lO THE 3IOKXIXG OllEGOMAX, THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1919. JlTorniujg Ctojrtmiatx rSTlBLlKHED 1ST HKfiBT.L PIUOIK. Published by The Orcffonlan "publishing Co.. Sistrt Street, Portland. Oregon. C. A. JlOf.DEX, K. B. JIPER. M-njger. S.1IU0T. The Oresonian is a member of ths Aso il.iled 'Press. Tho Associated Pree Is -ciuHively entitled to the use for puolica tton of all news diEpatuhes credited to it or not utherwise credited id thU paper, and a!c the l-cal news published herein. All iIjto of republication ot special Uiapatcbes be-ein are also reserved. bubscriptiotx rates lnvs.rta.bly ill advance: (By Mail.) VaV.y, Sunday Included, one year ?.? I-ialty. Sunday Included, six months. ..... iJaiy, Sunday included, tnree months. ... Jaily, buiidd itjtlude?.- one month. -v Oaily, Hhout Sunday, cne year. ........ 1 ai;y, without Kunday. six months. ...... I-'aily, without Sunday, one mouth. ..... . V. pvlv nn vjr Sunday, one year .......... Sunday and weekly By Carrier) rally, Sunday Included, one year " Lai!y. Sunday included, one month.. .... . 0-', I-laily. Sunday ineluoea, i nr&2 muui Ijaily, without Sunday, .me year Dally, without Sunday, three months Daily, without Sunday, one month How to Kemit Send postofflce money or der, express or personal check on your local hjnk. Stamps, coin or currency are at own ers risk. (Jive postoffice address la full. In cluding county and state. Postage Kates 12 to IB pr;es, 1 cent; 18 to olJ pagus. '1 cents: 34 to 4S pa;:es. 3 cents: & to 60 pages: 4 cents: J- to 7ti pages, 5 cents: 7S to pages. B cents. Foreign post age, double rates. Eahtcrn Business Office Verree S Conlt lln, Brunswick building. JCew York; Verree A Conklin. Steger building. Chicago: Verree l onklln. Free Press building, Detroit, Mich.; sn Francisco representative, H. J. Bidwell. 1 .it) .. T.SO .. 1.B5 .. -B5 a general air of stuffiness, due to its being ventilated only on ceremonious occasions. 'It has been practically abolished in modern home designing, in favor of the more cheerful "living rocji," or its equivalent. If the new institution is to draw trade it must not be a "parlor," at least of the old fashioned kind. The contest is an in teresting one. The successful com petitor undoubtedly will deserve his five dollars if he provide a word which meets the conditions, and which will catch the fancy of a gregarious and a bibulous people. THE PORT STANDS HIGH. The most impressive result of the election Tuesday as it concerned Port land alone was the emphatic approval given the bond issue of $1,000,000 to be used in developing the commerce of the port. The figures yes 14,722, no 6540 not only reveal a confidence in the port and its management, but are an answer to those fault-finders who continually tell us what should not have been done and to those others who insist that the proper location for the Port of Portland is 100 miles down the -river. There is, it is thus indicated, a wide spread conviction in Portland that docks and equipment and harbor fa cilities and channel depth justify active competition for the commerce of the I'acific. It is believed that there Is no reason why Portland should not occupy a first place among the ports of the country. There is a common understanding as well as an expert understanding that no reason exists why commercial supremacy should not be restored. The commission has now been equipped to do that thing. The money is placed in its hands with few restraints. It has been entrusted with $1,000,000 to expend as it deems best in getting the business. The vote on this measure demonstrated that the Portland public has spirit and enter prise. The several decisions as to measures and charter amendments on the city ballot were as they should have been with one exception. If a mistake was made it was in denying city employes salaries and wages commensurate with those paid in private employment. To grant just increases it was necessary that authority be given the council to levy an additional annual tax of two mills. That authority was denied. The title of the amendment was, perhaps, unfortunately expressed, for it gave prominence to the prospective enlarge ment of the police force and to en largement already made in the fire department by installation of the two platoon system. In fact, the increase in taxes, had it been authorized, would have gone in far greater part to labor ers and minor employes, long in the city service, .who are rearing fam ilies and struggling hard against the mounting cost of food and clothing. The defeat of this tax increase will . forco a hard problem upon the city council. Unless some drastic econo mies can be devised there will be in sufficient funds to continue the two platoon system which previously was indorsed by vote of the people, and difficulty will be found in keeping in the city service competent employes in a variety of capacities. There will be no grief over loss of the proposal to remodel the city hall. It is even intimated that had the bonds been voted the council would not have