4 THE OREGON i SUNDAY ; JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING.. NOVEMBER' - 21. 1920. " '. 4w- AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER C. 8. JACKSON ................ .l'ubluutr -'( calm, be confident, be cheerful and do unto others aa you would hare them do unto yog. J Published every wmt day end Sunday momlni. at The Journal Building, Broadway and Im- hill street, Portland. Oregon. - -;: ' Entmd at Jthe postoffice at PorUsnd, Ornton. for traiwmlialon through the mails as second elaaa matter. .1EUSPHONK9 Main 7178, Automatic 580-81. 411- .Mmanta muJiuI k h number. Mt'i U. t1" LUH .w , v, NATIONAL AhVERTISI.Vft KEPI1KSENTA TtVE Benjamin A Kentnor Co., Brunswirk ! ? ftulkfing. 225 Fifth avenue. New Tort; 800 Mallera Building Chicago. rAf'IFIC COAST KEPKESENTATITE W. R. - Barenger Co., Examiner Building, San Fran- el co; Title Insurance Building, lx Angetea , Post-Iiiteligeneer Building, Heettle. JTHE OBE'iON JOURNAL, reserves the right to A reject sdverti'ing copy which it deems ob- Jeetinnsble. It also will nut print any copy ' that In any way simulate reading matter or : that cannot readily be recognised as adcer- tiaing. I SUBSCRIPTION IUTKB By Carrier, City and Country f . DAILY. AND kUNnAY - One week I .15 I One month .85 t DAILY I KI'SDAY SOne week . .... I .101 One week...... .05 limn month 4 S ) . BY MAIL. AI L RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE f DAILY AND SUNDAY :ivne year. . . ..i5.o i nree mumiw. . ,-e-.- hi months.... 4.28 S DAILY (Without Sunday) One year 8.00 Jfcir. month. . . , 8 25 Thrt months.. 1.75 )ne month, . . . .80 I WEEKLY (Every Wednesday! JOns year. , . . . .$1.00 lr.tf months 50 One month. .... .75 SUNDAY (Only) On year. . ... . ..$3.00 Six months .... 1.78 Three months... 1.00 WEEKLY AND SUNDAY One year $3 50 I These rates apply only In the West. I Rata to Kaatern points furnixhed on appHea it.on. Make rtmittanres by Money Order Express iOrder or Draft If your po-toffice is not a Money Order office, 1- or 2-cent stamps will.be laccepted. Make all remittances payable to The Journal. Portland, Oregon. ' And the chief prieMa and serines sought how they might kill him; for they feared the people. Luke 22-2. v THE BENSON PROTEST THE resignation of Mr'. Benson from the state highway commis sion was a protest. , The main proposition to which he objects is the use of state funds on roads that are not state, roads. He calls them "political roads."-. This protest Is well worth general consideration. Oregon ought hot to build "political roads," or permit them to be built.. Washington tried- .:that plan and a sorry situation came of it. The . people there are . now .j paying heavily for the mistake. : The road program of Oregon is a gigantic undertaking. It is the ; state's supreme expenditure." The millions going into the system are far beyond any enterprise which the Estate has ever undertaken, and the men to whom la committed the ex- penditure of "these millions will be 'tray every principle of honor and be untrue to every obligation of re sponsibility if they allowf themselvea on any account to be drajwn into the building of "political roads." ; Local communities ought not to ask for local roads to be" built with . state funds. Local men ought not to do highway commissioners the in justice of bringing local pressure upon them to induce them to swerve from their duty of using state funds clor state highways. When they drag or drive commissioners through . ' pressure into schemes of local road : building, they help to bring the com mission into 'scandal. There is another features The (federal government is one source from which highway funds are de- ..riyed. Under certain conditions, .a ; 60-50 arrangement between the fed jeral government and the state is ap f plied In bearing the cost. The fed 'ral government will not bear any share on local roads or "political roads." Whenever the state high !way commissioners enter upon con--truction of a road in which 'the 'federal government refuses to par- ' iticipate, it betrays the people of Or ' egon by piling; upon them an un necessary expense. ( It was the apprehension that these things would arise in state road building that Mr. Benson says caused him to resign. If the possi bility of tha sort of thing caused 'Mr. Benson to resign, it is certainly trongly suggestive to all highway commissioners, present or prospec tive, to keep -free from such entan glements. . - -:'''.'.' . Mri Benson's objections to cement pavingare Jess consequential. Mr. Benson is undoubtedly honest in his belief on that point. , But there are other men - who hold that ' in ? the right" locations and' under proper construction,' cement ia equayy duf- able. 'J,'4,-r,';QUF(I-':' ."' " ' ' A total of 15S; miles of Pacific highway remain" to be built. Mis takes have doubtless been made by the commission,, but In general, that "body i has ; met , its responsibilities worthily, and, as the recent authori sation of an additional expenditure-of $10,000,000 shows, has retained the confidence of . the ; people. . . It 4a highly" important' that noth ing, t! done to. forfeit -that, confi dence! When the great road pro gram is finally completed, it i hoped that all the people will be able to say of the great work, "it is well." i Returning : from a brilliant re ception in honor of his election, a congressman at Long Beach," Cali fornia, was instantly killed in an au tomobile accident. ; Blinded by glar-1 ing headlights,' he drove his ma chine into a heavy , truck standing at the roadside. When you don't dim you may cause a killing. OREGON EGGS A FEW days ago, a carload of Ore gon eggs was marketed in New York at $1-08 a dozen wholesale. It