4 THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 26, 1920. fflomQtimai AS INDEPENDENT WEW8PAPEB - - - C. 8. JACKSON ...Publisher I Be calm, be eonttdMit. be cheerful ad do onto tone u yen woald hate thrm do ante yon-l Published erery wk day and 8nndy morning, at The Journal Building, Broadway and Xira- hill stmt, Portland, Oregon. 1 Entered at the postoffice at Portland, Oregon. for traiumiasioa through the maila as second daw. matter. ' . 'TKI.EPHONE Main 7173, Automata 680-51.' AU departments reached by thaw nambers. ATlONA'L ADVEKT1S1.NQ KEPlSbStNTA , TIVB-Benjamt It Kentnor Co.. Brunswick Building, 223 Fifth arenue New xorti PACIFIC COAST BKPHKSENTAT1VE W. A It ranger Co., Eiaininer Building, San Fran eieo; Title Insurance Building, Lm Angel; I'on-Intelltgeneer Building. Seattle. aHB OKEOON JOVKNAL reserves the right to rejwt sdvertixiifg - copy which - It 'deems ob jectionable. 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If your postoffice j is not a Money Order of flee. 1 or 2-eent stamps will be accepted. Make all. remittances payable to The Journal, Portland, Oregon. i There is a spirit, In man, and the inspirai tion of the Almighty, gireth them under standing. Job-' 32:8. -MORE THAN HANDCLAPPING nPHERE is in Portland a motion 1 picture theatre whose attendants . placed a Christmas tree on either side of the stage. - They hung it with crystals that reflected the j hues of the rainbow. They scattered over it a profusion of white flakes that sug gested, the beauty of snow without its chill. They scattered about it cords of shining silver and gold arid adorn ments of fantastic f orm. ' j , When the footlights and the spot lights were turned upon the trees they were pleased with the results Of their efforts, for they had given the, work more interest than would be acorded the ordinary task. cur. wnen me curtain, rwent up on the scene. in the presence of a large audience they were dlsap pointed. Not a sound of applause came from any person there. T'What's the use of fixing things up for people who have only learned to appfaud a dog fight" was the com plaint of one. Until they, perchance, read this ithey will not; know what triumph itheir work was. Tw thirds of the jway back in the dim light of the .theatre sat a faded woman. She ;wore a black dress of that stuff ;whlch,, when it is new, and never again, seems to be silk. She had i neglected to remove a bonnet of frosty black "straw, surmounted by Hrimmlng of equally rusty ribbons 4and a scanty three inches of mangled (plume. But .she was leaning for ward with awe upon her face and happiness In her eyes. Her son had returned to a tiny home in the hills. He had brought her to the city for a Christmas celebration to jan experi ence she had never had before. It was her first motion picture show. Suddenly she grasped the strap ping young fellow with a work roughened hand. "Son she said. '"Do you suppose it'll be half r as . uoauuiui in neavenT i used to ; dream ' about the- mansions of the -blest and Just think we got into one '.of them right here on earth. You've ' certainly been good toj your old mother, boy," I VANCOUVER'S SHARE ANCOUVER has not'. It appears, j V brought her sprightly campaign for a place in commerce and ship i ping to the status of'reductum ad absurdum. A committee composed . of some of the representative citizens ' of Portland's sister community has informed The, Journal that Instead of asking for a rate preferential over Portland, as was recently; announced, Vancouver seeks only those distrib ; utive grain export and local coal 1 rates which Portland already enjoys. Since the recognition iof Vancou- ver's merits in the recent decision ' of the Columbia basin rate case, they explain Vancouver wishes to follow up the advantage in respect to other ; conditions which are precedent to the genuine establishment of Op ' portunity for trade. With t this spirit, Vancouver is j pressing her campaign for" the ap V proval of a 30-foot channel project : In the Columbia above the mouth of the Willamette. Her rate experts haia obtained not only the approval 'of Portland in this entirely -.com mendable enterprise but have se- " J ; ; cured ' favorable action on the part of the commercial Interests In Se attle and Tacoma. With the ship caygo, present and prospective, and with the tangible cooperation with the government which are being demonstrated by both public : and private Investment in water terminal facilities, It is difficult to understand hew a board of army engineers or congress could find any honest rea Bon for not approving the improve ment of the mere four miles of chan nel involved in the Vancouver project. - Vancouver was entitled to the rec ognition accorded her In the Colum bia basin decision, and The Journal foresaw her merit when this news paper successfully urged Vancouver's intervention In the action before the Interstate Commerce commission. Vancouver Js equally entitled to other rate adjustments and channel Improvements which will Identify her in fact with the general com munity of trade and commerce at the head of navigation on the Columbia and Willamette. A little girl In Kansas wrote Santa Claus, asking for a doll for Christmas and a job for her daddy. Santa will provide the doll, and the Elks (pund a job for daddy the day after her letter was published. EVEN CLUBS PLAY SANTA THE desire1 to make some less favored one's lot happier at the season of good cheer imbues not in dividuals alone, but whole organiza tions also. This year in Portland and in other; cities of Oregon unusual generosity has been shown. The Elks had their Christmas tree for the children of need. The Ad club carried its truck- load of gifts to the