n t . 14. a . I . . if' mm PORTLiSl), OREGON. Entered at Portland. Oregon. Postofflce as second-class matter. Subscription Ratea Invariably In Advance: (BY MAIL) Dally, Sunday Included, one year JS.OO Daily, Sunday included, Blx months.... 4.25 pally, Sunday Included, three month!. . i.25 Daily, Sunday Included, one month. 75 Daily, without Sunday, one year 6.00 Daily, without Sunday, six months 3.26 Daily, without 6unday, three months... 1.75 Daily, without Sunday, one month 60 weekly, one year 1.50 Sunday, one year . . 2.60 Sunday and "Weekly, one year S.50 (BY CARRIER) Dally, Sunday Included, one year 9.00 Daily. Sunday Included, one month 75 How to Kemlt Send postofflce money or der, express order or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at sender's risk. Give postofflce address in full, including county and state. I'ostaue Kates 12 to IS pages, 1 cent; IS to 32 pages. 2 cents; 34 to 48 pages, 3 cents; 60 to 60 pages, 4 cents 62 to 76 pages, 5 cents; 73 to 92 pages, 6 cents. Foreign post, arc. double rates. EaHtcrn Business Offices Verree & Conic lln. New York. Brunswick building. Chi cago, Steger building. r-an Krnjjclo Office R. J. Bldwell Co., 74L' Market street. European Office No. Z Regent street S. V., London. rOKTUSD, MONDAY, JCXE 16, 1918. WEST VIRGINIA'S TROUBLES. For about a year a large part of the State of "West Virginia has been in a state of civil war, which was ended by the declaration of martial law. Armed bodies of miners have contended in battle with armies of mercenaries enlisted In the service of mine-owners. Only the intervention of the armed forces of the state put a stop to hostilities, and they were iro sooner withdrawn than war was renewed. Twice was martial law re imposed to end civil strife. Tet only occasional scraps of news leaked out regarding this anarchic condition. The explanation is the absence of -independent newspapers in the In ferior of West Virginia. The entire population of the coal regions is either engaged in the coal industry or is dependent upon it. Under these circumstances independence and fear less truth-telling is impossible, except by outsiders who go in for the pur pose of impartial inquiry. Even such persons are confronted by almost insuperable difficulties. Passion and prejudice are so heated that every person from whom information must be sought almost unconsciously col ors and garbles facts and many tell deliberate falsehoods or deliberately conceal facts adverse to their side of the controversy. Truth must be sift ed from a mass of misstatements, exaggerations or suppressions of fact. The most painstaking, conscientious, skilled and impartial can but reach an approximation to the truth. The West Virginia war should con vince us of the imperative need in such communities of a higher law enforcing power than the local au thorities. The Sheriff will inevitably be a partizan of either mineowners or miners. When necessity arises to call out the posse comitatus, upon whom can he call? Practically the whole population is involved In the controversy. Only an organized body, drawn from the state at large and under the immediate control of the Governor, can cope with the situa tion. This body should not be, the National Guard, for the work to be done is police work, for which the militia is not organized and perform ance of which prejudices large masses of the population against it, so that an open or tacit boycott against mi litia service exists among manual workers. A state police force, with semi-military organization, can alone perform satisfactory service in labor troubles such as those of West Virginia. It should with equal impartiality dis arm the mercenaries of the employ ers and the militant workmen. By protecting the property and employes of capitalists it should deprive them of any excuse for hiring armed guards, buying machine guns or doing any act which is an invasion of the sovereign power of the state. By protecting workmen on strike from violence or oppression at the hands of capital. It should deprive them of ex cuse for bearing arms. Mortal combat between private armies of mineowners and armed bodies of miners too closely resembles the conflicts between medk;val barons and revolted peasants to be tolerated in the twentieth century. The s.ory told to the Senate committee is a dis grace, not only to West Virginia, but to the whole United States. Credit is due to Governors Glasscock and Hat lield for their manful efforts to re store order. But this episode should serve as a warning to West Virginia and to every other state to equip themselves for preventing such con ditions. THE REAL BATTLE AT HAM). With the report of the finance com. mittee to the Senate, the real battle -over the Underwood tariff will begin. The result fh the House was such a foregone conclusion that little interest .attached to the proceedings in that quarter. In the Senate the Demo- - cratic majority is so small and so many ""Democrats would be glad to Jump the traces, if they could only muster up , . courage and be sure of enough com pany, that keen interest will be felt in the actions of that body from the outset. The normal Democratic majority is six, and, as Senator Poindexter, the lone Progressive, is expected to vote for the bill, the majority will proba bly be swelled for this occasion to eight. But to begin with, we must - deduct the votes of the two Louisiana , " Senators, who will surely vote against - free sugar at the end of three years ; and against the bill if it includes that ; provision. Senator Walsh, of Mon . tana, and Senator Newlands, of Ne vada, are bitterly opposed to free wool and the latter also opposes free sugar, though he might not desert his party