.THE OKEUON DAILY, "JOURNAL.. . PO KTJ-AND, . MONDAY, tMAKtH AO. lSU ...FabMslMr f IBu ttim. bs oeafid.nt, b chrfal od do afo etasri m yott wodd Uf thwn as unto yott) ZfcUh4 rr wfc dT " Swnday ayrnins. t l b ;nd BnikHns. Braedwsr sad X- klll ftrwt, PortUnd, Ors.cn. "TL.. i- throned b ."suite ooal Uac. ELEr HONES Min 71 Tl, Antommtle S60-51. Ail wtMti refad b th miinbnu FOREIGN ADVERTISING BEPBE8E5TATIVB BnJsSiin A Eantnor Co., Brunswick Bulldlns, S3 ruth rami. Kit Imi 0 stall -" ,- Sailduif , Chicago. SUBSCRIPTION BATES By aarriar, city and country. DAILY AND SUNDAT ' Cmvsm. .IB DAIT.Y Om imk. I .10 Om month.. ., .1 .45 On month $ .68 SUNDAY Om wk. . .. . . .05 JSY "- AZX RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE -Om yer...., 8 00 Blx BOBthi. ... 4.2ft DAILT (Without Ssnday 4 Om fr $s.oo His month. . . . 8.25 rbfw month. . 1.7B Om monUi SO WEEKLY fCnry Wdnd7 On rr.. . . .-. .$1.00 ' Mis taontb. . . . .00 Tli roe month. . . 12.25 On Bonth 73 bi:nt)at (Only) Ob r 88 00 Six morilw 1.75 Thro month. . . 1.00 WEZKXT AND SUNDAY On . 18.60 ' etiaa nfa anehr anl in th Wtt " Bat to Etrn point furntehed on pjHr- u.k. tmttiuei by lloner Order EipieM Older, or Draft; If Tonr Postoffic U not tany OrtUr Office, 1 or 2-eent itsmpi will b ; fMtpM. Mak U rmlttueei pJbl to Tb Fafawbood which w apum today War tb truth of Ion ao. WhltHer. THE MONTESANO VERDICT THE Montesano Jury found the . principal defendants guilty but not of murder in the first degree. It is evident that the jurors gave . credence to the testimony of the de- fense to the effect that s'ome of the s Armistice day marchers assumed a threatening attitude when the parade reached the I. W. W. hall. There "was such testimony. Seem ' ingly, it was strong enough to throw sufficient doubt into the minds of the : Jurors to give the defendants the ben efit of a second degree verdict. If that is not the explanation, then there is the familiar fact that not , many men are willing to sit on a Jury -and vote away another man's life. The common repugnance to voting ' for a Judgment that condemns a fel low being to death is an obstacle that will always stand in the way of ef fective enforcement of capital punlsh j merit Many say they have no scruples. And they think they have none. But when theyit in a Jury box day after day and look into the eyes of the de fendant; when in their own solemn thoughts there comes to them a vision .of - the dying struggles, the death throes and the Jerking limbs of a man ' whom they have voted to kill : when . "brought face to face with the oon- . SClousness that the living, breathing defendant before them is to be, if they so will, a stark and stiff corpse with in a few days, many Jurors, when .the time to vote comes, find it con venient and preferable to vote for a lesser verdict In order to escape from the .oonsclousness of having helped take a human life. v Whether this figured in the Monte sano verdict cannot be known. But It will grow as a force in future ver- , diets, and it has been growing in strength in past verdicts. There was a time in the world when men were too little removed from the code of "the jungle to have the higher Ideals that an advancing civilization has brought. The farther we get away . from the Dark Age the stronger men 'are objecting to the death penalty. Men were once hung, or. drawn and ; ; quartered or killed In a series of in- . human tortures for the slightest of fense. But as times and governments , and individuals advance in Bplrit- .-' wallty. the killing of men by law de ' creases. , The knowledge that an increasing number of Jurors shrink from voting to kill a fellow being must be taken Into the account by "those who urge j the death penalty, it makes oonvlc '. tlon more difficult and causes trials to be far longer and far more expen- . five. Notbinr proves more satisfying that real musical appreciation has been awakened In Portland than the report that the subscription seats at the: Symphony Orchestra concerts which were once either left vacant Or occupied by cook or the clerk. re now utilized toy the people who bought them. A SAFE DEPOSIT MIKE PAULOVICH seems not to , have been a student of the Bible. If he were he would have remembered that the man who dug In the ground to hide his one talent of silver met with bad hick. Maybe It is that Mike was thinking of Captain Kidd when . he ! went i out Into' 'his garden at Hoquiam' to hide his savings, where falling banks or absconding cashiers ' could not reach them. But even so Captain Kldd ' had bad luck In find ing the" treasure he sunk in various sections of the world IT there is any thing In fable. v Anyway Mike is bating a rather dif ficult time of it Having gathered together various shekels of highly ap preciated American money he sunk It In ft hole In ' his . backyard pending the time when he Intended to return to trouble Russia, where a ha'ldful of double eagles now means a bucket ful, or more, of badly battered rubles. But, ready to go, he can't locate the spot, though-he has dug for a" week, even by lantern light and far into the night Mike would better haVe hid den it in his sock. Electrification la now an estab lished fact upon the Cascade moun tain division of the Chicago, Mil waukee and St. Paul railroad, as well as upon Its Rocky mountain division. Many millions of dollars have been spent by this railroad in Its effort to lessen the costs and nullify the hazards of mountain operation. What, we would like to understand is why, if mountain elec trification proves profitable, elec trification of water grade lines that serve ports of the Columbia would not be even more greatly In the di rection of economy. five more: orphans IS IT Just all right and nobody in 1 the world to blame in the automo bile accident which orphaned five children Saturday riisht? Five other children lost their father when a driver drove his truck over him as he worked on the railroad track. Though the truck lights that would have enabled him to see the trackman were out of order