i THE OREGON I SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING; NOVEMBER- 23, "1919. 4 AN IXDEPEWPENT NEWSPAPER C. 8. JACKSON Publisher ' published eerjr day. afternoon and morning (Except Sunday afternoon). t The Journal Building. Broadway and Yamhill street. -; Portland. Oregon. EnUred at the Pontoffic at Portland. Oregon, for transmission through, the maili second cliu matter. rELEPHONEH Main 7178: Home, A -6031. All department reached by these, number. Tell the operator what department you want FOREIGN ADVERTISING BEPBKSENTATIVE Benjamin & Kaotnor Co., Brunswick Building, 225 Fifth aienue, New York; 100 Mullen Building, Chicago. Bubacription t.rms by mail, or to any address in the I'nlted States or Mexico: DAILY (MORNING OR AFTERNOON ) Qua year $5.00 One month t .50 8LNDAY One year $2..0 One month t .25 DAILY (MORNING OU AFTERNOON) AND HIJNDAY One year 17.50 One month..... f .65 They hare (aid, come, and let ua cut them off from being a nation; that the name ol Israel may be no more in remembrance. I'aalm 83. RECOVER THE LOOT T HAT public lands unlawfully ac quired could be, and should be, restored to the people, has always been the contention of The Jour nal. The restoration to the state school fund of nearly 10,000 acres in the Pa cific Livestock case is the latest proof of the merit of the policy. Before it we had the recovery of thousands of acres stolen from the state in the F A. Hyde operations. Restitution was secured through suits brought in the courts. Other examples are the Ore gon & California grant lands and the Coos Bay wagon road lands. Strangely enough, there has always been in Oregon an element that op posed recovery by the state of stolen lands. It has been an element with very great power. It was strong enough to put the notorious "mid night resolution" through the legisla ture. Of that resolution, when pre sented to it, the United States supreme court said: "The petition seems a prayer against the contention of the government." And that resolution, passed by an Oregon legislature, was a prayer against the government's contention and a brazen support by the legislature of the railroad's con tention. Back of that action there must have been powerful men. Exactly the same opposition appeared mysteriously and strangely in the Pacific Livestock case. Stealthy figures were in the hack ground, pulling strings and manipu lating the cards. The legislature was induced to with hold money with which to press the suit for recovery of the ill-gotten lands. That the lands were unlaw fully, held is now admitted by the company. in ,the compromise by which it voluntarily deeds back to the state a large part of its holdings. Though here is confession of unlawful posses sion, there were constant demands, both official and otherwise, that the suit he not pressed. If there had been no Journal news paper in Oregon, it is doubtful if Pa cific Livestock lands would have been restored. The Journal kept the evi dence of fraud in the case before the public. It printed and reprinted again and again the facts that even public officials were resisting the case. It was the one and only metropolitan newspaper In Oregon that backed up Governor West in his time, and later, Attorney General Brown, in their ef forts to recover the Pacific Livestock lands. The restitution of stolen lands in this case should stimulate people and officials to press on. Make the crooks give back their loot. Do not let the robbery go unchallenged just because the robbers happen to be rich. If the information coming from The Hague that the municipalities of Holland are Importing "American ehoes in an effort to break the high prices of the Dutch manufacturers" la true, the price of board feet over there must be enormous. BOOKS AND WAR BOOKS helped win the war. Good reading brightened the minds of men about to' go into action. Wounded soldiers found comfort in selected novels, poetry and travel stories. Technical works and text books on fundamental subjects play a large part in guiding the purpose for the future of men about to be re leased from service. These conclusions are inescapable after looking over an attractive pamph let issued by the American Library as sociation. The pictures of the little publication tell the story vividly. One sees the boys at the front clustered . in reading rooms. A crippled soldier is reading to one who has been blinded. Others whose sight has been lost are busily engaged In learning how to keep in touch with the treas ures of literature through the finger i touch on raised print. Sailors appear ' devouring publications of all kinds in ' reading rooms of naval stations or Clustered In every conceivable position on vessels of war. The liberal pat ronage of branch libraries maintained f.. In recreational buildings of welfare organizations is disclosed. Hospitals have their book racks for those able to read or to listen. It is evident that books from the Mexican border to the fields of France kept our men in uniform in touch with normal life, happy living and wholesome plans for the future. The most interesting statement in the review of the excellent service of the American Library association Is that Its work will go on and that library facilities will continue to be provided for every man in federal service. We beg, in legal parlance, to ex cept to the verdict of the Bend Jury that every dog: is entitled to one bite if it means that you or we are to be the victim. A CITIZEN'S SUGGESTIONS A' CITIZEN who reads with approval The Journal's statement that au tomobile drivers should be li censed as well as the motor cars, submits an outline of the qualifica tions he thinks should be required. According to his proposal, there should be a registration fee to cover