availed itself of the authority granted. The police substations and the police telephone system can wait without serious inconvenience. The expenditure of more than $1,000,000 for improvement of parks and acquisi tion of new parks and playgrounds ought to put Portland on a plane with the most enterprising city of its class as regards those embellishments and conveniences, and there Is a ' small crumb of comfort to the firemen, who now face a shaky two-platoon system, in the assurance that dilapidated fire stations will be rebuilt or made habitable. "Withal, it was a satisfactory and encouraging election in Portland. A CALL TO CIVIC PRIDK. Civic prtde must come to the front for. the Victory Rose Festival. Port land's far-famed flower fete, which this year holds a dual identity by being a tribute to the men who offered their all to their country. Hard work has been done by the directors of this year's festival and by their finance committee to gather the necessary money to hold the festival in manner designed to reflect contin ued glory of the city and the state. The hard work has been productive of money, for the city has responded well, but many have grown weary of giving. The war has been a drain on the financial resources of all, but the festival offers the opportunity to bring a golden shower to the coffers of all. A contribution to the "Victory Rose Festival is a legitimate business in vestment and with the eve of the festi val in view an appeal Is being made to Portland. Fifteen thousand dollars is needed to carry through the pro gramme. It is the duty of public spirited men and women to respond immediately. It is an eleventh-hour drive to keep Portland foremost in civic endeavors. From Skagway to London .the world knows Portland for its roses. It knows Portland as the city with open gates, the city with the 100 per cent war record; the city of freshwater harbor and .great shipping advantagoe. It remains for the people of Port land to say if this record shall be kept intact. IHE SOCRCE OF BOMB THROWERS. One need not agree with Secretary Morrison of the Federation of Labor as to the ultimate responsibility for unrestricted immigration in order to agree with him that it is the source of dynamiters and bomb throwers. They have some American-horn lead ers like Haywood, Debs and Mooney, but these anarchist demagogues would find poor material to work on but for the jindigested millions of aliens whose sole idea of freedom is destruction of all that exists and erection on its ruins of a communist Utopia on the bol shevlst plan. The present congress has been named the reconstruction congress, and it should reconstruct the immigration laws as an important part of its work. Men are carefully selected for admis sion to the army and navy, they must pass a fairly stiff examination for ad mission to the universities, but any able-bodied man who can read a few lines in some language is admitted to our industries and to citizenship, though his head may be stuffed with bolshevism and though he may use his able body to make and plant bombs. Nor after he is admitted is anything done to make him an Amerl can. The plain truth is that a band of foreigners is trying to terrorize the United States. Vv'e need immigrants, and shall need many more during the next few years, but we also need laws which will care fully select them, will shut out all votaries .of Karl Marx and Lenine and will compel those who are admitted to go to school, to learn what democ racy is and to practice It. The army transports would be well employed if on their return trips to Europe they took several thousand ot the immi grants who are already in America. Much has been said lately to the effect that labor is not a commodity, but consists of human beings. That rule should be applied to imported labor, for much of it Is composed of most undesirable human being?, who talk all the latest patter about capitalism and the proletariat and whose fingers itch to handle explosives. which it will try to atone after a while by a sudden feverish resumption when middle age has sounded its alarm. It is obviously so much easier to keep fit than to "come back" after ground has been lost that it would seem that. the propaganda of the future ought to be addressed to those between school and army age and middle life. rather than to those at either end of the string. The tendency in schools with their interclass and interfrater- nity activities is to broaden greatly the opportunity for physical development of every student. lr. Sargt-nt would make gymnasium exercise compulsory instead of optional. As a matter of fact nn increasing number of schools are already doing this. But the stu dent faces his critical period after he leaves school and becomes engrossed with the task of "getting ahead in the world." Bo with the young soldier just returning to civil life. The ancients were right in teaching the sacredness of the body and the duty of preserving health. Something akin to this philosophy is needed now And a good deal of resolution is needed. too, to