mill' 1 gfST. ' in' ' ' i ' ' 1 ' i t i . .. ,i . .in. ' - i. H " - V ' ' ' ' 1 ' . .' ,-" - , ' j' , ' ' ;. -.. ' .. ' ' ' , . 1 " " . . . -.I, . 1- -v i- -'- 1 " 1 ' ' AH "UfDBPENDKliT KKWWAPM .Pabhsbet O S. JACKSOM ' Tuh1UlMl , da, afternoon nd morning ay, um. .:- (Bxoert Bandar afternoon) , .TT Building. Broadway na aauui Fort 1 ml, Oregon. bound at the Postofflee t Portland, Orion ftowAli thnb the mum as ond . : s eisw BWUrt. ' All dnT1o.i reached bjr the. -- Tll toe operator wht department yon want. TOREK, ADVBBTM11S0 KKMIf . Henjamin eV Kantnor Co.. AoMaUer. : 22S Firth erme, Kew lt; 0 Mailers Building. Chicago. . Bnrxcrfptlon terms by mill, or to toy address In the fcniUd state or Mk: DAILY (MORNING OR AFTERNOON) 0a year., i.. .66-00 I On month..... .80 . SUNDAT ON MM 2.5 I On. moot..... I M DAILY (MOBSlNtOR AFTERNOON) AND On year 7.80 I On month I OB Arcliimedee bad stated, that siren the tan, any ginen weight miaht ba moved; U4 fTRi botntnl that if there were an- 7 othrr earth,, by folm into It he could ' taunt thia. Plutarch. DIRTY POLITICS iAILURE of the senate to ratify tha treaty has caused the pres ent Bitqatlon In foreign ex change which has resulted in . cancellation by European buyers of . large orders, placed with. American manufacturers." ; ; Such, Is 'a statement "read int the senate record In the debate on the - treaty Saturday. . The British pound and the French . franc are greatly reduced in purchas- lng power in America. The German . mark is almost valueless. There has not been" such demoralization of Euro . peaa finances In a century.. Defeat ; ot, the treaty means that America does not intend to exert her great ' steadying influence in settling the af fairs of the world. Just as America speedily settled the, war, so she could, by her great moral weight, quickly seine me peace. 1", The senate refuses. Its non-action means a continued state of war. It ' means renewal of negotiation and the seeking of a separate peace with Ger manf. It means more months, if not more years, of uncertainty, unrest and : turmoil; European buyers cannot -afford to J. buy American made goods and pay the ruinous rates of exchange. They - cannot afford with their depreciated nioney to pay a great premium in ad dition to the cost price of goods with out, inviting bankruptcy. The effect to deprive America of a European market, and the ultimate consequence ! is certain to be felt here in reduced exports of, American goods. A slow- ' lng dovn of the mills and men thrown out of employment is a certain pros- ' pect if the situation is allowed to long continue. , Meanwhile the treaty is in the sen Ate and the farce goes Jauntily on. The country wants the treaty ratified, , wants the uncertainty removed, wants - to go back to hormal conditions, wants business' given a chance to lay its . plans unharassed by the interminable uncertainty In which the senate keeps ' the country and the world. But Lodge is obdurate. The irrecon- ,- cilables are obdurate. A coming idle- pes8 of men and stagnation of busi- ness are nothing to them. They are ;' trying to make campaign issues. A lot of them are running for president. 111 fares the land to hastening iJIs a ; prey. Wa have the Bolshevists. We have' senatorial politicians. Of the two, the dirty politics of the senate , "is the most harmful to the country. : .The politicians are the" most danger- ; oug and destructive because clothed ... In the robes of respectability and ca .pable of playing upon public cred- r Ulity. If lean days come to America we shall owe them to the senate poli ticians and senatorial politics. William E. (Pussyfoot) Johnson, of anti-saloon fame, evidently be lieves that the vision of the one eye left hint by hoodlum London stu dents will be keen enough to hunt out many a blind pisr vet. w, the. Chicago News opened a eub , CrlptIon for his benefit. Johnson wrote asking that the fund be used Vaa.A - . iuubb wno nave lost all their signt. TRADE PROVINCIALISM T 'HAS so long been the habit to win or tne Philippines as . I wearied parent thinks of tarded, not very lovely, adopted wiuu, yia a suggestion from a Ma nila publication that America will fait 4n foreign trade if she continues . her provincialism, comes with ih "shock of surprise. The Philippines is ., ""oi. ttuiuii GUUUUQ9 vnjg ag. , , serUon: v , ' w0r ,n h natter of foreign commerce tlttt great bulk Of Amort nan r,u , ,nd Americans engaged In mercantile pursuits either on their own account v . w,m,Jre or. outers . are - "boys' . when H comes to trading abroad, nar. ucuiariy m the Orient. Hence It is that -s mm Americans who are seeking balnes m the Far, East and American bankers who are undertak ing the. duty Of Slirmlvinir inurl... banking machinery tor. handling that business will send "boys" to market. In many instances they are themselves boys; ad those who are not tnitst choose their representatives Xrom among V. corps of employes who at mostly rboys" so far as the) Orient fa concerned. ; The magazine goes on tq state that in seeking post-war foreign . , trade America 'has less of the equipment furnished by experience than the Eng lishman whose front yard has been the seven seas for five centuries, the Frenchman, whose language has been the language of modern diplomacy, and the Hollander, whose overseas buying and seljlng are as old as tra dition. While Germany Is not In eluded in the reference It is well known , that the Teutons planned trade colonization as systematically as they plotted the despoliation of Eu rope. 5 America enters, the broader enters prises of foreign trade, especially In the Orient, as a novice, and almost as an apprentice. Without an "open mind for trade maxims, a readiness to learn and a standard of service that will wrap the package as the buyer wants it; the ambition for foreign trade leadership would be humiliat ingly defeated. These are suggestions which have particular value to Portland and the Oregon country, because our own trade success must lie largely in the volume of our business with the Orient. Former President William How ard Taft finds in an incident of the I. W. W. outrage at Centralla his own assurance that the American Legion will ' safeguard the Interests of America and of Its own organiza tion. When the bullets of radicals pierced the khaki clad bodies of men who had fought for liberty in France, American Leglonists re strained the outraged citizens who would have lynched the assassins. If the American Legion can keep its head when Its own men are shot down, there need be little fear .of its yielding to impropriety or sordid motive In its relation with political and civic affairs. WITH A FEW DRINKS I S booze to fresco the coming special legislative session? 