the cost of administration, any bal ance to be used for streetrepair. No person under 18 years of age would be granted a certificate. The appli cant would answer the usual ques tions as to age, sex and occupation, experience as a driver and habits as regards intoxicants. Details would be given as to involvement in accidental or criminally careless accidents, and arrests. The make of car used and the pros pective driver's knowledge as to gear arrangement, gear shifts and the na ture and use of brakes would be in cluded. The inquiry would extend to the mental condition of the applicant, whether now or previously a sufferer from nervous or brain disorders. Abil ity to state the chief provisions of state and city traffic laws and ordi nances would be required, covering speed limits, rules of the road, sig nalling, the passing of street cars and other vehicles, the number and kind of lights permitted and the dis tance In front of the car where the direct rays of the headlight must strike the ground. If the applicant has been convicted of wantonly reckless driving, a bond would be required, its amount pro portioned to the seriousness of the police record. t Supporting affidavits of, say six property owners, would be required as to the truth of statements made and the responsibility of the applicant. Reduced to question and answer form the filling of such an applica tion looms as a formidable task. Yet it Is difficult to find a question sug gested which the person desiring to drive should not be able to answer if public safety is to be a factor in automobile operation. Occasionally the well known rule against the split infinitive can be excepted for the purposes of descrip tive emphasis. Note this definition of the I. W. W.: "A group of per sons formed to unlawfully, felon iously, and anarchlstically advocate, advise and teach crime, sedition, violence, intimidation and injury. ." It is a part of the com plaint against radicals held for the massacre of ex-service men at Cen tralia on Armistice day. INOPPORTUNE W ESTERN agriculture has come to a pretty pass if Chinese coolies must be imported to provide farm labor. Yet Frank C. Jor dan, California's secretary of state, has come to Oregon for the announced purpose of organizing a campaign to break down the exclusion laws. He is quoted as saying that American young men will, not work on the farms, that they like city life too well, and mat food production is suffering. It is an announcement that parallels the appeals for work for soldiers dis charged from military service. It Is a proposal offered at a moment when we are assured from other sources that workingmen drawn from the country and smaller communities by the handsome wages of war Industry are gradually returning whence they came. Likewise It Is a project contempora neous with statements setting forth the wealth of 1919 crops and the money reward allotted to tillers of the soil. It may be attractive to large em ployers of farm labor to consider the prospect of engaging yellow 6kinned toilers who will work for small wages. But wouldn't it be better to seek first to attract to the farms American men who with American initiative and en ergy can surely do more for agricul ture in this country than imported coolies? Bert Bland, captured Centralla I. W. W., states that he was accom panied in his abortive flight by one Ole Hansen. Et tu Brute. MUST BE RIGHT 1 T GOES without saying, or at least it ought to, that whenever Majority Leader Mondell, of the house, ad mits that he is "in accord with the president's action," then, and in that event, the chief executive must have had the right hunch, that start ling condition of affairs sprang into being with the president's veto of the Cummins railroad bill. The president in vetoing the Cum mins bill took the logical ground that so long as the railroads of the country were unaer me control of the govern ment, with the responsibility of their operation and maintenance resting solely upon it, the part of wisdom would require that federal authority should control railroad rates and reve nues, particularly those springing from intrastate traffic. Under the original federal control act the federal government was given the same power to fix, modify or amend intrastate fares, rates, classifi cations of practices that was given It in the regulation and control of inter state matters. The Cummins bill took away this authority by the provision that no intrastate regulation could be inaugurated or enforced by the gov ernment unless and until the local commission had first considered and approved it. "Since the authorities of each state would, under this bill, have full power to exercise an independent judgment," the president pointed out in his mes sage, "the probable result would have been to prevent any uniform practice at all, notwithstanding the fact that the federal government was in sole operation of the railroads and, as such, conducting the intrastate as well as the interstate operations. The im mediate effect of such a change in the law would be to deprive the federal government of the ability to cope promptly and decisively with operat ing emergencies which are now arising and must continue to arise during the existing period of heavy traffic." It sounds like good railroad operat ing logic, fr. Mondell says he "never had approved the bill" and that he is "in accord" with the president. It must be that the president is right and that his logic is sound. "With silver worth 5 cents more an ounce as bullion than as coin Isn't It about time for ua thrifty folk to melt up the ancestral teapot and trade it off for dollars? EFFECTIVE ARGUMENT T HE present policy of the govern ment in harbor and channel im provement causes it to pass by