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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 13, 1920)
THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL. POR TLAND. ..TUESDAY. . JANUARY . 13, 1S20. - AM WDaTMWDEJfT WCWBPiPsfey 0, 8. JACKSON ....Pnbbabet and morshif . Published rrrr day, sftemooa iCimt niuhi Afternoon! . St Tue ' Ju Allan ITSMI ; Hulldlno. Brudffti . end - lunuui I'ortUnd, Orsow - - i - '. ."W Entered St th prjatoffiee at Port hi ml, Oreatm. . lot tnnmlsica thrown tbs inaus :. eltu matter. ' - TXKIHO!E8 Main iT8, Aotomtlo 680-5 1. . AH Oepertmeats reached b thai numb. ' TU Uw operator srhat department ton want ttlkEIGN aDVEBTlSINO BEPWEBKNTATIVE i Benjamin Kant nor Ca, Brnmwifk Build n, " 225 fifth srenue. Maw Xorkt 00 Mailers Bnildinc. Cbleaaa. - - ' - tpbaerlftion ifrm br mail, or to any address fa .tba t'nktd States sr Mexico: f ' DAILY 4MOHNCTO OB AfTEBSOOKl ' .... Oaa f-Ooe month..... .SO !r -.",. i SUNDAY '", Oiwbv. . . .11.(0 I Ona month I .25 . DAILI (MOBNWO OR AITEBHOOIO AD Ona 7ar. ,$T.0 On month . . . .65 Mountain Mast to hare baas built for t the human raec, a at once tbefr schools and , their rataedrsls; full or tmram of Uhiini neted manuscript tot tha acholar. kindly in , , simple hMWii or tb. ewrker. eniet in pate elofarters for" tha thinker, oiiotu In holiness for tha krfnhitur. They are treat . cathedrals of the earth, with their gate of , nek, peTemente of cloud, choirs of stream and (tone, altsrs of snow, and raulta of purpla la trained br the continual (tan. -Ruskm.. WHAT WE SACRIFICE mNGLAND is at peace with Ger- tmany. I France is at peacewith Ger - , many. - v America is not at peace with Ger " many. America will not be at peace With Germany until tfie treaty Is ratified by the American senate or a new and separate treaty is negotiated with Germany and ratified by the - senate. ) Diplomatic representatives 'of the nations that have ratified are tak . - ing their places at the various cap itals. These representatives are the advance guard' that opens the way for the resumption of trade and economio ' Intercourse. . Exchange of commodi ties between nation and nation will at fence begin and every ; accommoda- tlon .and convenience be afforded through diplomatic channels for trade to be extended and enlarged. : Already, 1500 British business men ; are In Germany making trade connec tions. Germany needs .many things that England produces, and England . needs many lines of goods that Ger many produces. The same is true of Prance, Italy and Germany and ! all the other nations that have ratified i the treaty and are now in position to resume trade relations and cu cuUt ssof vate the processes and buslnes peace. x. . Exchange of goods stimulates in dustry In all these countries, gives employment to workers, forwards na tlonal prosperity, substitute.' peace lor war conditions, hastens progress toward the normal and fills peoples and governments with hope and cheer. America, is at peace with no coun try with which she was recently at -" War. She has not exchanged and will not exchange diplomatic representa- tlyes with them until peace is form ally ratified. America is not even a member of the League of Nations, which American brains planned and American leadership and influence brought into being. America is sacrificing vast trade op portunities, is Sacrificing her leader- ship of the world, is sacrificing the good will that she recently won fcorn mankind, is probably, sacrificing jthe ' very life of the League of Nations it " self, which is not likely lo survive . without America's leadership and v raoraL' Influence; is sacrificing the world's hope of permanent peace pe cause of the obstinacy and little :' Americanism of the obstructionists: in . the American senate. The unearned increment is at the bottom of city planning and sonlng schemes. This is the conclusion of Edijor Whltaker of th Journal of "the American Institute of AiPftlteets, as he expressed It before a Portland i audience. Now landed proprietorship-will have areal club against plans ' to prepare the city, for its future. -What; if history does dis close that .eitiesv perish which be- ' come so great as to be unworkable! What If congestion and, use of prop erly against puouc Interest does operate first for the-destruction of ;the life "of the city and then for the destruction of the city itself! TIME OR WORK SPEAKER before the National As- , II soelation of Mechanleal Engineers jrlia New York said:,,-. , v h There are measures' or by which to sell eras or real aetata. But i wneu w comes to tabor we have no esti mate ajtcept after the i labor is done, which Is long after the so-called bargain. wing took 'place, long after the-price Was et. It is true that labor is sold by the . . hour, but the bouf is an estimate of time, not of labor. We might Just as well sen eegs by? the yard without : specifying whether r lay them lengthwise or , serosa This inabtnty to strike a bar rain because the value of an article or the product . to be sold- is entirely Lun- known Is, in my opinion, one of the great . eat difflculttea to be overcome before . there can be in: equitable adjustment of the differences between the employer and . the employe, v ': ,: ,,. :. . -j 1, The .presumption In arfangemenls between employer and employe is that the time paid foe" la a measure of tb wofkv and IU product Ideally the employe utilizes toe time aaiaithfully and productively as though working by "the ,piec or for himself. Practi cally, the general experience of .em ployers a, that when the wage and the hoursj of 'employment are fixed pj contract production . drops.. Tbls places a' premium on Inefficiency, and gives respectability to