9 Lobbyists Often fit up rooms at Salem, stock up with variegated liquor and proceed to have govern ment by booze. They used to main tain such places as an adjunct of senatorial elections. In one the state ment went out over Oregon that women as well as booze formed a part of the senatorial campaign at Salem. At the last legislative session one booze party developed Into a soandal. At others, certain state commissions are known to have used favorite brands of liquor in large stocks in an effort to influence legislative votes. The prohibition measure itself is known to have been passed under circumstances scarcely less wet than in the palmiest days of old John Barleycorn. .Some day a legislature will come along In which there will be determ ined men who will move an investi gation. And it might so happen that men named on the committee would refuse to whitewash, and would go forward in a resolute purpose to bring out the facts. And the public ly that would result would taint names and make lobbyist booze joints o r e v e r unpopular thereafter. It might happen at the special session. It is an insult to the legislature to follow the members to Salem with cartloads of booze, which booze is, of course, relied on as a means of influ encing legislation. Is It not indeed, an insult, not only to the state but to the - legislator himself, to assume that his vote can be bought with a few drinks? Aliens who hurried off to Europe after the war are now scurrying back. They were shocked by the poverty and desolation. They found the cost of food and clothing higher in Europe than in America. The facts are worth attention by "those who are trying to make a Europe out of America. UNCLE SAM GIFT MERCHANT CLE SAM also stands behind the gift counter. . As a Santa Claus merchandiser he has on display a line of pres ents possessing exceeding attractive ness. The Ideal Yuletide offering is a dec laration of good will and affection. It should constitute a lasting remem brance. It should be valued by its recipient. It ought to be chosen with delicate consideration. Uncle Sam's gift list meets these requirements. His price tags reveal values that range from 25 cents to $1000. He can accommodate the light or the heavy purse. The ordinary gift begins at once to depreciate in intrinsic value. Uncle Sam's stock begins at once to increase in value, In addition to the avowal of kindli ness and hearty good wishes behind every truly offered Christmas gift, the presents selected at Uncle Sam's coun ter convey wholesome and welcomed lessons in stability, integrity and thrift. '". It must now be apparent that the Christmas gifts which can be pur chased from Uncle Sam are War Sav ings securities. These are remem brances which awaken pleasure and gratitude. To buy them not only keeps the Christmas spirit it also constitutes an act of patriotic serv- ice in financing the post-war needs of the government ' If In , its prosecution of citizens delinquent in removing snow from the sidewalks, the police bureau will include the owners of vacant lots, tnere will be Mttle trouble about pedestrianing along: suburban streets. It la most often tha side walk bordering the vacant lot that becomes fringed, and often choked, with, weeds in summer and . impass ably drifted with snow In winter. HIS MONUMENT ' ' 'J T OM JOHNSON'S work at Cleveland lives after him. .While . other cities are yielding to the demand of streetcar companies for In creased fares, Cleveland fares were yesterday reduced to sixjor a quarter! , Tom Johnson's life was shortened by the desperate fight he made in be half of low fares for the people of hts home city. The combined power of syndicated wealth was against him. The great business interests of the city fought him with all Jhe power and all the resources at their com mand. It is doubtful If there was ever so bitter a local struggle in America. Predictions of financial disaster and bankruptcy to befall the traction com pany were spread broadcast In the effort to confound and confuse John son's followers. All the invective and all the calumniation to which tongues and the printed page eould be laid were heaped upon Mayor Johnson. But Tom Johnson had the vision, and had the courage. He had more: he had the indomitable spirit that refuses always to compromise con science or bargain with convictions. He endured on, sacrificed on, fought on and in the end triumphed over all his opponents. The struggle wasted his strength and shortened his life. But he left an Imperishable monument a street ear system organized on business principles and dedicated as much to service as to profit. It is a standard to which all public utility systems must ultimately come. Tom Johnson, at the cost of his life, created the model system from which all must fashion. . These are days when one hears less talk about climate and more about weather. Judging, too, by the thermometer, the much discussed end of the world might, be due more to a transference of the north pole than any new relation to the sun. RECREATIONAL RESOURCES r HERE is. more friendliness than obstruction In the warning that as Oregon becomes more acces sible to tourist travel through the building of expensive roids the tour ist travel might become less valuable to the state. When it becomes possible to cross Oregon in a day and a half, there will be, during the tourist season, a con tinuous stream of motor vehicles bear ing the- licenses of many states and flitting happily along their way with few stops, unless reason is given for lingering. This means that if