WEDNESDAY, SEPTE3ICEU i37r, 1022. C. m. jacsjsos . Fabnenar IB caln. be eonlidWirt, be abeerral eaal So onto othexa ee yoa would bare, tku 4 Ht I ' Cubiuhed eeery weekday .and Sunday naoraine . t The Journal bsiklmc, BmAV at Xaaa- bill tregt; Portland. Oregon. luc tared at the Doetoffke at f ortland. Oreao. ., Jof tranzmuaioB Usa the aaeJa aa aacooa- ciaai matter. - National, advertising hjheenia- T1VK BfliMaia Keataer Co.. Braae- Vwtek halldina. S2S Tiftk aveaoe. Xw J ark; ; OQ Mallere tmUdlr.K. Ctilcato. PAatfiC COAST BKPBSE.TATIVE U. C aforcaaasa Co.. Inc. Kxaauaar r-ntirttnt. Sea Fraaeieeo; Title Irisaranee ' waUdiaeV - Anselee; SeeorhJea tralMinc. Seattie. t-BK OREGON JOURNAL, reeereee the. Shi to reject adreltiain eopy which H Jmh , fcbjecti enable. It atoo will not prmt Any f espy tiiat in any way nnniata readme aaae t ter or that cannot readily be recosniaerl at t , . . SUBSCRIPTION BATES e By Carrier Ctty and Country DAILY AND BCNDAr Op week S .lalOna month - DAILY I ttlXDAI On week .10 1 One weak $ . Ona month. . . . . .451 MX HAIL. RATES PAYABTJB V ADVANCE DAILY AND SUNDAY Oaa year . ,S.OO Three months. . . 82.2 S Six aawntrn. . . , 4.2SOae month 7 i DAILY IWithoat Bandar) SUNDAY Oaly One year. f 6.00 On year. ...... $3.00 fix Biontha. .... .2B Three month. - . 1.75 Bwntaa..... Three Don t be. . . I-0O Ota month AO f J WEEKLY I WEEKLY AXD (irnn WerinaadaTl ( SUNDAY One year 81.0iOe year .88.60 Sir Wjrurtrw. BOI j (These rate apply only in the Vt. - Rate to Eastern pouta fornrihed on appli cation. Make remittance by Money Order. Exoree Order or Draft. If yonr poatolftc not a money-order office. 1- or 2-eeat atampe wiB be aeerpted. Make all remittance pay able tn The Journal PablUhinc ' Company, Portland. Oregon. tELEPHONE MAIN 71 SI. All department reached by tbt number. A haze on the far horiaon, The infinite tender ky. The ripe rirh tint of the cornfields, An'd the wild crese aaittng hifu. It And alt over nplanu and lowland t - - The charm of the guldenrod jj Some of us call it AUtnmn. And otheri call it Uod! Carmth. i. THE PASSING OF ISOLATION AWiu "splendid isolation" and "no entangling alliances." as gov ernmental policies, collapsing? Is the" great veil about to be swept aside jto reveal this nation again taking its' abandoned place in world affairs? . On. September 1, President Hard ing drove the opening wedge. He faid, in substance, that, "if called ipon, America could no longer re fuse to take part In the adjustment tf the vital questions affecting world peace and industrial tran quillity," and that "at the proper time the United States will offer a scientifically practical plan for he satisfactory settlement of exist ing difficulties which have so far prevented industrial, financial and political peace, in Europe." i His statement is followed by the tf'esolution of Representative Brit- I ton of Illinois. That resolution falls upon the executive to take Such action as he deems fit to bring bout industrial, financial and po litical peace abroad, j Mr. Britton was one of the strong rltics of President WHson. He Was one of the so-called "splendid Isolationists." He was one of the bitter opponents of our participa tion in world affairs. He was one pf those gentlemen in Washington Who wanted to build a Chinese wall rbout America. But Mr. Britton has visited Eu rope. Other men have been there. All have brought back discouraging reports or conditions abroad, . Mr. Britton has watched the -progress of ''splendid isolation" in this coun try,. .So. have other men. So have the leaders of the Republican party. They-re- conscious of where their path is leading. They have watched "the recent events at the ballot box. They see what "splendid isolation" is doing to Europe and what the Kurdfpean debacle is doing to the United" -States. J", .'Itis well that they see as clearly as they do where Isolation leads. It is -well that they are altering the attitude of this government, even ht this late date. And it is not im possible that they can yet use the jfwwer of. this , government to bring about conditions that should have been present moViths and months kgo, and thereby save what can be saved from the wreck, both from ihe economic, standpoint of the pub lic and the political standpoint of the party in power. f -This Tiernan-Poulin affair must at least give the Indiana gossips k wonderful day in court. WHOSE BUSINESS? TT7HAT are district attorneys for, V if not to find oat where laws lire violated and proceed to prevent ihem from, being further violated ? f What is the attorney general for and what are all the deputies in the Attorney general's office for, if not to sustain, the majesty of the law using the courts when necessary lo prevent violations of the law? ; What are" the governors of states for. if not in the course of their many duties to see that there is a ! proper administration of the laws I that legislatures and peoples pass? I Do official oaths mean what they say and say what they mean when I the official takes a pledge to sup- port the constitution and th lava? There is fraud in the flat income tax amendment through false tXg nstures on the peUtioasv and most of the people in the state know t " With a lontr array of officials set up to perform" the functions of gov ernment in Oregon. Is there to be enacted the" farce of baring on the November ballot a measure that was almost certainly placed there by fraud and forgery? "RaIri" (loomed the Portland branch of the weather bureau, speaking- in reference to last Sun day. The sun shone magnificently all day. Fair tonight and Tuesday" was its" Monday prediction. The rain began before dark Monday and umbrellas were requisitioned most of Tuesday. But there's an ex planation. The weather bureau has. of course, taken to going by contraries as befits the whimsical season. TALL-BEANED CONVENTION TTTTTH only 70-odd delegates com W posing cne state convention there was a great deal of the Re publican party that was not present. and