1 i io THE OREGON DAILY JOU BNAlv PORTLAND, 'OREGON. THURSDAY. MARCH SO, 1S22. "nnnnnneHB"J 'V f e & better atmoapnere. . in a Dewer, I brighter atmosphere they would plan more courageously, and . accomplish moreffectlveJy-; :' vff ;;4'.- i ! If Ihese , things ar-true; ! -why do so many . people! shield Ubemselvea AV T"TrrTXIWST JSgWeTarTR .. JAf.tX ..IMblfabrt I It he eeafMant. b ehwrfal, wl " r.th t T-Ml wmH hee tnB nl T"- n mk,ui ti4 homtf Borntac i i oenina, a waii.r;at leiepnwno poic 1 h Jiwirtwl Staid" .'nt at tl ttuvtoUie at it UwMiiMfai Urawfc the wlk aa until the - car for which : they are waiting comes along t .Why do they eat heavily when '. t Y rfi "( 5 7171. " int. au rt.r.oi.nn v ibriiomWT I they are not hungry? "Why do they V,f,i late wheo ihey are sleepy? M Min, 2i rift nw, Hew lorti too why do thejf avoid fresh air as if it v"AfXffitf&tnt-iLi. w. Poison? Why.do they shun ex ... , in, tuaiwr tmiidins. ercise as if , It .were a t plague? fv ; ''Tr TSK- - because sonany areaslei- , JTir;C!nroTTIJ." rrr. tU iiM" a and more self-indulgent than in r-r tiMftMH ttf . ?ltellint? : . -- v, i " ; J. - unable. Ik ,kw elll ant Pfm any eepy w I In any aunalatca praams atauar or uai tu MwiiiJ m Imi UtrlH. . a is ew jersey congregation was shocked the other day when It found t .mi Hs pastor leading a dual life. The church had "been paying him 324 a week. ' Although his flock was en , srascRimoM batts g Carrirr. Pity anrt Cermtf. 1411,1 Jill ,. .1 .IS OlM ..... m IK DAT One weak....,..$ .08 Pwa . , . j DAILY n .1) (IIK MUA. .... , .41 r,i if aii, r x. hatxs FiTArtt ic l ADvAKCt j tirely ignorant t It a New york, de oV r......(i m.' Jth....U partment store had been paying him k.x axntiw..... 4.3ftlOa axntb...... I twice as much as a floor walker and. ' iwkii sL., lOaVfi section manager, i Some of the eld tt. ......if rMr.....,ts.Meri. have- yet to recover "from the Tlrrw aMmllM.. A. T 9 Tor atoalAa... 1 Oh avtta ...... wmt-Y i .oo I shok- of the discovery. wrrKf.T A!fO i SIjXDAT A GREAT TEAR and Washington's prize fruit East. Growers shipped to the Eastern mar keta for sale on consignment-- The glutted markets, promptly; sutaided. Preliminary losses were large, -. - Then, by the turn of fate's wheel. the market recovered. Calif ornla's orange losses, due to freezing, had something-to do with the recuper ated demand, i Doubtless' the call from England and ' Europe for , our apples waq a contributing factor. But grower who had held fruit for the aimpie reason that they could not find a j market, s suddenly! fowndthe skies cleared and smiling Demand became Intense. Hood Wver -shipped more apples thah had been credited as that; district's crop. :The specula tors were worsted. SW,!4 f - aX; J One 't the most ancertain of speculations Is the storage of eggs. One of the. best market observers in the forth west! says that re finds it costs not-Jess than , cents a dozen to-'carry 'eggs Vln cold "storage. The longer 1 they .fare. carried too, the greater; the. proportion of 'Vots' and "spots'" and breakage- .' This observer adds that fter Z years he has yet to see i speculators ! in Atef rigerated Wnen . 'onions '. are held ? In FOES OF- BONUS . ANSWERED Mollie Prentice's Reaent JtterJn The Journal Evokes sA Arraignment of .Those Who Remained to Profit la . Safety. While Soldwrm Suffered , : ' and Pertehea ands Their. Womanfotk Anguished ; Case " si for jne Bonus Arrayed on v : the FJane Chose . by ."" " 7i. Those Ppposing., - -. - -. By Old Timer To MolUe Prentice : Tour brief let. ter to The Journal. contained a meaning ful phrase that should b sharpened and driven through the thick hides of , the slacker class that how; rolls the : word cold jstoragei' -foir instance. ..the ' demand . .ik. IA . th ni ipru mir i W j T0RTUlNrr8 oversea and foreign Mtras;ti4 '.in inverse pttoportioii to U WtW .XMrk'. .Bw.itS vessels, of l.Oai.vJO Jftarntt rvtiltahlne Covpanr. rnnUnd. Ongmu y "n.iT grTS; seosatat entries in ltO were S 3 the wfppiy.iCln other 'words, if the w Dmit. if yea, pstoritr ia not vessels of 451,216 tons; In 131, 331 1 nrice'is high and'ontona. are scarce The oversea the sales will be brisk. "But people Nbimuo, m (hi, d-rrmni .hm.M . ttt I of 42,T01 . tons; of 1921, 1.94,93Q j op smelt if the price Is lW. only n ttd of tlw Mptr. ihouUl ant nt4 o onia m jrin ,t4 im nrrM ay im wrtUf, HMN MM II ASdl piny tK, uitWMHIm. I tons. - Intercoastal service grew even 1 more amazingly with 19 vessels of 105,553 tons in 1920 against 139 vessels of 911. ? tons in 1921. .The freight handled by the vessels thelr costs plus a, reasonable profit was in proportion; mere were o, The legitimate use of 4jold storage is t'o- provide a " more uniform dis tribution of perishable foods. People who engage in refrigeration, whether growers or: dealers, are : entitled to 462 tons foreign in 1920 and 1.66t 702 tons in 1921; 185.875 tons do mestic in 1930 and 314,810 tons in tl:t. - Refrigeration intended by specu lators to force people t pay high prices U both morally wrong and sometimes : financially , disastrous. The objective of the cold storage Za system of the country should be not foreign steamship lines last year and . v seven intercoastal lines. It is noted that nine steamship lines are giving regular service between the Atlantic and Pacific coasts, indicating that we are getting the attention of most of them. The steamship lines in for to see that ; supply meets! demand. of Vermont that started boss tradin In Birerside. Californy. 'fore the first lr riratln' ditch hit that town- and the folks in San Berdoon called 'em and ISppers. Pete traded of 1 a "smalt truck- load of cheap brass jewelry fer them little . rabbit-breasted - mustangs the Qreasers brought to- him, fore he come to a realism sense of the fact that them critters et more bar in a week n what they was worth, and he had to turn a dozen or o of iem loose fer..wagt of a market. Them mustangs,at four bits a head, -measured mi the basic -cost, of that there Jewelry.'; was -mighty costly livestock, Jlst,;tl-:samewir---t;-':V-i-- . ' COMMENT AND NfeWS IN BRIEF The Oregon Country rs Froni the People l I Carannnic&tvn ami. to Tae . Joamat ' tot pubii.