In viola tion of law, the coroner's jury exon erated the driver and declared that trackmen should carry red flags by day and red lights by night. It may be that The Journal is wrong, and that nobody but the dead and orphaned are ever "to blame for auto killings. Perhaps nothing more serious than more dead and more orphans will come from these continued killings and the continued immunity for those who kill. , Perhaps not. The announcement that rail rates must be Increased in the near future is a slap at the poorly analyzed pre dictions that as soon as the govern ment returned the railroads to pri vate operation rates would be low ered and service would be perfect. But it Is also a rather startling veri fication of the assertion made by Joseph N. Teal of Portland Just be fore the railroads were returned to their owners, that rates would have to go up while the service might be expected to deteriorate until the railroads are able to normalize their operation. RAWTHER FETCHING, WHAT? H IS majesty, the king of England, has found a new fashion for pressing his pants. He has aban doned the old fore and aft style where the wrinkles run up the front and down the back, so the cables whisper, and now wears 'em with the wrinkles on the sides. Future generations without doubt will sing perennial praise at this con structive act of statesmanship, for It is undoubtedly a move in the interest of the common people. Particularly will the hall room boys give thanks to the king, while the tailors of Lon don and the world will curse and curse. ' It will be easy under the new die tate of kingly fashion. to stretch 'em out on the floor and iron 'em as they lie, something difficult of accomplish ment with the fore and aft style which calls for Ironing boards . and things. Once more, thanks to the king, we can sprawl 'em under the mattress and wrinkle 'em while we sleep, something no one but an expert oould hope to accomplish .with the other plan. It must be a source of Joy to have a king planning for your comfort, as they have in Merry England, even to the pressing of your pants. The possibilities of a Lady Astor type of campaign open before Dr. Esther Pohl Lovejoy's candidacy for congress from the Third Oregon dls trict. One personality is not more picturesque than the other. A com parison of ability is not to the Ore gon woman's disadvantage. One war record is not less bright than the other. And when it comes to tump speeches, we will stake Dr. Pohl Lovejoy against all the Lady Astors here or hereafter. WORDS DONT REFOREST WHAT is the use of talking so much about- conserving the nation's timber resources and actu ally doing nothing? There is a nation-wide famine of newsprint, yet officials and congress men persist In using it unendingly to publish statements concerning what they think should be done rather than doing It.. Where are all the movements to save or propagate forests getting to anyhow T The nation has no policy worthy the name, although 50 years of tim ber consumption at the present rate will dangerously narrow the supply, The forest service is permitted td do some replanting In a small way but the vast acreage denuded by log ging operations remains stark and barren and ghastly as death. When. Gifford Pinchot urged con servation there was a hue and cry and a shanty Irish throwing of sticks and stones, which had ; the sole ap parent purpose of placing ' extrav agance upon a . political pedestal and preserving it against the weatherwith a liberal coat of whitewash. Now it is perfectly obvious, as Mr. Pinchot said recently, that "if we bad kept the lands that are most useful for growing pulpwood. at work pro ducing It, instead of allowing their productive power to be destroyed, the publishing industry . would have escaped its present excessive burden." The United States' is 'now cutting timber 2tt times as fast as the trees are grown, observes Mr. Pinchot, and adds : Mors than 100,000,000 acres of forest lands which ought to be growing- wood have' been devastated, and are now merely idle wastes. If we had conserved their vast power to produce instead of recklessly destroying it, the price . of lumber would not have doubled, and the consumer would have been spared the corresponding rise in the cost of living. What is the reason that facts like these fall in bringing about a com pulsory national reforestation policy. where yet there is time and hope? . With only 150,000.000 acres of virgin forest left out of an original 850,000,- 000 acres, and with the supply being grown at the rate of but 40 billion feet a year while we cut down 100 billion feet a year, what is the ex planation for lack of action, that will meet the situation! In our forestry affairs the United States is like a man who theorizes on fire prevention while his house is burning down. Having succeeded In Indefinitely extending the visit of Willie Hohen Kollern, Holland has another bright Idea, Germany's printing press money and England's 8 per cent gold reserve have made ' it so un profitable to submit trade to the unnatural exchange that Austrian merchants began loading a ship with wares which they proposed to exchange In London for things they want. But Holland interests have countered with a proposition for an international trading exchange, where goods but not money will be passed. Though the idea is worthy a stay-at-home Yankee trader, the exchange will be no place for the Yankees. Our money is worth too much to abandon its use. BLACKMAIL ,BT INITIATIVE ANEW law is needed In Oregon. It Is needed to protect the pub lic against a wrong use Of the initia tive. Four years ago an initiative bill hostile to the Columbia river fishing interests Was prepared and signatures were obtained for placing it on the ballot. But it was not put on the ballot. For a sum of money the men in charge of it made away with the pe titions and the measure was never brought to a vote. Out of the transac tion one of them, profited to the ex tent of an automobile. The operation was so profitable