.v. THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND. MONDAY, DECEMBER IS, 1919. r " . . . i t;- Sunday toK JJ S3. PaiMInC - Broadway and TmbM" wfc Pottlead, Onos- bntared a the Postotttce rvrum for liuntak throngs - eises wttit, ' - ' " ' AU Sapartaseats red br tteee J" Tag, the omrU what department yog waat. ............ imniriina . 22 Fifth tcsm. Kew Torts SOW aiaiieis Building. Chicago. ' - ' - SubMdptlon term, by null, w to aav address to Ui liatiea staies ov '"" A nl. .imo ('On nontk S .80 n : .. ' " t ma I Om month t -26 iiTWw mAMmri OR A ITEBNOON ) AND ' STJNDAT . n-. 1T.B0 I One month S . ' VW I II I flTT -pp m m uuiiui Mt mitten and never com mit a (suit 1 above the fore of human naum.- Plutarch 1h RUNNING FOR PRESIDENT S ENATOR HIRAM JOHNSON for mally announces that he is run ding for president. - ' .Everybody knew months ago i thai -he was running for president. ' He hasn't been doing anything else since he went to the senate but run " for president. Every act of his in that body n" been, is, and will be, ; 'attuned to the thought of whether - "it .will help him run for president. ;When he: Joined Lodge and con- verted a seven months' session of the senate, called for reconstruction, into a seven months' session, of destruo- - tlon,. Johnson was running for presi dent.; ;, ' When the senate's course on the ' treaty caused cancellation of Euro pean orders for vast quantities of goods . at American factories, to the great, hurt of American business, Johnson was running for president. When Hiram Is running for presi dent he is running for president. A , treaty that saved and secured all that American young men fought for and died for, that substitutes arbitration for war and that brings about dls- armament of the nations, matters nothing , at all to him when he is ' running for president. It Is nothing to hold up business, Id humbly seek a separate peace with frmany, to desert and alienate the biggest and best nations in the world, when HI ram hits the trail to the White. lloustf. He Was running for president when he followed Mr. Wilson through the Middle if West, misrepresenting the treaty. He was running for presi dent, as we all know now, when he f Ireworksed out to California. He was doubtless running at lung range for president when he stuck a stiletto into Judge Hughes' back in California in the presidential campaign of 1916. As the Swede said In reporting his failure to collect a bill, "It will be a cold day" when Hiram isn't running for' president. , ; ; Doubtless former Mayor Simon will hasten to modify the price of the five acre playground tract in Sunnyslde upon the showing that by some inadvertence the purchase price agreed upon is nearly twice the assessed valuation. He will without .question recall. sympathetically, from the experience of his own ad ministration, the city's difficulty in obtaining property for public use at anywhere near the valuation deemed reasonable for the purposes of pub lic .taxation. It may be expected that'' former Mayor Simon will en tertain, such sentiments of affection i and loyalty for the community which has honored him that he will desire, to make special concessions in the price of land that Is to be used for tha. happiness of little children. ' . . ' J AS IN PORTLAND nPOIANB has commission govern ; pent and likes the plan. J Xike Portland, It abandoned the I : - -aldermanlo system because gov-i 1 eminent under that plan was honey combed with Inefficiency and corrup ' tlon,-. Charges of graft were bandied about, ,and there was little confidence in publio affairs. ;-vuTbe;;'edmmi8Sion system went into effect nlne yjears ago. Five commis sioners ire elected, and they in turn choose a mayor from one of their number. The mayor and commission ers receive the same compensation.. Originally, they were paid $5000 a year; . Two years after the system went into effect their salaries were reduced by popular vote to $3600. Two ; years ago. effort was made to restore the original salaries, but the measure was, decisively beaten in a popular election. : . . ' In Spokane, as in Portland, there is far: greater confidence now, city gov ernment is cleaner and more efficient ; under the j commission - system. All public transactions are In the open and everybody knows what Is go- In contrast with the aldermanlo sys tem under which nobody knew any thing about anybody in municipal; of ; flcialdorn. everybody now knows ex actly where earb official stands and Just what he is" dying:' It Js ciulized 8l government instead of menagerie gov ernment. ' ' . , - Jf At Spokane there is no hint or sug gestion of going back to the old plan. There is some complaint to the effect that officials might be stronger men. That,' however, is usual under every form of government .There never win be an official upon whose quali fications everybody will agree. ,cK , On one point, however, - there is agreement: Wherever; it has , been fairly tried, commission government is universally regarded as superior to the old aldlrmanio form. As usual. President Wilson goes to th heart of the matter in a sen tence. The remedy for our ills, he says, Is a greater popular knowl edge of American institutions. It la the kind of government America has that keeps us free of the terrlbl Turk and the horrors of Armenia, that makes the tyranny of czar or kaiser but a matter of distant report, and that withholds a chance for suc cess only from the enemies of public welfare. NEVER SUCH SENTIMENT IF ERE je resolutions unanimously adopted by a Portland club: Whereas: The Klwanis club of Portland finds that automobile ac cidents have increased In the city of Portland at an alarming rate: that they have mounted 100 per wit In the last two years, there having been more than 8000 traffic accidents In which 117Z per sons were Injured and SS killed since January 1, 1919 ; and that these acci dents are gravely menacing life and limb in this city, and Whereas: All accidents are the result of carelessness 'on the part of either drivers or pedestrians, and are prevent able, and measures to reduce the num