loitering. The employe should -work on honor as well as by contract Many dp. But one of, the reasons for the popularity of piece work is because others grow to believe that they are iald for time and not for work.3 !, y The members are at Salem. The legislature: IS in session. ! The mils as;e costAis already incurred. There are other measures than those men tioned by the governor that deserve action. .While the body la at Salem, why should it not pass such meas ures as should be passed,' whether on the executive program or not? mmmmmmmmmmmmim mmmmmmmmmmmm mmm . FORTY-TIIREE BEAD THERE are 43 graves in Portland cemeteries that are graves of per sons kited the past year; in traf fic accidents. In those graves are the bodies of children and old men and widows who were' supporting children and men and women in almost every walk and con- UillUU VI tuc. - There Is" a howl about the murders and about, capital punishment as an alleged, means of checking) murders. How about checking automobile acci dents! More than three times as many persons were killed in traffic accidents as in murders. If we want to lessen violent death, why not also deal with the traffic tragedies? Is not a life snuffed out in a traffic acefdent just as precious as anyother life? Is not death Just as fatal whether caused by a high powr - automobile or by a bandit's club? The widow Smith's grave is out In one of the cemeteries. Three little children, .helpless to support them selves, were left destitute when she was run down and killed by a Winton Six that hurtled along its speeding way without stopping to carry the poor clay to the dead house. Her children are now on the mercy and bounty of relatives and friends,' parentis and almost shelterless. If every driver were licensed, and if for reckless driving his license were taken away and he could drive no more, irresponsible drivers and reck less driving would soon be at the. van ishing point Such a bill is knocking at the door of thg legislature. It is indorsed by automobile dealers, garage men, traf fic officers and all classes of citizens. If passedj.it would be the most pow erful of all agencies in saving people from being sent to the cemeteries by traffic accidents. ' Why disturb the seat of the state government of Oregon?. There is tradition and history in the location of . the capital at Salem. What sound reason is there for the pro posed removal to Portland? HIGHER EDUCATION T HE high cost of living is not af fecting the public schools alone. It is extending up into the higher institutions of .learning and from all over the nation are coming pleas for additional endowment funds and in the case of state-owned colleges bigger appropriations with which to meet greatly increased costs. A typical case is that of Columbia university, New York, which asks for an additional income producing cap ital of thirty million dollars to pay Its teachers and other expenses. In his annual report the president of the university touches upon a fundamen tal principle when he says, that be fore a college or university makes public appeal for aid it is imperative that it can satisfactorily answer these two questions: x Are its existing expenditures justi fied or can savings be madj by prun ing out what is unessential, wasteful or overlapping? Second, can its work be made more remunerative by re adjustment and increase , of tuition charges, by expansion of its activities in ways that are more than self sup porting or by any other method? In other words, it is incumbent upon it to show that -its administration. Is btjsinessllke, Another vital "principle enunciated 19 that T no 6elf respecting institution can acceet i'an endowment or rift which has fcohditions attached which will fix orttamper its complete free dom fn the control of Its educational policies and activities. To accept a gift on condition that a certain ad mlnlstrativel' policy be pursued is to surrender al. university's freedom. As stated j in . another way no uni versity is so poor that it can afford to accept aj gift which restricts its independence and no university is so rich that It would not be Impoverished by an addition to its resources which tied the hands of its governing-board. In these !da-ys of social upheaval much is heard of the charge that teachers, not only in thef higher, in-t stitutions btit in the public schools as well, afe becoming radical and socialistic The president of Cotum- biatakes issue with this and asserts that the radicals and revolutionaries are so few; that they are conspicuous: On the contrary, he saysMbat the university' teacher is usually very conservatr4 and difficult to bring to the support of a new idea or new project. ! ;.-. - The- nolion that some. ' university professors are . radical ; because their salaries ati not large enough "is, he aaas, more, .than usually ,';uncompll mcntary. The man who will change his views on economic,' historical or political subjects because his salary is doubled is, he thinks, made of pretty; poor stuff and his views need not trouble anyone very seriousjyc A California moving picture man wants to produce the Bible in grand pageant. He has been flooded with applications by women who want.tor play Eve, but not a man has come forward to an Dear as Adam. Is it because'' man hesitates to have it put faW over him as Eve did It, and will do it again? T WATCH THE WOMEN ACTIVITIES reported at a Portland meeting of representatives of women's clubs, as. recounted in ouiiuu; s wuuruai, ujuu awtcu- tlon. The women, as the article indicates, are concerning themselves with edu cational, social and civic endeavors. They are interested m adequate nour ishment for children In poorer dis tricts. They encourage effort