THE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM. OREGON SATURDAY vnRNTXG. NOVEMBER 19. 121 n r Issned Daily Excent Monday by THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY ' 216 S. Commercial St.. Salem, Oregon ; (Portland Office, 27 Board of Trade Building. Phone Automatic ' 527-59) MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pfllcatlon of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited Jlcatlon of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited fa this paper and also the local news published herein. jR. J. Hendricks Manager Stephen A. Stone T i Managing Editor Ralph Glover Cashier Frank Jaskoski Manager Job Dept. TELEPHONES Business Office, 23. Circulation Department, 58S Job Department, 683 Society Editor, 106 ntered at the Postoff ice in Salem, Oregon, as second class matter. THE RADICAL IN THE LABOR WORLD The radical in the labor world says, in effect, that if the jnrr ora will nn 1 r rt-n A (nnrnthor gnH rllrw t Hoi r" lend pre im. taplicitly they can have the good things of the world without -stint. i ' jj ' What are the actual economic facts bearing upon such a Contention J' - What is there in this implied or open promise? Prof. W. I. King of the University of Wisconsin, a recog nized authority, utilising government statistics as to the fwealth and wages of the people of this country, has shown t'jthat if all of the interest, dividend and replacement charges p (that is, the amount paid-for the use and maintenance of capital), were divided among all the workers in all of our rndustries' the average wage per 'year would be increased 'Jf Andeven ;tha& he is quick to add, would only result, tPROVIDED there was no'decrease in the output of industry aas a result of such confiscation and distribution of capital. "5 Bui every oneknows that there would be a tremendous j decrease in prpdiicion vtere the incentive to additional re dwards'for axceptfonal activity removed. cf look at Kussia.. . There is a very definite and near at hand limit, therefore, to the spoils which sovietism could divide among all the peo- ble, if they ever seriously intended such a thing. The exist ing margin is maintained by the spur of individual owner ship, and energy would vanish utterly if the rewards of merit nd accomplishment were done away with, il There -is an indication that the hold of the radical leader ship of labor in this country is slipping. In 1915 there were :701 strikes in this country; in 1916, 1025; in 1917, 1741; in rl918, 1942; in 1919, 2687; in 1920, 2826; in 1921, if the ratio pot the first three-quarters continues through the last, 1740. 3 The recession from 2826 to 1740 is quite a marked one. It gives a ray of hope that war in the labor world for the strike is a form of war is growing unpopular along with ethe disfavor in which all civilized people hold the horrors "andr utilities of armed conflicts. But there is a long road yet to travel in this country to wincf capital and labor into such a mutual community of interest, where they belong, as will outlaw strikes entirely, nrtA coflooll TnlciinrTiratanrliiicre ftnH Ar awnv with'flll forma lVB WfcMV nil AAKAftJ M.AM W MMf MW MITM ... cof Injustice, by arbitrations and mutual concessions. because t'jey enjoy 'Cigarettes, but because lien smoke them, and a woman is; endowed now with ail the obligations, as well as all the privileges and rights of men; She might losfe some of her rights by non user therefore she will ex ercise hejr rights ev?n if she doesn't ike them, lest i they should lase, and she might want them in he future. Out is! it customary for the person wjio performs a marriage ceremonylto kiss the bride? These days the custom is rather hon ored in he breach than in the observande. Kissing is less com mon than! it was, not only in the time of tfie susceptible Mr. Pepys, but at a bnuch more recent date. One of ofur French- guests about the Revolutionary period found that kissing the inn keeper's wile secured Mm better accomtnoda tions thajn he would otherwise have hadj and the tpremonyicould take placje in the presence1 of the woman's husband without caus ing him any distress. 