talking. Considering how small was the number of the delegates it is diffi cult 'to see what harm could have been done by admitting the numer ous Republicans who asked to be' seated as delegates but were denied admission on the ground that it couldn't be done "tinder the rules laid down at the Eugene and Pen dleton conferences." The keynoter? keynoted "party loyalty" as the main thing at the convention. But how much "party loyalty" surges in the bosom of an old-time Republican who wanted to get a seat In the convention but could not get it because the party chairman handpicked . . somebody else and limited the number of dele gates down toa measly 70-odd? Incidentally, the painful thought obtrudes itself, why did the "rules laid down at the Eugene and Pendleton conferences" by whom deponent saith not make the con vention so exclusively exclusive? Why make a Convention that is as sembled to speak for the whole party so pedigreed1 and so select? Why make the first convention after the sorrowful years of " no convention, so limijd in numbers and so confined to gentlemen of tall beans? Possibly, in selecting his high born delegates and in keeping them confined to a very limited number, the youthful state chairman wished to take no chances on having it captured by the K. K. K., or the Federated Societies. Or possibly he feared some Republicans of low brow ilk might invade the sacred Inner circle and be a source of em barrassment. Above all, however, there were the "rules laid down at the Eugene and Pendleton confer ences." j Anyway, the convention has been held. Some call it a "conference" Just as they called it an "assembly" in 1910, but I. L. Patterson said It was a convention." It was dif ferent in that the old time conven tion used to be composed of 600 to 1000 delegates preceded by party primaries instead of 70-odd dele gates partly h&ndpicked. It came and went without doing harm to the public. The only harm done is to the parts, for real old Lincoln Republicanism does not be lieve that an inner circle of the party should select certain persons as convention delegates and bar out others. & They say that the baby which cried, ''Mother, mother, mother" five minutes after birth hasn't called out since. Probably mother -Answered. COSTLT LIABILITY F$5 COSTS the public more than 300 a year to maintain each prisoner in Sing Sing prison. That is over and above what the prison ers produce by their work while in confinement. Probably the cost in other prisons of the country will approximate the same figures. What, then, does crime cost the people of the United States annu ally? There are thousands of pris ons and institutions scattered all over the nation. In them are thou sands upon thousands of people i Who are supported by public money! at the rate of $300 each per year.! It costs millions upon millions of dollars to get them into prison. Po lice expenditures mount high into the millions. Attorneys' salaries and fees add another tremendous total. Court costs and judges sala ries are enormous. Expenditures on buildings - mean millions more spent in the fight against crime. But the prisons and police and courts ill alone never halt crime, j Alone, they will not measurably re duce criminal activity. " To cut the costs" there must be measures adopted to reach back to the why of crime There wiU of course, always be criminals. Many of them are born outlaws. But a great . many more are imported. They 4 come here fronv'Other countries. The number of such can be tremendously re duced by immigration restrictions. Lack. of education. And training perhaps is responsible for more criminals than any other one thing. Many a law violator could have been saved by an education. Many a criminal could have been made into a good citizen by proper train ing in childhood. Enormous num bers lacking in knowledge is one of the expensive liabilities of this re pabllc . , . i i- Many a criminal is made by our economic system. Sometimes it is the fault of employes themselves. Often It is the fault of the -system whereby men and : women " are driven to hunger and crime by a low wage scale, combined with other unfortunate conditions. Time will rectify most of the de fects. As people live and learn and affairs progress, inroads will be made into the ranks of criminals and criminal-breeding conditions. In that fight education will be the foremost weapon. And it will be found to be much cheaper than paying the costs of criminal opera tions, criminal detection, criminal prosecution and criminal mainte nance. -. Of 22,000 criminals who passed through one New Tork courts-only four were college graduates. The Illinois survey found that 70 per -cent of the cases of immorality were among girls who had not passed beyond the eighth grade. Right in the midst of their cele bration of "Electrical week" the telephone . company called upon Seattleites for higher rates. The manager must have been listening in on comments as to the value of electric current. Seattle, in conse quence, is now threatened with telephobia. SIKI e ' THET say there is not much above the magnificent shoul ders of Siki except the hat rack. But Siki is the fistic champion of heavyweight Europe and middle weight America. He is out of that part of Africa where the black never civilizes. If he is to best American heavy weights his head must be more than a resting place for his skypiece. And the chances are that it will not be much more than that. Seemingly, for purely racial rea sons, the Ethiopian on his native heath is sharply differentiated from the other branches of man kind. His brain functions but fee bly. "His outstanding quality," says Stoddard, "is superabundant animal vitality." In this he easily surpasses all. other races. In this he will have an advantage over Dempsey, should they ever meet. This abounding vitality in the negro shows in many ways, such as his ability to survive harsh condi tions of slavery, under which other races always succumb. He is so powerful