ber of collisions and resultant Injuries and deaths are imperative; therefore be It Resolved: That the Klwanis club of Portland, heartily indorses an educa tional campaign . to Impress upon the public the exigencies of care In driving cars and crossing streets; that drivers of automobiles be required to secure a copy of, and become familiar with the traffic ruleS; that It unqualifiedly sup port the police department in enforce ment of traffic laws, and be It Resolved : That the Klwanis club of Portland support a movement to secure the passage of a state law requiring the driver of a car to carry a license Issued by the secretary of state, permitting him to drive a car; aid in tne passage oi other laws Intended to afford safety on the streets, and that each member appoint himself a' committee of one to assist In reducing the mounting ton oi accidents. There never has been in Portland such a sudden and unanimous awak ening of sentiment as has appeared in the campaign for accident prevention. No fewer than 18 clubs and business organizations have joined the move ment. The resolution of the Klwanis club is a 'sample of the action taken. The fire prevention campaign cut the fire losses from $6.78 per capita to 92 cents. In that movement there wf a us )i fvi artifact at Iat Af TtiiKl !rt nt n (to In tha nroa- -.iHn ,..: ,riv anmA bitterly opposed fire prevention. Some Portland newspapers fought it. One of them referred to the firemen de tailed for the work as "match Inspec tors." Yet that drive was highly suc cessful. There Is noN such opposition to ac cident prevention. Publio sentiment is unanimously and emphatically in favor of it. The people are tired of killings and mutilations chargeable to Ignorant, incompetent and irrespon sible drivers and thoughtless pedes trians. There can be but one result. The number of accidents will be halved if not quartered. Over the telegraph wire we learn that Ban Johnson is still cxar of the American league. After all the talk about dethroning him. Ban showed that he had the votes. CHAUNCEY OLCOTT T HERE is always a sweet phil osophy in a Chauncey OlcoU play. Speaking of the gratitude of his tenants for the new cot tages and for the land to be worked on shares instead of cash rent, he explained as Sir Dryan that a tear drop conveys more of meaning than all the words of thankfulness. In kindred maxims, and In the inevit able moral of sincerity and honesty and honor and generous purpose that his plays always express, Mr. Olcott has impressed many an audience and many a human being with thoughts that were good for them. Then there is the sweetness and the soul in the songs he sings. The old ones and the new are always fresh when he gives them under the magic touch of the human feeling that he throws into them. "Mother Machree," as he renders It, touches his audience into deep silence with its opening notes, and holds all lulled and waiting until the last sound dies away. All who hear it must have a freshened love and renewed devotion for the gentle, being that the world knows as "mother." There is always a laugh with the tear in an Olcott production. Laughs and an: occasional tear are a good mixture to spread before people. They are light tears that the laugh wipes away, to let the auditor go home with a sweeter outlook and a fresh ened heart It would be a happy incident If Chauncey Olcott could go on playing his plays and singing his songs for ever. Men and women would be the better for it. As one wing needs the other, two recent suggestions of the dock eom- misslon .are . interdependent. The first propotal Is that the city limits be extended' to include the several thousand acres -still outside the mu nicipal boundary lines on the penin suia beyond st. Johns. The other l!? ult fhe JPorjland Hallway, Llsht afe Power company extend it lino to the St. Johns terminal, so that men employed; there 'will not bo ' com pelled to walk the long distance to and from their work. It the ex tremity "of lthe" peninsula Is made part of the city, municipal authority would probably' be more effective In Inducing ' he street car, roraptny giro the service required. ..THE PATIENT ASS 5 f-lHIS telegram was sent by a Port- T lander to Carl Gray, newly named head of the Union Pacific : . Congratulations to country as well u tn toil under tout direction i pre dict utmost support and co-operation of Oregon country to your grea company. Ra Aavtnnnwint and eTOWth will fol low in aU sections served by your road If public interest Is promoted at fair cost and If labor and capitalistic profi teers are not allowed to reap the harvest of other people s work. It was profiteering that brought the railroad lines into their present sorry situation. Over night, the capi talization of lines was sometimes doubled by injection of watered stock Literal millions so-called capital was added to the capitalisation by the mere stroke of a pen. The shares were divided up among the magnates or sold to Innocent purchasers, and on these paper shares- the public was required to pay dividends. Only one result could ultimately come b ankrupteyor near bank-. ruptcy. The plants could aot carry the tremendous overhead. The busi ness could not stand up under the dizzy, reckless and dishonest system of finance. The public could not al ways go en paying increased rates with which to yield profits on these colossal frauds. A trouble now in proposed legisla tion at Washington Is that the Cum mins bill proposes a 6 per cent re turn on a railroad valuation of $20,- 000,000,000. There are those who in sist that a . great deal of this proposed $20,000,000,000 is watered stock, and that the. lines are entitled to no sucn return oa mere paper capital. An in vestigation by the interstate com merce commission has found a real valuation reported at only $12,000, 000,000. A guarantee of 6 per cent would mean a 25 per cent increase in freight rates. This would mean a per capita cLarge of $45 on every man, woman and child in the nation. Whether shippers or not, in the ultimate the rate must be paid by the consumer. Thus, when the