that the same men are now circulat ing petitions for a measure to cut the interest rate in Oregon. Before half enough signatures are secured. proposition is made by them to have the bankers and business Interests pay them to keep the measure off the ballot. Twenty thousand dollars is fixed by them as the amount they should be paid and certain persons are approached and told that they can have half the swag for acting as go-betweens. Happily, the proposal was made to honest men. They not only refused to enter Into the scheme, but they made the facts knoupi. We know from what has taken Tlace that the proposed bill to lower the legal rate of interest to 4 per cent and the con tract rate to 5 was a mere scheme to make easy money. The Initiative should be protected from use as a blackmailing device. and the public should be protected from use of the Initiative for crooked purposes. The next legislature should pass a law that would send to the penitentiary for an adequate period any person or persons who attempt such skulduggery. In Portland's loss of the Emerg ency Fleet office and Seattle's des ignation as Northwest headquarters of the corporation, Puget sound's metropolis gets the setting without the gem, the bone without the meat. The Emergency Fleet corporation has largely served its time. Its con structive activities are confined now largely to winding up' the business and the completion of some of the spicy and discreditable investiga tions which affect Seattle officials of the Fleet corporation. Portland's demand for justice will be in the allocation of the vessels of our national merchant marine. GOOD LUCK SALEM wants to be a port. Its business men. looking the future in the face, see greatly increased ton nage originating In that territory which must be shipped out to market, and a continually growing Salem buiind tonnage to flow in. Conse quently they are asking the county court to call a special election to consider the question of the estab lishment, and the financing of a por of Salem. The program contemplates a (200,000 warehouse, docks and other transportation facilities constructed where rail and water can meet. In a little tune Salem will have a paper mill in operation which will In itself yield bulk cargoes for the river boats. It is already a fruit canning center. New Industries are being brought there until the sleepy capital of years gone has passed away. An open river and facilities for using it would' be a. great asset tot Salem. It would mean th,at : traffic rates would always be , within control and tha the eommerce.it built could be pro tected from undue , burdens. Salem business men. have always been con servative. Now they are adding wis dom to their conservatism. ; : Some of the Items' That ' Benton's Assessor Has on.His Roll - List of Larger Agricultural and Horti cultural , Producers of the Blue Ribbon County. One of the Institutions of which Cor- va.UI Is proud is the recently erected plant of the Corvalus Canning company, with Its apple grading and packing plant. its cold storage rooms and its canning equipment The ground was donated by the citlsens of CorvaUls and the company put up the plant at the cost of $21,000. Last season the company paid to grow- eri in CorvaUls and Its immediate vicin ity $lS.7J0.Ii. paying liberal prices for fruits and vegetables. The assessor of Benton county can answer offhand almost any question put to him. Here are some Interesting facts shown by his records. The largest bear ing prune orchard In the county is owned by Robert Johnson of CorvalH. . there being 148 acres of bearing prunes in ex cellent condition. The largest bearing apple orchard - in the county is located at Monroe and Is owned by tne uaco Orchard company, of which Dr. W. J. Kerr is president. The largest farm in the county contains 3961 acres and is owned by H. C. Cabell. E. E. Williams has 225 acres In spring wheat, this being the largest field of spring wheat, while Thomas Eggers' 225 acres of winter wheat is the largest field of winter wheat. W. K. Taylor has; 76 acres de voted to corn, which is the largest single cornfield. Judd Smith's 200-acre clover field is the largest field of clover in the county; the CorvaUls Orchard com pany's 123-acre pear orchard is the larg est in the county. 'Fifteen acres set to walnuts and owned by the Imperial Orchard company Is the largest grove of walnuts In the county. There are 780 farmers In the county who own their farms,- and 237 tenant farmers. There are 3960 acres set to clover on the 222 farms where clover is grown. There are 443 farmers raising corn, most of which Is used In silos. There are 864 acres of bearing prunes in the county, the largest orchards being owned as fol lows : R. Johnson, 148 acres ; A. Bystrorn of Monroe, 100; Mat WUhelm of Monroe, 60 ; Imperial Orchard company, 42 ; C. R. Widmer. 40 ; Homer Moore, 33 ; R. A. Yocum, 30 ; Jens Petersen. 25'; C. B. Park, 22; J. H. Herren, 20. The production of wool and mutton is becoming one of the important producers of revenue in the county. The following list includes the names of all the sheep- raisers in the county listed by the as sessor. Some of the bands run as high as 1000, while other owners are running from 200 to 300 : Alfred Abraham, .W. M. Abraham, George Armstrong, Elizabeth Allen. G. C. Avery, Virgil Avery, W. D. Bayless, S. j E. Beal, L. F. Belknap. C. A. Bobanan, .John A. Bottger, E. H. Bowen, H. T. Bflstow, George Brown. J. W. Brown, i R. E. L. Brown, Claude Buchanan, J. Fred Buchanan, John G. Buchanan, F. H. Burnap, J. A. Carter, V. A. Carter, J. H. Cartwright, John Chambers, George W. Dixon, Dodele Brothers. Samuel Doldge estate. Grant Elgin, E. O. Frantz. M. L. and C. A. Frants. J. P. Gragg. S. A. Gragg, Gustav Hahn, C. H. Harris, Marion Hayden, Hector Brothers, H. C. Herron, J. H. Herron, R. C. Herron, R. H. Hewitt, W. J. Holbrook, A. E. Holmes, W. F. Holman, G. G. Horning, J. O. Hub bard. R R. Hughes. John F. Hurlburt, C. E. Jackson, Mrs. Jane Johnson, W. M. Jones, Richard