-tion in thMopartaeaC altooid-be writtra bonus" under the tongue-and alludes I ctti ZOO words in lencth. and must be sienna tf. this pittance- as ayltig the ex-service J 1 ithe writer, vixne mU addre in lull mutt I horse thief. That ought to make him a . ; SMALL CHANGE . .. , ." Incidentally, this is the season when life becomes a long, hard row to hoe, ji-J- . . .V -9i " s ' ' See ' where a fellow named Tatty Arbockle is being tried in California courts. ; ; - : . ; i -. .. . .. '' ' , - : Henry Ford has been Sued for $11, 000,000. The funny part of it, is that he has, the money. .-. .? ; tfow. if we could only find a little time and some respectable weather, we might .catch some fish. "Tex" Rlckard. freed by a Jury, says be will stick to porta." What's that about birds of a feather I Man in Southern Oregon is held as a , V ; : SIDELIGHTS . aaanaa - ' saiem'a slate aayroll is sue.ooe a month, se the Statesman boasts. And it Is Salem tax reducers who contend the schools are bankrupting the state. Ku- When It comes ' to a show-down In Kan n,an for patriotism." The phrase I re fer to is this: NO one knows what the boys arra their wives (and mothers) went through excepting they themselvea" ,v Between these two lines lies the story of the true bitterness of war. I think the word "patriotism" should be elimi nated from controversy. So few know its meaning,' and it only stirs the pas sions that lead to war. Surely there i no place for this word in any discus sion with the hecklers. Inasmuch as the commercial class has pushed to the fore front in opposition to the so-called bonus. Cfconpany 1 the cojitribatioa. 1 curiosity in these days. . - . . . . . . . . . ... v. xxyjyjK nniLJiti tiwutt ia i society women are orenarlnr to op- A liover of Opera Gives Fine Praise to I pose the young ex-butler in his love af- latr. bui a ouuer ousrnt to loos line ut Portland. March 28. To the Editor of I society togs ns s useo io em.. ine Journal me joys or the recent President Hardinrs yacht is equipped opera season were multiplied to me by I with a 350.000 speed boat. Wonder if we the i newspaper stories of the Dresenta-I can't arranee to let concrress Tide in it tnrougn tne sea oi penaing legislation? lions which one could read the day fol lowing, of the respective performances.! stay I be permitted to say that of all the Journalistic comments upon the operas which appeared in the Portland ! papers (I read them all each day and emrnT H"y" nuiw i i most enjoyable were those of Mr. wautn in The Journau I am not making any comparisons, but simply speaking of Mr, Wallin's articles. commercial. When the draft came, when the uni form was donned, the roll called and the bugle sounded, when the grim reality of this business of war took full form m the mind of the wife, and mother, what amount of money would she in that hour have willingly paid to have stopped that file of men and disbanded them? Let us figure It up on that basis. If it Is to be commercial, then there must be two sides to it. We have got to consider both sides, and see how much the owners of taxable property at home would have Maybe the throat epidemic is a symp tom of too much talk and too little ac tion, since thera seem -to be lew-l- loused hands. - a In the case of Mary Garden's cold, blamed upon a draughty stage in Port land, the preponderance of evidence seems to indict San Francisco's tog. t 4a Rriat Fa any nAtt. ,- v - r-'y . OREGOX ' "v The American LrrVoa ef North Bend Is planning a modern dance hail. 100 by 120 feet, and te cost 320.000. " - The Green Mountain sranc of Buxton. with about 1O0 members, will celebrate America, the golden rule stands small its twenty-first birthday April 20. chance in competition with the big stick. Aioany jjemocrai - - m m m The pararrapher has his little troubles. hut his last days are not troubled by the frantic effort to give sway bis ill-gotten gains.-Meaiora stau Tribune. Now that the ' famoua ' Kara Seotia ghost has been . explained, we wander whether it s some "d Incarnate 1nte:il Police Judo Leavltt of iriamath Falls has announced tun intention to be a can didate for the Republican nomlaatioa fr circuit Judges . FJjthty China pheasants from the state . ram farm have been released this week ' in Wasco county, la ta lot were 11 roosters ana aeaa, Charles Klnsey. well known former of tne tseavertea aeuhborhood. draoned gence" that's making all that trouble incad at noon Monday while loadtnr e the United Observer, States senate. La Grande wagon with gravel at the old brickyard. J. R. Luner of the state ttrtuvi'. off Joe at fcaietn has just received a pack - age oi pnotoirrapna wnicft were mailed to him et a Uttle town la Eastern Oregon 10 years ago. . ' ; Mrs. Mary A. Veutrin. aged 90. is dead at her home In Grand Ronde. Polk ooun- - ty. She wss one of the first settlers of ancouver. Wash- her hunhand belsa- ta Funny that nobody eas sunrested dur- ins; recent tax inveatlgstlons that a rood sized on unk pe added to automMtitea. The industry has almost been killed al ready by adding freak legislation, but tne I el low wno can ouy-30-cent s-asoitne and manipulate a flivver ought to be 1 l. - A . . 