AST INDEPENUfcNT NEWSPAPER 0. H. JACKSON .Publieher ' Be calm, be confident, be cheerful and do unto others si you would b' Um do unto yon. I Published ewy Mfk de and Sunday "V"?!!?' . at The Journal BuiWine. Broedwair and em- itraat, roruana. utmju. Knured at tha poatnffic ' 'ortl,'ld- lor trsn.mis.ion through tha mails a coM class matter. XEbEPHONES Main 7178. Antomatio All depart menu reacPea pt m " RATIONAL ADVERTISING ?PR"E1Z TIVK Benjamin KnUoTCx, ItoiMine. 225 Fifth aranue. - jots, vu Mailers BuiMinc. Chicago. ' PACIFIC COAST RErRKSFNTATIT- W. B t BTBrT Co.; Examiner BuUdtnc Ban rran Cisco; Title Insurance Building-. Los Anselae. roflt-lnteuicencer uniiawg. THE ORKUOH JOURNAL, reservee tha riht to ..reject adrartUin. copy which tt dma oo- JreMonable. It also will not print any oopy . that in any way aimulates readme matter or - that cannot readiir be recognised aa adrar- Using. - SrBSCRlPTION RATES By Carrier, City and Country DAILY - AND BUJiDAI . One week. . : g .15 One month - $ SUNDAY. Ona week. -Of DAIL.T Ona week .10 Ona -tnAFith s. .45 - BT MAIL. A U. RATES PATABtE IN ADVANCE 1 Ona year. f 8.00 biz montha. . : . . 4.25 DAILY .' (Without Sunday) One year. ..... .16.00 Hix raonths. ... 8.25 Three month... 1.75 One month; .... -SO WEEKLY (Eyery Wednesday) One year. .... .81.00 Kit montha . . . .50 Three month.. . 82.25 Ona month . . - SUNDAY ' (Only) One year .83.00 Six months. .... 1.75 Three month. . . 1.00 WEEKLY AND SUNDAY One year 88.50 These retea apply only In tne west Rate to Eastern point fnrniabed on appliea- f ton. Make remittanoee by Money Order, Expreae Order or Iireft. If your r "toff ice is not a ; Money Order office, 1 or 2 -cent atampe will be accepted. Make all remittances payable to Tba Journal, Portland. Ores-on. Vim must be a courteous to a man aa wa are to a , picture, which we are willing to give the adrantaee of a good light. ' Jmcrson- MAKING HIST6RY? IS INDUSTRIAL, history being made by the decisions of the United States supreme court? Monday , thqt " body - restrained trades unions from .'boycotting the Installation of printing presses manu factured in non-union plants. The inference is that the court would also restrain v open shop" manufac turers from use of the'secondary boy cott in refusing to sell their output to unionized plants. Application of the principle .would greatly narrow the field of the industrial boycott Tjoth for workers and employers. Another decision by the high court, expected soon, will pass finally on Whether employers can recover pe cuniarily from unions for business losses sustained in strikes. The case is the Coronado Coal company against the United Mine Workers in a suit for $625,000 losses and damages in a strike in the South west in 1914. The coal company wch in the trial court and the finding was affirmed In the court of appeals.' A decision favorable to the company would be a severe blow to the trades , unions. ' ' Whatever the outcome the radical element in the organization is bring--Jng harm upon the union labor move ment. The open shop movement," now .country-wide and heavily financed, is largely the result of their policies and proposals. Those proposals do ..not have the sanction of the poised and substantial men in the unions ., nd the effect is dissatisfaction and .' k possibility of ultimate disruption Of the organization. ; Avowed proposal by some of the radicals to seize and operate the plants, the policy of slowing, down - the unit H of production, and some other -practices detrimental to the interest of the 1 employer without corresponding benefit to the worker, are too unjust to have the approval of the better balanced men in the ranks of the unions, much , less the backing to the public, which is so necessary to the success of any movement.. , i r ' 1 . ; in tne ena radicalism among workers, like radicalism among era ployers, will get nowhere. Union fern's best way to fight the em battled hosts of reaction who have started out for the open Bhop is to make the production in a union ' shop greater per unit than in non union shops. "Whenever that is done - and whenever the sane unionists take command of the local and na tional organizations,, employers, for ' selfish reasons If no other, will be seeking union workers instead of shunning them; ' - It. is the course that the trades . unions, for the preservation and progress of the great cause, of good wages and fair hours, should ... pursue. . "The Truth Has Never Hurt Port land," is suggested as an appropriate , slogan, by the park superintendent. It might be still more effective stated, affirmatively: "The Truth Is Port land's BiggestBoast." . ..: '.- AN INTELLIGENT EMPLOYE AN OCEAN-GOING liner In tow of two " tugboats was ' tasting through the railroad bridge Friday 'morning when hundreds of workers in street and motor cars were hast ening to their employment' Still several minutes from- the Broadway bridge a blast signaled for that span to open. It meant a tie-up of traffic for several minjutes. ' An Intelligent tender; stepped to the center - of the bridge and mo tioned to lTrtrtftr and streetcar oper ators to speed up if they were to avoid the delay. Through his efforts hundreds of busy people were, en abled to escape a loner wait and the span as usual was lifted in time for the steamer. I .". It was real public service. The shipping: board has reduced the charter rate '..from ? 