Kiger, K. Kriens, A. Kyle, Orr Kyle, Robert Kyle, Joseph Lester, E. W. Liddle, E. J. Llewellyn, W. N. Locke, Logsdon Brothers, W. C. Looney, Frank Lutz, Mrs. L. G. Marks, H. T. Maxfield, Frank Miller. Richard McBee, J. N. McFadden, George Mc Laughlin, R. J. Nichols. Gus Nyman, J. A. Park. Ethel M. Patterson, B. Paul son, G. c. Peek, Jens Peterson. D. L. Pettibone, Wiley Plunkett, Jesse Porter, G. R Rowland, C. E. Rice, J. H. Price, John Price, W. B. Price, Peter Rlckard, Henry T. Ridders, Roy Rlckard, C. A Rycraft, Henry Scheele, R W. Scott. George Sebrell, Ernest Seehafer, C. 8. seeley, J. E. Shade, J. G. Smith, W. W. Smith. A. P. Starr. Fannie Starr, P. R. Starr, S. C. Starr, W. F. Starr. P. A. Swanson, F. M. Taylor, Al- mlra Tomllnson. C. L. Townsend. T. V. Vidito, Ira Vincent. Henry Voss, H. L. Wagner, George Waldon, Jesse C. Walker, Mrs. W. F. Whitby, A. Widmer, Dan Widmer, E. E. Williams! R. N. Wil liamson, J. O. Wilson, Marlon C. Winkle. Milton Wyatt, A. J. Zieroff, C. L. Zieroff. Letters From the People tomnjunicsuoD tent to Th J annul for puDlleiUon in thu department ihonld be written on only on nd of th ppr, should not esed SOO word ia lentb and must b timed J tb wnier, woo mtu laartsi in lull mint eeon. Pnjr th contribution. ) On Behalf of the Sightless Portland, March 111 To the Editor of The Journal There was an entertain ment given at The Auditorium Tuesday evening, March 9, at which a consider able sum was realized, to aid the blind of Oregon in the passage of a bill to establish an institution in Portland. Should our hopes be realized men and women without sight, from all parts of Oregon, would be taught trades and permanently employed, therefore being economic assets Instead of objects of charity. In behalf of the blind I take this method of extending our gratitude and appreciaUon to the mayor of our city for his kindly cooperation and to the men and women who gave so much of their valuable time in the advance sale of tickets and necessary preliminary work. We very much appreciate the In terest of the managements of the Hippo drome. Pantages and the Lyric, also those who assisted In making the re mainder of the program so attractive. We especially thank Frank Coffinberrv for the successful management of the evening's entertainment We are especially grateful to the nress of Portland for its readiness at' all times tc support to the limit the work of the adult blind. t. F. MYERS, Principal of School for the Sightless. The Soldier and the Land Portland, March 9. To the Editor of The Journal The present ex-soldier is not the first ex-soldier who has been treated shamefully after he has fought a nation's battles. It Is said that after the Boer war the ex-soldier of England was rewarded with a permit to beg on the streets of London (Precious boon1) while the lords kept wild animals nn large estates to satisfy the savage in stinct of murder. And history tells us that the ex-soldier of our Civil war was paid witn one kind of money, while uiuoo wkiubo propenj ne rought to pro tect were paid another kind of money, a money of higher value. When. O Lord, will the soul of man outweigh the dross of gold I And now our boys have begun to re alize that Uncle Sam is not "rich enough to give them all a farm."" Isn't he? Let us seeIf Texas were divided into two-acre tracts with an ordinary familv on each tract In a five room house, we could place every man, woman and child in the world Inside the borders of Texas, ana. there would be room for parks ana boulevards left over. Ger many, the size of California, with hei C0.000.000 people; stood! off the world five years. California has less thas 4,000,000; v But it is gwned by Miller ft Lux et aW and so. are parts of Oregon There Isn't any room for American farm boys who went to the front, but plenty of room for Asiatic labor If we would take down, the bars. J But bur most productive and Tunable land In the heart of Portland ia as much of that estate for which the soldier went Into the trenches as the snow capped The soldier has a weapon In bis hands more powerful than all the guns of the kaiser, a power he fought to protect and tar which it is claimed he was called to the colors. It is the ballot. He wUl have a chance to use it this .fall in no idle boasting. If he wishes to restore America to all her people on equal terms he can vote for the single tax amend ment. J. R. HERMANN. Shoddy Denounced Portland. March To the Editor of The Journal How much longer are the people of this country going to submit to the use of shoddy in clothing T Its use is dishonest and it is put into clothing for a fraudulent purpose. It has little intrinsic value, because It is "dead" wool and will not wear. The powerful chemicals used to reclaim it from wool and cotton rags destroy the natural oU necessary to live wool, and render the fiber weak and brittle. A few years ago. when I was a traveling man, I went through a shoddy mill in Pike county, Missouri. The manager was not proud of his business and frankly said he would not care to use any clothes made from shoddy. I re member the shoddy at that time cost the woolen mills 8 to 10 cents a pound, which, of course, accounted for ts ex tensive use. Does its use make clothing cheaper? Not at all. The man who makes the Shoddy knows it is practically worth less, and the mills that use it know it has little wearing value. The govern ment could easily stamp out the shoddy mills, and woolen mills could be re strained from using it. The sheepmen should fight it It displaces millions of pounds of new wool annually, thereby cheapening the honest product. The consumer should fight it because of the fraud practiced upon him. Rags that make shoddy are gathered from filthy sources and are often not only filthy but contaminated with disease. Oregon, which has " always been a leader in progressive legislation, should be first to outlaw shoddy, in the name of cleanliness, decency and honest busi ness. DOUGLAS HEWITT. The Greater Monroe Doctrine IorUand, March 12. To