8 THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, OREGON. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1920. KflDlfi AX'ixDKPEXDKNT NEWSPAPER n. a. Jirysnv ...Publisher (I calm. b confident. b cheerful and do onto others a you would haTa then do unu iwm Fubliahed rry week day and Sunday moijins, t Tha Journal Uuildinf, Broadway and Xam , hill street, Portland, Oregon. - Entered at the poetoffice at Portland, Oregon, for trmiumiuton through Ui mails aa aecond class matter. TKI Kt'HllVl.'H. f.in T17 Automatic 660-51. All departments rear bed ' by thene numbers. national advertising bepkkhknta- . TIVE Benjamin & Kentnor CO., Dranaw.c. Building. 23 Fifth atenue, New Xork; 000 Mailers Building, Chicago. rACIFIC COAST REPRESENTATIVE W. B. B ranter Co., Examiner Building, San Ftan eiro; Title Inaurance Building. Loa Angelea; rwt-Intelligraeer Building. Seattle. '1MK OKJjUO.N JOL'ltNAL. reeerrea the rfght to reject adrertising copy which ft deems ob jectionable. 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Make all remittances payable to The Journal, Portland, Oregon. Ona thing I certainly never was made for, and tliat is to put principles on and off at the distation of a party, as a lackey jehangea his lirery at his master's com mand. IlorscS Mann. WHY BACKBITE? IT IS not good business or good policy for the newspapers of Port land to condemn or disparage the port of Astoria or Astoria papers to condemn or disparage the port of Portland. Newspapers do not make ports. Trade and ships and cargoes and land transportation do that. 1 1 Newspaper talk does not unmake ports or undermine ports or .Inter fere with ports. Hostile newspaper talk merely arrays one locality against another and prevents the mutual cooperation by which ports situated as Astoria and Portland are can forward the interests of both, t Porta are not a theory but a tre mendous practical fact. Ships come ! and go according to the cargoes they can get and the money they can earn from transporting those car goes. The men who own those ships ar not in the slightest , concerned with the nasty things a newspaper in Portland says about the port of Astoria or what a newspaper In As toria says about the port of Port land. : Few of the owners ever see such newspapers, and if they did, they would be more amused than Impressed by the unsociable and un generous animadversions. Ships are not run on newspaper opinions, - but on information from the charts and the channel sound ings taken by competent engineers and on the demonstrated fact that great ships go to and from certain ports and get cargo and make money. . Poets are poets and shipmasters are shipmasters, and each in general la an expert at his game. When poets run ships and ship captains go to writing spring poetry, then, perhaps, the angryj disputations of newspapers . over 'their respective ports will be of some value. Meanwhile, Atorla is a. splendid port. So fs Portland. And they have " a common interest and that interest lies in working together and pull ing together for that greater1 thing than either the mighty and all em bracing port of the Columbia. Lemon Ice of Sistersville, West Virginia, got the court to change his name to Lee Ice. He should be able to cut some ice now after ceasing to be a lemon. , IN HARDING'S CABINET THEY all deny that Judge'Hughes 1 has consented to be secretary of state in the: Harding cabinet. It is the usual course. The probabilities are that the place has been offered, ; that Sen ator Knox urged 'Judge Hughes to accept and that the appointment was programmed very much as an nounced. , It would toe an excellent selection. It would do much, to increase public confidence in the Harding adminis tration. As governor of New York, Mr, Hughes was a mild progressive. He was the father of the primary system in that state, and while it is not so radical a reform as the Ore gon primary system, it is probably best suited to the conglomerate pop ulation of the Empire State.' It would be a point gained to have mmwm - : : IN THE DAY'S NEWS v LONDON, Dec 22. Premier Lloyd George, speaking today at a luncheon to the dominion representatives, virtually served notice on the world that no progress can be made toward universal disarmament until the United States beoomea a member of the League of Nations. "No League of Nations could be complete until the great republic in the West is included in it," said Premier Lloyd George. "We look forward hopefully to the entrance of the United States into the league." . The premier sounded warning that unless the race in armaments is arrested another war may follow. The premier characterized the League of Nations meeting at Geneva as "one of the great events in the history of the' world." He expressed the belief that if there had been a League of Nations in 1914 the world war would have been averted. . ' The league, said Lloyd George, is a considerable measure 'in achieve ment, but he deplored the fact that no progress was made at Geneva to ward world disarmament. J! "There can be no real peace between nations so long as there is compe tition in armaments," said the premier, "But at the same time nations cannot risk disarmament until every country is Included. "It was the terrible race in armaments that had more to do with the late war -.than any other force. All nations must come to an agreement that they-will not renew this race. Unless it is arrested the result will be another clash." one man of progressive tendencies In the cabinet. The.president-elect needs 'that influence to counterbal ance his pronounced reactionary bent of mind.. If he would select other jnen of the Hughes tendencies, it would be of value to the country and a future asset for the. Republi can party. "Women are easy to fool ,if a man knows how to feed their vanity," says a Texan, who successfully