18 to $16, this being; withltf 2.50 of the pri vate competitive-! rate on ocean ton nage as it moves.! If the action fore casts further reduction to. a point where exporters think they can af ford to make charters, complaints that our shipping interests ."" fail in loyalty in the employment of Amer ican --bottoms may cease. " A ROOSTING PLACE? SUNDRY persons want apppint meift as postmaster of Portland. Why pull down the high standard established in naming M-r. Jones, .the newly appointed postmaster of Port land? He qualified above a dozen others in .an examination to de termine which was best fitted for the position. He began as a carrier, and by sheer merit rose to the headship of the office. ' During 30 years of efficient" serv ice beginning in "July, 1890, he served as carrier, : as superintendent of carriers, superintendent of mails, assistant postmaster, and. finally, in recognition of his ability, was made postmaster, . There could bo no higher example of sound policV in the public serv ice than for this appointment to be conflrnied. Mr. Jones selection w.s a sign to all employes in the office that, through merit, the headship of the office is open to them. It was notice to them that the office is not a roosting place for politici ans but a business institution where effective service I brings its reward. To remove Postmaster Jones to make room for soine politician for party service seems; unthinkable. M. Jones knows' every 'detail of the office. He knows the requirements and the processes of every one of the many departments.. He is highly intelligent, of prime executive abil ity and has fully and satisfactorily demonstrated his capacity - in the brief time in which he has been at the head of the office. ! It remains to be seen whether the Portland postoffice is to be a public Institu tion tov serve the public or a private snap to serve politicians. Charlie Chaplin received three votes for governor of New York in the late election.; J. P. Morgan got one vote for state controller, Ponzi one for state treasurer; and John D. Rockfeller one .for the same of fice. ' One New York s voter also favore"d calling Jack London from the great beyond to become state engineer. There are at least a few voters in New York who do their own voting. OFF THE ROAD A PORTLAND woman narrowly escaped serious injury or death on the Columbia river highway re cently because thej driver of an au tomobile refused to pilot his ma chines the side of the road to al low the woman to pass in her car. As she approached, the other ma chine she sounded her horn. She screamed to the i driver to allow her to pass. But he steadfastly 'con tinued to usurp he greater part of the5 thoroughfare. The woman, compelled to turn !out too far, went off the road and only inches separ ated her from a drop over a high embankment. ': There is a law in this state pro viding that all drivers go to the side of the road or street on signal from other operators who desire to pass. When road hogs refuse to give ground they are violating the law and are liable to heavy punish ments Moreover '. they are forcing others off the road, perhaps Into the ditch and the grave. That is an offense to which no man would - care ; to plead guilty. Farmers of Iowa and Nebraska have decided to - use corn for fuel. Corn is becoming quite a utility. It is not only used on the table and for whiskey., but for fuel as well. WHAT'S AN EMERGENCY? ONE of the seven port bills to be j He has! been one of the big men presented to j the legislature 1 of the Baker administration. Not will bear the emergency clause. It j only a lawyer of unusual attain -will provide ' for the issue of not ments, Mr. La Roche Is a man of more than $1,000,000 in short time I vision, of vigor, and of honesty of port securities. By some critics it is suggested that the passage f this measure will be used immediately by the port to provide funds for the purchase of Swan island as an incident to the opening of the west channel. e A readintr ot tn " mssanra ifiu. not support .the i criticism. . The bill distinctly States j that the funds are to be used for drtsdge coristruettonARoche has aided in winning tor or operation or tor porT rhainte- Portland fights of deep import and nance. Only by a strained construc tion, which, it is taped, will never be put upon it. could land purchase, even though incident to channel improvement, bel included. The west channel is desirable. The purchase of Swan island at a fair price is desirable But neither is an' enleency: . :The public will re- gard as an ; emergency the speedy dredging of shoals ; left i by winter freshets. ' '" , The maintenance of the channel from Portland to the sea is of first importance, and to build more docks and buy land, secondary. H ? ! ;, .Happily the dock commission has taken a position which will go far to reassure the people of Portland as to the safeguarding of their port interests. ": The port bills contem plate the merging of the port and dock commissions. . But under the city ordinance which was adopted at the last election the merger and the transfer of the city's docks to the port commission may only occur with the consent of the dock com mission.! ' .' Before the t dock commission's acquiescence to the merger is given, even though all the port bills may have passed, the people will desire that all safeguards of public inter est snail have been provided. i It is i Indeed refreshing to see a Portland pedestrian stop and look both ways for traffic before stepping into the street. THE OVERWHELMED VETO THE presidential veto of the reso lution reviving the war finance corporation was set aside by the Joint action of Republican and Dem ocratic votes. As a party action, 'the Democrats could have sustained the veto under the requirement of a two thirds vote to override it. The war finance corporation was an agency created by congress to underwrite when necessary the huge financial operations of the govern ment during the war period. The shares of 'the corporation were owned by the government. It was clothed with the power of the gov ernment in extending credit. It was the agency through which vast ship ments of supplies from America to the allies were cleared. ' ? The same power is now to be used in extending credit for the export of agricultural and other goods and products. The cotton growers of the South are unable to dispose of their cotton, which explains the