South Portland children's home. Tommy Swivel, whose Christmas dinner for children began as an individual expression of exceptional kindliness, was Joined by others unnamed in special organiza tion for contribution to the happi ness of youthful life. There Is not an institution nor a child whom full handed generosity did not lovingly endeavor to find. And while the unfortunate in hospitals, ' institutions and chilly shelters have been remembered at home, the out-reaching spirit of the season has extended to the' little folks in the desolated countries of Europe and those to whom a csust of bread is a gift that brings life with it will receive the share which Herbert Hoover has asked in their behalf. Oregon's Christinas has furnished a new opportunity for business to make a prosperity statement. Ac cording to the merchants, trade everywhere has been better than last year. When they wish a customer "Jlerry Christmas it is partly De- cause a greater number of custom' era have already made their Christ mas merry. . - THE MILE HIGH HOSTELRY HAVING by personal visit and sus- ; tained inquiry Investigated the merits of 26 criticisms directed against the administration of Crater Lake Lodge, chiefly by Stephen T. Mather, director of the national park service, & committee appointed by the governor reaches one general conclusion: Most of the criticisms directed against Mr, Parkhurst might be attributed to the fact . that he has not been properly financed and that were he afforded the necessary financial assistance,. Crater Lake lodge , would become one of the noted resorts of the country, Mr. Park hurst has almost impoverished himself to keep Crater Lake lodge going from year to year making " such . improve ments as his financial capacity would permit He has invested a targe sum of money and should he be retired as lessee, we believe he should be ade quately reimbursed for his expenditures of time and money. This is a finding that states in new words an old conclusion. Crater lake is one of the wonder spots of the world. Crater National park is the one national park within the boundaries of Oregon. It is such a place that to be heard of renders every listener no matter what his residence, a potential tourist treking toward Oregon. The marvelous lake is, however, far from settled communities. Hotel accommodation is essential to all but the intrepid few who find their sus tenance in a' pack and their couch upon the f arth. - A. L. Parkhurst put his private fortune, his time and his faith for the future into a tourist hotel project there. He took up the load which Portland, which Medford, which Grants Pass and Ashland should, by reason of their direct in terest, have helped him share. - Then came the director of national park ' service, the vice president . of the Southern Pacific, and by their criticisms, without, at least, corres ponding contribution,, increased the embarrassment ' of slender finance and depressed the enthusiasm which had inspired the pioneer tourist hotel effort, s One of the criticisms was just. Portland business and hotel interests have failed to give their countenance and their cash to a well organized tourist hotel scheme at Creter lake. Since .the governor's committee so emphatically confirms previous state ments that financial organization is the first necessity, why doesn't ; it continue its efforts until the sugges tions are acted upon? There is a way of saying "Merry Christmas, without uttering a word. An Eastern Oregon rancher demon strated it. Asked for a, contribution to the 1 European children's relief drive and lacking the cash, he gave Instead three' of his sheep. The of fering of another was 10 sacks of wheat in lieu of money. , Each gave the most valuable of Christmas gifts, a life. - THE TEAR'S BALANCE SHEET "pHE material achievements of 1 , Portland and Oregon during 1920 are the earned reward of an in dustrious community whose efforts are dedicated to the advancement of the common welfare through labor and production. , Elsewhere in today's Sunday Jour nal, notably in The Sunday Journal Magazine, the accomplishments of the passing year are set forth in pic ture and text. , - We read of what has been done in port affairs and are warranted in the large expectations of what the future will bring in the development of maritime commerce. Twelve million dollars has been invested in Portland in new build ings during 1920. Of this great sum a large proportion has gone into in dustrial plants that mean more and larger payrolls and greater manu factured output -In the years to come. Oregon continues to hold her lead in highway construction. During the past two years she has invested twenty millions in Improved high ways, thereby facilitating the move ment of crops from farm to market and bringing in closer touch all parts of the state arfa rendering outstate points easier of access. Oregon's farm wealth produced during 1950 totals the enormous sum of $428,000,000, her grain yield alone being worth more than $125,000,000. The state's 284 banks report ag gregate resources of more than $350, 000,000, of which Portland's 26 banks show resources of more than $184, 000,000. . - , During" the year the federal cen sus has been taken which credits Oregon with a population of 783,285, an Increase of 16.4 over the figures of 1910. There are, according to the census, 50,188 farms. in Oregon, an Increase of 4686, or 10.3 per cent over the number in 1910. This figure is gratifying in view of the contrary condition in other parts of the coun try. The census gives Portland a popu lation of 258,288, an increase of 24.6 per cent over 1910. During the de cade Portland has advanced from the rank, of twenty-eighth - city in size in the United States to that of twenty-fourth. These few paragraphs picked at random from the mass of things ac complished Justify Portland and Or egon In anticipating a happy and prosperous New Year. ' AN EXPOSITION. SUPPLEMENT nORTLAND has a varietv of rea- A sons for holding an exposition in f ... 