proposed betterments not dis- tinctly justified by necessity. Cooper ative effort by communities affected is also required. The prospect of steady and substantial commerce growth must be good. Portland has now before the en-1 gineer corps of the war department a petition for a 35-foot channel project to the sea. The divisional engineer officer has been gathering arguments in favor of the plan. These have been submitted voluminously. But in the multitude of pleadings none will speak louder, go farther or be more decisive than the declaration of the Port of Portland commission that it is ready to deepen the channel from Portland to the mouth of the Willamette to a depth of 35 feet and to give it adequate width. In the division of tasks between the government and the port It has al ways been regarded primarily as the duty of the Port of Portland to main tain the channel and harbor south of the confluence of the Willamette and Columbia. We are not in a fortified position to ask the government for approval and appropriation to carry through the greater projects unless we do our full share. Harbor improvement, port facilities, organization and support of steamship service, business getting connections with world ports these are the best arguments with which to convince the government that the 35-foot chan nel project should be adopted. The town marshal of a hamlet in Missouri has solved the problem of enjoying a quiet game of pool and keep the law on his side even when his wife comes to fetch him home. In this instance the wife entered the pool hall, pulled a gun and ordered him home, whereupon he arrested her for carrying concealed weapons. Now it only remains for all the hub bies who dislike to come early to have themselves deputized and when wifey appears, arrest her for disor derly conduct. THE CLAREMONT MURDER T I'lE Claremont murder fills the mind with regret and horror. Re gret that lives of worth and ac complishment to and for the com munity and the state should be so suddenly snuffed out by assassins' bullets; horror that such a grisly oc currence is possible in the day and place In which we live. J. N. Burgess was a strong man in his county and in the state. He had long taken a prominent part in civic affairs. He was always in the fore front of progress and advancement in Pendleton and in Umatilla county in matters -having the best interests of his home section at heart. No call was ever made upon him by his fellow citizens for personal or financial as sistance In the advancement of the public welfare that was not met with instant response. As a member of the state senate during several ses sions of the legislature he occupied a leading position and was recognized as oneof the strong men and balanc ing forces of that body. He had just entered upon his duties as a member of the state highway commission, bringing to that important adminis trative body a wise, well balanced and conservative business judgment and earnestness of purpose which would have been of great value to the good road construction program of the slate. George Perringer was also one of the strong men of Umatilla county. He, too, was one of the citizens who always met the. call of his city or his county in public matters, was always ready to serve by personal effort or by financial assistance to promote the public advancement. He was one of the largest wheat growers of Umatilla county and one of ts most substantial and progressive citizens. Not a holder of public office, Mr. Perringer was less before the eye of the state than Com missioner Burgess, but the service he gave the public in the ranks was just as loyal and just as efficient within its scope and jurisdiction. Both were men such as the .state can not well afford to lose, which makes their passing all the more to be regretted, and the manner of it all the more terrible. The reports of boys from 15 to 18 committing burglaries, stealing auto mobiles and footpadding raise the question if the indictment of cul prits should not also include their parents. BROAD AND FUNDAMENTAL r HE president has outlined a broad and fundamental platform upon which the new industrial confer ence just called by him must stand in its effort to reach a sane and lasting solution for the discordance and unrest afflicting the nation. In his designation of the new group appointed to wrestle with the subject he tells them "that all of the new rep resentatives should have concern that our industries may be conducted with such regard for justice and fair deal ing that the workman will feel himself induced to put forth his best efforts, that the employer will have an en couraging profit, and that the public will not suffer at the hands of either class." He also points the goal which the nation will hope may be reached by the conference when he says: "It is my hope that this conference may lay the foundation for the develop ment of standards and machinery within our industries by which these results may be attained." There is this difference between the proposed conference and the prior one which so signally failed to pro gress. In that there "is no recognition of distinctive groups" in the present appointments, which recognition was j the rock upon which the first confer- ence wrecked itself. Thus the con- ferees when they convene in Washing ton the first of the coming month, will not enter the council chamber by separate doors and face each other with hostile instincts and opposing interests from the first. The nation will watch the coming conference with as much interest as it did the old. There undoubtedly ex ists somewhere between the opposing lines of capital and of labor a common ground where both might meet in co operative harmony. It ought not to be impossible to