physically that black blood once entering any other stock, is never really bred out again. He survives and thrives in the ex treme tropics of Africa in which other races perish. But he does not use that immensely fertile region to establish a commerce or create a civilization. Meredith Townsend says: None of the black races have shown the capacity to develop civilization. They have never passed the bounda ries cf their own habitat and never ex ercised the smallest influence over peoples not black. They have never founded a stone city, have never built a ship, have never produced a litera ture, have never suggested a creed. There seems to be no reason for this except race. Africa is extremely fertile and is pierced by navigable rivers. Blessed with a physique that resists the sun and defies malaria, the black man stands by the Nile, the Congo and the Niger, but he has never used them to cut forests. make roads or build cities. He learned the use of fire, learned the fact that sown grain will grow, learned the value of shelter, learned the use of the ca noe and the bow and arrow, and learned the good of clothes, but there he stopped, unable, until stimulated by some other race, to advance another step. If Siki ever comes out of Senegal and beats Dempsey he will be a racial marvel. If you have an enemy you- want to get rid of why deal in arsenic Or ambush? Take him deer hunt ing. When the plea is "mistaken for deer" the coroner doesn't al ways think it necessary to hold an inquest. Thus it will continue to be while hunters are permitted to shoot at anything that moves. WHO RUNS OREGON? 4fcTE IT resolved by-the council -D of the city of Portland that the council hereby expresses its sympathy and approval of the in vestigation looking toward a re adjustment and reduction of tele phone rates in the state of Ore gon," and so on and so on. But "sympathy and approval" doesn't win fights with a telephone company. The battery of lawyers and the wilderness Of statistics that the company will hurl at the com mission in the coming hearing will be ponderous. The best informed experts and the keenest lawyers In America are in the service of the great telephone octopus known as the American Telephone & Telegraph company. The experts can show you that white 1 is black and that the moon is made of green cheese, and the lawyers often make a public service commission believe it. The "sym pathy" with which the Portland city council proposes to do battle against these forces will get no where in a hearing and be valuable only in .case the phone company wins. ' And in that case the tears and flowers of the council laid at the feet of the beaten public will not compensate - for hard-boiled phone rates. - This telephone hearing is to de termine who runs Oregon the peo ple of the state or the American Telephone & Telegraph company. If the public stands like a weeping "willow tree at the hearing while the company does business with stuffed bookkeeping and powerful mental batteries the ; sovereignty ; jof ; the state might v easily I jvass to Wall Streetr : ' ' ' 1 ' REAL FOOD FOR BREAKFAST Decision of 75 Per Cent of America's Doctors in Favor of the Old-Fash-toned American Repast .- Matutinal Is Discussed With Much Relish by America's Editors. Who Knjoy Said Discussion Hugely, What c ever Might Be Their Reaction to Such Things as Slabs of Sirloin and Wedges of - Huckleberry or Other Pie. Daily Editorial Digest- i Consolidated Preaa AaaocUtioa) Some years ago an immigrant gained entrance to this Land of the Free. He was an agitator, and so successful was bis propaganda that in an incred ibly short time he had an enormous following, largely among our "best people." So widely was his influence Bpread. in fact, so strongly intrenched his doctrines, that those who stubborn ly remained outside the cult took on a tinge of ignominy. Now, however, red blooded Americanism is rising to pro test, and it appears that the alien whose name is Continental Breakfast is in danger of being deported as an undesirable. Seventy-three per cent of the American doctors, appealed to in the matter by a medical journal, have declared unequivocally for Amer ican breakfasts for Americans. . And their editorial fellow-citizens are sup porting them almost to a man. "Do you remember," the Rockford (111.) Register Gazette inquires, "the campaign for the breakfastless day? The theory was that you'd be healthier, happier and generally more efficient if you took a mere bite of a crust in the morning, or, better still, ate noth ing at all. Now, reports the New York World, "with the reform effected and in general observance, we are asked to undo it and return to the old substantial meat Expert -medical opin ion took away the traditional Ameri can breakfast, and expert medical opinion now restores It," a satisfying indication to the New Haven Register that "the world do move." - Hereafter, the Philadelphia Bulletin exults, "when the real autocrat of the breakfast table tries to justify her bantamweight meal with a malappro priate quotation about men putting an enemy into their mouths to steal away their brains, the husband can retort courteously that scientific authority has established "that the cerebrum needs calories a-plenty ; in other words, that brain workers need a good square meal before tackling the daily task of solving the world's problems." This because it is especially for "brain workers" that the American Medical Review of Reviews is trying to estab lish a puncture-proof philosophy in the matter of breakfast. And because of the philanthropic efforts of the medi cal journal the Hartrord Courant re joices that "at last the man who works with his brains instead of with his hands may come into his own, or. more accurately, his own may come into him, for medical science has reached the point where a show of hands indicates that the brain worker will be permitted to have actual food for breakfast." a happy state wtiich, the parper observes in