10 THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL; PORTLAND, . OREGON THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 17. 192L a nnrrKMbxsT xewbpapek C 8. JACKSOM Publisher IB salsa. s- eoofWWet, be cheerful ul do nt. ethers aa roa would ban tbeaa am Fablwned nwr weekday and Sunday onun at Tba JobmI Wuiklmg, Broadway lad Ito Kttt vtreet, Vortland. Oreevn. KaMered at the Dastottiee it Portland. Oregon. fee tra !! threugh the mails aa second alaaa matter. IliJU'HONi; Mala Tile. Aatomatio Mtt-il ail epartaata rflml by tbeae numbers. I.ATIOXAI. ADVtaTI.Hl.NU KEPKESKVTl TIVE JJentamln aeataor Ox, Brunswick avlldlaa. 22 S Fifth avenue. New Tort; 900 Mi Urn rmlMmi. rhlcaso l"A 1"R) COAST HEP RE KNT A TIVE W. R. ranger Co.. Examiner building. Ban Frin- rWo; Title Insurance building. Los Angeles; svwl-Intelligencer building, aattlg. THS OKAXiON JOI K.NAL. reeervea tha nght - to reject advertising copy whicte it deems ebfectinneble. It also will not print any roof that la aa way simulates reading mat ter or that cannot readily b recognised sdvertiaing. M'BHC' RIPTION RATfcfl By Carrier. City and Country. t.aii.t and arvniT One week I .IS I One month f ,5 DAILY SCNDAT On week .10 1 On week .05 fin eireitjl 4 I BX 11 ALU ALL, RATE PAYABLE I ADVANCE DAILY AND BINDAT 4.2J Three months . . Ona month HUN DAY (Only) Ona yaar All maatha. . . . Threw bob tha. . .12.25 . .75 .13.00 : 1.75 . 1.00 Ona year Sal months . . DAILY (Without Sunday) Oaa yaar. 10.00 r month. .... 1.25 Ttiraa month . . 1.75 Ona month 00 WKKKI.Y lEvsry Wednesday) Ona yaar. $1 00 mix months . . . .50 Thaaa rates apply only In tha Wait. -. Kalaw to KaMem omnia tarnished on moolica tan. Maka remitlaaeee by Money Order. Ki press) Order r Draft If your pnstoffice la not a aeveer -order office, 1 or 2-cent stamps will be eorented. Make all remittaneea parable to Tne Journal publietung Company. Portland Oregon. WBFKl.T AND I. 1 ' , i . Ona yaar 13. JO county's charity fund had been ex hausted, even after several transfers to it from other accounts. The bureau Is also a beneficiary of the Community Chest. But the Com munity Chest's allocation to the fam ily relief agency has likewise been exhausted in the attempt to meet an unanticipted Increase in the pleas of poverty. Some emergency step will, of course, be taken either by the county commission or the Community Chest. The hand of Portland's lib erality to the poor is not'likely to be closed. Portland will not stand by and see children hunger and, the aged without shelter. But let no more potatoes be (Tumped into the garbage can at the city jail because they are small. SET hundred families who have com mitted no crime save that of invol untary poverty need them, even if the county's well-fed prisoners do not. A piece of California is a piece of gold, says Arthur Brisbane, who adds that 50,000,000 people will find homes in the State of the Bear. If the prediction is realized it will take about 25,1100,000 peoplf on the farms of Oregon to furnish subsistence for the new Californians. IN JAIL ! I greater lire trap than s tenement house, no more dangerous residence for human beings. But New York is filled with tene ments. They, house a great portion of the population. They are tenanted because they are cheap. And be cause they are cheap they are cheaply built, house many and col lapse in a fire. Most of those who lost their lives were foreigners. They are the ones who largely inhabit the tenements. They come here ' to work at low wage. Some, perhaps, were imported by American industrial captains to com pete against the wages demanded by American workers. They cannot pay the high rents. So they are huddled together in flimsy tenements, there to burn to death, if Fate so wills, in the : fire that . ever menaces such structures. Portland, unfortunately, was short sighted in constructing her streets. She was short-sighted in. other plans for the city that has been erected here. But let her by no means be short-sighted in preparing against the contingency of her homes being converted into tinseled tenement traps, reared to serve, but in reality to threaten the unfortunate human beings, foreign or native, who are lured to inhabit them. LENIN'S BID FOR RECOGNITION the words were abbreviated to "Ded. LaL" -Ded." easily became corrupted mte "dead," and hence the singular phrase for describing the mariner's "de duced" position on the high seas. His Offer to Pay Debts of Czar Regime and Hake a Bargain He Will Carry Out, in Exchange for Russia's Re habilitation by Outside Means. Generates Added Incredulity in Some Editors' Minds Others Hopeful and Advise Giving the Proposal a Trial. Daily, Editorial Digest- (Consolidated Press Association) " 1 The offer of the soviet government, which, as quoted by, the Chicago News (Ind.), is "to acknowledge the old czar ist debts contracted before 1914. to make a binding agreement toward paying them off within a certain period, and to negotiate at a conference an eco nomic accord between soviet Russia and the powers that are willing and able to promote the economic rehabilitation of Russia for their own benefit as well as for hers," is interpreted in most -American papers as a frantic effort to secure a lifeline that will save the Bolshevik, administration. Not only are the wil lingness and ability of Russia to pay these debts seriously questioned, but the singleness of purpose in making the offer is a matter of grave doubt, many writers regarding it as merely a bribe, an ef fort to 'buy for cash," as the Detroit Free Press (Ind.) puts it, "a status among the nations which they are not willing to grant upon the merits of the Russian case." A minority opinion, however, holds that, whatever the do mestic situation impelling such an offer, it should be seriously considered by the powers to which it is made. Letters From the People COMMENT AND NEWS IN BRIEF Nit man eaa learn patience eicept by lf( out Into the hurly-burly world and taking life hut