interest of Southern congressmen and sena tors in the revival of the corpora tion. The wheat" growers of the x West believe that credit extended by the revived, ! corporation will strengthen the market and increase the price. In his veto- message. President Wilson ; expressed doubt as to whether the plan would have the desired effect. He pointed to the decisions at the Brussels conference In which it was declared that fur ther credit for Europe was not de sirable and that restoration of . the buying power of the people of Eu-n rope through return to production was the true process for financing their fiscal operations with America and other countries. It remains to be seen whether the president or congress is right. The president has a splendid record of things, done for the agricultural in terests'and he -is not a future candi date for reelection as are all sena tors and congressmen who voted to override the' veto. While it is hoped that the contrary may prove true, it is possible that revival of the war finance corporation is sop thrown by congress to the folks at home and that little good will come out of the action. In any event, whatever can be done should be done to relieve the agricultural situation. There are farmers who. are holding wheat that l it cost them; $1.60 to produce, and for which, perhaps, 51.40 is offered. It is possible ij that other farmers have on hand this year's crop whih cost them even more to grow. In many cases, they are paying Inter est . on debts created in . producing and gathering their harvests. Any use of government credit that will help them move their. crops and realize an Increased price may well be applied. Ultimate prosperity for all comes chiefly from the prosperity out where men walk in the furrows and grow crops. 1 Several hundred would-be actresses were unconsciously playing stellar roles In a tragedy when they .were seeking positions with a certain "theatrical agent." ; They each sent him $50 to show their, good faith in requesting stage positions. The '"agent" is now in jail. J . W. P. LA ROCHE, RESIGNED PORTLAND loses a splendid pub lic official in the resignation of W. P. La Roche as city attorney. puirpose.- His record as city attorney has been a record of , fidelity ito the public Interest. His office has been employed to gain the greatest fruits to the people ; he represented. He has been neither a corporation man nor a political trickster. ' J - .H as city attorney and legal adviser to the dock commission, Mr. La long standing, notable among them the Columbia basin rate case.' In this and other vital matters he has played leading roles. If ; ; i It is to be hoped that a public career of such accomplishment will not be terminated with the passing of Mr. i La, Roche from the city attorney's office. BACK TO THE LAW OF THE JUNGLE Since the Criminals Have So Reverted, Police Authorities Are in the Way of Playing the Game Same Style , The Editors Express There--. ; upon Various Views. Daily Editorial Digest (Consolidated i Press Aasocisxion)" -, From the editorial viewpoint, evident ly, the way to stop a crime wave la to stop it. The policy adopted by Chicago's new police commissioner :"Doht arrest, shoot !" -strikes most commentators as a more reasonable approach : to the problem than either "grandstand play" or the simple method of . ridding one community of criminals by passing them on to the neighbors. Judges- come1 in for their share of the criticism, as tfell, and, there is a general demand in the press for convictions and sentences that will inspire : a wholesome respect for law and courts, All admit, says the Rocky Mountain News (Denver, Ind.) that the present orgy of crime is ' largely the result of "the European saturnalia," and "war's madness cannot be shaken off as easily as it can be taken on. Lawlessness cannot be subdued through the signing of an armistice." To cure this "dis ease," the .Springfield (Mass.) Repub lican find.) feels that "it must be at tacked at the source" ; and in the opin ion of this paper, the tactics followed by city officials are resulting merely In "spreading the pest." The method of expelling undesirables "is a good deal like that adopted by a good many western towns, in dealing with the L W. wr, and it is not likely to be more successful. It is easy to understand' the temptation of a community to get rid of a hard problem by passing it along," but "driving loafers into vagabondage is very far from transforming them into desirable citizens." Moreover, in the opinion of the Topeka Capital (Rep.), "ths police care nothing what becomes -of the criminals so long as they quit operating in a particular baili wick," and in this system of "passing along the criminals" there is no induce ment to them "to change their prac tices, either in the way of a genuine organized scheme of punishing crime and preventing it, ox by the more diffi cult and idealistic process of guidance and direction into good citizenship." ' There is In the present crisis, how ever, much less Interest in the Capital's suggestion of "direction into good cit izenship" than in the "genuine punish ment of crime." The Boston Transcript (Ind. Rep.) expresses the attitude of most of the press when it suggests that "the question may well be asked wheth er an essential weakness and flabbiness in the administration of justice is riot in a considerable degree responsible for the present wave of crime.' " The fear Of the law, as the Albany Times Union (Ind.) sees it, "is the only weapon with which society can protect itself in this emergency, and it must be vigorously used." America is now "paying the penalty for too great leniency" toward the criminal class, the Louisville Cour ier Journal (Dem.). believes, and it of fers this proof: "In this country we convict and execute less than two of 100 cold-blooded murderers arraigned. We send to prisons, ' which -we term in some states "reformatories, men guilty of crimes for which they should be hanged. We coddle them in prison, and under laws owing their existence to exaggerated sentiment for the criminal, we turn them out -so soon that they are encouraged to continue their criminal careens.".. !, Commenting on the statement of Judge Rosalsky of New-York that, in his opinion, "every man Convicted f robbery should be sentenced to prison for life, because a highwayman is a potential murderer," the Boston Herald Ind. Rep.) says he "shows a real grasp of the situation," and the Indianapolis Star (Ind. Rep.) believes there is much to support his position. Such nrt?n "are entitled to no mercy, and when they are made to realize that none will . be extended them they will take fewer chances and the number of crimes will be greatly diminished." The - proposal appears to the Bangor (Maine); Commer cial .