The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, November 11, 1921, Page 12, Image 12

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    12
THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND. OREGON
I FRIDAYS NOVEMBER ,11, IS2L '
JACkSOtt..., . ... PubUabei
IW oelsa. be confidant, be eberrfel asm
sthsf as to would bar U do mmu
fiMM erwry weekday end So ads bsotbJb
at tm titml awi hubs'. nun eaa isas-
hi" . Portland. Orrym.
ataierew M Uw poXlira at Porthvad. Orwa,
. for trsmmusie U reach the ill as ascoad
riM miff.
f fciJ-riiONK 71 Tt. AtlU.a.CM 6S0-& 1 .
All rtyrtmwrtd rsHed by thfe snmbcrs.
kTI.Nl, ALVKTII.Ni RKFEMENTA-
- T1V It , Bewtsssra KMHt (a. Brtin--
baodiag. 21 Klflh imot, . Krw Tart; 00
a;ii; coast hehkmk.xtative w. k.
Beranger Co.. KaeeilneT baildiag. Saa Krsn-
r ewe: Tl( insaraaos tmnamc, La
. T M-IMII! mm tmiMtne. Heattl.
THK OUKIMN JUl'tUiAL,
aMsi itlMMbhk It els
k.t i m tsinlafe ramdintf But.
' Ur er that cannot readily be recognised at
erres the right
enpy which It an
will Dot print a ry
S1TMWf,
f RMCR1PTION RATES
S Br Carrier. City and. Country.
7 IlAII.T AMD SO DAY
Dm week I .14 I On month .
V uaixt I HL'MDAT
rwMb. :....$ .16 I On wet f .OS
ftae aHMith 4. I
2 II aUIU 1U. HATE PATARMC IN ADTA'CX
Z DAFI.T AND UDAT
r
aT Am mt 1 00
n la aontha. . . . 1.2 J
' (Without laivlar)
J Onm year Ifl.ftO
Sts SSoetlUL .... A. J a
Thraa anaths. . 176
vmm wivnin vu
i WKCTCI.T I
, llery Wednesday) f
One year IIM
. Its arntha ... .50 1
T" These reUa aroW Mil la the Wait.
Rafw U !nni pMnU (arnioharl nn tpilra
v -an, Mi mnltunraa b Money Orrlnr. K.l-
trwa Order or Imf L If ynar pmtoffirc U not
a avwMTsrdrr nffira. 1 ar 2-orat BtamtM will
V bw aarawud. MaJi all rtmillum parablr to
2 TV Joaraal rubU ling Inaptl;, l-oruaoa.
; OnfW.
n j
Thraa nonUu. . .13 J J
Ooa avmLh tS
SUXDAT
(Only)
Ona yar $1.00
Rli months. . . . : l.TS
Thraa aoeilu. . . 1.04
WFKKI.T AND
SUNDAY
Oaa year IJ.SO
sboold take root in America? ' Ad- -ikop ration on a-11 -foot cobra after
ocacy of It is a polite form of urging It had Dearly killed three other men
confiscation of property. If you who attempted the , job,, may -.enjoy
have not, runs the theory, then vote
for- whatever you want and make
those who have taxable property pay
for It. ,
This Is going farther than the Non
partisan league ever went, yet those
who are making: the class-prejudice
argument shriek at the Non-partisan
league.
The Journal thinks the exposition
tax should be voted, but not on any
untruthful representation that only
a few will pay the bill. ,
And not through rotten appeals to
class prejudice. . .
his work. But there are a lot of
people who would , rather clean the
streets for a living, with an occa
sional hour, in the sunshine on the
banks of the old swimming hole.
TEXAS WONDERS
WHAT IS THE ANSWER?
Tb pcanlas af Ua world waot paca nd
ViV l It taw, not marrl by rnoqnMt at
arma, bnt by a(rwDMt of aind. Wood
raw Wllwia. .
HIS DAY
J -
, TtVJDAY the eontrlbutlon to the
1 world of our war veterans and
H tketr heroic deeds will be painted and
2 prslned from platform" and press.
g Their bravery, their gallantry, their
j warrlflces, thefTiard-hlpii their suf
j fsrlnga and their glorious service to
s mankind will be reviewed and glow-
lng tribute paid the veterans. This
5 day is their day, and is given over to
national and International tribute to
those who fought and died that the
world might live in freedom, liberty,
prosperity, and peace.
But today, while-e word. of
praise are spoken and written, there
are ex-service men, mutilated by
war. suffering from improper medi-
cat attention. They are suffering
from lack of quarters.
in There are veterans suffering In
want. There ..are veterans hungry
z? veterans without homes and vet-
2 rant families foregoing many of
S the tecessarles of life. Nine hundred
? thoanand veterans are walking the
2 streets In quest of employment
' rina rla V v-Uren Inmne tr K I a
death from a hospital. Another day
a veteran shoots himself to death
Another day a veteran dies in want.
Another day there are reports of ill
'-treatment of veterans In hospitals or
otherwhere
And where is the peace for which
INDEED it is time that the United
States government investigsKe and
Investigate thoroughly the activities
of American railroads in aiding for
eign shipping companies to sweep the
American merchant marine from the
seas. Senator La Follette has called
for an investigation. Senator Jones
asks that the government enforce the
Jones act. And the public "wants to
see a prosperous and healthy mer
chant marine on the oceans. .-'
Senator Ransdell of Louisiana
charges that the railroads have en
tered into contracts with foreign
shipping concerns to secure freight
for foreign Shipping companies to the
exclusion of others.' Senator Jones
makes the same charge. Senator
Ransdell says free freight handling Is
provided the foreign lines. Senator
Jones says the same thing. Both
maintain that American railroads are
providing free and exclusive use of
piers and warehouses to foreign ship
ping Interests and that they have
promised to use their influence in
securing exemption for foreign ships
from local taxation and port dues.
The senators who make the charges
are responsible men. Documents on
file with the interstate commerce
commission tend to substantiate their
claims. The records of American
railroads in the past certainly would
not wuggest that such a status Is im
possible.