aa It blows. Beecher. THE BARRED DOORS THE problems of the arms con ference are far from solved. The meet la hardly under way. No defi nite accomplishment can be cata logued. A splendid proposal has been made. It was made brilliantly, frankly, and In the open. It has been accepted as a basis for discussion. But, the discussion la the meat of the confer ence. Thereby, a final plan will be evolved. Therein nations will make known their desires, their aspira tions, and their attitude toward world problems. There reservations to the plan will be proposed. There coun ter proposals will be offered. There the vitals of world problems and world troubles will be laid bare. From the discussions the public is to be excluded. They are to take place In committee. The entire dele gations of the five great powers have been converted Into a committee of the whole, which means that the representatives of America, Great Britain. Japan. France and Italy may7 all be called Into secret session. Was the initial . stroke of Mr. Hughes In the open Just a threat of open sessions? Was it a mere 'dip lomatic gesture? Was it mere sop thrown to the people who have fought for diplomacy in the day light? Is the remainder of the con ference to be held behind barred doors, with staged sessions for the public? Dark diplomacy Is a treacherous institution. It has converted confer ences all through history into horse- trades, barter and auctions. It has defeated the will of peoples and blasted the hopes of generations, It has always failed to stop war or even to limit armaments. After the splendid opening of the arms conference it would be a crime were It rendered impotent. After the bold, frank and daylight diplo macy of the first sessions and their tremendous .promise toward success bt the conference, it would be a tragedy were the meet to fall. But if there is anything under the sun that Is an accessory to failure of dip lomatlc parleys it is secret sessions. Mr. Balfour's acceptance "In principle" of the American plan wa .very carefully worded. Mr.- Kahy address was ridden with safeguards. Thero has been no complete agree ment. To ahroud the real workings of th conference .with a veil of secrecy is to hazard Its ultimate success. That la a tremendous responsibility for any man or any group of men to shoulder. XT IS a tremendous thirfg to- send mere youths t6 Jail, even for a nonth. It is a grave responsibility to direct that youngsters be taken from school and incarcerated in a forbidding cell. It is a profound task to take from parents and place be hind the bars a child whom they are attempting to educate and direct in the course of respectable and useful living. ' That is what Judge Kanzler did with two boys from the Benson Poly technic school. They had contributed to the delinquency of minor girls. A paroled sentence might have sufficed. It might have accomplished the purpose of reform. The arrest of the boys, their dismissal from school, the publicity, and their ex perience in court might have been a) warning to other youngsters. But it is doubtful. There" are other children in Port land schools. Their parents, like the parents of the erring boys at Benson Polytechnic, are attempting to edu cate and direct them in the ways of chastity and honor. Would it have been fair to the other children of Portland and their parents to have released the Benson students with out punishment? Would that have been a proper precedent to establish in a time of unusual vice and crime? Would It have been better or worse for the boys themselves? Everything possible should be done to aid the delinquent young men.- Their girl victims are in need of moral support. And everything possible must be done to aid the other children of Portland. It is for that reason that, with the utmost sympathy for the youthful errants and their parents, the average ver dict will justify Judge Ka'nzler's action. That the $80,000,000,000 tied up In the farming industry is more than is invested in railroads, manufactur ing and mines was declared by Wil liam M. Wood, president of the American Woolen company, to a gathering of farmers. The farmers knew that ' already. His speech should have been to a gathering of big businessmen, of whose product the farmers, buy about 60 per cent. And to the business magnates he could truthfully have said that their prosperity is dependent uii the farmer's prosperity. "SCRAPS OF PAPER"? TDORTLtAND policemen and . ex policemen have been besmirched in booze scandals. Local federal of ficers have been in them. Now come deputy sheriffs and represent atives of a law enforcement league. They were men who took oaths to enforce the prohibition, among other laws. It was their sworn duty to do all in their power to stop the flow of liquor in this country. They were drawing salaries to do that work. But here they are, among the most flagrant violators of the law they pledged themselves to enforce. Where is it all to end? When is the law violation to be halted? And when are law enforcement officials to be employed who enforce instead of violate? Are officers oaths, too, to become mere "scraps of paper"? The largest combination plant for manufactufe of tin cans, now build ing In Portland by the American Can company, will be in full operation next February. It represents an in vestment of more than $2,000,000 and employs 800 operatives in each shift. It has trackage space for load ing 48 cars simultaneously. PROSPERITY BY SHOUTS Los Angeles extended a long arm to take in San Pedro inlet as her port. Now she is campaigning for a 5-mile breakwater extension, which will add $8,000,000 to an original $3,500,000 breakwater cost, but will also create 50 square miles of an chorage space for ships. Los Ange les also is proposing to spend $6,900,- 000 for docks during the coming two years. WHY SO LONG? A "fish and game fight" 1 on in Washington. Oregon knows all about ruch controversies. Oregon also knowi their source. It is always politics. POTATOES