to keep high the standard of the milk supply; One item On their working program concerns defective children under five. Kindred endeavors looking to. social betterment are receiving Ujelr atten tion. ' It is highly creditable to the women. Men overlook such things. That has been .one of the weaknesses in our social and economio life. Men's minds are engrossed with other affairs. Men, In fact, are wont to look upon other men who work for social betterment as "sissies" and "Lizzies' and "softies." Some men think a man almost unsexed if he con cerns himself with the welfare of children or with the lowly lot of the near submerged. Men unconsciously dote on the doc trine of the survival of the fit. They deny that they do, but they uncon sciously do It Just the same. They think it unmasculine to be rkmcerned with milk supplies and submerged children and tenement districts. . Their psychology is a fatal defect inM)ur scheme of things. Their Vts and their thoughts are responsible for the fact that we have profiteers and swollen rich and a rotten system of distribution and multitudes of sub- Lmerged. Their doctrine of every-man for-himself, and their resentment against the thought of one man be ing his brother's keeper, has done the country infinite harm. Their aloof ness and their doctrines and what comes from them, furnish the radical's and anarchists with a great deal of ammunition for their wicked propa ganda against America. The women's activities are properly pointed. They are directing public thought in the direction that it ought Jf go. Every large city has its fester spot of poverty and so has many a small city. Ten to fifteen million people in America are llvipg in pov erty. Somebody ought to be thinking f them. If not in a spirit of Chris tian brotherhood, somebody ought to be thinking of them for economic reasons. These millions of submerged are a weakness in the republic. They are a recruiting ground ror anarcnist agitators. The man who is despon dent over the problem of survival, who doesn't know where the next meal for his family Is to come from. Is often an easy mark for the siren preachments of the radical. The women could not find a better field for their endeavors. It is a field that has been neglected all these years. It is confirmation of the wis dom of giving them the ballot that their first endeavors are for civic ,and social betterment. It Is God's own work and if they keep at their task aggressively enough, they will force the men to follow. Nothing better could happen to America. No autoist who knows how to drive a car, who understands the elementary mechanics of automo bile construction, or who wants to protect he safety of himself and the public, will object to a fair measure requiring the licensing: of drivers. EDUCATIONAL CHAOS T EACHERS at Lebanon, IU., are on strike for higher pay. A 'strike of teachers seems scarcely fit Closed school rooms wltb. pupiia in idleness and teachers Sparring for salary are not the ideal with which we have been wont to contemplate so sacred a thing as edu cation.- It is due perhaps to the ab normality . of these unsettled times, and, is hardly to be a permanent status in the republic. The average annual salary paid grade school teachers in the United States is $630.64. Does any one won der that vacancies in the ranks of trained educators constitute a na tional educational emergency? There are but two cities in the United States, neither one Portland, that pay a maximum salary of 91800 a year to the elementary teacher. Can the endeavors of 23,000 teachers to se cure a living wage be criticized T The. field secretary of the National .Education association tells the people of Oregon that the minimum salary of a teacher, especially trained .for his of her. duties, should be $1200 a year. This is at "the rate of 1100 a month. A self respecting carpenter or bricklayer wouldn't consider" it. A shipbuilder would lay down his tools. Men and women in the professions would decide that they had missed their calling. ' Yet teachers are expected to live on a "plane commensurate with the tradi tional dignity of their vocation. While costs ' of ' living have , doubled, lhey have been left to divert their energies from their educational duties to the ugly problerils ' of ; a" bare,' and "mean existence. I Back of the poverty .of teachers' pay are the grizzly form of Illiteracy and radicalism. .The true education of the nation's children is at stake. The educaUonaremergency-may bring economic chaos, i National welfare is involved in the teachers' appeal. Who willjdeny its Justice? Oregon Oty a Cradle , of Literature Ia ' Thia Historic Town Were Nur- lured Many Famed Writers. . 1 : The first published book written in Oregon was written at Oregon City by an Oregon City man. It was called -The Prairie, Flower." Its author was Sidney w. moss, it was puotisnea at Cincin nati by Kmmerson Bennett. The .hero of the story was ia well known moun tain man, George W. Ebberts, frequently called "the Black Squire." Medorum Crawford's wife and her mother were also portrayed in! the pagea of "The Prairie Flower." ! Sidney W. Moss came to Oregon City in 1842. He was born In Illinois." March 17. 