Certainly the railroads are put in
unique and unseemly position If
the charges are substantiated. On
the one hand they are asking the
support of the public to beat down
the wages of railroad employes.
They are asking and are apparently
to receive financial support from the
people through the government on
flimsy claims. And on the other
hand they are accused of being in
league with foreign shipping inter
ests in an effort to drive the people's
ships from the seas and thereby force
upon the people a loss of $4,0Jo,050,-
000 spent in building vessels. And
if they succeed how are the people
whose aid they are asking and Whose
ships they are charged with fighting
to fare in the matter of freight and
passenger rates?
What does the government think
rpEXAS is a state of wonders.
Down there they grow fields
and fields of cotton. The oil re-
ources are extensive. Hospitality
is in high gear, the summers are hot
and negroes are there in abundance.
But of all the wonders of which
Texas can boast none is more un
usual than a certain Southern man.
Like other men, he is married.
Like some other men, he has a
mother-in-law. But, unlike most
other men, he has a strong affection
for the -mother of his wife.
The mother-in-law recently ar
rived in New York from Denmark
At the pier anxiously awaiting her
was the son-in-law. He had driven
all the way from Texas to New York
to greet his marital relative. He was
sorry to learn that she was only to
remain with his family for a year.
He had hoped that she would remain
in this country and at his house
forever.
But there is a reason for the
Texas .wonder man and his strong
affection for his mother-in-law. She
sums it up thus: "I never butt into
the affairs of my children."
Perhaps, after all, the real wonder
is the mother-in-law.
WHOSE IS THE
VICTORY? s
n
the veterans fought? What has be
come or the "war to end war"? Are
not the nations preparing their pot
son gases, building their battleships,
perfecting their fighting planes and
constructing bigger cannon than they
ever constructed before ? Has Amer
J lea herself not refused to join th
only organisation so far proposed to
end war? And has she so far offered
any substitute?
The service man completed a for
bidding task. He fought a glorious
fight in a glorious cause. He gave
all that was asked of him and more
I without quibble or question. Have
we given to him in the way he gave
to us? Are we evsn going to estab-
lish the status we told him' he was
J fighting for? If not, why not?
' i
It has been understood all along
jj that the War Finance corporation
1 was revived to helD the firman Tt
latest loan seems to be one of $1.
1)0.00 to the Portland Cattle Loan
company. Is that a loan for the
benefit of the farmers or for the
benefit of a loan company?
In the Railway Strike Matter the Edi
tors or America Award the Palm
Variously, but Public Opinion Has
Many Vote as the Power That '
Dictated -the End Brother- v
hoods Credited. With Sub
stantial Victory in One An-
alysis, Though Foes Con
tinue to ' Taunt Call
for a Stronger Law.
: -Dally Editorial Digest
(Conaolidated I-reaa Aaatioa)
Something flagged the plan for a rail
road strike just as it was fearing along
under a full head of steam, and it came
to a dead stop with scarcely any grind
ing or its wheels. What operated the
signal that read "Stop"? Did the men
realise that "they had embarked on n
impossible venture." as the Brooklyn
Eagie (Ind. Dem.) says, and that "a
public opinion overwhelmingly adverse
to their policy doomed a strike to dis
astrous defeat V Was the strike or
dered remanded because, as the Butte
Post (Rep.) thinks, "the simple truth
is that the chiefs of the brotherhoods
couldn't deliver the goods" end i "their
bluff was called," as the Portland Ore
gonan (Ind. Rep.) suggests? Or, can
the other hand, was it because, as a
number of papers believe, the men won
all they wanted and there was no need
to strike?
"Public opinion really compelled the
cancellation, of the strike order." de
clares the Boston Herald (Ind. Rep.)
and has, accordingly, "won a great mor
al victory," the Minneanolla Journal
(Ind. Rep.) adds. The position that the !
recall order was due entirely to the i
pressure of public opinion is held by
an impressive number oi papers. But
the question of where the victory lies is
answered- in various ways. The Colum-
: bia (S. C.) State (Dem.) believes that
There Is a certain inconsistency "for once the people are victorious In a
about the spectacle of the Oregon batUe royal for-their rights and inter
Dairymen's league going to Pieces ?rJf',an1d e Roanoke World News
, ,, . , H, , (Dem.) also finds that "the real winner
while the livestock exposition In tIxe public, the public which
XNorxn roruana presents ocular proof wouia nave been the worse loser in case
that the finest dairy animals in the of strike." The. brotherhoods "have
follows; - The nrdper number of figures,
designed from leather . by hand, were
mounted on rods .and projected on the
screen by the head of the operator.. The J
screen was a white cloth hung' between
the audience and the light The Shadows
were manipulated - by the operator's
pushing , the- manikins along In a
trough. As ' action advanced -through
climax and anti-climax, the operator re
cited in. a : singsong . voice five reel
dramas othe loves and wrongs of the
kings and queens represented. .
COAIjMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF , .
SMALL. CHANfiF. f SltJEI ir.HT
The Oregon Country
I Letters From the People I
- r - t . ; . i
world are to be found in the Northwest.
THE DAIRYMEN'S FIGHTING
CHANCE
capitulated bef orea rising tide of public
rury," the Peoria Transcript (Ind.) feels,
a "fiasco" which the Wheeling Intelll-
Igencer (Rep.) says "has given organised
laoor a black eye from which it will be
long recovering," a view entirely con
trary to' that held by the Lynchbure
. t, , , , . News (Dem.), which considers the fact
THE troubles which the Oregon "that the brotherhoods had the moral
-L Dairymen's Cooperative league is courage and nerve and patriotism to
experiencing today are the troubles meet the terms of their obligations to
Which the cooperative marketing or- the Public and the public interests is
ganizatlons of California experienced promed.2h """ and 8hUld be 80
In their first stages years ago. . . .