find this neutral zone and bring the warring forces together upon it. Nor should it be impossible to discover some just and fair means, some equitable and unbiased machin ery of negotiation and determination, by which industrial difficulties and disputes could be smoothed and ad justed. The conference will front a grave problem. The world is settling slowly back into peace after international war. it is not making so mucn prog ress in the establishment of indus trial peace. The world is looking from its four corners towards Amer ica, the world leader in industry, for it to find the path to industrial peace. The solution of the puzzle is a duty America owes to its own people and the people of the world. A world authority on vital statis tics informs the national convention of the American Institute of Actu aries that fat people die sooner than the lean. Maybe, but think of the food and fun the skinny fellows miss during their extended span. BREWING THE KICK IS5 CORA STODDARD, director of the bureau of scientific temper ance investigation of the V. C. T. U., tells the convention of that order, gathered at St. Louis, that "a large number of women," from Ver mont on the one hand, to California on the other, are busily engaged in the presumably exhilarating pastime Qf "making wine and other intoxicants of elderberries, dandelions, cherries and many other fruits and vegetables." She reports that during the past sum mer she found a "surprising number of'women" so engaged, and urges thit the organization "must go after these women as well as the men." . It is an Interesting story, and with out much doubt Is true. The surpris ing thing about It is that the gentler sex should be plunging so generally and so recklessly into the avocation of brewing homemade moonshine. Probably in the exercise of the com monly imputed feminine instinct they are doing it just because they have been officially notified that they can't, rather than because they want to drink, or to imbibe the stimulating potations they may brew. But, aside from the naughtiness of It, may it not be possible that Miss Stoddard has stumbled upon one of the causes of the present sugar short age which is making so many of the rank and file lose its wonted sweet ness of disposition? We have been told at different times during the past year or so that the demand for sugar, candy and other sweets has increased in almost direct ratio with our in creasing drouth. Candy makers tell us of an enormous increase in the demand for their wares, even in the face of continually upward climbing prices, and we have been taking It for granted that this increase Was eat ing up the sugar surplus to make those who do not eat candy grow sour. V However, if it be true, as Miss Stod dard reports, that the kitchens and the cellars of the nation are bubbling with the clandestine activities of ama teur brewmistresses is it not only possible but probable that the de mands of the industry are making heretofore unknown inroads upon the sugar supply of the country? That "you can't get a kick without sugar" seem to be a maxim of the brewing business, long established by commer cial practice and experience, and the more sugar the more kick. Maybe the ladies, sweet though they may be, in their efforts to brew the unlawful kick, sweet though it may be, are assisting materially in making the nation more sour though not so dry. SABOAGE REARS HEAD IN SENATE Lodge Succeeds in Placing Emery in the Cogs. Satan himself never rebuked sin more Bternly than did Henry Cabot Lodge when he told thi senate Tuesday that "the sooner a country as unfaclle in dealing with the affairs of other coun tries as the "United States has shown it self to be in the last year takes itself out of any relationship to the affairs of other nations, the better it will be for this country and the world." After devoting a year to snarling up the already complicated affairs of a world prostrated by war. Senator Lodge points triumphantly to the achievements of himself and his associates as proof that the United States is Incapable of playing any part in international rela tions. During the first eight months that followed the armistice. Lodge and his partisan colleagues exerte all their ef forts to discredit the president of the United States In Europe and add to the enormous difficulties in the way of negotiating peace. WThen the treaty was finally framed and signed, they dedicated Vthe following four months to schemes to mutilate it and destroy it so far as the United States is concerned. There is hardly a nation associated with the United States in war which they have not publicly insulted. There is not a scheme of imperialistic politics advanced in Europe during that time to which they have not given aid and comfort. There would have been peace long ago in the world if it had not been for the United States senate, and the leader of the United States senate is Henry Cabot Lodge. The senate is fond of calling itself the president's "partner" in the negotiation Df treaties. It is his "partner" in the same sense in which it is his partner in the appointment of a United States mar shal for the eastern district of Arkansas. In both cases its "advice and consent" is necessary. In the matter of a United States marshal the "advice and con-, sent" of a majority of the senators is sufficient. In the matter of a treaty the "advice and consent" of two-thirds of the senators is required. Because a small minority of the sen ate can defeat a treaty, senators have usurped a power which they would not dare try to exercise in respect to ap pointments. When the president names John Doe for United States marshal in Arkansas, no senator seeks to substitute the name of Richard Roe. Nor does he introduce