1810. During the winter of 1842. In his log cabin at Oregon city, Mr. moss wrote this book of Western life. He gave it to Overton Johnson, who went back to the states in 1S43, with the request that he find a publisher for it Mr. Moss was! a stonemason and worked on construction of the original Oregon institute, i which later became Willamette university. He surveyed Oregon City for Dr. McLoughlin and in 1843 Moss' hotel was famed for its ex cellence. He employed at his own ex. pense the first public school teacher at Oregon City. He is also the author of "Pictures of Pioneer Times." When Edwin Markham wrote his fa mous poem, "The Man With the Hoe,' the whole world thrilled to Its beauty and truth, but what few of the readers of this famous poem knew was that its author was hprn at Oregon City. He was born ' by the Palls Of the Willam ette April 23, 18S2. In 1857 his widowed mother took her two sons to California, He worked his way through the state normal school at San Jose. Though admitted to the bar, he never practiced law, preferring to be a teacher. His two volumes of verse, "The Man With the Hoe and Other Poems" and "In Karth's Shadow," have -been widely read. There is force and sublimity in such lines as these: "O mssten. lord and rulers of the lands How will the f utnre i reckon with this man ? How answer his brute Question in that hour When wHirlwlndu of rebellion shake the world? How will it be with kingdom and with kings With those who shaped ban to the tning he When this dumb terror shall reply to God Alter the silence o( the centuries t" Ella Rhodes, who was born at Council Grove, Kan., was taken by her parents while stilt a baby to the Grande Ronde valley. While in her early teens she moved with her parents to Oregon City, where she spent her girlhood. In Port land Russell C. Hlgginson met, wooed and won her. Ella Hlgginson, once of Oregon City, has written some beautiful verse and has published several volumes of stories. "The Forest Orchid" anxl "The Land of the Snow Pearls" are col lections of short stories that have ap peared in the Century, Harper's. Mc Ciure s and other magazines. Possibl her best known poem is "Four-leal Clover." "Sunrise I on the Willamette' is one of her most beautiful poems on Oregon. These two: stanzas give pne an idea of its beauty : i i The eon kinks downward through tha aflrer mist That looms across the Talley fold on fold. And shdint through the fields that dawn has kissed, v Willamette sweeps, a chain of liquid (old. Tha sun sink's downward through the trembting haze. The mist flings glistening needles high and higher, , And through the clouds O fair beyond al) praise I Mount Hood leaps, chastened, from a sea of fire. In 1846 there Bettled at Oregon City a merchant named Ben Simpson, who was born in Tennessee in 1813. When the Simpson prairie, schooner started for Oregon in the spring of 1846 there was a 6-months-old baby in the wagon. Sam, the baby, was born on October 10, 1845, in Missouri. His father took up a claim in Clackamas county not far from Ore gon City and here Sam Simpson was reared. His tender and beautiful poem, "The Beautiful Willamette," will live BALLOT ON Vote one choice. Indicate prefers ace bxX mark in square. 1 1 I I favor compromise on reservations and immediate ratif lcatioa el J peace, treaty and League of Nations covenant ; .-, Or, a I favor ratification with Or , r I favor ratification of ths I J covenant substantially ss Wilson. Or. 4 I am opposed to ratification Nam . Address gin ta aad mail ta; Tha Journal. Umitatloa BALLOT ON Vote one ebotoa. Indicate preference by X aaaik 1a easara. X n I favor compromise ens reservations and immediate ratification OX I J peace treaty and League Or. a r -i I favor ratification with u Or S, f"l I favor ratification of the peace -treaty and League of Nations L I covenant substantially as presented to tho senate by President " Wilson. . - Or, 4 r 1 1 am opposed to ratification L-J Nasfil O ..4 Address rm ta aad mail t The JetnaL LissMatloa BALLOT ON i Tele sea ebofea Indicate prefereoee br X mark h square, I favor compromise on reservations) and tmmediate ratification -et peace treaty and League of Nations covenant; 1 favor ratification with Lodge reservationa " Or, a Or. a, .I favor ratification of tho peace treaty and League of Nations covenant substantially as. presented to tho senate by President Wilson. , - Or. tl X am opposed to ratification Name J.. a MM m rut as aaa sst to; TUe Joarnai. Umitatloa for aU time. There u a haunting music in ine refrain : .,- . Oaward r. v. - - k" rrrer. Softlj calling to the sea.' v , Time that scar urn, , f . 4 . Maims and soars s. Leaves "bo- track or trench on the. Few Western writers have been so widely read as Eva Emery Dye. who has maae her Dome by the Falls of the Willamette for the past 30 years. "Mc- jLougaun ana Old Oregon."- her first book, ran Into edition after edition. The Conquest." "McDonald of Old Ore gon" and "Shores of Oregon" have all been eagerly welcomed by the reading public. Mrs. Dye, will soon issue a book on the early life of the mission aries In the Sandwich islands, a subject about which little or nothing has been wrjoen. , i Oregon City Is truly the birtholace and cradle of Oregon literature. " Letters From the People 7: : f UOSmmilcitlnni mil , n., M PbUeatioa in this department should be written onij one side of the paper, should -sot exceed vw woras m length, and must be signed by the Winer, wnoee mait aoaresa in lull mu&t accom pany the aontributfon. 