-Had the California cooperators While ;a number of papers feel with
given up in the face of trouble tne Charleston News and Courier (Dem)
and discouragement their later sue- i ?D1. .ln caiung off the etrike the
cesses and profits would have been ZZT,,"
impOSSlDie. I Visited uoon nreaniiwl lshnr In thl.
But they did not quit, and the co- country in many years," many editors
operative marketing organizations of view the outcome very differently The
California have become one of the ansmS (Mich.) State Journal (Ind.)
marvels of the world. kst.bl'y Motherhoods
The Oregon dairymen most need in this belief more Dositlvelv KtAterf la v,irt
meeting their crisis these things: by many. The issue was not. the Omaha
Courage. World Herald (Ind.) insists, the wage
SDeedv rendering of court docis- reduction of July 1. "It was the fear
ions in the litigation brought to test th! railroads we determined upon
the validity of contracts between the I reducuOIT fn"Vages would shorty be
league and its members. ordered, that led the- labor chiefs to
Support by business men and exercise their authority to call a strike."
ICaaaaroafca tieac Mat to Tha Journal foe
publication in this depart nt should ba writers
on only ona ida of the paper, should sot ri
eaad SOO word is lanarth. and most ba aimed
by tba. writer, wboae -tail addnaa ianfoU most
arrompaay tna coatribaaow. J (
SOME REMARKS ON TAXES
Writer Believes the Bonding Duainess
Has Been Overdone.
PrinevUle, Oct. 28. To the Editor of
The Journal Some of the Journal's edi
torials are certainly grand. Your edi
torials against taxation are rood, but
did not come soon enough. We have
already encumbered ourselves by bonding-for-one
thing and another, so that
we shall not see reasonable taxation for
the next 25 years. Much of it there is
no call for. Good roads were needed
but we have gone at it too ramnaeeoun-
ly and we are paying a high price for
what little we are getting. The soldiers'
bonus is another waste of money. I
cannot see where they have anything
coming to them, providing they were dis
charged in good health and were paid ln
full, also receiving the $60 bonus con
gress gave. Any soldier who had his
health injured or was maimed so he is
incapacitated is entitled to help and not
just a mere pittance, but enough so that
wiui-wnai ne can earn he can live In
comfort and -be able to lay up a little.
The loan feature of this bill is good, but
the cash feature is not. I heartily agree
with E. A. Linscott on this loan ques
tion. It certainly would be a good thing
If the -state would make this loan to
apply to all who wish to make homes
ior tnemseivcs. Why not get behind this
question and put it over? There are
many men with families who are paying
rent that, if thev Could art mnnev n
Uong terms, could and would build homes
ior themselves and stop paying rent. I
think this question has merit, and the
man who stayed at home and ate substi
tutes without a murmur is just as en
titled to the benefits of this law as those
who volunteered or were drafted, for,
with all the high wages that he got, he
had to bow to the will of the grafter.
Why not give us all a pension and
declare all days holidays and Sundays?
Square Dealing.
SMALL CHANGE
Wasn't. It ICurrla n w. riw nit n
bear so much about in the happy days
of long ago?
T "
Rail chiefs slain another Iimto raw
cut. Amputating the pay of the "chiefs"
w ot a men.
fcaa .
Whatever ma
he d never
partner for a flapper.
Coney. Island win walk on Oregon fir
n" oon aim on western money
to a large extent, no doubt.
a
may be -Etetnpsey's virtues,
make a graceful dandnx
Armifitta AiV ?.!. wt.v ...Aw
sentiment as only the memories of those
no ne in neroes graves can sanctify.
A good way to Insure the state of
matrimony la to apply generous quanti
ties or the golden advice of experience
and rub it in thoroughly.
A flower show concurrent with our
8tokJ8,ow .""rely is an exposition of
varied blessings, for which the spirit of
mortal may well be prood.
In America candidates "run" for con
gress. In Great Britain "they "stand"
for parliament. In . America it is the
people that stand for congress.
SIDELIGHTS
There Is a shortage of wood la the
valley. When ooa considers that ooa
bas to haul It all of five miles om Is not
surprised. Medford Mail-Tribune.
a a .
We hear there la atman employed at
the courthouse who does Doth lng but fill
ink wella.. Who has the job of distrib
uting chewing rum to the typists?
Roseburg News-Review.
;
We understand that there la a move
on foot among the Amalgsraated Holi
day Advocates union to : havs Thanks
giving corns every quarter Instead of
once a year. CoryalUs Oaseus-Times.
a
Idaho has also brought In a verdict
of guilty in a murder case ; tt rooks like
people are becoming so annoyed ever
murders that there Is sentiment In favor
of punishing those who slay. It Is ail
very brutal on the part of the law. of
course. renaietoa bast uregonian.
'
What has happened to the wnemolov
reent conference called by President
Harding? No one hears about it any
more. It has apparently died, raded
into thin mist and dissipated. Hailed
with much publicity at Its inception, the
conference has silently vanished. Tbe
uaiies i;nrontcie.
Now if that Washington conference
will only celehrate this da by making
disarmament the token of Armistice day
at butt
The budget committees provided bv
the legislature have done one thing, if
nothing more. They have attracted at
tention to budgets, and therein lie some
staggering Tacts. Payrolls or every
political unit nave mounted nKyrtigh and
InrrnuMl numbers nt emnlnvea in min
world we shall have, instances have been noticeable. La
Grande Ubeerver.
MORE OR LESS PERSONAL
Kwrthwaat Rappa-wxa ta riaf Fens Ut las
Random Observations About Town
of the situation ?
A gain of 20,429 in the circulation
of books by the Portland public li
brary is officially reported. A "great
demand for books on disarmament
is noted. With Oregon's federal tax
Increased from $1,000,000 a year to
$28,000,000 a year to pay war bills
and dreadnaught costs, it is high
time for people to, be reading and
pondering.
bankers.
A repledging of loyalty by dairy
men to their organization.
Broad, zealous leadership and ef
ficient administration.