passing, "has not occurred before for 40 years.'' The idea of these physicians, as the Waterbury Republican explains it, "seems to be that the brain worker needs to coal up well in the morn ing," for, the Cleveland Plain Dealer agrees, "in the morning the human stomach is empty. The human engine needs fuel to begin its operations. At no other hour of the 24 la the human system so in need of stoking." While admittedly "the man who starts the day with a handful of sawdust and a dish of prunes is not open to argu ment," there is some consolation in knowing that he can no longer "look with contempt on his brothers who eat a man-size breakfast, even though it may include a sirloin or a slab of huckleberry pie." Once more "Amer ican good sense" has triumphed over the "wave of effete continentalism" which has been menacing that good American institution, the honest-to- goodness breakfast, and the reason, as the Brooklyn Eagle sees it, is that "we Americans are not going to daw dle through a forenoon. We're going to work with steam-engine energy. An empty stomach rarely does much hustling in a world of economic equiv alents." And with the doctor's permission we are going to have pie for breakfast if we want it. "and live in the pie belt." "Why not?" the New York Times askg. "For generations pie for break fast was the nurse, in the colonies and the United States, of manly sentiment and heroic enterprise, the food of pio neers and Indian fighters, heroes of the wars against the French and the Engish, winners of the West, makers of empire." So, bearing the seal of ap proval of the medical fraternity, the Manchester Union, from the heart of the pie belt, sees "the great Ameri can pie glowing with the modest pride of the vindicated." e Unfortunately, however, it is again demonstrated that there are people in JJiia country who never approve of anything, and we find that those doc tors that crabbed -13 per cent, who declared that the way to start the day wrong is to eat, hava their coun terpart in the editors who raise ob jections to a return to the American, breakfast. "It is not so much lack of else as something else that la the matter with the American breakfast," asserts the New York Tribune : rather is it the fact that it must be had "on the eat-and-run principle." At least this is true so far as New Yorkers are concerned, the New York Globe (agrees, and while a heavy breakfast may be an excellent idea for normal America," it won't work in the cities. "The light breakfast." the Globe says, "has been the New Yorker's lifeline. Lingering for the marginal five min utes of slumber, he munches briefly, drinks briefly and is gone. A hearty breakfast would demand short sleep, rising in the dark. Impossible bolting of food and sprinting across the dewy pavements of the big city or of suburbs." Worse still, the Philadelphia Public Ledger comes along with this unpleas ant thought: "It is the observation of most of us that tne person in seden tary,; occupation . is more concerned with how he and particularly she) may lose a pound, not gain one. Often this has been accomplished only, as the result of heroic effort to stifle the in stinct of a lifetime. And now come these doctors and advise him to eat a heavy breakfast, the one . meal on which he 'had found the least diffi culty in economising P; V S '-7' ' ' ' ' V But with a not too implicit faith in medical edicts, the Philadelphia Rec ord observes that "nothing any, doctor can tell you can be of as much value to you as the message the breakfast itself is f likely to telephone to you later la the day.- , !f':" - A: NAMELESS IMPERIAL FAMILY -"at. Koraata. in the Japan Adreraser -;. Xn the peaceful and Isolated com munity it is probable that at first no family -bad any special line of occu pation r to follow. It- was when the community had made - some -progress that division of labor was fotroduced It is r clear from - many - .myths that family names in Japan were taken front the occupations followed. When manjr - families came to follow the same occupations,- then the neces sity arose for giving distinctive names to the different families. Of the rul ing famiiy, however, there was onfy one, and as it had no occupation as other families did, it had bo name. Nor was there any occasion for giving it a distinctive name ; it sufficed to call it by an honorific name. It was and is only when a member of the imperial family sets up a branch fam ily that a distinctive name is given. ' Japan furnishes the. solitary Instance where, the ruling family has no fax-oily nirme. In England. Italy. Holland a.nd other countries those who already had family names acquired influence and ascended to the throne. That the Japanese ruling family has no name is a . clear proof of the contention that Japan has been ruled by one and the same family from the beginning. Had there been any revolution at any time in the history of Japan that is to say, had the first ruling family been sup planted toy another the present im perial house would have a name of its own. Letters From the People Communication., rent to The Journal fot publication is this Oapartmejit abould be Writ ten on only one side of the paper, abouM sat exeeed 300 word tn lencth, and moat be i lined by the writei, whose mail addrea in fail most accompany the coatributioa- i A PRODIGAL SON'S STORY One Who Has Neither Part Nor Lot in the Fatted Calf and Doesn't Want Any. Portland, Sept. 2. To the Editor of The Journal. I am a Republican for the cheap reason that my father was a Republican. There is this differ ence, however, between my father's method of voting the Republican , tick et and my own: Father always voted a straight ticket and in consequence voted for many crooked people. I scratch my ticket like the turkey in the straw, and vote "yes" on all com pulsory education bills. Father, in the second place, was an orthodox politician a "convention Republican." He was always a delegate, because he was an "old soldier" while