The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, April 02, 1922, Page 24, Image 24

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    THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY HOIKING, APRIL 2, 1S22.
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7AJTINO
rrilRES sews Items In the same
i -- paper have a striking relation to
each other and to 'present economic I
conditions. I
One related to the work of the I
American farm bureau federation.!
It toldvof the necessity for foreign!
rarksta for farm prodncts.y Tiretil
ft waning ior tner agencies w.tia
it opening the foreign fields, the
tureau itself decided to send com
ralssloBS to foreign countries to aid
in establishing a regular and lucra
tive market . "-.'
. Another was the following state
ment by Bernard M. Baruch. one of
the greatest economic experts in the
country, and former chairman of the
war Industries board:
"It was neglect i seriously needed
r. forms by the governmental powers
.v.v ,t 4
V:m:Z:Airt:ZZ
and not destructive of any real
value." , ' .
The third was an address delivered
by Philip B. Kennedy, vice president
Cf the First Federal Foreign Bank
tig association, of 40 Wall street.
New Tork. j
In part he said:
The, Genoa conference in April has a
rreat purpose - or bringing about aco-
romlo eooperatlon. In Europe, If It
r .v;rrrt;rnj'.
great success the united States
look as though this country, would be
represented. Why T Among other rea
sons, we probably de not yet know where
we ourseivee stand. We took a' lot of
t;me debating tha Versailles treaty. We
took a lot of time debating the. fouiy
jwer treaty. ..
. As ceoperstore we have got to make
ir nre speed or we will not be much help..
international economic conndeoce Is
ehaolutely eesenUai to prosperity ta thlsltorles with no cut in wages,, Edsel
.VetuVew the company.
cut se that we can deal with world busl-
eeas pro5ime uae business people. Then
we will be a help and not a drag.
- vaiiiHM
th,tr -renin matktta. Their walt.4
i'T iw n iuua i vuuiv. 1 ov tney are
taking their own means to get the
market Bernard Baruch says it
la the government that should have
sided them. Mr. Kennedy says in
many words that it is the gov
ernment that Is holding up our re
turn to economic stability. And so
It la
For international business to be
confidence and eooperatlon with al
s-nat. h.llng month, and month.
over treaties? How can money, be
mania to, x.urope wnen tnere is no
toa-rantee of political peace T .How
an tnere be political peace when
're is political non-cooperation
t tween this country and Europe?
An, I whan tkiar. MKt V I
. ... ,
- we maintain
market, abroad? I v .. , .
nr. L.
Ir.ow where we stand. a
-w. th.r. la tiAiiM..i
.. . .. .
ww - ftuvofil vf UtV
I a 1 srea Ptaar-i I V Tar a rtmm am eaplka.l
shouli stand la foreign relatlooa
t we cannot stand there just yet,
:.-auie the last eampaign saw
; :es made ae .to reversal of
' tt'zn policy and those pledges can-
"t be broken openly. They mujft be
Nrrcome tna America must step
! 'lkJV PrPPr PUC n'lSht
. ,. .. .
....i,.., unnaurmai ousiness
and economic prosperity will hare to
watt. Politics. It seems, comes first. I
Within the next 15 months Uncle
Sam mast retire some $8,000,000,000
of Indebtedness. . In view of which
how can you have the heart to fuss
xt last month's grocery ftqiT-.
.
-SLANDERING COLLEGE MEN
lqpHAT there isn't a single gradu- j
, - J- ate of the Oregon Agricultural
college In the state who has gohe
back to the farm" Is a statement said
lo have been made by P.. JL, IXArcy
of Salem -before the Portland Civic
league.;
At mention of free public educa
tion, Mr, D'Arcy sees red. He Is bo
fussed over free higher education
that his statements on the subject
have become ridiculous.
The Journal has had some lnvestl-
guion maae ana nnas wai o per
.. . . .......
.cent of the agricultural graduates
of Oregon Agricultural college are
actually engaged in farming. This
uuee noi uk mio mo accuuni mo i
i ni nnrwii wno mipnaAa inn insiiLU'i
hundreds who attended the Institu
tion one to three years and went;
back to the farm without graduating.
Another 40 per cent are assisting
to Increase agricultural production
as extension or . experiment station
workers, high school or . college
teacher of agriculture,' or employes
wlth tht nlted StatM apartment
of rriculture. These are probably I
doing more for building up agricui-1
ture than they could possibly do by
actual farming:
Successful farmers. orchardists, j
dairymen, stock breeders and poul-
trymen, graduates of the, college, are
to be found in every county in the
state, some of them within a few
miles of Mr." lyArcy's Salem home.
The pure bred Jersey herd that holds,
the world s record for production, by
herd of not less than 15 cows, is
handled and partly , owned by; an
Oregon Agricultural college gradu
ate. Qraduates of , Oregon Agricui
tural college are also owners or at
the head of a number of other lead
lng Jersey herds. .
Here Is an example of Oregon Agrt
cultural college graduates as farm
ers that Mr. D'Arcy might paste , In
his hat: Four of them In the north
end of Gilliam county, Oregon, har
vested wheat in 1921 as follows:
Mark- Weatherf ord, of the firm Of
Weatherford & Weatherford, 65,000
bushels; Merrill .Moores, of the firm
of Moores V Jones, 90,000 bushels;
Arthur Weatherford, of Weatherford
A Turner, 20,000 bushels; Paul Spill-
man, of .Epillman Brothers, 7800
bushels. Total' 182,000 bushels.'
In the same district Mr. Diets, Ore
gon Agricultural college . graduate
of 1)13, is foreman on a wheat ranch
that in 1121 produced 60,000
bushels. ' ..." ; L
If Mr. D'Arcy will get the' hatred
of Oregon's public educational plan
out of his system he can find college
trained dirt farmers all over Oregon.