the tourist is to represent more than a road wearing debit, Oregon must be able to guide him and his family to attractive hotels built In regions of scenic charm where fishing and hunting and out door sports will give the stay, no matter how protracted, the tang of fascination. Although this is the winter season and abnormal storm has laid a ban upon all but the motor travel urged by necessity, It Is a good time to plan seriously and fruitfully for the meas ures that will dot Oregon with tourist hotels, stock the streams abundantly with trout, replenish the game of for est, and make the state permanently a place which recreationists will hasten to, but never away from. While we are building the roads, why not make them yield to us the utmost of value? The man, or woman, who builds a fire in the stove without first as certaining that the water in the ooil 13 circulating, is as foolish as the victim who goes looking for a gas leak with a match. WIIAT OF IMMIGRANTS? r; E annual report of the commis sioner general of immigration shows that the year now closing has witnessed a net Increase in alien population of 20.790. The total admissions were 237,021 The departures were 216,235. The total admissions of Immigrant aliens as distinguished from non-immigrant was 141,132, or 30,514 more than last year. During the year 1917 the Imml grant aliens admitted aggregated 295,- 403. In 1916 it was 298,826 and 326,700 in 1915, or a yearly average for the five years during which war raged of 234,535. For 10 years previous to the world war the corresponding annual average was 1,012,194. During the past year the number of aliens denied admission was 8626, or 3.5 per cent of the applicants. Twenty-three per cent of the rejec tions were due to the, new statutory causes included in the act of Febru ary 5, 1917. Among this number were included 1455 illiterates, 464 stowa ways and 19 Asiatics. There -were also 40 enemy aliens. - The number of deportations was 3068. Of these 115 were physically. 158 mentally and 590 morally defective. As to the question of future immi gration the bureau after a general survey finds factors growing out of the war which may retard it and fac tors which may promote it ' It will depend greatly on condi tions in Europe. On the one hand perhaps eight million men of the age groups from which most of the immi gration- comes perished during the war. Other millions were maimed and diseased to such an extent as to pre clude their admission under our laws. Then there will be the demand at home for reconstruction and rehabili tation. ' This may produce condition which will be more attractive than the lure ' of emigrating- to America. Again, there -are those countries such as Poland,' where long sought politi cal freedom has been realized. . Yet, on the "contrary, .there; will be in these countries an element ,. of con quered nationalities who will wish to leave those countries where sover eignty has been forcibly transferred. Another, factor, which may stimu late immigration is that of war weari ness in Europe among victors and vanquished alike. With all, there Is a doubt that peace will be perman ent. Many look to the United States as a land of peace, where , they and their children will not always be in the shadow of armed conflict. How immigration will be affected by the war is problematical. The his tory of the past furnishes no basis on which to speculate. That there should be careful dis crimination in the future admission of immigrants Is a lesson that we learned from the action of disloyal aliens during and since the war. PRYING INTO THE INFINITE Man Enlarges the Known a Llttlo, But " the Unknown Enlarges Faster From the San Francisco Can Man's knowledge of the universe. greatly as it has increased, may be in relation, to the whole truth no more than Is the size of the earth in com parison with the extent of the visible heavens. What the scientists call nat ural laws are nothing but descriptions of the manner In which certain phenom ena which we can watch and Identify take place. Under certain conditions an object in the air will always fall to the ground. Hence the law of gravitation, which enables astronomers to calculate the mass and movements of planets and even the movements of such apparent ly Bolshevistic bodies as comets. a . But as our ability to perceive phe nomena increases the laws have to be modified or extended. Dr. Alfred Ein stein has electrified the scientific world with the theory, now apparenUy es tablished as a respectable hypothesis, that rays of light are bent by the at traction of gravitation. It follows that light must be, or be transmitted through. tangible substance. It has long been held that space Is filled with ether, but this theory has never rested upon any physical demonstration. No one. had ever seen the ether or weighed it. But If light Is deflected by the attraction of the sun it wUl be a comparatively simple matter for the scientists to weigc the light itself or the ether in which it may be a form of motion. , Furthermore, if light is ever deflected by gravitation it always is, and it. fol lows that what the scientists have been calling straight lines must be curved lines. When the astronomer thinks he is looking straight Into space he may be looking along a parabola or a great circle. "Probably this will mean." says Professor Harold Jacoby of Columbia' university, "that there is no limit to space, but only to the distance our tele scopes can penetrate. If the instrument can be made powerful enough the ob server may be able to look all the way around the complete circumference of the circle and will - thus see his own back." ' i-;. " These speculations -are regarded by most of the astronomers as a sort of plaything to amuse the layman, who can not possibly understand what the new, discoveries mean. But though the layman can not understand the mathe matics involved in the passage of a ray of light through a crowdeM sea of stellar systems he is well able to comprehend that the visible universe has suddenly been made more vast, and more mys terious. Once it was commonplace to all men, including some as