1 1 "Tbe"Handicappedw Athena, Jan. 1. To the tfditnr of Th Journal Your sho;t editorial. "The Handicapped." ouerht to be nri n r eri i n letters of gold and scattered broadcast tnroughout the land. What a strange thing it is in this beautiful land of ours, flowing with milk and honer. An evurr hand the signs of bounty and abundance. uiai wnerever you go you see derelicts ana outcasts. And words of svniDathv S-e empty worda' They are unheard by the deaf ear of privilege and the heart or the woud is adamant to the appeals of sympathy. Too long entrenched has been wealth and the social morals that make w earth. The derelicts of society have been in numerable in every age. and the suffer ing and privations of the lowly unfortun ate submerged always nave been com mensurate with the unholy, selfish ag grandizement of the fortunate class. And if the golden rule, is dead It is because Christ himself was unable to raise it from the dead. The cold, unalterable principle of vest ed rights, founded upon thousands of years of selfish and unscrupulous ethics, that knows no natural rights, that re ligion itself cannot soften or allay, is the principle upon which our social sys tem Is founded. And the God-given abilities some men have to use as a gift that they might greatly benefit their kind are stultified to selfish use. And until the world will learn the les son that man's duty is not to himself but to society and the . world, and that special endotrments are conferred that they may be used for the good of all. our "Christian duty" and "brother's keeper" are but empty phrases. Alms indeed may be salve to the con science, but are never anything in strict reality but a guilty admission of un righted wrong. It should not be re garded as magnanimity or benevolence, but rather as a debt we owe humanity. F. B. WOOD. Commends Article on Car Fares Portland, Jaru. 12. To the Editor of The Journal-rMay I aslt.you to repub-; llsh the artlclev found bn page '-fof sec tion 5 of Sunday's Oregonlan, January 1 1, . entitled "Public's Interest Vital in fixing Street Car Fares," from the pen if E. Q. Hopson. civil engineer? Or, if 'ou feel that the article is too long fo tpubUcatlign, may I ask you to com nend the article and. its reading arid ttidy to every reader of your valuable cper? ' ' ' Nothing anything like equal to Mr. Hopson's article has. appeared in these arts on the Important subject of street car fares. It -should be read, studied and Inwardly digested, for It is the last word on the subject Franklin T. Griffith, in asking for an additional Increase to 8 cents for street car fares, considers how easily he got away with his. contract for a 5 cent fare, and, like Lord Cllve of old, when he considers his opportunities he- Is amazed at his moderation. If it is Mr. Griffith's purpose to put the circum stances under which he broke his cont tract with the people of Portland to carry passengers for a 5 cent fare and no more, into the politics of Oregon, he can do so without much more effort. HENRY E. M'GINN, America Both Big and kittle ' From tha Bookjr Mountain News. America is both big and little. Her 23,00O",O0Q dairy cows produce 45,000,000, 000 quarts of milk a year. Yet 6,000,000 Infants are puny from lack of milk. PEACE TREATY Lodge ressrvationa peace treaty and League of Nations presented to the senate by President in any form. ef ballot to acalUled voters is requests. PEACE TREATY , of nations covenant ; Lodgs reeervatlona la any form. i .....,..,......., ,,, . .. ; af baUet ta-aaanflea votars Is ...... PEACE TREATY tn any form. tt bails as ejsalMea enters Is COMMENT, AND ' SMA'tl CHANGE Pardon us. but donl you be aay walker. ' Have you seen anything of a stray heiress T , . .-. . H-. v Now, we'll sea what the legislators will do about everything. . -r Hoover says Europe can teed Itself. Weil, It's certainly old enough. "LctU Drive Back, Red Army in fcerth" Headline. All, right, let's. - Wond'er if the iMysterioHSXlr. X" is reiaiea to ine wen known "Madame x. Now a scientist plans to . shoot rocket to the moon. With a lot of racaei, no doubt. - A That Eastern weather man who fore-' casiea rsun nis week baa let one per fectly good day go by without making e . . In Illinois, where the school teachers are on strike; it is probable that ths Pupils, for once, are in sympathy with uieir leacners. . "Purity Drive Relenllejss in Its Soope Headline. Seems that the ''driver" id hi so popular during the war has taken a peacetime strangle hold. 1 he market pape Says that "hoes touch $17 in the alleys." Evidently thev were not regular nogs, or they would not have been satisfied with merely We read that a missionary is being held prisoner hv th rrhtneiut. w trttmt he will find some solace in the fact that the Chinese do not make a practice of wkuiiB uietr vicums. MORE OR LESS PERSONAL - Random Observations About Town .State House,. Salem, Jan. IS. Tom' McCusker. who Is as ubiquitous as tha legislature, irnot more so, has moved up to Salem Ao try to stage a battle royalwlth Oscar Horns, Eugene Smith and any others Who might want to sit In their cornerof the ring in defense of the Horfn?un1on labor bill. enactedNift er a spectacular fight in the regular sesslpn. Tom Is putting up"at the Hotel Marion, that quoted phrase hav ing JO do with the fact of his domicile only.' jarthe estimation of A. A. Smith of Baker, who contends that Tom is not putting up 1n any other meaning of the term. He'ltas that idea because Ton Invited hitn to eat breakfast with, him, and then left him to pay for his owrf meal, a diplomatic lapse not often ob served among lobbyists who Journey up to the legislature to get things. putter, or under, as the case may be..- At' fiy rate, McCusker is after Horne and hls bill, with Gene Smith showing his teeth, in his usual genial smile, of coarse, every time he meets the secretary xf the Employers' association about, the lobby. Mrs. Ada Wallace Unruh. chief pilot of the good ship Bone Dry, is sniffing the breeze about the capitol . lobby, sus picious and unconvinced. She Has a deep rooted conviction that some of the boys have "got something on the hip," but she has not. been able as yet to de tect any undue protruberances flaunting! i. . i .... i . . - .. ...... -1 Lirciuwires in aiiront to ine proBlDltlOn eye. and so is inclined to the conviction' .that they have 'abondoned the quarts for the flat flasks that may gurgle un IMPRESSIONS AND OBSERVATIONS OF THE JOURNAL MAN By Fred Lockley '(More about Jb nsmber" 4 trttd by Mr. Lockley In a second instaBmept on that remark able numeral, lie goes into history and into chnrchly obeerraneea for .instances oT tha num ber's application. On May 31, 1862, General McClellan, with 42.000 Union troops, attacked an equal force of Confederate troops under General Joseph, K. Johnston. 