yet a young man, and could read the eye of the political boss with unerring accuracy, and obeyed his will as readily. Father never coveted public office, never failed to subscribe liberally to cam paign funds, never showed a political boss that there was no ring in his nose, never failed to support the other fellow if his own candidate was not nnominated ; therefore, he was a "cho sen" and "accredited" delegate to more political conventions than any other man I ever knew in my native state. He always did the big things for po litical bosses and they were more than glad to eat chicken at our house and do any other little thing like that. I somehow always enjoyed seeing my father make and unmake public offi cers, but I somehow resented, even as a boy, the idea that Judge Allen in variably told my dad what he ought to think and do politically. I have ob served Republican conventions in many states, and whether these conventions were big or little, I have always found from three to seven "Judge Alleng" haT the fish all. fried and the pie all cut before the "leaders" ar rived. My dad was a "leader," I want you to know that. The people in our county always thought he "led" like a brave general who consults no mind but his own. But I was on the inside. and, just between you and me, he "led'l like a Jersey cow. He never seemed to resent the invisible rope that connected with the hand of his political master. My dad was one of the most conventional Republicans I ever saw. He could pull wires that were so hot that few men dared to touch them ; therefore, the majority press always praised him, while the minority press howled. Now, no man 6hall say my father was not a great, good and wise man. His friends evidently thought I was a chip off the old block for they tried to put me into the state legislature before I ever owned a razor or took a fall out of a "Judge Allen." After I began to carry on and showed an unruly political disposition and began to advise people to scratch tickers, my enviable political pedigree never amounted, to a darn. I am sorry I was a political prodigal from the house of my father, else to day I, might be "toosey" with Toose and a "chosen delegate," even a mem ber of the "sub-committee." I know the political game so well that if I had inherited that old nose ring and rope that belonged to my father (or to his boss) I could place it In the hand of Toose and could so L ;have that four years from now I could ask for and get that sheepman's place in the'United States senate. But it never can be, for I am cursed with a backbone that makes the whole chiropractic profes sion chase me around. They are as anxious to "adjust" me as are the old-line politicians. No. I can never hope to get even a piece of liver out of the fatted calf. For the Democratic bosses hate me as they hated my father before me, and the "Judge Allen" type of Republican boss has no love for me. Calvin Rutherford. APPEALS TO THE FATHERS Principles of the Constitution Held to Warrant Denouncing toe Compul sory Education Bill. Portland, Sept. 26. To the Editor of The Journal Is America going back ward instead of forward? Do the American people no longer believe in democracy and its doctrine as set forth in our constitution? Surely this can not be. ' The American people have tes tified many, times that they dearly cherish the ideals of this great docu ment. In contrast to this noble feeling there has arisen a movement to under mine a mighty pillar in the constitu tional structure. This erroneous move ment is being fostered by citizens who consider themselves' rendering a pub lic service. Oar forefathers could not tolerate religious persecution in other lands, and sought out this wilderness as it was then, to make it their home. When our government was established. reugious UDerty was - made an out standing feature of our constitution. America is referred to as "the land of the free," meaning, as well, freedom of religion. 1 Religious liberty in Oregon will cease If the erroneously termed compulsory education bill goes into effect. The Puritans, Pilgrims and Quakers, wbo were among the first to settle in this country, believed in the principle of re ligious freedom- They advocated that church and state should not be united but should remain separate, each fuse tioning u its peculiar way. From for mer experience it 4s clear that this doc trine u correct. Therefore Oregon' will fall short in its duty under the consti tution if it enacts this bill, prusatan- ism is not considered civilised. -Then why try to force this principle " epon the Oregon public? Surely the citizens of Oregon, are peace-loving, law-abid ing people and do not desire to be blindfolded in such an important mat ter. ;- . - -. ".. j -'. - ' .. - ..;-. It is my opinion that all proposed legislation should be logically defined as to actual principle, and no attempt to camounage tne real meaning of a proposed measure should be tolerated. :Trr' A Student. i REASON FOR DELAT,' I -U Tram Ufe LoniarUle Coariee-Jeqmaj ' , f "What's the hitch . about Grace's wedding- lo.: the duke?" "I believe they re saving nia -xiu searched. - Yl lYTKl ST AND' SMALL. CHANGS ' Seems to us that Turkey ts getting allf ired pernicious with Thanksgiving remands so near. I . : To the jaxs hound home becomes nothing more than a handy place td keep a clean shirt and his shoe polish. '-. Fashion is a fickle Jade! Here the edict for long skirts has caught a bunch of nice young things with their hair bobbed. Cries of- personal liberty and the like notwithstanding, it is true that many folks are good because they can't be otherwise. - It's ' strong . phone pole indeed that will withstand the assaults of some of these new model porch climbing automobiles. . German royalty may make Mexico a haven of refuge. . Well, you know that old line about jumping from the frjrtng pan into the fire ! Every time it happens that we just have to have a new suit oi clothes" it also happens that the clothing