ST. HELENS MIST. FRI DAY. NOVEMBER 26. 1915. I-XHJNDED 1881. Issued Every Friday by THK MIST PUBLISHING COMPANY. 8. L. MOORHKAD Editor and Manager Entered as second-class matter, January 10th, 1U, at the Postoffice at St. Helens, Oregon, under the act of March 3rd, 1879. SUBSCRIPTION KATES: One Year fl-50 Six Months ?S Advertising rates made known on application. COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER. A WORM I" THE BUD. Though Oregon is certain to capture many tfold medals on fresh fruit entries, the Grand Sweepstakes on apples has gotten away from us. Just because a measly little worm, prob ibly not in the apple when it started from the Oregon orchard, showed up about a quarter of an inch in the cali end of a Newton Pippin when the jury cut it open, Washington, that state made famous by Seattle rather than ap ples, captured the sweepstakes on Winesaps. In other words, Okanogan, think of it, Okano gan county, had on display the best five-box exhibit at the big apple show. Everything was sailing along gloriously for the Oregon fruit, and up to the time that dinky little wormlet put in his dastardly appearance, Ore gon apples had scored ninety-nine points. Ore gon apples looked better than the best they had the proper color, the size was uniform, there was no blemish apparent, the bulge was exactly so, and the pack from all view-points was nothing less than championship calibre hut just before the jury had entirely finished :ts work one of the experts decided that he wanted to taste an apple from that wonderful display of Newtowns from Oregon. They all looked alike and all were beauties. Even as he gazed with a magnifying glass there was no evidence that the apple of his choice was anything but perfect, but neither did Eve have i.ny suspicion of the result when she selected an apple and gave it to Adam. In both cases the worm was there and fatal was the after math. Wljen the juryman slashed into the Oregon apple with his cutlery he gave a yell of dismay and Director Ravlin, in charge of ihe Oregon showing, got just one glance, had a fit and fell over in it. When he came to, he swam out of the room in his tears, and left the scene to the worm and Okanogan. After this, forty apples were cut open, but nary another worm. However, one was enough, in fact, too many. A worm before a horticultural iury is even more out of place than a woman at an exposition with clothing above the'waist 'ine or below the knees and in this instance it proved to be the straw that broke the cam el's back, that, so to speak, relegated us to "inocuous desuetude" so far as sweepstakes are concerned. A worm, any sort of a worm, 'ong, short, slim, wriggly, quiescent or other wise, counts just five points against the pos sessor thereof, and the loss of those five points was just enought to let the Washington fruit nose out. The worst part of it is that it makes no difference to whom the worm originally lelonged. If the exact fact be told there is trong suspicion among Oregonians here that that dinky little worm was not born and bred in Oregon, but instead that i spe"t it virly days in Washington and was brougnt to the txposition for the purpose to which i'. lcn itself so effectively. The Washington pavilion n the Palace of Horticulture is just across the aisle from the Oregon showing, and it is be lieved that that worm had been kept in hiding or several weeks and at night had been train ed to find its way to the Oregon fruit. At the psychological moment his worship was start ed on his way and told to do this dastardly work, and he did it. That this was no Oregon worm needs no other evidence than that he bad entered the apple scarcely more than a quarter of an inch. An Oregon worm in an Oregon apple would have eaten from calix to stem and back again forty times in the thirty days since the fruit left the Oregon orchards. There is one thing about Oregon worms hey are real worms", full of life and are of the get-up-and-go variety; that's the spirit of the country. There is nothing aenemic about an Oregon worm, while this particular specimen was, as said before, dinky,, weak, completely devoid of virility and wholly lacking in any thing that would give it the appearance of health. Still, it did a healthy service for Washington and Washington experts here have asked for him that he, or she, may be be fittingly honored as the state's greatest friend. NOBODY LOVES US. We are in clined to think that Mr. Joseph H. Choate puts it a little too strong when he says that the United States is one of the most hated nations in the world today. It is unhap pily true that hatred is now the dominant emotion in a large part of the earth, and that some of it is directed toward us. But hate is a hard word, representing an active passion, and we do not