1925, but none more distinctive or historic than Vancouver's centenary as a Hudson Bay company post. The suggestion which comes from across, the Columbia that the two cities make common cause in exposition plans warrants not only acceptance but support by Portland. Los Angeles might steal the idea of celebrating the completion of the Lincoln and Pacific highways. The centenary of the electro-magnet, basis of power transmission, might be selected by almost any city which had exposition ambitions. The restoration of normal trade, provided by 1925 it has been restored, would be seized upon as a genuine cause of ubilation by any port. But Vancouver's settlement was not alone as a fur trading post. It became an outpost in the westward course of empire. Around it cluster historic "fact, picturesque anecdote, romance' and legend. Associated with it are such luminous names as McLoughlin, Grant and Sheridan. The addition pf Vancouver posts centenary to the Portland exposition would provide a gracious and charm ing supplement to be welcomed and not denied. ' JAPANESE IN OREGON THERE are, according to the re port of the Oregon labor bureau. but 4547 Japanese In Oregon. Some 2021j of this number are in Mult nomah county, but the ' remainder are scattered with considerable uni formity among the various counties of the state. ; Idleness and pauperism are almost unknown among them if, the labor commissioner's figures may be be lieved, for of 2666 male Japanese in Oregon he credits 2387 with being employed, 202 In 'commercial under takings, 1595 in industry and 690 in agriculture. The . Japanese women. on the other hand, appear to be home bodies, for of the 833 in the state but 64 are listed - as working for wages, 63 In commercial pursuits and one in agriculture. -. , That the Japanese in this state work for less than the whites is in dicated in a table which shows that the highest average daily wage of $5 is paid in but two counties Co lumbia and Coos, and the .- lowest average daily wage of $3.40 in Linn and Malheur counties. The home making proclivities of the Japanese in Oregon seem to be far ; below their Industry. . In but 10 of the 35 counties of the state are they listed as paying rent, the labor commissioner explaining that in other counties the buildings oc cupied are of nominal value or are used also for .business purposes. The labor commissioner suggests but one possible evasion of the law 6ui uiieunu vwuuuiiv i yi uu- erty in ihe state. t It appears to him that Japanese are stockholders in several - corporations owning large tracts of land, and he advises the enactment of & law which, will com pel all corporations to file state ments with the several assessors giv ing a list of their stockholders and the amount of stock held by each. . WHAT IS THE ANSWER? SENATOR MILES POIND EXTER of Washington state has become a staunch brother among that group of congresmen whom we, were wont to call the old guard. As such his , name was prominently mentioned as a presidential possibility. Wheji the campaign did get under way, with Warren G. Harding as the Repub-j lican standard bearer, ; Po in dexter forged to the front as one of the big advisory chiefs. Today, with his party safely in power and assured of undisputed reign for two years or nroTe, Po in dexter has hopped on the national band wagon as the would-be father of an anti-strike proposal which is declared to be one of the most In cisive and deadly weapons ever aimed at organized labor. These facts are cited merely to picture Polndexter as he has grad ually come to be during the later years of his public career. His con servatism conservatism of the most unadulterated brand is now unques tioned and unquestionable. Letvour thoughts next turn to 1910 when Polndexter was ' a senatorial candidate in the primaries of Wash ington. His opponents were John L. Wilson, a former United States senator and owner of a big daily paper .at Seattle, and Judge Thomas Burke, a corporation lawyer and dis tinguished scholar, who then had, as now, both brains and money, Wil son withdrew from the campaign, and the decision was left with Polndexter and Burke. Judge Burke spent, it is declared, more than a small fortune - in his effort to get the nomination, but was unsuccess ful. He had behind him an almost perfect organization. Every paper In the state, with very few except tions, threw Its support to him un grudgingly. Burke -was a known conservative, an embryonic member of the old guard, and Polndexter was a radical and avowed Progressive. That wave of Progressive Republi canism, one of the firBt to hit the Northwest, swept Polndexter into office overwhelmingly. It is to be doubted if Judge Burke carried a single precinct in the state. In that campaign organized labor was one of the factors behind Polndexter to a man. What is the answer which -will clarify the question of Poindexter's change of political front during the flast 10 years? Were his earlier j - , views those of an immature mirjd grasping at gewgaws which blinded his true sense of moral and political values, or were they the outpourings of a calloused and Insincere opportu nist, who saw a tidal wave of public upheaval " coming and at- once grasped a lifebelt and plunged on the breaker of Progresslvlsm ? The query is not put in any vitu perative or calumniating spirit, but merely in a desire to bring forth some light on an