4 is Secretary Hughe has not de livered a single public address de moted to foreign policy since he entered the cabinet. Ambassador lUrrey is doing the talking. Springfield. Republican.' . A woman robber has been treat d br the medical attendant of Jhe Brooklyn district attorney rith a fluid from the thyroid felands of sheep, with the reported Result' of curing her of her pre fatory r propensity. The. sheep, lhat is, has driven, the wolf from he door., . ;T'V A famous connoisseur and deal er la paintings is being sued" for 4500,00 for libel because of his Expressed, opinion that a painting known as "La Belle Ferromere ' and-reputed to be by Leonardo da wincl Is really by some other art- st.'v The plaintiff a -elaim to have llngerprlatproOf.fv-it.'authen- icltyt The controversy somehow recalls Mark Twaina comment, on Watching' the copiers in the Lou- kre, to the effect that the copies Were all , better than, the origin- Ms; ! English, or rather American. an -Associated fress start corre spondent writes, has become the predominating language in all Russian government departments and in Moscow generally. In all ha high schools of Japan, 'the English language is taught. In China the English language is be ing studied and employed by mora and more millions. English !s the language of tho Washington peace (conference. English is be coming more and more the lan guage of commerce all around the world. It Is to be the uai- versal language. KISSING THE GKOOM A woman who has been elected justice of the peace in New Jer sey, and la therefore endowed by law with the power of binding until la divorce court shall act two souls with but a gingl? thought, two hearts that beat as one, announces in advance of taking office that she shall kisa the groom. Of course, the traditional right is hers. If the clergyman or thi magistrate, being of the mascu line persuasion, has a right to kiss the bride, it is quite evident that if the bonds of matrimony shall be forged by a woman she has the corresponding right to kiss the groom. She' may not care to kiss the groom, but very likely she will feel that she is under some sort of moral obliga tion to do so. It cannot possibly be as pleasant to kiss the groom as it is to. kiss the bride; it might even be distinctly repulsive. But there are women who smoke, not The cjistom of osculation jl decidedlyf much less common now than it tfas then. Indeed. '' there have beeji cases in recent -times where the bridegroom resented the clain of his traditional priv ilege by jhe preacher. Some cases to the cpntrary are cited. It is not veryflong since a bridegroom threatened to lick the minister who didj not kiss the bride; it seemed jo be a reflection upon her char his. But there is a gen eral impression that owing to the exclu8ivehess of the bride, or the jealousy of the male member of the combination, kissing the bride Is not scj safe as it was once,' and is now ifarely practiced except In some off the rural districts. V This Ipw Jersey justice of th peace dught the writer to say justess 6f the peace? is said to have several weddings listed for her offifial acltion. But the ar rangements wete made before she announced hepdetermination to kiss thej groom. Will some of these couples take a change of venue tj a magistrate who will not kiss! the groom? And if so, is it onf account of the attitude of the bride or the groom? Are the youig men of New, Jersey, un willing jto be kissed by the juar' tess, or fare the young women d-a- their bridegrooms Ana is tne per sonal pudchritude of the magis trate aq element in the case? If the magistrates are young and beautifdl, one can imagine that the young Jerseymen may be eager to be married by them, but by the pame token the young Jer seywomen might do something tnat would be construed to be contempt of court. bom good friend ought to ad. vise Her Honor not to kiss the groom unless her purpose 13 dis tlnctly understood by both par tLes; ahd yet, since she has an nounced her purpose, she might be justified in assuming that all applicants, for her official serv ices understand and accept the osculatbry premium which, 6he of fers. termine shall a that nit be? UXCOXSCIOrt DIPLOMACY fered her mite to the giant Am erica. All that we had done for that little- nation was repaid when her few soldiers and millions were added to our millions and bil lions. The debt of gratitude'was thoroughly paid. Cuba owes us nothing. Some day Russia will not have forgotten. That country will r member the ships that sailed from these shores laden with food and raiment, the gift unsolicited of a 1 great people to another great g3opIein deep distress. The peo ple who gave the world such men as Tolstoi, Turgenieff, Dostoye- sky. Chekhov and a host of oth rs of their kind cannot be for getful or ungrateful. It is wrong to measure the Russian peopla ly the character of the men ho have brought her face to face with ruin. Verily, indeed, the bread you cast upon the waters will return to you after 'many days. Is it unconscious diplomacy that sending American reliet shlj.s and gold and forces to distribute food and clothing and medicines