(Ind.) "a drastic one, yet there is no question but in recent years, because of light sentences, the. parole system, and steadily increasing pardons, the criminal does not fear punishment as formerly." - - But the criminal reaches the court,- if at all, by way cf the police, and It is toward this initial step in the apprehen sion of criminals that much of the crit icism is , directed. The New Haven (Conn.) 3ouraal-ourier (Ind.) finds that "the trouble with the American constabulary, speaking of it as a whole. is that it lacks professional detach ment. The man at the top' is too often more of a politician than ire is a police man." With the administration of -the police business in the hands of one who made a profession of it, "there would not be a professional criminal in the country who would not sense what this change in attitude meant." New York and Chicago are affording opportunities to contrast police tactics in meeting a "crime wave" which is common to both cities. The New York Evening World (Dem.) speaks of "the spectacular, small-town police stunts" which have been resorted to in New York in the ; effort to clean up the criminals, which the New York .Globe (Ind.) pictures as suggesting "prowling bands of marauders infesting the streets. -special details picking off thugs and cracksmen, easily recognizable by their resemblance to recently. published cartoons and bandits on the point of erecting barricades and starting a little revolution of their own." The New York Times (Ind. Dem.) is strong In the. conviction "that the incapacity of the police administration" is Tespon sible for the ''feeling, of reasonable se curity" " which criminals are enjoying, and that "eelf-arming and self-protec tion seem necessary." This spectacle of "America's greatest city compelled to adopt the old methods in use in frontier towns the Charleston (S. C.) Courier (Dem. finds "utterly amaaing." With this the Brooklyn Eagle Ind. Dem.) contrasts the picture which Chi cago presents ; "No unsolved murders in a month ; no payroll holdups in six weeks ; a record-breaking series of ar rests and convictions for strong-arm crimes," all as the result of the policy of the new police commissioner, who believes that "a police . force - is pri marily an agency for the prevention of crime rather than an agency ,.' for the detection of crime after it has been committed." His order to shoot to kill when resisted is, in the opinion of the Rochester ; Democrat and 'Chronicle (Rep.), a "lawless method too much like a return to the crude system of jus tice of the frontier towns where the rule was to hang men first and try them afterward." To this the Eagle makes unequivocal reply : "if is not It is meeting lawlessness with law, the sort of law that the criminal best under stands and most readily respects." - THE STORY OF IRISH POPLIN ' ... From the Johnstown (Pa.) Democrat Irish i poplins were once I a popular weave. This is the way poplins came Into existence. Once upon aitlrne there were a great many Spanish tin Ireland. The descendants o these Spaniards man- aged to work- tip i quite a business m weaving silk. The British parliament passed a law forbidding the) Irish to ex port sllx.; The sons or n.rm wtu uc.ci opel quite a woolen lndwstry. Irish woolens were marketed on. the continent. British spinners protested and the Brit ish parliamenUpassed a lajr forbidding the. Irish to export, woolen gooas. Irish sninners then got-together ana thought out the DODlin scheme. They mixed wool and silk, . thus j evading the British statutes. And then! aa a result of various restrictions the i Irish poplin manufacturers were legislated out of, ex istence. t I All this indicates that there are eco nomic causes back! of the age-long dis agreement between! England and Ireland, England is a manufacturing nation. One of her requirements Is cheap food. The Englishman has always ratner ranciea that it was Ireland's business to serve as a truck garden for Liverpool and Manchester. ' Ireland, on the other hand, has always cherished the notion. that she too had a talent for manufacture. England has steadfastly refused to permit Ireland to become in any way her rival in tne in dustrial world. Back of racial antipathy there has , been ah industrial struggle that has been engendering bitterness for 250 years. ' Communications seat to Tha Journal for publication in thla department ahonld bs written on only one aide of the paper; should not axeaea 800 words in length, ind mast bo simed by tha writer, whosa msil addrasa In full must atcOsB- pany tha contribution. ) : PEOPLE'S RIGHTS PARAMOUNT Capital and Labor Should Bow to These ; New Deals All Around Demanded. " Troutlake, Wash., Jan. 4. To the .Editor of The Journal Many people be come "weepers" because of the loss to labor in wages through strikes, and because of labor's unholy demand for closed shop. They make no reference to the loss in wages through capital's striking, nor to the fact that the organ izations of capital I are equal to a closed t hop. j Allowing that