7 miles east of Rfchmand, Va. On the battle ground was a hotel, whose name ' was the 'Seven. Pines," and so this 'stub bornly fought and hotly contested bat tle has gone down into hiatofy as the battle of Seven Pines. The Seven Weeks' war Is the title given by historians to the war waged in 1868 between Prus sia and Italy against Austria, Bavaria, Wurttemberg, Baden, Saxony, Hesse Ilesse-Cassel, Hanover and Nassau, which resulted in a victory .for Bis-, marck and the formation of a new Germany, with Prussia the dominant factor. The Seven Years' war was fought between Frederick the Great of Prussia and Maria Theresa of Aus tria. The petty quarrel ot these mon archs finally involved aU the great na tions of Europe. England joined Prus sia. France and Russia Joined Austria, From 1764 to 1783 this stupid and sense less war was waged. From Europe it spread to America, where French and English forces fought each other. When over a million Uvea had been maorifictd, the contending forces agreed to call it a draw. a" a I)id you evej. notice how the number 7 constantly crops up in history, both sa cred and profane? All literature is filled with reference to the sacred and sym bolic numeral, from the. seven wlBe men of Greece to the seven wonders of the ancient world, which were the pyramids of fcgypVthe hanging gardens of Baby lop, the maWoleum at Halicarnassus, the temple ofTilana at Ephesus, the Colossus of Rhodes, the Pharos at Alex andria and the statue of the Olympian Jove in Ells. The middle ages also had their seven wanders the co"liaeum at Rome, the catacombs of Alexandria, the great wall ' of China, the leaning tower of Pisa, the , porcelain tower of China at Nanking, ' the mosque of St. Sophia at Canatanti ' r.ople and the ruins of. Stonehenge in England. - M . -v j Turn which way you will, and you ! will see referenco to the seven crosses. I the seven brothers, the seven sisters, the seven sleepers, the seven senses ; Curious Bits of Information Tor the Curious Gleaned From Curious Places i The origin of the loving cup is fiasy., tSome InvesUgators have asserted "that its beginning wft the wassail bowl, be longing to festivities antedating the Christian era and that upon the advent of Christianity tho custom of wassail ing assumed a religious aspect. Tho monks called the wassail bowl the "po 1 ..u.Hk" r i ovine cup). The cer emony of drinking from ono cup and ntaainsr It around was observed at the I Jewish pascal supper and on other not Jable occasions. Undc Jeff Snow Says: With the legislature gitUn' a extry dig is us this year, it's most ilkeJy well blieve the prophet or scientific feller a : while back that said disasters and af i flictions alius toilers up a big sun spot made by all the pianets tuggui on one side. - Loss fay tha Rusting ot Sleel From the Sail rraDriane .Cbronlele. It is now quite universally- admitted lhatH tho rusting of iron and steel: Is REWS IN BRIEF. SIDELIGHTS,, . J, m.. Tiw 4i.fv nAtA Ksffl twttt -WlA Of tut lightest In the numbfeir of fire ana n.uo . I saakji thssFUfrAin IR MNlOrl I historyT7MaiTvWbn total losses win prooaoiy ,.moi. tomore ..than, WOW.,. fi.J k nrK -i.i Wo.t Rl-rth 'irtrM; bridtte and road work Is completed. Ths Dalles, the Chronicle declares, will have on; of the finest city entrances poaseea bv anv community on the route ?of the Columbia-river highway.'1 - , "Dry New Tear's was not so bad. after it - th. T ji nranda Observer testifies. "The bead was clearer and the eye was hrlhtr tho dsur followins:. ; Even the hin-nnricAr siartiM were stooped in many places, which indicates that prohibition is actually proniDiiing. , "One 6f our county offlcialsv. who was named in our last issue as oeing in una tnr a ralu In ulsrv. aJLVfl he is ODDOSed to the proposed Increase," says the Gold Beach Reporter. "In fact, he is con sidering the refund of a portion of his !( TMur month salarv. at he feels there is not enough business transacted in the ofrice to Justify even the present wag. Rlnrm nlarwta t-tnnrtjd bv the Fossil Journal's Birch Creek correspondent. "Our recent snowstorm took a ratner heavy toll of dumb brutes, but no loss of human life has been reported in this section. There were a few narrow es capes, however, such as our stage driver had. He was out all. night battllnit for his life near the Birch Creek school house. He reached DayVUIe the next iiav KKnnt 17 hnnn tat. He is a re turned soldier and makes very little of it, although he was half frosen. We think his battle for life as heroic as ths warfare overseas. . . heard and usseen. However, she has been forced to conclude, so far as tha session has gona that ths legislature uitwa roi nave us-same oa smell. ' Ben Sheldon, true to prediction and accustomed form, "rose to remark1 ahead of any of the other fellows of the house or of Mrs. Thompson, when the session got under way Monday morn ing. As chairman of y the resolutions committee he got the first Chance to say "Mr. Speaker" ,and eome 'other words, while he handed In a bunch of resolu tions framed by the cdipmlttee and en trusted to his charge. Now that the formality is over and the lea has been broken, all the other members of the house feel that the bridle has been taken off and the road of oratory Is open to all. J' Sarrr Brown of Qervals, who is not ths man., who made the belt. Is