was the highest price for eggs paid in the metropolitan market,' and it was a dollars and ' cents recognition of the frequently repeated statement that Oregon's eggs are the best in the world. ' , " Add to the evidence of quality the fact that Oregon's hens produce on the average about 50 per cent niore eggs than in any other part of the country and it can be readily understood why the eggs produced in this state last year were valued at $58,800,000 morejthan the value placed on all the vegetables, fruit or dairy products' produced in the commonwealth. The eggs marketed in New Tork from - Oregon were, jof course, se lected with great care. The market ing exploit was performed by the Oregon Poultry Producers' associa tion, a recently formed cooperative marketing organization of actual poultrymen. ' j It might be expected that the pay ment of such unusual ' prices for Oregon eggs in New York would stimulate local ambitions and prices. As a .matter of fact) the same co operative marketing organization has announced that I prices will be lowered 2 cents a dozen wholesale on Saturday, and that, if necessary, there will be further decline to pre vent speculative manipulation of the "egg market and to avert the usual December slump also credited to speculative influence. . A statement from Manager Upson of the association furnishes the ex planation: j 'As an organization of producers it is to our interest to see that, the commodity which we produce is j in constant and consistent demand. t Progressive cooperative organizations have realized that their duty is not only to the pro ducer but to the consumer as well, and that no organization can continue to exist which ignores the rights of the con sumer. We lare lowering the price and will continue to lower the price gradually, j in order that we may rebuild the demand for eggs and thus prevent the serious slump which usually takes place in December. These slumps profit no one except the speculator. They simply result in. his acquiring a stock of eggs at the lowest figures obtainable and the market re bounds, 5, 6 or 10 cents. We feel that we. are entitled to the cooperation of the consuming public in carrying out this policy. j' As an evidence of sincerity it is testified that at the time the usual "gentlemen's agreement"' was being entered into relative1 to the price of eggs, the Producers' Cooperative association announced firmly that their maximum; regardless of prices made by others, would be T8 cents a dozen. Portland consumers are the beneficiaries forj as a result, the price of . eggs here has' not -been so high as in many other cities. W. T. Myers, lawyer at Atlanta, stabbedi one reporter and pointed a pistol at another bfecause they ap peared in his office! and asked him to Join the Red Cross. Wht could have been his mental attitude? Did he think there is too much "ideal ism" in the Red Cross? THE RAILROADS' S. O. S. IN PREPARING jfor the annual 1 convention of thej National Rivers and Harbors congress in iWashing ton, D. C, December 8, 9 and 10, SecretaryS. A. Thompson calls at tention to an admission printed in the time table of the New York Central railroad. Railroads today are the bottle-neck of the Industrial world. Once they were de veloped beyond the demands on them. New industry is being retarded because the roads cannot meet the demands. It is unthinkable that Industrial expansion should be checked at a time when in tensive production Is so urgently needed. The bottle-neck must be widened or the pressure on it be reduced. The railroads alone cannot handle the traffic of the nation. Inability to furnish cars and service ade quately and high rates help account for the checking of the nation's busi ness. For years the railroads "tried to monopolize the transportation of the United States. They ambushed water transportation and choked the life out of it. When the war emerg ency came, inland jwaterways were idle. The boats of the ante-railroad day were rotting at their docks or bleaching on the jsands. -Federal administration at once recognized the need of supplemental facilities for transportation, j Out of .the war experience came-the renewed plans for the New York lake-to-port canal, the organization ' of the Mississippi barge line, the campaign for water transportation ttonj the Mississippi to Chicago, and thence by way of the Great Lakes, and the St. Law rence to the Atlantic and Europe., There was also incorporated in the transportation act, under the same inspiration, the ' clause ; which de clares that it is, the policy of con gress to aid and sustain water trans portation in every possible way. The time has come to take the opportunity for the development of water transportation seriouslv. Whv wait until the development of the "est has proven Its; railroads un- equal to their task before providing the facilities on the Columbia and its tributaries for the moving of the heavy and bulk commodities which constitute the greater part of the commerce of the ports of the Co lumbia? j Water ; transportation should be developed as the Columbia basin and the ports of the Columbia fire developed Or development will lag. Oregon's minimum quota j of Christmas seals to furnish funds for the fight against . tuberculosis is $39,164. This is said to be only 6 cents " for each man, woman and child in the state and less than 6 per cent of the $6,000,000 prevent able -loss ; which annually the state suffers through deaths from tuber culosis. THE RISING TIDE THE full effect of the warning contained in Lothrop Stoddard's recent book, ."The Rising Tide of Color," may be rejected. His fore bodings of the fall of white suprem acy may j be ridiculed. But those who reject or