THE OREGON DAILY - JOURNAL. - PORT . LAND. ' 'WEDNESDAY, . JANUARYC 21; 1820.' ' '-! . AM DEPBtPST WBWtPfg C. I. JACKSON. , .Publisher (Eseept Sunday imwi, " - '""r BaUdtni. Btn ud ; tMhlU street. Portland, Oresor. Snterad at tha Fwtoffle a rvnSfSMl for trensmtasioo, throats the mails a aoofa v etui matter. ' ' TELEPHONES Main 7178. rtflJ": AU department reached by these numbers. - Kg topsrstor what department you want. OBKIOH ADVERT18f.NO BpREflEfTATrTK BUnln Kaotnor Co.. nfr0BSSi 22 ruth eenue, New Tort; BOO Mauess Building, Chkoago. ' abwHpUaa terms by malL or ts any addiw to th United States or Mexico: ' DAILY MOB-NINO OB ATTEllSOOW) Oat sr.... ..85.00 I On month I .60 SUNDAY On year 82 80 On month f .2 DA0L.T (MORNING OB AFTERNOON) AMD SUNDAY Qaa year. . . . . . 7-R0 I One month . Than It no dispute aer wbiah nation fee frma to war that oonld not hee better bean settled in peace. Grant. A RAILROADER'S PLAN 0VERNMENT operation for two years has convinced the country that public owner ship is Dot desirable and that the railroads should""and can be op- crated by their owners." So declared Thomas DeWitt Cuyler, 1 chairman of the Association of Rail -.way Executives, in an address at Buf falo. Then he went on to say : ! Are the laws to be broad and strong enough to maintain the roads, PROVIDE i THE COST OF OPERATION, NECKS t t 18ARY ADDITIONS AND BETTER- f 'MENTS. A FAIR RETURN ON THE lWAflTAJj 1IN V Ml tLU A Dim c-ra i OF CREDIT IN THE FUTURE THAT i'WILL PROVIDE FOR THE BETTER- ' fMENTS AND EXTENSIONS THAT i WILL BE REQUIRED INCESSANTLY TOR ALL TIME TO COME? J - That Is to say, if the government Jthrough legislation will provide the roads with a "fair return on the in vestment," and will "provide the cost of operation and provide the roads "with a system of credit that wtl1 iprovide for betterments and exten sions," then the managers can sue 'oessfully operate the lines. J vCertalnly almost anybody could run a railroad with the government ; providing everything in advance. "Why couldn't the managers operate th lines if the public carefully sup plies "cost of operation" and "a fair return" and a "system of credits"? Who couldn't run a railroad with the government guaranteeing, in advance the things to make the business pay? But the objection to Mr. Cuyler's proclamation is his cocksure state ment that "government operation for two years has convinced the country that public ownership is not desir able." There was no fair trial of government operation. The line were managed by the same men who ran them under private ownership. There was no attempt to convince the country that goverrunent opera tion was desirable. The circum stances were such that the public had to " be ignorrrl movement of troopB arid war material had to be given preference. And then, the men , in control cared little as to whether the public was satisfactorily served. The higher tips among them preferred that the public, would not be pleased with government operation. Yet, in the government operation, there was this: The traffic of the eoiptry was all moved; unde- private control the roads collapsed before the great task of moving that traffic. Government operation may not be the thing. That Is a very great prob lem. There will be more sentiment for government operation when the roads go back to private operation and rates are raised, as they will be, to meet a lot of the requirements which Mr. . Cuyler demands. Then some people will say: Since the gov ernment is to exercise guardianship over the lines and see that the busi ness pays", why not the government operate them? Tom Skeyhlll, the Australian poet, haa the idea. It Is the English language that we learn and the American "slanguage" we apeak. At that it is the most expressive in the world, even if It does require . more exclamantlon points than any other. OREGOVS SAFETY LAW T WENT through the house with .1 out a dissenting vote.. It was ap proved by the senate unanimously Yet the bill which empowers the Oregon Industrial accident commis sion to formulate safety rules for in dustrlal plants constitutes one of the broadest grants of authority ever enacted In any state. Representative Smith who Intro duced it gave the measure unquali fied support. He is outstandingly identified with labor. President Ball of the Oregon and Columbia basin division of the National Safety coun ell says that no bill was ever aimed more, directly " at the benefit of in dustry conducted in the interest of the state. He Is an employe:. : The new industrial safety law ex tends its provisions beyond power to form and enforce rules and regula tions; It gives the"; Industrial acci dent commission r almost the stand lug ot a court. It permits the com mission to sit upon any controversy Involving the settlement of aocident claims. Upon motion from either side in the controversy the case must be reheard by the commission. Then, if desired, appeal may be taken to the' circuit court. But in the action before the court no evidence can be introduced which was not pre sented incident to the initial hear ings. This provision is most signifi cant. One of the first rules which it is purposed shall be formulated under the safety law is one that involves the adoption of (he boiler inspection of tfie American Society of Civil En gineers. This code is now operat ing in California and many other 6tates. Boiler inspection codes have in the past failed before the Oregon legislature because of fault imputed to them by either workers or em ployers. Recommendations for installation of safety devices In manufactories will gain an authority not before pos sible. The 6tate labor commissioner believes this authority to be of great importance. The safety measure puts the power of law back of a safety move ment which has heretofore been forced to depend upon moral