on that issue. A combination between - these two Senators and the two Louisi- anans is talked of. If entered Into, all four would vote against both free wool 'and free sugar. Those four votes transferred from one side to the other would make the . Senate a tie, and the Vice-President's - casting vote would decide the fate of the bill. But if Mr. Walsh and Mr. Newlands should vote against their party with Mr. Thornton and Mr. R.msdell, others who are strongly op posed to free wool might Join them. Should any others Join the four mentioned, our own George and Harry might be nerved to the pitch of voting in defense of one of the chief lndus- tries of their state, rather than as the caucus dictates. If the revolt spread . so far, it might sprj.d farther, for it - is one thig for tvo or three men to rr"bolt the party elision and quite an- other thing for a respectable nurrfber .'.of men to split the party. Suppose the Senate cuts out the free wool and free sugar provisions, what """then? The 'bill will go to conference for reconcilement of Senate and House on points of difference. When the Democratic Wilson bill of 1894 and the Republican Payne bill of 1909 went to conference, the House yielded and the Senate had its way. But conditions are now different. The majority party organization in the Senate in each of those cases stood behind the amend ments; in .this case it would be against them. The House was then far more complaisant than it now is. President Wilson stands unflinchingly behind the House and hardly conceals his purpose to appeal to the people against the bolters. The stress and strain and strife in conference will be terrific if the Senate changes the two vital points of the bill and ceaseless efforts will be made to whip the bolters into line. The contest in the Senate preceding passage of the bill will be only the first, if the threatened amendments should be made. A fiercer battle will follow in conference and the fiercest of all will ensue if the House stands pat and if a last effort should be made to force free wool and free sugar through the Senavte. THE OKEGOX FIRST. The school children of Oregon have peti tioned the Secretary of War to let the bat tleship Cietou lead the parade through the Panama Canal. Indiana will flip heads or tails for the honor. Indianapolis Star. Oregon will flip nothing. We ask the honor for the battleship which bears the name of this State because it would accord with the eternal fit ness of things. The Oregon"s voyage around the continent was a practical demonstration ' that the canal was necessary to our national safety and so fastened attention on. the subject that President Roosevelt did. not rest until the work- was begun. It is most fitting that the ship which thus aided so powerfully in bringing about the realization of a splendid dream should act as the chief part in ceremonies marking the fact. What particular connection has Indiana or the battleship Indiana with the canal? AVELL EQUIPPED. . The qualifications of Mr.' O. MJ Plummer for the position of school director were emphasized in a. re markable way in the long list of in terviews with men and women in various. walks of life published yester day. It is probably t needless, there fore, for The Oregonian again to di rect attention to his interest in child welfare, to his personal investigations of school methods in other cities, to his progressive tendencies, to his support and indorsement of the plans of the new superintendent, Mr. Alder man. But there is another qualification to be considered. Mr. Plmmer has practical business ability. The duties of the School Board are not wholly confined to directing methods of education. Sound Judg ment in purchase of school sites, let ting of building contracts and the like are essential to the welfare of the taxpayers. The school director serves in a dual capacity. He not only must, to meet all requirements, have special knowledge of educational needs and methods, but be equipped to. guard the public from financial errors. The person who is acceptable in both branches of the duties of the office possesses rare qualifications. Mr. Plummer has them. A TEST FOR WILSON. A severe test is made of President Wilson's courage and independence by the rider to the sundry civil appropria tions bill. This rider provides that no part of the special appropriation for enforcement of the anti-trust law shall be used in prosecution of labor unions or farmers' associations. The rider is urgently demanded by the labor unions, which fear that the Dan bury hatters' case may furnish the pre text for attacks upon them in the courts. Little has been heard from farmers In its favor. The Manufac turers' Association has entered a pro test on the general ground that it is special legislation exempting certain classes from the operation of a gen eral law. Whether the President ve toes or approves the bill on account of this rider, he will antagonize one element or the other. It is for him to choose. The President's own party is not united on the subject- The rider was supported by Senator Martin, con servative, of Virginia, and opposed by Senator Thomas, Progressive, of Colo rado. Among Republicans It was op posed not only by such conservatives as Senators Root and Gallinger, but by the progressive Senator Borah. One of the last words of Mr. Wilson's poli tical discoverer, Colonel Harvey, as editor of Harper's Weekly, Is an ear nest plea for a veto. He says: Unless you can show conclusively that this bill was forced upon you against your will, that you had no part in resuscitating It when there was no need, the credit or the blame must be yours and yours alone. Can you do that? We fear not. It stands to day