AND THE POOR WTFLAT -win bring back good times? W Publicity of a certain type, is the answer of the New York Rotary club, which has appropriated $60,000 "to be used immediately in an out door publicity campaign on 75,000 billboards in 6000 cities and towns. carrying announcements of. return ing good times and prosperity." Doubt as to the value of "Poly anna billboards" is expressed by toe independent of the same city. It says: What goes on in a time of depres sion constitutes a vicious circle. Depres sion creates unemployment and unem ployment in its turn creates depres sion ; because people have not the where withal to buy, production slackens, and because production slackens people have not the wherewithal to buy. Ultimately, through one cause and another, the cir cle Is broken ; but It does not seem likely that the time of this consummation can be brought any nearer by concerted shouting. Plans for making good times mostly overlook fundamentals and deal merely with symptoms. Printed slogans on billboards cannot give work to the unemployed. The cuts in wages demanded so widely will not make more employment. They will merely reduce the buying power of men now employed and thereby reduce the sales of the grocer, butcher, baker and milkman. The 'way to break the so-called vicious circle is never to do again the thing that brought on all this trouble. The war ruined the busi ness of the whole earth and plunged millions into idleness. If all the nations would agree to morrow that there should never be another war, the vicious circle would be dead. NOR is Henry Ford's plan to buy th srrannAii wftrfthinii Imnrap. tlcable or beyond reason. It is a dramatic exemplification.of the waste of the tremendous sums put into huge armaments. What is the state of mind of a world that builds dreadnaughts at $40,000,000 per, which everybody knows will be Junked in 15 or 20 years and may become obsolete through new ad vances in naval construction before they are even completed. Mr. Ford says it was a crime to sink the captured German waships, That is what most people thought at the time it was done. under extreme flirncuities men work in the bowels of the earth to bring out ores from which iron and steel are extracted. At extreme cost these elements are carried through perfecting processes, and at further great outlay of money and toil they are fashioned into war ships that are soon junked. What a waste of human energy! How unreasonable that in a boasCBd F civilized state, men accept thSSe costly processes and this wanton waste as necessary! All the metal put Into every ship is metal taken from the arts of peace. In agricultural implements and the various fields of production . The "appeal is momentous," the Chi cago Tribune (Ind. Rep.) thinks, not because of "any basis it offers for new relations with Russia," but because of "the evidence it gives tha the Bol shevik tyranny is nearing its end." Without recognition by the other na tions of the world Bolshevism is "doom ed to perish," the Washington Post (Ind.) declares ; "it cannot maintain it self at home if it cannot create and hold a place among governments," and be cause of the belief of the Red leaders that "all governments are moved by greed," they now appear "with a bribe" with which to secure that necessary place : in short, as the Pittsburg Gazette-Times (Rep.) has it, "the Soviets will be honest if honesty can be made to pay." But the proposal, as the Provi dence Journal (Ind.) sees it, is merely "a scheme on the part of Lenin and Trotzky to strengthen their tottering structure of despotism," and the Boston iranscript una. Kcp.) aaas, "to pre vent its utter collapse." The factTthat this latest move "cre ates little enthusiasm abroad," the New Orleans Times-Picayune (Ind. Dem.) belves, is due to the feeling that "soviet recognition of Russia's debt would be only a gesture at best," and moreover, it suggests to the Harrisburg Telegraph (Rep.) a proposal "to pay 50 per cent" of a debt "in return for .a receipt in full." "Recognition", of the czarist debt is indeed "a shadowy con cession," the rsew York Evening Post (Ind.) agrees, which Moscow "generously offers" for the "substance" of recogni tion of the Bolshevist government. "Ac-J ceptance or responsibility for the pay ment of the debt" scarcely goes far enough to meet the situation, the Spring field (Mo.) Leader (Dem.) points out, and it is quite likely that the nations addressed wjll require "guarantees" of a more substantial nature, and, the Sioux City Journal (Rep.) adds, the entire dif ficulty "lies in trusting them." Responsi-. ble nations are asked to give something immediate, tangible and of great value," the Mobile Register (Dem.) says, "and to receive in return nothing more sub stantial than the promise of a govern ment that in the recent past repudiated all idea of being under obligation to anybody for anything." However, the Columbus (Ohio) Dispatch (Ind.) thinks "it is not necessary to im peach Lenin's intentions" in order to show that "Russia's outside debt will never be paid by a regime which has made of her internal affairs the most stupendous ruin in the world's financial history." "What are they going to pay with?" asks the Elmira Star Gazette (Ind.). 