suasion and the enthusing Influence of civic campaigns. It places carelessness and indifference to safety . under legal stigma. It will be a source of incal culable benefit to industry. General Pershing told Portland that the moral victory of American troops in the world war was nearly if not fully as great as the military victory. Uncle Barn's doughboys showed that soldiers can live clean as well as fight clean. Every il literate who put on a uniform and went to the front learned to read and write as a part of his training. One understands now the source of the high idealism expressed in the organization of the American Legion. BANKS ON JELLY FISH w HO oan blame Senator Banks for demanding that Governor Olcott resign? Didn't the governor prevent the senator from getting a $500 legal fee? Didn't the senator, like a true humanitarian, almost work his head off to get a pardon for a convict? Didn't that convict have - $3000, and didn't the senator have a right to separate him from $500 of it as a legal fee if the senator wanted to? Isn't the laborer worthy of his hire? Governors ought to mind their own business. When It comes to pardon ing a convict out of the penitentiary, that is the convict's business and the lawyer's business exclusively. They know exactly what should be done, and any governor who knows what a governor is for. will, when the prin cipals to a pardon are negotiating, go away back and sit down. As Senator Banks truthfully says, any governor who deprives a lawyer, good and true, of a $500 fee for get ting a pardon is a "jelly fish." He Is not only a "jelly fish" but a low browed "jelly fish" without pedigree or pride of ancestry. And furthermore, as Senator Banks Indicates in his letter on this page, any governor who refuses Vj allow legal fees to lawyers who appeal for pardons is also a "jelly fish." He Is not only a "jelly fish" he's a cuttle fish, a crawfish, a red-headed salmon, fish bait and a fish commission. Thus, not only has this unregen- erate Olcott shut Senator Banks out of a $500 fee in one pardon case, but he has closed the gates to every hope of a fee in future pardons. It's a dirty shame. Senator Banks is. right Olcott is not only a "jelly fish," but he is unconstitutional? THiY ARE HUMBUG R; EPLYING to a reoent editorial in The Journal an Ohio congress man writes : The charge that these speeches are not made on the floor of congress Is true. but t contend that it is better to give the members this opportunity of expression rather than take up the time of the house to listen to the speeches. It simply saves time, and It give the members the opportunity to go on record and to express themselves on pending legisla tion. Then the house is not a delibera tive body. The speeches not delivered in the house but inserted in the congressional record, are mere bun combe for the consumption of the folks at home. Leave to print many of these speeches is granted days after the bill has been passed. As the gentleman from Ohio says, it saves the time of the house not to have to listen to the voluminous ad dresses, often prepared not by the congressman but by a bright clerk. It is a deliberate deception. It is a heavy waste of public money. It is a system of false pretense that ought not to be practiced upon a people by a great legislative body. By send ing these never-delivered speeches back home many of the folks are given the impression that then- con gressman is one of the pillars of congress, that he Is cutting a wide swath, and. of course, creating the Impression that he ought to be kept in congress. That is mostly what the speeches are for. They are fraud and humbug. They are an expensive luxury. The practice ought to be abolished. MAKE YOUR WILL 0 F THE several phases of National Thrift week none is more im portant than "Make You? Will" day. Usually we ourselves must suffer the consequences of un thrift, but those who are most dear to is must suffer the consequences if we. fall to . make , a will. v . , It is the privilege of every person of sound mind, no matter how little or how much he owns, to give writ ten directions for -the disposition' of his property after death. You' want your will to stand. It is the most important personal document you will ever, be called upon to execute, for the way it is written will determine how well your wishes will be carried out.. It is the final disposition of your life work. Your will MUST be correctly drawn. It must be precisely worded. It must be properly witnessed, and not by a beneficiary. It must have no ambiguities. It must be contest-proof. Every conceivable, contingency must be foreseen and provided for. Lawsuits often heavily tax the as sets of an estate. None but a lawyer thoroughly versed in probate practice should be intrusted with the writing of your will. But whom shall you name as ex ecutor? Countless fortunes ac cumulated by years of toil have been wasted by inexperienced, inefficient. ignorant administration. You desire, if possible, when the management of your estate passes to other hands that it will increase rather than decrease in value. Your executor must be honest and temptation-proof, and his business judgment must be of the highest order. Thrift week is a splendid enterprise. The movement should have every encouragement. The various phases of thrift as presented in the week's program merit full consideration and very wide attention, because, as a nation we are notoriously a spending and wasting people. Some one has said that the rea son the customer of a doctor or a dentist is known as a patient is because he has to be. What we can't understand is why the term isn't extended to apply to the clients of lawyers and the patrons of plumbers. A HAPPY SCENE HEN Alexander Berkman, Emma Goldman and the other de ported radicals landed at a Russian port they