before the public as an Administration measure. But you can and should, and pray God you may, disregard any Implica tion of commitment In courageous perform ance, after full and complete understanding of the truth, cf your public duty. Two facts are certain: The fate of this Infamous meas. ure, involving your own and your party's political fortunes, is In your own hands. The New York World, which was a staunch supporter of Mr. Wilson be fore his nomination, is no less em phatic in recommending a veto, for it says: It is true that this restriction would not prevent the president from employing other funds of the Department of Justice for that purpose. It is true that It would not Inter fere with criminal prosecutions against such associations. It Is true that the restriction applies for only a year and that the Attorney-General can probably manage to evade it. Nevertheless, the iniquity of the principle Involved is In no sense minimized. This bill Is class legslation, and class leg islation is always vicious. It is an unwar rantable Invasion of the powers and Inde pendence of the Executive. It amounts to a Congressional decree that the President shall violate his oath of office. It creates a precedent that, unless stifled at once may survive to vex the Nation for years to come, for if Congress may interfere with the Presi dent in the enforcement of one law it has power to Interfere with him In the enforce ment of every law. We believe that Congress has neither a moral nor a constitutional right to leave a law on the statute books and then restrain the President In the execution of that law Congressional usurpation may be as danger ous to American institutions as executive usurpation, and the President owes it to the country to assert, the Independence of his office. He should emphatically uphold the principle that if Congress wishes to amend or qualify a law it must do so by statute and not by tying the hands of the Executive. It was contended, during the de bate in the Senate, that the rider was a gold brick handed to the labor unions, since the Government would be free to use other funds than the special appropriation in their prosecu tion. The ' rider, it was contended, would establish a vicious precedent, without giving anything to those it purported to favor. It was insisted the only straightforward method by which labor and farmers' unions could be exempted from the operation of the anti-trust law was by amendment of that law. The President" has shown courage under pressure on former occasions. vVhlchever alternative he chooses on this occasion, he must show courage again. His opinion on this bill will make interesting reading in connection with President Taft's message vetoing the same bill because of the presence of the same rider. DR. MATTHEWS ON FREE SCHOOLS. It seems that most -critics of Amer ican life have been making a great mistake. They are in the habit of telling us that we work too hard and too continuously. "Knock off and take a vacation" Is their constant preachment. "Stop digging for money and go out to play in the woods." Now we know that all this is wrong. The truth of the matter is, as we learn from the calm and philosophic Dr. Mark Alison Matthews, of Seattle, that we do not work hard enough. "We are parting from independence, initiative and the habit of industry," he moaned to a reporter for the New York Sun who interviewed him late ly. If he had added that some of our clergymen were parting from their common sense he would have been still more edifying than he was. What evidence is there that "our young people no longer like to work," as Dr. Matthews puts it? This is the evidence: The Presbyterian Church, as matters stand, was joined in 1912 by 73,000 persons, no more and no less, according to Dr. Matthews. Had each elder of the church done his plain duty and secured one H6W mem ber every week, the total number of accessions would have been 960,000. Count them, 960,000, and when you compare this magnificent roll with the beggarly 73,000 who actually Joined you have the measure of the elders' dereliction. But, reasons Dr. Matthews, Pres byterian elders are the flower of mankind. If they are lazy everybody else must necessarily be still lazier. Hence his wail of woe. The trouble, he thinks, is at bottom due to the common schools, which provide free education, "free books and sometimes free doctors." He goes on to tell us that . this wretched scheme "was hatched in the convict colony of New Zealand," where it has been a patent failure. Seeing how extensive and ac curate Dr. Matthews' information is upon these points, it Is a great pity that he does not revise the current cyclopedias. It has become a habit with some charlatans to plan a raid on the common schools whenever they feel it desirable to attract more than common attention. But the schools are pretty tough. They have come safely through many a combat, and we rather guess they will outlive Dr. Matthews. TWO MORE NOTEWORTHY' EVENTS. Another Rose Festival has passed into history and the Portland people owe a debt of gratitude to the citi zens of almost every hamlet, town and city on the Coast for their pat ronage and co-operation in making the affair a success. Particularly are thanks due to the splendid citizens of Los Angeles, Oakland, San Francisco, Tacoma, Seattle, Vancouver, Victoria, Spokane and Boise. The Portland people ought to return the favors shown by giving to each of those cities a large attendance at their coming annual fete days. We have in Oregon many events of importance yet to be held this year, two of which may be mentioned with pride. The first in point of time, and great in point of importance, is. the Pendleton Round-up, which takes place September 25. 