And as a settlement has been made "on
the strength of the assurance of the
labor board that it will give the railway
workers a square deal," the Muskegon
Chronicle (Ind.) concludes that "the
real victors in the episode are the rail-
LIVESTOCK LIVELIHOOD
'TWENTY per cent of Chicago's
2,701,705 people, a number equal
to about twice the population of
Portland, depend for livelihood upon i minds.
A pledge of renewed loyalty should wa,y unions themselves." The position
be eiven not nnlv hv dalrvmpn who uken y the railway' labor board "is
v, !,,. v. v. tmar eui ior me unions,- me ADer-
are or who have been members of deen (s D ) World (Ind u gure
the league. It should fee given by the Minneapolis Tribune fRen.l holds
the dairymen who have stayed out- that "those who chose to do so may be
side their cooperative marketing "eve that the brotherhoods have suf
organization and who have re fered a defeat, but it is hardly possible
benefits of organization without 0-10 Tacl
the Richmond Times Dispatch (Dem.)
i sees it, the unions "stand triumphant on
the greater issue of receiving from some
authoritative source assurance that wage
reductions are a thing of the past." and
they 'go their way rejoicing, remind
ing their followers that twice within five
participating in it.
The day is not lost for the' dairy
men of Oregon. 1
Their form of cooperative organi
zation is based upon the widest ex
perience interpreted by the best
Their organization has the years thev have forced their rnvemmnt
the livestock Industry which centers express sanction of federal and state to capitulate, and the railroads, through
PLAY A SQUARE GAME
THERE continues to be In Tort
A land a claim that 10 per cent of
tne voters are non-taxpayers and
that only about 20 per cent will bear1
Portland's proportion of the cost of!
the HIS exposition.
The exposition management should
fJkl for thet line of-argument to be
dropped.. First; the contention Is not
true, Second. It Is an appeal to class
prejudWe.
! The exposition la too worthy an
! enterprise to be urged on the mls-
representation that but 20 per cent
J f the population will have to pay
for It, Everybody knows that every
renter and every consumer will help
pay for tt because of the shifting of
pert ef the taxes to him la rent he
pays or goods he consumea
Again, the exposition Is too well
grounded on reason for arguments
te be made for It through appeals to
class prejudice. This argument Is
that the have-nots should rote for it
because the haves will be forced to
pay the bin.
t What If that kind of argument
ln the Windy City.
In Denver, when business is dull
est, the-annual livestock exhibition
makes its stimulating influence felt
ln every store and Industry.
Naturally there is no lack of ap
preciation in either Denver or Chi
cago of the importance of the live
stock industry.
Nor is there less appreciation in
Kansas City and Omaha. '
Visitors who come part way across
the continent to attend the Pacific
International Livestock exposition in
Portland expect to find a correspond-
1 lng sentiment here. As a matter of
fact they do, except that more ex
perience and information are neces
sary In order to gjye the sentiment
entire unanimity.
The Pacific International Live
stock, exposition is not so old as the
Chicago International Livestock ex
position. But even in its youth the
Northwest's show It Portland covers
10 acres, as compared with Chicago's
three. Even now the dairy cattle
exhibits surpass all others in the
world in siae and Importance. Even
now the beef cattle, poultry, sheep
and swine exhibits take front rank
among all livestock exhibitions.
All of this means that the North
west Is p'ressing forward to interna
tional leadership in livestock produc
tion. It means that we are ratohtno-
up with and passing the Middle West
and the Southwest in, at least, the
quality of our dairy stock.
Translated Into the terms of indi
vidual farms, it means agricultural
success and. prosperity. Farm fail
ures do not occur where purebred
livestock Is produced.
Translated Into the terms of cities,
the Northwest's remarkable progress
in livestock production means the
feeding of urban communities by
their hinterlands and the prosperity
of the towns in proportion to the
prosperity of the country.
The livestock exposition ln North
Portland startles3 the observer with
its immense six, extent and variety.
But l Is no less startling in the magi
nitude of the resource which It rep
law.
Public
government intervention, to yield."
fiontlmAnt snnnnrta ia
. , . . ' , . nowever, a very suDStanuai Claim ior
u,iuc .11 uBflilH. to se- the laurels of victory can be filed by
cure a. xair enure ui ie vaiue oi the railway labor board, in the opinion
their product. , ; - "of . the majority of the press. "The
If the dairymen through the" di- triumph of a sound principle and a just
rectorate of the 'Dairymen's league 5!icy wafT w9n;" the Adrian? (Mich.)
t , ,rtTOT. . ,K, . Telegram (Ind.) feels, "when the author
decide to go forward they can-.capi- ity of thc rauWay labor board was vin-
iaiize impending laiiure ana trans- dicated," and, "in the final analysis.'
ionn it into tne quality of success the Buffalo Times (Dem.) thinks "the
won by California cooperators. result is a triumph for arbitration." We
They can defeat th hostile agen- are workin toward a time, the Cin-
cies whose undermining influence .is
cinnati Times Star (Rep.) says, "when
a ppnprnl rail rrvj A str-HcA will ha fmnsto.
visible in the very proposals for the 8ible, but if we are not to have strikes
disruption of the league. . we must have governmental machinery
which will provide for hearings and the
KptTlpmenr rt ffiRrmt.n wlthmit industrial
THE UNIVERSAL SEARCH warfare." In ita haudlin of the recent
crisis the railway labor board has
SPEAKS FOR TR,UCK OWNERS
Charging That Load Limit Is a Hard
ship on Them ; Also on Producers
Portland. Nov. S.-To the Editor of
The Journal I write relative . to the
dilemma of the truck owners who are
handling livestock, becauaa
known interest ln the welfare of pro
ducers. The state of Oregon has
lawauiea iortn upon a 1100,000,000 hard
f"" roaa-Dunaing campaign. Mil
lions have been spent and hundreds of
miles of roadway have been built. Oppo
nents call them scenic highways- the
sponsors call them market roads. On
une weory mat they are market roads,
voters have approved them. But there
Is a big question now as to whether they
are market roads or highways. Five
years ago receipts by wagon and truck
"ockyarda svere very small, but
with the Increase in mileage of paved
, , " c"-c''la naye increased beyond
all dreams of the sponsors. Hogs, cat
Ueand sheep come from beyond Hood
River and The Dalles ln increasing num-
Is anJ theTe ,a 001 a section in the
whole Willamette valley that is not rep-
co.ccu uauy, or was until recently.
