugene waa probably 4 fatally burned when he attempted to warm himself before an open fireplace. . ine paving of the Columbia highway 'tween Cascade LockB and Wyeth has ten completed, and tbe difficult detour Over an old road la no longer necessary. Oregon City banking institutions hav entered into an agreement to open ut . bi.- anu ciose ai p. m.. except on , Saturday. When the closing hour will ' be 1 p nu McMinnVill wants a vae-alnKta unit , fruit cannery, and business men of that city are willing to provide a large turn to in ngni pariy wno will consider th Op--portunlty. Abides ar blled an hlo-h In tha atnra ' room of th Albany cannery that th manager expects to have apples enough if" to run at full capacity until the first Of the year. The car shortaee situation thraatana to , assume the Herlous proportions ef 1916. 1917 and 1918 in solte ef tha af. . forts of state bodies and officials of the railroad administration to rsmedy the situation. - Thome Snannatl Jr. ta In a hnarUl as Medford as a result of a fight with a bear that he had wounded. He has a broken wrist, lacerated hips, chest and shoulders, and the calves ot his legs ' are torn into shreds. Argument on the appeal of J. Henry Albers of Portland from a fadarai judgment, under which he waa fined ana sentenced to Imprisonment for vio lation of the espionage act, waa heard in the United States circuit court at ban Francisco Wednesday. . WASHINGTON Between 1000 and 1200 people ar now engaged on the 1919 apple orop in th Spokane valley. Seven contract, amounting to JllJ 089.4S, were awarded this week for pav ing portions of a number of Toppenlah streets. t Use of the state armory t Tacoma for an address by Eamon da Vetera ha been refused by the adjuunt gjnerai. oi th state, Th nW telephone cable between Ta coma and Vashon Island is in working order. Th cable Is 11,000 feet long, weigh 25 ton and coat $22,000., Figttres from railroad off'c how . that 111S cars of apples were shipped out or the Yakima valley laot week, the total vaiue being more than $1,600,000. John Cleoria, a Seattle oaf owner and prominent In Italian circles. Is dead as the result of agunshot wound inf flic ted by Edward , Kletistra, an attor ney. ... -. J Enlistments and reenlistmenU have been heavier at Camp Lewis this week than at any Um since the cumpiign for strengthening th regular eauMlsh tuent commenced. , Pinned under an overturned tractor at Spokane for two hours bafor h was. discovered, David Conway waa so badly vaiuwu ui ne Qiao wna Deing fir.r- f rled to a hospital. T By use of an airplane, two fitxrlcan men covered 16 mile from 8pokane to . Odessa lake, rot a foil bag of dunks and returned the same day, making til return irip ra do minutes. Miss Genevieve Danlelann tt Koattla. aged 25, whil learning to drive ah hu- tomobiis, was kiued when th jnachlu got from under her control, dashed down h nui ana was overturned. John Donovan, eon Af John Ttannvan - 6f Belllngham, was killed on the puved road between Sultan arid . Gold liar when an automobile In which he waa riaing sxiauea ana turned over. Private Shelby C. Cole is being sought , r his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Cola Of Tacoma, who have heard nMhlne from him since he waa rescued from Olden Oregon Earty, Oregon History Largely Inter national Boundary Dispute, -- During 25 years prior to June, 1846, th history of Oregon Included as It principal thame th dispute Between in governments of the United States and Great Britain as to where the boundary line should be located. On the part of the United States th forty-ninth parallel of north latitude was early proposed and quite consistently held to, although tne political Cry or "iity-iour iony or fight was not unheard for a time. On the part of Great .Britain, the course of th Cqlumbla river was considered a fair compromise line, but without entlr disavowal of rights to the country north of California, or the forty-second parallel. Proud of doquille ' Trot th Ceqttilla Sentinel. w ' have had occasion, many time durinr the nast few years to reel proua of Coqullie. ; in war work, in iurnisnmg both men and Wean for the world struggle ngalnst German autocracy and flendishneaa, coqwue ana in neignoor Ing districts measured up to th full standard- Of wegon painousm ana there was son hlsrher in the nation. In contributing to th Red Cross and other war charities Coqulli was never a slacker and always did a little more than .was asked aome times giving doubled . - , When'lk came to building a new' school house those who lacked vision and faith In our people were dU to get an awaa ening. -.The decision, wsi left to tax payers only, and the amount asked , was probably double what It would have been five years ago, bat Coqulli an swered with no uncertain Bound. Four out of every five said "ye." and th result was such a indication of our city and school district as must silence all caviler. ; We are ashamed of our pres ent school accommodations but more than proud of the way oar people have Joyfully r and enthusiastically put. their shoulders te the wheel and declared that the best possible irt th way or a school buDdlng la none too good for the children f thi city. Coqullie 1 on themap. The city