fooled four of them into marriage. But for attempting to fool Number 5 he got into Jail. GUILTY MONEY THE troubles with the soft drink places are example of difficul ties authorities must encounter in enforcing prohibition. Before we inaugurate the blue Sunday or pro hibit use of tobacco we may well make sure that we are making pro hibition prohibit. . it is just as well to face the booze business as it is. The wholesale revocation of soft drink licenses is but a glimpse. . In spite of prohi bition statutes and officers galore and courts and punishments, boozeJ is regularly in the market. Lately tho supply is so increased that the price is much reduced. Where does it come from and how does it get into Oregon? The cap tain of a ship is. authority for the statement that revenue officers made repeated visits to his vessel and car ried away quantities of booze on each trip, but that it was his opin ion that they did not get more than one third of what the sailors had hidden away in secret places in the vessel. He had no hand in the traf fic and his estimate was only a guess, but it was probably a good guess. A returned army aviator bought an airplane. He operated between Canada and various parts of the state of Washington in connection with an organized crew in. the latter state and at the end of a few months piled up earnings of $75,000. ' . When Oregon went bone dry, a telephone employe in Portland re signed and went .to bootlegging. The man who told the story to the writer saw the bootlegger's certificate of deposit for $15,000, amassed in a period of about eight months. An attache on a transcontinental train relates that every time his train reached a Pacific coast city, not Portland, it carried from 100 to 1000 quarts of booze,' hidden away in secret places. That it was dis posed of in perfect safety through a secret arrangement with the moral squad at the terminal city was a part of his illuminating information, confidentially given. A colored porter on a California train is declared by a man who knows, to be worth $20,000, all earned since Oregon went bo.ie dry. Forty thousand in the bank and sev eral automobiles used in bootlegging as the earnings of a Portlarider who carried on a daring traffic be fore California went dry, is another case vouched for by creditable au thority. . Prohibition is a splendid substi tute, for the saloon, but the fact may Just as well be faced that" it thrusts a super problem upon the authori ties. It opens a field for crooks and offers temptations to men with soft consciences. If to the enforcement prohibition we . add-prohibition of tobacco and the regulation by law of people's lives on Sunday, enforc ing officers will have to be armies instead of squads. A young woman presented a small check at a bank teller's window. She was without acquaintance in the bank, and had no letters or other means of identification. She was asked if she had a handkerchief or some article of jewelry marked with her name or initials. For a moment she was puzled, and then her face brightened. "Would an Initial gar ter buckle do?" she queried.N She go the money. THE HIGH MOUNTAIN MOUNT HOOD, the Wiyeast of Indian legend, is a peak of in scrutable mystery and uncertain con- auct. so It has been since the eyes of a white man first looked upon its titan's tent of snow white splen dor uplifted in the sky. Lieutenant Broughton of the Brit ishvnavy, on October 20, 179 2, is recorded by the Mazamas' delight ful recent book on Oregon's great mountain, as having been the peak's discoverer. He looked upon it from that point in the Columbia river" Just above Vancouver where the mighty stream Itself by optical Illusion I seems to Issue forth from beneath the wide spread snow fields. His log speaks of it . as "rising beautifully conspicuous," and so im pressed was he by the mountain's mass and altitude that he set down its height as 25,000 feet! Then he proceeded to name it in honor of another Britisher, Rear Admiral Sir Samuel Hood. When an attempt was made in 1854 both to make the first ascent of Mount Mood and to measure its altitude, the double impression of its sky-piercing upward reach persisted and the mountain was credited with, 13,361 feet. The next would-be, but defeated, conqueror of its heights, had an even more intense Impression, for he found Mount Hood to.be 19,400 feet high. Not until 1867 was the altitude of Mouril Hood correctly measured and then by Colonel R. S. William son, but the first accomplished as cent was made in 1857, under the leadership of the late H. L. Pittock. As. to the eruptiveness of Mount Hcod, the Mazama volume makes it clear that the subject was as much in dispute m olden times as It has been more recently when the Dlume above its massive head was defined by one observer as an outthrust of smoke from the fires beneath and by another as a banner of loose snow waved by the unceasing winds of that rarefied altitude. But aside from questions as to name, height or heat, the Mazamas, in their book, have contributed much' to the growing place which the "Mountain of Personality" has in the lives of Oregonians and their visitors. Their quotation of John Muir is peculiarly apt: Climb the mountains and get their good tidings. Nature's peace will flow into you as sunshine flows into trees. The winds will blow their own fresh ness into you, and the . storms their energy, while cares will drop off like autumn leaves. In New Zealand government oper ation and ownership of the railroads netted $8,017,169 in profits. Rail roads thjre are not weighed down with watered stock and bogus se curities: AS YE WOULD AT ONE of the 17,000 feeding sta tions maintained hv A in the war ravaged countries of East ern and .Central Europe, a visitor watched the children who were waiting for their daily allowance of food. ' ' m Among them all