not a very KPoa lriena or Jack Frost. In fact he LP I is a bitter enemy, contending that Jac8I? ' an unwelcome visitor at any season of the year, particularly In his loganberry patch. Mr. Brown used to make laws up at Salem every two years or so. hut now makes it possible to make logan berry lulca.by cultivating a large num ber of acres- close to his home town and postof f ice Until the , recent cold spell he was an optimist, but now, since he has thawed out and his berry patch has not,, he Is a pessimist. Jack Frost nipped .him,' and his .neighbors, and he contends that there is about to be a great dearth of -berries when the harvest time comes next June, and July. for in the old days they taught us we had seven senses instead offlvav sight, bearing, smell, taste, touch, speech and understarilng. The seven . liberal arts of the Romans Were arithmetic, geom etry, astronomy, music, logic rhetoric and grammar. The seven lamps of architecture were the lamps of sacri fice, truth, power, beauty, life, memory, and obedience. Tha-seven churches of Asia; addressed by St. John In the book of lievelation, were Ephesus, Smyrna,. Pergamus. Thyatlra, Sard is, Phila delphia and'Laodlcea. The sevVn cham pions of the Crbss were St. George of England, St. Denis of. France, St. James of Spain, St Anthony of Wsrv, Bt. . An drew of Scotland. St. Patrick of Ire land and St. David Of Wales. .X y The Roman Catholic church defines the seven chief virtilea as faith," hope, chacity, prudence, temperance, justice and fortitude. The seven Corporal works of mercy are, (to bury the dead, to oiothe the naked, to feed the hungry, to give drink to tho thirsty,- to shelter the homeless, to visit those" In prison and to administer unto the sick. The Catholic' church designates the seven deadly sins as pride, anger, envy, sloth, lust, covetousneftB and- gluttony. It teaches that the seven gl(ta of the Holy Ghost ace counsel,' fear of 'the Lord, fortitude, piety, understanding, wisdom and knowledge ; that the seven joys of Mary were the annunciation, the visita tion, the nativity, the adoration of the Magi, the presentation in the temple, the f tndipg of Christ among the doc tors and the assumption. The seven sacraments of the Jloman Catholic church as set forth,, by the council of Trent, are. baptism.: confirmation, tho eucharist. penance, holy orders, matri mony and extreme unction. On . Friday preceding Palm Sunday Is celebrated the festival- -of the seven sorrows of Mary, which observance" was Instituted by Pope Benedict XII L They are the prediction tt Simeon, tho. flight into Egypt, .the loss of Jesus in Jerusalem, the sight of Jesus bearing his. cross, the descent from the cross and trie entomb ment. The Seven spiritual works of mercy taught by the . Roman Catholic church are, to admonish tho sinful, to bear; wrong patiently, to comfort the afflicted; to counsel the doubting, to forgive offenses, to instruct the igno rant and to pray for the living and those who are dead. one of the serious industrial problema If we assume an : average life of steel to be S3 years tho depreciation charge fl 8 per cent represents, according, to tho United States bureau of mines, a yearly loss of 1.000,000 tons of product In this country for tho crude or soml-flnisiied material alone, exclusive of correlated manufacturing . ooatav The inevitable rusting of steel may be justly claimed to be tho mainstay of ths sine Industry, as 40 per cent of the metallic zinc used in-tho-states Is for galvanizing Iron and steel articles, representing an annual outlay of $20,000,000 in an endeavor to protect metals from decay. Enormous amounts of paint are used in a like en deavor. About E.000,000 tons of coal are needed In tho ' production of steel to replace ths annual wast and 1,000,000 more for replacing tho - sine that is an nually lost No estimate can bo made of tho value of tho brass, bronze, copper, aluminum, nickel, tin and other metals and alloys used in machine parts as sheathing for plating, etc, to protect steel or as a substitute for it in places where it would be used but for its lack of resistance to atmospheric attack. , And Hitting on All Twehe ' : From the CMesfO Vein. 4 Nineteen-twenty looks like fine new 12 cylinder year. The Oregon Country,' Northwest Happenings rn Brief form for tha if t4. Busy Header. , t . ' OREGON NQTES 4 A new Methodist churrh'ia beitic hum at Falrview to replace the one recently" Hirn uown. , Miss Elisabeth Tavlnr nf inl a graduate of Occidental college. Ih now insarucior i epanisn at the university of Oregon. Clatsop county la arranarlnr in .nr.r Upon Its program of highway Improve- ' mont for liSO. whtch jill entail an ex penditure of JS15.OO0. VerV few Phlnauu r.li.fi,i. killed in Linn county by the two foot. snow and attendant cola snap, accord- i wig mo game wsraen. In the anirreo-af J? f,u.r ..n. -??B loaded by the railways of the North- -i western region in December cnmiuimi - ith tho corresponding month of 118. An Eastern manufsri goods is looking for a location for a packing plant In the Lake Lablsh. re Brook may establish a factory at Night Foreman Morgan of the O-W. ' R. A N. yards at Bieth nearly lost his Hl y asphyxiation Sunday morning j. while lighting a heater in a refriaer ator car. Oregon's 1919 farm' kndwrchard pro duction crowd the $50O,t00,oiio mark, with grain ihe largest Item, over T5,ooo. 000. In 1914 the total grain alue was $4,500,000. Business men of Salem who wish to become more clffsely affiliated with WU- ; Ic.metto university activities will be given associated memberships in th " student body. , Mrs; Addle M. Thompson, a daughter JJ,,,11- Il;bn C and Margaret Lair v 11111. one of OreKon's most prominent Sloneer families, died at Albany. Bun- l ay, aged 70 years. ' The total returns from all IIom1 River ' valley products the past year, including lumber, will exceed $7,000,000. The ap ple crop leads with a gross income to ' growers, of $4,500,000. la handing his annual report to ths -directors in sesHlon Saturday, J. O. Holt, manager of the Kucene Fruit Growers association, stated that the annual busi ness amounted to $94,476.