1 It .t. T I V.. E ki- mn. nmm.mi,. pawKum I tD employ of Ir. John McLouarhUa. News-Review. - Lawrence Stafford, who committed snt- cide at Astoria Saturday, had recently Thete are people who blame the news- f"d action In court appealing- from the papers for publishing: stories about the ruling of the state compensation board moving- picture scandals. and yet i disallowing: his total disability Claim, wouldn't these same people be the first The SummervUle Stock association has U condemn the newspapers If they re- decided to make an assessment of SL3a rusea to puousn sucn stones? we'll per head on stork rraxtn mi gamble they would accuse the newspa pers of suppressing news In the Interest oi aavertisers. Astoria Buaget. ss they stood alone. They were terse but comprehensive, sincere, impartial and independent. , and showed . a wide range of musical knowledge and under- j standing. They also revealed the shadows of the occasions as well as the high lights, and yet did so generously. by implication rather tnan . by direct statement which setms to me to have benefited the whole opera season, as an MORE OR LESS PERSONAL Random Observations About Town ment land, the funds to be used In im proving the ranges and for current ex penses. ..... Pupils of the district schools ef Tilla mook county, who have conducted at cam paign recently against gophers and nave met with murk success. One aT t: paV 'Ue wifTand "the mo'er ""VtJJZ tlt and which, therefore, while open to mel- Wade Siler of Enterprise, who is so journing in Portland, takes exception to published statements that : Wallowa county is in a bad way. On the con trary, he asserts that optimism is pre dominant and that Wallowa county is Just as well off as neighboring counties. There has been very little loss of stock Eater, when the boys went across, what I low- criticism, such as given by Mr. j and there is sufficient hay. The snow Wallln, was not subject to the slightest comment that might have savored of I censure. !I thank you for making the articles possible. " H. E. Veness. MR. BAKER ON THE BONUS the mud and vermin in the trenches or I Writes Again. Assigning Mis Reasons in was a fair price to pay the wife who laid her head upon her pillow sightly. wakeful, wondering if tomorrow's cas ualty lists would show her a widow? Or to the mother whose nightly prayer was that the boy. she had nursed and reared might not be crouching that night amid Elbert Bede, editor of the Cottage Grove Sentinel, has been urged by his friends to become a candidate for eign service include the best known th legislature In Lane county, and W faka Jmb peine to be happy than to apavaf an. Haaaaleeaauld. . 1 - -.-' 1 f r t i M n. lIARblNO . AD JAZZ names of the marine world. Portland will rank among the first four ports of the United States in grain and flour shipments for the cereal year of 1921-23. Its grain nd flour shipments of 1920 were 11,- 171,110 bushels and .2.141,219 bar rels in 1920 as compared with 37,- 927.219 bushels and 1,803,304 bar rels in 1921. The falling off In the lumber mar- his candidacy is announced. 'A square shooter, a thoroughly informed citi zen, a man whom the hangers-on and politicians at the legislature could not fool or control, Mr. Bede is thoroughly equipped for legislative work. One great trouble with legis latures is that many of the newly- elected members do not know what is going on or what to do until the session Is mostly over. It would not be so with Elbert Beds, .TO PLAT HORSE? j.V HIS addrssa at the Calvary Bap tlst church. In Washington, Presl 'tent Harding ably diagnosed many of ket al1 not affect the port as much the ailments of th United States and M might have been expected, for the offered, intelligent advice for cures, shipments of 1920, amounting to 222,. He declared that much Of our trou- K89.000 feet, are not auhstantiallv Oe comes through' a "moral laxity, greater than the 219,897,000 feet COMB Washington news Is that the Mfting standards, and weakening .htnned hv water in 1921. oonus dui win soon pass tne sen ,f the, sterner fibros."; ,H! cure U a I -jho growth of the wool ro0ve-lte' Other news is that the present ronrtr relation botwoen the citizen ment by water Is phenomenal, for lme.? ny'.wut pass jinat oay. lying wounded and helpless in No Man's Ldnd? How much would -these women have paid? Good God, Mollie Prentice what business have you trying to an swer the Bakers and their heckling? We vill go into court with it as a case in I are several : Detail for His Position. (Independence. March 28. To the Edi- j tor of The Journal A few more words. to make myself clear on the bonus : The objections to the bonus, as I see, along the river has gone and the cattle and sheep are now on grass. e ' e e . It. B. Magruder shag come to Portland from gpie dike lands of Clatskanie on business. ' ' ' -W. E. Burke, whose postoffice ad dress is Sherwood, spent Wednesday In Portland. The Clam Shell division of the Union Pacific system Is still maintaining a molea. b boy. Ror Haanenkratt. haa Ilk rn hta credit , . . With the ilnVIn f tK. T.. r- lumbia Oil et Oaa company's well to- a depth of t200 feet the funds have run R'.VJ10? toczholders are advised that Among those registered at . the perial ia L. H. Smith of Corvallis. Im- eQUlty. That is an easy place to win it. have seen people go into civil court and win alimony or damages 50 times in excess of a soldier's bonus, merely by alleging V:ruel andjnhuman treatment, and proving It to be vmentsi distress". There is no money to pay it 'with. If the bonus is voted by congress upon the I people at the present time it will throw! new burdens upon the country's finances. , will" wreck many industries, cause many It. A. Dixon of Klamath Falls is regis tered at the Imperial. . George W. Rogers is in town from Iho men to go wtthout employment and raise county seat of Malheur county. as-; 1 -m . .... a. I - A lawyer the other day in court was , prlc" of . niries'K not, on!f those who get the bonus but to alt the people. - - The main argument for the bonus seems to be that men who joined the handed 580,000 merely for a few months' service in settling a dead '. man's . es tate, and another lawyer' calmly took Anwn f13AfWWl Im ti Dim. Mii.f frm (h. same Job. So let's try it in court. By ""ancl' ??Tlllc " "lB tf.king this course w can meet the heck- f 0 f, ? wh ma?.nn? !, lers in their own forum, even though it 22 lL.T.ho !??d?. fiPanclai be somewhat unpleasant with the odor I .,, Am rrw. , . ... nt int .nii i.i- b,.nd- Th prices of these bonds have -.".