26 and 27. The Round-up has grown to be an affair of National importance, annually at tracting as much attention as any occasion of the West. As an Indian show alone the Round-up now outclasses all shows of the kind in the country. No other place, gathers so many Indians, no other event sees them so gaily and so gaudily appareled or so beautifully caparisoned. Somehow the Pendle ton people have a knack of getting the pick of several Indian tribes, and each year the number of Redskins grows larger and more to be admired. As to feats of horsemanship by the ever-lessening number of" cowboys, the Pendleton affair stands practical ly alone, and in the other branches of sport indulged in in the earlier days of the range, nowhere else are they given in such an at tractive manner, on grounds so well fitted for the purpose or under such splendid management as at Pendleton. After the Round-up, the week after, from September 29 to October 4, we have the annual state fair at Salem. Year by year the state fair grows better and more attractive, and this year, again under the splendid management of J. H. (Henry) Booth, of Roseburg, President of the State Fair Board, we are promised a better and bigger fair than we have ever had, while Albert Tozier, the "Mayor" of the tented city, which is one of the great features of the fair for the old timers, promises better arrangements for the tenters than in the past, owing to great improvement of the grounds. These two events ought to attract large crowds, as we feel sure they will. SILENCE THE "KNOCKERS." The American people have acquired a habit of late years of searching the National conscience and making open confession of their sins before the whole world. This is a characteristic of the morbidly religious which it la not well for us to carry to an extreme in public discussion of our affairs. We can find the weak spots in our public and business affairs and can strengthen them without continually harping upon the subject and creat ing the impression among other na tions that our whole political and business system is rotten to the core. When we look back to the opening of the Twentieth century and make comparison, we can perceive abund ant evidence that we are cutting out the rottenness and building up new and healthy tissue in the National body. We have made great progress In placing party organization and the Government under direct control of the people without intervention of bosses and are continuing progress along the same line. We have estab lished a much higher standard of pub lic service than formerly prevailed. We have brought the railroads under public control, which they now wel come as a buffer between them and their patrons. We have made great progress in breaking up monopoly, so great that many illegal combinations are no sooner attacked in the courts than they voluntarily comply with the Government's demands. We are con tinuing this work of restoring com petition and have compelled big busi ness to assume a very different atti tude towards government. It no longer controls, dictates and threatens. The tie between it and the governing power has been weakened. if not broken, and it is on the defensive. We have not yet actually put some of our trust magnates in jail, but some of them are under sentence and we can feel assured that, if after a few more years of law enforcement, any remain blind to the signs of the times, impris onment of a recalcitrant monopolist will become as much a matter of course as that of a bank wrecker. But many of our people have harped so continually on the sins of our politicians and big business men that they have created the 1 in the world at large that almost all our public men are corrupt and that all our big business men are rascals. xnese mucKraKers and callers-down of woe upon the Nation have blackened our reputation In the eyes of the ,world The effect has been that all American investments are coming to oe tooKea on with suspicion and the price of all our securities is depre ciated because some are much wa tered. The good are made to suffer for the bad, because of our own neg lect to discriminate. Our disposition to foul our own nest has become so confirmed that, when Great Britain accuses us of violating the Panama Canal treaty, certain selfish Interests which are in jured by the carfal law find ready sup port amoner the oeoolp of sonsitivs conscience when they take up the plea. TA 1 - 1 it is caimiy assumed by Americans that our own Government, deliberate ly or negligently passed a law in vio lation of a treaty and that no honor able course is open to us except to confess our sin and rpnoai the law There Is the same disposition to ac cept as true the charge of Japanese jingoes that the California land law violates treaties. There is a gen eral disposition among the agitators against toll exemption and the war alarmists to take It for granted that in any foreign controversy their own nation is always wrong and the other nation is always right. Other nations do not act thus. There has been no greater financial scandal in recent times than the French Panama Canal swindle, but the French cut out the rotten spot and stopped there. They did not by a general, long-continued and indis criminate campaign give theN world to understand that all French securities were equally bad. Nor did the Eng lish when Argentine speculation wrecked the Baring Bros.' bank or when rubber speculation caused many to lose millions. They told the facts, repaired the wrong, left the reputa tion of securities in general unim paired and continued business, saying no more about the Scandal. When their government Is engaged in for eign