- Of the 1559 students registered at ths University of Oregon. 391 are from Mult nomah county. Thirty-four counties of the stats are represented. and 166 stu dents are from other starts, A special election will be held at As toria on January 15 to vote on the Issu ance of bonds to conwtruct playgrounds, an athletic field and auditorium. About $260,000 is needed for the purpose. Three hundred Guemnev heifera will be brought to this state direct from ths Island of Guernsey, off the coast of Kngland, this spring, according- to Ira T. Whitney, Lane county agricultural agent. After three years of Investigation and an expenditure of nearly $30,000, the Medford irrigation district reports that the only feasible source of water Is from the Rogue River Canal company at $13S per acre. By the explosion of a five gallon can f oil while she was atartliiR the kitchen Ire. Mra Rosa Carlson nf Aalnrlji u-aa : fatally burned, her S-mnntha-oid chiM severely burned and the furniture and personal eirects of the family destroyed. - V fc-v- ' . ". 4 washinoto.v .-Mrs. S. J. B. Campfield, bom In 1159 at t,resweu, vr., of pioneer parents, died last week at Husum. "A ladies' auxiliary of the American Legion has been organized at Raymond with an enrollment of 25 members I.eon Hathaway, 21 years old, died at Yakima, Saturday, as the reault of In juries received when he touched a high power wire. Henry Christ, aged 84, one pf Van couver's earliest and best known pio neers, ia seriously 111 and there la little hope of his recovery. Stores and residences at Prosser aro depending on kerosene lumps and can dles becnuse of breaks in the power lines owing to cold and frost. Fortyt thousand shots were fired ami 11.000 rabbits killed In the- big rabbit drive near Burbank, Sunday. Many bunnies escaped because the shooters ran out of ammunition, v 4 J Grays Harbor lumber shipments dur ing tne Pst year totaled upward of 800.000.000 feet. In addition to thia, har bor mills shipped about 3000 cars of shingles and other lumber products.,.. Emery Dillingham, whose wife was fnund dead in her chicken yard, near Belllnctiam. has given himself up to the officers and says he accidentally shot his wife while attempting to kill a rat. . L Game birds of Yakima county, driven out of. their usual haunts by tha se verity of the winter, are giving farmers mtirfi trnuhl and atens are belnK made lo trap them and send them, to counties that "have a shortage. . John Bolman of Outlook and Walker Schlosser of Sunnyaide are under ar rest at Pmeser, charged with attempt ing to hold up an automobile party en route to a dance. Six shots were fired at the machine, but the party escaped unharmed., t ' GENERAL Th Trrf ne-iieae cabinet realrned Sat urday, owlnsr to tho opposition of ths chamber of deputies. Information, is received at Ran An tonio that Oarrania government orr cials are countenancing a plan to es tablish a Bolshevik regime In Mexico. a nvemrh frulner has arrived at Co penhagen with 600 troops who will oc cupy Flensburg-Schlesburg during ths plebiscite, ureal umain win stiio iv men. The Shrine auditorium In Los Angeles, nrAnrtir nf an organization of NoDIef of the Mystic Shrine, was destroyed by f're Saturday. The loss Is estimated at 8200.000. While In San Francisco Will H. Hays, Republican national chairman, will nam the 40 members of the committee on platform andV policies authorised by tha national committee recently. Secretary Glass, in a statement do elaras another! liberty loan will bo nec essary If congress embarks on "now fields of large expenditures or reduces the aggregate volume of taxes.' ' By reason of the failure of prohibi tion IMS to obtain a majority of votes In the recent "no license" referendum, New Zealand will remain wet and th present license system will remain. General Ludendorff makes an earnest appeal to the Germans to forget tbeli domestic quarrels and close their ranki to the grave perils which he thlnkt menace the republic ff6m Bolshevism Lieutenant Bruce Struthers was in stantly killed and Lieutenant J. Evans severely Injured at Douglas, Arts., when an airplane in which they were attempt ing to make a forced landing crashed to the ground.. An effort to retire Samuel Gompori as president of the American Federation of Labor on full pay, and crea'e fot him a new position as honorary presi dent, is expected to be mads at Ui convention of the federation next Ju Olden Oregon Beaver State Mads Itself a Stats, Congress or No Congress. Oregon became tho thirty-third state in the union. February 14, 1859. It had, howovor, by action of tho people, be come a "state nearly a year before. -' Believing that congress would pass the enabling act in 1859, tho voters bad formed a state government by tho elec-- tion of officers in June.,1868. A special ' session of tho legislature convened to July. Tho state officers took tho oath of , office ' and two United States sen ator were elected. Soon afterward! -word cams that congress had adjourned,, , without paaalng the enabling "act and thatlpregon was still a territory. There werewQ seta of officers and two gov. ernmenta ' By common consent ths stats government was set aside - tempo -rarlly and the territorial government ; -functioned until '"the ; following Febru " aryv when congressional acUon was tak-