Now we find them checked by state and
county, officials who ,'aay our pave-
ra .won 1 stana the traffic. A big
fleet of trucks here at the stockyards
which serves the country hv troint- nt
for livestock from the farms and which
renaers a liKe service to numerous small
itinera oy irucaing purchases out, is
practically tied up. Their trucks are
equipped to carry efwht cattle hnr .mH
the regulations the farmer who wants
to take advantage of the market and
tne market road can't do it Officials
say the pavement won't stand the load.
Perhaps it won't. And If it won't ir
a good time to find out all about it
right now. One thing is evident: the
concrete pavement from the Interstate
fill to the stockyards will stand any
load on any truck that runs. What's
tne matter with the rest of them?
Freight rates are prohibitive and the
trucks are just about to solve the prob
lem. Is this regulation a discrimina
tion against the farmer, and for the
railroad? Or is it true that our pave
ment won t stand up? If it is discrimi
nation we ask you on behalf of the
farmer to help remove it If the pave
ment won't stand up. we ask you on be-
nair or ail of us to help turn on the
light The failure of the big trucks to
carry maximum loads in to market is a
severe blow to farmers in the first in
stance. And the failure to carry maxi
mum loads out is a restriction of outlet
that reacts on any patron of the Port
land market I have referred here to
the fleet ,of trucks at the stockyards,
but there are hundreds of trucks
throughout the state that were bought
and equipped to transport heavy loads
of livestock and upon which the farmers
of the state are dependent for a market
Three months of this regulation will
break the truck men and seriously in
jure the farmers. JL L. Clark,
Nowhere in the country are the deci
sions of the judges of the Pacific Inter
national Livestock exposition being
watched with greater Interest than by
the 125 students at the Intermountain
institute at Welser, Idaho, which en
tered 12 Holsteitis in competition, ac
cording to A. H- Morgan, superintendent
of the school, who is at the Multnomah.
One of the conditions on which the
pupils are accepted as students . at this
schooT Is that part of their tuition must
he paid by actual work, the boys work
ing around the- ranch and the girls do
ing cooking and other work, so that
when 'It was decided to enter dairy cat
tle in the great exposition the boys,
who had cared for these cattle as part
of their tuition, became exceedingly
eager to see if any of their entrtes would
win a prize against so many competitors.
The news that seven prizes have been
awarded the herd will be a great
stimulus, to the students of that in
stitution, ,Mr. Morgan says. The" in
stitute was 'principally endowed by Rus
sell Sage, and through this endowment
sons and daughter of farmers have been
able to get an excellent practical edu
cation.
Dr. W. H. Byrd, prominent physician
and surgeon of Salem, Is at the Multno
mah for a short! visit in Portland. Dr.
Byrd is the father of Winifred Byrd.
who appeared in concert at the Heilig
weanesoay evening.
Mr. . and Mrs. Gus Moisan of Hood
River are visiting friends ln Portland
and attending the exposition. Mr. Moisan
was formerly in 'business at Salem, but
has been located, at , Hood River several
years. -'
w
C. P. Bishop, former senator and pres
ent pioneer merchant of Salem, Is at
the Portland, having come down to see
where the wool comes from that goes
into the sox and things he sells.
Mack Anderson of Reeds port Is at the
Portland, having: come up to rive the
expo?it,lop the once over and to transact
business.
J. Paupart esquire, who dispenses the
Oregon spples in London which he sc
quires through the industrious agency
of Sam Rich of Portland, reports, by
cable, that the Juicy Newtowns and
Spltsenbergs of Hood River seem to
have hit the English palate right Mr.
Rich, who is spending what 'sleeping
hours he has to spare during this apple
harvest time at the Multnomah, has re
ceived a cable from J. Paupart to .the
effect that a large shipment of Oregon
apples has arrived ln London and has
been sold for SO cents a box above the
current market the Newtowns bringing
$4-32 a box. Rich is waiting with a good
deal of anticipation to hear from a ship,
load sent to London through the Par
ama canal, for If the consignment stands
the long water voyage In good shape
it will make a good deal of difference
in future shipments, the freight by
water being approximately $1 a box
from the municipal terminal In Portland
to the docks of London. Incidentally,
a second shipload of approximately 70,
000 boxes of apples collected from Ore
gon and Washington orchards will be
shipped from terminal No. 4 next week,
the entire refrigeration space of the
vessel having been chartered for the
shipment
a a
Mr. and Mra James R, Linn of Salem
are registered at tbe Imperial. When Jim
is not doping out the political situation.
buying hops and prunes or running the
Pilot Butte ranch, up at Bend, he is
the proprietor of the Marion hotel at
Salem.
Dr. and Mrs. J. A. Reedy of Tillamook
are registered at the Oregon while ttr
tending the livestock exposition. Dr.
Reedy is a veterinarian and much Inter
ested in the upbuilding of the livestock
industry in his section.
a a a
Alex Johnson, a well known livestock
man of fossil, is at the Imperial.
.
Carey W. Foster Oof PrinevUle Is at
the Portland for a few day a
OREGON
J. A- 1WHf l. m .. et.is
f?i5?Ml county, had a I. en-Is and
three ribs broken last Tmuredar wbea
his team became frightened and ran
sway .
Gibson CI uub.. . -a w
I;f!7-Wr' eommiu-4 eukctds near Cedar
ui Bunaay by shooting himself througfc
!?:. J1 "rlfe fcd deserted hum
ana be was desDondrat
Because h b.inwi v.- 1 . -
Rfiy Jrf th 1,prT ln he stale, M.
ti . ?' Albany haa -b-n appointed
.-ZT-L . M l N"oual Hay Prose
ssociaUSa from Oregon.,
XJr oblJrd per and a'
f10 for UiO.OOO worth of
rood road bonds voted let J one te
matca im state hirhvay money oa the
Baadon-Camas valley road.