unions and strikes have helped labor, the fact still remains- that they are still working for their board and telothep. The American- people, whom the In dustries are supposed to serve, have rights and are tired of looking on and suffering while capital and labor quarrel ever a division of the profits. -And if the parties directly interested cannot de vise some way of peacefully , settling their difficulties, tie people should com pel lawful arbitration. If the form of arbitration is unjust It will be to the interest of all to I vote right and .send men to our legislatures .who will enact just laws. We also read complaints of "labor loafing on the jobi." Why not stop the big leaks first? Ljabo'r as a mass, pro duces all, and does sot receive full pay for what it produces ; while capital, that cannot produce, is overpaid. The power of creating artificial values to rob the people dan and must be taken out of the hands of the few, giving sup ply and demand k chance to function. Government ownership of some of our industries is absolutely necessary, espe dally when trusts are able to supplant the power of the people. - If one eonsidersj the industries which either city, state of national government now owns or pretends to control, he realizes that we are more than drifting toward a condition we perhaps do not want. CM. Cutting. TO REDUCE DEATH TOLL Compel Drivers f Cars to Qualify; Lower the Speed Limit Hood' River, Janl . To the Editor of The Journal One of. the greatest ques tions before the American people today- is how to prevent the wholesale destruc tion of people by automobiles. I have carefully scanned he editorials of many of the .leading journals, including" the pregon Journal, but I cannot find the answer. Please allow me to propound a question or twoJ why are autos al lowed to run through 'our streets at the speed of 20 miles an hour when railroad trains must slow down to six miles an hour? I suppose it is because, there is danger of smashing up a few cars by the railroad cars that just must get over the railroad ; while on the other hand. trains of autos, many times in charge of incom Detent drivers, are allowed to speed through the crowded streets of our cities at the breakneck speed of 15 to 20 miles an hour, regardless of the conse quences, turning blind corners, etc. " I suppose it is because there is supposed to be nothing in -the way .of the automobile to smash up except some belated pedes trian who Is too poor to own a car and must walk, and ydu know It costs less to bury a man than! it does to buy a 'new car. I have arrived at the conclusion that if we ever nut a stop to this wholesale slaughter two very important measures must ; be adopted. One is to allow no person to run an automobile on the streets unless such person can ' pass a rigid examination ; also, we must reduce the speed to seven miles an hour in our crowded streets, 10j in the outlying dis tricts and 25 on the county roads. Why be In such! a desperate hurry? What would happen to a man who at tempted to drive a team of horses through the streets! at 20 miles an hour? In the outskirs of our city signs are tacked up which read, "Slow down to 20 miles an hour and shut off exhausts.1 Half the time no attention is paid to the notice. Now this speed mania is a form of insanity and unless It is curbed will work much harm. As I view the matter, the first thing to be done is to cut down the speed, and cut deep. John B. Polk. 'Curious Bits of Information Gleaned From Curious Places The jerboa, a strange little animal that lives In Africaj looks like a tiny kanga roo and belongs to the same, family as the rat, is called the . cleanest - animal there is. This little fellow spends most of his time washing himself, yet no wa. ter is used. The jerboa digs a trench in the clean sand and rolls over and over; When he Is cleaning his stomach he is rolled up like; a ball and he twists odd shapes to reach himself into many his back. No matter what his position. he never falls over. Olden Oregon Scenla Wonder Iri Josephine County " Discovered, in 1874. . The marble caves! In Josephine county were discovered in 1874 by Elijah David son, who was following a bear which he had wounded. (In 1913, because of their scientific interest, they were set aside by the national government as a government reserve. In the reserve are embraced 420 acresj f ? , Uncle . Jeff fBnow Says : r Down to Portland! the mayor has tuck over the job of chief of all the cops. Ma has wrote -him a letter . askin him to please put in jail all the crazy folks that crosses the streets jaywalkin and all that crosses right in front ' of traffic when the-cop in the center , with a lan tern on a little pole tells the auto folks to go ahead. She tSffers him a loan of our barn and hop Shed fer jails if the city Auditorium gits too full and the city hall is all occupied by officers who can't workin the rain.- , - ' - ' .:"' Letters From the People ; 1' "' COMMENT AND SMALL CHANQE ZAf-ASt Sir tr V.. nl.i.. I.LA.. numbers in New York. Indicating, per- Pittsburg Dispatch. , f A ?mfntae jtMl,.u i i . . keep their political pledges. As . weU. perhaps, as -they keep the promise to obey. Worcester Gazette. Althousrta thv T1 ,nJ.,L. i -I- 'a act alike, some secretaries of state are more important than others, the same as buttons. Kansas City Star. - . - " , Craruao'si rinotnra Kli l--- ti -will confine him to his room for a. period." In some cases a period means ' enii ci.it. j.i-ui. v-t . i e a The lfllmhv rtf lunnv celved from friends this year indicates uia.t. Bumauiuig nas lowered tne Amer ican standard of giving. Baltimore Sun. TCf Tl folmri laA la4 a.lu Harvard cast 965 ballots in a class elec tion, which suggests that the intellec tuals may yet control this country. Omaha Bee. - - . Lots of people who complain that they are not slIIawjmI a h,,. ...v. i. ... brandy for Christmas pies and puddings wouldn't