controversy, they stand by it as a man stands by his own family. It is about time Americans changed their tune. The "knockers" should be silenced. By all means let us expose and punish the rascals; but do not let us confound the honest with them, nor meekly admit our Government to have been in the wrong whenever an other nation call3 its acts in question. Senator La Follette, who has viewed very critically every act of Governor McGovern of Wisconsin ever 6lnce the latter allowed himself to be used by Colonel Roosevelt at the Republican convention at Chicago last year, is angry with the Governor for vetoing a resolution submitting a woman suffrage amendment to the people. The Governor's reason was that a similar amendment was re jected last Vfta.r flnil Vtat it- thM.U not be submitted again after a lapse oi only two years. The Senator WOUld have had It mihmittarl -Frt.. other reason than to give the cause me Denerit or constant agitation, and shows that he triumphed over the old machine only by hammering away in campaign after campaign. But the pugnacious little man can be trusted to keep up the fight, even without an amendment to base it upon. The appointment of D. C. Freeman as publicity man for the Hill people Is more evidence that the railways of Oregon are getting the best men for wurit, wnicn Degan when the Strahorn system annexed Mark Woodruff. These young men will be antagonists in a way, and the state will be the gainer for their rivalry. The Democratic maioritv in ih Illinois House has passed a corpora tion law which the Chicasro bar re nounces as containing all the most oojectionaDie features of the statute which New Jersey recentlv cUnrsirAo at the dictation of President Wilson. tsut uie Democracy always did pull In several directions at the same time. The output of Portland cement in this country, between 1870 and 1879 was 82,000 barrels. In 1912 it was ou.000,000 barrels. That should glad den the heart of the Pinchot reserva tions, for it will leave them free to let the timber rot in the forests while we build of concrete. This is Grand Army week at New berg, the occasion being the grand encampment, and Editor Bell, in the latest issue of his Enterprise, pub lishes a "war" number that is his torical as well as interesting. The Santa Barbara man who of fered Senator Works J 1000 to have him appointed postmaster seems to be as honest as he la lsnoranr Tli. Senator might better have burned the letter than have given it publicity. Charles Durant Hearst Elbert Hub bard Sagne Maines of Poughkeepsie, K. Y.. will inherit J20.000 when he reaches the are of 21. unliwsi h. din of exhaustion under the burden of such a name. Under its commission form of gov ernment, Denver is rerulatlns- thA bathing suits of its women. Tights are ioroiaaen and something loose is in slsted upon. Voting at the school election Is not a easy as lormeriy. since household gOOds are PTPm rtt mnn-ir nhn legal voters are no longer in that It is evident Judge McGinn believes In Oregon as a great dairy state and that a two-pound roll of butter must weign thirty-two ounces. These rains are helping: the irrain. but are not of benefit to clover that is down, and there is much of it Too much money seems to be dis rupting the connubial felicity of "Lucky" Baldwin's descendants. "According to Hoyle" has a new significance in San Quentin. - It means doing away with the stripes.- Pioneers of Oregon have the right of wary this week- AXBTTJAL EVENT STRAINS INTEREST Suggestion Blade That Rose Festival Be Held Less Often. PORTLAND, June 15. (To the Edi tor.) The old Greeks were wiser than we. As a quadrennial event, the Olym pic games maintained an abiding inter est among the people for hundreds of years such an interest that the suc cession of other events was recorded on the basis of its periodical recurrence. As an .annual event, who can suppose that the interest of that people could have been sustained so long and so in tensely? But we are attempting to maintain annually an event which, to insure its success, makes no light demands upon the time, the resources and the public spirit of our citizens. Our experience shows us clearly that we are attempt ing the impossible. No one who has been with us during the past six years can question for a moment the asser tion that our Rose Festival week Is los ing its interest among us. We do not prepare for it as we have hitherto done. We criticise rather than appreciate when we are in the midst of it. In re gard to the week which has just passed, who among us today feels that pleas antest of emotions, the retrospective enjoyment of an hour, a day, a week, given without reserve to the pleasures of the moment? We are disappointed ourselves; we disappoint our friends and visitors, and, though the latter may say some very kind and nice things about us, we know in our heart that we do not deserve them, and most of us are glad when this annual interrup tion of our affairs is over. The Rose Festival week is an excel lent institution, and as a triennial or quadrennial event could be made one of. absorbing and widespread interest. We could prepare for it ungrudgingly on a sufficient scale, and the active interest of all classes of our citizens (of not less importance than their fi nancial support) could be enlisted with out urging. Not by the solicitation of a few, nor by their most earnest efforts, can anything of this nature be main tained. Only so Ions as it obtains the voluntary support of the mass of the citizens will it be successful. And this it cannot obtain as an annual event. A. B. SMITH. MODEL LICENSE IN LA GRANDE Observation of Its Effect Convinces Writer of Ineffectiveness. IMBLER, Or.. June 14. (To the Edi tor.) I am