-i? nd wttl hmr special city
election November 2 to dacida whether
to -raise 000 more for central city pur
poses next year, as called lor by Lbs .
budget recently made out
tv1&-Rrrr-r. ?s Famham has cost
the city of Bend Just $1 In tbe 10 months
he bas been In rrin, salary and ex-1
penses of the offVa irr, ,, (Ma
and fines reaching a total of $177.
.hen. a cylinder ftead from an engine
the Sears planlrg mill In Albany blew
off. Charles Moore as hurled 10 feet
through a door, sustaining a fractured
arm. shattered leg and other serious
Injuries. -.
Permission has been granted th Val
ley A SUets Railroad company by the
Interstate commerce commission to Issue
$70,000 In capital stock against Its lines
in Oregon for tba purpose of paying off
iuiiu 1 aroia.
Th Oregon Growers' Cooperative
association bas already exported more
than 12.000 boxes of apples snd It la
expected that the total export from tbe
Willamette and Umpque valleys will
pass the 12.000 mark,
J. H. McLelland. a Rend watchmaker
and member of the American Lesion, has
Just received a letter signed by Kinr
George of England, enclosing a stiver
Victory medal swarded McLelland for
services in the World war.
The Pacific Livestock company has
paid to the state $ij.000 in full settle
ment of a suit brought by the attorney
general to recover certain lands alleged
to have been acquired bv the livestock
corporation through fraud.
OBSERVATIONS AND IMPRESSIONS
OF THE JOURNAL MAiS
By Fred Lockley
Every one to his taste, is the old
saw. The New York doctor" who,
"with two assistants, tried to perform
THE principal nations of the world earned "a vast amount of credit," the
feel economic depression. Toledo Blade (Rep.) thinks, for "it has
Half of the merchant marine ton- shown singular ability in getting Itself
nage of the world is Idle, listened to by men determined,. stubborn
T) .. . jjL .j,.t.-. and angry." and tbe Springfield Republi-
'"'"."' can (Ind.) finds that itgalns in popu-
sumpiion 01 011 is at me rate or prestige." .The great gain, in the
700,000,000 barrels a year. . opinion of the Boston Post (Ind. Dem.)
What is more, government experts iB that "the. labor board, backed by pub
have estimated that In five years the Uo PIni0Q' haa demonstrated that its
consumption .of oil -will mount to f.J,aepttdflfs tin"
1 Ann Ann AAA and In .the recognition of these prin-
1,000,000.000 a year. ciples of governmental authority and
Where is the supply to come from? public interest" th Philadelphia Bul
The United States supplies 70 per- letin (Ind. Rep.) believes, "lies tbe real
cent of the universal demand. The vjctory hich has been won."
official estimate is that it will be ,TB"i whtU tne New, ?rk Po3t
. , . , , - (Ind.) puts it a sea wall thrown up
able to continue to do so for the next against the inundation of industrial war
quarter century. fare has held in an emergency," it stil
Mexico, producing at the present remains imperative that it be "strength
time about 23 per cent of the world's ened amst the future." Is public pin
supply from an aggregate area of on ton the Chgo News (tad.), asks.
.. . ., . . 0 . . . "without Improved legal machinery for
1200 square miles. Is looked to for prevenUon of transportation strikes,
increased production.' Oil explorers to be depended on under all conditions r
are at work in Souh America!, Meso- The railway labor board, the Topeka
potamia and Asia. Capital (Rep) points out had no legal
The, quest for fluid fuel from be- "S; 'or. I1150? it assumed,
neath the earth's crust has extended 2! " 13 to, T um,th function of
' the government in fixing wages and
to the Arctic circle of the western working conditions, its authority will
hemisphere. Capital, enumerated have to be made clearer than it is now."
not in thousands or hundreds of
thousands but millions, is back of
the search. '
Why doesn't 'capital in similar
strength see what can be done in America is not the original home of
the production of hydro-electric the moving picture. This assumption,
energy fromreams that flow with VJL J1!
, x proved, by an apparatus of ancient
vol umejjKT power far beyond com- Siamese civilization recently discovered,
parlson with the greatest oil wells? The apparatus consists of a number of
Why isn't - 21,000,000 horsepower j ancient movie machines unearthed at
of potential hydro-electric energy in I National museum in New York:
the Cnlnmhia Karfrv a, -rnrtfcv rrf da-i"11 heen hidden away in
country by the king of Siam in 1S75.
ilia cuwnsuc art as pneucea nunareas
The Message of the Unknown
Soldier
By B. K Chappell, Member Louis
Leidle Post No. 116. Golden
dale, Wash.
Curious Bits of Information
Gleaned From Curious Places
yelopment right here at home as to
search for ' petroleum- in the an
tipodes?
J of years ago irjSlam was carried on as
(Dedicated to the Unknown Soldier bailed is
Arlington Cemetery)
Back from the field of strife I corns
Midst f unerai dirca and muffled drum
Back to the land I called ay own-
Bat my Hpe are cold, the? are cold a atone!
No one will know from whence I came;
No one will know my face or name:
Someone will shed not team and sigh
While draped in the Star sad Stripe I lier
Somewhere my father, axed and fray.
LoTini me in hia auent way;
fjo mew here a aiater, a brother, too.
Are prayiac for saa: and they may be yoal
1 lored. I wu human, with flesh and blood
Swirled about in war'a aria flood.
I foasht and I tried to do my anare.
For U w.aa "Carry on" orer there.
Mother win coma with tear-dimmed eye
To tba little plot wherein I lie
May kiaa a picture will one tm of me.
, Who fought for the life of democracy ?
Perchance for ay airs I may atone '
While mothers, aittinc by tha atona
Wffl breathe a prayer, for I may ba'
Their soy whs died across the sea.