wise as any alive today, that the earth was the cen ter of the heavenly systems; the views that our wisest astronomers held as re cently as yesterday may some day al most certainly wUl some day be looked upon as being quite as fallacious. New explanations of creation may be based upon Kinsteln's discovery, new philoso phies, new conceptions of human destiny. - a The universe might be compared to the continent of North America as it was when Columbus sighted San Sal vador, and man's knowledge of It to the little that Columbus was able to gain from his visit to that island. We can see th land, but behind it there are moun tain ranges, vast plains, huge rivers, strange inhabitants of whose existence or nature we can only make conjecture. This is the point to which science has brought us after the greatest hundred years In human history. A generation ago it was thought that research would soon take the element of mystery out of life, but where it has lifted one veil another has always appeared behind it. and where It has led us to the top of one mountain other mountains, range beyond range, peak beyond peak, have forever reared themselves in the unpen etrable distances. Though we go down through the val leys and across the passes of the once unknown universe, that part that is still unknown recedes and recedes before us. Through no secular instrumentality can we as much as glimpse the position of roan in the universe or the nature and meaning of the universe. Compared with what there is to know we know literally nothing. The Cost and Must It Ever Be Paid All Over Again From the Philadelphia Evening Ledger Philosophical observers continue to In sist that there cannot be another war of conquest in Europe for a; least 100 years. The various peoples are urea ana dis illusioned. Governments are weakened and impoverished. Such are the evi dences on which a good many students of politics base the convictions that a more or less enduring peace is assurea. no matter what happens. This appraisal of the situation might be oueBtioned. Germany is tired, impov erished, disillusioned and as eager tor peace as anyone else. But Germany lost and lost heavily. She has incentives for new war unknown elsewhere. She can not lose any more. Powerful cliques are trying to convince her mat .some time in the future she might win.. Japan has ambitions in Siberia. In a pinch, perhaps, she would fight for them. Meanwhile the savants associated with the Carnegie Peace Foundation have been estimating the coats of the war. The earth they believe ia poorer by $372,000,000,006 than it was five years ago. Losses of life, property and divert ed effort are included la this calculation. Civilisation paid some such total be cause it had not formulated a universally acceptable philosophy of life and national relationships. j The peace treaty and the covenant of the League of Nations were drawn to establish Just that sort of philosophy. We all know what has been happening at Washington. And it is impossible not to wonder whether olviliaaUoa wUl have to pay aiav - PORTLAND, TUESDAY, . DECEMBER ,16, 1919. HilJ..ill.i).lll i M.i.i ill ,. Mjr HllMini .iiiilllir .. II .1, .l II. . .. Letters From the People f ContmttBMstioB aecC . to The Journal for publication In thia department ahookt ba written on alr one M of tha paper, ahould not exceed SOO word la lenttta. and muat be eigned by the writer, whoa mail addraa is full mart accom pany the contribution. . : Argue Case Against Tobacco Portland. Dec 11. To the Hditor of The JournalIt 1 hurrah for, prohibit tlon of tobacco, now, ays the well meaning E- A. Linscott. in his, charge against those "who delight in hatching up something to make others miserable. I wonder If the world is so -one-sided that any one class should be made miserable all the time. The above state ment looks good on paper, and sounds good in argument, but such people over look the fact that other peoples can be made miserable, also. Why so many no tices posted in public places "No Smok ing Allowed.'? -Because it makes the many miserable while a few are enjoy ing their liberty. Why did the depot agent compel five Italians to stop smoking when the mother took her two sick children outside to get a breath of fresh air? Because it made babies miserable. Why should four apparent ly gentlemen, "after lunch, smoke cigars half an hour at a table, to the discom fort of ZS others, two of whom left the room because sick from tobacco fumes and declared they would never return? Because it made others miserable. Why are thousands of mothers, who, cau tioned, reasoned, pleaded and prayed for and with their boys to abstain from to bacco, now seen with a careworn look as their returned hero saturates their once clean and sweet scented homes with the filth of tobacco, as well as stains his fingers, fouls his breath and turns his ivory teeth amber color. Be cause it makes others miserable. Why do the railroads cage smokers in a car by themselves? Because they think oth ers have a right to breathe unpolsoned air and not be made miserable. The supposed case of one holding a cigar in the mouth of another and mak ing him smoke is not a fair one ; no one would do it. Neither would any gen tleman compel others to inhale air poi soned by tobacco smoke. If one .should poison a spring t he would be mobbed. Why should anyone have the right to poison the air? The saloonkeepers confess that they are to blame very much for the pro hibition laws, because they abused their privileges. Unless the tobacco venders go a little more careful they will stir up moral sentiment once more a power not to be fooled with. ALBERT M. BEAN. Practical Considerations Portland, Dec. 13. To the Editor of The Journal Let us hope that the visit of Mr. Rawson of England to Portland may result in awakening thought and action that otherwise might have re mained dead. Let us hope that the in creasing unrest in metaphysical thought may pierce the veil that clouds the soul of man, and that, however new may be the path they blaze, wj may safely trust that the laws of the universe will ulti mately bring them into harmonious unity. But the