waste a drop of it on pies and ruiiuiuii n , uicy naa lu XM asnvuie Banner. a Recently a sailor's life) was saved by the fact that eight pennies, which he had In nl TwtflrtVtftMr v v..i let. - Five for saving his life, we nre- sume, and three for the luxury tax. wviuuiuia to. oiate. MORE OR LESS PERSONAL Random B. H. Grady. S. S. taxkin. D. H. Clark. John McTaggart ahd W. R. Cook. all of Madras, were in Portland to tell the drainage and irrigation ; delegates about the needs of their community for water, and Incidentally to buttonhole a few legislators and tell jthem where to head in. . a John Bozarth, formerly of Salem, where he was associated with his brother, Scott Bozarth, but, now of Bay city, wnere he is a banker and realtor. is at the. Oregon. Eugene people who - are visiting In Portland are T. C. Luekey. Mrs. W. W. Branstetter, Mrs. Frank Hampton and T. N. Shumway. S. L. Brooks of Imbler, pioneer resi dent of Union county, is a guest at the Seward. Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Wiggins, well known residents of Exchange street, As toria, are at the Seward. William C. Orcutt of Ontario and David 'Stoddard of La Grande are at the Multnomah. Charles E. Gray of Rock Point and G. W. Jacobs of Foots Creek, register lng from Gold Hill, are at the Oregon. H. C." Tapping of Culver Is a guest at the Multnomah. H. R. Nugent of White Bluffs is Portland visitor. ' L. C. Seward. Murray of Salem is at the H. E. 'Johnson, from the county seat of Morrow county, is a Portland visitor. a - a A. Madden, a stockman - from Con don, is at the Seward. . Frank R. Prince of Bend is spending few weeks in Portland. ' ; Mrs. J. A. Fulton and children of Albany are Portland visitors.; : Mr. and Mrs. Don Ssreant of La Grande are at the Imperial. ; H. C. Jerome of Medford is a Port land visitor. a a Mrs. S. D. Willis of Roseburg is visit ing Portland relatives. a , a a Captain A. W. Gowan, attorney of Burns, is at the Oregon D. S. R. Walker, real estate man of Eugene, is at the Orego n a . J. J. Bryan of Springfield Is a Portland visitor. I- a ' L. H. Compton. super ir tendent of the Oregon penitentiary, is ai the Benson. a . -a T. L. Quinn of Prlneyille is registered at the Benson.. .1 k a ' a A. B. Cornell of Gra Pass is a guest at the Imperial. OBSERVATIONS AND IMPRESSIONS , OF THE JOURNAL MAN By Fred Tha funny thins stenographers write with out tha slishteet intention to be fnnny occupy Mr. Loci ley for a little while, and then ha eoea on at a great rata oa Ms own account, lattice the uipa fall where they may. Some time ago I dictated a story to a temporary stenographer. The result of her efforts was appalling. As gently as X could I pointed out to her that what she had written but faintly re sembled what I had dictated. S She said, "Yes. I fixed it up for you the way it should be. The business college where I went to school said whenever we took dictation from ignorant people - we should correct what they dictated ; so I did." ! j ' Out of the mouths of babes and suck lings you occasionally receive wisdom; as, for example, when the attorney in dictating' a letter to an associate as to the amount of the fees they should -charge dictated: -Fees are the sinews tf war." The high-heeled, pompadoured young lady who took the notes wrote It: "Fees are the sinners' reward." It was probably (he same young lady who in writing about a pending claim wrote: We want the matter infunacuatly set tled." What she probably meant was "amicably settled." It was a Florida lawyer who In writ ing about interim certificates and the validation of bonds dictated : i "We will place these papers In escrow.", "What stater Inquired the stenographer ; "Escrow, Florida?" 'Another stenographer who had failed to acquire a literary flavor wrote : "Let the goaded jay wince; our feathers are unrung." ' "' ' i "t:V. Let no one think the legal profession has no humor In it. E. T- Grunden of Parks, Neb.; In a- recent letter to - the Docket sent the following! which is an exact copy of a contract filed in West ern Nebraska: - . ;.'f- ; '- : ' Parks Nebr. May the 13 No all parties by these (Presents that I do .this day .Sal my, (wife, nevada Burkhart, as we can not agree to gather. And we Have Made agreement for Her to go with James Hudson and I will get Her a Devorce as Soon as Possible And I want her to MarriS James Hud son As soon as Possible.! This is the Agreement Between all of Parties. j George Burkhart - his X mark Mrs. Nevada Burkhart ' - James Hudson . i Witness C. F. Gilbert ' Witness Winfleld Scott. 1 Mr. Judge let this' woman get married at any time She wishes as I Have Sat Her free An She will i never be bothered by me. r George Burkhart his X mark . E. E. Brodle, well known newspaper NEWS IN BRIEF SIDELIGHTS - D'Annunzio may have been "hungry for martyrdom," as he declared, but the Flume population preferred something to eat. Albat y Democrat. "Oregon Nuts in I Jeopardy," says a headline in a Salem paper. Someone must be planning a raid on the institu tions down there. Eugene Register. Many a wife-is selected nowadays for her ability to fox trot, but unfortunately fox trotting doesn't come in handy be fore the kitchen stove. Crane American. Remarkable Increases In the sales of cracked corn and prunes are "reported and the police are baffled to understand what they are doing with it Medford juau-Tr-ibune. r - . a " . If Baker is to have a reign of holdups, then arm yourself and go gunning. The holdup has no respect for human life and the sooner he is put out of existence the better. Baker Democrat. . . . a a A Kansas City robber who stole 40 cents from a drug store he had burglar ised was given a 25-year prison sentence : at times it almost seems like the less a man steals the heavier his punishment. Pendleton East OregonUn. r The initial success of the Salem Symphony orchestra was enhanced at Sunday's concert, proving that Salem has musical