market shows, as the business editor puts it, an "upward trend." do: MORE OR J-ESS PERSONAL Random Observations AlSout Town -y.i i.i.m.1 In TVtilirlAJI OOlintV X ue vtvi .t.. ... - w - now in highway development is to se cure federal cooperation in theim- - -Ka wo. A rlnirn the aJRlD yrUVCIUCil V Vi VAv va.v .w-. ' qua to Reedsport, says George Neuner jr., aisinct. nuic - . When this road is finished the next road in importance is one up the North URipqua to uiamonu itt&c. n tm t ci.in,, nf Salem was among recent arrivals in the metrop olis, .i v - C. P. Crandail of Vale was among iku uhn narticiDated In the Re publican convention. T'lllI- -Vnan nf TCll0-n WhOSS hobby is climbing' mountains, is visit ing friends in Fortiana. Amone visitors from Roseburg is J. W. Thorne. Visitors from Roseburg include Mr. and Mrs. F. C Frear, Nora N. Freer and Carmen Robertson. e e e V. R. Van Slyke of Free water is transacting some business in Port land. e e a R. M. Mayberry of Pendleton is among out-of-town visitors. OBSERVATIONS AND IMPRESSIONS OF THE JOURNAL MAN By Fred . - . , i. Ur Lock- w.B r'ntVibit'Sr whSSi wpeninee. ia ley a nreaeni . ,h.-K two sue- that lino wui um - Deeding InKaiuaenia. . - i. hf nf the steam- Portland, ana -i hangs a tale, or to be exact a hundred tales. Some time when be has a spire hour v between meals.' drop into 'alley o.tba Georgiana and say. "Hey. Rube, to him. and then listen to tales of the "big top" and the sawdust ring that wilf make your pulses Wr. JldU. knows the roads of the United States, of CanadI and of Old Mexico asyou know the streets between your office and your home. e "You want me to start at the be ginning." he said, when we sat down togetner rect:ii"j - - ,,, of the Oeorgiana. "Wen. that wiU take us bacK au yearn Y t " to my birthplace in Jowa and to W natal day. January 7. 1872. While I was still a tiny toddler my pec .pie moved to Topeka. Kansas The first job I landed was as a counter bo for A A. Sells. He owned a restaurant opposite the Rock Island depot. He had a hotel called the Hotel Chester field He named it for his son s fam ous riding horse. You probably re member William Sells and his won derful horse. Chesterfield. In his day William Sells was the greatest rider that ever rode around a sawdust ring. "I had heard of William, but I had never seen him. One night a pros perous looking chap dropped Into the restaurant and ordered pretty much of everything on the bill of fare. He finished his supper and started out. I stopped him and told him he had overlooked paying his bill He said. 'What of It? Forget it. Who is going to make me pay?" When I said that I was, he just looked amused and brushed me aside as ir I had been a mosquito. I was 17 years old. I reached under the counter and got a revolver I kept there, and said, You will never beat another restaurant out of a meal. Cough up for that meal or I'll put a chunk of lead where you put tBat sirloin steak.' He pulled out a bill and said. "It you can t take a joke, take your pay out of ;tht bul. My name is William Sells, and my father pays you your wages.' "I didn't know whether I would be fired -or not. Instead, it made a big hit with William. He moved into the room , next to the restaurant and brought his six wardrobe-trunks with him. He invited me into see his cos tumes and later hired me to take care of his clothes. The next spring he hired me as his valet, to go along with him and take care of his costumes. His father bought a show at St Joe, show. It" was called the Andrews ehow. He and his son William went to St. : Joe to get it and bring it to Topeka. They found that someone had spirited-away the elephant, which was worth about J6000. Yoa wouldn't think anyone could get away with as bulky a thing as an elephant, but somebody had, and what' is more, the Sells never did locate their stolen ele- phant. . . - ' - , - . ...... ': ' a e-e '- - "That winter the show was reor ganised while in winter quarters, and the. next spring this" was in the spring of 1890 we toured Kansas and the Middle Western states as - the Sells and jsanda. show. While we, were at Columbus, Ohio, Mr. Sands, my boss got married. ' We ran into bad. weather and bad luck and at Pawnee,. Nebra-; ka, decided to call it a season and take the back track for home. The end of the seasqn found the shew en the red ink side of the ledger. That winter J. N. Rengfrew .came to Topeka and while showing at Crawford's opera house met. Ad Sell, who practically gave him a half interest in the show so that his sen would have a capable and experienced partner for the com ing season. The Reft spring, that of 1891. the show started out as the Sells A Rengfrew show. We made money wherever we showed. , We wound up at Mena, Arkansas,- with a good sized bank balance. I was general util ity man during the season, serving as valet to Mr. Sells and also going on as a clown and doing-tight rope work. We toured the West the next season and broke all traditions by - reducing the. price of admission .from $1 to 0 cents, thereby doing an immensely profitable business ;"Tne next season . I was promoted to the Job of route rider. My Job was to check up the work of our advance NEWS IN BRIEF SIDELIGHTS Every once in a white. events shape themselves to prove that - neither the police nor the echootma'ams function properly as parents. -Medford Mail Tribune. , i . . - e ' a - ..-.