ridicule cannot faii to take from his thoughtful, if pessi mistlc, discussion a new valuation of the effort to utilize more fully jthe the white man's heritage between Rockies and the Pacific in United States. This great, sparsely populated the re- gion is the expansion area reserved to the people of the nation. When the overcrowding of the East shall force the stream of settlement west ward, here are waiting vast spaces which must be prepared for homes and production, not by Individual istic, but by communal plaa, Em ploying all the machinery of devel opment which modern science jhas produced. It is little wonder if other pna tions in need of expansion area jfor their congested peoples look with envious eyes to spots like Oregon, where there are but seven people to the square mile. If the plans of such nations for colonization by "peaceful penetration" should be defeated, and if their necessity for room grows more acute, it is not difficult i to understand Stoddard's fear that the white man will be asked to give an accounting for his failure to improve his opportunity to occupy the land". Sooner or later the law of the survival of the fittest operates. Although the white man's resi dence is limited by climatic, and other reasons to a limited portion of the earth's surface, he has actually obtained political control, at least, of the greater part of the area, j Of the S3, 060,000 square miles of land area, exclusive of the polar regions, there are but 6,000,000 square miles under the exclusive control ,of non white governments. In some coun tries, as the British in Ind'ia or Egypt, the white man has.however, a control about as secure as that of a man who attempts to block j the eruption of a volcano by holding a stove lid m the throat of its crater. governing instead of being gov erned, it: is Stoddard's apprehension that their sheer numbers may be! the conclusive element in any struggle that may ensue. ' j The world's estimated population is 1,700,000,000, and of these l,i50, 000,000 belong to the colored races, 550,000,000 to the white races. Among the colored races, more ihan 500,000,000 are yellow, 450,000,000 are brown, 150,000,000 are black and 40,000,000 are red. The whites double in 80 years, the yellows and browns in 60 years and the blacks in 40 years. "Wherever the white man goes," says Stoddard, "he at tempts o Impose the bases of his orderedrciyilization." He eliminates tribal war, fights disease, sets up processes that increase, food produc tion and improves the facilities of communication. Thus the incrjease of "the dominated races is facilitated and their need of expansion area rendered more acute. It is difficult to conceive that the yellows, the browns, the blacks land the reds would ever cohere with suf ficient intelligence, purpose and or ganization to defeat the white man, unless he carries' on more intra white wars that reduce to the minus point his numbers and resistance. It is equally difficult to believe that, while the mind growth of the col ored races is approaching the point where they might overcome the white man' as he is today, the vrhite man would not be also progressing and keeping the relative balance of today. But, to recur to the first sugges tion, the discussion does give weight to the ethnical and economic Irea sons for moving in upon our own western land and making such j em ployment of its resources as will' for ever silence any outside challenge of our right to its possession and use. Within less than six . years the sesqucentennial of American -nde pendence will be celebrated. There is just about time to learn hoW to pronounce the word. TIRES SLIP 1 o SINCE a pun Is the lowest form of wit, it will not be more than suggested that Akron, tire citjy of the Union, is tired by abnormal growth and- will use a temporary slump in the demand for ' automo bile overshoes to rest and plan more permanent growth. , : In 1910, Akron's population! was 69,000 and In 1920, 208.000. In the same period Akron reached a posi tion where her people could truth fully boast they were producing 60 per cent of the . world's supplies of motor car tires. s Rubber factories were operated three shifts a day and so were lodg ing houses." Tiref companies devel oped home builditig departments in order to care for their employes. Hotel accommodation was at a pre mium. The announcement on a recent morning that tires have slumped in price from 7 to 15 per cent, means that Akron will slow up and take stock while surplus tires are being consumed. Then the "tire oity" will come back into her own again on a more substantial and permanent basis. To be a patron of the bootleggers' syndicate may be funny when the flask 'is passing around, but it will seem a bootless business, something like the cold gray dawn of the morn ing after, to the Portlanders whose names appear in the police investi gation. SAVING FIVE THOUSAND HF I COULD regulate the sleep 1 ing . habits of Chicago I could save 5000 lives a year," says Health Commissioner Robinson of the Windy City. He added: A curfew, law that would keep chil dren off the street after 9 at night would be an excellent thing, not alone for their health but for their morals. Most adults would feel better if they had more sleep. Napoleon took but five hours for sleep opt of the 24. If he had slept more, perhaps, his career would not have ended at a St. Helena. Edison drives ahead anywhere from 16 to 20 hours out of the 24. He takes an average of only about five hours for sleep. But Edison is a superman. The 'rule' for him is not necessarily a good rule for all. It is probable that Commissioner Robinson could save 5000 lives a year if he could regulate th sleep ing habits of