the Editor of The Journal The two great political parties stand as champions of the Mon roe doctrine, which guarantees the ter rltorlal integrity of American nations against foreign aggression. Now comes the League of Nations, supported by the great powers and many of the lesser powers of the world, which guarantees the territorial Integrity of every nation against foreign aggression. It is simply an extension of the American Monroe doctrine to all the world, supported by the combined powers ,ot the earth. This greater Monroe doctrine Is not only a protection to all other nations, but is also proffered to protect the United States by the combined forces of the world against any power which in fu ture may seek our dismemberment. And yet the senate Is spurning this offer of protection to ourselves, and to other na tions, by Its refusal to ratify the League of Nations covenant. We have long stood alone against the wtfrld for our lesser Monroe doctrine in defense of the Americas. Now we should stand with the world for the greater Monroe doc trine, in defense of the- higher civiliza tion. It is a duty we owe ouTselves and the world.- The political party that defeats this extension of the American rMonroe doctrine will go down in ig nominy. GEORGE H. BENNETT. Expressing Presidential Preference Madras, March 8. To the Editor of The Journal I am a Republican, but I don't see any timber m the G. O. P. which represents the people at present. I favor McAdoo, who has shown himself to be constructive. As to parties, I think the Democratic party has lived too long, and the Republican party long enough. I supported Wilson In 1916 and would support him in 1920 were he a candidate. I think the treaty should have been ratified. The League of Na tion! is a distinct and separate affair from the treaty and has caused both strife and contention and delay, to the detriment of destitute and starving multitudes and nations The League of Nations can no more than centralize power in an arbitrary court. Germany worked for commercial su premacy and prepared for war at the same time. England worked for money. France reveled and America slept, until the fatal day. Throughout God's word, the disobedient are to be punished as contrary to God's law. Why? Hoover would be my second choice. I cannot say what other farmers may think, yet a goodly number do think that Hoover held down the price of wheat to their detriment of II a bushel. Wilson has done the best he could do. McAdoo has done well. Hoover has done well. The Republican senate. has in a measure wronged the whole world. G. L PAXTON. Objects to Sacramental Exception Walla Walla, Wash.. March 10. To the Editor of The Journal I see that the government proposes to appropriate 850,000,000 for expenses the first year for seeing that the' law against having liquor, except for sacramental purposes. Is observed. I am opposed to spending government money !to maintain this privilege of the church and to establish an ecclesiastical prerogative and un democratic inequity. Mr. Wilson's democracy will not be safe as long as they do it. A. JOHNbUiN. Curious Bits of Information For the Curious Gleaned From Curious Places Modern advertising had Its birth in the signboards of inn and tavern - keepers bearing the names of hostelries. Innkeep ers being the first tradesmen to adopt signs. It was not until the sixteenth century that merchants dealing in other than liquid refreshments began to erect sgns over their doors. The custom spread rapidly, and the seventeenth cen- for the sign painters of England. The houses, and shops were not numbered in London, so that a tradesman s place of business could only be known by a sign. The Ingenuity of merchants in such a city as London was taxed to provide an original and striking sign that would stick in the memories of passersby. A man starting in business .considered a striking sign his most important ; in vestment. These signs, often of huge size, were sometimes slung - entirely across the street. Olden Oregon Vast Reduction In Area When Oregon Was Raised to Statehood. : When Oregon became a state, in 1859, the eastern boundary was thus defined; "Thence up the .middle of the main channel of? said river (Snake) to the mouth . of the Owyhee river ; thence south to the. paraUel of 42 - degrees north-." This left an of the present state of Idaho and portions of Montana and Wyoming attached to Washington territory untU X186J, when the .territory of Idaho was organized. ; COMMENT AND SMALL CHANGE The best of roada la nn nuj n careless driver. Prune your rose bushes and plant a flower. The Shriners are coming. ex-kaiser during this little uprising in vverroany. A little sunshine is needed now to coax our early maturing vegetables out of the ground. If you spent all day working on your Income tax report, you may stiU have time to file it today. , It is said that Charles, the former emperor of Austria, plans to "come back under an assumed name. But a tyrant by any other name is just as MORE OR LESS PERSONAL Random Observations About Town School teachers and college professors reserve the week-end for the social side of their lives except, of course, when there is other work to be done Which is assigned by hotelmen as the reason for the presence In Portland each Fri day evening, Saturday and Sunday, of a large number of educators. For instance. at the Seward hotel, to spend the week end, the following registered by Satur day noon: U. G. Duback. H. C. Sey mour, E. D. Ressler and Mrs. W. F. Gas- kins, members of the faculty or exten sion staff of the Oregon Agricultural college" at Corvallia The same hotel was host to J. It Ackerman, president of the state normal school at Monmouth, who- considers an occasional journey to the big. city not "germain" to the In terests of modern education. "Germain" Is a favorite word in Ackerman's vo cabulary. Mrs. Gaskins, member of the staff of the O. A. C. school of music, of which her husband Is head, has as her guest Miss Ethel Elliott of Fort