social reformer still has a duty, to perform, a clarion note to sound to those who would leap across the material chasm Into perfect bliss without the slow process of evolution. We who' have reached middle life may assume that personally we have solved part of life's problem. But what about the untold millions who must tread the pathway we have trod? Remember, every statute we place on the books either blocks this pathway, to these little ones, or it removes the obstruction, that they "may more easily ascend to that perfect unity Mr. Rawson talks about. The confusion' the world is now in is doubtless the 'result of false pictures resident In the mind, and one of the most pernicious of these is that the ma terial universe he speaks of. that has no reality, is owned by a very few men, because of the false pictures of the many, and the result Is we are all in hell, and no amount of hypnotic delu sion can convince us that there is a substitute for coal, or fuel of some kind, or for food, in our present environment. The laws of political economy are na tural or divine laws, just as much as the 'aws of healing, and the problem of this life is to so conform to those laws In mass that the higher expression of the infinite varieties may blossom into full expression. Let us not forget the footstool while star gazing. J. R. HERMANN. The President and His Foes Newport, Dec. 8. To the Editor of The Journal What Is the difference be tween "hyena-like" and "like hyenas"? Or, what is the difference between foreign-born aliens and American home made aliens? Or, what is the difference between an alien enemy and an I. W. W.? I can't see much difference. A lot of them behind the bars In Seattle went on a hunger strike, but after a time they repented, begged for food and ate ravenously, it is said. How shall we view the actions of some of our United States senators, trying in every con ceivable way to belittle the president and discredit our government and free institutions before the world? They even attack the president upon the sick bed, thus the more easily to worry the very life out of him. With venom they undertake to undermine all his efforts to quiet our turbulent country. Their acts are an awful lesson to set before Red radicals, when they impugn the president's . message that pleads in strongest terms for pure Americanizing In an effort to hold the country in a safe anchorage. No finer definition of government in the Interest of all classes could possibly be made than the presi dent made in his message to congress. It portrays the soul of a great man de termined to render honest service to bis people. When his illness, in his deter mined and Impartial service to the peo pie, no member of congress moved reso lutions of sympathy. But In 1912, when Colonel Roosevelt had been shot. Mr. Wilson immediately sent a telegram of sympathy. When Mr. Roosevelt finally fell ill, our president was one of the first to wire sympathy to the sick cham ber. And when Quenttn Roosevelt fell in France, Mr. Wilson promptly cabled condolences to the Roosevelt home. This shows the true spirit and genuine pa triotism of Mr. Wilson in contrast with his political opponents and league fight ers in the United States senate. May God strengthen our president against all political rot to the end of his term in the interest of humanity. E. W. DURKEE. Arraigns Tobacco Users Portland, Dec 11; I am surprised to see any man, as E. A. Llnscott does, de fending tobacco. There Is nothing more filthy than tobacco after ft man has put it into his mouth. Man has become so filthy, man haa got bo dirty with to bacco that It haa become necessary to pass laws forbidding him to spit on tha sidewalks. A man got off a train the other day, who said he had had to sit in the smoker, the other cars being crowded. Of course, he had to stand for the choking smoke ; but, what was worse, some previous occupant of his seat had chewed tobacco and had formed on the floor a great pool of tobacco juice. I suppose that was a God-given right Haa a mas a right to puff tobacco smoke In your face"? In spite of all you can do he Insists on doing it If you com plain he says that Is his God-given right l say no. A decent man wouldn't do It. The Bible says there is nothing from without a man that entering into him aa da&la Mat but tha thlnga that coma COMMENT AND SMALL CHANGE ' Going up the thermometer. Let er go. It seems to be a case of off again, on again with passenger train schedules. As i we understand it. Bolshevism is caused by everybody In the world except Bolshevists. ' ' -i- ' Granting that everything said about Mr. Burleson was true, still he never wore whiskers, like Mr. Redfield did. a The way father and mother are both buying this year it looks to this quarter colyum as if it will be up to the kids to hang up both stockings. Between the llauor situation at one end and the egg situation at the other, the -immemorial holiday tipple is going after the rimless-cipher championship of the world. Difference between hard tunes and good times: In hard times you are afraid to buy; in good times you are afraid not to. Aye. aye, sir ; this world is always full of fear. Portland women are on record in favor of strict enforcement of the traffic or dinance, to help prevent accidents, and now to be consistent they must be even more cautious about stepping off back ward. The Medford Mail Tribune's Smudge Pot dopester, observing that Senator Wiles Poindexter "has issued a state ment setting forth 22 reasons why he Is good presidential timber," Observes further that "there are 23 reasons why he is bad presidential timber." And we'll say there are at least that many, to start with. IMPRESSIONS AND OBSERVATIONS OF THE JOURNAL MAN ' By Fred Lockley Hera are aome frienda and neighbors of Mr. Lockley whom be meets while on a Journey and to whom he Introduces Journal readers, doling with the presentation of a tribute in Terse to crosa -continent arlatora, written , bj a former Oresonian whose work ia well known. Not long ago, in front of the post office at Los Angeles, I met Miss Mar garet Walton. As we both live on Mount Tabor and