big railroad profiteers were getting millions of dollars for nothing, when they were piling up huge fortunes within a few years, they were creating colossal charges and debts for that patient ass, the public, to pay. If, in addition to the 25 per cent Increase In rates recently piled on, another 25 per cent increase Is to come, it will be consequent from UJ u umj nuauvc uu tlonate profiteering practiced by cap- tains of railroad Industry before gov ernment regulation and supervision began. These sins of the past have had an other effect: Groups of workers have seen the big exploiters enrich them selves by profiteering with railroad securities. They saw the fruits of their own work swallowed up by reckless financiers. They saw those exploiters heralded and proclaimed as great men. From such an example a psychology has been created in which it is the Impulse for workers to in sist that they be also permitted to have larger profits. And thus grow ing burdens are imposed upon the public, that public' upon which every burden is cast and which must suffer helplessly from every added exaction. Happily, Carl Gray Is a railroad president of the new and four-square school. Because, as she expressed it, his Vibrations did not harmonize" with hers, Mrs. Lillian Streeter, Los An geles, said she couldn't live longer with her husband. He gave her the ranch and got out. "Vibrations" is a good name for it. A YEAR'S WORK A' YEAR ago the Oregon State Chamber of Commerce was or ganized. The report of its secretary in preparation for the first annual meeting shows that the body has devoted itself with direct ness to activities that Influence the development of the state. Inquirers have been directed to the land .and protected against exploitation. In dustries needing locations and com munities needing industries have been brought together. A committee is at work on the ever hopeful but much deferred project of rendering logged-off lands available for agricul ture. The organization was represent ed in the telephone and rate cases af fecting the commercial Interests that had affiliated with the state Chamber of Commerce. Highway construction. agricultural development, railroad transportation, and even a road along the ridge of the Cascade mountains between Hood Klver and Crater Lake have been the subjects of the state chamber's activities. And all these projects, valuable though they may be, probably are inferior to the importance of the Oregon , State Chamber of Commerce itself as an .agency for making . the communities and agencies more co operatively friendly. . . FOOLING THE HEN fMURNINO night Into day Is not pre- scribed as a general rule for hu- man , oonduet, . but in a modified , form 4t seems to be conducive to Increased egg . production- This is demonstrated' in. the experience of F. F. Irvine,; a Yamhill county poultry- man,: who has been experimenting with an artificially Jiguted hen house. He has concluded that experts who : have for years advocated fooling the hens Into the belief that the sun was still shining, had the right hunoh. . In ; a . local' newspaper Irvine Is credited with' the statement that dur ing the short days of fall and early winter he caused the light to shine In his hen bouse and. as,, a result the bens worked that much harder. They spent more time on the nest than on the roost.. .'.. Another deduction . was that they scratched much harder for a living. This gave them a better appetite and induced a better disposition tc lay, : Whether Such a mode of living will lower the average life expectation of the hen is yet to be determined. Whether his finding is dependable is open to conjecture. PROVINCIALISM WILL FAIL Lecture Read to Sluggish or Cocksure Tanks by a Manila Journal. From "The Philippine." The admonition to refrain from send' inar a boy to. market Is susceptible of wide and varied application. It is a good maxim to be observed by those Amer icans who propose to engage in over' seas trade. In this connection it mat ters not whether the boy be old or young in point of years. Some of. the 'most childish boys are those who long since to such length of years have come. As the many-wintered crow that leads tne clanging rookery nome, Witness some of the solons in the United States senate who are charged with matters relating to America's for eign commerce. In such affairs maturity is not measured by the almanac nor the frost on the whiskers. Children, bom to culture, absorbing It with their moth er's milk, have less "boy" about them at 7 than the savage has At 70. Experi ence makes the man, the want of it the "boy," no matter what the horologue of time may say. And this experience is of two sorts, that of the individual and that of his race. The United States is up against this natural law in prepar ing for overseas trade. For In the mat ter of foreign commerce the great bulk of American merchants and Americans engaged In mercantile pursuits either on their own account or as employes of others are "boys" when It comes to trad lnc abroad, particularly In the Orient. Hence it Is that there is danger that American exporters who are seeking business in the Far East, and American bankers who are undertaking the duty of supplying American banking machin ery for handling that business, will send "boys" to market. In many instances they are themselves "boys" ; and those who are not must choose their repre sentatives from among a corps of em ployes who are mostly "boys, ' insofar as the Orion: Is concerned. In fact, there is considerable concrete .evidence in the Far East that, in the post-war efforts of American exporters and bankers to ac quire business in the Orient, a good many "boys" are being sent to market. a a a In the matter of world experience, of both the individual and the racial sort, America's European competitors have a decided advantage. The Englishman has used the seven seas for a front yard for nearly five centuries: the tongue of the Frenchman has been the language of diplomacy almost since the rise of mod ern nations ; the Hollander has been buy ing and selling overseas