keep from relapsing into shift less ways. Physical exercise in mod eration, and avoidance of prolonged strain, will mean a great deal to health later on. But excesses are by all means to be avoided. The medical writer. who believes that Colonel Roosevelt's life may have been shortened by a too strenuous regimen, also calls attention to the'deaths in recent years of other men once noted for physical prowess which also convey a moral. There were Mitchell, former aspirant for 'championship pugilistic honors, at. 69 Sheridan, champion shotputter, at 5S Fitzsimmons at about the same age, and Frank Gotch at 40. Gotch was an especially conspicuous example of one "whose marvelous physiTtie should have challenged the grim reaper for many years." The indicated answer to the problem of maintaining efficient, happy and reasonably long life Is universal physi cal training and formation of correct habits in early life, maintenance of such good habits afterward, and, finally, avoidance of too strenuous effort in middle age. The error last suggested will be committed less often if the first two precepts are consistently observed. ANCIENT TREASURES OF 1EARMXO, Plans already laid by eminent scholars to go to Constantinople as soon, as peace is made, in quest of the treasures of learning which it is sup posed the cellars of the mosque of St Sophia cohlain, will have the good wishes of f ll who have reverence for learning, but we shall expect too much If we count on a revival of intellec tuality such as nearly coincides with the capture of Constantinople by the Turks in 1453. The spread of interest in learningfor its own sake which followed the Dark Ages, and which is known to us as the renaissance, was one of the most momentous develop ments In history since the beginning of the Christian era. Nevertheless the importance of the victory of the- Turks in the general movement probably has been greatly exaggerated by writers of text books. Those who have assumed that the flight of many medieval scholars from Constantinople upon the arrival of Turks was chiefly responsible for the founding of universities and libraries throughout Europe ignore the in fluences which had led those scholars to assemble at Constantinople in the first instance. The Renaissance was fairly under way prior-to 1453. The rumblings of intellectual discontent had been heard in the world for al most a century. Only the excessively optimistic will look for a second renaissance as the result of the delving of our anti quarians Into the crypts to which they ally's aid they hoped to destroy Rus sian power 1n the Balkan peninsula and to become supreme there. Ger many had the ulterior purpose to make I Austria a vassal and to use it as a bridge for advance through the Bal kans into Asia and Egypt, for the appetite of that country had so grown that single provinces could not satisfy it: it hungered for whole empires. Austria would be a meal, to be followed by Turkey and Russia.. Nor had the polyglot empire inspired the loyalty requited to resist absorption: it had no inherent cohesive power. Hence the Hapsburg empire was doomed, whether it won or lost the war. The tyranny of the Hapsburgs, nar row, selfish and stupid, was the cause of their downfall. By giving their many peoples freedom and equality. one race with another, by federalizing their empire, they might gradually have blotted out racial antagonism without extinguishing differences of language and custom. Switzerland in cludes people of three nationalities and languages, but all are equally devoted to the republic. The United States gives equal rights to immigrants of all nations and is molding them Into one. Austria chose to accentuate racial di visions and to intensify antagonism by treating all other races as inferior to the Germans and' Magyars. It thus insured that when it encountered a force greater than that which held it together, It would fall apart through desertion of those whom it had held only by force. The Hapsburgs Je pritcd themselves of the services of the ablest men among the Bubject races. Austria gave no inspiration to loyal service among the ruling races, for they patterned after their master and were greedy, narrow and stupid. Native Austrian generals and states men have been noted for their incom petence and failures, and the empire was so poor in ablo men willing to serve it that most of the great aristo cratic families are descended from for eign adventurers who exchanged their talents for estates and fame. Hapsburg methods repelled men of brains and character. The reduction of Austria to approxi mately the area which originally held the eastern marches is the inevitable consequence of Hapsburg policy. The empire would not have survived as long as it did if other nations had not feared the convulsion which would accompany its dissolution. When that convulsion came, the disjointed struc ture fell in pieces. Stars and Starmakers. y Lrsse Caaa Birr. to X ULIUS T ANNEX is going fcl presenting an act in make-up. One main cause of the Egyptian in surrection appears to have been that British rule made the people so pros perous that they had time to talk politics. When Ismail Pasha ran the country, he kept them so busy working and paying taxes that they had no time for anything else. Just when Herbert Hoover tells us that the grain crop is ample. Forester Cecil warns us that we must plant a new tree crop lest the next generation go without lumber. 