frequently meet at the Mount Tabor Presbyterian church, we had plenty to talk about We walked across the street to where her grandfather, C. W. Qay, was waiting for her. Mr. Gay has lived in Portland for more than half a century, having moved to the Mount Tabor district when it was a farming rather than a residence dis trict. "Margaret and I are visiting my daughter, Mrs. William tM. Spears." said Mr. Gay. "We went from Portland to Atlanta, where Margaret's sister Helen is a nurse in the army hospital at Fort McPherson. There are more than 1800 crippled soldiers - there. She is in the ward where injured arms and legs are treated. She got a few days leave and with Margaret went down for a visit to New Orleans. I like to travel, for two reasons : I am glad to see new places, and then I am always so glad to get baok to Portland." One of the telephone operators at the hotel where I was staying in Los An geles, the Alexandria, is a Portland girl. Her name is Mrs. R. J. Hunter. Her father, W. O. Moe, lives in St. Johns, where she was reared. She worked for five years for the Fred A. Jacobs com pany of Portland. a At Avalon I ran across Bert Weaver, who wanted me to give his regards to Phil Metschan when I saw him, "I'm thinking that young Phil will make nearly as good a hotel man as his father, and if he does he will have to go some," he said. ' When I was in Ban Ffanciscb I met a number of the aviators who had made the cross-continent flight, and I also ran across an old argonaut who had come In the old days, when it took six months with an ox team to come from the Mls- nut nt ntnv ' theinfl are thev that defile Illin. IUU pev, I1UUI Jtaua w filed, and yet his body in this state of defilement absolutely rejects the dirty, flithv tobacco. It compels man's mouth to pur it out, and he has no respect of place or person or law. He deposits u any place to get rid of the dirty stuff. I once wanted to get rid of five cats that bothered me and the whole neigh borhood, so I got a pipe that a man smoked nearly all of his time. I took a broom straw and poked it into tne pipe stem and took out the contents. I put this upon five pieces of meat and gave a piece to each cat. They passed out of life without pain, seemingly. And yet my friend would encourage such stuff for the rising generation. ELI A. BAUBEAR. Instead of Capital Punishment Portland. Dec. 11. To the Editor of The Journal There is a cry by some of the people for the return of capital punishment Would they be willing to do this killing themselves, or do they expect the state to maintain a slaughter house? Simple, isn't it; yet, those same people, through fate, may see a brother, sister or other relative, probably through circumstantial evidence, condemned to pay the price with life, later to find they were perfectly innocent. Who suffers most the one that died or those that still live? Imagine that occurring in yoflr own home., Wouldn't it be better to enact laws (Iron-bound ones) classifying crime with a specified sentence for each classifica tion, and when one was found guilty of a crime calling for 10 years' Imprison ment, that he were compelled to do 10 years to a day, not three years and a parole for good behavior? In that event a mistake could be rectified, if it was found one had been made. Some will say It means too much ex n maintain a orison full of con- victs. It is absurd to think a perfectly healthy man can't more than pa y h s bare Uvlng expenses. Build with their labor a few million aouars worm good roads that Oregon needs. That la the best way to punish a person that To my way of thinking, there is very Uttle punichment in death. Hence the dead person's relatives are the ones that are really punished. Let's change the laws, but not oaca l ... w HiVHi. Complains of Grain Inspection WoMinnviile. Dec To the Editor of The Journal I notice where the emer gency board, amonw ouier tl'ons, made a $10,000 appropriation for the grain inspection department My experience with the local grain inspect ors this fall cost me 1100 worlh, of wheat to have. No. 1 inspected eroded and tested down to No. 2, and after cleaning by JW?An"i. J"? Sheridan grain house, docked 4 per cent It appears to me that the grain cor poration, which is a part of the inspect ing' department should be self-sustaining I also noticed a statement made by a Middle-West senator in congress, that the grain corporation last year made 823.000,000, and under the present grain regulations all I can see for the wheat growers of Oregon to do Is to bring in their grain and get rtaved. A FA1UUUK. Uncle Jeff Snow Says; Alt this trouble over the coal short age comes from our great statesmen last July not beln' able to see far enough ahead to know . thai December was a comixk' sure. " . - NEWS IN BRIEF .. OREGON SIDELIGHTS This from Bruce Dennis of the La Grande Observer : "Only give us a lump of sugar in our ' coffee and a lump of coal in the furnace, and it will be a merry Christmas." " ' a . i .. ' "The increase in the egg production In and about McMinnvllle is flattering indeed." says the McMinnvllle News Reporter. , "Of course. McMinnvllle is not yet a Petaluma. but the egg Industry Is again coming Into Its own. a The secretary of the Baker Coramer plai rluh hjia hum) a.t work for some time on a net. advertising booklet for the club, and has been instructed to have 5000 printed at once, as the supply of old pamphlets has been exhausted. "Visitors at the Oreeon state fair will aCTWL- savs tha Aurora Observer, "with its -secretary that a board of censors is needed to pass on all concessions at the fair. Some of the concessions at state and county fairs are an annual disgrace to the commonweaitn. "The dry farmer," "says the Baker Democrat, "has a prospect of seeing hqpe long deferred realised the coming year. All signs point to deep snow this winter and the fellow on the mountain side and in the dry gulch may get a 50-bushets-to-the-acre ieW next harvest." Soon as snowfall ceases, work will be started in Deschutes county distributing alfalfa leaves impregnated with strych nine in a campaign against the jack rabbit pest, the Bend Bulletin