talent possessed by few cities of its size, and that all that Is es sential to perfect a permanent organisa tion that will be a source of much pleas ure in the future is public encourage ment through generous patronage. Sa lem uaptM-Journai. , . Observations About Town Out of town people who attended the sixth annual meeting of the Oregon State Drainage,assoclatlon at the Chamber of Commerce are W. L. Powers of Cor vallis, who is acting secretary of the association; Ward Cretchle, J. W. Cun ningham and James T. Jordlne, also of Corvalhs: Percy Cupper, state engineer; W. E. Wilson of Salem, T. E. Armstrong of Gaston, E. E. Riley of Oregon City. J. D. Brown of Houlton. W. L. Benham of Bugene, Harry Gard of: Madras, A E. Harris of Brooks, . Alphonso Aya of the Swift diking project and his brother, Alfred A. Aya from La Pine; Thomas Flippen of St. Helens and.E. A. Geary of Klamath Falls, i . a - a "Mrs. Jay Upton and Jay Upton, Prineville, Oregon," is the way it ap pears on the. register of the Hotel Ben son. Mr. Upton can qualify as a model husband, for nine men out of 10 register. "Mr. Soandso and wife," as though their wives were part .and parcel of -their goods and chattels. i a Professor George . Tumbull of the school of journalism at the state - unl versity is in town for a day or two to visit his fellow journalists on the Port' land dailies. ! a a a - David Little of Astoria is in Port land, his chief pursuit being to locate John Gratke, who, he claims. Is more elusive than any flea ever could be. , - -, . a . a, C. W McTlnnald. m-esldent of the Jack son County bank of Medford, has been In Portland for a week or 10 days on business.1 .' a a Herman Wise, , as witty and wise and smiling as ever, Js up from iastorla, and is a guest at the Imperfal. A. Baldwin, D. B. Snyder and T. D. Barclay, all of Pendleton, are guests of the Multnomah, . ... s . -a . a ! a . . , Thomas Murray Spencer, cigar sales man and -known as "the Montana poet, is at the Portland. V .. - - a - liss Elisabeth Benedict, a nurse at Mercy hospital, Roseburg, is spending a few days In Portland visiting friends. a a a Fred McKay of Prairie City, a veteran ot the world war and wounded in France, is "a, Portland visitor. 1 : a. . . - . , Prineville visitors in Portland Include Carl C. Hyde, Guy Lafolletts and Donald Graham. a . W. El Meacharn of Baker Is a Port land .visitor. t a , a a Lloyd Riches of, all over Oregon, but at present of Vale, is at the Imperial. : a - Fred N. Wallace of Turaalo is a Port land visitor. a a - a Mr. and Mrs. Wl H. Hobson of The Dalles are at the IraperiaL .a a a W. H. Oxley of Baker Is taking in the sights of Portland, j Lock! ay man? of Oregon City, has decided to take up horticulture. It is reported he Is assiduously cultivating the plum tree at present. Reports are that there will be a very short crop of "plums" south of Mason and Dixon's line, where the crop has been abundant for the past few years. ; , - .- a . a a With briquets at $20 a ton most of us are strong for Jay Stevens and his fire prevention policies. - a Local markets have reindeer meat for sale. - Savarin A Co. recently shipped 250 reindeer from Nome to be sold in Portland. We have become so accus tomed ' to buying dear meat that deer meat should find ready sale. - . a N "Turkey's demands .- are excessive," reads a dispatch -from Athena. With turkey at 75 cents a pound here In Port land it seems that we could say "Ditto." a-- Mayor Baker is going to put teeth In law enforcement in Portland. Let us hope they will be wisdom teeth. Someone was telling me the other day of a little girl who was taking her first trip on a. train. Her mother gave her her ticket with Instructions to give it to the conductor when he came through. Presently the conductor opened the door and called, "Tickets V The little girl handed him her ticket when he came by. A moment or so later the' news butcher : entered the car and called. "Chewing gurri !" With a look of dis tress on her face the little girl turned to her mother and said, "Do I have to give him my chewing gum?" They say "a certain frenxied financier who at present is looking the picture of dejection claims he has been framed. a . The public is having its Inning, for the profiteers, with' their overcharges, are: now under charges. r They say that a Portland policeman In testifying- In the trial of a welt known citizen for speeding said: "The ma chine was going pretty fast but it wasn't as fast as the bunch in the machine." a . a The Lawyer and Banker tells of a colored woman who visited the probate judge and said : "Is you-all de reperbate Judge?" "I am the judge of probate, mammy. "I'M corns to- you-all . 'cause I'se In t rubble, Mah ' man he's dons died de tested and I'se got t'ree little infidels so I'se cum to be app'inted delr exeeoo-tloner." The i Oregon Country Northwest llapenlnn'fn Brief Form for tha ii Busy lteader h j OREGON NOTES A cfvjl service! examination will be held at Rainier to select a postmaster at a salary of JI300. j Mrs. Sarat Anrl Caldwell, who crossed the plains to Oregon with her parents in 1848. is dead at ijoncalla. aged 93 years. The Dallas citjf schools are closed on account of an ..epidemic of scarlet fever which has been raging for several, weeks.-. ...