1 he life of na tions is like that of men, just one thing after another. Twenty-two per cent ot the voters of Portland passed several million dollars' worth of bonds. If 22 percent of the legislature, ID. 8 members, voted crbout $9,000,000 out of the state treas ury, what a howl would go up from the people! Some one Is blaming the professors in many university socialist clubs for the bomb outrages. That is wrong. The professor always is sincere and highminded. a little too much of the latter, perhaps. "Foreigners" are said to be insti gators and participants in the bomb will now have access. The Turks have outrages, and America continues to be try Ho is also to be aided and ' abetted by a map and a cue to point the reason why a fellow doing a monologue gets the laugh. The act was written by J. Harry Connor, and the title of It is to be "The Psychology of Monologlng." That idea of having a map and a cue for folk in the audienc.fi to know why they laugh appeals to me. I'm In favor of It for all monologues and most sketches. My idea of nothing to kill myself over would be because my hair didn't fit, and yet that's .Just what Sarah Bernhardt a understudy did in Paris last week. She was Mmc. Blanche Dufrene, a well-known actress, who held the lead in "La Danie aux Camelias" running at the Theatre Sarah Bernhardt, and she committed suicide by hanging herself from a cur tain rod In her dressing room Just prior to the commencement of the piece. The audience had to te ais missed and the house has been closed. Mmc. Dufrene often acted as under study of Sarah Bernhardt. The cause of her suicide was depression and acute melancholia. She was liottced to be very Irritable during the day of her suicide because a wig she was to wear in a new play displeased her, Mile. Dazle is opening a new school of dancing in Carnegie hall. New York. Beatrice Kaufman, whose husband it dramatic editor of the times, is the pub licity promoter of tho enterprise. Dazie is a toe dancer. Opening dates for the Orphcum cir cuit have been set for next season. Ours opens August 31. Clark Silvernail. who used to be Baker juvenile, now has a company of his own, called the Silvernail Play ers, working at the theater Albert I, in Tarls. Beverly Sitgreavcs is the leading woman. Eugene G. O'Neil, son of James O'NeM, has completed a three-act play. "Be yond tho Horizon." He is already well known for his playlets. The new piece will be produced this fall. e Frank Bacon has sold the boo' rights to "Lightnin'"" to Harper & Grothcrs company, tho publishers. The novelixa tion will be rflade by a woman writer. Bayard- Vciller, playwright. Is back in the east after a California sojourn of months. He is floating a friendly project for publication of 1000 special edition copies of the works of the late Charles E. Van Loan at $25 each. The popular short-story writer left very little to his family. Subscriptions may be sent to Veiller at the Lambs club in New York. t e - The seven-months' old baby son of Crane Wllber, leading man with the Wilkes Players in-Salt Lake City, died last week. Jessie Bonslclle has tried out in her Mid-West stock company the new piece by Frances Nordstrom which has been accepted by William A. Brady for Grace George next season. It is called "The Ruined Lady." but the stock company used the title "Ann's Adventure. Just prior to sailing for the other side Mr. and Mrs. Brady had Miss Bon stelle put the piece on for one night in Poughkeepsie Those Who Come and Go. In Other Days. WANTED A NEW WORD. Responses far out of proportion to the pecuniary reward promised have followed a recent announcement that the managers of the city life exhibit of the Methodist centenary celebration at Columbus. O., would pay $3 to the person pioviding "a word which will do as the name of the substitute for the saloon." Such a substitute is to be rne of the novelties of the exposition. Celebration headquarters have been deluged with suggestions. It is said that all parts of the United States arc represented by the competitors. But new words, which have a way of coining themselves on occasion, do not corns when bidden. The committee lets it be known that among the sev cial thousand offered there are few if any promising candidates. It expressly culls for a "coined word, represent ing an entirely new start, a word which will be "as new as tho new era to be ushered in with prohibition." This bars (no pun Intended) a vast number of obvious candidates. There is nothing new, for example, about "The Oasis." The saloons already had appropriated it. For that matter, the s;i loons had overworked the term "enfe." although they seldom dis pensed cofte and