And if be will seek farther he will
find that Oregon is building up the
finest rural civilization the world has
uur tarmers average very
high In intelligence;- they'' produce
more per man than almost any other,
farmers in the world; they have j
adopted the most advanced system
of farming and. are constantly im
proving it. ; V'"1'
Here is an . example of what our
farmers are doing: Ten years or less
ago we were Importing poultry and
poultry products into-Oregon by the
carload and tralnoad. Now we are
shipping them out by the carload
. "T .V 11 , ,1
and tralnload. The whole world ap-
for poultry strains.
because Oregon Agricultural college
has developed the finest - poultry
strains ever produced, a- single
acnjevemeni mat, year by year,
yields as much money to the state
a Oregon Agricultural college an- j
nually costa
The Great Northern win spend
110.000.000,; the Union Paciflo $17.-
i I 000,000 on betterments and replace-
ts. how fr wm that part 0t
I I2T.0OO.O0O spent for labor go in pro-
viding for jobless ex-service men?
BRINGS BIGGER DIVIDENDS
TN ANNOUNCING the institution of I lon" noga for any man to pro
f the five-day week as a permanent! duce an honest day's work if ho
working basis in the Ford motor fac -
ia-
. Every man needs more than on
day a week for rest and recreation.
i xnf Ford i. company has alwavs
,ought t0. promo h?
,. . , . . ;
for its employes. We beUeve that in
order to live properly every man
should have more time with his fam-
lly, more time for self-Improvement,
more time for building up the place
called home."
If there were mere employers like
the Fords there would be less radi
calism, less anarchism and less bol-
ahevlam in America. There woirld
more healthy political conditions and
MArA ISsTtslYt ftno MUt feA.iVat.-
iiZ.r XnrZ
LMii - - -.. r.. " uuusnai
A man with a living ware and a
homo of his own doesn't often steal.
e ooesn I become a radical, He
usually takes time to study political
I . . --"n HIS
I name but for it. He doermt
I strike, Lit v v..
e",k! D
I iiuvcii laui, irora tne
..I
r"1" wno ln tura can buy
trem tne manufacturer and .the r,
. . . . -
v., " v .vmyvy
mora help and buy more from other
manufacturers and producers and re-
p'1"!" , i ' . )
ita JO. T' there r tpd few
- ura are too many corpora
tlnna ti -. .... .
" " m ui uieir employee
wages to the bone and lengthen their
rrkICf urs- By thel- they
invito strikes, and go so far;aso im-
i port aliens to this country who -n
work for a pittance, crowd the tene-jman who had "not where to lay his
men ts, and make or a city not only i
a place dt low living: standards but a J
place for plagues, for misery, and for j prepare His . food as did Martha;
crime. 1 - (these have been, comforted' by. the
The Ford company has not only I
6hown the way to employers In deal- J
lag with employes, but has lowered j
the. price of a utility to consumers.
It has made It possible for people of I
snih.ll means to own an automobile
and.to have the comforts enjoyed by
those of greater income. '
The Ford plan will be copied! There la at this time a most un
throughout the United States, yet j usual and practical opportunity to
Eut la time, there will be! more
Fords and fewer profiteers, because
the profiteers will find that la the
long run, the Ford plan pays bigger
dimetidsi
FINIS
T OXG Bhornof all lmoerial srlen
j-" -Aprs, not even the poor glory of
- " .
being "the last the Hapsburgs"
remained to the pitiable personage.
Charfes Francis Joseph once ruler
or ; AUSiria-Jrlungary, wno Uiea yes-
tawiav irt a-viia fl minhQi .in
island of Madeira." Oh the one hand,
he had outlived himself, since he had
outlived the only thing for which he
lived-- the estate of royalty. On the
other hand, scores of Hapsburgs are
In being; lagging superfluous upon
the stage, save as they may have al-
ready turned to pursuits that are of
use to humanity or' may do so in
future.
Now that it Is all over with him.
the world may pause a moment to
pity him as . a plain ' human being.
He was personally amiable, possibly
liberal, but certainly weak, He died
in poverty. " Denied those substantial
props that usually in modern times
have sustained dethroned royalties
and those well furnished refuges that
have sheltered them, he reu into a
state of utter helplessness. He was
king or nothing. " And he found that
man, at last, as well as God, has be
come "tired of kings." , -
As j nobility,, the; Hapsburg lineage
is traceable for nearly a thousand
years. As royalty, it runs back six
and a half centuries. The family has
been notable for acquisitiveness.
Territory, power, dominion, have
been seized, but still more have they
been acquired through what ne his
torian calls "a series of fortunate
marriages and opportune deaths," in
those centuries when . realms were
considered personal ; belongings of
monarchs and passed by marriage
or death, as items of dower or leg
(acy,
What the Hapsburgs got they
held, or undertook to hold, and
with marvelous success. And to
power they held most tenaciously, re
lentlessly and crushlngly.
In -their acquisitiveness they had
grasped and held together by force
no less than eight varying and for the
most part discordant peoples, largely
hating one another and the Hapsburg
overlord. These eight, peoples' eight
languages made apt the title, . '.'the
polyglot empire.'
The World war was not needed' to
erase -the Hapsburg as an imperial
character. Internal ; forces would
Have ! done that work, or so Europe's
shrewdest prophets had , long pre
dicted.' The "death of old Franz Josef
was the event that ' was to- be the
signal for the break-up. But he lived
Into' the World war,' and. that work
was done jsummarily.