ever since he drove the Duke of Alva and King Phil ip's oppressive hordes out of the Low Countries ; the Spaniard had governed half the world for nearly two centuries before the United States was dreamed of; while, in the land of the Italian, moet the science and achievements of modern peoples and the imperishable treasures of culture handed down from glorious antiquity. a a a This racial experience survives In the Individual to a very large decree. Na tional and racial traditions bulk large In the equipment of any given man or woman. The average American of fron tier ancestry could probably give I. any modern European the proverbial cards and spades and beat him at subduing a new continent or at mapping and tam- inrr an uncharted wilderness. But In negotiating the psychological mazes of an Oriental people whose history runs back beyond Babylon to the shores of the flood.the European trader has some what on the average American mer chant. a a a As a matter of fact these Europeans and their neighbors represent in the Far least tne oriental s conception oi xno white race. There has grown up an on written code of standards and prac tices in business and other relations. Doubtless many of these practices and standards should, and. In the course of time, will be changed to the white man's credit, but, on the whole, they are the outgrowth of conditions which actually exist and until those conditions pass away, that code Is likely to remain for the most part In forse. and It Is the part of wisdom for Americans to know of Its existence and to recognise Its cur rency. The one who does otherwise will be found In the end to have been a boy" to market. His rampant midland Americanism showing itself chiefly in his Ignorance ot or disregard for the white man's code in tne Far East may amuse the people of the Orient as some thing new, but it will hardly get him or the principals he may chance to rep resent, any great amount of business. Shakespeare Considered in Light of Best Seller From the San Francisco Call. William Marion Reedy calls attention to the fact that the' only known copy of th first? Mition of Shakespeare's col lected "works, printed in London In 1619, has JusV been bought by a New York coUectotr for S100.000. It is, he says, the most expensive book in the world. This may well be. At any rate. It is difficult to think offhand of any other book which has brought that price. Yet it is doubtful if there are very many peo ple in the world who would give as much for Shakespeare's original manu scripts, much less the first printed edi tions of his works, - provided they could not Immediately sell them and with the proceeds buy something else. The pro letariat, if it were to b wrecked on a desert Island, would certainly prefer to have with it th complete works of Irvra Cobb in perferenc to the rarest collection of Shakespeariana that was ever got together , on earth. And th proletariat, in its crude way, would be right. Shakespeare flourished In his own day, not because h was musty with age, but because he was up to the minute. H survives now, where he does survive, because something es sentially modern In him has escaped th moth and the rust. But the ordinary citizen does not see the advantage of scraping th dust off a classic when he wants to enjoy a quiet evening by the fireside Instead, h Is likely to tarn to his 'newspaper ' or to that accurate reflection of superficial America which merges weekly from th depths of Phil adelphia. - In this, h loses.. An enjoyment of the classics, i; it b real and not merely conscientious, is one of the most precious , seam one a man can have. It ts possession of which he cannot be cheat ed by Wall 8treet and of which he can not be robbed by the Bolshevik), which be cannot mortgage or pawn or ia.a moment of rash generosity give away. Once his, it Is his as long as his mortal frame holds together and the breath of Ufa Is in him. But It 1 hopeless to ex pect the great majority to acquire tius aristocratic taste. Most of us must have our literature rewritten for - cur, own generation or for. us it does not exist. This is the excuse for the multitude ot mediocrities who ' flU our magasines with their oceans of twaddle, in which a few pearls and rare deep sea fishes and wonderful corals may from time to time be discerned. -They are the only Shakespeares we will read, and If Shakespeare la worth $100,000 they are wortb mUllona, ; Letters From the People (Commtuucatioci wnt to The Journal for on oolr one side of the nun, 300 word, in length, and maU ba sisaed by tha writer, whose mail add ran in full rnunt acoou pan? the contribution. ) On Unrest and Remedy Vancouver, Wash., Dec 8. To the Editor of The Journal What Is a sane solution for the present unrest and dis satisfaction among the laboring classes? We all know the cause, but what wiU be the remedy? Jit Is plain that the cause is the unequal distribution of products. The ' class that produces nearly everything is the class that gets the shprt end. of the proceeds. The class that never produce so much as a dollar's worth of anything but simply speculate on the products of others are the one's that control the wealth. It is through these people that we are made to pay the present prices for our existence (not living). We have laws that would handle the I. W. W. of the business and finan cial;, world, if the common classes had representation In our governing bodies. But they have not. Now it would seem to me that If the common class would search their own ranks for men to represent them they would be more sure of getting a square deal. Instead, they will always go to the class that Is piling up Its millions from speculation, made wholly on what you and I have produced. What else should we expect than what we are getting? What more should we expect from the class that we are supporting in idleness 7 Tne only solution I can see is for laboring men to support men for office in their own class. Let's take the word "speculate" out of the English language, and deport aU speculators. Let's all be Americans. I am ready