Wayne, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Hall and Miss Helen Hall, residents of Toronto, Can ada, are at the Multnomah hotel while visiting In Portland. At Toronto. Hall Is district inspector for the electrical in spection bureau of his home city. Boots and all. R. B. Magruder, owner of extensive delta lands near Clatskanle, Or., arrived at the Imperial hotel on Saturday, only to find his favorite room occupied. Likewise the second, third and all the other choices were occupied and a Greeter politely asked the little Clatskanle warrior-to wait a few min utes for better accommodations. "Gosh," he exclaimed, "I can't wait a second. Look at me I" And he exhibited him self adorned - in hip boots, woolen sweater and mud all of which were In cident to the trip from the Columbia river town. Down around Witchita Falls. Tex., the did order of things has been transformed by the discovery of vast quantities of oil. The bootblack of yesterday Is a millionaire today and the little garden patch out at the edge of town is a pushing well of oil. spouting up for tunes for its owners. The oil well der ricks pierce the landscape in a thousand places, rivaling the composite skyline of the church district in any score of ordi nary cities. Oil Is everywhere and the money oil has brought to" the town and sent out of it. as well, is counted in tens of millions of dollars. From that same humming town, where fortunes are made overnight and sometimes as quickly lost C. D. Evans has oome to Portland. While spending a few days In the city Evans is a guest at the Im perial hotel. Attracted to Portland by the festivi ties at the Elks lodge Saturday night, where local "Bills" were entertaining IMPRESSIONS AND OBSERVATIONS OF THE JOURNAL MAN By Fred t (Joncludtni hi aerie of article on U aiomuhir.itif idTenrure of Ben Jarrell In Ore gon. Mr Lockley report him u reeoWed te unit hi 1 oniric Ut and tlek to th . t of th law-abiding hereafter. Th preoartom trnnre by which the lawbreaker hold bi lib erty it well illustrated in th episode related in this final chapter.) You can get a lot of fun out of life, if ycu have the faculty of putting yourself in the other man's place. The papers are full of accounts of the arresting and fining of bootleggers and moonshiners. Did you ever try to Imagine yourself in the other man's shoes and try to figure out the impelling causes for his actions? I was greatly astonished a day on so ago, in talking with one, to have him say the reason there were so many moonshiners was because there were so many profiteers and so much, land was held for speculative purposes that he cculdn't get hold of a piece of land, and he decided to get money honestly If he could, dishonestly if he must So he had thrown tip a smooth dime heads for holdup and tails for moonshine ; and it lit tails up., There are all sorts of grades among law evaders. Just as there are all grades of business men. from men of the highest Integrity to substltuters, adulterators and crooks. I was talking recently with Ben Jar rell, who is serving a year in the Mult nomah county Jail for modhshinlng. He is at the top of the scale, such as It Is, being a man of intelligence and having his own code of honor, to- which he rigidly . adheres. "I'm through." he said. "As soon as T'm footloose I'm going back to North Carolina, where I have a farm In the hria-ht tobacco belt. I can do more good hoeing corn and tobacco there than loaf ing here. I was caught wnue wonting at my still near Heppner, by Til Tay lor and his posse. I escaped, crossed the Columbia at Arlington, ana went to Spokane. From there I went to isanaers, Idaho, to visit an old time neighbor, I had been raised with him m the moun tains in North Carolina. When I had been there three weeks in some way Til found it out Til came out to the ranch with Sheriff Nowlln of that coun ty. I was out hunting when they got to the house. Word was brought ouM to me, so X. decided not to come in until their call was over. I waited out of sight till I saw them go; then I came in. Til had left word for me to call Mm up at Tekoa. He said he was going there at once. Til is a Mason. So am I. So I knew' he wouldn't lie to me. I called him up ' when I figured he had time enough to get to Tekoa. The clerk eald he wasn't there. If I hadn't known Til I would have worried, but I figured he might have had a breakdown, so I left word for him to call me up. With in five minutes he called me and told Uncle Jeff Snow Says: It makes me mighty proud of bein a American citizen when I think of how we saved democracy and freedom and civilisation and all that our new crop of politicians can orate about ; but when I think of them French and British and Belgians and Eyetalians with their mil lions of dead soldiers to count up it strikes me that mebby we crow too loud and too often. Them chape held up the Hun' when we didn't know be was after us, and if they .hadn't of dons It we'd of NEWS IN. BRIEF SIDELIGHTS Tigard Community Development league Is putting Tigard more and more upon the map.. At th' regular meeting of the league tomorrow night a special effort will be put forth in the Interest of making Tigard a berry raising cen ter. .Professor C. I. Lewis, chief of organisation of the Oregon , Growers' association and formerly chief of the division of horticulture, O. A. C, will address the league. The Ouard reports the supplylngof one of Eugene's long felt wants : "The unsightly wooden poles that have dec orated Willamette avenue for many a year, serving as guide wire holders for the street car railway, are now disap pearing. Workmen are sawing them off flush with the sidewalk. By agreement with property owners the eulae wires, once attached to the poles, are now attached to buildings." Seattle brethren- whom they visited a few weeks ago. Theo A. Johnson, presi dent of the Washington State Elks' association, was in Portland over Sat urday. He was a guest at the Multno mah hotel. t E. M. Reagan, publisher of the Albany Dally Herald, was a guest at the Se ward hotel Saturday. "Warmsprings" Johnny Catlin. , to whose reelection to the office of town marshal, the Herald a few years ago contributed its efforts, is again 'seeking the job 'he has had, off and on, for many years. Reagan reporta In . spite of the encouragement of the song written about the man who wanted to "drink that old Green River dry," John F. McKay, a guest at the Perkins hotel, never tried that little stunt. Mc Kay comes to Portland from Green River, but not the Green River that made the Bong famous. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Shefler of Lake Grove spent the week-end at the Cor nelius hotel. Lake Grove's fame Is un determined, but it Is, none the less, where fihefler Is engaged Just now on a road building contract W. P. Lathrop, president of the Walla Walla Bafety Deposit Trust company together with Louis B. ftomalne, member of the firm of Whitman Romalne, auto supplies, and J. D. Jones, president and manager of a machinery concern, are Multnomah guests from Walla Walla. . The Multnomah also houses Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Smith of Milkaukee. Wis., where the former is head of a furnishing goods business of some importance. . . About a mile from Crooked river in Crook county is Terrebonne, where be tween 50 and 100 persons Vle with one another In the pursuits of the day. Whatever is Terrebonne's population, the number Is temporarily diminished by the presence in Portland today of W. A. Giesey and C. Casperson, who live in the Crook county town. The visitors from Terrebonne are stopping at the Perkins hotel. Mrs. B. M. East, whose first initial, it has been suspected by friends, stands for "business," registered at the Im perial hotel on Saturday morning after her belated arrival from St. Helens. Mrs. East conducts the Liberty theatre at St. Helens and constitutes her own official and unofficial board of censors. ' Mr. and Mrs. George S. Craig are guests at the Multnomah hotel from En- torprise, where Craig Is vice president of the Wallowa National bank. Portland delights in the presence of another bank er and his fireside partner In the per sons of Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Beals of Tillamook, who are registered at the Imperial. Lockley me he had Just got In. He told me I had better take my medicine out here where I wasn't known than to be arrested when I got home, where everybody knew me. He said it would save a lot of trouble and expense if I wou Id surrender. So I told him to come out next morning and I would go over the whol situation with him. He said he would bring Sheriff Nowlin with him. as he had no authority Ui arrest me. I told him I would not be there If Nowlin came, but for him to come alone and I would go to Pendle ton. Til and I went to Pendleton to gether. I offered to pay my own way, but he said I might as well sage my money, so he paid for both tickets. TU played square with me, so of course I played square with him. I got six months, which I served here In this Jail. "I hated to start anything -I couldn't finish, or to put my hand to the plow and turn back, so I decided to. stay a month or so longer in Oregon;, make a few thousand dollars and then go back, clean up my debts which was what 1 had come to Oregon to do in the first place and then retire from the busi ness. I would have made it If I had known about the law requiring vehicles 10 carry lights at night It was a little thing to slip up on, but it got me. I rented a place on Youngs river, four miles from Astoria. As I was driving toward my place on, the Lewis and Clark road about midnight I met some officers out on Some 'other business. They asked me why I didn't have a light on my .wagon, and told me they might have run Into me. I apologised and drove on, but they were suspicious an followed me and after I had gone to bed they searched my barn and found rome of my raw materials and then looked over my ranch and just happened to stumble onto my still. They had no idea there was a still in the country. I was arrested on June . If they had let me alone a couple of weeks longer I would have- had my goods made and sold .and would have been out of the country for good. "Some people think there is nothing in luck, but it certainly looked as If hard luck had camped on my trail that time, for tt was the merest accident that they chanced to 'meet me, and If I had had a lantern on my dashboard or tailgate they never would have stopped me in the first .place. "Take it from me hard work and steady saving is the safest way to get ahead. There Is too much rough sled ding in. the evasion of the law. I know for I have been a government officer myself, and I have served on federal grand juries, and in, the long run law evasion doesn't pay." been flghtm' the cusses on American shores by this time and pilln' up a mil lion or two of our boys as a sacrifice to foolishness. They ain't dots' much crowin : they're too . busy, thin kin' of their dead and their orphans and widders. t . Pedestrianism to the Discard . rrosi ta Philadelphia Ledger Once man was noted if he Went to Europe ; now be achieves distinction by walking all ths way to the office. ; - The Oregon Country Kotthwwt Happiln in Brief Worm tot the Bniy tosder ORTSQON C. N. LSUrhrlri h.. Mai nul Via position in the office of the secretary" u enter tne employ of a Con- , don bank. The Roseburg Realty board has adopt-' ert a resolution urging the county court to push construction work on the Tiller Crater Lake road. . Seymour Jones of Marion county, late speaker of the house of representajiSji ves will not be a candidate for re- election as representative. i. - ' Unless the 1920 centum rennrta m ceived at Bend before the primaries, candidates for city offices must be elect ed in. the fall without nomination by La Grande is to he 'made the head- . quarters of the Eastern Oregon district of the Maccabees. Heretofore the dis trict has been under the supervision of Portland. Uniform dress for high school airl