- j , - The new mill lf the Willamette Val ley Lumber corrjpany at Dallas com menced worl this week with a full crew of men. ! Clackamaj eouritv v'iH nn4 $443,673 for jthe construction of the Pa cific highway from the Multnomah to the Marlon, county lire. . The Uniotf county court has let tha contract fo the grading of aPDroxi- mately 10 milesj of roud from Lyon's hill to Medical. Springs, Lake county farmers last year con structed eight silos and filled them with sunflowers, t In every case tha builders pronounced them i a success. . According I tO the stats eame warden. a total of 6850 deer were killed in Ore gon during the list season. In Douglas county alone 1500 were killed. Hlllsboro I erarlire. Pttrnni nt Tins. bandry. is Imaklng great preparations for the celebration of Its forty-seventh anniversary on Friday, January 14. The body !of a man known as Eeker. man was foiund hanging at Newnort br Lester Martin d Johii Shermer. Kck- erman had $900 uieDanK and o in nui pockets. I There are 47 plants in Ore go years ago. j Ne 423 were dstro of operation. more manufacturing thanl. there were two plants total 898, but ed byi fire or are out Two million Salmon ea-ea rollarttul for the Rogue t'ver by the state fish and game commission recently, hatched on the wayjand Were sent to a hatchery on Coos bky. i The Klamath county court has in cluded in Its bbdget $50,000 for com- Diction oi ine oi springs courthouse, ignoring anl injunction, issued bv Jnrie-a Calkina of Medfbrd. William B. Hall, a hrakaman wtin . Injured in the (train j wreck at Union Junction August 15, has filed suit against the! O-W. R. & N. company to recover JoO.pOO damages. The Hammond Lumber company Is preparing to construct 16 miles of rail road iri the! Crabtree vicinitv to tan the company's holdings there. There is suf ncient timoer td keep! a force busy for one year. WASHINGTON The stats has1 surchased the 888.000 worm or ponds (issued by the Richland irrigation ajBtriqc . I Spokane ounty has collected 311.S00 In fines fri motor vehicle law violat- ors in the ast year." j Yakima countv during the Taxes in coming yeir ttal 83,055,773. an in crease of 8888,433 over a year ago. Since 190 the county of Clallam baa paid Xhounties Ion 1993 wildcats, 25$ cougars, 27jtlmber wolves and 2 lynx. A total of 83:27.80 iwaa cleared dur ing the lasf year by 14 members of the Felida Botfs' and Girls' Agricultural C1UDS. 1 - Charles W. Ccile of the business' fir of Cole . All Dirtgmam has disappeared from -Pascol taking all the funds of the firm with him. j j . - . Ross Corle has closed a contract -with J,- H. Louoks td haul 8,000.000 feet of white pine lumber from the Loucka mill 9 mies Mi to Colville. George Smitley, secretary of the Ts coma lodge of Elks, is a likely con tender for the poatmastership of Ta coma undei President Harding. A still arid 10D gallons of mash were discovered pn the Cleghorn farm, north of Davenpoirt, ahd W. A. Cleghorn was arrested and fined J99 and coats. In futuH ! all! cases of mental de rangement of disabled ex-service men in the Northwest will be cared for at the westerri hospital for the insane at Stellacoom. - At a meeting In Spokane Wednesday the going wage for all millhands where the Loyal Legion of Loggers and Lum bermen is I organised was reduced 10 cents an hour. . - The Loykl Legion of Loggers and Lumbermen! an organisation of workers In the timber industry, has extended its -scope by purchasing the Aberdeen general hospital for 840,000. 8. D. Tirultt, a ifarmer of Adams county, states that !on his ranch ex cellent oil indications had been struck at a depth Of 164 feet- A short distanc away a new hale developed strong in dications ot gasL Walla Walla merchants are warned to be careful about accepting checks and $20 federal reserve notes. One merchant accepted $2.50 worth of worth less checks! - an three reserve notem raised f roml $i tjo 20 have been .founds I IDAHO ' The state Band commissioner Is asking an annual appropriation of $40,000 for forest fire prevention), Almost $800,00 waS paid out during the year to xndivijdual Indians of the Nez Perce Indian agencyi a much greater sum than that J any) previous year. Idaho farriers look a long step toward the problem! of fthe small flock owner when, during 1910 and 120, they pooled 200.131,000 poundi of wool and marketed More thai $2,500,000 worth of farm r.t,.ntm J llvatnlc were shl DDed from Buhl iver the branch railroad of the Oregon phor : Line during the year lust ended. I i M. E. Parks aind his son, 2 years of age, were iperhaps fatally burned at Olenn's Ferry Wednesday morning when a can of gMoIlrie exploded, destroying the house and contents. Harold Trjiomas Roberts, a Boise real estate man,! Is dead as the result of a mrninl rpi-AvrA i front a 22-calibre re volver he was eiamlrtlng. Roberta was not aware the gtm was loaded. The Idahril legislature, in Joint session, has unanimously indorsed Governor Davis for appointment as secretary of the interiori The joint action came lm mediaMly after Goverpor Davis nead his message. f i A prehistoric mastodon's tusk, six feet long and 24 Inches in i diameter, the gift of f. N. M. Caskat of Katxebere, Alaska, is the latt addition Ito the exhibUs of the geological departpnent of the Uni versity of Idaho.i I know youi PORTLAND Whenever people pay freight going ,and coming on the Same'article they also pay the wages! and profits In volved In rnanufacture elsrwhere. Portland! Is a port of export for juniper woody The little Juniper trees grow thickly in j Interior Oregon. They arei shipped In the form of cordwood t Japan. The clever work ers of Japan reduce) them first into pencil slats and then Into lead pencils The pencils are picked into pack ages, bundles and bales and, doubt less, shipped back I into Deschutes county or jprook county, whose the juniper trejes growi Osily a " little Imagination! Is tequlred, further, to see Bend business men figuring the juniper wood wiith the pencils or the Redmond, school ohildren writing essays on the Juniper with these pen cils. .-. f . The storyt has ften been told about the difference irti value of a' pound of steel and the same weight in watch springs., - the (difference isn't no great, natwrall-f, between juniper trees and Juniper wood lead pencils. But if it l is profitable to take the wood to Japan and jback again and pay the. freight, wouldn't It be more profitable td make lead pencils locally and thus create janorher home indus try? We mtght feven sell lead pencils to Japan, rather than the wood to make them off. I " I : - 8'