-' I fauen until there is a distinct loss when f"suvu ' I von ev tn rutin nn thnm T knrmvnl money at 8 per cent to buy Liberty bonds and many others did the same thing.- I had to dispose of mine long ago. Thousands have suffered finan cial loss on account .of the war. They did their best just as truly as did the Now, why should you. a mere soldier's wife or mother., feel the way you do about it, when all you did was to give up jour .loved one. deprive yourself of ev erything but the slender hope that he Mrs. J. M. Fix of Lewlston, Idaho, is a guest at the Portland. . , . L. O. Taylor of Bend is among out of town arrivals. a a A. W. Stone of Hood River is regis tered at the Portland. a a a . R. H. Bowman of Salem is a Port land visitor. 1 a a a C. Macdonald of Salem is transacting business In Portland. a John Ray of Astoria is trsnaactlng business in Portland. dally schedu-o of twotraln. per day fi. TWlJiiiu'S m- - . . . Ywv-ftww nijna to Captain rd Budd. general manager. a. J. Kyle of Florence has been an- who is spending a fewdays in Portland, pointed to fill the vacancy on the board He reports the clam packing season has of directors of the Roosevelt Memorial opened notwithstanding the delayed h,iA.Vil'lrT Jt?"mtien caused by . the death of J. W. Bergman, who rep spring season. raaented Lane county. Lyman a BJce of Pendleton, of tha . WASHINOTOH " ' World war veterans state aid -coramls- - False teeth valoed at 9B50 were wtoiea sion. Is in Portland on business con- rom two dental of fipes In Everett a few nected with the soldiers bonus law. nignis ago.. . June 1 has been set as the date for the Among 'these attending the spple dj''t.ur ,rom Seattle of Captain Roaid growers' contention ie Kdward Pierce Amundsen s Araic expedition. - .- of Opportunity. Wash. cSJJ tVA"' n . . , . . attle municipal a treat railway deficU O. T. Bergner of Ashland Is repre- during January. 19JJ, et Il7.vt. senting Rogue river orchards at the Dr. W. n. Kirknatrick hae re. . apple growers' convention. . Isppolnted by Governor Hart as trustee or the Belltafhem state normal school. His new term will end June 11, im. A state fair surpassing all previoua exhibitions la promised this year at Yakima, September 18 to 23. by F. 1L Gloyd. asslsunt director of tha depart ment of agriculture. Announcement ts made that the North west Trost and Sayings bank has merged' Its business with the Marina National bank, both of which are well known George IV Wilbur, whose heme ts In the Hood River valley, la visiting In Portland. A R. Ruhl, an apple grower from Medford, is in Portland attending the convention of apple growers. Georen Parklna of Rend uIai man- seer of the Brooks-Scanlon Uiraber o" tasUtutions of Seattle. company. Is In Portland on business. X R. Hammond of Umatilla spent Wednesday In Portland on business. - a O. W. Hunter of Eugene is a recent visitor in Portland. Mr. and Mrs. E. M- Cherry of Astoria are registered at the Benson. e e A reeheck ef the demaa-a dona tn Una. ber tn the Hob and Clearwater shed a in the Olympic . peninsula by the great storm of January. 1921. show the loss to be 9 Jk per cent of the total stand. The timber oa one section 'of land In northern Lewis county brought 110. S00 when sealed bids were opened Monday ey tne state captiot - committee. The proceeds will go late the capital building A tract of about 2S.000.000 feet ef tlm- J. F. Hall and son of Medford are at- ber In the North river district will be ft It has passed the house. But still has the gauntlet othe, senate and president to run. And it, is in the senate that trouble is likely to arise. - i : , H There are few to commend the bill as it passed the house. It is more ana mo law ana we enure, -,- ut amounted to but 545,111 pounds The' moral jaxltjr' that Is apparent I Jn 1920 and to the very largo total ltover the country Is serious men- of 23.002. 081 pounds in 1921. nee to the future of ho United States. The dock commission found that High school students of both sexes when the order tn the Columbia basin nre found carrying whiskey flasks, case became effective September 28, There Is more scandal than ever be- 1921, the grain receipts at this port f -re. The divorce courts are run. immediately began to grow. But ltlof an aid to the money landers than :..ng at full swing. There are more also found that lower class rates to the soldiers. And there is no pro ve triangles and resultant murders, from Portland to the 4500-square- J vision as to how the money shall iore rrivoious conduct ana lowered I mile zone south of Snake river were! finally be paid inaaras of morality are apparent helpful to manufacturers and ob ' i the lite of the times, .-. ' - " bers, and likewise that the decision . Many a nation has fallen heo to have "a most decisive bearing l-ullt on a foundation of immorality. In determining the location of indus- rowet and, war always brought U .tries In the Northwest.'" ' n. The sterner' fibres er weak- . These, figures -of the port are the ned. And finally the nation crum- substance of accomplishment. They t led. Frivolous people do not make demonstrate anew that the vision, the i.atlons, 0 " effort and the Investment made by -Thero Is. however, another thought. "na in port xacuuies pay. might some time return? All that you soldiers who went to the front, and yet did was to exist for two years, perhaps j i i have not heard of anybody asking on crumbs, as best you could, and wait,! for a bonus or adjusted compensation feel now as you do about, it. when your A 1 great mani 'who stayed at home man merely left his investment or his were , salaried i employes, pllke myself, place in the world of business and in- whose pay advanced very little