incident of political psychology, surely a man has a right to change his mind,' but Just as, surely has the. public a right to ask and know the cause of such a change, especially when it has been such a : marked right-about face as that which characterizes Poindex ter's present attitude. WHat irresis tible quality in his later association and environment at the national cap ital has provided the attrition which has worn and washed away all traces of the Polndexter who emerged from his cocoon a decade ago ? The senator undoubtedly . could write an enlightening and interesting symposium on the mental processes which have led to his utter abandon ment of the rebel cause and his pledging of allegiance to the powers that be. Will he? STILL AT THEIR MOORINGS ALARMED parents who fear, that the trend of modern education is, away from religion, should, take comfort from" a survey recently made, by the Baptist denomination In the University of Chicago, the re sults of which have been announced in the Baptist Observer. ': Among more than 2000 students interviewed, there were only two avowed agnostics and one atheist, while 88 per. cent of the students claimed membership in some or ganized ; religious , group. More women than men were without, any religious connection. Two thirds the entire student body recorded It self as Protestant. The figures showed that during the school year 93 per cent of the students attended' some, religious service at least once a month, and that 45 , per cent go once a Sunday. One eighth of the etu dents engage in some form of religious work, such ai teaching Sunday school, etc . An even larger per cent engage In social service worst of one kind or another. This social and religious work is carried on in addition not only to heavy university .work, "but to house hold and remunerative-work done by the students. Of the men, it was learned that 216 engage in some,form of household work, and 819 of the women. Besides these, 409 men and 144 women spend at least 10 hours j a week in remunerative work to help j defray their expenses, NATIONALISM AND "WILSONISM" Mercure de France, a Leading Journal of Opinion, Rebukes Shallow Critics and Yields to President Wilson Credit for Superb Purpose and Achievement in the Cause of . Universal . Peace. -Foreign Editorial Digest- (Consolidated Prone Association) "France, England, Germany these proper names are in such common use that one is led to -think of them as cor responding to something exact and pre cise. Yet republican Ireland, chaotic Germany and ambiguous Poland are there to remind us that national enti ties are abstractions, and that one must taka rj&ina to inaulre from time to time lust what their concrete significance is. before emolovine them in evanescent syllogisms. But people -are generally satisfied with the few , vague ideas and sentiments that names of countries con note." ' . . . .AUliS Dlguiuvii, . r ctlseion of the League of Nations in tne Mercure de France a -publication that deserves its international reputation in literature, politics, economics and art. The article continues: "And yet necessity and convenience do not allow us outside of scientific works to be as accurate in our choice or ex pressions as we might like. We have to gat along with approximations. There is no grave danger in it provided senti mentality and partisanship do not ut terly blind us. "The fact that makes It most CifXl- cult to define a nation is the fact of internationalism. Socialism Is only one of its aspects. . This word, if it once might have been compared to a note or music, now corresponds to a scale or a whole keyboard. . Within national enti ties. Socialists , of every hue frankly overstep the bounds of legality In fight ing the existing government. "In Great. Britain and Italy commit tees of action, which are a sort of soviet, deal as equals with, the constituted au thority. The syndicalists qf Europe de clare that the occupation of the Ruhr would be a crime against the working class. What then becomes of national sovereignty? . : 1 . "Such sovereignty is threatened from yet another side, the so-called bourgeois side. The Brussels conference, follow ing the conference of Washington and Geneva, showed how far the road to pro gressive limitation of the right of gov ernments had been traveled. It Is not haDDenlnsr without strong resistance, un til an equilibrium is reached. The tri umph of "reaction" is the sign of this resistance. Authority Is break ing up. 'In this condition of .anarchy, now comes the Leatrue of Nations. It is a Parthenon of hopes, or a cathedral on which -several generations are collabor ating. On its Romanic bases may arise heaven knows what choir, what naves and what rococo ornamentation. Though for the moment it is even more difficult to define than a nation, many people talk of the league as if they had created it, as of a, thing that can be touched, seen, measured ; while really it is only tending, and without haste, towards a form. "And now comes the question : What is Wilsonlsm? The opponents of the league are going about everywhere repeating that America has repudiated 'Wilsonism, that Wilsonlsm is dead, 1 Yet the corpse, like so many others, is doing -pretty we4L:- - - "A "large number of cities, towns and villages have given President Wilson's name to streets, squares and avenues. This somewhat silly infatuation has been followed by .unreasonable animosity. During the war and up to the signing of the peace, it was forbidden to take the name of Wilson in vain. " Those who ventured on criticism or even resr ervations felt the scissors of the cen sorship. Now that the first assembly of theJeagoe is meeting at Geneva and President Wilson