was not one chubby face. Their smiles had a pe culiar quality, for they made the visitor weep. The children were pinched and thin. Their legs were bent and their knees were 'knobbv with rickets, which is a 'disease of under nourishment. A child of 10 would be about the same size as your 5-year-old. Rags were their gar ments. One can stand about so much of such a scene. The visitor turned away. But down the street she met a little girl bitterly sobbing. "My brother," she mourned, "he lies there and he will not move and he will not get to the feeding station in time for our share." i-" The boy lay half sheltered in a dugout of earth, a' tiny figure. He did not answer when the visitor spoke to him. There was no move ment of the rags that partly cov ered him. One claw-like little hand still tightly clutched the small bucket In which he was accustomed to receive his daily portion. But he was dead. Let th scene shift. Only a few thousand miles intervene between a dead boy lying on the earth with his empty bucket tightly clutched in a claw-like hand and an Oregon home where seme red-cheeked young scamp with rumpled curly hair begs "daddy" for bites at a breakfast table. Suppose by a quirk of fate the positions were reversed. Suppose the insistent little voice begged bites in vain from a father or a -mother in tho bitter region where meals are not served any more except through the generosity of America. - Some small boy, some tiny irirl. across the sea wall not have the red cheeks and round body of complete nourishment unless someone in Or egon gives to the European child ren's relief workers this week. It isn't possible so to transfer our as sured comfort and abundance. But the tiny girl or the small boy. If Oregon gives "as ye would that others should do unto yours" will at least' keep life In a frail body and the bucket tightly clutched in a claw-like hand will not be empty. WHO -WILL HELP THE FARMER? Nobody Will. If the Counsel Given by Most Newspapers Should Prevail They Mill Around Among Plans . Offered, Generally' Decry Them, m And Offer Nothing, in Place of Them. Daily Editorial Digest . (Consolidated Press' Association) Federal loans for farmers, resurrec tion of the war finance board and cred its for foreign countries which are po tential buyers of foodstuffs have not proved popular demands among most ed itorial writers who comment upon' them, despite the pressure that is being brought to bear in the West and South to secure protection for the agricultur ists against the depredations of defla tion. Although nearly all the newspa pers demand that congress rush through legislation now pending, few are able to offer concrete suggestions and fewer still place much faith in what has al ready been outlined. "The United States government has neither money nor credit," says the Wall Street. Journal (Ind.). which, while it may be far from the fields and furrows, is at least close to the nation's purse, "to extend to farmers, combining to in fluence unfairly a world "market which is, and ought to be, beyond this nation's control." Seventeen banks in North Da kota failed, it adds, because they at tempted this very thing:. Nor does the Journal believe in the war finance board as a friend in need for the farmer; it is not a peace time "necessity." Indeed, to call back this organization into exist ence, the Chicago Daily News (Ind.) de clares, would be "the least reasonable" of all the plans brought forth, "while the best one would be extension of credits in Europe. The trouble with dealing with foreign customers who haven't the price to pay their bills, the Springfield Repub lican (Ind.) points out, is that the new tariff policies would conflict, and if America is to expect iiSpney from abroad the Europeans must lie' allowed to sell their goods here and "the Republican West and the Democratic "South must oppose the movement for a higher tariff." e The St. Louis Star (Ind,) ' does and doesn't believe in credits to the farmer, for, though it admits he may be suffer ing from price reductions, the public is still suffering from high prices. The essential need is "to pass the farmers' price reductions on to the consumer." In sum : "The farmers ought to have credit enough so that they will not have to sell their goods when speculators or a glutted market have depressed prices. They should not have credit to enable them to defy natural conditions or create an artificial shortage. But that is what' they are asking for." What they are asking for, if the Non partisan league organ, the Fargo Courier-News, can be taken as their spokesman, is a credit for Germany, based, for instance, on the "$400,000,000 realized from the sale of German prop erty in the United States," permission "to federal reserve banks to extend credit on agricultural paper," and farmer representation on the federal re serve board. Credits to farmers will mean tem porary relief only, says the El Paso Times (Dem.), but granting European credits is the real solution. . This plan meets the approval' of the Richmond Times-Dispatch (Dem.), which, how ever, also supports the idea of farm credits with qualifications. It says : "In addition to the organization sug gested to finance foreign trade in farm products, what seems the most favor able plan under consideration is the overhauling of the land bank system to enable it to provide credit to the farmer upon his produce and perhaps his ma chinery. This would make it possible for him to withhold hia, crops from the market for a reasonable period. Such loans as have been suggested might be limited to four or six months, to the end that hoarding of farm products on the part of the farmer would be pro hibited, in the sense that hoarding on the part of the middleman is barred." The Charlotte (N. C.) Observer (Ind. Dem.) pleads for the immediate revival of the