'What nation is going to take soviet paper rubles in payment of this debt?" Cotnmunicationt tent to Tha Journal for publication, in thia department aboold be written on only one aide of the paper, ahooid not ex ceed 300 word in kneth, and most be fined by the writer, whose mail addraaa in fall moat accompany thia contribution. DISARMAMENT A CENTURY AGO An Experiment on a Grand Scale That Has Worked Perfectly. Pacific Grove. CaL, Nov. 41. To the Editor of the Journal If the late war proved nothing else it indelibly restamped s an eternal failure the European sys tem of militarism, with its motto: "If you want peace prepare for war." Pre pared "to the last buckle," Germany lost territory, lost trade, lost lives and treas ure incaculable, lost even that evasive. elusive will o the wisp called glory. Moreover, left in present world-command are the new generals General Distress, General Bankruptcy, General Unemploy ment. Our customers killed, starved or ruined ; our commerce curtailed : our pro ducers poverty-stricken ! So much for the European system ! Against this put the century's success of the American system proclaimed by Monroe April 28, 1818. After the war of 1812-14, foUowed by the treaty of Ghent, British newspapers announced their gov ernment's intention to increase their navy, the course clamored for by cer tain yellow journalists today. Monroe deplored and deprecated such mischiev ous action. He proposed a new Ameri can system disarmament. Britain de murred, until Adams, our minister, deemed the case hopeless. Monroe, how ever, insisted and persisted so effect-' ually that finally Richard Rush, repre senting this country, and Mr. Bagot for Great Britain, agreed not only to de sist from putting any more warships on the great lakes but to dismantle any al ready there and to convert any in course of building to other uses! By a further "tacit understanding" no additional forts or garrisons were in future to be placed on the 3000-mile border-line stretching westward to the Pacific! A century's success has proved the wisdom of Monroe and his policy of dis armament! What reason is there to doubt that the same wise policy would be universally successful? Europe's sys tem has resulted in ever-widening dis aster ; let the American system noW hold sway ! "America, dreamer of dreams, be destiny's leader!" Edward Berwick. J SMALL CHANGE i Martial law mav rule. Colorado leni ty, but marital law still will be the most powerful Influence. Breshears and his kind should think of the wife and children before they open prison doors by their rash deeds. w w m Portland, a vtsitinir artist reports, is recognized as a grand opera city. And it's a grand city in scads of other ways. Anyhow, the business of the "house for rent" hunters has been lessened by the advent of unsettled business conditions. . a Admittedly all men have equal rights, but not all "of them have eaual vocal power to make the world understand it. If our sense of humor made us all laugh at the same things we'd only need one funny paper anyway, and that would never do. eaa Without the men who compose the grange and its kindred organizations what in the world would we do for our banquets? a Thirteen -year-old girl kissed by Foch won t wash the pot on her check, she says. Wait until she gets a sweetheart who's strong for sanitation ! Roy Gardner might have had the sym pathy of a very great number of very fine people if he bad proved himself man enough to tell his particular Satan where to head in. SIDELIGHTS There's one good thing to be said for the fall toga The sunshine afterward is so surpassingly beautiful. Eugen Register. eaa Aviators say that the barking of a dog can be beard four miles high. They can be heard farther than that on land when one ts trying to sleep in the una' hours. CorvaUia Gazette-Times. eaa Heavy snows in the East and Central states and zero weather there during the past week makes ua glad we live in the Walker . basin, where sunshine and warmth prevail. La Pine Inter-Mountain. a A 6-year-old boy is on trial at Che- halis. Wash., for shooting a chap of about the same age. There ought to be a law against notches in a man's re volver handle, until he ia 10 years old Modford Mail Tribune. The Democrat believes that Oregon sentiment is In favor of the 1925 fair and Oregon votera see in such an expo sition the one big step toward increas ing wealth and population, things need ed II uregon is ever to reacn me goal oi its ambition. Baker Democrat. It might be in order for Mexico to look into conditions in this country be fore going further with negotiations for resuming diplomatic relations. Now armed soldiers are guarding our mail trains much aa they used to In Mexico during the revolution. Eugene Guard. 1 The Oregon Country J j' Kanhweet Happeniasa ta Rnaf I'mrm for taw Baay Reader. A FEW days ago potatoes were dumped into th garbage pall at the county Jail that had been sent from the county farm. At least one observer who saw the potatoes await ing the garbage man commented that though not. In the opinion of the county Jail chef. large enough for . prisoners, they were quite as good aa had been bought for use in an Irvtngton homo. This, howover. is beside the point. On Wednesday the public welfare bu reau suspended ita relief glvigg to oomo 100 needy families. , It was forced to do so. The bureau is agent f tha county board of relief. The Now we are told that food de velops color in the eye. That's noth ing. Everybody has seen drink that developed a beautiful vermilion on the nose. NOT HERE "PLEVEN lives were lost in a New iork fire Monday. Thirty peo ple were burned or injured. So rapidly did the flames spread that several sleeping victims did not even move from their beds. The fire was in a tenement house. It was crowded. And it was little mora than tinder. There is no MONEY-GETTERS CONSIDERED Portland, Nov. 14. To the Editor of The Journal In a recent issue of The Journal A. Henry Dubb is commenting on the ability of Brumfield and Gard ner to earn money. I should like to see how they "earned" so much. Lots of people nave a KnacK or making money, going after it and getting it, but as to earning it! But the gods of silver and gold have a prominent place in the world, and the guy that can corral the most ducats is recognized as a power in the community," "ambitious" and "successful." A poor man who can get next to a "sharp deal" or "sell at a neat profit" is in fair way to "success." The merchant who can show the biggest profits is the most "successful," and so on. But th laboring man, or even the skilled tradesman, who makes only a fair living bah! he is nobody. He is not "ambitious," not "successful" in any way, simply 