is coldly deserted by so many formerly zealous supporters we must try .to give the president his due. ' "If Wilsonism is the 14 points, Wilson ism does not belong to Mr. Wilson.. To mention only .the authors of the treaty and the covenant. Clemenceau had the name of the league constantly on the tip of his tongue and of his pen before he was recalled to the prime ministry. At thajt time Mr. Wilson was writing notes of infinite- good will and patience to the German government. . ' But what belongs to Mr. Wilson, what Is entirely his, cannot be taken away from him, is. his stubborn, obstinate and superb perseverance. "An article In the Semalne Lltterarie a year ago, though it contains some inac curacies, contains also these worm, the truth of which has been confirmed day after day r There Is one thing to Presi dent Wilson's credit that cannot be de nied him, that he showed prof ound ,and statesmanlike foresjght In Insisting that the League of Nations should be cre ated by the peace treaty Itself and not by ' a separate pact. If the covenant had not been written Into' the treaty, it is certain that it could not be con cluded now and that the idea of which the president had made , himself the champion would now be lost forever.' ."This Idea, which was the Idea or all. or at least of many, he made his own. It was no more his than anyone else's, but he made It his property by making it his obsession. It little matters what psychological reasons of political mo tives prompted him, the result is there. -www . .- - "The partisans of the old systems of alliances, the opportunist politicians, who think It clever . to change their speech very week, the malcontents everywhere. and even Mr. Harding ntmseir, cannot change that result, wilsonlsm Is the re peated affirmation or a principle, toward and against all, against reality Itself, if heed be, against wind ana tide, con cessions and adjustments are subordin ate. There Is no danger that they will not come. But there must first be an Impulse and some guidance. "Since It Is plain that agreement is impossible on a, thousand matters, let the pact be revised, even In vague terms, and ratified. That is the first thing to do. President Wilson can now give way to others. His work is done. How many of his opponents will leave behind anything so lasting f" ; ,:-. Letters From the People f Coin ill urdoaOona sent to The Journal for publication in this department ahoaM be. written on only one side of the paper; should not exceed BOO worda in length, and moat be aicned tr the writer, whose mail address ia full must accom pany the eontrihotion. 1 . I LIBERTY BONDS AND FARMERS. ' Incoming Administration's Attitude Tow . ard Both Is CrlUcised. - ', Freewater, Dec 22. To the Editor of The Journal It Is easy to read between the - lines what our future government means when it tells the people it In tends to stabilize the war bonds at par. It's a gentle bint to the wise financier to load op, buy all the bonds available of the poor people who, during the war bought " 'till it hurt," to save humanity ; and now that the country is saved these poor , people - are forced to ' sell their bonds at a big discount In order to save themselves. - So the government is plan ning to stabilise the war bonds. There is rood money in it for the rich ; besides their blfe- discount the poor people will pay the Interest and in this way the COMMENT AND SMALL CHANGE If s getting so an employer can't fire ven his furnace without permission of a union. El Paso Herald. . As Cncle Sam would not go to Europe, Europe is preparing to come to the United States. Seattle Times. e. e In spite of her predilection for bliz zards, Canada doesn't want to be snowed under 'at Geneva. Boston Transcript. iDpn't be oversensitive. President elect Harding can't confer with every Great Mind. SlWoseph News-Press. In ten years from now there may be no Irish problem because there may be nT,, ,.Bh' th ,way things are now going. Richmond (Ind.) Item. . . Compasses are smashed to get alco holic contents, says a headline. After a man is drunk he doesn't care what di rection he goes anyhow. El Paso Her ald. Not only is it awfully Wd for an ord inary chap to look as well in his union suit as the fellow in the advertisement looks in his, but it also isn't necessary. Kansas City Star. , One rather gets the view, from the postmaster general's report, that he is not wholly at one with the public on the standard of service rendered by his de- MORE OR LESS PERSONAL Random Observations About Town Twenty years ago Fred Caples. a i former student at Oregon Agricultural college and a resident of Columbia City, joined the great stampede from Dawson to Nome, Alaska. He had gone to the Yukon when the news of the first strike was announced. For 20 years this na tive son of Columbia county mushed all over Alaska, being one of the first to get under. way with-his dogs and sled whenever a new strike was re ported. After 20 years In a vain search for rich diggings in Alaska he came home to his birthplace at Columbia City, where he owns a considerable body of land and recently has discovered on his own place - extensive deposits of iron ore which bid fair to make him more money than all the placer gold he ever struck in Alaska. Probably there are more people than Fred Caples that over look the opportunities at their very door and travel afar' in search pf wealth or fame when they could find both in their own home town. "What am I doing?" said the literary bellhop at the Imperial. "Can't you see I am writing. I am composing a poem about the ever-genial host of this hotel. Read it to you? All right. It is In the rough yet, but here is about how It will go : Phil was told that ha needed a tonic Ilia illness at once became chronic He said: "Doctor dear. Won't you pleaM make it beer?" But the Doo aaid: "No, no. That's Teutonic" A. W. Stone of the Apple Growers association of Hood River is spending the holidays in Portland with his daugh ter and putting In his spare time on the golf links. " . , Mr. and Mrs. F, W. Bond of Pendle ton are in Portland and are guests at the Portland. Walter Brown, pioneer sheepman from Montana, formerly of Box Elder but now of Butte, is a Portland visitor. Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Mathews of Med ford are registered at the Benson. a Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Hudson of Bend are Portland visitors. . - Leland Gott of The Dalles is a guest at the Portland. OBSERVATIONS AND IMPRESSIONS OF THE JOURNAL MAN By Fred An interpreter of an interpreter of nature la Mr. Liockleya eon Lawrence, wno wniee 01 Joon Minefield as a poet of nature, and whose critique Mr. Lockley generously aharea with Journal readers.) My son Lawrerce is at Berkeley. He has been writing some most excellent verse and sending it to me for criticism. As a matter of fact, he knows more about versification than I ever expect to learn, but I imagine he thinks it pleases me to seem to defer to my judgment. I asked hira recently what he thought of Masefield as a . lover of nature. His answer to my query contains some bits of Masefield's verse that have In them so much of beauty that I am going to quote most of his letter. Here it is : "Masefield writes of his fellow men with a virility that can betoken naught but a fellow feeling, a knowledge of them, bullded on close association, on the hard, rough life that men live. His life has not been one of retirement, or close association with nature. He has lived as a man, among men. And yet his every poem is permeated with a realization of the omnipotence of nature, and her forces, and bubbles over with a deep, silent love for the earth that bore him. With the instinct of an artist, he has made this love the warp upon which his woof has woven the fantastic tales of the sea, or the deep seeing dramas of life. It reinforces his theme. It relieves his tragic passages, and In the most horrible parts of life, one feels that the beauty of nature, rand of life with na ture, makes it all worth living. "In ;The Everlasting Mercy,' after a night's orgy at the Lion, Saul sees the dawn come . . trj on Bndlow KnoZU The Dawn with flitterinc on the snaeea, ' The Dawn which pass and oarer panel - In The Widow on' the Bye Street,' just after the murder trial, Anna Is going to another place to spin a new web. She boards the train. 'Into the vale, and halts, and starts t climb To where the apple-bearing country ends and pleasant-pastured hills rise sweet with thyme, Where clinking- aheepbells make a broken chime. And sunwarm corses rich the air with scent, .And kestrels poise foe mice; there Anns went. It is like a breath" of pure, fresh air. this glimpse of nature, after a period in a dank, musty cellar. Here it is again. when the Dauber hides his precious painting, and stands on the quarter deck : . . .- . silent, inaninf on the boat Watching the constellations rise and bum. Until the beauty took him by the throat.' "What a relief to ' take, with the Dauber, that breath of pure air, after the fetid stuffiness of the fo'c'sle, to drink in the beauty of the sea and sky, after the cruel mirth of his shipmates. "Still a more noticeable Instance Is found In 'Daffodil Fields, where the ac tion is rushing to the climax in a fight in which both central figures are hilled. Yet Masefield pauses long entMgh to admire the surroundings: The ground was toel there; the daffodils ' . ' Glimmered and danced beneath their cautious - feet, - v- Quartering for opening for the blow that kills. Beyond the bubbling brook a thrush was high financiers of the -country will soon get back the $3,500,000 or more that they spent In the last campaign for a change of the administration. The new admlnlgtratlon-to-be Is cast ing the shadows before, for already the farmers are sadly feeling the change. Why this silence In regard to the farm loan? Why has the government always ready money to lend the railroads? Why plenty to loan to foreign countries? NEWS IN BRIEF SIDELIGHTS The peak of. high taxes does not ap pear to have been scaled yet. But who cares for the taxpayer, anyway? Eu gene Guard. j If the papers keep on printing; those stories about the shipping board, ievery body will be wanting to work for it. La Grande Observer. ' Oregon's revised population is 783, 389; we could double that during the next ten years and not be ja bit crowded. Pendleton Kast Oregoman. i - Herbert Hoover should have a nlace In Harding's cabinet. The orly ob jections we have seen, are in j reality hia strongest recommendation&J Med ford Mail-Tribune. i , . t Testimony in the shipping board In vestigation indicates that 10 per cent of ait tn snipping repair duis was graru That's a new construction of the cost plus 10 per cent system. Eugene Regis ter. i The people of America are being asked for donations to help the poor children of Germany. Just as a little suggestion w submit the fact- that the amount of money the people of Germany are hand ing over to the kaiser would be suffi cient to keep all of the needy children of all the" central powers. Benton j County jourier. v An examination of the registers of our leading hotels will disclose the fact that more and more globe trotters and world wanderers are "making" Port land. Dr. Lum Ling, late of Peking, China, la a guest at the Hotel; Benson A number of distinguished travelers came over on the last trip of the Si beria