war finance corporation and for establishment of foreign credits. It says : "The war finance corporation has at its hand the machinery for putting this credit at the service of Europe and starting the outflow of cotton, wheat and manufactured products, with a re sultant rise in prices and the breaking of the jam. The discussion about ways and means for bringing relief to the country need go no further than the two propositions just set forth." Distribution is at the bottom of the farmers' trouble, the Topeka Capital (Rep.) asserts, and in this respect the farmer is at a great disadvantage as compared with the merchant. For thi3 reason, the Capital explains the desire for the war finance corporation : "In this situation, which is almost without parallel In this Section, and which, with out the federal reserve system, would have before now resulted in panic and chaotic condition, congress is asked by the farm organizations to revive the war finance boaYd for the purpose of affording loans by, the government to the agricultural part of the country." The Boston Transcript (Ind. Rep.), while it does not express much enthu siasm over the idea, grants that "it may be necessary" to revive the board, for it considers that there is "no ques tion about the seriousness of the crisis In the country's agriculture" and "the intervention of the national authorities seems to be due somewhere." Another Boston paper, the Post (Ind. Dem.), despite its geographical distance from the centers where the situation is the worst, names as possibilities the meas ures called for by the West and South. It concludes : "As Senator . Harrison of Mississippi has said, the government encouraged the farmers to make the great crop of which so much remains on their hands, representing a very high cost of production, and now ought to apply exceptional treatment to aid them." But from Ohio and Alabama come two voices of protest against the theory of federal assistance. The Birmingham NewsiDem.) believes: "We have be come too accustomed to looking to the federal government to do things for us -from telling us how to raise babies to singing songs and 'entertaining the proletariat. ' It has got to stop some time. And we must get back to self help, self-reliance and take our losses manfully." Self-help is also the keynote sounded by the Columbus (Ohio) State Journal (Rep.), which admits that the govern ment may be able to give some help to the farmer, but thinks that la the last analysis he must 'Tight his own battles." Curious Bits of Information Gleaned From Curious Places Tibet is peopled by a branch of the Mongolian race. The 2,000,000 or S.000, 000 population are a mixture of Chinese and Tibetans, a the races intermarried. They believe in both polyandry and polygamy. It is the most extensive elevated country in the world, contain ing 750,000 square miles, with an ele vation varying from 1 8,000 to 14.000 feet. Its climate is principally bleak and cold, although the summers In the southern part are mild and pleasant. The first white man to enter Lhasa, the capital, was Sir Francis Young husband, who fought his way there in 1904. Dalai .Lama, religious head of the Buddhist faith, which is the national religion, was so overcome-by the fact that infidels had trodden the streets of the forbidden city,, that he fled the I country, and was for- many years a wanderer In North China. Letters From the People Communications sent to Tba Journal for publication in hia department sbonld be written on only one aide of the paper: should not exceed 800 word in length, and most ba signed by the writer,' whose mail address in full must accom pany the contribution. ' PUTS IT UP TO CONGRESS To Lead Off in Reconstruction. That Local Units May Follow. Portland, Dec. .16. To the Editor of The Journal The unemployment prob lem in Portland seems to be an an nual situation, and at present there are differences of opinion as to the number of unemployed and the cause of unemployment. There are about 10,000 unemployed men in Port land at any time of the year, and twice that during the winter months. About 20 per cent are professional vagrants, both local and floaters. These do not seek work at any time. Unemployment is more noticeable in winter on account of their congregating in , north end districts, where shelter and warmth 'can be obtained for little or no consideration. For a city of its size Portland has few industries. Not enough work is obtainable for local Portlanders the year ' round. Portland has always been a hangout' for travel ing laborers in winter. . Therefore there is a crime wave every winter on ac c6unt of poverty among the unem ployed. Plenty of industries in Port land will as a natural consequence lessen crime to a greater extent than any other factor devised by public of ficials. Local- capital has failed in past years to invest in local industries for the fol lowing reasons : Freak laws controlling industrial pursuits with regard to li censes and taxes ; inadequate transpor tation facilities; poor markets; lack of cars and ships; inflated prices of swamp lands that are fit only for fac tories and millsites ; lack of coopera tion between employer and employe ; no special effort to adjust economic con ditions with regard to production and consumption of all commodities, con gress having failed to even attempt to adjust the economic situation with re gard to profits on goods and the prices of production. A curb on foreign im migration is a start in the right direc tion, but is only one of the many reme dies necessary of enactment to bring about , the settlement of conditions which never were so unsettled as now. The people are waiting, and watching congress, as the problem is up to it. Upon the enactment of federal laws, local officials will find jurisidiction to cope with local economic