Chicagoans. Loss. of sleep is the beginning of shattered nerves. Loss of sleep makes you start or be startled when the door creaks a curtain falls or the woman next door tunes up her piano in a burst of jazz. It means that your nerves are demoralized and that you are on the way and accelerating your speed toward six feet of earth or. the bughouse. Mothers now put their babes to bed very early. They have learned from experience and from science that with the long sleep the child fares better, is stronger and more docile. A curfew law to drive the older children indoors and to bed at nine is, as Commissioner Robin son says, a wonderful measure for good health and good morals. It must have been the thought of the Creator that, in the general scheme of things, darkness was for slumber, to which man has added darkness for criminals. Official Washington has ruled that laborers in the state, war and navy departments, will be penalized if they discuss other than official busi ness during working hours. Now let the rule be widened to include the holdiers of the ornamental positions an it will be unnecessary longer to wear spurs in order to keep the feet from sliding off the desks. THE SPORTSMAN'S DAY EVEN at this early hour there are comforting assurances in the air that the next legislative session will not be a "fish and game legisla ture." . There will, indeed, be a fish and game bill. But the present indica tion is that it will be brought to the legislature by the sportsmen rather than by the politicians. Since the division of the administration of commercial fish propagation and the propagation and protection of game and game fish, a gratifying relaxa tion, of attempted political control of the game department has been apparent. Now the rod and gun enthusiasts are finding it possible to agree on a shortening of the fishing season, in order to destroy fewer trout dur ing the spring spawning season in the mountain streams and the autumn spawning in the coast streams. They agree that small trout hatcheries should be located on the streams where the troqt are released and that the present plan of hatching the fish in a great cen tral establishment and attempting to carry them from 10 to 300 miles is wasteful and against nature. . They are willing for a reduction in the bag limit from 50 to, say, 30 fish a day and might, with a rather startling realization that a fascinat ing outdoor sport is threatened with destruction, consent to increase from six to height inches in the minimum length of trout which may be taken. It has been borne in upon the anglers that during the years they have been politically exploited and sundered by squabbles, the streamsi have gradually been depopulated of their finny denizens and the .occa sional trip for trout has become more and more disappointing. ' They also know that if mountain streams are stocked persistently with trout produced in hatcheries at headwaters, if the fry are protected even by measures so extreme as closing the stream for a year or two, if the bag limit is lessened and, the legal length of fish which may be taken Increased, streams which had seemed barren of sport "come back" with marvelous rapidity. PART-TIME PEOPLE. . A Stern but Just Appraisement of Those Who Flinch at Steady, Humdrum, Day-ln-and-Day- , Out Production. v i ' From the Philadelphia Public Ledger Taking the crowd in tne street as we find them one by one, we see on every side people who are partly use ful and partly useless. They start something with enthusiasm and do not put it through. They are great at be ginning. , They beat a drum and sum mon an army sind postpone the action until the fortunate moment has gone by: You can depend on them here and there. They may be satisfactory per formers when all conditions favor and they have things their own way. But you cannot be quite sure of them. They may fall you in a pinch. Their elo quence captivates, their brilliancy in spires, but when it comes down to sober, humdrum, day-after-day pro duction they disappoint They cannot keep office hours. They cannot ener gize consecutively. They function by fits and starts. Do not look to them for regularity in action or a definite and punctual delivery. The able and the Justly distinguished among the sons of men are those whose productive labor is not fitful and casual, but incessant. They do not wait to go to their work until they feel like it. If. those who carry the burden of the world's toil consulted their moods, things would be at a standstill. The engineer may not feel like climbing into his cab: the good wife may not feel like cooking a meal ; a man may feel too ill to write books or paint pictures or build bridges or set type or sail a ship. A thousand disin clinations spring up in us to pull us away from exercise that is not fun. But the real man says to them all : "This is something I have to do. Duty is the overlord of inclination. I cannot quell my conscience as if it were a troublesome insect. Some unsubduable voice within me will not let me rest- I must be about . my business." This is a time when honest labor in some quarters is not in vogue, and pre texts for sloth are sought and offered unashamedly. The work is still to be done, ,and, if some refuse to do tt, the rest must be all the busier for their refusal. The places of trust will not go to the demoralized ; they will go to those who have shown themselves fit to be trusted. They will go to . the ones whose minds and bodies, disci plined to steady industry, overcome mountainous obstacles with a minimum Of waste and friction. Blessed is the toiler who puts in a full day's work for a full day's pay ; whose thought and hand are given undistraoted to the immediate task ; who is able to con centrate utterly and say, "This one thing I do." Such a one is worth sev era! of those who give but one lobe of the brain to what they are doing ; who bestow two fingers where they should take hold with all the hand. Their wits and their affections are afar off. They move as in a dream. Amus ing they may be in an interlude of so cial entertainment, but they cannot stand and hold their own against those stalwart, valiant souls who give all of themselves all of the time (with rea sonable spaces left for play) to the serious occupation for which they were set on earth. Letters From the People fmblication in thi department ihould be written on only one side of the paper; should not exceed 800 words in lenirth. and must be signed by the writer. wboe mail address in full must accom paoy the contribution. A STATEMENT BY DR. BILDERBACK Portland, Nov. 19. To the Bditor of The Journal In relation to the status of the Waverly Baby home, I beg to submit the. following : It is true that we have sickness at tha Waverly Baby home. Until Satur day, November 13, there was no cause for alarm. Some of the smaller children for a. period of a inth gave evidence of a' slight digestive disturbance, but they were not critically or dangerously ill. They were simply not digesting their food properly. A condition of this kind is not supposed to be reported to the city health authorities. On Saturday, November 13, one of the smaller children, without any warning, suddenly became extremely 111, having a temperature of 106, and died in less tl.an 24 hours. There was such an ab sence of physical findings that Dr. Patrick, the attending physician, asked Drs. Benson and Menne of the Medical school to perform an . autopsy. They did so, and their findings were that the child died of broncho-pneumonia. The reason the autopsy was performed was to ascertain exactly the cause of death,, and for the protection of the other children. In order to know if we were dealing with the beginning of a feypentery in fection, Dr. II. J. Sears of the Medical school kindly gave his services and made cultures of 19 of the children's bowel movements. His report was that all were negative for dysentery. Having had dysentery at the Waberly baby home In May, 1913, the medical staff is nat urally apprehensive of a reoccurrence and has idone everything that Is possible to ascertain the cause or origin of the present illness. Today j several - physicians, Drs. Ed mond Labbe. William Knox, and L. 1 toward I Smith, made an investigation of the baby home and they are all in accord that the babies are being cared for efficiently. It is the opinion of Dr. Robert Benson that we are probably dealing with a streptococcus infection, which was the organism that was responsible for the high death rate throughout the United States during the influenza epidemic. Jt is impossible to say, at the present time, what the outcome will be at the home. We may unfortunately lose some children, but if this , Bhould occur the board of directors was no more responsi ble for the infection than the mayor was for the influenza epidemic A group of public spirited men and women; for 25 years, have kept the baby home alive. During this time they have accepted unfortunate babies, cared for them, and in several hundred instances have had them adopted into good homes. The doors of the Waverly baby home have always been open to any child regardless of creed or color, and, while an institution is not an Ideal place for babies, the care and the attention that they have received at the home have been infinitely better than they have ever received before. The board of : directors, during all these 5'ears, has raised a large part of the money for the maintenance of the home by Belling tags, lead pencils, beg ging and giving a large part of their time and energy to the care and better-" ment of the helpless and unfortunate children of this state ; and their payment has been malicious criticism. : J. B. Bilderbaek, visiting physician, . Waverly Baby Home. MR. EDISON'S QUEST Portland, Nov. 16. To the Editor of The Journal Many persons are inter ested in Edison's experiment to deter mine if it is possible to communicate with the so-called "unseen world." Edi son is not a spiritist.' On the contrary. SCARRED BGeorge FAR nobler the sword that is nicked and worn, Far fairer the flag that is grimy and torn, Than when, to the battle, fresh they were borne. He was tried and found true; he stood the test 'Neath whirlwinds of doubt; when all the rest Crouched down and .submitted, he fought best. 4 ' There 'are wounds on his breast that can never be healed. There are gashes that bleed and may not be sealed, But wounded and gashed he won. the field. And others may dream in their easy chairs, And point their white hands to the scars he bears, But the palm arid the, laurel are his not theirs. MORE OR LESS PERSONAL Random Observations About Town George W. Hayes, well known attorney of Vale, is a Portland visitor. f "Three months ago," said Mr. Hayes, "the dairy men of Washington Wanted to place an order with the alfalfa growers of Vale for 1000 tons of baled hay at $30 a ton laid down, which, deducting; $18 for ireignt, meant in a ton to me vaie nay grower. They turned it down. Today , they are trying to find a market for their hay at 8 a ton. The bottom of the hay market has simply dropped out of sight." -z a a e Herbert Chandler, native son of Baker county and owner of a 2500 acre ranch midway between Baker and Haines, is at the Imperial. 