to fight by all lawful methods for a better America, politically and socially. Let's all work for a better governed coun try, one that will say to its subjects, "Have all you earn, but In return earn aU you have." A L. ADEE. Across the Race Line Vancouver, Wash., Dec. 7. To the Editor of The Journal In answer to Reader, In Saturday's Journal, I want to say that that writer did not have much thought regarding other than his own kind. If he had been workincr there at the Alblna railroad station, what would he think or do if he should be laid off for no other reason than that he was a Chinese, if he should be one? They have to find a living lust as much as anyone else. I have great respect for the returned soldiers but do you think it was just and right to oust apotner from his job just because ha did not take part overseas? He says the Chinese aie not for Americans. Do you think he Is doing anything to kindle their love for Ameri cans if what he baa, written Is put into action? I'll say this much: China has helped all that she could, but she was not given any credit for her part what soever. Why did "A Reader" specially want the Chinese laid off? Isn't It be cause he has some prejudice against them? But why should he? The Bible teaches us that "we are all one In Christ Jesus," that there ts neither Greek nor Jew, bond nor1 free." A CHINESE GIRL. Alien Stackers Portland. Dec 9. To the Editor of The Journal There is a very bitter feel ing against the alien slackers, especially the Swedes and Norwegians, as they are tne most numerous. Those two small nationalities make up about three fifths of the whole lot, because their love for their native lands would not permit them to light the battles of Russia, the arch enemy of their fatherland, when they were not American cltizena Members of the American Legion in their passion and zeal went so far as to hunt an alien Norwegian slacker out of job after Job. No sooner did the poor fellow get a job tnan tney got him out again if they had done that to make room for ex service men it would be a great credit to them ; but they did it simply because he was an alien slacker.. Leaving the pariah out ot consideration, it seems to me this Is nothing less than a crime against the commonwealth. Surely there are criminals enough on a rampage now, witnout systematic effort to make them. As the alien slackers are so very offensive to the native Americans they should be deported, regardless of treatlea P. T. JOHNSON. Defends Queen of Belgium Portland. Dec 8. To the Editor of The Journal A soldier who was reading the query as to why the Queen of Bel glum had such nice clothes, says she has a right to wear nice clothes If she wants to. She spent a great deal of her time at the front line trenches, feed ing, encouraging and consoling the sol diers, waiting 6n them and helping them in every way. The Belgians all love her and would not think of criticising her wardrobe. Now, can you answer this? It Is re ported that many of the "poor miners' of the East are leaving for the old coun try, taking with them, on an average. 18000 each. Where is the "poor" miner? How many working men outside ot the miners could scrap. together 18000? MRS. J. A. H. A Korean Student's Statement Pacific College, Newberg. Dec 12. j.o me Xiaiior or Th Journal Permit me to explain the article about the charges by the governor general of Korea. Salto, against the American missionaries encouraging the Korean in dependence, which appeared In your pa per of December 11. The writer is a Korean, native born, who knows the real situation, and shall discuss the statement of Governor General Salto with true facta and conditions. I will not attempt to discuss Japan's lack of fairness or her contempt of our civilisa tion . and the principles , on which her state rests, but will convince the read rs that the independent movement was not the work agitated by th American missionaries, but by th entire popula tion of Korea, who rose up to regain their national liberty , The Korean peo ple nave neon ana are super-tag under th unspeakable tyranny of . the mi kado's rule. At this significant period of world reconstruction, when the ag gressive spirit ot militaristic autocracy has been wiped out by, the Invincible fore of justice and democracy, the Ko reans have realised that the time has come for them to assert themselves as an Independent people, to form a gov. eminent under which they wish to live that they - may bo developed - and ad. vanced in the age in which' we live. So the Korean people declared their inde pendence on March. L" 191. - The - for ian did not know , anvthiaa- of this COMMENT: AND .NEWS IN BRIEF SMALL CHANQE ; How's yonr temperature? ?( if I How about the Boss Festival? .:' : - When we all ' are "oMtimers" well hark back, to the -winter ot MIS." iit , .. , -, . . . : ..A-' i Now Is the time to begin to assemble your data In readiness for the coming of the eansus takcTj . - rs ' "Holding for' ransom' continues to be the principal Indoor sporf in Mexico. The i milkmen must expect a -lot of "kidding" now because the frees la the Willamette Interfered with their milk supply.. Remember the old-fashioned scrapper who was "ready to fight at the drop of the hat?"' Well, he hasn't anything on friend husband, who is ready to fight at the rise of the hat. . 