has a great futur before IC W expect to see it become the .educational center of southwestern Oregon. - The Deutsehlsnd renM tti rtfielnnatl fhaee-StSf - The Deutachland. th first submarine to crces the Atlantic, ocean, baa mad Its last voyage. It has landed in a London inuaeum. where it . will ba viewed as a permanent war souvenir. -v c n. - Curious Bits of Information For the Curious Gleaned ' From Curious Places Camel proved a source .Of great strength for the BriUshT during their camnaiens against th central power In Asia in the world war. They were In valuable in the warfare where forced marche through desert region were re quired. They Were also Stoical and brave under fire and bore their wound bravely. Their use, however proved the fallacy of some stories about camels, such as their ability to go seven days without water, write George F, Paul In popular Mechanics. The Sudan oaml can do this, but the Egyptian . camel, the neat best for use in warfare, can go only two days without drinking during hot weather. The most delicate of all camels, ar those of Hindustan. They ar also difficult to train because Of their temper. They ar more obsunat than mules and eveti wilder during certain periods. They kick -and bite and fight fiercely with each other; On the dry sand of the desert the camels lop along nicely, but n wet or slippery ground they tumble around Ilk persons learning to roller skate. During the operation In Palestine horse proved much their superior. On one occasion it was found necessary to abandon, 100 tons Of material because the camels heeuld not advance ove the bad roads. ; f Uncle tit Snow Say: Soldiers don't atrik very often, but when they do things happen fast A chipmunk ain't much of a fighter, but he can bit Into your finger and mebby give you blood ptsenin-. - , Irrigatioa la the Valley , j Prom the Balers Capital Journal Irrigations and k Willamette valley cli mate form a combination that 1 hard to beat when It come to producing ever bearing strawberries. In th stlmation of I. M. Christopher , of Marlon. Mr. Christopher, Who was in this morning to complete hi fUtag upon water, for Irrigation purpose -' uttfn his tract, brought with him a boa f the luscious berries just to show what can b don in the "strawberry line with the aid ef irrigation. Lack of sunshine ha robbed the fruit of some of its sweetness but in appearance the berries ar as rich as any appearing on th local - market la th normal strawberry season. the Turoania and rmovdato a hospital In Ireland. . , - IDAHO Buhl high chool has been susnended IndefinlUly pending th installation of a steam heating plaint. Joseph W. Zimmerman, a busineaa man of Mohcow, fell dead on a street In -that cuy wium on iu way so cnurcn. The Buhl Canning company haa put up lSOO casea of peaches and in now can-, nlng apples, having about 1000 cases of the latter. The commissioners of the Deary rural highway district have awarded the con tract for clearing th nw Pin creek -right of way. "The canning factory at Psyett has cloned for the season. About 100 peoeple have been employed and $15,000 waa paid out for fruit - Short course In general agriculture, -dairying and homemaklng hav opened at the University of Idaho with many students enrolled In each department. .' Employes of the Washington, Idaho It Montana railroad, owned by th Potlatch Lumber company of Moscow, have truck for Increased wages, only the crew -on tbe passenger train, r fusing to quit work. . - v ( The public uUlltief commission - of Idaho has denied, the request of the operators of the Oualey ferry for an In crease In rates, and ba required the company to malntalan a continuous day and night servlc. OENERAL. -Vv Tha price of certified milk haa ad vanced in Ban Francisco to 21 cent a quart. 7 Savage fighting Is U1I gning on ifl the city Of Riga between Lettish and Lithuaaian troop and th 'Uermaho KuMslan army. The Pacific mall liner Colombia passed through Honolulu last Sunday with $25,000,000 in bullion conalgned to the bank of Shanghai. . ' . , Berlin experienced a new brand of f atr Ike Wednesday, when 18.000 clerical workera In th municipal office walked out, demanding more pay. . " The first contingent of regular troops '-. to leave Camp Dl since the armistice entrained Thursday on the first (eg of -their overseas trip to Silesia. .' Charles L. Stokes haa coxfsed at Lo Angeles that It killed Dr.- Ernest B. Roberts when Roberta told him that he bad stolen the love of Stokes' wife. ' Abandonment of organisation of th World War Legion and cancetlaUon of It national encampment scheduled for this week at Pittsburg waa announced a Washington Thursday. Six former Cantu soldiers, th last ..' survivors of the mutinous Algodone garrison, met death at the hands of a firing squad in Lower California 1m mediately after the fight Wednesday. - Journal Is Leader in Constructive Effort ' The Journal has long been a leader in progresaiv,! oonstructlv news paper work, and haa set the pace for other ; Portland ' publlcatlonaj . A glance through th. files of all local newspapers will ' quickly jfnd fairly how a considerable, numner of In stance wherein Th Journal ba led -the way and haa been followed and imitated by other papers. - ft'