'He raises Herefords, as did his father before him. His father, George Chandler, settled near the pres--entjtown of Baker in 1862, and was one of Oregon's best known stockmen in the early days. . Ed Coles of Haines, who was awarded the grand championship on a carload of steers at the stock Bhow, is visiting Port land friends. i ' . Tom Jay of Fossil is a guest at the Hotel Oregon. E. V". Mahaffey, well known banker of Bend, is in Portland for a brief visit, . . R. B. Hailey ofJVasco, L. U Ray of Eugene and C. W. Conroy of Condon are guests of the Oregon. R. W. Child, manager of Hotel Port land, and Li. Q. Swetland of the Per kins are in Santa Barbara at the Hotel Men's convention. Prank Curl, who has been voting the straight Republican ticket and seeing that all his friends do likewise since Pendleton was a stage station on John Halley's stage line, is spending- a few days in Portland talking politics. . Mr. and Mrs. E. W. McComas of Pen dleton are Portland visitors. O. P. Hoff, at one time transient farm hand, later railway employe, merchant and labor commissioner, now state treas urer of Oregon, is in the city on business for the state. - E. L. DeLashmutt of Willamina, which Is the terminus of a Southern Pacific branch road, is at the Perkins. A. A. Roberts of Pendleton, where for the past four years he has been chief of police, is at the Perkins. ,Mr. Roberts was a deputy under Zoe Houser OBSERVATIONS AND IMPRESSIONS OF THE JOURNAL MAN By Fred ("Know a man by the company he keeps" ia an ancient and moat true adage. Mr. Lockley today applies it in the nutter of literary com radeship, edifying books being lauded as friends that are in some tropecta b.-yoni all others, while the daily -newspaper ia given ita joat place in any self -educational scheme. "Who's your friend?" I heard a young chap say to his comrade a day or eo ago. Did you ever stop to think how much Is involved In that question? The something in us that survives the muta tions of time is made or marred by what we think. Our thoughts are termed and influenced by those with whom we as sociate, as well as by what we see and hear and read. Our character Is formed by our mental and spiritual food as much as is our body by our physical food. We are judged by the company we keep. Propinquity is the greatest factor in the choosing of a lifemate ; hence our associations and friendships reach beyond the grave 1 and are re flected in the character ) of- our pos terity. We cannot choose our relatives, but we are .free moral agents in the choice of our friends. We can choose for our friends the best minds of all ages. Plato and Socrates, Shakespeare and Milton, Victor Hugo and Mark Twain, Stevenson and Homer, and all the countless host of the illustrious dead, will talk to us through their books and become a very part or us. .No one, Irrespective of age or sex, need lament the lack of a collegia educa tion so long as a public library or a bookstore is accessible. Lincoln's Get tysburg speech will live as -long as our race survives, yet his early library con sisted of the. Bible and Shakespeare. He read them till they becamea very part of him. If you will keep Chack of the time you waste each day you will find that this spare time properly utilized will enable you to secure an education. Tou say books are not always access ible? All right; you can always get hold of a magazine or a newspaper. If you are a discriminating reader you can learn something of value from every person you meet and from every pub lication you get hold of. For example, during the past two days I jotted down Just a few of the interest ing things I ran across in my browsing in the newspapers. Here are a few of the Items I find in my notebook : Obregon will be inaugurated president of Mexico December L The laws of Japan allow the policemen to grant divorces. During the summer of 1900 when I was at Nome it had a population of over 20,000 ; today its winter popula tion lis less than 200. In the early '80s Knut Hamsun was a conductor on the horse cars on the Halstead street he, like the majority, of scientists, is skeptical in regard to theories that are not substantiated. However, he may succeed in proving that the nature of the human mind cannot.be discovered with scientific instruments. For thousands of years people have regarded the mind as being 'if not super natural at least something that tran scends nature. - But since science has proved that the universe is endless in. time and space, and that no energy is lost nor matter destroyed there is no place for a supernatural, so we are forced to take another tack. This mind of ours is a natural force that manifests itself only in connection with the ehuman brain, which Is inseper ably connected with the nervous sys tem, and that, with the body. The body requires food, clothing and shelter, which man obtains- from the earth by social labor. The earth ia part of the solar system,, which, great as it is, U Houghton when Houser was United States mar shal, and -also served two years under Jack Mathews. '"The election of Zoe Houser as sheriff of Umatilla county at - the recent election was a great surprise to many, though it did not surprise me greatly, for there were three causes that led to the de feat of Jenks Taylor, brother of Til Taylor," said Mr. Roberts. "It was a Republican landslide, for one thing. Secondly, the bootleggers and moonshine peddlers had it in for Jenks Taylor be cause he insisted on enforcing the law and they got in trouble every time they broke the law. They worked hard against him. Thirdly, the prohibitionists claimed he was not severe enough with the bootleggers and lawbreakers, so they also worked against him, and between them they managed to defeat him." fee J. S. Sparks, proprietor of the opera house at Condon, is in the city to take in a few shows. Dr. William T. Phy, native son of Union county. Is down from Hot. Lake. Dr., Phy is superintendent of the Hot Lake sanatorium, which is becoming the surgical center of the Pacific Northwest, e Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Llvesley are in the metropolis from the capital city. Robert H. Barton of Hood River is registered at the Benson. Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Bell, who for many years have been giving the glad hand to the traveling public at their hotel, the Mount Hood at Hood River, are reg lstered at the Benson. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Ackerman are niMti at th Seward. Professor Acker n ' - man has worked up from teacher of a country school to a teacher of teachers at the Monmouth normal school, of which he is president, j Mr. and Mrs. II. F. McCormick of St. Helens are at the Benson. Mr. Mc Cormick contriwes to keetf busy manag ing a few logging camps, a sawmill or so, and a shipyard which has turned out scores of well built and seaworthy ships. a e e E. E. Paddock, who endeared himself to the members of the A. E. F. in France as a real man and a bully talker, is down from Hood River.' His job at home is being a bishop, but overseas he was a chaplain, willing to work at any old thing that would bring pleasure or com fort -to the doughboys. . Lockley l line in Chicago. He won the Nobel priie this year for literature, in com-i petition with the world. Hog Island j shipyard cost the government and that means you and me over $70, 000,000 It is to be closed February 1, 1921. The government is considering a bid of $4,000,000 foj- it There were approximately 8.750.000 registered motor vehicles In use in the world dur ing 1920; 7,3S8,848 of -them were in use In the United States. Napoleon Bonaparte died May 5, 1821. The hun dredth anniversary of his death will be celebrated In . Paris. General Pershing, General feir Douglas Halg, General Diaz of Italy' and Field Marshal Foch have been appointed a committee to arrange for the ceremonies. A watch has about 17.7 separate parts and 2200 operations are' required to assemble these parts. Guatamala has gone dry. New Jersey, will pay all prisoners for work done in jails or prison. A. W. Brabham has succeeded in growing tan colored and tiark brown cotton. Luther Burbunk says it Is quite possible to produce coal black cotton in place of white, thus pro ducing a natural fast black without German or other dye. The United SJatcs government used the Choctaw language as a secret cipher on various occasions during the war, and' the Germans were unable to figure it out. Boston is the Jargest wool tenter in the United States: Port land is second. Portland Is the largest lumber manufacturing city in the world. Portland circulates more books per capita and of a higher : type than any other city in the United States. a ' a Who is your friend? Think 1t over. And to help you think, read here what the poet Southey says of books-: My day tmonf the .dead an paued ; Aronnd me i behold. Where'er these casual eyes are east. The mighty minds of old; My nerer-failin friends are they With whom I conreis night and day.- With tbem I take delight in weal And seek relief in woe. ... And while t understand and feel' How murh to them t owe. My cheeks hare often been bedewed With tears of thoughtul graUtude. My thoughts are with the dead. With thera I lire in long-past years. Their virtues loe. their fault condemn. Partake their griefa aad fears. And frora'Tff'ir sober lessons find Instruction with a bumble mind. My hopes are with the dead. Anon With them my place will be, And I wittl them shall trayel on Through ' all futurity. Yet learing here a name, I trust. Which will not pariah in tit dust. but a finite part of the infinite universe. Reverse this no , and we find that things are what they are, only because of their inter-relations with other things. Torn away from those they cannot exist. But and here is the key to the riddle for the purpose of understanding we may mentally separate the universe Into as many parts as we wish and consider each part as being distinct from and independent of the others. The trouble .is that we go on regarding 1 them as such, and forget that the separation was a mental formality. Because it does not follow that, if separated mentally, they must be so, in fact. Digestion is a function of the stomach ; breathing.' of the lungs ; and thinking. Is a function of the brain. 'We cannot digest without a stomach, breath with out lungs, nor think without brains be cause we cannot conceive of a function going forward regardless of the organ that makes 'that hinction possible. . P. J. McCarty. The Orcg-on Country Northwest Happening hi Brief form - for the Buay Header OREGON NOTES "" ".uiii, B enure or uie mantel roads fund will be $55,000. Grants Pass has 1330 children of school aee. an incremin nt mn iur year. ' T Til a arhnnl Mti. i t ' . . 3048 children of school ase. Just 200 wi ia yetur s count. Thft HtAtll Knnrrt rt I I i. . budget to be presented to the legiKlature. ...