amendments and reservations providing that the marshal must be at least 6 feet tall and weigh not less than 187 pounds. That is the way, however, the senate proceeds in respect to treaties, and in this instance it is not only the foreign affairs of the country which it has muddled but the domestic affairs as well. It is quite as much an obstacle to reconstruction as to peace, and, car rying the Lodge argument to its logical conclusion, it proves that Intelligent and progressive government cannot be car ried on under such a senate and such a leadership. If that is what Senator Lodge started out to demonstrate he has successfully maintained his thesis. The senate fili buster on the peace treaty is the break down of government, the failure of one of its branches to function even in the midst of a world emergency and a world crisis. Senator Lodge may find reasons for pride in the collapse that he has helped to bring about, but if he does. It is the kind of pride that a member of the I. V. W. takes in his successful sabotage er forts to put emery dust in the bearing of an engine and thereby wreck the ma chinery. Letters From the People r Cnmmnnirations sent to The Journal for publication in this department should be written on only one side ol uie paper, snouiu not nctcu 300 words in length, and must be signed bj the writer, whose mail address in full must accom pany the contribution. J For the Pure Type Geer. Wash.. Nov. 19. To the Editor of The Journal The United States de partment of agriculture and othes pub lic and private agencies have inaugu rated a country-wide campaign in favor of pure breeds of all kinds of livestock. No arguments are needed, as the bene fits are self-evident. Yet it is only too true, that the campaign is needed. The main cry is for the pure-bred male, and rightly, because "he is half the herd.' I believe that he is even more, in some lines, because egg laying and milk-giv ing proclivities seem to be transmitted from mother to son and from son to daughter, rather than in a straight line; according to recent Investigations. But like every other good thing, the predilec tion for pure-breds can be carried too far, run Into a craze, by some people. Prof. Dryden of the O. A. C. has shown that it is the "type" rather than the "breed" In chickens, that guaran tees performance at the egg basket. Bet ter for a male to have super-excellent layers in his ancestry, if of the "type,' even if white and brown Leghorns or even others of the Mediterranean egg types, are mixed, than that they be less good layers, though "bred to the feather." of one variety of a breed, say pure White Leghorns. In other words better have pure egg type of excellent, though mixed variety, than pure variety of a less good performing ancestry. Another striking example is the milch goat. The several varieties of the Swiss milch goats, as well as the German varieties, the Spanish, the Maltese, etc have for ages been bred with one object in view, that is, milk production. The Swiss breeds, Toggenburg and Saanen, seem to head the list. Now I would, ten to one, rather have a sire that Is a crossbred between the two varieties, if of super-excellent ancestry, than a pure bred of either, if of less good ancestry. People who have the money, can and do pay $15,000 for a pure-bred Toggenburg buck, as did J. T. Gordan, when he bought Alessandro, and make it pay, too. But we can not all own such animals. we can not all live In Jerusalem, as the saying is, "some must needs live in Bethlehem." I am not speaking against the pure-bred variety, but in its favor very strongly. But where a choice must be made. I prefer the pure type if of better ancestry, to the pure variety I am speaking for the little boy or the little girl with the milk pail or the egg basket. R. STUEHCK. Drift Casks in the Arctic From the Philadelphia, Public Ledger Sergeant P. R. Conway of the Royal isormwest Mounted Police has reported I to the Philadelphia Geographical society THANKSGIVING By Hannah COME forth, come forth, to the festjl board, As our sires were wont in the das of old; The reapers are home with their harvest hoard. The herds have hied to their wintry fold. And the cullers of fruit our vaults have stored With the wealth of the orchard's freight of sold. Come forth, come forth with your heart-felt praise. To swell the songs at the altar's side For a lofty paean to God we raise. Who hath scattered His love gifts ire and wide. And still, from the wan earth's earliest days. His seed-time and harvest hath not denied. We halow the day as our fathers did. With a mingling of gladness and praise and prayer, With a willing boon for the lowliest shed. That the hungry and podr in our thanks may share, And the scantiest table be freely spread. And the lip of the mourner a blessing bear. For the sos of the feeble pilgrim band Who irst on a distant rock-bound bay Gave thanks for the gifts of the teeming land. Have spread over mountain and stream away; And a song of praise shall to God ascend From a myriad of burning lips today. Come forth, come forth, with the chiming bell. A joyous throng to the altar's side; Come mingle your tones with the organ's swell; And, where the door of the feast stands wide. Let the gray-haired sire to his grandchild tell, A tale of our nation's grateful pride. IMPRESSIONS AND OBSERVATIONS OF THE JOURNAL MAN By Fred Lockley The appropriateness of a memorial on Mount Rubidoux to those who fell oYerseas is pointed out by Mr. Lockley. The first Riverside boy to be killed in the war was Louis Rubidoux. His grand father, Louis Rubidoux, owned the land on which the city of Riverside is located. Recently, I stood at the foot of the cross, on the summit of Mount Rubidoux, just as dusk. Below me lay the city of