'grubbing away. Take the trainmen, for instance are they not earning twice as much as they are getting? And the miners let some of our "successful business . men" take their places and see how they would .like it. But, no ; they prefer their business and their profit,. Mrs. John Smith. MORE OR LESS PERSONAL Random Observations About Town George M. Steelhammer of Sllverton Is at the Imperial. Silverton is observing "Homer Davenport week," to raise money to erect a monument to the town's best known citizen. eaa Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Elliott of Perry dale, in Polk county, are registered at the Oregon. Chester Hester of Grant Pass is in Portland. Alonzo Q. Reid of Heppner is a guest at the Oregon. a Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Kloepping of Salem are registered at the Oregon. e L. W. Glaser of the City of Destiny at the mouth of the Columbia is in Port land on business. Thomas W. Gilbert of Pendleton is taking in the sights of Portland. Dr. J. A. Best, former mayor of Pen dleton, is down from the Round-Up City. H. S. Royer of Klamath Falls is so journing at the Imperial. E. L. Campbell of Eugene is a Port land visitor. a e e W. H. Canon of Medford Is at the Im perial. Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Miller of Pendle ton are spending a few days in Portland. ... Fred Ingram of Pendleton is at the Imperial. e C. O. Smith, hailing from Kerry, Is a Business visitor in Portland. But here another element enters. So viet leaders "have gone a long way of late in abandoning their Bolshevik vagaries." the Newark News (Ind.) notes, "and it now looks as if they were ready to go a good deal farther," par ticularly if, as the New York World (Dem.) believes, their latest move can be interpreted as "another step in the gradual transformation of the govern ment from its communistic theories to a "bourgeoise state'." Doubtless Rus sia is "as poor as a church mouse at this time," the Birmingham News (Dem.) concedes, "but her very economic ex tremity seems to have brought her to the rule of reason," and in the opinion of the paper it will perhaps be well worth while, for the sake of the resump tion of world trade, that the soviet gov ernment be heard at least in some inter national conclave," for "if the Bolshevist powers are willing to advance an inch toward a feeling of responsibility for the debt incurred by the government it succeeded, they may be induced to come an ell." The Chicago News (Ind.) also feels that "the conference proposed by the soviet government should be held." 'Any kind of settlement of the Rus sian nrnddle would .be welcome" to the Brooklyn Eagle (Ind. Dem.). and the Rochester Times Union (Ind.) believes that this offer "supplies the opportunity" to work toward a settlement, and the paper "hopes that it will be accepted." for, it continues : "The soviet govern ment' has now been four years in the John Hoskins. a resident of the one time metropolis of Southern Oregon, is here from Jacksonville and is a guest of tha Imperial. a Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Garrison of the turkey metropolis of Southern Oregon arc here from Oakland and are guests of the Seward. e a e Mrs. O. E. Farnsworth and Mary H. Farnsworth of Heppner are registered at the Seward. e S. M. Douglass of Hood River is down from the apple metropolis of the West on a brief business visit. a a e Miss Nora Dobbs. mail clerk at the Imperial, has Just returned from a visit to her girlhood home at PrlneviUe. - R. R. Gordon of Klamath Falls Is a guest of the Imperial. A. F. Howes of Hood River la a P-. t- land business visitor. R. Baraett and family of Grants Pass are at the Seward. . Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Powell of Eugene ar visitors in Portland. a Pauline Myrlck of Forest Grove Is a guest of the Portland. H. T. Holden of Eugene Is at the Portland. a H E. Maxine of London la registered at the Hotel Portland. e Mrs. C. W. Hein of Terre Bonne Is a guest of the Cornelius. OREGON County Superintendent Byland ts ap portioning $4.874.3 among tha achooia of Clatsop county. Paving operationa between The Dalles and Rowena on the Columbia highway were completed this week. Ruamiana and Germans predominate among the foreign population of Polk county, there being igc Russians an 169 Germans. A unanimous vote was cast in Gardi- ner Saturday to raise a special 6-mtll h nr.ey to be apent on th Roosevelt highway. Because of the Urge number of hw boes now traveling through the county, the Albany police fore has been en larged by the city council. The Union Oil company has started construction of it new plant in Tha Dalles on property bought several months ago from the city. The Bandon recall Kchool election laM Ja!?k 1-lf4- L. Zentner and J on NUson defeating the proposed new di rectors by a vote of Vt to l4. A. B. Robinson, county judge, and , Mrs. Xlorence Hinkle of Independence, have sold their. ii hop crop, consist- , ing of 427 bales, at 27 cents a pound. Alcoholism is given by the coroner aa ' the cause of the death of John Grinolda. whJ? w,a discovered dead in a room in a Baker lodging house Friday. At the Bonanza mine in Baker county Manager Dodson is Installing a boiler, engine and five-stamp mill at the mouth or the long tunnel recently completed. A fire in Vale last Wednesday de stroyed the residence of Robert Hann. together with all the household furni ture and effects. The total loss was $3000. During the past season 66 miles or new telephone line has been constructed in the Ochoco national forest, the work being done entirely by the regular ranger force. Work of constructing the new high way bridge across Bulley creek, on Ihn Central Oregon highway one mile from Vale, was begun this week by the Unite States Bridge company of Boise. Mlsa Emma Bunge. public health nurse for Morrow county, has arrived at Heppner from Seattle. She will trm the county for an indefinite period undtr direction of the state