were cheered by the soviet military. That is fitness. Soviet Russia is the true place for those who admire the soviet system. ' "This is the greatest moment of my life," exclaimed Miss Goldman as she stepped on Russian soil. And the Bolshevists from America greeted the Bolshevists of Russia with fraternity and enthusiasm, and the welcome of Russians was as fervent as a reunion of long separated brothers. It was all ideal. It was a sort of happy family. If a fatted calf had been handy it would undoubtedly have been killed and been served up for merriment and feasting. One would think that the radicals left here in America would contem plate that felicitous meeting with hunger and longing. So many hearts beating in unison, so many good and true Soviets with such singleminded ness, so many soviet souls bound to gether in such warmth of undivided and unadulterated impulse it is the dream the radicals have had so long and just over in Russia It's come true to Emma and Alexander and the other deported ones. Why do not all our Reds go over there and join in the good things? This business of proselyting America to sovietism is a thankless job, any way. If the attempt should succeed the Americans could not appreciate what had beea done for them. And it might not succeed and some of those attempting it might be brought under evil days. Why -ot fly Into the outstretched arms of Russian sovietism. welcom ing its heroes home, and leave Amer ica to the Americans? It's a way to make everybody happy. A Shriner in his fez and velvet pants would be a bizarre object be reft of dignity and vivid presence if forced to dispone his limbs upon a park bench. Better see to it that he and his wife have a room in your own home and a good time in your city when the Shriners" con vention comes to Portland next summer. If you are crowded, you'll lose no credit if you follow the ex ample of the Pendleton man who lets Round-up visitors sleep in his bed while he rests in the garage BAYING AT THE MOON R' EAR ADMIRAL SIMS is quoted as a believer in the possibility of firing a rocket into the moon The earth's satellite has lonjr been a symbol of the unattainable Even the upper air has never been explored by man. The mystery of this region may be solved and communi cation established between the earth and the moon by a multiple charge high efficiency rochet now being worked out by Professor Goddard of Clark college. An interesting speculation, says a statement given out by the Srnithsoni an Institution, Is on the question of sending to tho surface of the dark part of. the new moon a sufficient amount of the most 'brilliant flash powder which, being ignited on'lmpact, would be plainly visible in a powerful tele scope. This would be the only way to prove that the rocket had reached the moon, as the apparatus would never come back. The outer limit of the earth's atmosphere is estimated to be 230 miles up. The highest level ever reached with instruments is 19 miles, and this was done with a bai- loon. v? To- send a rocket beyond, the Influence of the. earth will require, It is estimated, ail "initial miss" of 1274 pounds. -.. . . , The nature of the upper air has for a long time been a subject of much speculation as to its chemical com position,' density, temperature, etc., and even if Professor Goddard does not succeed in throwing a rocket to the moon he may be able to learn something about the higher altitudes. Oregon Country Spurned by Osteocephalics Farseeing Men for Years Labored With Congress in Vain Oregon City, the first capital of the Oregon country, should erect a monu ment to John Floyd of Virginia. He was one of Oregon's first, ablest and most brilliant champions. He was born in Jefferson county, Virginia, In 1783, was graduated from the University of Pennsylvania, served as a surgeon with Virginia troops in the war of 1812,- be came a ongaaier general, served in congress from 1817 to 1829, and was governor of Virginia from 1880 to 1834. For eight years John Floyd fought against the ignorance, intolerance, prejudice, ridicule and indifference of congress concerning Oregon. but though he made a hard, aggressive and intelligent fight for the rights of the settlers in the Oregon country, he did not live to see his cause win. In 1818 Great Britain and the United States signed the "joint occupancy" treaty, whereby it was "agreed that any country that may be claimed by either party on the northwest .coast of Amer ica westward to the Stony mountains shall, together with its harbors, bays, creeks and the navigation of all rivers within the same be free and open for 10 years to the vessels, citizens and subjects of the two powers." The treaty was renewed and reaffirmed in 1827. Shortly after the signing of the Joint occupancy treaty in 1818, the United States bought Florida. This was in 1819. The following year, on December 19. 1820, Floyd of Virginia brought up the "Oregon question." He ran against a stone wall of ridicule and opposition. He finally succeeded In having a com mittee of congressmen appointed to ob tain information' about the American settlements in the Oregon country. The committee consisted of Floyd of Vir ginia, Metcalf of Kentucky and Swear ingen of Virginia. Early in January. 