-v.. ii. jummiai ueeug lor tn next biennium at $1000. Tha It a If p r Tmnm,.Amj.n , ?k !?n op!.5on " a tract of land it? v ' na" rormulateu plans for a park and playground. i Elbert Dver nt n give 200 acre of land in 10-acre plots, to ' agree to plant and raise berries on the tracts. More than 4.000.000 eBgs have been V taken from eastern brook trout at Elk K lake. The egs will he taken to the 1 i hatchery on Tumalo creek. Th Doinrlna mM.ni r i .1 viji vuu,"7 'ini uurrau IS holding mass meetings throughout the mnntv In . i ...... . . . . r - n.ir-iiijji. m increase Uie membership from 135 to 1000. While hunting ducks last eek Al fred Johnson of South Inlet in Coos county, was Bhot in the back by a i-om- " uou tx ia-ja cancer line. levied $20,000 for the conduct of the city government next year, about JBOuo of which will be used to retire warrants. - Twn fatal Acrlrianta mtt ryt u t r. f t n 263 Industrial casualties were reported Biaie inuusirmi accident commis sion for the week ending November 1 1. Ten carloads of fine brick have been sent by the Forest Grove Clay Prod ucts company to Eugene to be used 'In the new buildings being put up on the University of Oregon campus. A bill will be presented to the next lejt lslature authorising the state hoard to become a party in the organUation of a drainage district covering - about iimm acre of land within the limits of Salem. WASHINGTON' The sum of $175,000 has been voted hr the city council of Seattle for the Skagit river power project. . , , A black bear weighing 450 pounds w -killed a few days ago on the N. C.'liall ranch near Rldgefleld. -i More than $5,000,000 was paid out to labor during the few months It took to harvest the. five main crops of Yakima valley. Ernest B. Hegbert is dead at Taooma rrom injuries received when lie drove his motorcycle into a team of horses In a-heavy rain. Sugar "beet growers and workers of Yakima valley received $358,000 for beets delivered at the Toppctush factory dur ing the past month. t . Dr. F. A. LaVlolette of Bremerton has been elected to succeed A. J. Rhodes of ' Seattle as president of the Washington State Chamber of Commerce.. The Walla Walla county agricultural and stock fair lacked $468 of paying its debts following the fair this year. Last year the fair cleared $0000, Lumber shipments from I Washington for the first nine months of the rvreKent year represent a gain of. 144. 9.(4, r.H4 teet over the corresponding period in 1919. Although shot at by the man. Mrs. Guy C. Williams routed a bandit 'at her1 home' in Seattle and spread the alarm that resulted in his capture a half -hour later. At an enthusiastic meeting at Mwtsop the Grays Harbor County (Berry Grow ers' association adopted a coiiMtitution and by-laws. All present paid initiation fees of $5. Louis Glutzman, who had worked 11 years for the Day Lumber company, was instantly killed- near Sedro-Woolley when a snag fell from a tree and struck him on the head. ' Victor Anderson, a 60-year-old farmer. 20 miles from Ellensburg, was murdered at his home by unknown parties. Thrrw were evidences that lie had put" up a heroic battle for his life. 1 IDAHO Receints for this year from the bou national forest totalled $4ii.440.'U. Two carloads of Bonner county, tid potatoes were sold at Sandpoint at 10t per cent above the market quotations. Reports from Moscow "and Mi Cara mon, where umallpox has rnBfcd fur sev eral weeks, indicate that the disease l.t on the wane. ' Rudolph Smith, 17-year-old son of Wil liam Smith of Potlatcb. went tlnouKh the ice while-'skatiiiK un the I'uiuu.sa river and was drowned. While trying to remove a wheel frnm the beet elevator at Kexburx, Walter W. Barney was thrown against a cenent curb and his back broken, dying shortly afterward. During the 1920 grazing season on the Sawtooth national forest reserve, per mits were granted to 304 owners for 10. 603 head of cattle and 246814 sheep. Fees were 12 cents for Bheep and 60 cents for cattle. Uncle Jeff Snow Says: There is no doubt that folks ian speak the truth and yit bo 'most awfully mistook about it There's the new mln- inter's wife, f'r Instance She told the Ladies' Aid last week that she heerd Hannibal Moredell prayln' on his knees alongside his auto, and while she was too fur off to understand what ho .iald, she k no wed he was wrastlln' with the Lord in fervid prayer. Now- Han hain't bent nary knee in prayer since he first come to the Corners in '83. His new second hand auto, however, has got him on his knees more'n onct lately, and I reckon if the new preacher's wife had come a little cloater she would have not mistook ' his remarks for prayln'. Figures That Show; Portland , Is Still Very Much on the' Church Map. 11 Just for good Sunday reading, de you happen, to know how many churches there are in Portland? Do you have any Idea how many members the churches have? Would you believe that there are 243 churches and communions, snd about 150,000 of the city's people affiliated with them? Would you believe, further, that according to a survey made some time ago by The Journal ome 60,000 . people go to church In Port viand -every Sunday? The Information about the churches Is furnished The Journal today by the Rev. Ralph McAfee, executive secretary of the Portland FedWatlon of Churches. He gives the church strength in ISortland as follows: IVoUetant i ... , 100,000 Catholic .... . ... , 25,000 Jewish ..,.,.,.,.,,. 15,000 Miscellaneoua ................ 10.000 Total . . 1 80.000 In numerical strength tit Protestant (roups rank as follows: 1. Methodist Episcopal. 2. Presbyterian. 8. Banfiat. . 4,. 1 -others ii. O. Kpiscapal. . Congregational. T. IHsriDles. s. tinned Brethren, i The eburche of each denomination are Christian Scientist, f; Congress tioml, 15: tHsciplea of Christ, : Imnkard, 1: Epis copal, 14; ETsngelical Association, 6; Eran- gelical i Synod. 2 ; Kree Meihodist, S ; friends, 3; Jewish. 7; Latter Ir Hainur : IHormon), 1; letter List Saints (Ke organised), 1 ; Lutheran lix dirisionul, .18; Methodist pieorl. SO; Methodist KpIscotmI South, 1 ; Methodirt . Episcopal W'ealyan. -1: Jiassrene, 5; Irebyterian, 21; Reformed ETangelical. 8; Reformed Presbyterian, I; Keren th Iay ,AdenUt, 7; Swedenborgian, i; rnitarisn, 1; United Brethren, 14; United Evangelical, 8; United Presbyterian, t ; miscellaneous (roups, 2. ' - Two hundred and fourteen churches, it miscellaneous; S43 total.