says. With heavy snow on the ground, condi tions for the war are considered the best since the winter of 1915-16, when 85,000 rabbits were poisoned. sourt river, in place of a day's actual flying time to come from ocean to ocean. on the course of 2701 miles. A few days after I had interviewed Sergeant Kline, who accompanied the "flying, parson," Lieutenant Maynard. across the conti nent, I received a letter from Bert Huff man, my old time partner on the Pendle ton East Oregontan. His letter was dated at Calgary, and contained the following tribute to the argonauts of the air : The Arconanta, the Arsnnaata bare coma. Their wins a-leam o'er San Frencbco bay I Arrow the continent their motor hum To apan its breadth in one awift. matchlem day! How proudly, glorknuly, they slide From state to state, from mountain chain to chain! A, abore the rollinf clouds they ride. What plaything! aeem these eitiea of the plain! What narrow sflrer thread those riTers gleam t How Iniiisnlfieant the fields below. With what disdain they pan from dream to dream From sunrise glory to the eunaet glowl Ah, whits winger argonanta of sir and akr. The landscape you bare crossed are wet .with tears! From yon far glistening height, eould ynn descry The panorama ot the bygone years? Listen and wonder at the story told: The plaint you passed, the silrer streams you apied. Within their breasts a nations' epio hold A tale. of other Argonauts, thrioe glorified! WOd streams were they and plains without a track, With sarage foray and the midnight raid: nnn ahead nn thonaht of tomins back: The men fought on, the women hoped and prayed I Weeks, months, they toiled at aome wild moun tain pass. Where no now glide in one delightful hoar I The mocking mirage glowed like molten glass To bold them in its taunting, mystie power I Ther dropped and died upon the lonely waits ; The teaseled earn in golden glory warea Where, at the midnight hour, they made in hasto A thousand unrecorded, unmarked (rare I And in the winds which Ussad your westward (Ton Argonauts, more fortunate than they!) Tbeir whimpered prayers now greet, yon in delight To bear you on to this triumphant day! My Dog St John Lucas In Philadelphia Ledger The curate thinks you hare no soul; I know that he haa none. But you, Dear friend; whoee solemn self-control In our four square, lamuiar pew, Was partem to my youth whose bark Called me in summer dawn to Tore Hare yon gone down into the dark Where none ia welcome, none may lereT I wfll not think those good brown eyes. Hare spent their light of truth so toon. But in aome canine paradise Tour wraith. I know, rebukes the moon. And quarters erery plain . and hilt, Seeking its master. As tor me. This prayer at last the gods fulfill: That when I paaa the flood and sea Old Charon by the Stygian coast , Take toll of all the shade who land Tour little, faithful, barking ghost Mar leap to lick iny phantom hand. All This In One Oregon Town From the Ashland Tidings. Sales of real estate, an activity which has been moving at a quick-time pace for several months, broke into double time in the past three weeks in Ash land. Nineteen residence properties, four suburban home places and four ranches near the city have been re ported sold in that time. In addition Ato the movement in residence and farm properties, numerous changes nave taken place in the business section and seven new firms are offering their goods and services to Ashland people. Be sides the new establishments, several of the old established business have changed hands and are expanding. An Inrush of homeseekers has made "To Rent" signs as scarce as flies in an Ice plant and rentals and property prices are booming skyward. Most of the bargains in real estate have been snapped up but property continues to move at a rate which prophecies big things for the coming spring. The total lack of apartments or cottages has caused a furbishing up of long-vacant properties and with, the city crowded and more coming, an extensive building campaign is sure to come when winter has passed. A number of house owners are remodel ing their homes and one or two new residences are being built even at this season. Sales of Ashland residence lots are recorded every day. The new business establishments re cently opened include a bakery, meat markets cleaning and dyeing works, plumbing establishment electrical sup ply store, variety store, and restaurant The upper story of a business block Is to be remodeled Into up-to-date apart menta A cabinet works plant is being built Olden Oregon Where the International Boundary Line Might Possibly Have Run During the controversy over the northern boundary of Oregon one of the compromises suggested was the follow ing : Beginning from latitude 49 degrees at the Rocky mountains, - southward along the height of land to the place where Lewis and Clark crossed the mountains, said to be in latitude 41 de grees 42 minutes, thence westerly along the Lewis river until it falls into the Columbia, and thence to the sea. This line would have left the Rocky moun tains at Lemhi pass, in central Idaho, and followed the Lemhi - and Salmon rivers to the Snake, the Snake to the Columbia and the Columbia to the ocean,' . . J The Oregon Country NorOiwaet Uappenbifs to Brief form tor the Bw Header. OREGON NOTES Considerable fruit- and shrubbery att the state hospital at Salem has been dam aged by the present cold weather. John Murphy, aged 56. found in a de serted shack near Echo, is in a hospital at Pendleton with both feet frozen. On account of the ferries being fiozen up. It requires a trip of 135 mil to reach Hood River from White Salmon. "The report of Union county school dis trict clerks shows an enrollment-of 313 high school pupils for the 1918-1919 term. Henry Rldgeway, 64 years old, was found dead in the woodshed at his home two miles west of Liberty last Satur day. Fifty farmers from all parts of the county met at Klamath Kalis Saturday and perfected a permanent farm organ isation. In all Hood River churches Sunilav pastors and congregations Joliiprl in fervent prayers for an abatement of the winter storms. . The Hollv Milk (VrpHl nittiiimii ot Amity, has discontinued evaporating inllk on account of the cold weather and shortage "of fuel. O. Van Marrn. a faller for the Urookp Scanlon Lumber company, waw killed near Bend when a tree limb fli. .ti ik ing him on the head. The present below-zero weather will reduce the 1920 longanherry crop in the Willamette valley about one fourth, ac cording to the growers. Mrs. Etta Handsaker, one of the Earli est pioneers of Oregon and whose hus band established the first store at Gosh en, died at Tacoma a few dayB ago.