1821, they presented their report, to gether with a bill authorizing the presi dent to occupy Oregon territory, iex- tinguish the Indian title and provide a government. The bill failed to pass the house. One year later, on January 18, 1822. he presented another bill of a similar nature. This also languished in committee and died. On December 17, 1822, Floyd made an eloquent speech in congress on the re sources of Oregon and the opportunities there for settlers. This was the first speech ever made In congress on the Oregon question. Baylies of Massachu setts spoke of the value of its timber, fish and furs. Tucker of Virginia op posed any action, as he said the mouths of the Columbia and Mississippi rivers were over 4000 miles apart and that a colony on the Columbia would be more apt to trade with China than with their kinsmen on the Atlantic seaboard. Tracy of New York in his speech said that Oregon was an Inhospitable wil derness, that its coast was rugged and its climate bleak and forbidding, that the country was broken and rocky, the entrance to the Columbia dangerous and the climate west of- the Cascade mountains damp and unhealthy, while the Columbia east of- the Cascades was one vast desert waste of sand and gravel. Floyd's bill .was" amended to change the name of the Oregon coun try to the Columbia country. The vote stood 61 for and 100 against Floyd's bill. Early in the next year Representative Little of Maryland presented a petition from 80 farmers and mechanics asking that the Oregon bill be passed, as they desired to. emigrate to Oregon. On January 19, 1824, Floyd of Virginia again presented a bill authorizing the United states to occupy the Oregon river and to establish a territorial government for the Oregon country. The bill remained in committee till the end of the year. In the debate Floyd gave a graphic description of the ad vantages of the Oregon country. finally, on December 23, 1824. after four years of constant work for Ore gon, Floyd of Virginia had the pleasure of seeing the Oregon bill pass the house by a vote of' 113 to 57. The bill was brought up in the United States senate in February, 1825. Senator Barbour of Virginia took the floor in defense of the settlements on the Oregon river. Dick- erson or New Jersey opposed the bill. He asked, with great sarcasm, how the honorable senator from Oregon would get to Washington. D. C. Would he come overland on horseback, or around Cape Horn? Or perhaps it was planned to have him come by the Northwest passage, through Bering strait. "This passage is not yet discovered," he said. 'but it will be by the time Oregon be comes a state." He said that under no conceivable circumstances could Oregon ever be of any value to the United States, as It had no wood nor water, that its land could not be cultivated. and the only thing It could be used for was as a pasture for the buffalo. Senator Benton of Missouri closed the debate, speaking In favor of creating Oregon territory, "he senate turned the Oregon bill down so hard that it stayed dead for some years. In 1828 Floyd of Virginia once more took up the fight for the Oregon coun try- He presented a petition from Hall .T. Kelly which had over 3000 signa tures asking that the Oregon bill be passed. He presented the memorial ot John M. Bradford with a large number of prospective settlers from Louisiana and also that of Albert Town of Ohio, with a considerable number of Ohib set tiers. The Oregon bill was defeated by a vote of 99 to 75. Floyd went back to private life, and the Oregon bill slum bered until congress came within an ace Of turning over our entire Interest In the Oregon country for a share in the privilege of catching codfish on the Newfoundland banks. Letters From the People t CommunfeaHous arat to The Journal for publication in this department ahouM be written on only one tide of the paper, aheuld not exceed S0O words in fanurth, and must be alined by tne writer, wboM mail address in full must accom pany the contribution. A Statement by Mr. Banks Portland, Jan. 19. To the Editor of The Journal An article appeared in The Sunday Journal of January 18, pur porting to come from Salem, 'in 'which it is intimated that personal differences with the governor, growlre nut of -v efforts as an attorney in seeking to ob tain a pardon for a paioieu chv.c, may be responsible for my criticism of the governor during the special session of the legislature,-and also for the res olution introduced by four senators de manding that Governor Olcott resign and submit his candidacy to the voters at the next election. I desire to assure fa hltati ent!r1,y Bpon h,8 pUDi,c .ori I since assuming the office of 'governor. and not otherwise. - I challenge , hie most earnest supporters, if ha has any, to defend his course on the Important matters which he -haa attempted to solve, including the controversy relat ing" to the flab., and game commission and the matter of calling a special ses sion of the legislature. In my Judg ment his' Incompetency haa been fully demonstrate by his official acta. More over,, the resolution requesting the gov ernor to resign and submit his candi dacy to the people at the next general election is based upon the sincere and honest conviction that the framers of the constitution never intended that the secretary of state should bold the office of governor beyond the time for which he was elected secretary of state. Since the article in question purports to give some facts regarding my effort to obtain a pardon for one Marshall S. Sikes, alias Marshall a Irwin, I be lieve I am entitled V correct some of the statements made, ' and to add- some facts which were not published. I challenge ahyone to read the record of this case in the governor's office and say that the paroled man is not entitled to a complete pardon. The trial Judge, the district attorney who tried the case, the warden of the penitentiary, the state parole officer and everyone who had ' Knowledge oi tne Tacts ana circum stances, recommended that Marshall S. Sikes be unconditionally pardoned. The governor himself,- after a complete in vestigation, expressed his Intention of exercising the pardoning power in this instance. He changed his mind only after he found that myself and asso ciate were to be paid a fee for our services in the matter, the amount of which was fixed by our client himself. The governor assigned as his reason for denying