Interested in the letter by T. M. Gilmore, president of the National Model License League, which The Ore gonian published June 12, and in your comment thereon. Some years ago Union County went dry by a large majority of votes, and Immediately the saloons were gone the "model" brewers and saloon Interests of Baker and Umatilla counties flooded Union County with "booze" until the people were disgusted and were easily persuaded by the "home-rule" cry and the Model License League to vote the county ,wet again. A drastic model license ordinance was proposed by the liquor Interests of La Grande, with eight saloons as the limit, and used as campaign "dope." The writer had business near the front door of one of these "model sa loons" for several hours one evening the following Summer and saw at least four young boys drink at the bar and two staggering drunkards served with liquor without hesitation. Treating (tabooed by the ordinance) was almost continuous during the evening, and drunken, noisy men were allowed to hang around the place. I presume this Is a fair sample of the law-abiding, high-minded, patriotic citizens who are running the present model saloons in Oregon, and my con tention Is that Mr. Gilmore is absolutely wrong about regulation being the solu tion of the liquor problem. We have plenty of laws on the statute books now to paralyze the traffic, but we do not have officers in sympathy with or who have the least intention of enforcing the laws, except in a very few cases. La Grande now has ten saloons, and more will be added, no doubt, as the city needs the money. There is a cam paign started tq put the saloons all out of business in Oregon, and it will not bo done by "regulation," but by "administration." GEORGE L. CLEAVER. ROSE FESTIV AL AS ANNUAL 13VENT Correspondent Favors Tax and Urges Varied Programme. PORTLAXD, June 15. (To the Edi tor.) The Rose Festival, just closed, should be made a permanent annual event. Its effect on Portland's activ ity and prosperity as a metropolitan center has become an established fact to all the people of the United States. Its expectations are fully realized by all and to let it dwindle would be a hard -blow to the welfare of the city, especially now that the Panama Pacific Exposition at Sah Francisco will be held in 1915. This event will attract a great mass of people from all over the world to this Coast, and the cities outside of San Francisco will profit as much by the event as that city Itself. Therefore, when these thousands pass through Portland in June, 1915, and the Rose Festival is In progress. It will do more to stimulate in their minds than most any other method the fact that Portland is a real, live city of progress and that its business activity is sate, sound and enduring. What should be done to accumulate sufficient funds for the undertaking is to create a small tax which really would not be felt at all by the prop erty owners. In this way the many and not the few would feel that they had a personal interest in the Festival, which would circulate to Portland's entire population and be the means of making it into one grand, enthusiastic success. The events each year should be con tinually changed so that the people can expect something new all the time; so that visitors may see that we are up to date and always doing things for Portland's advancement. A suggestion for next year: Everett and Flanders streets to be strung every 20 .feet, with roses, and Maypole dances enacted. A SUBSCRIBER. ROSS ISLAND. ' How big is Ross Island, pa? We've heard so much of late. Is it as big as Canada? Or some much larger state? Is it so blglthat one could build An incinerator there. With Mount Hood as its smokestack To purify the air? Its size, my child, depends upon The heat that's in the air. Also depends, to great extent. Who's Mayor, in the chair. . At times the soil peeps well above The river's lowly bed. At other times 'tis Just the tops Of trees that show Instead. However, my child, return to sleep And no mors rack your brain. Ross Island's in Its grave so deep 'Twill never rise again. SUMMER POET. ' Teaching In Alaska. WALLA WALLA, Wash.. June 12. (To the Editor.) To whom should a teacher write for information regarding-necessary qualifications for enter ing Alaska schools? SUBSCRIBER. There Is as yet no territorial Board of Education, examining board or superintendents to govern the 42 white public schools, as a whole, in Alaska. Qualification requirements doubtless vary, and the only feasible plan is to write for information to the school principal in the town in which one de sires to reside. TABLE TALK IN A SEA. STORM A Man Tells Ed Howe About Water Battle, While Dishes Are Smashed. E. W. Howe's African Travel Letters In his Magazine. - At dinner, not half the passengers were In their places, but Adelaide and I occupied our usual seats aft table, al though we had a difficult time getting down the two stairways to the dining room. The dishes were fenced up. so that they could not roll off the tables, and the portholes were under water every roll of the ship. The sick man who has been seen on deck nearly every day of the voyage surprised us all by appearing at dinner for the first time, although he was almost literally carried down the stairways, and across the dining-room floor. The diners at the two center tables were forced to go to other tables, owing to a crash in the skylight above, and a downpour of water. But In spite of all this confusion, Mr. Connell, a very calm and well in formed man who sits at my table. In terested me by telling of something he had read during the day. At the Bat tle of Waterloo, in 1812. less than 170. 