- The University of Oregon K. O. T. C. has ordered 2500 text books covering i military subjects over a four yeara' course for use by members of the corps. The motor propelling Oregon Electrlo train No. 6, north bound to Portland, burned out on a Salem aiding Sunday, with a loss of several thousand dollars. Deschutes county's first bond issue of $125,000, to draw interest at the rate of 5Vfc per cent, was purchased Monday by the Ralph Schneeloch company for $126, 750. Because of the present cold weather, the annual Marion County Corn show,, which was to have been held from De cember 16 to 20, has been postponed one week. According tot an estimate by th$ for est service, deer tin the western division of the Umatilla national forest have In creased 300 per cent in the past five years. Students in the department of geology at the University of Oregon have Just organized the Condon club, In honor of Dr. Thomas. Condon, pioneer geologist of the state. WASHINGTON f A grain exchange has been formed In Tacoma and will begin to function Janu ary 1. John Joseph Kilkelly, a farmer living a short distance from Kalama, was gored to death last week by a bull. W. a Elliott division freight, and passenger agent has announced aa em bargo, effective at once, on all freight shipments out of Spokane. Oakvllle schools were closed Friday indefinitely on account of inability to heat the rooms sufficiently for comfort of ihe children and teachers. Nearly all the coal companies of Washington have announced their In tention to pay the 14 per cent wage Increase fixed by the government. As the result of the coldest weather ever experienced on the harbor, all the timber camps in the vicinity of .South Bend have closed down Indefinitely, An exploding water coil in the range at the home of Ed Mosher in Kelso com pletely wrecked the ransre and kitchen. many parts of the range going entirely through, the ceiling. Seattle officials are searching for' a bandit who late Saturday night held up a restaurant and escaped with $140, after a revolver battle ith three policemen who were eating in the place. Kelso having been two days without water, the public service commission ' has sent , Its chief engineer to take charge of the city water system owned by the Kelso Water company. John Meade Jr. has just returned to Raymond from Flume. Italy, where he haa been stationed since the close of the war. Mr. Meade enlisted In the army the day after war was declared. IDAHO All mills In the Coeur d'Alene coun try have closed down because ot the extremely cold weather. Judge Lovett at Boise has ruled that the Oregon Short Line Is not responsible for interruption of construction on the railroad spur rrom its Yellowstone branch to the Teton coal mines. The controversy over the control of the Idaho slate fair has resulted In the suspension of Miles Cannon, state agri cultural commissioner, as we 1,1 as the personnel oi tne state lair oureau. The Blaine County Investment com pany, which is in charge ofJhe Blaine county irrigation project, HmTi brought suit against Blaney Brothers & Co. for $100,000 ror alleged breach oi contract. If the Dreeent negotiations between the federal and atate governments go through, Idaho Is likely to have one or the biggest and finest game preserves in the United States, if not in the world. GENERAL Congress has begun a drive to clean up pressing affairs so as to adjourh Sat urday for a two weeks' holiday recess. Searching parties are but looking for men who Sunday night near Dungloe. Ireland, shot and wounaea rrom amousn four constables. Having won all his demands. Gabriels d'AnnunzIo will hand over command of the, citv of Flume to regular troopaomder General Cavlglia, former minister war. Charles Thomas, a rancher, wai&shot and instantly killed at Lyons, .Colo., Sunday by his father-Jn-lawlrhlle Thomas had a revolver drawn w1 hie wife. iTr The airplane of Captain cedricwSowell, nna nf tha British airmen In the JaOTldon- Melbourne flight was wrecked! St George's bay December 10 and ffi is no hope that eitner tioweu or ninaecn anlcian escaped. , Kfr J. W. Cool Id ge, aged 61, of KSEncll Bluffs, and William H. Bay. . of Omaha, vetefan engineers, whllel i ylng different sections of the Overlaii i lim ited. Saturday, were Both strlck ( with paralysis while at the throttle. Vt 1T1 Curious Bits of Informa to tot the Curious " ml,- Gleaned From Curious Flao 1 The first presidential proclai atlon, appointing a day of national t tanks giving In the United States, wasjssued by George Washington, who desffaated Ocober 3, 1789, as the day. While the festival continued to be observed in many sections, especially In New Eng land, where Thanksgiving day origin- ated among the early colonists, it waa not until Lincoln's administration thai the last Thursday of each Novembef was officially declared a day of thanks, the observance ot which waa urged In proclamations Issued by the president and governors of the various states. It was largely due to the agitation of Mrs. 1 Sarah ' Joseph a Hale of Philadelphia that Thanksgiving became genera! holiday throughout the United fltatts. For a score of years she carried on propaganda ; through the columns ol Godey's Ladles Book and the Ladle Magazine, of which publication she Wag editor, and eventually she was success- -ful tn her plane for having Thanksgrve ing made a national festival, to be ob served on a uniform 5 date in all . the tatec. Canada followed the precedent of the United Stajes, except In the mat .ter of date, the dominion festival com ing several weeks before .the .day oh' served in the United States, .