In 191T there were listed 1T0
Hapsburgs men, .' women and chil-
drenf all. branches, butvthe dis-
k ' 4 i
innce uie wuria zias muveu- away
from autocracy, is shown in the fact
that, as a whole. It is not even con
sidering, such a thing as any sort of
successor of Karl. . it no longer fears
"pretenders," such as were those
m nxitt the 'f a at. mil Stnartn. "Ranr-
bona and Bonapartes who for many
veara alarmed, and through manv
later years pestered, those peojples of
Europe that - were moving toward
i democracy. . . . J
The herald's ancient cry - began.
The king is dead!" The peoples are
I now saying, "Let it end with that.
Klamath Falls lumber workers
told their employers that rather than
accept a nine-hour day as ordered
they would, accept a proportionate
cut in their daily wage. Eteht hours
! works honestly.
AERIAL COPS
THE latest thing In police craft is
. . an airplane patrol.. . France has
adopted '; it, - First the ; aerial cops
.. vy.
win review Jt-ans- streets irom ; tne
air. Thus more equitable dlstribu-
lion of traffic and reduction of con -
gestion may be obtained. Then they
will be trained to track swift moving
machines in which criminals are
seeking to escape. They will follow
the Canadian plan to prevent em tie -
gling,' by v airplane surveillance of
ships that are entering ports.
Just how the elevated : guardians
of. law will collar culprits is not
explained. Probably they will carry!
wireless telephone .? apparatus " by
which information can be broadcast-
ed to officers on the ground, the lat-
ter being provided with antennae and
the small, but effective, fan-shaped
receivers. ; , ' , ' ;
If the theory works out in practice
as planned, crime, with both air and
ether turned against "it, will not havelwar ; destroyed.- Creative trains,
so free a hand as now, unless the
lawless gentry devise something still
more cunning.
NO NOBLER CAUSE
inasmuch as ye hare done it
to the least of these thon hast
done it unto Me.- has been4 the
motive power which has impelled
thousands of Christiana to acts of
unselfish service since that pathetic
rtlea r. I rwm f a Tina A v.. - .
. .. ... -uV viuu -
man or Ualiiee.
Teaming to minister to the bodHy
n?a3 oi me weary traveler of Jor -
head, to hatha His tired feet as did
the Binning and penitent Mary, to
promise that He will honor service to
tho "least of these as onto Him-
self.
Thls ts pure religion and unde
nted, that ye visit the fatherless and
widow in distress" is quite as scrlp-
tural as a rule of living as the meet-
jlng of ourselves together.
minister to the "least of these" in
giving assistance to an enterprise
which : many cool-headed business
men have designated as .the biggest
and best philanthropic; enterprise
ever projected in Oregon.; that of the
farm home for dependent children
which is being '"mothered" by the
Oregon W. C. T. V. -.-
There - are at the ' present time
literally hundreds of fatherless chil
dren in Oregon who, if sheltered at
all, have no real home or love, and
in the large part are given such
grudging care that they are bound
to grow up into shrinking men and
women, unfitted to meet life's prob
lema bravely .a
Organizations outside of the church
have taken an interest in this enter
prise and are giving generously, but
this Is.a service to which; the church
and individual Christians should give
support even -without solicitation
from the projectors of the - home.
What will the worldling think of
that body to whom He said, ' "Inas
much as ye did It to these" if they
do not take a leading part in making
a home to shelter the heads of "these
least" that they may have the honor
of "doing it unto Him" in whose
footsteps they profess to walk their
earthly journey. Surely this appeal
will not fall upon deaf ears.
It is hard times and churches are
burdened with the regular expense
of making the "wheels go round" but
surely such: work as this may well
be counted legitimate expense for
the church of God. ?
Rev. Thomas VUlers comes to
Portland well recommended by the
congregations of his former pastor
ates and by a record of accomplish
ment. Such pastors are doubly wel
come in Portland. . f-
ONE MORE UNFORTUNATE
THE tremendous grip .narcotics
have on those who become ad
dieted to drugs is not more start
llngly illustrated than in a case that
has just been discovered in Illinois.
A young woman in that state, it
has been found, has submitted to
14 surgical operations, all of which
were entirely unnecessary, as, a means
of obtaining the drugs that she
craved. It is even suggested that she
inflicted Injuries, upon ' herself in
order to return to hospitals and there
secure opiates. v ' "!
While in hospitals, the. young
woman seemed never, to get welt
She used the radiator and water
bottles to keep her temperature high.
After discharge from one institution
she would turn up in another, under
go another operation, and remain as
long as possible. . : , I'
A physician ' who recently was In
charge of her case says: (
I feel perfectly safe In eaylnr that
this patient would submit to any kind
11 S?"S
aa - uu& vluvjP . vuier oamuo
drugs. During her stay In the Rockford
hospital she has tried every means to
obtain an operation through taking vari
ous) troubles and disorders.
That is what drug sailers lead their
victims to. ,1s "it any: wonder that
public sentiment' all over the coun
try Is running high against narcotic
peddlers, and that campaigns are
under way to save other people from
a similar fate?
The bill in congress to deport
aliens caught peddling drugs ought
to pass without a dissenting vote.
, The abandonment of a part of the
Oregon Trunk railway is a fresh re
minder that if one railroad had been
constructed through the gorge of the
Deschutes instead of two there might
waay oe anotner tapping tne pro-
ductlve regions of Central Oregon
I and furnishing profitable : traffic for
both. ' . - " . 1- :
THE GEDDES ARGUMENT
I a-- . if: " . ii. i. - : ;
TTERE lie a million men among the
dead. What matters it to this
crowded old : world ? ; They died in
. -v- , lu
giory. war i ounea tnem . beneath
J the sbelltom earth. Against their
1 honored memory can be laid no such
1 weight of worry as bemedaled sur
I yivors of the strife strive with anew.