9 9 a - There was a time when men who could neither read nor write and Such despised men who could. Does our . own day artord us any analogies? f . We are told that Berkman faced his deportation in silence and with evident trepidation. That's as If he realised what an awful thing It is to be banished to the place he wanted to make the United States be like. a A green Christmas makes a fat church yard, is an ancient sarins. It ts not so ancient, a saying, but It will be Just as true, to say that a Red Christmas, If pulled off as threatened, will make a lot of corpulent penitentiaries, together with a highly productive gallows tree nere ana were, IMPRESSIONS AND OBSERVATIONS OF THE JOURNAL MAN By Fred Lockley ObaerraUons moat just, and la those troubled time mort apt, an the tapla ot If t. Lockley'i offering tor the day. Nothing. i in them but woold neeiTe the O. S, theoreticallj. ot Boat men; yet the whole world is diitretaed became moat men are loth to make such preespta efteet fre.) I wonder if at times we do not pay too high a price for our wealth, for after all, the amount of money you can secure from others is not the real measure ot success. If an employer succeeds In j lrA , V las wJA1rrM unKa wtr wVis . th wUJ dlllcharg;e., xt hft thlnk. the , nf th- . , h ! . h. fcAn them hard at work, I wonder If he does not overlook the intangible element of loyalty that helps buUd up an enterprise. A man may take advantage of his work men and pay them less than they earn. He may consider them mere machinery, to be scrapped when they have lost their highest energy ; yet the day of reckoning is bound to come for such a man In some form. He may pile up a million, yet "a man's life conslsteth not In the abund ance of things which he possesseth." What is success? What is your goal? What yard stick do you use with which to measure success? aaa Somewhere I once read this definition of success. Have you achieved success of this kind? Here It Is: "He has achieved success who has lived well, laughed often and loved much ; who has gained th respect of Intelligent men and the love of little chUdren ; who has filled his niche and accom plished his task; who has left the world better than he found It whether by an Improved poppy, a perfect poem or a rescued soul ; who has never lacked ap preciation of earth's beauty, or failed to express it; who has always looked movement- Even the ones who are losely connected with the Korean lead ers were ignorant of the planned revo lution. The wosld was startled at the ability of the Korean people to carry on such a nationwide demonstration. Now the new governor general Is talk ing of reforms. What reforms? New methods ot killing the Korean people? We want no reforms, be it civil or oth erwise, but Korea for Koreans, not for any foreign people. Armored In the garb of justice, with freedom, democ racy and Christianity as their slogan, the Koreans will strive to fulfill their aim which they have set out, to accom plish, and to clear the futuf In accord ance with the earnest dictates of the conscience of mankind. C L. PIL The Umpqua's Floods and Freezes From the Boaeburc Review (Dee. 10.) The many unexplalnable phases of the weather situation, chief of which was the continued comfortable conditions here while in practically all the other larsrer cities in Oregon there was snow and storm, brought to the minds of many of the older residents today tne memorable winters of years ago when for nrobably the only time in the history of the country the umpqua river rrose over so that . there was actual skating and driving on the Ice, and .other times of great Sooda which wrought woeful damage to the property along the banks. Twc local residents today were laminar with this locality In 18(1. and remarked that the record of that winter had never since been equalled, and that In fact In late years there have been no floods at all compared with the annual overflows that occurred in the early days. George Kimball and Judge J. C Fullerton both referred to th "great flood of 1861" to day and stated that this was the time when the Island on which the peach or chard Is located in the river between Mercy hospital and the city was actu ally formed. Prior to that year ' the land now known as the Island was a nart of the property on which the hospl tal Is located but was then cut oft be cause of th tremendous force of the swollen stream, forming an entirely new channel on the west side of this piece of land and remaining a shallow channel to this day, Mr. Kimball was then at Applerate. near Yoncalla, while Mr. Fullerton was living in this city. The water rose to the celling of the old Rast and Criteser flour mill and one piast ered dwelling near the Cardweli property showed the highwater mark on the in side wall for years afterward. - Mr, Fullerton had Just moved to his present property on the west side of the river In 1886, however, when in that winter occurred the memorable frees. The river was frosen solid for days and residents ot the city improvised sleighs and skates which wers used on the sur face of th stream tor probably the first time. While similar conditions seemed to be prevailing within less than 100 miles from here today, It was th prediction that Roseburg would experience its usual weather for this time of year, with the thermometer registering con siderably above the freezing point Olden Oregon Early Day School houses and Books Described by Oldtlmer. . Th first schoolhouses In Oregon contrasted strongly with the of today. A typical on Is thus described by the Rev. G. W. Kennedy: "School was taught In an old log cabin standing on a beautiful oak MIL It had no floor but th earth, n seats .but. th Cat sid of a split log, no desks, no place for - a fire except In th rod stone chimney built at one end of tb cabin, no windows save th opening la th absence of a log at one aid. Our text books were the used In Illinois and Missouri and crossed th i plains with us the Webster spellers, the McGuffy readers - and Pike's arithmetic Some time on book served for tro or thrts OREGON SIDELIGHTS i CatUs buyers and horse buyers for the past two weeks have been as numer ous around this locality as mosquitoes In spring time," says the Drewsey Pioneer-Sun. , . I T, Mnlitmi nf Mr.Kwen Is not tO be daunted by any house famine. He U tearing down a nous in Bumpier ana will move it to Baker, where be will rnaks his home. -, At a recent school meeting at Her- miston a unanimous vote was east to purchase four acres of land lying be tween the school grounds and the dairy show building, to be used as a publio camping ground for tourists. aa a. riHuTta a? rta.vtnn. tbe Carlton Sen tinel says, are looking forward to the erection next spring of a fine memorial community hall in their city. A finan cial drive will be held December IS to 20 to raise a minimum