o starving and naked and sick Russia? There is no motive excepting the one of service; the motive of t.he Good Samaritan. Russia is our "neighbor" because she needs help and we can help her. But there will undoubtedly grow in the hearts of a stricken people thus helped a sympathy and understanding that will in good time spread over the whole nation, the ideals of Amerncaa democracy and the idealisms ot thi people brought to a position ofr power to help under our form ot government and our habits of thought and our impulses of ac tion. In good time," Russia will ike America. is still held to be the sport of part of the landless-poor; as has kings, and to take a flier on one's been the case in the history of favorite is a virtue rather thaTj,every other country in the world. a vice. The Louisiana lottery died i f a"yone b3L And . . . . . , the history of land monopoly. And fcard, and turf speculation is still j e wm g0 OQ makin, a goal ui more tenacious of life. In New j one man tor the sini ot the many Orleans it is still possible to dig ' in enacting surh mockery of j'.i up a crap game. All the sport-i tice as are found iuj existing land taws. i Cbl. E. Hofer. ing blood has not been mopped ui). The biggest and best musical comedy of the season r O A lI PI THEATRE OO K A IM U Tuesday, November C- Nat Goldstein producing company pi ents the original New York cast and proavciion 01 1 EDITORIALS OF THE PEOPLE be TIME TO DAXC; BITS FOR BREAKFAST! All in .he f. n. s well I ... 1' i ' ' - - ; tUnitedSt INDIRECT INVESTORS EVERYBODY who deposits his funds in a bank is an indirect investor, delegating the actual investment to the bank. His money helps build construct ive projects and business enterprises. The United States National errs on side of safety and conversatism alway feeling keenly the responsibility of U investment. Accordingly, the con dence of the public in this bank is placed. Unssia is not dead. That vast empire of the SIavs covering as it does one-eighth of the earth's surface;, possessing riches and re sources that have hardly been touches by the industry of 150, 000,000 virile men and women, will be born anew. It will not alwaysj languish under the blight ing nightmare of the brutes now in power. Great nations may be staggej-ed by calamity; but they do nojt die;; like eternal truth, crushe to the earth, they will rise again. , Rusjda is sick, mentally, mor ally aaid physically si?k. The brains! of the country have abdi cated the throne of reason. The moral code of the world has been repudiated. The body ot the na tion is( weltering in a quagmire of filth and disease. Russia needs to Tee the great arm of friend ship thrown about her while sho is wansdering in this twilight hour between night and day. The only nation in-the world and the only people in the world who Save shown any sympathy for Rhssia are America' and her citizerjs. Ve are looking over beyonti the primes of Lenin and his gabs of Assassins to the help less millions who are starving and dying and the humanity or this nation will be true to itEelf now as it las been in alt the years of its na ional existence. We are not looking for a re ward ow, and neither were we lor any in 189S when Amerita struck the shackles from little Cuba and gave her an inde pendent place among the nations world. We all remember The court has decided in an Il linois case that music and danc ing cannot of themselves be pro hibited. They may not even be restricted as to time. The Bible aays that tUere is a time to dance. but the law says that it is any time. The Chicago council passed an ordinance requiring caharet performances and dancing in res taurants to shut off at 1 a. m. several of the larger places kept open as long as the patrons re mained. They defied the ordi nance and the police raided them. Now the court holds that the raid was an unlawful one unless the dancing was immodest and the music disorderly. There is no time limit on music and the dance. They may be regulated, if they disturb the peace of an in dividual or tlte community they may be halted, but the police of ficers may not pull the watch on them and command them to halt at any definite hour. Unless it cad be shown that they are act ually disturbing the peace or be having immorally the man and maid may jazz themselves on for 3ver. A city may not even call time ton a restaurant for having music and dancing in the middle of the night unless it be that (he objection be for some other reason than that it is music and dancing. Whether this is the judgment of the supreme court ot the United States remains to be demonstrated. That august body might not be