conditions. This is surely the only feasible means of readjustment and reconstruction. It was advocated throughout the nation directly after the war ended but abso lutely nothing was done by congress, which is the servant of good but mis guided people. Otto D. Drain. REAPERS OF THE WHIRLWIND Austria and Germany Deserve Their Fate, This Writer Believes. Wolf Creek, Dec. 20. To the Editor of The Journal I have read your edi torial about the ex-kaiser's sorrows. In The Journal. Let us waste no sympathy on the (ex-kaiser. He is only getting what he deserves. He ought to have been turned over to the allies for pun ishment, and in particular to France. He could have stopped the war had he been so minded. Austria has sown to the wind, and now she is reaping the whirlwind. It was Austria that started the world cat aclysm. We have no sympathy to waste on Austria. She is only getting what is coming to her. Hungary. Poland and Russia will likely next follow Austria's lead to bankruptcy. It is my opinion that Germany is vir-J iuauy oanxrupi ana is likely to declare herself so at almost any Jime. Her credit Is gone, her factories are going to decay, her money is worthless and her merchant marine is gone. What a contrast in her affairs between the years 1913 and 1920! But, like Austria, she will have to take her medicine. She alone is responsible for her present con dition and is not deserving of any sym pathy. A. W. Zoellner. DENOUNCES PRIZEFIGHTING Calling It "Boxing" and "the Manly Art" Doesn't Help Any. Portland, Dec. 18. To the Editor of The Journal Your esteemed paper is commenting considerably of late on box ing. It used to be called "prizefighting." Many will be glad to see Portland line up with San Francisco and Seattle and condemn it. I have my opinion of peo ple who admire such "sport" and call it 'the manly art." Two brutal, barbar ous performances by men have I seen one a "boxing" exhibition by the re-: nowned John L. Sullivan and the Maori of New Zealand (he was renowned too), Pete McCoy, lightweight, and others of the "famous." I saw them in a popular theatre at St. Louis. There was a nice play first, by fine talent, as was regu lar, usually, at the place. Then the "boxing" was announced. The ladies left the hall, every one, and soon there en tered "sports." And they seemed to me pretty rough. They smoked, swore, etc. The whole affair was what my mother, would call, with burning scorn, "low down." The other was the hanging of a man. This I witnessed at Barboursville, Ky. Only onc have I seen such things, and I do not care to see them again. They are surely the most "low down" human performances I've seen. E. M. IC , TARIFF AND COMMERCE Portland, Dec. 16. To the Editor of The Journal Our exports being largely in excess of our imports, how can the European governments pay us for our products if we bar out theirs by a high tariff? Their money is almost worth less. How would protection affect com merce? J. B. Wright. Olden Oregon First Grist Mill Was Set Up Champoeg in the '.30s. St Webley J. Hauxhurst, who came to Oregon with Ewing Young from Cali fornia in 1834, erected a grist mill at Champoeg, which added greatly to the convenience of the Inhabitants of French prairie, including the Methodist mission, who had .previously pounded their bar ley in a large wooden .mortar and ground their' wheat in a .small castiron mill called a corn cracker. Hauxhurst, who was a native of Long Island, joined the Methodist church, being among the first converts of the mission among the American settlers. Uncle Jeff Snow Says: Andy Melheimer, who's somewhat great around the waist, has been practicin fer the part of Santy Clause at the school' house, and that's why the door has had to be cut open a bit wider. It's all Andy can do to git past it now 'thout no out landish costume and a pack of stuff bigger'n a bale of hay, and nej ain't agoin to take no chances, and neither is the committee on program. COMMENT AND SMALL CHANGE - The Irish question ought to demand an eight-hour day. Detroit Journal. . 1 -' , . We confess this agitation for a farm ers' strike goes against the grain. Chi cago Post, As a rule when affections are alien ated they were never thoroughly natural ized to begin with. El Paso Herald. Some men never get a chance to tell the truth, now that there is no wine to bring it out. Columbia (S. C.) Record. While we are at it we might also try something to bring matrimonial bonds up to . Uielr race value. Minneapolis Tribune. '..-,. Perhaps It will not be long after his retirement that Mr. Wilson will decide that he would rather write than be president- Houston Post. a a Jaywalker : . A term applied to the unfortunate who guessed which way the driver would turn and guessed wrong. Baltimore Sun. If Philander C. Knox isn't invited Into the cabinet Senator Johnson will regard it as cruel and unusual punishment, and therefore unconstitutional. Anaconda bianaara. ' A good many wives, in ruminating these days oyer what to buy friend hus band for a Christmas gift, are in a quandary as to just what kind of a vacuum sweeper he might like best. Tulsa Tribune. MORE OR LESS PERSONAL Random Observations About Town E. J. Wilson- of Prineville is at the Imperial. Mr. Wilson has Charge of the "Home Made" railroad, which runs from Prineville Junction to Prineville. When the railroads decided they were too poor to extend the road to Prineville the peo ple of thaf enterprising community dug down In their jeans and produced some thing over $100,000 and built the road. When a commercial traveler comes to Prineville to book a bill of goods the mer chant says, "By the way, how ar the roads?" If the drummer says, "Pine, you folks have great roads out your way," the merchant gets very busy pull ing nails out of empty boxes, and says: "I am too busy to see you this trip," and the drummer