the pardon that he was afraid of adverse newspaper criticism and that someone might think he would receive a dtvlsion tf our fee a most ridiculous statement. I replied that in the 20 years I have practiced law no one ever charged that any Judge be fore whom I tried a case had ever re ceived, a part of my fee. Instead of granting a pardon, the governor altered the terms of the. parole so as to deprive us of the compensation we had earned, and thereupon immediately insulted every self-respecting lawyer in the state by inaugurating a permanent policy of prohibiting a lawyer from appearing in pardon cases for a fee. The statutes of this state require certain things to be done before the .governor can exer cise the pardonrag power. These re quirements of the statute can best be accomplished by those who are familiar with the law. Such a policy, in my judgment, will In many instances re sult, as it did In this case, in a plain miscarriage of Justice. The facts in re lation to the application for a pardon in the Instant case is a . matter of record in the governor's office. I wish that every citizen could read It. This young man was convicted in Douglas county of the crime of larceny in a -dwelling. It appears he entered a cabin In a re mote part of the county and appropri ated a few articles of little value. He was a 'stranger in this state and served in the penitentiary for this offense al together three years. I am Informed that the district attorney who tried the case acknowledged that a mistake was made in sending this boy to the peni tentiary - Instead of the county Jail. After he was paroled his companions were those ex-convicts . whom he had met in the penitentiary. This class were his only acquaintances. I am told that he acquired the drug habit while in the penitentiary. He desired a par don so' he covld go to his relatives in Illinois, and ithus be saved from his evil companions. I investigated his cause and I believed in him ; I be lieved the state had wronged him ; I gave him money with which. to eat. and applied to the , governor for a pardon. X did not court the governor's favor, al though I had a right to expect fair treatment for my client. I based my claim for a pardon on simple Justice, and on the record before the executive. and so informed1, him. The record was complete and perfect. The pardon was denied and a conditional parole substi tuted, because the governor did not have the courage of Mis convictions. We did not ask for possession of the boy's money. We only requested that his obligations be paid, and all of them were paid except the lawyers who had befriended him. I again repeat, that what is needed in the governor's office is more Gibraltar, less jellyfish ; more executive, less clerk ; more courage and less cowardice. The governor's course In this matter was in line with ..the spineless policy he has pursued since he assumed the office of governor. He should resign and become a candidate In the general election as the framers of the constitution intended, and as the people of this state desire. W. W. BANKS. Indorses Mr. Jones' View Prlneville, Jan. 18. To the Editor of The Journal Doesn't Herbert Jones know better than to express him self in the way that he did in last Wednesday's Journal? He Is liable to be classed as an I. W. W. or some other awful" thing. Still, I glory in his brave ery in defying his opponents. What he has written Is gospel truth. The United States is supposed to be a free and liberty loving people, but when one looks at the carryings on of the last few years, one sometimes wonders if It Is. As for the saloon, I, like Herbert Jones. hope It will never return as we had it. but I do hope that common sense peo ple will assert themselves and that those who want it can have something at their homes and not be criminals. I fully believe that if we had less so ciety and club activities and more good old fashioned fathers and mothers who would look after their children and make homes for them, we would have less of drunkenness, less of those who use tobacco, less gambling and less of crime in general. r hope to see a star rise out of the East as at Bethlehem and that common sense will be restored and that .peace shall again reign. ANOTHER JONES. The Status of the Cow From the Common weal thrr Recently a section foreman, in mak ing a report of a cow being struck by a train, wired the following to his su pervisor : "The cow that got killed last night was a bull and she hain't dead yet. Please send me a keg of spikes." Curious Bits of Information For the? Curious Gleaned From Curious Places There are two European monarchies Koumania and Norway where heredi tary titles of nobility have been abol ished by law, yet the diet of republican Bavaria haa decided to retain the old titles of the country. France shows a curios anomaly In this respect. Al though hereditary titles were abolished at the time of the first revolution by a decree revived in 1871. yet the ministry of justice issues certificates of nobility. All members of the French diplomatic service who use titles must obtain one of these certificates and pay stiffly for it. The certificate sets out that the pedi gree of the holder having been investi gated, his claim to the title he bears has been fully established.. and the seal of the republic is affixed to this patent of nobility. Uncle Jeff Snow Says : COMMENT AND SMALL CHANGE The city needs mors street lights. How about the rose show this year? , Blood ties lair uv the, ac cording tO disnatohea RIvn1 la V.I. drink. .I?!..Worl.d. A1manac, according to a aWi,.it?,h n.Bwer ticklish questions." And yet it isn't reailya joke book. - Governor oimrt . , Lislative measures his o. k.. and tha ouers fie gave the k. o iW tni8!, that we r not premature in commenting on the approach of spring and home