is generally atmroved at Rosebura- hut ther is considerable opposition to ihe( prohibition of silk stockings and high - heeled shoes. When Deschutes countv was organ ized Rend was made the temporary county seat. A measure will be placed un me ivovemner ballot to locate It there permanently. The state hiahasv commission has : received notice that Oregon will be al lotted BO additional auto trucks by the 1 federal government for road work. Thus far the state has received 170 trucks. Extravagance in dress will ha ellmi. ' nated from the Roseburg high school. A vote by the girls or the student body showed that 180 were in favor of a unt xorm areas wnue is favored the old order. The manufacture of apple boxes 'will begin at Sutherlln about May 1. Last year over JO.000 appl. boxes wers shipped Into the district. To meet the demand this year, 80,000 botes will be required. C.,F. Hopkins of Roseburg has an nounced his candidacy for Joint repre sentative from Jackson and Douglas . counties. It' is understood that W. IL Oore of Medford will not be a candi date for reelection. " WASHINGTON Yegmen blew open th safe In the postofftee at Rainier and secured $2&0 In cash and stamps. The, public school and farm bureau of Sar will give a Joint entertainment next Saturday at the new community hall. Free city mall delivery for Olarkston is in prospect on July 1. The salary of the postmaster will be raised from (1900 to $2300. An effort Is being made to adiust ths long standing wage controversy between the telephone girls and telephone com pany at Seattle. The work of paving Clarke county roads will begin within the next two weeks. The county will spend 1.800,000 In paving jhis year. The supreme court has granted a writ of mandate directing that the funds of the Yakima state fair be turned over to the state treasurer. Centralla's north end nark will be Im. . proved this summer. Electric llrhta ani city water will be Installed and cement Stoves and comfort stations constructed. Major Carl H. Reeves, who was an un successful candidate for councilman at the recent Seattle election, miy be mads superintendent of public utilities at 8e- ' attle. Merchants, fruitgrowers and business men of Wenatchee have pledged them selves to raise 25 per cent of the cost of constructing a railroad from Wenat chee to Pasco. Protests against the approval of the recommendation of the recent welfare conference of an $18 weekly minimum v. age for women employes in hotels and restaurants will be haard by the In dustrial weirar commission at Seattle March 18. IDAHO . A. Tallman has been reelected water master of Boise river. His salary was " fixed at 85000. , The Coeur d'Alene school district hss ' Increased the satarv of the supertnten- dent of schools to 13600 a, year. - Governor Davis has recommended the observance of western consumers' week April 5-11 for purpose of encouraging home Industry. Official returns from the Grangemont highway district election show that the proposal to issue 1100.000 bonds failed to carry by a few votes. Thomas T. Kerl of Coeur d'Alene, con victed of dlslovalty and sentenced to pT a fine of 82000, has been disbarred by order of the state supreme court Idaho has 23.000.000 acres of forest land and 130,000.000,000 feet of merchantable timber according to a compilation f ths North Idaho Forestry association. Motion to dismiss the application nf the Idaho Power company for Increased irrigation power rates have been denied by the state public utility commission. Fred B. Jones of Boise, district mana ger of the Mountain Stales Telephone company. ha been appointed general manager of the company for Utah and Idaho, The South Methodist church of Star, newly erected, has been burned to tba ground as the result of a fire started by children playing In a pile of trash at the side of the building. According to the report of the county auditor submitted at Coeur d'Alene te the county commissioners shows the net debt of the county has been reduced In amount,, approximately 8100.000. The public utilities commission has re quested the Oregon public service com mission to Join in an order directing railroads between Poeatello and Hunt ington to run on mountain time. "Christmas Relief Bureau" Conducted by The Journal A Notable IPhilanthropy Portland ia prosperoua Work Is abundant. The slump that many ex pected at the end of war as Industries changed over from military to peace production has not occurred. Even ex-servtce men are being absorbed by desirable employment without unrea sonable difficulty. It is difficult to believe there was ever a time when Jobs were at a premium, when Idle men thronged the streets, when the utilization of th Gipsy Smith tabernacle as a place for the unemployed to sleep and eat was necessary as well as the employment for similar purposes of an old laundry on the east side. It Is a tax on credulity to accept the statement that a few years ago in Portland Christmas drew near and mothers in modest homes wept not more over empty childish stockings than empty little stomachs. It was during these "hard times" that The Journal found opportunity to be useful in a new way a way that won the continuous gratitude of thousands and that gave The Jour nal readers a chance to express sub stantially their i own generous sym-' patby for misfortune., A "Chrtstams relief bureau" was opened in a store room on the ground floor of The Journal building. Facts about necessity were gathered. Co operation was afforded established agencies. Appeals were published day by day. It was insisted that aid should , not alone be for Christmas but to help the unfortunate and needy through a long winter. It was said and said truthfully at that Christ mas that no child in Portland w by necessity ' deprived of Christmas presents and that for every family there -was a Christmas dinner. Thousands of dollars and thousands of packages of food, clothing and presents were distributed. And the gratitude of mothers made the ex perience blessed to all who had part in it . '