- In the war between moonshiners and officers In Oregon' the score now stands five to two killings in favor Of the moonshiners, - Kentucky please note. Albany Democrat. Fourteen youngsters born under the August sua in Grande Ronde valley is not such a bad showing. There may be those who think race suicide pre vails, but they are mistaken about this valley. La Grande Observer. -v - : - The president has vetoed the soldier bonus bill, and ail the administration organs . will indorse his stand. Had he signed it they would have praised htm just as unstintedly- Eugene Guard. The miner's wage, as a rule, is high, but one is ready to admit that the man who continually faces, such dan gers as that which overtook the trapped crew at the Argonaut mine de serves a high wage. Eugene- Register. Among the delegates to 'the Repub lican convention who took a prominent part in the proceedings was Dr. 3. W. Donnelly, now 'of The Dalles, but for merly of Arlington, whose chief hobby outside of politics is golf. . Darwin Yoran. a merchant of Eu gene, one of the candidates for the postoffice, attended the . convention Tuesday. . - . . e e a ' Senator I. L. Patterson of Polk county was among the speakers.at the Republican conference. He insisted on calling it a convention. Alex La Follett and Sam Brown. Re publican nominees for state senator from Marion county, were among those present at the Republican convention. .-- Roy Smith of - Hood River was among delegates to the Republican convention. e e Among out-of-town visitors is Thom as Watt, merchant of Reuben, Colum bia county. e e a R. R Butler of The Dalles is trans acting legal business in Portland. F. J. Miller of Albany is among out-of-town visitors. Lockley crew to see if their work had been done properly. In addition I was'bom missloned to buy all the animals I could pick up at a" bargain. I bought a lot of monkeys, at various city parks and zoos, including a lot of assorted ".oriKeys rrom the zoo at the Golden Gate Park, in Ran Fmnl t i j - " "--v.. - a ucaiu a that had a young tiger at . .: ' v-alI1rnia. i round when I got. there that some grateful friend in the orient had shipped him a six- rnontns-oid tiger as a present. He had no more use for a tiger than a deep-water sailor has for a bucking broncho, so I mm) hin 3 for life by taking his tiger off his w.v.o ana giving nun 125 for it. That winter my partner. James McElroy. !er.a bareback rider, trained r'T nor8e- was the v- '"'--riaing tiger ever shown, and lt made a big hit. Later Mr. Sells sold this trick tiger to Ringltng ?k f?.?n evn7 thousand, and they figured they had bought him dirt cheap. We gave our first performance or the tiger on horseback at San Fran cisco and got columns of front page publicity on it William Sells quit the ring as a rider, and as a testi monial of his appreciation to Jimmy McElroy for training the tiger to r ds a horse he gave him all of his VJ"JF ,cttumes- wn,cta had cost him several thousand dollars. ' t the time. Mr. Sell came to depend more and more on me as the years went by. I think it was in 1895 that the big railroad strike took place. Practically every raUroad man in the country quit work at the same time. PrlhU5.rao8t f th rallrJ'" of the Lnlted States. Our show was stranded w.1! fm Si,ver Bo Montana. We broke the train into sections and by harnessing our elephants anCusine- I,,?? r Bow' Mr- Se and I went to ? if a"d inferred with the officials ? ,i .1 etnkln8r ra)lad workers. We told them we would give a benefit per formance for their brotherhoods if they would steal an engine and fur nish an engineer, fireman and con ductor to get our train to Butte. They f flTn .' "? wt turr,ed over more than rifrefcfrra th" lormanc. The reason why we were so anxious vLtK Butto; that Jim SSH road, the Great Northern; was still hto men hot having gone out ' ' i " : . -. ' .' One of our advertising cars was tied ftp in Utah and another in Montana, so we abandoned our route and went wiia. We worked the towns between Butte and Seattle, where -we chartered the steamer City of Kingston and were independent of the raQroads.-We went to Victoria, B. C, and other coast towns, including New Whatcom (now Belllngham), Tacoma and Other water front citlea When the strike was set tled we toured Oregon and California, making a clean-up. Mr. Sells sold out to his partner. Mr. Rengfrew, who went East and ran into such hard luck that his show was attached and sold for debt. ..:.'- "Mr.- Sells organized a new show and made me manager of advertising car No. s L As my mind - reverts to those old days a thousand Incidents flash- back as vividly as thoogh they had happened yesterday; .lcan see myself helping to round : up escaped Hons and tiger or a scared youngster crawline- under the nri,n. v the hard boiled town 'toughs were try- ng io snoot up tne snow. - pas night at BlloxL Mississippi, as I was Walk ing; through the railroad yards to my advertising car on the sidetrack, a tough guy stepped from behind a box ear and said. 'Hands up' Up went my props, as I said,. 'Don't shoot. You are welcome to what L have.1 He went through me and,, took my money and my watch. As he was frisking me I said, "See here, partner; some crook wltt' bur that watch' tram few dollars. I will pay yon more for lt than r you can get from anyone else. If you want to sell it I will give you 29 for if He said. It's yours for-a. twenty. - I said ."Come to the pay car with me and I will get the money for you. He kept his gun on me and we started for my car. I had a gun in the cash drawer and I felt sure J could move a shade-quicker than he could.- When we got almost to the ear-he got cold- feet- and said. 'Maybe you are on. the square, but I have met so many crooks I am get ting suspicious of dealing with stran gers. I guess I'll leave well enough alone.' And he faded from the scene between a couple of empty, box cars." The Orsron Country Northwest Happeniasa ta Brief gone toe i Baay Baade , ' OREGON Tlfc tn G.I.imI.w .IVaeA .a r- - wui u.j jiijlu& vara m pears had been shipped out of Medford for .the Eastern markets, i r , wm hundred tons or prunes are be ing received daily, at the plant of the Eugene . Fruit Growers' association, -Miss Mahl r? ifotA. c.otti.- accepted the position of executive sec retary of the Jackson' county Red trosav s --:?. i TwearvilT .f i-... . ass of Albany; hJn school have ob- ia o?legeT irady 'nronetl '-. - .wcuapun nave uw- to iScember; 7"?- some time Mam thin a'nnArtA '.Jr. 51 ' ----.