gardening weather Surgeon General Blue says he has no AltJ J? recurrence ' of the flu epi demic. Nothing to be blue about, as it were. If the authorities stick to their an nounced declaration not to grant driv ers licenses to reckless drivers of au tomobiles there are a number of per sons In the city who will either reform or give up their driving. MORE OR LESS PERSONAL Random Observations About Town Help is what P. J. Wo r rail of Tilla mook needs more than anything else. Worrall presides over the destinies of the Tillamook hotel, at the door of which, thanks to a big road building program, throngs of visitors are ex pected this summer. The hotel is howl ing for help to care for the rush. Wor rall wouldn't trade Tillamook county's new road system for a king's ransom, he declares. Yesterday was Tuesday, and that might make possible a pun, since Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Monday of North Pow der arrived in the big city a day late. When they can't make hay while the sun shines on their fine ranch the Mon days are thinking up new ways to spend their money mostly In Portland. This trip they are at the Imperial. "Now, up In Boise " W. L. Bear of Boise. Idaho, gets the attention of R. W. Childs at the Hotel Portland with out another word. Up In Boise this year they've been having fearful weather, eo Bear says In apologizing for his pres ence in Portland, where he is "loafing." Bear has a big hand in running the af fairs of the First National bank of Boise. "But this winter has been very unusual," he declares. Mrs. T. W. Tandy, who helps her husband ranch a la mode at Marsh land. Columbia county, is enjoying the early spring season in Portland as a guest at the Imperial. Mrs. Tandy lost her nephew, Ray Curtis of Russellvllle, Multnomah county, when the tanker Chanslor struck Cape Blanco reef, off the Oregon coast, recently. Heading a delegation of Grants Pass folks who are sojourning at the Hotel Oregon, the names of Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Saddler are very noticeable on the reg ister. After the signature placed in the bold Spencerian of C. A. himself, is the slogan, "It's the climate." , In his home town, no less than in IMPRESSIONS AND OBSERVATIONS OF THE JOURNAL MAN By Fred Lockley (Hera to the atorj of a man whs haa mada mora than good aj a rir of poultry, b aittnins in a small but intellicent way and keeping- always up to dat. Mr. Lockley alao array fiturea to show Oregon's rank in poultry and other product, and it cotnparatiT rank with other poultry center. Russell E. Butler haa been a member of the Portland police force nine years. He is very fond of chickens. No, that isn't what I mean, at alL I don't mean the chickens with tight skirts and drug store complexions. I mean White Leg horns, Barred Rocks and other kinds that wear feathers. A day or so ago in Oregon City he told me of his ex perience in the chicken business. "Three years ago In March," said Mr. Butler, "I bought a five-acre place out on the Oregon City car line, making ,a first payment of $1260. I had exactly $100 left and 25 White Leghorn chick ens. Today I own nine acres, for which I have, patd $4500. I have 1600 hens andi 100 roosters. AU of my -birds are pure blood and all are trap nested. I took an Inventory of my place on January 1. Its value was $14,999.50. Since then I have addefl over $1100 worth of equip ment. I secured my foundation stock from Tancred's nock, at Kent, Wash. Last year I sold 15,000 baby chicks at an average price of 20 cents. This year I have accepted an order for 40.000 chicks at 25 cents apiece. I have nan to turn down orders for over 100.000 chicks, as my present capacity is about 40,000. Last year I sold over iOO breed ing cockerels at $7.50 each. "It costs me one cent a day to feed each chicken. I feed my chickens sprouted oats for breakfast. In the evening I let them scratch for grain in straw litter. They have before them all day dry mash in their hoppers, as well as charcoal, ground -bone, grit, oys ter shell and green feed, and I let them drink all the buttermilk they want. "I have increased my egg yield nearly 16 per cent by providing an abundance of electric light Every chicken house and runway Is equipped with lots of light. My alarm clock is set for 6 a. m. When the alarm goes off I reach out of bed and throw the switch In. This turns the lights or all over the place. The minute the lights are on my chick ens hop off their roosts and get busy scratching in the straw. When it gets last of that there old cuss. He'll keep a-pokln' of his head outer the grave and hollerin fer help ever little while fer quite a spell. The Piute Injuns on Bishop creek In Callforny uster drap a big rock on the head of anybody they wanted to stay dead. Rock Salt Joe. old Piute he-devtl. cllm outer his grave In the fall of "77 after they'd drapped the rocta 'cordln' to custom and fit quite a while 'fore they got him back to stay. The Injun agent reported Joe died of smallpox, but some of us that k no wed how the funeral went off alius doubted it. Olden Oregon Cascade Mountains Had Earlier Borne Two Other Names. The Cascade mountains were given the name "Presidents' range" by Hall J. Kelly about 1838. Later the name "Cascades" came into vogue, probably on account of the fact that their sum mit on the route of traffic and travel was marked by the Cascades of the Columbia river. As far back as the Astor expedition, the name Cascades was applied to the mountain range. In early maps the name appears as either Cascade range or Presidents' range, or both. Greenhow's history of Oregon and California contains a map com piled in 1838, which gives the name "Far West mountains." Cascade range appears In Wilkes' narrative of - Oregon, in 184L ' NEWS IN BRIEF SIDELIGHTS ' "It is surprising,- according to the Medford