or none dustry. a place to which he perhaps had during the war. Yet -while the salary struggled in the waiting line of promo- did not increase , the prices of the neces- tion or advancement; when be merely sSries of life' did. -or the purchasing cave his place here to another and went power of the - money decreased, which- across, leaving you uncared for, your fu- ever you call it., It amounted to an this eamnaissinc in Minoati asd cuawhera. Tha ture unprovided for ; when he knew .that setual loss. Thousands who stayed at I ae eompiated is a noccctdin InaulV xr nfl aio nor rriirn veur first wnitin jm i uomc xiku, 'uzib eiDcmnce. i tendlnc th apple trowtrf conTaUon. OBSERVATIONS AND BIPRESSIONS OF THE JOURNAL MAN By Fred Lockiey A Ciril r vetcraa whaae aoenton acrrefl their esnntry In ia earUart eenflieta ia ban Quoted by air. loeklay. Ha leeouata hi wandT Ingi aa aa arzonaut out Pika'i Peak way aM Undoubtedly, the war Is largely re S'onsfble for the present conditions. Wars create disrespect for law. But is this the game: for the house to pass a bill that it knows will be held up in the senate, and in the meantime get the soldier vote in the approaching, elections, t!i bill then to die in the senate chamber? There are indications that such is the plan. It is generally understood in Wash ington mat .certain senators, at a private dinner party recently, dis cussed the bonus and, it is said, they Panned to put it in the background M a cau w( bzvm Wl ' iaCillCU UJ el whether the law of the .t t a e t,a Kansas newspaper. It continues: "I moral Jaw. O B ,v" .ena, i oo wU, f avor POrhaps. but .President Harding, whon ho took .T "IS J , hot tho present eSure.M The presl crrico, Inherited the results of the wrB' y- I V . TV wilt oep hands off: fTho house war. He cannot recall that war. But "I J1 J I B the senate will wrangle, and the He can do much to avoid another war, and thereby- avert another r"riod. of disrespect of the laws of ftate and the church. -The. conditions of the present but a darned ,lnt better." rerioa oi jess musi ce met as pest they can. In his advice. President Harding has taken a stand for what is good and wholesome in the world. And ho can do far mort to avoid wages. , any man wno Knows a k..n. m -niMte't hk.. I . - , , a . - I ey v 1 f eeW, 7 I . w i7. : really to provide tho ooldiers jrlth one ef poverty and sadness? According to the views 'of the sapient Jorgensens and the heckling Baker trsse considerations are mere whim sies. The business of war, the miseries that follow in its wake, and the penal ties that must fall upon those who sur vive it. 'should, in the view of the class that has stayed at home and taken care of the money matters, become now pure ly sentimental and patriotic, to be set tled on the basis that they cannot "pay a man for patriotism." But they csn without batting an; eyelash issue 340. 000,000 of road bonds to enable the tour ist ana the - drummer to ride more smoothly. Now, about the young man who had educated himself for a business, let us say the livestock business for I recall a particular case in point. He had bor rcwed 83000 and invested it in a. start. just a year before toe war. The draft came. He had to leave his business in untrained hands. After two years in French and Belgian campaigns he re- The fourth and last that I shall men tion is an argument put forth to the ef fect tnat tne soidier lost the opportunity to share in the high wages, while he was at the front. In reply to this let roe remind those who make this argument tnat tne nigh wages were during 1920. Most of the men were In France in Rodolph Crandall lives in HUlaboro. He celebrated bis ninetieth birthday last month.- When I visited him at bis home recently, he said: "I was born in Lewis county. N- T., February 19, 1832. My father's name was Joseph Crandall and my mother's 1919.; The majority were returned home I maiden name was Mary Clark. " My In 1919. Tet. if statistics are right. I grandfather on my mother's side was wages were , higher., in' .1919 than at any Asa Clark, and my grandfather on my other time. The great? increase in I father's side was Joseph Crandall, Both wages came after the soldiers had left! served In the Revolutionary war, while tne army. Taking the eountry over. 1 mv father served in the War of 1112 .1. . t. ; V. -... ... . . 1 . uK:pu;n 9 ware psiu alter uic coming from stock like that, it is no war.; not during it. I wonder that, with six of mv brothers. fBome may say. "uet tne future pay it." I t r-i.-n Tv.ni. W. a. . . a , . V . - - I Wl ivu a.aa -e w as a AvMitiBf fyiZii w"r nve " ""eldest brother, served in the First Mln. pay wivnuui navmg mis xo pay 7 Wnlie OUndd terie. end anent tne bonus may be of benefit to a few. 1 , 7 "T.v. u. I think it will do each one of us and I "nJ,T ' .u. Vl'' our eountrv an em Ann f nf ihmin I v we wm sin It wm not recover from for eeverai e- afterward he made applicaUon for vouchers. An officer of the company said. I have a man in this company. named Crandall, who can sling Ink to the queen's taste.' So X was appointed quartermaster's clerk. "The officer bought enough horses to e rations. R. W. Baker. A HOUSE OWNER DISSENTS Insists Rental Return Is Insufficient to Cover Taxes. pension, but every time he wrote about it the pension department would write back and tell him he was dead, until finally he had 82400 back pay coming to him. Finally they got sick and tired m. w.me mo joo. ah agree not tha tf.d1ustaa efrmncnutlaa to whloH to treat him Uke onej of the family Uy ar entitled, or Is it going to play horse with them? AN EXAMPLE The photographs that! took ten sinotner war ana another such period I big crowds moved at The Audi- than ho has so far done. torlum during the.rrand onera week there was-illustration of what ena Mgures of meat prices in the I way traffic will do. : rreckels market as-stated by a re-1 -At one of the entrances