I What matters it that 2,000,000
j died or. that 20,000,000, succumbed
1 because of wart
In the answer that Sir Auckland
Geddes gave his Auditorium audience
inj Portland there was Irrefutable
argument against war and in behalf
of nations leagued to keep the peace.
The loss of 1,000,000 bodies Oft
the bloodsoaked earth .where) they
fought; that was of less consequence.
I But the loss of 1,000(000 brains! Ah
j there, said he, is a loss from which
I the world cannot recover to this
I generation.
They were young brains that the
I courageous brains; brains filled with
dreams and.- the power of accom
plShmenC Brains that, alive today.
could and would help solve the sick
old world's problem, of recuperation.
Brains crumbled into dust!
Is it to be wondered that Ambas
sador Geddes declared, with evidence
of hearfelt feeling, that war's horrors
and consequences are such he would
leave no 'stone unturned to prevent
japy future conflict?
t . . . -
i rwtoer wars couia only mean
I further dotmt!n- nf -rnn,'..
nersonalSties and snlenclid ahmtv t.f
1 should be dedicated to invention anl
THE MODERN
KEYNOTE
World's Statesmen Proclaim Vital Need
of Trust Among Nations, That Each
Shall Trust AH Others With Fear -of
Foreign Malice Fore rone. Do- "
mettle Tranquillity and Pros
perity Will Reappear The
War Will Must Be Ban- - '
lahed From the World.
Riia tbt Ixia aogelea Times
Whether it is Liovd nnm nA a
iuur xiauoor or- .ungiana or warren G
j- - wvw. ur ueuiv ii. do iesa- 1
wa vl ut opposition lora Urey, Lord I
nuuert ecu. jtierDert Asquith In Britain I
or ex-President Wilson. William I
Adoo, Homer Cummian el America j
ine aeynote of all the great speeches to- I
uy is a wider, nobler, more altruistic I
lDtenuttionallam.' Th cum i. m. .r t
France and IUly, of the British domln- I a,Vtt ! leveler. but that con
ions, even of China and Janan. hnu diuon only lasts until distinctions again
leaders of national nr,ti r mtt I
Wht tu, l;.r: I
selfishness. th viinna. Kr.V:.
f". J J wniuio
No man amorur them dares nwnW tn
take a stand oa the old worn-out the
ories of every country for Itself and the
devil take the hindmost. Tha -rt sr
Lbrought home to peoples too clearly, too
bitterly, the fallacT of such a nniir in
moaern tunes, when trans portatloa and
means of communication have brought
wwi sauua im worta into such close
toucn wita ita fellows.- .
- . . - e e e ' L - " '
The time has not vet'com. a a rtnr.
man Angell pointed out In his several
lectures before the local clubs, when the
wora . Toreiener- ceases to be a terra of
contempt; yet, ' for - the! salvation of clv-
uizauon, ior the restoration of world
peace, for the sake of the heritage of
our children, governments and peoples
must learn to think internationally, must
translate that word "foreigner" -into an
Interpretation of friendship and confl
uence. , i .
The old policy of "My country, rirht
or wrong," can :no longer stand. One's
country a righteousness, one's country's
relations to the jest of the world, one's
own country's integrity and good stand- I
ing among tne nations, as exDresaAd In
its friendship fori and confidant in i
those other nations the mutual resoect. I
sympathy and fair dealing between coun-1
tries must be the basis , of future pros- are Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Venders of Al
perity and peace.i Nothing else can bany and Mr. and Mrs. C. N. Freeman of
achieve it. Andi power henceforth must
be baaed upon the international confi
dence which governments inspire.
"i -., j. ,a a . .. . .
The great minds of -the world have all
accepted , this : obvious truth all their
public pronouncements reek of it The
noisy, political, . spurious patriot who
now shouts "the grave dangers" of the
limitation of armament,, who decries the
peace pacts because You are making It
impossible ror us to defend the Philip
pines, impossible for us to go and attack
Japan," like Reed of Missouri, Whose
sole arguments against the safeguards
of conference and arbitration contained
tn those various peace pacts is the bbuse
ana vuincauon of other countries t like
Hiram Johnson.' whose braggart ; faith
crime In the i strength and domi
nance of the foreigner," but only virtue
and idealism in the strength and domi
nance of his own country these are the
smau fry. the provlncialisU of a day
mar. is passing. -
Prime Minister Lloyd George, speak
ing- before the ; Liberal conference in
London,- said s ; - I sr? fiL-' . .
"The" great problem which : confronts
Britain and the rest of the world might
be summed up in one phrase the res
toration ; bf. mternational f Confidence-
confidence In Great Britain, -confidence
In ' other countries, but above all the!
confidence of one country in every other
country. International confidence is
the' basis of international trade. If
there is no' International trade, xthere is
desolation, and to restore that you must
restore national confidence, I am asked
why : I devote so much time to foreign
affairs, why I don't give more time to
domestic matters. X. will tell you why.
Until we -restore the peace of the world,
until we restore International confidence,
our domestic problems, the domestic
problems ct all large countries, cannot
be satisfactorily dealt with, Peace must
be built upon the 1 good understanding
among all peoples.- That is the first con
dition.' of -i the i economic ' restoration of
their internal affaira
There is but one urgent program, but
one urgent item of that program. Let
us Inscribe it on our banners. Peace on
earth and good will among men.
j . ; . -a a a
This is the fine, modern keynote, the
cry that finds a response In every, hon
est Christian heart today. The greater
the patriot today, the greater an inter
nationalist is he. . We cannot go back
to Cain and. ask. "Ard I my brother's
keeper!" But rather must we remem
ber that "inasmuch as ye have done it
unto the least of these, ye have done it
unto me." j
Letters From the People
l Commnnieationa aent to Tha Jonrnal tor
pnblicataon. ia thia departaaant aluraid be written
eeWsSo" wf."i? mValm'i
by tha wrUer, wheaa maU addrats la full saoct
aoaompaar tfte eootnoaotm. j y:it
: irtftBT-wnrm rit lA-trriTTR .taw
" r J
,,,HVWU' Tr " . fTT."rhu a student at the Oregon institute.