Mall Tribune's Smudge Pot man. "that more people don't own motor cycles. The chances of breaking a neck are. so much higher than in an auto. Besides the chances of breaking the other fellow's neck, one might add. Virtually every school lad of The rn. th nimnMa aavs. la included in a recent sweeping edict. Pool halls and tobacco dealers have been notified and presented with fists of lads not eligible to "shoot" pool or smoke. Approxi mately 800 names appear on the prohi bited lists. Tn . m 9i.,M.irn mlumn the La- Grande Observer reproduces from old files this: "There is an organised gang of sure-thing gamblers working tne trains between Portland and La Dnnit with the nhtect of fleecing unsuspecting travelers whenever the op-1 portunlty offers. Some or tee trainmen know who a part of the gang are, and keep a close watch on them, but even the conductors are not able to protect the silly dupes who bite with the avidity of a sucker only to find that they have been robbed." Portland. R. Spaulding of Baker has a reputation. He is, in fact, the best lit tle orator in all Baker county, and when the local football team v. ants to intro duce Itself to an admiring populace 8pauldlng is as redy to pronounce the invocation as he is to promote, orator lcally. the sale of stock show pavilion bends. Spaulding is at the Imperial. Right next door to Spaulding on the Irr-perial register is Norman Elliott, who spends most of his time within shouting distance of Baker. Elliott la one of those Baker citizens who is char acterized by the town realty dealer as always ready to tak a shot at any-1 thing good." "The Million Dollar Kid" Is at the Oregon today. Otherwise known as J. G. Richardson, deputy state treasurer and custodian of such funds, that .his mil lion dollar nomenclature Is understand able, the Salem Ite Is at the Oregon, at his leisure afW a strenuous session at the state house, where he represented Marion county in the legislature. "No harm will come to White Salmon fruit crops as a result of the cold winter weather, although the severity of the season was a little more than usual." In that optimistic view does C. T. Dewey, orchardist of White Silmon. pass over the trials of the winter and look for ward to a crop of great bounty next fall. Dewey Is spending a few days J" Portland and Is a guest at the Oregon. J. F. Gilpin of Astoria, where he is a mainstay. In the composition of the Mc Eachem Construction company, is at the Oregon. W. G. Vassal!, who enjoys a state of bachelorhood more than any other man In Dallas except Carey Hayter, is very carefully and quietly doing business in Portland. He sleeps and sometimes eats at the Benson, where all that is known about him is that he is a banker in the Polk county metropolis. daylight I turn off the lights and at E o'clock in the afternoon I turn them on Ull 6:30. Good care, plenty of the right kind of food, absolute cleanliness, lots of light, plenty of dean, pure water, lots of charcoal and oyster shell and constant attention are bound to bring good results. "There are lots of men here In Clacka mas county making good money with chickens. Elmer Grlbble of Canby, A. Brownell, J. R. McRae and T. B. Mil ler of Mllwaukie. B. C. Palmer and B. F. Noyes of Molalla, Grant Dimmlck of Oregon City, and B. Sullivan of High land, are a few of the successful chicken raisers I know of. "Meet U. L. Upson of Grants Pass. He is manager of the Poultry Producers as eoclation, and he can think like I chicken." . "We have $50 members," said Mr. Un- son. "owning about 400,000 birds. We are planning to put ii a hatchety at Oregon City, which will hatch a million and a quarter chicks a year. At first we will only hatch a few from 60,000 to 100,000 and gradually Increase our output. Our Idea is to introduce pure blood hens and contract to buy all the eggs produced. We want to produce so many eggs here in Oregon that we shall be shipping a carload every other day to New York city. It costs 12 cents a dozen to lay them down there. Petaluma ships a carload of eggs to New York city every other day. Petaluma hens average 120 eggs a year. Oregon hens average over 180 eggs a year, which gives us a great advantage. Western Oregon and Western Washington, on account of our mild climate and lack of excessive heat In summer, and on ac count of our superior strain of stock, form ar Ideal poultry section. "Do you realize that Oregon produced $85,500,000 worth of poultry last year which was 24 per cent of all the farm products raised In Oregon? Now com pare what our hens did with other lines. We produced last year cattle to the value of $30,000,000. hogs $24,500,000, dairy cows $10,000,000, butter $8,000,000, cheese $3,900,000. milk and cream $24,000,000. wheat $37,000,000, hay $24,000,000. fruit 820.000,000. and so on down the line. So you see that the mere hen is not so very mere, after all." Because the family, like the Individual members thereof. Is up-to-date. The family aa a whole finds more of interest and benefit In The Journal than any other paper. 