so liberal. They might object to toddling in the shimmy at daybreak. MiT-moria! Favored Kditor Statesman: I notice it is suggested that an election be held to provide for a tax for the purpose of building in Salem a memorial temple hon oring the American legion. This appeals to me as the fin est plan for a memorial that has been advanced, but why not make it a broader memorial? Build a handsome structure, with an audience room of good proortions, and halls suitable for meetings of organizations, and let the plans provide suitable loca tions for memorials to be placed by the several organizations of veterans. Perhaps the Daughters of the American Revolution would erect a statue of a soldier of that war. Surely the O. A. R. and its allied organizations would place a fig ure of a Civil war soldier, and the Spanish-American veterans would take pride in placing a me morial of their time and strug gle, and we would all poin in pro viding a figure in memory of our wonderful army of the World war. It would seem that such a plan would secure the very active sup port of the greater portion of the community and would materialize Into a building that would be a worthy memorial. A Daughter of a Veteran. roads lead toi. Eugene. ; s ; Troi-pccts for a 1 muddy game there. ; ! V I The IS 23 fair is UP to Tortlaml at thf polls todav. j m fm j If the proposition; carries' there j today, it is said there is a general : understanding that there will be 1 a special session of the legislature j to put the proposition up to the people oi the state.; Friends of the proposition say the vote in Portland! is likeiy to te all but unanimous m favor of the fair. If the vote should fail then1 today, however, it lis likely that the fair proposition would be dropped. The promoters would be up against a hard tak in get tla,g enough money from private sources to put it ovfcr. mm Chas. M. Sch wabisu rely hocd at a banquet to Marshal Foch la.t night that He has the courage of his convictions. Sayins that, his company, the Bethlehem Steel orporation. is the? largest maker of war engines and materials un der one management in the wot Id, he declared that he would gladly see the war making; machinery of that great plant sunk to the bot tom of the ocean in: order to bring about the abolition; of war. Professor Paul Miliukov, now in this couontry, expresses the opin. on that a monarchist military raid nto Russia like that of Charles of Hapsburg into Hun-gary is one of ho dangers of . the-immediate fu ture. Although bitterly hostile to the Bolshevist government, he op poses strongly a monarchical res toration. t X 1 a mm All fun, frolic, melody and magnificence V,,to tho nrcial prices i.ov .pi.vw Seats on sale Monday. 10 a. m 1 K( Mail Orders Now $3.84 Round Trip Plus S t Federal War Tax To Todd. atesNatlonalBaiik OREGON V. of thd that April In 1917 when this country entered the World war. Cuba, est o the youngest and thfj Btnall independent nations, of- FUTURE DATES KTato SI, tS Md Sib-MariM If ril tor TMpburs Ititltsta. JcnW. U . ud SiiiUr - Mondi .Apollo rlub coscerta wit a Vir- GOIXti I P Berlin is to have the first gen uine sky-scraper of Europe. Tho building will be 22 stories high and will combine a railway ter minal, an office building, a thea ter and a restaurant. That would be a pretentious combination, even for an American city. In Europe it marks an epoch. It is doubt ful if there is a ID-story' building on the continent. Paris is a city of fine buildings, but they seldom go beyond six or seven stories in height. London is mueJi the same. The new Berlin will fur-!a home -.-I. . . (the sail uiou uiuuei u curope lis Iirsi nu- man-made cloud-piercer. WORLD'S UKST IJTERATURK The Nobel prize for literature this year goes to Anatole France, the brilliant son of the land which bears his pame. France has won the literature prize four times since the Nobel awards were founded. America has not yet been recognized. It 'seems that the stuff they are writing for the movies is not literature. BIXG RANG! Lord Byng of Vimy. new gov ernor general of Canada, in his greeting Fays that the best way to honor the dead is to help th living. What Byng says goes with a bang. SOUTHERN SPORTS A Word for Mr, Editor Statesman: By the time this is in print John W". Todd may or may not be under conviction for his con nection with public land frauds. It may bs necessary in the evolu tion of things that there be a scapegoat cast out into the wil derness that the rest of us may enjoy immunity for the sins com mitted in connection with tha alienation of public lands. But me question, win still remain whether all of us who have