Plea for More- Shifts Entered.
Weed, CaU . March 27. To the Editor
of The Journal In a recent Isaue of Tne
Journal - a prominent- manufacturer .- is
tiuoted as saying that before the war
he was an ardent champion of the eight
hour day. ; as conditions then, warranted
it, but, now that.conditions have changed,
he believta the eight-hour day should be
BuspendedNtemperarily. .. . .
X do not see the reasonaUeness of
policy that favors the eight-hour dav
when there is a job for every man, yet
advocates a longer work day when there
are, mmsajids-aeeking employment. The
reason given In favor of a longer day is
that there must be more production at
less cost to everyone. To substitute the
10-hour for the -eight-hour day without
even pro rata compensation, as the party
referred -" to " is attempting to do In the
lumber Industry in Northern California,
doeav net. mean more production at less
cost to everyone, but is clearly a case
of more production at less eost to the
employer - and at the expense of the
workera .
There are any number of such cases one I one week, another another, as ao
1 over the country, yet we are Midi tnar if wnafrvtai .vt
all
noblyacama
lf of the employment aituasion
there is need of greater production, why
not add some ef the unemployed ex-
service men to the payrolls, putting on
another shift if necessary, instead of
adding two hours to the day of those
atreaay empioyeor ; .."v bubscriber.
EDTJCATIXG CHILDREN TO SAFETY
Tttm Una Spokane Spokesman Burlaw
Harriet Beard, supervisor of educa
tion In safety at Detroit, has recently
told of thej-aventtve work done by her
" uw awwwaK' .um uawu, bwi
reau of education considers her narra
tive so useful that it has issued this as
a government document.
The making of a department of safety
started with study f the police records
of accidents to children. The police and
the firemen lent and stlO lend the maxi
mum of cooperation. The school chil
dren were asked to picture safety on
COMMENT AND
SMALL CHANGE
Since wev fi am-i-ftr ' an tiKi.
day we're ready for the other exigen
cies of sprins. - .
James Gwlan of Pendleton would be
a conrressman. Prohahiv wAnta . tn
"gwlna" pa his merits, too. .
. a a
A third party is enter-in ooliUea the
I papers say. Again violating the roman-
uo taeory that two is company. . -
jue s not start
an arsument - on that
score now.
t
I.lfa rnma a a T.ntt x.
greatest rains of an energatlo month
f" mto one aster bonnet or a frock
" oay.
i a
established by tiny slabs of fir or
cu vautta ox marble.
? Anyhow, just so long as this ferocious
iieavmgs or thoughtless invaders.
San Francisco, bavin? fatl tn. hur.
den Portland with blame for Mary Oar
den's cold, has gracefully escaped, cen
sure by having Mary relieved from ill
ness.
Now It annears that our ba.w tele
phone rental in Portland is necessary so
that- an -Eastern corporation can buy
Michigan phone poles to erect in the
shadows of pur fir and pine,
MORE OR LESS PERSONAL
Random ; Observations About Town
A. C Fenton. an attorney from Mar-
garetviUe, N. Y.. the old home town of
A. G. Jackson, forest examiner, arrived
in Portland Saturday to visit Mr, Jack
son and other Union college men whom
he has not seen in many yeara Fenton
has been at Beaumont. CaL, settling an
estate, and having a desire to see where
tv.a Mrwvi River annles arrow, which he
'bas"been buying for a great many years,
and also to see his old college mates, he
una North. Fenton will also visit in
Seattle before returning East. .. '
I . a . a a ;
; Among the guests ef the Multnomah
Silverton.
e e e - -
G. S. Ehle of Toncalla is making a
business visit to Portland.. : ,
e- e e v " ' :-
Mrs, S. S. Bath of Goldendale is a
guest of the Multnomah.
m i w
F. H. Struble ef Salem was seen on
the streets of Portland Saturday.
. i a a .
Mr. and Mrs. C T. Mills of Ch eh alia
Wash., are visiting In Portland.
. a w m
H. E. Kirk ' of lone is registered at
the Oregon. . . -
OBSERVATIONS AND IMPRESSIONS
; OF THE JOURNAL MAN ; p
; . By Fred Lockley - -1
The neneBal hietorv of pionear who fca
pused tha mark et lonreoare and tan, with tha
record of hi long aerrica la publia capacittea,- ia
presented by Mr. Lockley today. This bobs
eaariaa did pra-pioneer work in s taction of
Orecon that ia now aoted for wealth aa watt a
pristine wiWneaa that is part ef ita waalth.
General W. H. Odell lives at No. 4
East 24th street, PorUand.' He was born
in Carroll county,- Indiana, in 180,-se
he is 92 years old. X visited him recently
and we renewed an acquaintance begun
nearly, 30 years ago. - ..
Mv ancestors, were 'among the early
colonists of South Carolina, said Gen
eral Odell. "My father moved from
South Carolina to Ohio in 1803. -In 1S08
he moved to Indiana. : Our family were
the first white settlers in Jackson town
ship. My father's name was John OdelU
My mother's maiden name was Sarah
Holman. She was born In Kentucky.
I came across the plains with my father
In 1851, so X was SI years old. X drove
a prairie schooner whose motor sower
was four yoke of oxen. There were 18
wagons in. our train and we never lost a
steer coming across the plains.. : . . .