Riverside. In the west, the rose and old gold of the sunset was fading to neutral tints of pearl and gray. As 1 stood there in the twilight of the Indian summer day, the dusk faded to darkness. The crescent moon and the starlight seemed to make the cross faintly luminous. The twinkling lights in the city below seemed the reflection of the twinkling lights above. Here and there, the light of an automobile or street car, flitting back and forth on the tree-shaded streets, seemed like the, flitting of fire flies, as I have seen them at Libourne or St. Emilion in France in the warm dusk of a summer day. The fragrant breeze that came from the nearby orange groves reminded me of the poppy scented fields of France. The wooden cross on Rubidoux brought to my mind "Flanders fields, where the poppies blow, between the crosses, row on row." Cities, like individuals, have individu ality. The whole atmosphere of River side is redolent of the long-gone days of the brown-robed Mission Fathers. The palms and pepper trees, planted by these Franciscan priests, have turned Cali fornia into a land of verdure and beauty. The first public ceremony by white men to take place on Rubidoux moun tain was on Washington's birthday, 1905, when Jacob Rlis unfurled an American flag on the summit of the mountain. A hundred years or more ago, the Indian tribes used to gather for peace councils on Rubidoux mountain. A large hol lowed stone, blackened by the fires of many years, tells of their council fires. Mount Rubidoux was not only the coun cil crest of the Indians, but was also their lookout and signal station. The long-dead priests of the old Mis sion days seem to have left their bene diction on the land, and it Is peculiarly appropriate that the citizens of Riverside have erected, on the summit of Rubidoux mountain, a cross in memory of Fra Junipero Serra, for to the labors of this priest, more than any other one person, is due the success of the work of the Missions in California. He died in 1784, at the age of 71 years. A cross, on the crest of Rubidoux mountain, was erected to him and was dedicated on April 26, 1907, by the Right Reverend Thomas J. Conaty, bishop of Monterey and Los An the recovery of another of the "drift casks" which Henry G. Bryant and the late Admiral Melville of this cityset afloat in the Arctla 20 years ago to determine the direction of tidal cur rents. The cask was put out by Cap tain B. T. Tilton, of the steam whaler Alexander, off Cape Bathurst, 20 years ago. It was picked up by David Picto gane, an Eskimo, on an Island off the south shore of Franklin Bay, June 18. 1918.- It has traveled 75 miles In 19 years which is slow voyaging, even for the Arctic. Originally Mr. Bryant, our most en- thusastic and persistent geographer, and the admiral had launched 35 drift casks, north of Alaska and British North America, and six of these have now been reported. One traveled to the north ernmost tip of Iceland ; one floated to Soro island, south of Hammerfest, Nor way ; three landed at points compara tively near, on the Siberian coast and elsewhere. The fact that the latest cask recovered Is intact, its spindle shape and its stout construction of solid oak en abling It to resist waves and the grind ing ice, shows that In years to come there is a good chance of recovering others. More Regard for Votes From the East Oregonian. Complaint is being made and seeming ly with justice that our national law makers are more Interesjjgd in the sol dier vote than they are in the men who wore the uniform in the war. The most astounding Indifference yet shown In either body is the refusal of the appropriations committee of the sen ate to act on the bill passed two months ago by the house under which com pensation for soldiers totally disabled in the war is raised from J30 a month to J80 a month with additional allowances for dependents. This bill, known aB the Sweet bill, and containing all the im proved features of the War Risk Insur ance legislation has laid on the table of the committee seven weeks without action. Meanwhile the proposed im provements to soldiers' insurance af fecting 4.000,000 ex-service men cannot be put into effect. Meanwhile, also, 200,000 disabled men are drawing $30 a month and fractions of $30 a month, when they ought to be getting a living compensation. To the lay mind this neglect of con gress is inexcusable. Even if congress does not see fit to pay a higher bonus to service men in general there can be no room for debate over the propriety of cariner for the wounded men. Those men did their duty, their physical needs should be cared for without haggling. No Longer a Hoodoo From the Des Moines Register The man who used to sneer at the $2 bill has reformed to the extent he Is always glad to see that it isn't a $1 I bill. E. G. Arey geles. A bronze tablet on a rock near the cross bears this inscription "The beginning of civilization in California. Fra Junipero Serra, Apostle, Legislator and Builder. To commemorate his good works this tablet is here placed. Un veiled by William Howard Taft, twenty seventh president of the United States, October 12th, A. D. 1909." At the open air service on the summit of Mount Rubidoux on Kaster morning, 1913, Henry Vim Dyke read his poem, "God of the Open Air," and at each Kas ter service since that day this poem has been read. Sitting on the bare granite rocks, as one sees the cross on Rubidoux silhouetted against the evening sky, Henry Van Dyke's beautiful lines come to one's mind Anil so, on Kaster morn. His Tirtory won. Breaking the mortal bars that sealed "ie tomb, In a fair garden filled with flowers ofblooin. The risen Sariour met the rising sun. Him will I trust, and fur my Master take. Him will I follow, and for His dear