board of health. OBSERVATIONS AND IMPRESSIONS OF THE JOURNAL MAN By. Fred Lock ley THE FLAG This Writer Would Have It Made the Symbol Exclusively of Peaceful Things. Portland, Nov. 10. To the Editor, of The Journal I read with interest the article in a recent issue of The Journal on "Rules Given for Flying Old Glory." Some of the rules seem silly and far fetched, but for the most part they are splendid and ought to be observed. One of the rules admonishes us that Old Glory ought not to be fastened to the side of a building. I would add that. after 1800 years of Christ and the progress of science, especially in materia medica, it ought not to float over an old brewery that manufactures slop for medicine for the citizens of the great est and most intelligent nation under the skies. Also it ought not to float over any machine whose sole object and pur pose is the killing of men and the de struction of property. The rules say that the flag "should not be raised before sunrise and ought to be lowered before sunset." I would add that its sacred folds should never be allowed to float above the darkness and blackness and the din and clash of battlefields, where men and nations meet to kill one an other. While In the past Old Glory has stood for the best things, we cannot forget that It also has stood for and protected Institutions that were a curse to the nation and humanity, such in stitutions as human slavery and the legalized saloon and others of the pres ent time I might mention.- Let us hope and pray that in the great and hopeful future before us Old Glory may stand for the higher patriotism ; not or that patriotism that is inspired by drum beats, but that loftier patriotism that catches its inspiration from the heart beats of humanity. F. L. Harford. ' cililla T , Viae t?i.r--i'.rl t)io HonvAK rf by machinery and implements, it j int(,rnal dissension and the menace of would add to the comforts of life In warships and guns and the other implements of war it is dedicated to slaughter of life and destruction of property. The waste goes on at an accelerated pace now when every civilized nation is grinding its people with the collection of money to pay armament and war bills, and with most of those nations in actual bank ruptcy. The naval programs of the nations now are $19,000,000,000 against $3,000,000,000 in the naval programs before 1914, when all na tions were still solvent. The most beautiful and most per fect machinery in the world is deep down in the holds of warships. The shining metals and the swift, noise less movements of the -various parts are a wonderful sight to see. And there all the marvelous enginery ia,, with the arts of peace robbed of billions of value and tons upon tons of human energy in order to make wax more terrible. Granted, for argument's sake, that a police navy be necessary, when you think of what Ford would do with the Junked ships and recall that the League of Nations In Europe and the disarmament con ference in America are working for limitation of armaments, you wonder why nations continued so long in the madness. external war. It has. in practice at any rate, abandoned its theories, proved by experience to be unworkable, and is moving along the lines of a policy not widely divergent from that of other European nations. The time has come to recognize these facts; The time has come to readmit Russia to the ranks of the peoples." And in the opinion of the Wheeling Register (Dem.), Russia has taken the most likely step to bring about -the de sired end, for "money is a most pow erful agency in smoothing out existing difficulties a curealL.in fact"; and the proposal which the soviet government has now made "will bring to bear a stronger" influence for recognition and economic peace for Russia than any other 'argument' that might be sub mitted to the world." Curious Bits of Information Gleaned From Curious Places YOU CAN'T CHANGE THE LEOPARD From the Medford Mail Tribune. Ambassador Harvey is running true to form. When he was named, we pointed out the dangers, and those dangers are now being realized. With rare consist ency he never opens his mouth without putting his foot in it, He celebrated his arrival in London by telling why America entered the war. and the public condemnation of the American Legion is merely the culmina tion of a long series of rebuffs which his unfortunate utterance received. Last Thursday he made another speech and proceeded to depart from his pre pared address and commit another blun der. He announced that America would never consider an alliance with Great Britain, and took occasion to reprimand Lord Derby for making such a sugges tion, j.- , Whether Ambassador Harvey was right or wrong, makes little difference. As a matter of fact he was probably right But Jt is not the American am bassador's province to outline American policy. It is not for him to say what America 'will or win not do in the fu ture. He is merely President Harding's representative, and should scrupulously confine himself to pronouncements which are- authorized at Washington. There is a peculiar interest in tracing the origin of the term "dead reckon ing," which has always been regarded as one of the most puzzling terms to trace. The general impression, saydr the Detroit News, is that the prefix dead is merely the mariner's way of ex pressing himself noting similar terms, as "dead-eyes," "dead-lights," "dead wood," "dead-door, "dead-Oaf The origin of "dead reckoning" is traced to the old-fashioned method of keeping the ship's log, the method being to use small, loose sheets of paper, ruled into several columns. The latitude column being too. narrow to admit the words WHERE NATURE BLUNDERED From the Rochester Timea Union There is a fortune awaiting the man who will invent a permanent shave. WELL NAMED From the Green rille (8. C) Piedmont The bootlegger's other name is legion. Uncle Jeff Snow Says Wiley Hotten wants the county to gravel the Wayeast road up to his