-. --v jvuim u-out nave !LbfrA,ld 'n ,lha Putea river rwl eJCT j 1 s icaery during -mfa. - -; ; - . .. r . - T .A rPA CM n-a aim. t . . night combating forest rirea in Mor row county, one of which, on Mailory creek, is about leUO acres in extent Th TTnttH Stat .,.-.. ..,, roads is starting a crew of men clear mar on the, ii w..,-. . i project The graoang contract will be et early next spring. . V During a stroll about Silverton a few days ago the editor of the Appeal found it houses that have been com pleted within the last two or three months or are now under construc tion. :',-VL, .."'-..--.-.,.- The" Buehner Lumber company, of North Bend is preparing to build a logging road to Its timber holdings be tween Clear Lake and Schofield river, where . the company owns tour biiUou leet of Umber, ;: The Yamhill Electric company has Improved its plant at Willamina by the erection or a new flume and the. installation of a large new dynamo. The plant will furnish power to Willa mina and Sheridan. . .WSU? fHhng his gasoline tank by the light of a lantern, Ralph Jacksott, a young larmer of Morrow county. . . IUMU .. ovaye - wnen me gas ignited. His automoelle, granary ami a lot -of wheat and barley were de stroyed. . ... A Jl Armstrong, circulation mana ger of the Eugene Register, died Sun day at hlM hnniA iii a An formerly was a minister of the Meth odist icaurch and during the World war was connected with the -army at Fort Stevens. . WASHINGTON. ' Plans have been announced for re building the Everett theatre at aa ap proximate cost of f 100,000. T,R,suLar Passenger service between Bellingham and Seattle on the North ern Pacific road will be restored Octo ber 1. October 24 has been set as the date for the examination of candidates for ppstmaster-at Seattle, Wenatchee and Vancouver. x David Burgess of Tacoma-has filed at Olympia his -nomination as candi date tor United States senator on the Socialist Labor party ticket. Three hundred apple growers met at jiakima Saturday night and decided to form .a pooL Seventy thousand boxes were pledged at the session. Dr K. H. Putney.' one of White Salmon's big game hunters, killed a black bear at Oag Ridge last week that tipped the scales at 400 oounda. Struck by a Great Northern passen. ger train while crossing the track near Richmond Beach, Mrs. 8. E. Herrlck. 56 years old, was instantly killed Sat urday morning, -." Grace Wenlif daughter" of Mr. and Mra. H. Stevens of Bellingham and a bride of ayear, died at Colville Fri day as the result of a gasoline explo sion in her home. . Falling four feet from the steps of the Concord school in Seattle .Friday,'-7-year-old Joseph Desimon, 4 son of Marco Desimon. was instantly kHied.V s The Bloedei-Donovan . Lumber Com pany will operate daily a special log. ging train between Sylvana and Bel lingham. The train will carry 25 cars of Jogs or 200,000 feet of timber- v. At a meeting of 1400 students of the North Central high school In Spokane, it was voted to put a ban on the wear in&r of .exnenmv i1nthini, tv.ni.tt - heeled shoes, silks, heavy jewelry and ear rings. . Attorney General Thompson left Olympia Monday for Washington, D. C, to argue before . the supreme court of the Lnited States the question of the right of Japanese to be admitted to citizenship. r . . Residents of Everett will vote upon the issuance of a $360,000 bond issue for the erection of a water storage reservoir of approximately 20.000.ooO gallons. Three contracts, involving more than $1,000,000, will be awarded by the state highway committee Octo ber 3. IT my .. -- - - - -..1 V Eugene Cox of Lewiston has been elected president Of the western divis ion of he Roosevelt -Highway associ ation. - - The University of Idaho school "of agriculture is conducting a packing, school at the Dalton Gardens packing house near Coeur d'Alene. .Thirty-two acres of DIcklow wheat averaging 74 bushels to the acre is the record of a crop raised by Gus Land holm on bis ranch near PeaVey, Idaho. Madge, 12-year-old daughter of X J. Thomas, died in a Boise hospital Sun day from injuries received three weeks ago while on an outing with her family- - . . . : ;.- . . ; Twin Falls county's first carload of bead lettuce grown as a commercial crop was shipped last week by the Idaho Lettuce company to the Chicago market : f.-;-.--z-i. s: - : One of the features of the women's state federation meeting at Burley October IS will be the dedication of a monument erected to the memory of the Old Oregon Trail pioneers. Twenty Years Ago From .The Journal , of September i7 -1962. vvorainen avrw engagea in preparing the foot of Spokane avenue, Seltwood, for the hew East Side Mill company's sawmill. ," i ' f M . Kansas City The World today eays that from statements made by W. J. Bryan to close ' friends It is not out of the question for-hlrrt to. be a candi date J-ot the - presidential , nomination again. ; . . Residents of" Sunnyside are com plaining on account of the lack, of steam wood saws and crimen to carry In their winter's wood.- 1 ' -- Blackleg has appeared among' the cattle -of Couse creek residents, seven miles northeast of Weston. , " The state fair has-been a financial as well as aa industrial success this year. -All ltsvdebts have- been said. leaving a cleat balance of 70. -, j - - - - ? . e . ... At the meeting of the' street Com mittee of - the city: council- yesterday .the O-W. p. Jfc R. company asked per mission to run its cars over the Burn side bridge, v . , :; An? unusually "heavy rain " fell last eight apparently the "clean top" of the lowering weather of the past few days. -; ,, ' e - Salem Governor Geer is to make a fight for7 the United- States senate on the basis of the vote cast in the Jane election, which it Is claimed - makes him the legal and .logical condldatQ under the Mays law : - - - :- ; ,- v----" -. The - Multnomah club football - team arm be captained tMs year by Roy R. KlrklyT The Portland - Academy team will be handled, by Coach Blanch ard. i Frank Swope is , captain, of the high school team. Hill Military has secured R. C Montague as coach.