as high, as ' irnlng Portlander Tuesdky are chal-1224 automobiles were loaded and sent ' -nged by meat dealers In Portland, away within IS minutes, At no on- A rter' wiring . San " Francisco ., they trance was there the slightest con note the following: Sirloin SO cents, fusion, either In arrivals or depar- : p round SO, porterhouse 85, leg of turgs, at any time during the week, mb IS. leg .of Veal 23, breast of It was a high example of efficiency veal 18, short ribs of beef 10. The very creditable to the traffla depart? rices quoted by the returning Port-1 ment, and the real secret of it was years to go 'from Eastern j Oregon to arrivals and departures of the saiem were n a perfect state of pres- TN THE ease and speed, with which yw" T arrivals and denartures of theSalom ervatlon. That is more than can be said of some photographs which reach uO tqn hours after mailing. HIS GIFT WHAT a plagsing thing life would - be if ' all people held to the Penumbra Kelly standards In civic and .moral duty! t :J 'A- gold watch presented to Mr, Kelly yesterday was testimonial to hint of tho! estimate plgcod on his nder wre coplsd from Ma not-1 that at each entrance all traffic went I virtues by his friends. Four terra iok when given The Journal. V r REACH ER AND PUGILIST PREACHER and a prise fighter may occasionally -agrto. James '. Corbett tells Portland that a roan - f 67, may loob like a man of SO If h drinks five glasses Of hot water, ith a pinch of salt In the first glass, oth before breakfast and dinner. He advisee light calisthenics and ts of walking., There are a few W . . . . a, - ..... .1 .kA,,i V . , V. n. .till allv. eand therdiF W - r - - - -. - - - -- - - i mi.. f.At. lit .1. .i.ti i mta nil nenaien rnaeir . rouia eeeive rank norma 1p nlnw - f Inlnhawi ) i - - r -.- J mi V. ': v.," " I when be says that rents in apartment I he died, so the fellows back in Wash were. in th7 X.Tv. he.'w ' IS houses, office buildings and m every Ington decided they had been right all has before him many years of debtor slavery. What do these so-called bonuses look luce to him? Xg&a 30 cents worth of dog meat And I guess, Mollis Pren tice, that is about what they look like to your roan, ir he will be right honest and ssy it. A neighbor of this farmer soldier was a .physically ' perfect young nanaer wno naa a pun ana-got exemp tion from the draft He told me he made enough money the. second year of the war to enable him to live five years without work. building of every kind in Portland are fixed by the landlord in an Ideal way. That ideal way is to figure cost of build ing, what repairs and insurance would cost what deterioration will amount to, what taxes are, a fair Interest on his investment and then, after summarising all these figures, fix the rent Speaking from experience, I differ. The rents in The Journal building are not fixed that way. The manager of that building, if he follows the system of all other first-class- buildings in town, learns what is the going figure per square foot a year the time about his being dead and they would not send the check. Finally, how ever, they did send 8200 te pay- his funeral expenses. - ' 2 -. e a .-. "My brothers William ' and Nelson were in the Second Minnesota. Nelson was killed at the battle of Chickamaaca. My brothers Harrison and Marion served with the Minnesota rangers and later enlisted in . the : 11th Minnesota. , My other brother, Arthur, served in . the Fourth Minnesota. All - six of my in the same direction. " i w : legislature ana , tnree times It la example of. what could be sheriff are always teste C the raral done by applying one-way traffic in j strength of; a man, ana IMr. Kelly other congested districts. came out or tne crucible unscarred. All lives have their troublous seas. The most sensational news Item -of I The inhumanity of man to man. the the year comes out of Toledo, Ohio, I nM nd furies of those who are The , Ice company them made a ift packing m tne gentler ways oi living per eent cut In the price of ice. ,-'-; J and the sordid trait in so many human beings make it difficult xor ABUSES OF. COLD STORAGE! I life to, run ; through jreen pastures and beside still waters. The triangle "EXPERIENCES f the past year! todays -the f suicide; tomorrow the .U 7 V v no roy" roM'W-rtne for those not happen if all minds and all heart I.. But I ho gut of his who would speculate In cold storage I pulsated with the rhythm that Is Seration. He doesn't foods. . " . . - ; I woven Into the lives of the Penumbra mm I a jSJ at tfve T e tf. ...'. S-i have demonstrated that iltiM tMH! fli :ftM: miM Mmlnetlons from the .diet which he no royal road to fortune for those not happen if all minds and aU heart nine uruuii,. ,ui unset Is moderation w "",r . Last season government report in- Kelly. ,'"vui7"" vt f euouiu aicated a considerable shortage In There Is still In the state a lot of i cirntii w excess., v '.;;: -t I potatoes. Thus assured, speculators I pioneer Oregon stock, the strain of George ? Wood Anderson, the I paid aa much as 12 a bushel. In I men stern and true but gentle, tnen ingellst of Methodism, has like-1 stead of ristag, the market broke, j who caught from the wilds of their .e told Portland that a good deal I Their holders were happy to sell 1 time none of the savage spirit so America's depression is physical. I some of the high priced potatoes for j familiar and so In evidence among thinks people would be healthier las much as Si a busheL Losses in some in these latter days.) They and they ate less and exercised more. I certain instance were immense. ; their deeds epd their lives are sober TfOpie were healthier they would K The apple crop of last year is ling and stimuIaUng annals out of y more opilmistic. If they were I another case In point Dealers I which to inspire a higher-idealism re cptioQlstio they would create) hurried their carloads . of Oregon's land nobler faith. I am older than you. Mollis Pretice: foi many, many years 1 nave observed human nature. As a child, I saw the worn, weary men who came back from Moody fields and prison -sens -of the Civil war. Some of them were dear to me. I watched these men when they had to organize and fight again to wrest from the smug money-grubbers a few paltry dollars to eke out with toe eftprts of crippled limbs -Of diseased bodies a poor living for the rest of their , days. Later, when that war became a glory vision through the base of year. 