believe it is the feeling with which we are regarded by any nation in gen eral, although there can be no doubt that there are many individuals who would like mighty well to get at our throats. However, we have no doubt that no nation under the sun is more generally disliked than ours. There is hearty dislike, and, in truth, some hatred for us in ;ermanv. because of our stand on the subma rine question :.nd because of our sales of mu nitions to the allies. The same feeling exists in Austria. Great Britain, to say the least, has no love for us. The mass of her people seem to think we ought to have made common cause with them, and we ought not to inter fere in their blockade operations. Russia, of ficially, has never liked us, and the same is true of Turkey. France, we may hope, is our friend. nd Italv seems to bear no grudge ngainst us, but Spain has not vet forgotten '93. Japan would like to have a bout with us, ;,nd upon our own hemisphere we are regard ed with feelings that range from unfriendly Indifference to actual hatred. There are many reasons for this attitude of the nations toward us. Some dislike us fur one thing and some for another, hut there is one emotion that influences all of them, more or less, and that is envy. The United States is the richest nation on the globe.- Although we are Lut 6 per cent of the world s popula tion it is estimated that we have one-fourth of its wealth, and we are continuing to accunui i;.te wealth in a way that excites the jealousy . nd the cupidity of other nations. To imagine that, under such circumstances, we can for ever continue to live in "splendid isolation," is a very prettv fancy but a very impractical one. The United States must be prepared to pro tect its own. It must guard its treasures. When dislike and envy unite it needs but a trillc to create open hostility. lllobe-Dem-ocrat. . OLDEST FIR TREE. News has been received by Portland of ficials of the Forestry Service that the Doug las fir found in the Washington forest in Western Washington, reported to be- more than HX) years old, is bv the count of the an nual rings 1144 vears of age. It still is the oldest Douglas fir of which the authorities of the Forestry Service have record. The rings were counted by the ranger on duty near Finnev Creek, where the monger tree was found The tree has been cut down, the stump partially burned and 50 feet of the trunk sawed into wood. For the first 500 years of the tree's growth it attained a radius of 27 inches and tin. other 644 years added only 14 inches to the radius. The oldest hemlock on record is 545 years old and was found somewhere in We.-tcrn Washington. It had attained a diameter of 61) inches. The oldest red cedar vet discover cd by the forest officials was found in the Sno iiuahuie forest, was 100 inches in diameter and ! 137 years of age. The oldest yellow pine in Eastern Oregon is 687 vears old, its diameter being about four feet. Five thousand trees were examined in the growth study. Give this serious' thought: "You don't realize what a nervous strain you are putting on a man in the cab," said a Southern Pacific locomotive engineer the other day to an Ash land automobile driver, "when you dash up toward a crossing just ahead of his train. There he is in his cab and he knows that he can't stop his engine. There you are in your r.utomobile speeding toward the crossing just ahead. You probablv know that you are ioing to stoj) just at the edge of the track and look up and laugh at him. He doesn't know but what you are going to trv to dash across ? head of him. It's a joke maybe to you. To him it's a few seconds of the most intense agony. Whv do you do it? When you see a train coming and know that you can't make the crossing and don't even intend to try to make it why don't you slow down and give the engineer the assurance that his train is :ot about to hurl you into eternity?" Portland has a trunk mystery. A man lilled his companion for hisnoney; cut up his body, placed it in a trunk and dumped it into the river. If the guilty wretch is apprehended the severest punishment is the penitentiary for life. Perhaps he may be allowed to serve eleven years, the average life sentence in Ore gon. The scaffold has its terrors but the peo ple of Oregon have voted it out of existence. The average criminal can hold up and butcher with the assurance that if apprehended and convicted, he will soon be a free man again, ready for another crime. The great storm which has prevailed on the coast could not find its way up the Colum bia, so we were exempt from its ravages. There was no discount on the rainfall, however. It is a matter of great convenience to Un people of St. Helens that the through even ing train for Astoria stops at this station This gives the business men additional time in