figure of $7000 for the proposed building. It is planned to eoulp the hall with a rest room. library and reading room, gymnasium and shower baths and equipment for a banquet halL ' In its last pre-snowstorm Issue th McMlnnvllle News-Reporter related this extraordinary incident: "Th brisk wind of Wednesday blew the sign which guides wayfarers to th office of Yam hill county's leading home paper. It is fortunate that the double guideboard on its descent to terra, ttrma did not damage the plate glass window. It was well anchored and the wires broke suc cessively, letting the sign down as gently as If It had been done by skilled work men. The printery is stUl doing busi ness at the old stand." for the best In others and given the best he had ; whose Ufe was an Inspiration, whose memory Is a benediction." aaa If success costs you the loss of those who are dear to you, the respect of those you associate with, your peace of mind, your serenity of soul, or your health. It Isn't worth the price, if any a man has sacrificed his wife and children on the altar of success. The price Is too great. ana wnen it Is too late many a man would give all he has to win back the love and trust he has lost I don't know who wrote this, but It Is true: If I had known la the moraine How wearily all tha day Tha words unkind Would trouble my mind, I said when you went away, I had been mora careful, darlint. Nor giTen yon needless paia; But we vex "our own" With look and tons Ws misht asTec take back acain. For thooch in the quiet evening. You may give me tha kua of peace, Yet well it might be That never for me The pain of ths heart should ceaas. How many to forth In the morning Who never come home at night; And hearts have broken For harsh words spoken. That, sorrow can ne'er set aright. We have careful thought for the stranger And smiles for the sometime guest. But oft for "our own" The bitter tone. Though ws love our own the best. Ah, Up with the curve Impatient; Ah, brow with that took of scorn, 'Twera cruel fata Were the night too late To undo the work of The Call to America By Rev. Frederick W. Neve -4 Leader of Nations called to be I By peonies scattered far and wide. Trusted by all to set them free. Thou canst not put the call aiids. Moses thou art to them, and they Do look to thee with rod in hand To lead them on their demit way And bring them to the Promised Land. Parched with the burning desert thfmt. Wounded with many a serpent's bite. By many an ancient wrong accurst. They look to thee, to lead -them right Thou hast already struck the blow Which loosed the cruel Egyptian chains; And will thou not tm further go. And do tha work which still remains? The Red Sea stained with ruddy glow Blood of thy sons is safaly crossed; And must they back to bondage go. And all the agony be lost? Leader of Nations! Strong and free I We know full wsU where thou dost stand; Thou wflt the peoples' Uoms be. And lead them to tile Promised Land. Ivy Depot, Virginia, December. 1919. Our Snow Storm From the Amity Standard Wednesday morning we woke up to face one of the worst snow storms that we have ever experienced In this state. It was some job to get up town through t or 4 feet of snow and when we arrived there It was hard to tell In which par tlcular drift our office was located but after some hunting It was found. People were to be seen dressed In any thing but the latest fashion and many pieces of apparel that had been dis carded years ago were brought to light Snow shovels of all descriptions and makes were put to use and It made no difference who handled them. No train found Its- way to town till long In the evening, mall carriers had to stay In town and even the milk routes were tie in some portions of Montana, 'in en closed. When the mall did come Will sands of cattle are said to be dying of Taylor had a most unique way of bring- lng It up town on a little sleigh that he must have borrowed from some youngster. As a Monument From ths Eugene Guard In a speech delivered by Colonel The odore Roosevelt at Christian la. Norway, May 6, 1910, he said: "Finally, it would be a master stroke If those great powers honestly bent on peace would form a league of peace, not only to keep peace among themselves but to prevent, by fore If necessary, Its being broken by others. The ruler or statesman who should bring about such a combination rould have earned his place In history for all time and his title to the gratitude of all mankind." What a splendid memorial to ' this American leader the ratification of tb covenant of the League of Nations would have been ! -. It would outlast any other memorial we may be able to erect of granite or marble. The White Coal of the West Front tha Eugene Register. Every time there Is a coal shortage In the East,' and shortages have been frequent of late, ; steam driven plants hav to dose down wholly or In part In the course of time that ought to make Western water power, which Isn't affected by coal shortajres, look pretty attract! ve Reason for. Prompt Action From the Philadelphia Evening Ladser Ther Is bop that, Senator Lodge and Ms fellows may realise before congress meets again that peace postponed until 1921 is peace postponed Indefinitely. Re ports from- dispassionate observers . In Europe tell of a possible merging of radical forces in Germany and Russia, and such a combination may welt startle tn worio. - . , , . . The Oregon Country North wat BappMunsf. ta Brtai Cone tor Uw Btur Ketdef. QREOON NOTES A sugar shortage exists at The Dalles, -as well as a fuel famine. Two pounds of sugar is th limit to each person. The coldest plao In the United State Sunday morning was Madras, In Baker county, with if degrees below sero. The school district In Seaside last week voted fCOOO In bonds to purchas additional land for a new school build, tag. Because of a shortage of cars, th weekly production of lumber In 119 mills has fallen from 109.743.121 to 61.587.7DJ feet At a recent special tax election in road district No. 1, south of Ashland. 