4 The Journal's news Is freshest, most complete and most reliable. Its editorials are the fairest the best written and treat upon the most time ly subjects. Its features, such as women's pages, children s bedtime stories, comic section and magazine section, are the best obtainable. Its advertising columns are most carefully censored and carry no objec tionable or questionable matter. The Journal's policy of "Oregon First" makes it truly "The Home Paper of the Oregon Country." , Finally, The Journal is an afternoon, morning and Sunday paper, reaching each class of readers at the most logical time, thereby render ing the only complete service in the city. THEREFORE ' The whole family reads The Journal and patronizes Journal adver tisers. That's why The Journal has the largest daily average circula tion in Portland and trading radius of any Portland paper. "The Oregon Country Northwwt Happening to Brtaf Farm (or Ua Buay Baadat. OREGON NOTES Clackamas county authorities are watching the highways for Overloaded trucks. An Industrial survey of Linn county la to be made by the Albany Chamber of Commerce. Thieves entered the store of F N. Hendricksen near Mplalla and stole ra ors and pocket knives valued at $100. More than 1300 applications (or real estate licenses for 1820 have been re ceived by the state insurance commis sioner. Voting precincts in and near Albany uocn rearranges so mat Doun- daries will correspond with the city B1II1ILB. Following the release by the govern ment of the railroads extensive improve ments will be made bv the Southern Pa. clfic at Roseburg. The car shortage situation in the state haa not been improved, according to a communication sent by the public serv ice commission to the railroad adminis tration. District Forester Merrltt at Eugene ays Indications are bright for a con tinuation this year of the trail work and that several Important projects will be finished. According to Captain George Wilbur a conference of Oregon. Washington and California men who are Interested in Japanese exclusion will soon be held at .Portland. Bertha Ma pes. 2 hours old. has the distinction of being the youngest per son In Salem enumerated by census tak ers connected with the drive conducted for the Cherrlans. The number of births at Enterprise last year was nearly three times the number of deaths. Nearly twice as many males died as females and the number of males born exceeded the females. IDAHO A large quantity of sealed Scotch whiskey has been seised by customs of ficers at East port. At present bootleg prices the seizure was worth $300. Idaho's public utility commission will meet early In February with the Ore gon commission to decide upon the applu cation of the Idaho Powar company for increased rates. The new rate demand affects Malheur and Baker counties in Oregon. A. B. Hullt, who is in the Jackson IJole country examining the elk and the feeding situation, finds that newspa per stories sent from that section rel ative to the condition of the game are incorrect. The elk are being well eared for and have sufficient food. WASHINGTON Boxing and wrestling are to become a part of the Yakima high school ath letic program. The Washington State Association .of County Game Commissioners and War dens will hold Its annual session at Spo kane January 26. Charged with wilful neglect to an swer census questions. A. F. Hmtth of Aberdeen is under arrest. Other ar rests are expected. Cowlitz county's new shingle mill has begun cutting shingles. The mill is equipped with five cutting machines and has ample kiln capacity. Yakima Pomona grange, which In No vember last went on record as opposed to the triple alliance, has reaffirmed tts-attltude by a vote of 128 to . Two black bears have appeared near Stevenson. This is the earliest In the season bears have been seen for years and old timers say it Is an Indication of an early spring. The Utah-Idaho Sugar company has three factories In Yakima valley and would like to have 15.000 acres signed up this season Last year the price was $10 a ton at the dumps. Thirteen alleged I. W. W. charged with alleged criminal syndicalism have pleaded not guilty. Their trial has been set for January 29. The court has ap pointed an attorney to defend them. The city commission at Chehalis haa decided not to press the matter of ask ing the state public service commission to review telephone rates until a case now pending In the supreme court is de cided. Deputy sheriffs who have been work ing In cooperation with Indlap police to apprehend Christopher "Tulee. the In dian hoy who shot and killed his father, are certain the boy Is being hid and supported by Indian friends. District Horticulturist Albert of Lewis county says this section is the best berry growing section hs has ever seen. Last year he found It took three or four Oregon loganberries to equal In site one grown here. As to the profit, he cited an Auburn man who netted $7200 from six acres of berries. A decision of the supreme court hold ing that railroads are not liable for damage to fruit shipped In box cars under option where the shipper takes the responsibility for freezing, frost nd overheating, puts an end to a long drawn out contention and haa a far reaching effect on the fruit Industry. Farmers of the Yakima Indian res ervatlon have discovered that the In dlan appropriation bill carries a de mand that they shall pay $10 an acre during the next year as part or the re payment to the government for expeti- dltures in developing the Wapato unit of the Yakima project. GENERAL An offensive and defensive alliance has been concluded between Austria and C'zecho-Slovakla. Heavy storms and snowslldes have blocked the White Pass A Yukon rail way since January 6. The Standard Oil company haa with drawn distillate from the market. To force the public to a greater onsomp tton of gasoline Is charged, but this is denied by the company. A concentration of British war ves sels in the Black sea Is Interpreted a a movement to protect British Interests in case they are threatened by the Bol shevik advance to the Tcoast. Next year will be the most critical one tn the food supply of Europe, sines the war began, predicts the parliamen tary secretary to the British food min istry, so far as supplies and prices of butter and cheese are concerned. The dairy product of Australia is much be low the normal, owing to drouth. There is no prospect, he adds, that the world'e supply of sugar will be increased. Meat products also will be short. Why the Whole Family Reads The Journal y4 I don't reckon the celebration-of -the funeral of Johnr Barieycorn'll . be ths - j