sake God of the open air, to Thee I make my prayer. The citizens of Riverside are planning, as a memorial to their hero dead, to have some great sculptor carve, from one of the huge boulders, on the top of Mount Rubidoux, a figure of the risen Lord. They are planning to secure, from some war-torn field of France or Belgium, a cross, which they can bring here and re-erect where the gaze of the statue of the risen Lord will ever rest upon it. Their thought Is to help restore some shattered church and to furnish it with a new cross, in exchange for the one which they will secure there and erect on the summit of Mount Rubidoux. They believe that this will be a bond of friendship to the two communities, and, to all who visit this spot, it will be a sacred shrine and a perpetual reminder of those who spilled the red wine of their youth in France or Flanders. They be lieve that a statue of the risen Christ, the Prince of Peace, would be a more appropriate- monument to those who gave their lives that the world might be a better place for men to live In, than if they brought captured cannon or other grim reminders of shell-torn field and bloody trench. They think of their sons who will never return their herb dead as did Lieutenant J. H. Yates, who "rites: These are the young, the strong, the lie. the brave. Who, waiving their just claim to life's full worth. To future generations gladly gaTe The treasures which belonged to them nn earth. We dare not let them count for naught. They gave their all to death, and we must gWe Our bent to life! Their pain and loss hare taught A lesson to our profit; arid the cost They paid that earth might be a better place Tor men to life in, will he basely lost By us: How then should we hate heart to face That world that lies beynml death's open door. Where we shall see our great lored dead once moref The True Spirit of nomocracy From Detroit News Class making in the United States is hard business. Maybe that is because the very idea of class is opposed to the fundamental theory of Americanism, but, at any rate, wherever an attempt has been made to Isolate and designate and keep distinct an American class failure has resulted. This was never better Illustrated than In the late industrial conference. This, it will be remembered, nad a tripartite organization the employers' group, the labor group and the group rep resenting the public. The failure of such a scheme was fore-ordained, be cause there was but one group In whose favor any decision could have stood without contention. The public group, which means only the group representing the United States of America all the people of this nation was the only group whose right ought to have been considered If democracy is to have its sway. There will always be diversity of Interests among Individuals and associa tions of individuals, but in the last re sort the will of the majority must tri umph or the experiment of popular rule must be declared a failure. And this attitude must be attained In spirit and In truth by all who hope either individually or by corporate or as sociative action to bring about direction of public policy. The will of big busi ness as big business must not be thrust upon the American people; the demands of labor as labor must not be enforced against the desires and the sense of jus tice of the general public; no group or organization of people can by extra governmental influence or power work their will to the detriment of the people without doing violence to the very prin ciple of democracy. It is useless for any group so en gaged to plead, "We are good Amer icans." The test of Americanism is ac cordance with the principles of govern ment by all the people. Canal Under Jerusalem From Popular Meclianics If the proposals of a Norwegian engi neer are carried out, there will soon be a subterranean canal directly under the citv of Jerusalem to the Dead sea. irrigating the wilderness of Judea, and Drovding copious electric power at the mouth of the Jordan. For the Dead sea, that strange body of heavy saline water, is 1292 feet below the level of the Mediterranean, and not more than 50 miles away. An ample electrical supply, available for the modernizing of the Holy City and other communities that have made no progress since their names were recorded In the manuscripts of the Bible, la an interesting prospect The Oregon Country Northwest Hipenintfs in Brief Form fo tot Busy Header. Ortl'XJON NOTES Coyotes are coming in from the hills and killing sheep in the Ueaverlon neighborhood. Three cars of fat hogs and one car of steers were shipped from Gold Hill to Portland this week. Edgar Forest raised 7000 sacks of po tatoes this year on 130 acres of dry land in Umatilla county. The city tax levy of Cottage Cirove for isio will be $2000 larger than that of this year, the total being $16,000. James Drown, city marshal at Myrtla Point for ninny years, lias resigned as the result of criticism by the American Legion post. - " Eighteen I. W. W. who were arrested a week ago at Tillamook have been bound over to the grand jury on charges of criminal syndicalism. The shooting of Klmer llolilman bv an armed thug last Monday has started a general round-up of unemployed bv the sheriff of that county. , An overheated stove destroyed the home of n Van Ordstrand at The Dalles and left nothing for the family, except the clothes they wore. With the eceitpon of the Nehalem and Columbia fixers the fall fishing reason has ended. The season lias Iwcn a disappointment to the canncrs. Out of r.'l children in the Athena schools who were recently tested by the county health nurse, only two were found to be below standard weight. Coal of splendid analy?,s and appar ently of considerable nuantltv Ins heen found