700p was voted for work on the lateral road a Several carloads of apples on sidings at Hood River are frosen as hard as rocks, and apples stored In bins are ruined. Arrangements are being made by th . wpi oi loggers and Lumber men to install a cooperative store at c,ugene. Mra Elisa Jane Whetstone, the first whit child born In Umatilla county, died at her home In Heppner last week, aged 69. Judge Joseph Williams, a resident ot Heppner for id years, and former post-' master, died In that city last week, age IS years. Two illicit stills with about 410 gallons of raisla mash were seised at Astoria Saturday by a sheriffs posse, and six men were arrested. Recurrence of the rabies epldemlo among coyotes, prevalent in Klamath and adjoining counties two or three years ago, is feared by stockmen. The K. V. Kruse. one of the largest sailing schooners evetr built on Coos Bay, ...rPelv,n" th" finishing touches and will be launched next Thursday morn ing . H. H.'Keck of the Spokane. Portland 4 Seattle railroad, with headquartera In Portland, has arrived In Salem to act as coal officer for Oregon until the fuel conditions are relieved. One of the large racing barns at th state fair .grounds crashed to the ground Saturday night under the weight of Two of the livestock exhibit barns fell two days previously. Clinton B. Halght, editor of the Blue Mountain Eagle at Canyon City, suf fered severe burns and a considerable SS-. mo,ney ,n clothes was lost when fire destroyed his home Saturday WASHINGTON V? J- M- C- A- building, the largest fh.d'w-te V C"""' collapsed from mol UhM Bno'. being completely de- J-, J-,,R?.nn: who wa" nt to Port Ualla Walla in 1857 with the first con slgnment of troops, died at Walla Walla Saturday, aged 85. Fire Saturday evening at Welkel sta tion, near Yakima, destroyed a ware house, together with 6000 boxes of ap ples and a quantity of hay. The gas suppry at Walla Walla be came exhausted Saturday, ctesinK sev eral restaurants and bakeries and inter fering with newspaper publication. Plans have been prepared for a five- !Lt?lX.n0,'D,u, ,n Pasco, to cost 190,000. Of this amount $70,000 la now available from the sisters conducting the prewont hospital. A Great Northern engine jumped tb track Saturday when It struck a. rock near Cascade tunnel, killing Engineer John Calder and seriously Injuring- Fireman-Cummins, j Mrs. Hlljle May Slverly, aged 42, Is held in jail at Seattle on suspicion of being responsible for the death of WaU t(B Chapman, 35. who It was thSught committed suicide near Knumclaw. No trace has been found of the rob ber who at noon last Friday held up the Union Park bank at Spokane and maae away witn aiuuo, alter ordering the cashier and bookkeeoer Into thai vault i Eugenia McCool of Walla Walla and Alta Brooks ot Hlllsboro, both 18 years of age, were sentenced at Vancouver to from two and a half to 10 years. In the penitentiary for the theft of an av moblle. Joel Marcus Johansen, for 12 years assistant professor of English on th' faculty of the University of Washing ton, died at Seattle Saturday night from Injuries received In an automo bile accident John Calvin, receiver of the Union Loan It Trust company at Centralis. Is paying another 10 per cent dividend to creditors of the InsUtuUoh, making 80 per cent received by the depositors since th bank closed in 1914. GENERAL During the Bela Kun dictatorship it is estimated that 600 murders were committed in Hungary. A new issue of Polish' postage stamps contains the likeness of Ignao Pader ewski, president of the Polish republic. Efforts will be mad to push the plan this winter to import 40,000 Chines la borers for sugar plantation work la Hawaii. Greek troops advancing to the line of demarcation In Asia Minor fixed by the peace conference have clashed with Turkish forces. Canadian authorities threaten to quar antine Toronto against ths world unless the city council passes an ordinance making vaccination compulsory. Twenty -one Islands In iPrlnce William sound, Alaska, have been leased for fox farming purposes. All the fox farmers report that they are prospering. Enver Pasha, the former Turkish, min uter of war, has been crowned kins; of Kurdistan, the Turkish region lying; between Mesopotamia and Persia. Frank Hugo, an American citizen, manager of a ranch In the state of Coahulla. is being held for 10,000 ran. som by the Villistas who raided Musquls last week. - ' Swarms of hungry magpies are at tacking? half frosen. famished rang cat starvation. in a letter statlnr that he was "dis gusted with public life," Senator John Sharp Williams of Mississippi declares that he will not be a candidate for re election to the senate. It Is said unofficially that an agree ment between LVAnnunslo and the Ital ian government has bees reached, by which th mad poet will withdraw his troops Immediately, who will be re placed by regulars. Curious Bits of Information For the Curious Gleaned From Curious Place ' In th Mediterranean no bird Is better known than the quail from the Spanish,' littoral to the Arabian hillsides. Twice a year It passes over th great Inland sea, northward In spring and southward in September and October. Its coming is quit a festival, and many a peasant's - overdue rent is paid at its expense. When it goes northward In May to its nesting place In Middle Europe tb sandy Italian sea beaches ar lined in th line of Its flight with fin netting loosely held up by stakes , and th unhappy lltUe quails, flying low ever th sea, plunge Into the : and are securely held by the falling meshes. No fewer than 17.000 have been ' received in Rome is one day and in the, ' small Island of Capri, near Naples, 180, 000 are sometimes taken in a season. ; Uncle Jeff Snow Says :-. U Them there nmbretler sharps In Pdrt-s ., land Is a thrifty and forehanded gentry; . I left mine down to a office in Portland durln' the dry, cold spell, thlnkln It was ssf enough whtl it wasnt ralnln. but som kind soul adopted it, knowln' "very ' ; well it'd rain some tlm again, vr And ' J : from. the ''way they- most all keep their " umbreller locked up at the clubs X ' reckon I'll, hav to buy anolhera.v i 1 T -f. X " V 1 i f . r , - "