To the Unknown Dea j
Harvey M. Watte in Philadelphia Pub
lic Ledger-
A eoldier whoae disabilities incurred in th
Boer war incapacitated him for tatting Into tha
World war arils Mr. Lockley about hia eerrice la
tha ona ind hia tribulations in connection with
tha other. Mr. Lockley appenda to tha resulting
article a seat little piece of- rersa is praise oi
a well-knows actress, ) ,
"My father and the. father of General
Jan Christian Smuts, present premier of
South Africa, were brothers, so Fremter
Smuts and I are cousins," said Captain
John A. Smuts to me recently. "I was
born at Capetown, January 26, 47 years
ago. When. L was 17 years old I went
to Cambridge. After -receiving fny de
gree there 1 returned to South Africa
and became a lieutenant in the cape
artillery. Two ' years after my return
to South AMcs the Boer war broke out.
My cousin, Jan Christian Smuts, being
a Boer, like myself, was soon In the j
thick of the fight. As you know, he
was one of their ablest generals.
"Having graduated at Cambridge. 1
had the English viewpoint that the iso
lation of the Dutch was a mistake. Be
lieving that England was right, I fought
with the British forces. I asked to be
transferred from the Cape artillery ,tO
the South African light horse, where
there wOuld be Opportunity for imme
diate action. We were sent to Natal,
and, as you knowi the battle of the
Tugela occurred shortly thereafter. It
was there that the son of Lord Roberts
was killed. I will say this for my kins
men, the Boers: tney are wonaerrui
shots, and courageous fighting men. The
South African light horse, in which I
had become a captain, was employed In
scouting, a most honorable but some
what dangerous duty. Many of my
comrades were killed. I was wounded
by a pompom sheik Later 1 received a
Mauser bullet in my side. I served from
October, ' 1899, to June, 1901, being In
the battle of. Spionkop and In many other
engagements, as well as being in at the
relief of Lady smith. I received my pro
motion to captain in June, 1900. It so
happened that I ; had come under the
observation of Lord Kitchener, who gave
me my promotion and transferred me to
the railway staff. ; I was a railway staff
officer on the lines ot communication
east of -Oilman u tha. After the war I
was appointed resident magistrate of
Brandveli, a district lying south of Ger
man Southwest Africa. I served as resi
dent magistrate -there 10 years. My
duties ranged all the way from se'ttling
disputes between -the natives to acting
as judge and administering the affairs
of the 'district.
"as v
"I decided to go into farming, and so
I took up 4000 morgen of land and began
raising sheep and wheat Four thou
sand morgen is about 8000 acres, as you
measure it here in America. After some
years of ranching1 I sold out and went
to England, where I was married, June
(Eagtaad is Westminster Abbey and France
at the Arc da Trioospe eonaaemorate Armistiea
say by reoaryutr tha rrauina of on of their
araxanw oeea is -, uraae tuaoaa
shrinta)
Where pomp of woesfcp and of carle pride
, Bar cxmeerated to tha state- these fanes.
They lay is peace these lone and chill m
Tba they, in cosmos da. wiUTkiccs beside,
alar tell their hombls taJa and aoChing side,
A sobto ceremony saaght remains .
la way of soades tribal ere there wanes '
ftesnesabranca aa ta why they besot aad (bed. -80
let them yest' beneath the dwelling Taalt
: And take the honors others long hare shared
Iarnad U casual accidents of nam.
rrw inn we imci or lost Searrt or taalt
20, 1914. While at sea on our way to
Sooth Africa we received word of the
declarations of hostilities in the World
war. We wentk at once to German
Southwest Africa, where I tried to enlist.
Th medical officer turned me down
because of the severed ligaments ln my
foot which made me limp slightly.
After maklnr nu erons ittrmni. ta n.
list, and being turned down. I went to
ceyion and thence to India. After look.
lng about a bit, I secured a place as
manager or a rubber plantation at
Singapore This plantation was owned
oy me sultan of Jahore.
a a
"After putting in a year or two there
at a most saUsfactory salary I ran
across my old comrade-in-arms, Dudley
Rideout. He bad become a general. We
had served together In th Boer war 'as
captains. I told him how anxious I was
to get Into the service. He had pull
enough to get a doctor to pass me as
physically fit for aervjee. My wife ar
ranged to eervw as a Red Cross nurse,
while I was to be a captain in the Brit
ish forces. Unfortunately, before I could
secure my commission I bad to take
anouier examination, and was again
turned down. I heard that the Canadian
examination was less strict, so I came
over to America, and at Spokane ran
across a British recruiting officer who
triea nis best to get me Into the service,
but again was turned down. Then I
turned to t America, hoping that there
ouia pe some place for me In her serv
ice, out
every branch
s-os Angeles, where I bought a small
ranch and raised potatoes and rabbits.
as
"My wife and I expect to go back to
Singapore. When once the East gets
bold of you Its call is almost Irresistible.
Yes, my -wife, too. likes the East ' She
Is here ehe can speak" for. herself. She
has lived hi Portland at various tiroes,
having spent several years here. You
probably know her best as May Yohe.
former wife of Sir Francis Hope."
a
Every overseas man who heard Elsie
Jan. "over there" will feel his pulses
thrill when he reads Harold Speakman '
poem. To. a Steam Launch in China" :
Lest is s world ef ancient things
Of high-valled dbes. temples rast
Where base with hobbled feet and wings
Ceases erweping slowly from the past,
I saw. beside a bamboo dork.
A email laaack lying, trim and white.
And then ' ita aimi dynamic shoe
The ha Jaam. sprang ia sight!
The Chinese awv-csja fled away
And is ita Biaea waa rrsnoe and the
A ear, a tired girl is gray.
A thomand happy. ad4aiaed aara
Crying "There's Elsie toed ola scoot:
Three eh uses I . . The rfeioa flickered set
And slowly I baraaa aware
, Of yellow aea arith rare hair.
Baring from bridge sad wall and moat
Te as a faretgacr salute a boat.