at slight depth m the Sams valley and Meadows district of Douglas ceun ty. Martin Hanson of Ticnd has lost sev eral head of valuable tattle as the re sult of eat Inn hemlock, w hich Is found along the water courses of Deschutes county. Walter Hunt, aired 2S, son of John Hunt of Westport, met instant death nt the Big Creek Logging company's plant In Clatsop county Friday In an effort to stop a runaway flatcar. Oheesemakcrs at Tillamook are highly gratified at the fact that ehe.se made in that city won the sixth first prize and tied for the seventh at the I'juiiie International Livestock exhibit inn. A post of the American Legion was organized at Canyon I'Hy Friday night and tunned Irving 1011 is Tiacy post, in honor of a Canyon City boy who lost his life during tlie war. WASHINGTON Enrollments in the Edward IV Rhodes post of the American Legion at Tacoma now total nearly loOO. H. M. Chambers, mayor of Albion, has resigned owing to a dispute In the coun- ell over the paving of streets. William floodenoiigh was struck by a train at a railroad crossing at Ilntton and Instantly killed Thursday afternoon. Offlc' rs visited the homo of Augustine Tarretia, near Walla Walla, Thursday, and seized 300 gullons of home-made wine. The Lewis county turkey crop is the largest in the history of the comity, and contract prices have reached 35 cents liveweight. A contrnct for concrete work on the east entrance to the viaduct at Aber- j neen nas oeen lei io ine uniya jiuiuui Building company ror .lii,J'.il.4. ; Five thousand gallons of tomato cat sup, seized under the pure food act, were destroyed at Spokane this week by the United States marshal. The lot was worth J40H0. l.'nited States Commissioner McClel land lias quashed the search warrant under which the Seattle Union Record was seized and the paper has been re turned to Its owners. The federal immigration department has refused to deport 13 aliens arresled at Centralla unless the state can prove that each of the aliens actually prcuchvd I. W. W. propaganda. Russell Lynn, an Aberdeen high school boy student and an ex-service man. Is under arrest charged with the theft of postofflce money orders and other prop- ' erty from postofflce sub-stations. Whtl indulging in an Imitation of an I. W. W. hunt near their home in Yak ima, Hollo Goldsmith aged 1,',. was shot and fatally Injured by a .22 ilfle in the hands of his playmate. Orvllle Dennis. Six-cent street car fares In Seattle are imminent as the resull of the city coun cil voting that repairs and riTalnteriance of streets between the trai ks shall he paid fur out of the revenue from the lines. Although the strike of pressmen In the Job offices of Seattle has heen ordered off by the International union, the strik ers refuse to Hhlde by the order and have voted to remain out another 10 days before returning to uik. IDAHO W. W. Deal of Nampa wax reelected chaplain of the National Grange at the annual convention in Grand Kaplds, Mich. Idaho ranks Keventh In the United States in 11M3 potato production with 6S30 cars, according to the latest bulle tin of the crop reporting service. The. Uecla Mining company ha de clared Its regular quarterly dividend of $100,000. The declaration Is at the rate of 10 cents a share on 1,000,000 shares. The West Peark Oil Ac Gas company of Pennsylvania has completed an oil rig on Goose creek, near Oakley, and will Immediately begin drilling for oil. James V. Hllss, an I. W. W. organizer, pleaded guilty to criminal syndicalism In the district court at Lcw-lston and was sentenced to 10 years In the penitentiary. A total of 3.") suspected I. W. W. have been rounded up In Sandpolnt and vi cinity during the last few days, and will be tried under the criminal syndicalism law. Because of 111 health. Gns Johnson,-23-year-old son of Krlc Johnson, com mitted suicide at Pocatello by ("hooting himself In the loft breast with a shot gun. Investment of $260,000 of state funds In United States Liberty bonds has Just been announced by, C. A. Klmer, head of the state department of public Invest ments. Setting aside 1,118.000 acres of land in the Thunder mountain region ad ditional forest reserves th federal gov ernment has made available for the state of Idaho 83,600 acres of now school lands. CKNKRAL The United Slates Grain corporation announces that embargoes on wheat ami wheat fiour will be lifted Decem ber 15. The attorney general of Great Britain is going forward with active prepara tions for the trial of the former kaiser In London. Specialists say that William K. John son, the American Anti-Saloon league campaigner who was mobbed In London, will lose the Right of one eye. Uncle Jeff Snow Says: Down in San Antone, Texas, along .".bout the time Garfield hadn't ytt been heard of outside of Ohio, .Nick Stewart come up from the lower fork of Big Handy with a span of rearln' and rarin" black stallions hitched to a sprier wagon an' tore round that town some thin' fierce. Nick was bad enough sober but when he hitched Old John P.arley corn to the combine an' run over a couple of little black pickaninnies .the" fined him $10. The next day he run down a school marin an' .ledge Camp bell fined him $100. Right away after that Nick smashed up a baby buggy and before he got hack to the stables run over a crippled fiddler some-thin scand'lus. Then .Tedge Campbell pent him to the chain gang fer !0 days and though Nick offered to pay JlO.Ooo fine he hadt'r serve. It was a sure cure and Nick sold them hosses and went back to his ranch, dead certain that there was a law to reach the rich an' reck less in the Lone Star state o' Texas. Also he and a lot of other folks was more patriotic an' law abidln'. It sura did a lot of good to see that almost millionaire pickln' dirt In the street.