Portland. While the cast is wading around in snow ;nd the mercury hugging zero, roses, asters i nd chrisanthemums are still in healthy bloom in flower gardens of St. Helens. It was an Irishman who made the state ment that he was absolutely neutral in this foreign war. He said he did not care which country whipped Germany. The average citizen certainly had occasion to give thanks for many things. In these days of Wilson prosperity, you ought to be thank ful that it is no worse. Eastern Oregon wants Congressman Maw-Icy to run for the United States senate against Harry Lane. Hawlcy is a great vote catcher. Although retired for a good many years, Binger Hermann's double compound hand shake has never been equaled by any candidate. The St. Helens cannery has put up 10 000 gallons of saner kraut. Should Europe hear of this Germany will immediately sue for pace. : v The gates of the great San Francisco expo sition will close December 4. It has been a financial success. Roseburg shipped 10.000 turkevs. There is some gobble to that town. Candidates will begin to show their faces r.fter New Years. PATRIOTIC FLAG PRESENTATION JuiIbo Eiikin Accepts Fluff tor Co lumbia Comity, following the address of V. II nillurii, representing tho har la ne- Cfullni! the fliK. Juilno Kakln In ac cepting tho ling ns rcprcsetitlntt tnai court and Columbia county, spoke as fellows: In accepting tins fluR. so nicely presented hy the Sons of the Ameri can revolution, I wish, as representative- of tho court and of the Court of Nuturnlliatlon, nnd In that sense, as a representative of the County of Coluiulilii, to express the fxallllcatlon of tho county ami of the court at this presentation and of the patriotism which hus hnhued Its pre sentation to tlilf) thurt. Wo sometimes wonder and t know I have, nml I think many tlx wonder why wo put so much sirens upon the flag In connection with our national duli.u and service. Tho ift a ;..vu!lful thiiin'; tills Hub :!.:i;d e'.d lvl:d ''ml.reldered. lie slurs ui uli Morkt'd m t hand und the rihhons constituting tlio flax are sowed together hy hand; It is of silk iiid beautiful in the combination or colors, and It Is beautiful to look at. hut that does not explain tho pat riot lm which ,lt la supposed to Inspire- and which I believe does Inspire every truo American; and I feel. In thinking over thli matter, as to what this Hug represents and why we should lay so niu.'h stress upon It, that 11 Is uo sacrilege to say that I believe It stands within the purview of the peoplo of this nation In tho S.H110 relation that religious symbol stand to religion. It stunds to Am erican peoplo Just us the cross stands to tho Christian religion or She crescent to the religion of the Turks, or of the temple of Diana to the religion of tho Creeks, and so It does represent an Idea. The flag in itself is little more than a combina tion of colors, but tlm Idea which It represent Is tho llfo of a nation nnd consequently it means ail that the aatlon which it represents means to tho Inhabitants. There Is tho gen eral idea that It means I ho union of the states of the nation. Wo have a nation composed of many Btates un der separate and subservient govern ment and they are united, and ns said In the revolutionary times, an. one and Inseparthle, and the Hag represents that inscnarahlo charac ter, but it means more than tliut to the American peoplo. Wo are no', a nation that we would call homogen ous, that Is, a nation of ull one kin 1, but we are a nation composed of every element on iie faro of the earth. With very few exceptions, all these elements may become a part o( our national system. Now, It becomes a part of tho du ties of certain courts in tho I'nlted States to take In these foreigner;:, theso aliens, born in other countries, as citizens of the t'nlted States, end by so doing, they I "( cine equal par ticipants with tho-e who have hern born In this couutr, and then tho question arises, "Vnt will Put mean to them?" 'Will they still remain Russians, or will they re main Italians, will they remain tier mans, or will they rennln Hrltlsh, .ir will they forget those native policies to which they were born nnd thriw them asldo and adopt only those poli cies which they adopt in swearWt; i-.lleglance to the American govern ment?" In my judgment, there is a mure important moaning to this flag than that of unity of stales; it means that they shall cast aside all their native, Inborn sentiments of nationality and cleave only to that which they have adopted in becoming citizens of tills country. Therefore, this means unity, not only of states, but it means unity of tho Individual with tho body of the state, and that, In my Judgment, Is tho truo meaning of tho American flag, r.nd in that senso I havo used I; In naturalization in tho Clatsop