place or top of the hill,. but the rest of it he ain't a mite interested in, bein's he never goes thataway 'cent to a funeral or a farm auction. There's a whole lot of us mora like Wilev'n what we're , ueuuceu jautuae in xuu at uo head, willin to own up ta From a pioneer of 1850 Mr. Lockley obtain! a t-tory that inclndea the Oieriand trail, ranchinc in Eaatern Oreon in it wiidernea day, and diapensinf liquid refreahmenta in the pre-Volateadian era. Mr. Lockley appenda. incidentally to a aopplementary taetcb. a re markable poem of the dayi of the WeHern ar gonaut. William M. Renshaw Is night clerk at the Smeed hotel in Eugene. "A lot of Oregonians stopped in Missouri just long enough to be born, and I am one of them," he said to me a day or so ago. "I was born at Springfield. Mo., No vember 7, 1850. and I started for Ore gon the following spring, bringing my parents with' me across the plains. My father, William D. Renshaw, was born in Tennessee. My mother, whose maid en name was Mary Jane Walker, was born In Georgia. They were married at Atlanta. There were eight of us children, three girls and five boys. My brother Theodore, who is 74 years old. is the eldest He is In Eugene visiting his boyhood friends. I was the next child. Then came Hugh. Julia, Robert. Elmer, Sarah and Hattle. My brother Elmer lives here in'Eugene, and so does my sister Sarah, now Mrs. Maybew. "The donation land act was passed September 27, 1850, Just about the time we hit Oregon. Captain McMurray was captain of the emigrant train In which we crossed the plains In 1851. Our fam ily spent the winter of 1851 at Salem, where father worked at carpentering. The next spring he came to Lane county and took up a donation land claim in the Camas Swale neighborhood, about three miles from the Land of Goshen district and six miles soVith of Eugene. I worked on the farm until I was nearly of age. In 1870 I got a job on a sur veying crew and went up to the Ochoco and Crooked river country, near where Prineville is now located. I put in five years surveying, working for the most part in Lake and Harney counties. It doesn't seem possible that less than 50 years have gone by and there Is hardly an antelope in that country today, when there used to be thou sands upon thousands of them when I was carrying the chain down there. I didn't suppose they would ever be able to kill them off. There were large num bers of mule deer there then, too, and there was wonderful trout fishing. "On July 25. 1878, I married Elanor Thome and we moved to Grant county. Our ranch was 50 miles from Canyon City. We got our mail and did our trading at Prineville, 60 miles dis tant because the road to Prineville was better than the one to Canyon City. Our nearest neighbor waa six miles distant and the next one 12 miles. After a few years there we came back to Eugene, where I started a butch er shop. I soon sold the shop and bought a saloon. I stayed in the saloon business for the next 20 years. Yes, I made lots of money, but I didn't keep it The saloon business was rec ognized as not exactly a legitimate business, so everyone felt that he could make us dig up. We had to keep our hands in our pockets most of the time. Politicians, churches, Fourth of July committees and everyone else felt that as we were making so much easy money, we were legitimate prey and they had a right to some of the easy money. If they didn't get their share, they would put up a holler and make trou ble for us, so we had to dig up, whether we liked it or not About all we did was to soak the old soaks for what they had and hand it over to someone else to keep them quiet No, sir; I wouldn't go back to the saloon business for any money, if there were such a business One was looked down on by the very people who patronized him. He was preached at and hald up aa a horrible example. The kind of people you had to truckle to and associate with would turn a man's gorge. I doubt if very many of the old-time saloonmen would be willing to go back to their old bus! ness. if they could. On October S. ISO; J I started the Smeed hotel and ran it for uw aica.. ill wa, auu uuw a eua Bau in the old stand, -ejerving as night clerk of the hotel I started." While at Forest Grove recently I visited Mrs. Samuel Walker, a pioneer Oregonian and the wife of a native son born at the Grove in 1852, the son of parents who came Went on horseback in the '30s as associates of Dr. Marcus Whitman and Mrs. Whitman. Mrs. Walker's grandfather, John Carey, set tled in Dayton, where he served as Jus tice of the peace for many years. Our talk of the early days drifted to the time when gold was discovered In California and the settlements in the Willamette valley were almost deserted as the one-time staid farmers became eager treasure seekers In the neighbor ing state. Going to an old-fashioned leather container. Mrs. Walker brought forth a number of old letters and poems written half a century or more ago. Handing me one of the hand-written man user pits, she said : "Here is a poem written by my grandfather about the rush to the California gold diggings. It was published in the Spectator of Ore gon City in 1848. It shows how the dis covery of gold affected Oregon." Here is the poem : Come hither, mow. and ten the newi. Nor be thoo a amrrUrr. But ainc in plain poetic atrain The preaent "yeilow teier." Not lone ato I laid m down To ret in quiet ahimbera. And whilat I alept I dnramed a dream And coined tt into numbera. I thought I aaw on every Land A mighty congregation A betrrogenona mam of meei Of e-rry name and nation And each pursued with keen delight Soma honest occupation. Whilat rosy health, the la borer" i wealth. Killed eTrry situation And then I looked, and lo! I aaw A herald bright advancing! A .being from ome other clime. On gnlden pinions dancing. And aa it neared the mighty crowd. He loade thia proclamation. In tones so clear, distinct and loud It startled half the nation: "Why do. yon labor here?" ha cried. "For