WASHINGTON
The state has Durrhased tll.SOA wmik
of Wilbur school bonds at par. with 6
per cent interest
Throusrh altered lamest en tha nart
of eity officials, no municipal tat can be
levied at Sprinjcdal for 1922. Tba bud
get should have been prepared in S-
innDeL.Dui was ai 10 wea to go by de
fault T .
Yakima. Sunnyside and ether towns
along the route of th Yellowstone trad
are opposing efforts to chanee the route
to the Columbia river and Portland, or
to establish a branch route In that di- .
rection.
Charged with Inefficiency. Henry
Drum, former warden' of the Walla
Walla penitentiary and sines April 1 su
perintendent of the state gam farm.
will be dismissed from that position De
cember 1.
Oil ateepsge. besvier than bas ever
flowed from the welt caused the drillers
at the A Italia operations last Friday to
cease drilling and to begin sat ting tha
casing to dry the hole and give the oJ
a cnance to now.
William. 9-rear-old so if of Fred
Knauat car repsire-r at the Orest
Northern shops st HUlyard. is dead aa
the result of a broken skull received
when he was struck by a car driven
by J. F. Monahan.
Mra Minnie E. Brown, aged S3, was
attacked by a tha- at Fpokan early
Sunday morning and knocked down I y
a blow on th Jaw. He snatched her
handbag- sod eax-aoed. securing; a Ion
nickel as his booty.
Rather than submit to arrest J. Q.
Shelton. 60, committed suicide near Col
vllle by shooUng himself with a rifle.
He was a homesteader and his body waa
fdund near a still where be had been
making moonshine whiskey.
Joseph M. Campbell, aged 75, a pioneer
of the Northwest, was found dead last
Sunday night at his bomerln Chewelah.
Campbell mined at SUver City. Idaho. In
the early days and staked a water right
ciaim on eponane fans in 1170.
Andrew Siraou and his wife and J.
Alex, a Greek, were srrested at Van
couver when Sheriff Thompson confis
cated a copper still, a large amount of
parapnernaiia aad five 62-galloB bar
rels of marb ready for distilling.
IDAHO
A battery of 60 artillerymen was mus
tered in at Payette last Thursday night
and officially recognised by the federal
government.
Rev. H. E. Carter. 75. one of the first
Naxarene preacher to come to Idaho. ' I
died Monday at the home of his daugh
ter in uaioweiL
Pocatello is to expand as a eltv at
the expense of the United Statea for
est service, the surveyor general be
ing engaged in platting a half section
of government land.
The Sumpter Valley smelter ha ring
been -completed, miners ln the Bou
Dsain win save irom lo to III a ton
oy snipping tneir ores to Bumpter in
stead of to Salt Lake aa formerly.
The two-year-old daurhter of Mr. and
Mr. 10m bturm, living near Melba.
strayed from home and was found lying
in a ditch filled with water. Sfc waa
unconscious when rescued, but will re
cover, t
As the result of action Uken at th
lat meeting of the city council th
c'ty of Boise will ask all hanks In w-tl-ri
funds of tbe municipality ar deposited
to fumisji surety bonds instead of per
sonal ponas.
With the exfntlon of wheal hlnir
Idaho grsin and seed will compete
against- entries from the whole of the
my injured foot barred me from ' Uni1tea States and Canada at the tnter
. ' .. . . rr . I national arraln and har show to ba held
service. I went to aX Chicaa-o. N.vmh.r'n i rw.r a
, Uncle Jeff Snow Says I
Down on the stretch tween Uvalde,
Texas, and Stewart's ranch there was
a. patch of road'fore Chester A. Arthur
fell into the president's cheer, that run
kacrost a big Cat and. ever winter teams
mired down, in there especially if they
got often tbe road seekln' a better way
untH they couldn't git -the wagons out
Tbe only thing they could think to do
was to leave 'em there tin the road
dried up and then ge dig 'era out. Old
Man .Ike Dever bad a ranch, nearby and
uster buy them wagons at bargain prices
and dig 'em out later. He was dead
sure there wasn't nuthin" else to It but
aome oy tne ways of Providence.' How
They hre. the ombol of a -oath that dam! '
. laaaortsl ta the worid'a ancheckrt scdjuaj ever, a . crazy galoot from A Northern
college come down there ' and got the
oounty board to dig some rock outer a
hill and spread tt onto the road plum
acrost that flat and busted Old- Man
Devers game all to flinders.
THE BEST MINDS
tha saVaaitalnM. tSiklU T4
Nothing; but sdsaoi - trath matters to
the true scholar, prejudice, preconcep
tions. aIf-lntsrest do not weigh in the
cieatifie mind. .If a thing Is. it is. and
It tmist be reckoned with. , Of life. war.
economics, politics, government medi
cine, diplomacy, religion, social oppor
tunities and human relationship gener
ally, the scholars are saying today what
the rest of. the world will believe and
lively In generations to come.:- -,
What I Like Best
In Th Journal
J. R. .MATTHEWS. 4047
East Stark street Its alert
ness In securing news. For
instance, it was announced
that a $1,000,000 new pro
duce market was to be built
between East Oak and Alder
streets on East Third. The
Jjext day The Journal showed
a complete diagram "of the
market the only paper that
had lta I like Fred Lock ley's
articles, the enarket page
and The Journal's loyalty to
the conurson people.
MARTHIA LAM BAIN", SOI
Hoyt street The advertise
ments. W. O'NEIL. 41S Halsey
street The editorials. 1
spend my happiest hour of
the day scanning the columns
of Tbe Journal.
. REX PRATT. Astoria I
read first the headlines on
the front page, then "Jerry
od the Job, then, seriously,
tbe editorial page.
H. A. SCHMIDT KE. Sit
" East Davis street Its de-
peodabUity. Its -fairness In
' all dealings with the public
"' I esteem all Journal features.
.We have a fine carrier. -
What do yon like best in TbV
Journal? Be sure ' to Include
name
write.
and - address when yon
BV
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f
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