Maru, of the Toyo Klsen Kaisha line. Among the number were'; Dr. and Mrs. Charles D. Tenney. Dr.! Tenney went to Shansi, China, in 1SS6 as missionary. He It was who founded the Anglo-Chinese school at Tientsin. Later he founded Peiyang university.; In 1900 he became secretary of the Tientsin provisional government. Bight years later he joined the staff of the United States legation at Peking as Chinese sec retary. He acted as charge d'affaires until the confirmation of William R. Crane. - Upon his retirement land just before- his departure for his home in America he was the guest of! Dr. Wu Ting Fang and Dn C. L. Wing at a farewell dinner. tL H. L Gage, a student at the school of mines of Oregon Agricultural college, is a guest at the Imperial. '!We have about 2000 young men students at the college," said Mr. Gage. "Overt a thous and are exempted from drill and mill tary service oh account of having seen service In the naval or military forces during the world war. Yes, I am ex empL I was in the intelligence depart ment, and my job was running down alien enemies." ' . H. J. Vaughn of Coos BayJ with his family, Is spending a few days in Port land. ' A. R Tohl, one of the men who have helped make Nehalem a prosperous com m unity, is visiting hi Portland- I C J. Pugh ot- Falls Cityand C F. Stone of Klamath Falls are at the Im perial. . - Glenn Dudley, well known wheat raiser of Athena, is a guest at the Benson. Ida Tress Benson of Bend at the Benson. - C. C Hunt of -Enterprise Oregon. guest is at the Lockley "Perhaps there is no betted example than the passage of Jim's hanging In The Widow in the Bye Stjj-eef The gloom of a hanging, the awe Of death is over all. And yet: J 'A broken ringing like s beaten pea. It sent the sparrows wavering to the trees. The- wall-top graues whickered ire the breeae. The broken ringing clanged, clattered, and clanged. e- As though men's bees were (wanning, not men hanged.' i ' j "All through the longer poems are interspersed bits of beauty, like lilies In the mire. But one might expect them there, in works that he had planned qut so carefully, and whose balanced quali ties he iuA probably studied over so closely. And yet in his Sa4t Water Bal lads and in his 'Round House Tales' one finds even more often the beauty of the sea, a' glory that floods his work spontaneously. Many of his shorter poems are extemporaneous apostrophes to the grandeur, the beauty and the glory of the sea. 'Sea Fever,' whose refrain 'I must down to the seas again' brings an exultant joy in the) wonder of the ocean, is typical of these. 1 "Spanish waters, Spatueh waters, yoa are ringing in my ears, r Uke a alow sweet pieoe of Busts irons the grey forgotten years. e e . "It Is not the Intellectual or aesthetic enjoyment of a poet,, but the joy of a pagan, a physical pleasure, j One finds much the same physical enjjoyment In his little three stanza poetr. 'Cargoes. We can, with him, go- Dipping through the tropica, by the palm arses shores.' e e Tf for nothing else, Masefield's two stanza bit, "Beauty,' Is wortky of being read for its sensuous enjoyment of beauty. A part will serve foa an exam ple: , i 'I hare aem dawn sad ran set on mn and windy hill t Coming in solemn beauty like, (low old tunes of Spain: i I hare seen the lady April bringing the daffodils. Bringing the springing grass and - the soft ",- . warn April Tain.' I "One finds still another type of na ture worship in "Spanish Waters. A voluptuous, sensuous enjoyraent of the sounds and forms of nature pervades the verse much as the heavy scent of musk pervades, the rooms house. ' of an old "To refer to the longer jpoems, one sees with Masefield. in spite Of the bitter scorn, the misunderstanding ! and drudg ery. Dauber's surroundings : The Dauber sighed there, looking at the sails. Wind steadied archies leaning on the night. The high trucks traced on beaten and left no trails; The moonlight made the topsails I almost white. The panting side lights seemed (to drip green light. , - t And on the clipper rushed with fire-light bows. "It is one of the joys of Masefield that, whatever he may be telling, how ever climatic may be bis movement, or how ultra-realistic be the passage, he always helps his reader toj enjoy with him the pleasures of nature," , . - ' - T : r And why, in the name of all that Is Ameri can, are the farmers' requests turned down? Are they of so little) importance that the nation can do without them? By all that Is right and just, by all that is deserving and helpful, the farmer is en titled to be considered and safeguarded. It is he who feeds the world. Should he refuse to sow and reap the World would starve, bonds or no bond a Mary Harris! Simmons. The Oregon Country Northwest Happening In Brief t'ono fof the dui7 jiaauer i OREGON NOTES j pany has begun operations at its well in Clatsop county. j " John Smith, who crossed the 'plains to Oregon in 1852. died near Cottage Grove or u eu, me, age oi vo years. . Marnhfield. wna rinA fnn v.. pleaded guilty to conducting a still on VAr a IriMlaDftil l.eaA. A lrAtAff hv hA A oUUr. aA. I elation in November, the price; being 78 vcn to per uuzen. TWrt hf nrilr'swl rifilrvman ntViA T)r,nt,. n .v men vi Ll IC -li r 9 fllSttrtft hflva BtiKsffiKal ftlttfifllk . . ' b wovi iwvir I 1.119 erection of a creamery land cheese fac- trtrv In ni At a recent meeting of the Tillamook County Creamery association a plan was indorsed to ask the legislature for an appropriation of $15,000 for dairy in- Sparks generated by friction whrlo" cleaning a silk dress in a Bend laundry fired the gasoline, set the building on fire and burned the clothing i of U. E. Olsen, proprietor. . - ... v. miii v. u i.. t in i ui 1 1 1 1 ina Oregon and Washington legislatures at wieir sessions looKing to me con struction of an interstate bridge between Wauna and CathlamoL i All Bravnl rn IV.. .1 :1 utai v ' i 11 1 , x att between Pendleton and Echo has been laid and the road is completed except for a bridge near Echo, which will have to be built in the sprirrg. Plans have been announced bv the Association of Pacific Fisheries for a nation-wide campaign of education as to tnA Knnmv ami f.