might as well pack his sample case and beat it, for he won't sell any gpods in Prineville. If the drummer says, "I came in on the train," then the merchant tells his customer to drop around later, as he wants to look at tl.is gentleman's line of samples. The explanation is simple. The merchant is a stockholder in the railroad, and he believes in reciprocity. If the drummer can't ride on Prineville's railroad, then the Prineville people don't care to buy his goods. Bill Hanley of Burns is at the Mult nomah. Bill Hanley wanted to be Unit ed States senator some years ago, but he is rather ' glad the voters decided against him, for he has decided that the lucky man in an election is the man who Isn't elected. " Cary Ball, importer and exporter, from Japan, is at the Perkins. He is here looking up the lumber market W, B. Alderman, pioneer resident of Tillamook county, is doing some Christ mas shopping in Portland. Ira Mclsaacs of Granddalles, across the Columbia from The Dalles, Is a PQtland visitor. r Dr. Carrie L. Norvalle of Elgin is In Portland to spend the Christmas holi days. L. Parker of Garibaldi on the Tilla mook shore Is transacting business in Portland. It C. Cooper of Salem is at the Im perial. Edna Miller of La Grande is spending the holidays in Portland. . OBSERVATIONS AND IMPRESSIONS OF THE JOURNAL MAN By Fred A strong; plea for the development of Alaska is hers presented by Mr. Lockley, quoting a buxineas man of Juneau who knowa the re sources of that country and what is needed to daTelop them. Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Jacobs of Juneau are guests at the Hotel sPortland. Mr. Jacobs is a business man of Juneau and has been there eight years. Juneau, with its 5000 population, Is not only ,, the capital of Alaska, but also the me tropolis of . that vast and rich territory. It is situated on Gastineau channel and is at the head of navigation for ocean going vessels. "Juneau has more than one string to her bow," said Mr. Jacobs. "The min ing industry probably ranks first, then comes fishing, and then, though possibly not in the order I mention them, come the tourist business, timber, waterpower and agricultural resources. The Alaska Gastineau mines, located at Thane, three miles from Juneau ; the Alaska Juneau mine.; within the city limits, and the Alaska Treadwell mine, just . across Gastineau channel and about four miles from Juneau, are our big producers and have given us the name of the Gold Belt City. These mines are said to be the lowest grade gold mines in the .world. The first two have capacity for crushing 15,000 tons of rock daily; The ore runs from 1 to $1.75 in gold values per ton. 'With the Increased cost of produc tion due to labor scarcity during the war every manufacturing plant passed the increased cost on to the consumer by raising the price of its product to take care of the increased cost of labor and ma!,ia, i1!! 1 FfJl1 ?"1lTl1i'f gold had to remain at the same value as before the war, so that the cost of production had to come from the profits previously secured by the stockholders of the mining companies. The govern ment did not raise the price of gold, so the mining industry hasbeen hard hit by the higher cost of production. These mines employ approximately 2000 men, so our lunch bucket brigade is a large one and we rank high as a payroll city. - "The Alaska Gastineau and the Alaska Juneau mines represent an Investment of over $8,000,000, while the Alaska Treadwell mine cost around $3,060,000. The old Treadwell mine consisted of three workings, or mines the original Treadwell, the Mexican and the Ready Bullion. In the tunnels of the Tread well and the Mexican mines, which ran under Gastineau channel and at right angles from the main shaft, at a depth of about 2500 feet, the engineers had blocked out over $10,000,000 of ore values Almost without warning the roofs of the tunnels collapsed and the sea rushed into the workings. As Gastineau chan nel at the point of submergence is over 1000 feet deep it can readily be seen that the $10,000,000 worth of blocked out ore has been written off the books and transferred to Neptune, or Davy Jones, or whomsoever owns the depths of the sea. - While we have gold mines with very low grade ore, we also have gold mines where the ore runs very high in value. The Chichagof gold mines, on Chichagof Island, which is about 40 miles to the northward of Sitka, has ore that, runs $40 to $280 per J ton. It produces about $1,000,000 a year, NEWS IN BRIEF SIDELIGHTS . Repealing the excess profits tax will not swell the bank account of the aver age taxpayer. Eugene Guard. .The most dangerous combination in peace times is an autolst with a bottle of hootch in his hip pocket and half of it in his Interiors. Crane American? r ' Washington is going to have a lu sky law like Oregon's. - But Washington cannot have a blue sky like - Oregon's. It rains so much up there. Corvallis Gazette-Times. - t If Mayor Baker can do away with the unsightly North Bank depot and succeed in getting a union station for Portland, his name will go down In history. It should be arranged now whlle the time 4s ripe. Banks Heratd. v - Rents in New Sfork are so high that tenants can't stay in the houses, and moving expenses are so high that they can't move. That's a case of the Ir resistible force mee&ing the " Immovable body. Eugene Register. President Wilson has been awarded the Nobel peace prize for 1920. This car ries with it a grant of about $10,000, but, aside from that, is considered about the greatest honor that can be accorded a citizen of the world. Salem Statesman. . . a Bonanza aspires to be ,the county seat of a newTrounty to be formed by divid ing Klamath. It is presumed that the dividing line will be in Klamath Falls so as to include one of the numerous courthouses which Klamath county