'these men became heroes to a newer generation that did not sneer at payiag for patriot ism" nor begrudge them far more liberal treatment than ; they bad been able to get from their stay-at-home contempo- rarlea The good soldier, like the pho- phet Is too often without honor in his own generation. War.' ancient .or modern, is hell, and the man who has'gone through it in de fense of other men s families and other men's property can never thereafter be placed by his -country quite back on the level with the man who-didn't go however ungrateful that country may be. This is the thought f all women, who "know" and of all men who think four sonars. Millie Prentice ; so dont you be troubling your dear soul with efforts to answer the hecklers, That the wife or mother of a soidier boy who fought in France should come to feel that-she now Is on the defensive it is sickening te any decent Americas mind. for huiidinea of hia dui snd simitar I orotners serves m annnesota organise locatian. rmrine- eood times he endeav. I tions, and 1 intended to, but J became or to get rent enough to tide over the member of the Fifth Iowa volunteer poor times, which certainly have come te ! cavalry. It came about this way : As and 1915 if he had informed his tenants I state. About 1848 our family moved to that he must get the prices which rule I Illinois. In 1858 we moved to Wisconsin. today because he needed that much to I Four years later we moved te Hinne pay: taxes, upkeep, -interest on bonds, 1 sota. In 1859 a party of six of etc. they would have laughed ' at him I started for the Pike's Peak gold mines. and, told him they could get offices tn I We had two wagons, each drawn by oiner ouuoujgs ior mucn less, itentais four yoke of oxen. When I struck Den on; all classes of rental property are Ver it was a city of tenu and shacks. fixed, not as you suggest but on the w. spt,nl tha whiter f 1860 in New baste of what the market- will . stand. I M.-rirn Tn the ri .nrlr, i tsi et.irv.r?.n tack to Pike's Peak. On July 4, Wtf3 a ? 1L y brother Marion and I started 7J7JZTiZZ.7lJZL;. rZZ with our outCU back to MbmesoU to Uncle Jeff Snow Says Andy Scroggins, our garage man, has him leven wrecks h'straded good, f5iv- vers fer, and can't sell "em at no price. He's moEt as tad elf. aa Pete Hamlin orged immediately by b. v. johneon. who has purchased It from the Hobi Losging company, whicb is retiring from business. r - With the premoBitien that be had but a few days more te live. Fred W. Miller, wall-to-do cabinetmaker of HUyard. last week purchased hia coffla. paid cash for all. his funeral expeases, and. died Friday.. A aiaa giving the name of Bin Joaes and supposed to be one of the men wbe master -came to Omaha to buy cavalry norses. While living In Minnesota I had gone to Iowa and hid taucht penman-1 robbed the State bank at Seeutm last nip for a time. In those days we had I eek or izz.000. was enet near ruyauup the Spencerian system of writing. That I Monday by Frank Cbadwlck. a motor- was before the days of typewriters, so v t- It was considered a business asset to I T""m"i.!'' "5" V1'",".'"- b. able to wrtte welt The ouarterme.ter r' ru'n"ted f o, 1 MWrZ who was there buying horses wanted a I Sits. The pests have appeared tn Corn el ark to take down the names of the I bers In the Paloune district this winter owners of the horse and make out I tor the first time. As the result ef a guerre! ever the quality of food furnished by the Simp son Legging company near fsheltoa. -James Brooks, 80, is dead at the libel ton hospital and John Campbell, id, ts held In toe cousty Jail charged with shooting him. After tracing bis wife to Seattle after outfit two companies, snd was also able I the had deserted him in New York. John te buy enough riding bridles to supply Aionge. a insurance aojuaier. urea two companies, hut the market was com- IZTZi .rJTwinY wTT rT Baker pieuiy bare of saddlsa. The officers aB(! th. other EitUng Frank W. npksr. asked us if we were willing to ride tela patrolman. St Louis bareback. We were se anxious to get Into action we would have walked ; so of course we consented t ride bareback. We kad not been out more than a week or 10 days when every men In both companies was sup plied with a saddle. We laybawked them as we went along. We figured that the .stay-at-homes could afford te I project. IDAHO Nampa' sarins' program this year ealls for the expenditure of 8189.098. Bonds must be voted for only -t.fr00. - At a meeting Is the Chamber ef Com merce rooms at Buhl. Saturday, farto- arn end Wualneaa aeea. bv a vets Of f te L favored the Ajaerlcaa falls water contribute a saddle to their eountrye services so we confiscated all the loose saddles w earns across. . When we get to bt. Louts our .stolen saddles were taken away from us and we were fur nished government saddles. T enlisted at Omaha. August 29. 114L I was mustered in September 14 as a private in company A. The men la our regiment were from Nebraska, Missouri and Iowa. In October.. 