000 men were engaged. The battle lasted 12 hours, yet the casualties amounted to 61,000. The Battle of Lule Borgas. fought between the Bulgarians and Turks in 1912, lasted five days, and although 800,000 men took part with modern implements of war, the casualties amounted to only 35,000. We moderns have more effective weapons than the ancients, but seem afraid to use them. The modern man has more sense than bravary. The old savage man had a fool notion that it was bravery to fight for a ruler, but modern man has dis covered that bravery is to fight for himself, and meet his ordinary diffi culties with patience and fairness. The prizefighter is brave in that he is able to stand a great deal of punish ment, but in private life he Is not very nice, and often keeps a saloon and whips his wife. At dinner Mr. Connell also told me that in Australia, where the women have full suffraee, the wives of the working men often vote against their husbands. In a certain election in 1911 the Labor party demanded the adoption of a measure that would re sult in many strikes and much dis turbance. It was believed that the measure would carry by a large ma jority, but the wives of the labor men generally voted for peace, and the measure demanded by their husbands was defeated by two to one. LITERAL ACCEPTANCE OF GENESIS Illeh School Pupil Confuses It With Definition of Atheism. PORTLAND, June 14. (To the Edi tor.) On page 16 in The Oregonian yesterday was an article entitled "School Is Stirred by Origin of Man." As a pupil of Miss Jane Stearns, and believing that she was grossly misrep resented by the article. I feel it to be my duty to write In her behalf. From the reading of the article one would think that Miss Stearns was an athe ist. She is far from being that. To the contrary, once when a pupil ex pressed an opinion to the effect that physiography conflicted with the Bible she very clearly proved that the study of physiography not only strengthened the Bible but also made its teachings a great deal clearer. She did not say that she believed in the theories mentioned, but stated that they were merely theories and should be taken as such. Miss Stearns never goes into any talks on religion or things directly per taining to It except when questioned; but when pupils ask her questions per taining to religion, she tries to answer them to the best of her ability, but never expresses an opinion or belief on matters pertaining to religion; In stead, although the pupils ask her a great deal about religion, she tries to avoid all discussions of religious be lief. After being her pupil for almost six months, and her pupil at the present time. I can truthfully Fay that I have never heard her so much as express an opinion on religion or anything per taining to it. I challenge anybody to prove otherwise. Surely a pupil would know if anybody did. Miss Stearns is a highly Intellectual and intelligent woman, and is liked by all who come in contact with her. She is considered to be one of the best teachers, and the most capable, on the Coast. She certainly has great teach ing ability. ONE OF HER PUPILS. Our young friend is needlessly alarmed over public interpretation of the article. There was no intimation In it that his teacher does not believe in the existence of a supreme being. The school discussion reported in The Oregonian concerned only the scien tific accuracy of the origin of man as recounted in Genesis. Countless Christians, In the religious sense of the name, look upon this portion of the Bible as allegorical or as poetical tradition. HUCKLEBERRY FINN'S PRISON LIFE Mark Twain's Character Did Not Turn Out Well in Real Life. "Highways and Byways of the Missis sippi," by Clifton Johnson. The house Mark Twain lived in still stands in Hannibal and is much the same as it always was a stumpy two story, clapboarded dwelling close to the sidewalk. It is just off the main street, snuggled in among other similar build ings. The senior Clemens had a print ing shop upstairs in the L of the housr, and as there were several children the living-room must have been pretty well crowded "All the family was the nicest people you ever saw," I was told; "but they were very poor, and the father died bankrupt when Mark was 12 years old." On the next street lived "Huckleber ry Finn," whose real name was Tom Blankenshlp. In the books this laa turns out to be quite an admirable character, but in actual life he and his relatives were a very rough lot, and when he left town It was to go to the penitentiary. The author's descriptions of Huckleberry's father fit the person who was "the town drunkard old man Finn." His end could hardly have been more tragic even In fiction. He was locked up one night In the calaboose, and in lighting a match to have a smoke set fire to the building and was burned to death. The Huckleberry Finn house was al ways rude, but it has not yet suc cumbed to either age or chance, and its ruinous, unkempt antiquity Is quite worthy of its associations. Two or three negro families now live In It, and I made the acquaintance of one of the women Inmates who was sitting out in front and lunching on bread and a dish of greens. , "This is the Huckleberry Finn house isn't it?" I inquired. "It sholy is," was the reply, "an" las" year Huckleberry Finn and Mark Twain both was hyar to see It Dey come togedder in a two-horse coach an' dey each one give me a quarter." "Celestial" as Applied to China. Toronto Globe. Everyone knows the epithet "Celes tial" applied to China, but few know its origin. According to a very old legend. Thibet is a fragment of a P .nce 3eoP1a by a yellow race, which in some way became detached tnt. on.tho eart. The dazed ln f -..i- f a tr&sment were unin jured, and, cold and hungry, they