now possesses. Lake County Examiner. Condon, in the wheat growing belt of Eastern Oregon, was well represented in Portland this week. Among others from that live and progressive community were : Mr. and Mrs. Ray Bishop, George Campbell, J. B. Sparks. Andy Erwin, Miss Mary O'Rourke, G. W. Hawes, Mrs. E. R, Hutchison, Mrs. Frank Maddock with her two children and her mother, Mrs. Kate Russell ; Elmer Hamrick, and K. E. Fry. . L. L. Paget, banker and stockholder In Seaside's new hotel, is in Portland to interest Portland capitalists in Oregon's biggest seaside resort hotel. Seaside is spending $100,000 to put down a concrete sea wall and sidewalk along the ocean front. It will be a mile and a half long and will extend directly in front of the new hotel. Rev. Frank James and P. J. Voth of Dallas were recent Portland visitors, They were here consulting about plans for the new Methodist Episcopal church edifice at Dallas. Mr. and Mrs. John IL Putnam of Fossil have decided to become Port landers. They have - just moved here and have bought a home. C C Chapman and Mrs. Chapman of Pendleton are in town. They want C. C. Chapman of the Voter to know that he has no exclusive monopoly of the name or initials. . Mrs. Ed Seufert, whose husband has an Interest in most of the salmon that swim up the Columbia river from the sea. is a guest at the Imperial. - Mrs. Lewis T. Griffith, Mia Margaret Griffith and Miss Jeanette Meredith of Salem are domiciled at the Imperial. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Brockman of this city are entertaining Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Price of Clark Wrood's town Weston. Mrs. C. W. Woodruff of Prineville is spending the Christmas holidays with friends in Portland. Curtis Bailey of Prineville Is seeing the sights in Portland. Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Starr of Olex art at the Oregon. Frank Foster of Prineville is a visitor In Portland. Lockley "We have 20 salmon canneries within a 40-mile radius of Juneau. These use Juneau as their base of operations and source of supplies. During the canning season many thousands of men come from Oregon, and Washington to work in our salmon canneries. In the past we used Chinese labor to a much greater extent than at present. As the wages paid jun from $5.50 to $7 a day, and as board and lodging can be had for $1 a day, the work attracts many college students who put in the sum mer vacation profitably. ' "Lying about 50 miles from Juneau ar the famous halibut banks of which you have read and heard so much. These banks are fished by independent fishermen. Let ys say a man ownsa fishing boat. He leases it to a group of fishermen. Suppose' three fishermen go out on the banks. In dividing the catch one fifth is given to the boat and one fifth to the owner of the boat, and one fifth is taken by each of the three fishermen. In other words, the boat is always given the share of one man and the owner is also counted one man. About 6,000,000 pounds of halibut, black cod, king salmon and sable fish is caught by the independent fishermen, boxed in Ice and shipped to Seattle, the prices realized by the fishermen run ning from 4 to 14 cents. "Twenty miles from Juneau local capital has erecfed on the Speel river the pioneer pulp mill of Alaska. It Is located in an immense body of spruce and hemlock and unlimited waterpower . is rcady available. The pulp milt is 90 per cent completed and will begin grinding up spruce trees to convert into pulp for the making of newsprint some time next month. Plans are being dis cussed which may result in the Gas tineau Mining .company also putting in a pulp mill on its holdings which will cost around half a milion. Alaska, with its vast fonests of spruce and Its unlim ited waterpower, can settle the pulp and paper shortage If capital can be interested in the erection of paper mills there. "The mild climate of Southeastern Alaska, with its wonderful scenic at tractions, resulted last summer In only a small part of the tourists being able to make the Alaska trip who would have gone had accommodations been available. The Alaska Steamship com pany and the Pacific Steamship com pany are , planning to increase their fleets to take care of the increased tourist business, I understand. When you think of Juneau, remember it" is a modern and up-to-date Western com munity, -pot a red light, wide open, fron tier or mining town. We have good schools and churches and live newspa pers. John Troy is .editor of the Dally Empire and Charles E. Herron is editor of tut Daily Capital. Herron also owns a paper at Anchorage and is a live wire. "The best way4o learn Alaska's pos sibilities and needs, and also to ' learn that she would like to maintain closer commercial relations with' Oregon is to make a trip up there and see for your self what we are doing and what we I hope to accomplish " The' Oregon Country . Northwest Happenings In Brief Form for tba : Buijr Header OREGON NOTES -The state tax for Columbia county for the coming year is $139,900. Last year it was $64,0110. . The Bend Commercial club has elected -L. Antles of Denver, Col., to the position of secretary. Graveling of the state highway from " Bend to Jtedmond has been completed by the contractors. , , The total tax rate for Marshfield prop erty owners next year will be 62 mills, the highest ever levied. v; With about 80" ranchers present, the Hood River Valley Poultry association was organised at Hood River last Sat urday, Searchers are combing the hills near Klamath Falls for Fletcher Decker, who went hantlng Sunday morning and failed to return. The school board at Bend has In augurated a move for the construction of a modern 40-room high school build ing to cost $150,000. The Coos and Curry Telephone com pany is erecting a new building and -making other improvements