merely bfe and pleasure. When hist beyond that mountain gray Laea wealth beyond all measure! The road is plain, tha way is smooth, "Tia neither rough nor thorny; Come, leave thia ruaxed glebe and go With me to California! There is choice land on erery band And each may be partaker) Where fifty tone of finest gold Are dug from every acre!!!" At aound of gold both young and old Forsook their occupaUon. And wild conflation seemed to rule In Yvery situation. An old eordwainer beard the news And. though not much elated. He left his pile of boots and shoes And just evaporated. The cooper left his tuba and pails. His buckets and bis plggins; The sailor left hia yards and sails And started for the "diggin'a." The farmer left his plow and steers. The merchant left Us measures: ' The tailor dropped hia goose and shears And went to gather treasures. A pedagogue, attired incog. Gave ear to what was stated. Forsook hit school, bestrode a mala. And the absquatulated '. A boatman, toav forsook hia crew. Let fall his oar Ifd paddie. And (tola his ueigiur's iroa gr7. Bat went witaoafa saddle. The Joiner dropped hia eqaare and lack. Tha carpenter baa chieel; The peddler laid aside his pack. And all prepared to "mixsle." The worxtssrln dropped hia trusty axe; The tanner left hia leather; The miller left his pile of sacks. And an went off together. The doctor cocked bis eye askance. The promised wealth descrying. Then wheeled his hen and off ha pranced And left hia patients dying. The preacher dropped tha Hoey Book And grasped the mad illusion ; The herdsman left hia flock and crook Amid the wild confnaion. The hslge eonaigTMd to eoid neglect The great Jodieial ermine: But lost which way hia honor went I could not well determine. And then I aaw. far ia tha rear. A prosperous attorney -Co Bert hia last retaining fee And atart upon hw toorncy. And when each brain in that vast ina Waa perfectly inverted. My ahamber broke and 1 awoke And foand the piaoe dranrtil WASHINGTON Skamokawa State bank celebrated tt first birthday anniversary Monday . by paying a dividend of 2 per cent to stook- holdera Dr. H H. Smith. Yakima county health officer, has condemned the wells of the town of Sol ah. following an examination and discovery of colon bacilli. James N. Glover, founder of the citv of Spokane, is critically ill at his home in that city. Glover moved with his' parents from Missouri to Salem, Or., In 1849. A railroad rate of a fare and a half has been granted delegates to the Farm ers' Union and Northwest Wheat Grow . era' association convention at Spokana December 12. Twenty-four marines from the Puget Sound navy yard are guarding the. United States mail in the Seattle poai office. while 31 are scheduled to report for duty at Spokane. The November 1 estimate of the Wash ington potato crop ahows a decrease, of 41.000 bushels, aa compared with October 1, while apple production increased mora than 2.000.000 bushels. A "home rule" bill, taking all power over public utilities in cities of the first class in Washington away from the state department of public works, will be presented to the next legislature. Jesse Peterson. 22. was killed and Earl MeGilvrey. 32. badly Injured In an auto mobile wreck near Eatonville, Monday night The overturned car waa found near a creek with the body of Peterson pinned underneath. Mra Charlotte Walker, Northwest pio neer, died a few days ago at Friday Harbor. Mrs. Walker waa 12 veara old and crossed the plains to Oregon tn 181 J. walking most or trie way, and at one time being kidnaped by the Indiana. Because Mrs, Dai ley Sell t re passed on the A r Land farm near Montessno. picking wild evergreen blackberries from which to make jelly and jam for her two little children, she was arrested and fined 81 and costs or to serve four days in the county jail. A piece of ivy gathered from the bat tlefield of Argonne In France, by Mra. Frank anderlip of New York has been sent to Mrs. C. V. Ieach of Olympia. M ra Vanderlip is sending little sprigs of this ivy plant to kld Star mothers throughout the country. IDAHO All previous records for apple crop In Idaho are broken by this year's esti mated yield of mora than 4.000.000 buahela Beer and light wines cannot ba lanld In Idaho, notwithstanding tha receait ruling by the treasury department ac cording to Roy L Black, attorney gen eral. The election at Nampa to authoriz an issue of 1175.000 street improvement bonds to care for the unemployed this winter, lost by 2( votes. All street work will now cease. There were 47 predatory animals killed m Idaho during October by 17 " hunters, soma working for the govern ment and some working on a bounty basis for the state. Mrs. Jane Baker, who twioa crossed the Western plains In an ox cart and who was the first white woman to live In Denver. Colo., is dead at her doom in Twin r alls, aged 94 years. What I Like Best In The Journal E. J. KRAFT. 611 East Eighth street Its broad views on the labor question, Fred Lockley's articles, and Its market page, which excels that of any other paper In Portland. C. GAEBAEO, 92 Hull avenue All ita features, from cover to cover. We have been reading The Journal for 18 years and have yet to tire of IL O. A. ANDERSON. 48$ Beacon street The editorials for their position on tha dis armaraent conference, on world peace and the labor question. M. 4SPAHN, 805 East Tenth street The market page, for its convenient arrangement. ' The purity of thought and tha noble sentiment of The Jour nal generally and particularly on the labor question. JAMES C. LEITH. Eugene The Journal is the fairest daily I have ever read. It does not dodge issues and it stands for the common peo ple. The editorial page, in cluding editorials, the articles of Fred Lockley and the edi torial letters, has tha moat Interest for me. The articles of Norman Hapgood are ap preciated. . What in The Journal has most interest for you? Tour opinion must be accompanied by nam 4 and address in order to b pub lisbed.