- . K & ........ plentiful varieties of canned salmon. ,f . For the second time within the pHst few weeks Gervais is without water. The pumping station is ample to supply Ik. A .. J i . ,, . V. . ... . . . .no uciiia.uu, uui me wens un wun a line sand and put the pumps out of com mission. WASHINGTON Pasco has subscribed $55;000 for the proposed intercounty highway bridge be tween that city and Kerinewick. The Puyallup public library has re opened after being closed six weeks on account of the diphtheria epidemic vTjxiicrii j. ccreis prominent, lumoer man and member of the Aberdeen city council, is dead In that' city from pto maine poisoning. Despondent over family troubles and his inability to obtain work, John Huff, 29 years old. killed himself with a shot gun at Seattle Tuesday. "'"; For the purpose of getting medlcal'cara at the expense of the county. Charles Morris allowed himself to be arrested at Aberdeen for shoplifting. Word is received at Tacoma of the sudden death aboard a Milwaukee trans continental train of S. C. Riley, a former prominent lumberman of that city. Farmers of Adams county met at Rltz ville Saturday and formed a wheat pool. The association has over a million bush els to sell. . ' . For the 11 months ending November 30, the net earnings ' of the Aberdeen water department were $25,486 ; Chehalls, 111,340, and Puyallup, $3777.! With only one vote opposing, Prosser precinct of the Yakima Benton irriga tion district has approved an assessment to complete the survey of the highline extension of the Sunnyside canal. It ia Ktatd that triors Are now 27(18 members in Washington and Idaho af filiated with the Wheat Growera' asso ciation, with a total of 9,000,000 bushels of wheat in prospect for thej 1921 crop. , Charles IX Hlnton, deputy1 state treas urer, brokp his leer and I E. riwartz of Seattle suffered fractured ribs when the car in which they were riding left the pavement and turned turtle near Olyra pla. - t At a meeting- of the Washington Hotel Men's association at Seattle ft was de cided tot abide by the resent supreme court ruling upholding: the new $18 min imum wage for women employed In res taurants ana note) a IDAHO The Cassia county commissioners have appropriated $6000 for the continuance of farm bureau work in that county. Approximately $425,000 has been paid out for beets this season by the Lincoln branch of the Utah-Idaho Sugar com pany. . A proposition to divide Bannock county is creating much discussion at Pocatello its coming session. Fred Taylor died at Welser a few days ago from a- stroke of apoplexy brought on during a fire in the upper story of his house. Roy Klmmel. a boy student from Boise, has been elected editor-in-chief of the Gem of the Mountains, the year book of the University of Idaho. . , . -. Jobs were found for 40 of the 102 per sons registered at the Boise employment office from Monday to Saturday in clusive. . Of -the 102 cases, 10 were des titute Articles of incorporation have been filed in the office of the secretary, of? state by the Abbott Gardner Sheep com- rany of Nampa, with a capital stock of 100,000. Uncle Jeff Snow Says: A feller was a-tell In' us at the Cor ners that the days of gasoline is num bered and what's a-omJn' downT the pike of time is lectrio juic stored in a tin can and hitched to the gearin direct 'thout no engine whatsoever. When that day starts to light up ths shk of the U. S. A. poor old Rockefel lerTl be dead and wont worry none a-talL Meanwhile we must . have gas even if we got to let the old roof leak another year and Ma turns her Sunday dress fer the fifth time, i kiNow youR PORTLAND Portland streetcar lines are said to cover a wider area In proportion to the population served than in any other city; of . similar else in -the Untied States. ? In response to the request of The Journal, Franklin T. Griffith, presi dent of the. Portland Railway, Light Sc Power company, has prepared some figures that show in a ! most inter esting way the extent of the system. Five hundred and fourteen cars are operated on city linen and 93 cars on lnterurban lines, a total of 609. There are 170,477 miles of track in the city lines and 78,414 miles of track in, interurban lines, a -total of 248.891 miles. These figures do not Include the tracks used in connec tion with the sidings, car houses and yards. ; The 25,00-mlle circuit of the earth st' its equator, does not seem very impressive when one - thinks that to and near Portland the trolley tracks of one concern would belt the globe nearly 10 times, or reach from Port land to the moon. j . The streetcars may hot seem to travel very rapidly under the retarda tion of frequent stops, and a epeed limit of 20 miles an hour, but it 's found that cars on the city lines, during 1919, traveled an aggregate of 1S.66S.C70 miles, which is a sixth of. the distance to the sun. During the month, of October the cars on the city lines ; recorded : a1 mileage of. 1,255.841 in distance traversed, ( and the dally average on the city lines last October was 40,511 miles, the equivalent of five round trips across the American continent. ' . The interurban lines during ,1919 covered 1,587,704 miles; during Octo ber. ,127,65a miles, and 4118 miles' dally average for October. A