at Coqullle that will cost $.000., - t' Several carloads 'of sulphur have reached Kedmond. in Deschutes county,, for fertiliser purposes. It Is being sold to farmers at $60 per ton. Following retrenchment orders issued h V thA ntharn I n ... f ff.lt..,.., I'? n ' 1 employes of the oar shops at nave oeen .aiscnarged. Plans ? have been completed for the reorganization nt tho riohnt.. i. Cow Testing association. The organiza- -'"' uis iu eiirow owners or, 3uu cows. Approximately 2,000,000 strawberry plants destined for California growers have been held up by an embargo placed on Oregon grown plants by the Califor nia state board of horticulture. , There are from 125,000 to 150,000 tons of hay raised in Malheur county, and an attempt I being made i to organise the , farmers into an association for selling the entire output. The price is now ' per ton. . Orchardlsts of Malheur county are suf fering great losses from the too numer ous beavers which are cutting their trees near the river". Many fine orchards are almost entirely destroyed. 1 i WASHINGTON'. Ten cent streetcar fares in Vancouver, ordered by the pnbllc I service commis sion, went into effect last Monday. .- The Chehalis school board is prepar ing plans for a new grade school build ing to cost from $70,000 to $100,000. The body of Don S.' Ounder, son of W. R. Ounder, who died in Frame while serving the colors, has arrived at Puyallup. i Three meat dealers of Walla Walla have been arrested and fined, for using preservatives in , the manufacture vl hamburger steak. " Jim Hill mustard is costing the farm ers of Columbia county $100,000 a year and the farmers are planning a deter mined fight agairst it Another gas well has been produced in Benton county's oil field, making the fourth gas well, all of which are located witnin a radius of one mile. The Chehalis Box, Basket & Veneer I company has filed articles of lncorpora- i tion with the Lewis county clerk, the i capital Mtock being fixed at $100,000. Two masked robbers entered a pool hall at Rainier, forced a dozen patrons of the place to line up against the wall, f while they robbed the cash register of ; $75 and escaped. j A movement among churches of East- ! ern Washington for revision of divorce1 and marriage laws, strict state censor- ship of moving pictures and registration ! of the clergy has been announced. I The Infant son of Mr. and MrsMr- i tin Anderson, who live near Vardar. wan I probably fatally burned Monday when ! their house was destroyed by fires Mrs. i Anderson risked her life to save the I child. ' ,-:'.!: As a result of a formal pow-wow held on the Yakima reservation. Chief Louis Mann will leave in a few days for I Washington to meet President-elect ! Harding and explain to him the grlev- I ances of the Indians on the reservation, i IDAHO State revenue from motor vehicles during 1920 amounted to $1,611,969.80, while In 1919 it was only $988,251.19. The cannery at Lewlston closed ' its work fpr the season last week with a final run of apples to the amount of 1037 tons. ' Freight rates on Idaho hay to Mis souri river points have been reduced from $15 to $10 per- ton, according to word received at Boise. Sergeant Louis Woods of the Thirty second infantry, Vancouver; has been appointed drill master In the University of Idaho military department. A bill calling for the creation of a welfare commission to atd disabled and destitute ex-service men and women will be presented to the next state legisla ture. . Governor Davis announces that he will appoint Frank R Gooding, senator elect, to succeed Senator Nugent In the event Senator Nugent i accepts the posi tion on the federal trade commission. Extension of t time on the first and second Owsley projects for the purpose of allowing entrymenla longer time tn which to file proof of claims has been granted by the commissioner of recla mation. " I know youRj. PORTLAND Mount Hood is the outstanding peak in the colony of snow covered moun tains visible from Portland. It is -also the overtopping scenic feature of this community. . i ' Information about Mount Hood con tained in the -booklet recently issued by the Mazamas warrants reproduc tion in condensed form. The first white man to discover Mount Hood was Lieutenant Brough ton of the British navy, October 20, 1792. He named the peak for Rear Ad miral Sir Samuel Hood, also of the British navy. He estimated the height of the mountain at 25,000 feet. The first accurate measurement of the peak was made in 1867 by then Lieutenant R. S. Williamson, and his Is the figure accepted today, 11,225 feet above sea level. J The first successful! attempt of rec ord to scale the peak was accom plished in July, 185T, by a party com posed of 11. L. Pittock, W. Lyman Chittenden, James Q. Deardorf, Wil liam Buckley and professor L.I J. Powell. Two, previous attempts were made but are not credited with suc cess the Dryer-Barlow attempt in 1864, and the Belden (attempt in Oc tober of the same year. The first of these latter parties estimated the height of Mount Hood at 18,361 feet and the second at 19,400. . r - j Volcanic activity in the crater of Mount Hood has not. been, officially "knowi within the memory of white men. although Joe! Palmer reported In 1845 a plain filled with mud and boulders so recently! deposited that tops of buried trees were stiU visible. Smdke plumes have been reported from time to time, even within the last year, and have usually been either credited to the imagination of the observer or defined a snow plumes. Hydrogen sulphide gas still Issues from the crater, and there Is con siderable beat but without -sign of eruptive tendency. .';: As the crow flies Mount Hood is a little less than 60 miles from Port land. , Government Camp, on the south side, and Cloud Cap Inn, on the north slope, are the usual start ing points for ascents.