.: v.$-. . i . ' a v a -,v-., j , j, i.
"We located In Yamhill county. Shortly
after coming here I went to the Oregon
Institute, now known as Willamette uni
versity. In 1H9 I took; charge of San
tiam academy, at Lebanon, remaining In
charge of it three yeara One of my
most brilliant students was M. C George,
later & congressman from Oregon, and
now a resident of Portland. ,,
;-.r ';. ;; ,'-.e e e '
In 1S5S X married Mrs. Samuel R-
Thurston. My wife's maiden name was
Elisabeth F. McLench. She was born
December 23, 1818. at Kennewlck, Maine.
She married Samuel R. Thurston in 1844.
They moved to Burlington. Iowa, th 1848.
and crossed the plains to the Willamette
valley in 1C47. -While they were living
at Oregon City my wife's first husband,
Mr. Thurston, was elected Oregon's dele
gate in congress. - He- died In 1851 on
board. the ship on which he was return-
rom Washington to his horn in the
I Willamette valley. . He : died tle" year
1 X eame to Oregon. . Two years later his
widow became preceptress of Willamette
university. : It was there I met her.
She taught Latin and was also proficient
In French. Italian and Spanish. Presi
dent Hoyt of Willamette university per-
zonned our marriage ceremony.
'After living on my farm in Yamhill
county several years we moved, to Leb
anon and took charge of Santiam acad
emy. From there we went to Albany,
where we taught ra the public schools.
The following year, 1864i we moved to
Eugene. My wife opened a - private
school there, while I , took up the prac
tice of surveying. I put in the summer
of 1864 in and around Baker: City and
in Malheur county, The following year.
1865, I surveyed a part of Wallowa val
ley. 1 was among the first white men to
go Into the valley. .At that time deer.
the streets. Trafric games were 'played
to teach what It means to cross the
crowded and dangerous street. These
made .the children realise what ' the
safety -policeman means and how he
dfteS his Work. Bov Senate wm maA
-vw . siuuj, : .
' Safety dubs of children are formed,
and the schools compete tn keeping down
the number of . accidents, A little text-
j book has been issued that offers ideas
I about safety work and its methods. The
police department,, m case of the occur
rence of some particular kind of dan
ger, makes suggestions to the schools
and their pupils.
I demonstrate that really efficacious edu-
Detroit's experiment and experience
caUaB la orint tlta tlmrti r i.
ucabie. During the year . before 96
school children and many more not of
school years had been killed by acci
dents on the streets of Detroit. During
the year of safety work only 48 school
children were thus killed, and all other
casualties to children on the streets
numbered !S3. as against 1037 pre
viously. .. .
NEWS IN BRIEF
;. sidelights;
There's a. he an of satisfaction tn nub-
Ilshing a country newspaper, Wa know
mat we earn our money nonesuy ana
we earn every penny that we- getr
Grant County Journal. j '
The rood old rata Is lust what the
oil needs to nourish the field and gar
den crops that will feed thousands.
Oregon should have a bumper year In
1922. McJiinnvtile News-Reporter. -
" . a a ; .
There seems to be a subtle attack on
onr public school eyetem throughout the
country. Our. system is not perfect, and
honest, open criticism will help. It is
the most American institution we have
and must be , Jealously guarded from
enemies. Molalia. Pioneer.
- ' " -
And then William Jennings Bryan teQa
the evolutionists they can't make a mon
key out of him. So should have said the
senate to the opposition performers In
the organ -grinders concert over the
peace treaty. Oregon City Banner-Cour
ier. ..... ' : .
Psalm X And behold, there came
forth - Sammy and Peter and Cy. who
walllngly objected to a tax on Incomes
at the state convention of the tax reduc
tion party. So it is written that those
who do not help bear the burdens of
others should be cast out. Turner Trib
une, -i .
; . .. - "' . a a . "i ..' . " ,
The Pacifie Herald Is absolutely In
favor of abolishing United - States and
state senate. America bas no need of
riT expensive and arbitrary arljnocratlo I
houses of lords to interfere with legis- I lng concussion of the brain, the re
lation in the interest of the plain people. 1JU11 of being thrown from a wagon In s
rney are rencs 01 worn-out, oaca ages. l
Tl'.U 11 . TI u., 1 I -. . I
I Waldport Pacific Herald.
-. .
Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Harper of Eugene
are vUlUng In Portland over the week-
end.
mong out-of-town arrivals are F. H.
Far.boru and Malcolm Scott of Astoria, I
who are at the Benson. 7 j. . I
Mr. and Mra J. H. Martin of Salem
spent Saturday In PorOand. f I
J. L. Travis of Salem Is transacting
business in Portland.
A recent arrival 1 R. L. Wlnther of
Eugene, - - :
- . e e e
' J. A. Brown of Salem was among Sat
urdays arrivals. . .
e e e
S. G. Clark of Grants Pass Is an out-
of-town visitor. ..; -
backward spring.
. .. a
Paul W. Scea.of Milton is spending a
tew oays in i'ortiana,
. ..v e ' ; e..
August Hildebrand Is registered at the
Multnomah from Astoria. .-
.(.. a a - ' . i
George F. ' Christen eon ef Stevenson,
wash., paid Portland a visit Saturday.
elk, bear and mountain sheen were nlen-
uiui around wauowa lake, . - !
none crossing tne plains I armed a
number of buffalo and antelope, and In
my various surveying trips I have seen
ana aiuea lots of big game.