1881. two com- O. ML Casbniw was erebably fataDy barned a few days age by an explosion ef gas which had eellected la the fur nace of the Odd Vellews bwDaing at Buhl. ,. v Clyde Owens.' colored, who has ferved one terns ia the penitentiary fer killing a Mtxtran named Rami res at alias, shot and seriously wounded another negro . at Foceteue last Friday. Importation ef dairy eoers Into the Jerome section has Increased the sale of dairy products more than ao per cent.. panics from our regiment were assigned! The Jerome cream station le paying out more uaa saw a mmj iw ui, 8Ute Treasurer Banks has Just re ceived a Check for H 644 II from the federal government for Idaho's share of the 1921 grasing fees received front the national forests within the state. to service with Fremont ' I was la one ef 'these companiesv We became known as "Fremont's . Husasrs' ' General Fre mont was the commander ef the depart ment ef Missouri, but friction arising, he - was superseded tn November by General Haileuk. - . ' - , - .Xa .Peoember 20, 188L- a regiment of cavalry wa organised that wa -called 'Curtis' Horse,'. Our two eorapanies were incorporated la this organisation. Gen eral Samuel R. Curtis bad about 12,000 troops Under him, which were gathered at Rolls. Missouri. He pursued Price who was later joined by Qenerai MoCuJ loch." CurUs followed them to The Old Oregon lYafl No. 2. tOrganisaUoa by Astor of Eipeditio by Land ana Be te Kstaeusa Peats for the Fur Trade. houses to live In Is because the owner enlist tn a Minnesota regiment We The average occupant of a rented house. 2OB officers, or even - lieutenants, taking one year, with another, does not I When we got to Omaha everybody pay nearly enough to take care or ail 1 """t" " the items vou enumerate, and that means I we could get back to Minnesota. So we he? leaves the owner to pay the taxes. I sold our oxen and wagons and I enlisted at Omaha. The company I enlisted in was full and the officers had already been selected, but they said , they would take me aa a private. ? A tew days after I enlisted-a quarter- eion, under- Rosecrans John Jacob Aster's idea was to estab lish a Use of trading poets from the Missouri river to the Columbia ad have China aa the great mart for the fur Pea obtained. He Interested with htm Alcx- Rldre. Arkansas, in the Oxark mountains. I snder McKay, Duncan McDougal. Do Tbe Confederates bad enlisted about 4000 I aid McKensle wad WUson Pries Hunt. Indians, mostly Cherokees, but our artll-1 June St. 1810. the raeifie Fur company lery was too much tor the Indians. They I was formed, with the above named man preferred head to band fighting, frith I as partners of Mr, Aster. t i s knives and tomahawks: so they didn't I Twe expetitttene were devised and set do much good. Our title was eventually I foet. ene by sea and one by land, to changed from 'Curtis' Horse' te Fifth I reach the mouth ef the Columbia and Iowa volunteer cavalry. Three eons-1 establish a trading post The ship Ton- pan les la this regiment were from Ne-1 quin. under eemmaad of Captain Jona- vaoa. tnree rrom Minnesota, two irvm 1 than Thorn, was fitted out for the sea I si -v"-:-;R.. M. TuttlaV- CRIMINALS AND CRIMINALS W One Who Denounces Rapacity Traces 1 Low crime to Hign urime. Freewater, March 28. To the Editor tk.r. .miMMil n MTitevinl nr. i Plains the whole thing. In the first ef tide under the title "Beck to Piracy." I these articles 1 note the criminals that based on raids of a band of bootleggers I made by the criminals described In nam shins carrying liouor. with - intent I tne secroa- we, too common poopie. iaiW tlum if-thM twumMimmi'" nnrlkml n,iw -jw" vcitt v vw xcvvuvu n thir nrm.1 immeHLnteiv foiiinl from the WaU Street, criminals lawful this article was one under the tlUe v."rel crimes.- but no remedy -has appeared. lSmln). Wall Street - This referred to I We must suffer what they: want to deal a proposed' cleaning up of Wall Street lout to ua The Wall Street criminals hv account of recent ?vicious nractioes I are turning out fearless criminals from nt MMtrea f flrwin- amiltr at fake trans-(among our working classes. -. There is no actions and fraudulent operaOona. ; I remedy for that except Justice. They tried ' You, as editor of a -paper, tnarvel4stj armies in.the days of Tlome. .They tried It the -'piracy' conditions, when .Tight in i out in Russia And they faUed. Tou can tho -Bame column' another editorial "ex- j shoot' men "down. Tou can so. 1 them Miseourt and the rest from Iowa, We put In the first year of the war. at or around Fort Henry. Tennessee. Oa March S. IISS, we were transferred to I Fort Do nelson, where we. stayed - until Jene S, erbeq -we tnarched to Morfrees boro. Tennessee, and became a part otl (the First brigade.- Second cavalry, dirt- niry. He was greatly harassed tn his sion. under- Roeecrana. . - t .a.i,i.- k- uih ks- paay, which did not relish the thought te' orison. Too can bang them. But se I ef a rival company coming , into the long as this power of Injustice rules su-1 field. But by persevering Hunt finally voyage, ana the lane ex pea man placed under the eemmaad of Mr. Hunt. Mr. Hunt proceeded to St Louts, which . was then the outpost of civilisation, to fit himself out with a company te under take the toilsome and perilous trip over land through a savage and unknown pretne we shall have criminals of the gathered together, com pen y ef boat "pirate" claas. I beg ef you to be dill- men and hunters with which to make' gent In your sphere, for there never wss the Jowrwey. Included io his company a time in history when the troth, and were such men as. Donald McKensle. nothing but the truth,-was needed as It Joseph Miller. 'Robert ' McLeRea. John is today. Jesus said, -"Beware when all Day, lUnsay Crooks. Pierre Derios, ln men shall speak well ef you." Stand up terpreter; John Bra bury, scientist: Me.' for Justice, for the sake of Uod end Natalt scientist sod John Reed, clerk, tumanity. Upon such men as you there In October. 1810. the party left tt. ia a great responsibility, -for you deal Louis snd proceeded up the Missouri dslly with the masses. And so does the river ht boals, where a winter excrp was minister of the word ef God. May Go made. help us alL - fl.-E.Cex.- - J .--fT be eearUauedJ 9 -