sought to get lands which we coul "f legally acquire by any other means, are not aiso guiltv of frauds on the public domain? It Is a notorious fact that the pub lic lands in our state and all western states have been taken up and then disposed of to mon opolistic holdings, by more or less fraudulent methods. All the pow wow over the O. & C. land grant lands on which men have rod" into congress and into state of fices, have not gone into the hands of settlers. They have bsen taken off the tax rolls and are ,held there, costing the state and counties millions of dollars that must be wrung out of the rest of the taxpayers. The school lands of th state were alienated and "absquatulated" by the nril lions of acres and converted into baronial holding of cattle kings, The same with timber lands Enough lands have been stolen in violation of laws to have made homes for millions of peopl wnicn we are now taxing our selves to get through chambers o commerce, commercial ciuds. an expositions. -If Oregon had the lands that have been acquired through processes far more shady than those practiced by John W Todd, the state would need t levy no taxes for a thousan years. If these stolen lands could be recovered by the state there would be revenues enough to run our state and schoo without the highest millace tax in the west, and on top of tha trying to enact a state income tax. Laying aside our sympathy for John W. Todd and the neei less regret, that those who sought to share profits with him. ar also made to share his losses what is an honest, righteou-, man-to-man and before-God pub lic land policy? Is it not that th stat? and the nation shall not part with public lands but to per sons or families who propose to live upon and till the same fo' and as producers from A. single man or wo man who would go and make a home on land in the sage brush, in the forest, or on the moun tain side any stay with it and cultivate and beautify it. would not remain single very long. Some other human being with hunger fdr the soil would join that homesteader. The family and the home have the first rights to land, and those who wish to live in the cities where the bright lights blaze and the mov ies move have no rtght. morally or legally, to become instrumen talities for taking up public lan Is of any kind merely to turn them over to land monopolists. That has been the Outcome of nine tenths of the public land trans fers made in the last half century. While that may possibly not bi undone, land monopoly is "the greatest obstacle and greafest in dustrial curse of the west. Lands unfit for human habitation and cultivation should be held as th forest reserves are held, in trust for industrial and development purposes. 1 know that no atten tion will be paid to this matter. We will go through the same slow process of undoing the wrongs done to' the people in the fraudu lent alienation of public lands, by BOISE HEATS WALLA WALLA WALLA WALLA. Wash., Nov. 18. Boise high : school today rounced Walla Walla high 1 4 to I in a football game played o;i a field covered with snow. Snow fell during the game and some of the spectators ; built fires om the sidelines to kepp warm. Eugene Account U. of O. - O. A; C. Annual Football Game And . oi O. Alumni Meeting Saturday, November 19tk sale Friday and Saturday return1 . 1 ' ':::(' limit Tickets on Monday. , TRAIN SERVICE s Going: Leave Salem 10:05 a. m., 11:00 a. m., 4:08 p. m., 5:46 p. m., 9:04 p. m. Returning: Leave Eugene 11:00 a. m., 3:35, p. 4:29 p. m., 5:30 p. m. ! . ' For further particulars, ask Agents m., SOUTHERN PACIFIC LINES . JOHN M. SCOTT, s , General Passenger Agent. The Louisiana legislature voted down a tlll which was calculated to stop betting on horse races. Down, in that section a horse race eufferincs and revolutions on tug ri Of Interest to All Good Cooks Every good cook realizes that the actual cooking is just as important to good cookery as is the prep aration of the ingredients. Isn't it fair, therefore to say that tetter ranges will make better cooks ' KtoSJts&r better rangcs for more th-c- They are the only ranges with practical automatic control. They can be trusted to start and stop cooking without attend fiV a tK?SC, thu minimum ?f current. They heat the food and not the kitchen. Lfar?? cookjnS be done conveniently and comfortably? and just why Westinghouse Range, make Eood cooks better. Talk to any of the following dealers: Portland Railway, Light & Power Co. Salem Electric Co. Welch Electric Fixture Co. SALEM, ORE. Fobes Supply Co. Wholesale Distributors PORTLAND,- OKE. , iii i i i' r m mm sn mil ..J'"V , t 1- i . .in .1.1... t r- 11 -1,