made their way toward China, which they peopled This origin of the Chinese , d, ? thelr U'ns themselves Celestials." and it is for this reason that the Emperor calls himself Son of Heaven. , Such, at least, is the legend. Twenty-five Years Ago From The Oregonian of June 16, 1SSS Council Bluffs, la.. June 10. The train bearing the Pacific Coast dele gation to the Republican National Con vention, representing 42 votes In all. whistled Into the Omaha depot thl afternoon. The local committee of re ception caught the sentiments of the Coasters by flaunting an American flag with a portrait of Blaine over the field of stars. "We are all for Blaine," was the general cry. and one of the dele gates added: "Yes, it's Blaine or bust." Berlin, June 15. The Emperor (Fred erick) died at 11 o'clock this morning at Potsdam. Arlington. Or., June 15. A wind storm and cloudburst struck near Lex ington. Morrow County, killing three persons and wounding a dozen or more. Colfax, W. T.. June 13. A water spout, accompanied by a heavy wind, passed 15 miles west of here yesterday afternoon. Union Flat Creek rose 12 feet in less than half an hour. Shoshone. Idaho, June 15. Elijah Smith, president of the O. R. & X. Com pany, passed west todav on a special train to attend the annual meeting at Portland. Last night the third graduating ex ercises of the East Portland publin schools took place in the Methodist Church. Behind a table covered with flowers and diplomas were seated the' directors. Joseph Paquet, J. T. Stewart and Thomas Hislop. The following la the graduating class: Maggie Charles tion, Nellie Atwood, Anson Buckman. Amy Gray. Louisa Sharkey. Chauncey Case. Minnie Robertson. Mary Bell, Ol lln Pershln, Jeannie Older, Ava Owen. At the last meeting of the board of trustees of the Boys' and . Girls' Aid Society, J. A. Strowbridge and W. B. Gilbert were appointed a committee to draft a bill prohibiting the sale of cigarettes to minors. L. Therkelsen. who was nominated ior t-oiice commissioner by the RepuO lican city convention yesterday, de clined the nomination. The city com mittee nominated George R. Frank. The Oregon Pioneers and Indian War Veterans met in Portland yesterday. It was the 16th annual reunion. The cornerstone of the Industrial Fair was laid by the Grand Lodge, A. F. and A. M., of Oregon, with all the honors of Freemasonry yesterdav. Mayor DeLashmutt Introduced Hon. George H. Williams, who delivered the address. Half a Century Ago From The Oregonian of June 16. 1S63. Major John Owen, of Bitter Root Val ley, and one of the oldest white resi dents of the western slope of the Rocky Mountains, is a candidate for Congress from Idaho. Walla Walla. June 10. Today there came off a Democratic meeting at the Courthouse to ratify the nomination ot George E. Cole. The prominent speech was made by F. P. Dugan. the leading watch repairer of this town. Murfreesboro, June 9. Colonel Law rence Williams, formerly of the Sec ond United States Cavalry, later Gen eral Br'ggs' chief of artillery, and Lieutenant Dunlap, of the rebel army." were arrested and hung as spies last night at Franklin. Washington. June 10. Yesterday two brigades of Pleasanton's cavalry under Buford made an important reconnois sance towards Culpepper and had ons of the most obstinate cavalry fights of the war. The cavalry crossed the Rap pahannock at Beverly Ford, drove the enemy back to the rifle pits and after a desperate conflict cleared the woods, the enemy falling back upon their ar tillery and maintaining their position until 12 o'clock, when our artillery came up and the rebels were again driven back for six miles in the direc tion of Culpepper Courthouse, when our force returned and recrossed In good order. Preparations for the celebration of the coming Fourth of July are pro gressing finely. Hon. Amory Holbrook has been selected as orator of the day. Rev. T. H. Pearne reader of the Dec laration of Independence and Rev. P. S. Coffey chaplain. When Love's Fire Smolcea. Judge. Her love Is waning when: She comes to the breakfast table in a wrapper. She lets him see her comb her store hair. She says there aren't any such crea tures as the boys who keep him out at night. She says she's glad they don't hold hands any more. She says she's going shopping and leaves him at home. She tidies up his den. She forgets to hand him the current neighborhood scandal. She detects the reason for the clove. His love is chilling when: He notices that the peculiar look in her eye is a squint. He insists upon having sugar In his tea. He notices that the" mantelpiece la dusty. He wonders what he can tell her when he is late. He asks her If that Is really singing. . He reads the newspaper at break fast time. He completely forgets to buy the magazine she wants. He won't tie her shoe lace on the street. He say she' getting extravagant. Thinking of Your Vacation or cf going on some pleasant short journey or week-end trip? Lots of people are nowadays vsg-uely planning and wonder ing where to go to escape the routine of workaday hours, if even for ever so brief a time. No better bureau of informa tion than The Oregonian, with its travel and special journey announcements. Often an ad vertisement solves a problem that has been a perplexing an noyance for days, perhaps. The Oregonian resort and trip advertisements are always help ful always suggest a pleasant jaunt; they help you plan more intelligently; they give you information that's worth while, and give the prospective trip or vacation a keener antici patory zest by vividly describing the delights of the place you make up your mind to visit. A tour through The Oregonian advertising columns is itself an extremely pleasant and profit able journey. 1