-in ilR77 my- wife and I moved to
Salem. From 1877 to 188J J was editor
of; the Salem Statesman. 1 bought .
tmrd interest In the Statesman and
eventually bought out the other stock
holders. W. XX Craig was my foreman
and was one of the best foremen I aver
naou ... i
"I held' the office ef denntv TTnltad
SUtes surveyor of public lands from 1864
to 187L when I became surveyor-general
oi uregon. in.ii7( x was Republican
nominee for presidential elector. That
was during the Haye.-Tilden campaign,
I was appointed messenger i to take
Oregon's vote to the national capital.
. "I published the S&lem Statesman fmm
1877 to 1885. .During the last two years
ox mat penoa a also served as state
printer. ; At the end of my terra as state
printer X was appointed Postmaster at
Salem, ' serving under President Arthnr
I continued in that office darina Ha
aumuusu-auon oi Tesident - Cleveland.
Later I was given the Job of allotting
lands to the Indians on the Silets Indian
reservation in Lincoln county. .
-My wire died March 31. 198' Rha
was buried from the Methodist church at
oaiem. ine paiibrearera were ex-Gov
ernor-2. L. Moody. A. Bush. General W
H-.BI.er.8' John Hughes, Professor Starr
and FabrltUS Smith. Shortlv after m-r
wife died I was appointed by the surveyor-general
of Oregon te the post of
inspector of publia surveys. It was dur
ing this time that X allotted, the lands to
tne Indians on. the Silets reservation.
In 1895 Governor Lord .appointed me
clerk of the State land board at Salem,
wuere served lour yeara
: ... " , . a a. a
: Tn 1894 I married Mra Carrie Taylor,
whose maiden name was Carrie Bright
&ne was born July 291334. Her mother
aiea wnen she was a small child, so she
was aa opted by zr. Walker of Ken
tucay. She was given a coUege educa-
tion. In 1861 she married Dr. James
wuinn Taylor, we were married Mar
23. 1894. She die at Raiam ji,i a
M clJ . BIm'.,jr
X have known most ef the prominent
Methodist ministers and bishops in Ore
gon during the past 70 yeara Among
these was Bishop Ames, whom I met la
ism at my home in Dayton. X also knew
well Gustavua Hinesvr A. F. Waller.
Father Lealle, J. L. Parrtsh. Dr. W. H.
Wilson, A. F. Hoyt. ? William Roberta,
Keamlah Doane and many othera..
"For many years I was president of
the board of trustees of Willamette uni- j
versity. : -4 - 1 -
C. B. Moores, who lives In Portland,
can teQ you all about me. I have known
Charlie ' Moores since he :- was 1
years old. His father was fine man.
so is unajue. ne is a good republi
can ana a good Metnooist.-
. ,- A DOUBLE STEAL
From the Haw To HataloV
The Chicago bandits who steal . the
articles pledged In pawnshops commit
what amounts in effect to double rob
bery. They steal from the pawnbroker
and from his customers at the same
time. An honest man or woman who
borrows money on an heirloom Intending
to redeem it and suffers its loss bjr theft
from the pawnbroker certainly knows
wnat oaa rue is. .
THE POINT OF VIEW
"'yr-rwss the Boston Transcript ' ''.
i Dora Archie is clever, even though
you -aon t uae mm.
. v t m . . . .
vn-v.istt 1 Ana orawuig 1:9 a
weeai y.- ,
" Dora Trua but think how much leas
ne u worth. ' - -
Uncle Jef JLSnow Says
Jed McCracken has come back from
revaay, where he's been a-workln fer
a truck company fer nuthinV He didn't
make enough to keep up his payments
and his board bill, and now he's out his
truck and all he tfaid on it, but has a
miLaon dollars worth ef experience,
waoca ne cant rind no market fer.
r
The Oregon Country
VarUswaaa Happemnaa la Bnaf fana tar iba
aay aeaoar.
; OREGON
The Tillamook Guernsey Breeder as-
sociatlon haa decided to bold the "Guera
sey Gaieties" at McCoy. June 1, X and 2.
In order to obtain poetofflce facilities ;
for West Salem, t total of 145 tiames '
have been, suggested for the municipal-
iv- . . . : .
Convicted of having liquor In hie poo- I
eesion. W. Moody was r.ned $50 at
Bend and given a four months jail sen
tsace,. "
Hood River county grange members
have leased a brick store building la"
Hood River aad have launched a oo
operative store. m- .. ,
At Grants Pass 'Tuesday night two
railroad men were held ep by a lone rob
ber and relieved of thaur gold watches
and about ft la cash. , .
Because he transferred his auto license '
tag from a Buick to a Ford. C F. Hoe-
iu. Ltescnutes county rancher, was
fined 10 at Redmond.
FkMnr ataaM. tor ratfTntn ..
der 10 inches and not less than Inches.
does not open until April la. Formerly
toe season opened April X.
Mrrtle Point arm vntA Anrtl 1 1 -
30.000 bond Issue to enlarge the city's
water supply. sThe proposition was lost
by a narrow margin at a recent election.
Charles -T IMran a "waM ' f Ik. -
World war. attempted to commit suicide
In the county jail at Eugene by slashing
his throat with the lacsed edrea of a .
coffee can. .
Paul Hanaen, a rancher ef the OdeU .
patriot, la Hood River oountr. is uf far-
" awweat,
fW . .
The state hirhwa v.. ' .
reived nine large tractors from tha wa
aepartmeat. These tractors will be used
.f0 .SOB'u?cUoa worit various
parts of the state. ?
Fire VandlT mnmlit. A.-.a .
large barn three miles soatheast of Tan-
P "s ownea ny . ti Archibald. infUct-
r ttZ-JV!??
tenta. Bru " con
Mra Pearl O'Srian -) -.i-
th. ik.M. . i.ki... V .