County Naturalization vjuii, wnKro wo rave so muny to pass through the examination, and I have always held up the flag to them ae tho symbol of what they would be expected to become when thoy tuke the oa:h of r.lkglanco and renounce allegiance to their farmer country. That. In my judgment, Is the moan- lug of the flag ac It Is presented to us today, nnd in behalf of tho ueoDlo of Columbia county and In behalf of the court, I wish to express the grati tude and appreciation of the countv and of the court to the Sons of tho American Revolution for this pro- seniauon; and I also wish to extend our appreciation of thanks to Major Sllva and Mr. Schnabel, who have lagen upon themselves the duty and the trnultln nr i u,g l,,.re wllll U(j this morning and making the presen tatlon. t assure them that wo fully uiirB:.Bi0 meir efforts and on he ...... . t.lt court, i will assuro them that we will make full use of the flag in bringing citizens from foreign parts into amalgamation, or atinmm. Ing to do so, with tho peoplo of the cn.ici suites, for It is In tho unity I or nmulKunmthm of tho peoplo that como Into our country with thn who aro born Into this country upou which depends tho i.trength nnd per manency nnd vigor of our nation, therefore I wish to again thank them for their trouble and tho pu trtntlo presentation of this flag. I also wish to express our appreci ation of tho presenco here today of tho St. Helen High School. We fully appreciate It and 1 hope, that you will receive soino llttlo further Impression, ut least, In regard to pn trlotlsm und tho duties of American cttlieus, by your being present hero today, nnd this feature of tho session of tho court will now bo adjourned. Why j Uy uii'lgirtaii 4 , l flatly n.y nml i 0 tffrturt tiive T" them tho same J i -Irmii to will piu tiMitinii mill surivtw U M the lad having tlie I HEW MUTATIONAL jj PietiVinmy In liU Imihv Tills new en a! inn miui r ult loirtl snttior- 3 ity all I uul.i if piudlug iisstiin 6 in -hi i.ny, p-.'Ki.'1'li)-. Li graphy, j s'tiitir, ir.iiit:iu ia;i"ii,v. rtrt,artJ, 1 ut.il M'ie:t.i t. g 40!).VjoV.xrubiibn-T.t.ti. 27GPait. 11, ur (.do I tin -.trillion, (.olt.r-tj Plutea. V .sir 4W.iae.iir IU Uu Dl Tf. Tbc Hi matter U r.i'tivblutit to thai el If.- ..limit tuoyctoyedt. Mrr Svholj.ty. A'i tirul. Conn!n, attti Autluxlutliu tlttin nnyaiiiwrhiti j li.li I iv'iUmttry. KICt I A ANlt " !:.'. Ax, il imma. ' FItr.l,. tl Vsn filter. C. 4 C. MCRRIAM CO, s?r,nariiu, mass. X 'MCHUIIUJIWmiiilMi.JWiCW.J SPECIAL I have purchased the black' smith shop formerly owned by B. Thompson, and will now be permanently located. A. L. Robenolt HCULTON, ORE. Blacksmithing and General Re. pair Work. Phone 114, ' mi i 1 A FRESH SHAYE I Adds tone to any man. That's why we arc so busy and there ate so many tony people in this ' town. ? IS Cents a Ton. I 8. R. LYNCH. Z St. Htltni, Oregon Str. IBALDA Rates between- St. Helens and Port land, 50 cents one way, 75 cents for the round trip. Tickets good until used. Host leaves St. Helms 7:fn. m, Keturnliig leaves r.itth.nd 2:.T0 p. ni Arrive at St llelcm 4 V, p. in. r. I. HOOGHKIRK muuu. ur PERFECTION. SCnpvj-vww mm SIMPLE SIMPLY PEHFECT. T mL 1 ' '' n',"" nml ' Sewing 1 wcu"o supphus, pairing a .ociidty. " NKW IIOMR (THKItH AUK QUALITY CIMMINKIIH Vur Hale by , WI-iKM 111 nivi.:il Sil Morrison Ht., I'oHlnnd, Ore. THK XKv HOMK HKWINO M. nilMK o, Hun 1'VhiicInco, Cal. PROFKSIONAL clt H-'A. ROSS FUNERAL DIRECTOR I l r-. ... -"-LN5rn tu... Bank Buildin. .. Bounty Phoo 25 t 1 Itr.uLb. 1 ' 1 J C 1?. wadb PHYSICIAN AND SURGj 7WJVff t MuekU lll,lg. IW.W.R.DINHAM DENTIST St. Helens . r, vc2oi, I'l-'miiurw DENTIST ST IIKLKNS, 0kK(i()N ii-HERT ROSS PHYSICIAN hSUKCOH Mid DR EDWIN ROSS PHYSICIAN A SUKS0H orrich in iMMi hi ,lSU St. Helens . Qrcgot T. S WHITE FUNERAL DIRHU0R Ut'KNxKI, KVIIMSri Ilottltou Orci DR. ALFRED J. PEEL PHYSICIAN A SURGEON St. Helens Hank lliiil.llnc DR. H. R. CLIFF PHYSICIAN 4 SURCEPN llionr M.ln vi A l.'B; u.. ""tiT" ro.llaud,0r. Diu 1 it a w. nunc irn. nana H. nunc Drugs ' Ktlti I omc Hours: J a. m, to 11 1 2 p.m. to 4 p.m., 7:30 to 8:10 pa St. Ilolons, Orciton. M. E. MILLER ATTORNEY ATLAW St. IIclcus Ongon ST. HELENS ROUTE tU WIImii Sloak THE PEOPLES BOAT STR. AMERICA Loan Portland dally -1:30 P (Sumlay J: 30 p. m.) Arrive St. Ilelons - 1:00 P lnvca 81. llolcm - - - Arrives rortlnnd - - - -II. HOLMAN,Ail MaVea all way landing. Wtarl ' toj Aidnr streot. rnonus; A-4204. FIIANK WU.KIN8, Bt Holoni ! PURE ; MILK AND CREAM Furnished Daily ly ST. 'HELENS DAIRY S. N. CADE, Proprietor ST. HELENS, OREGON. Phone 107-6. Our rcllltli anil e-inlpn"" fp handllnK dulry Vf enuhloa us to supply I'1 J? (ratio ut milk nl '" , in strictly sanitary. We are nnxlou rnnre riistonicw and Pf"nl"" gornl awvlce. . HutlsfHctlnn uiinrsntwxl every resjiect.