1 and steps will be taken to naani ih.
corporation, after which the foundry wilt,
P? Prt?d M private enterprise by
-r??.r3' y01'. Swagrart end Mrs. George
were karti TiV.lZ w?m'n of Pndleton. ;
ftTfrnan' tt?J?,P V?!
I a. -wva ww en. uu etc a aAgiTCkr
license suspended for six months.
l' -: ... WASHINGTON - ;
Aberdeen! ETV a Tnawa n!l liinu .
JJvrjti72,e00 fund for their new' lodge
Chehalla HM mim '
the construction ef 3000 uneal feat of
concrete sidewalk. ;
It is estimated that In Walla Walla,
&MUVa H UU a. : 1 -
B. F. Cnln. Mi-ritiirnr at...
r ' J V . uv .WilWUIII
uttlBMr comnanv a.nl . mm.. . wA
Third NaUonal bank of Walla Walla,
died Tuesday la Walla Walla. He was
ii years oid.v
- In an altercation ever a Mantim. in
at Lind. Wash John . Philitna ma
?1t,,d .tftrf tune by Charles Smith.
Phillips ia in a serious condition I ronv
lose of blood. ."y
The new concrete hrlda-a tm k
creelc at Stevenson, together with one
mile ef permanent read on the North
Bank highway, has been completed and
opened for traffic. .
Eleven bide war nlmiiHi rv..i.M
Jor "'tnting the new reservoir tor
the Walla Walla water work ts. iw.
eat was fKS.C23.28, or 16,000 under the
eugipeere estimate. . . - ,.
Archie TL Mitchell, former rarai malt
carrier at "Yakima, has been arreated
at Galveston. Texas, and will be brought
J,.clS. fc harsea of embesaUng pos
tal funds and rifling letters. TT.-
(rMBn,i,n3!!!.of Lk 9he
fM!,
A second allotment of Lake Chelan
rtgatlon district bands mitmrtiii.
820.000. has lust haan anli . t..t.i. "
bond house. Fifty thousand dollars"
worth were disposed ef recently.
The cornerstone of the new 1150,000
Elks' temple at Wenatchee was laid at
11 clock last Tuesday night. Bombs
were exploded, fireworks set off - and
there was a parade of 600 Eika bearing
torches, . - .
Followinr conviction f Vlrhaai trn
and W. A. Johnson at Taeoms, sentences
tw. me foTrobblng the Tsutebank et
Eatonville 'March 8 L John CKeefe wag
given ssven to 18 yeara . .-
- Contract for tha ImnrmanMt .
I consolidated drainage district of LewVs-
ton and Thurston counties, involving 800
aorws. nu own awaroao. to a Bpoaane
firm for 318.600. The engineer's estimate
oa the project was 33 1,000.
Authorisation and order tn the Vnetn.
ern Paciflo railway te refund 3177.40 as
aa overcharge On the ahlproent of two
I carloads of cull apples from Grand-
view, Wssiu. to Monte sano, has been Is
sued by the department of publio worka
; '.-""v" idaho -i -' - '-
Jacob Hod sins' and Elma. Thla wlfa.,
pleaded guilty at Kellogg of having
liquor in their possession and ware each
fined llfkp aad oosta.
The Caesarian eperatlonoaased the "
death ef Mrs. C ftommer, St, wife et a '
ehysician at Cottonwood. The child, a
or, is living aad normal. ...
K bond election has Yvaan iaTt4 ar -
Kootenai for April 11 to vote on an issue
of 815.000- the monev ta Toe uaad la bnil1 -
additions to the school houses. . - - '
Widening of the treads of alaltrha In
northern Idaho, to have them conform,
to the width of automobiles as a means -of
keeping the roads open the year. -round,
u proposed by the Moscow cham
ber of commerce. . ,
The new 831.000 home of tha TdafcA
Phi Delta Theta et the University of
Idaho was officially christened a few
I ilJn M bT Miss Lucy Davis of Boise,
I .wuo Pv experience a in. -cnxisten
I ,n eouices, threw the bottle of grape
I Juice through a large plate glass window..
Quldhood
. .
Charles Hanson Towns In the Designer.
There Is nothing in an the world Quite
so beautiful as childhood. X think this
ia so because in children there is Inne
eence ; and whether or not. growing older.'
we sometimes dare to smile at innocence,
deep down In our hearts we have an '
abiding -veneration for It - For Inno
cence is not ignorance. - Imagine calling
a white rose "ignorant.' But Innocent,
yes. .. . . .; .- - .
Childhood Is doubly dear when Ita
happy years are shared with another.
There Is scarcely a more wonderful Jove -
than that which often exists between
two slaters. For in an affection like this .
there Is no thought of Jealousy or rival
ry only the pure nncontamlnated love
that is the result of the tie of blood. It
is as unselfish as the dawn or sunset,
as fragrant as lilacs wet with rain, as -much
to be cherished as the one perfect . '
friend "who sometimes a --. miraculously '
comes Into our later Uvea
Then. too. we all look back upon our '
childhood : with - longing eyes as NV .
vember loqks back at the vanished April
and we see, .often through a mitt of
tears, all that we once were, and as we
wish we might have been able to remain.
We know.- as good Bishop Earle knew,
that a child is "a white paper, unscrib
bled with observations of the world. '
wherewith, at length, it becomes a
blurred notebook. It was thla same
wise man who aald that a child Is The
Christian's example, and the old man's
relapse ; the one imitates his pureness
and the other falls late his simplicity." :
xes, u we could regain the ingenuous
ness and beauty of .childhood we should '
be rich indeed. The best that we may
hope for with the crowding years is the
golden memory of that which we inev
itably lost, and look upon the children
who follow us as we look upon the stars
symbols of a power and a purpose be
yond our poor understanding. ..t .
: i
It