they have been dis guising themselves aa "buffets" for more than a generation. The prohihi tionists are not first in the quest for a word conveying the idea of liquor Icssness. The committee rejects "noolas," which is made by reversing the lerters of "taloon." The saloon has met with reverse all right enough, but the drys want a word that won't mean saloon even when viewed in a plato glass mirror. "Sofateria" seems to have friends among the judges, but it is l obbed of novelty by "cafeteria," which already has won a place in the lan guage and presently will get into the dictionaries. Meanwhile we so on calling the in stitution a "soft dVink parlor." al though it is not clear why parlor should have been picked on. The par lor brings up memories of haircloth ' sofas, marble-topped center tables and MODERATE EXERCISE. One of the reasons why men in middle life often succumb to strain, it is pointed out by a writer in North west Medicine, is that in the effort to overcome the results of too close ap plication to work" they add physical exercise to their already oppressive daily labors. The writer by no means deprecates exercise as a means of re storing bodily vigor, but makes the point that these men "get up an hour earlier in the morning or exercise an hour at night or give up to gymnastics the noon hour, which might with ad vantage be devoted to rest." The re sult might be entirely different if reg ular work were cut down and exercise taken in the time thus saved. The fault is with the usual practice of adding exercise to daily labor rather than substituting exercise for part of tho labor. The warning thus given will be heeded with profit to themselves by men who, having neglected exercise too long, try to atone for their orais- sions by too sudden return to the strenuous life. There is another story to be told when they establish correct habits in early life and continue them always with regard for -moderation. through life. In this respect there is evidence that we are already Improv ing. The present generation of middle aged men consists of the students of thirty or forty years ago who paid less attention than students now do to systematic physical development. Dr. Dudley A. Sargent, who for nearly half a century was director of Hem enway gymnasium at Harvard uni versity, has been making comparisons of the records of a generation ago with those of the present, and these show that the average young man of today has a far better start in life than had his father. Specifically, it is shown that in the 'SOs the average Harvard student was 67.7 inches tall and weighed 133.2 pounds. His present height is 68.7 inches and his weight 141.6 pounds, He id at least 25 per cent stronger than he used to be. The improvement noted at this university is supple mented, as records of the surgeon general of the army show, by a vast gain by the young men who served in the army during the war. The millions of pounds of added weight taken on by these young men do not tell the whole story. Their added strength has not been measured, but it is known to be large. So the present generation of young men has a distinct advantage over its fathers at the start. WhetKer the ad vantage will be maintained will de pend in considerable degree upon whether it preserves the habit of exer cise formed m school and army, o whether it lapses into carelessness, for had too little respect for scholarship to lead lis to suppose that their vaults will contain many parchments that in even a fair state or preserva tion. Yet one of them comparable to he lost books of Livy would be worth good deal, and it may be that ncient productions will be unearthed that will divert the current of our houghts from more recent calamities. The past century has been a golden ra of scientific progress, but in the humanities we still have much to learn from the philosophers of very olden times. the asylum of the scum that is not allowed to exist where it breeds. There was a reign of terror at tempted in Washington one night, in April, 1S65. The leaders were hanged. That will be the fate of present terror ists, if not shot in the taking. That election-day weather would have assured success of a republican ticket, top to bottom, but as only finances were Involved the taxpayer let the other fellow do it. THE DISSOLUTION OF AGSTRIA. The shrinkage in the size of Austria which will result from the terms dic tated by the allies is a striking example of democracy's destructive effect on autocratic empires. From a petty duchy established to guard the eastern frontier of the once holy Roman em pire, Austria grew and swelled in the course of centuries to a great power. By any means, war, conspiracy, matri mony or forgery, the-Hapsburgs added the adjoining provinces and kingdoms to their dominions, but all these terri tories were joined, not united as France was united under the bourbons. The Hapsburgs had a genius for conquest and acquisition, but none for assimila tion and reconciliation. Hence the conquered provinces remained a series of outer coverings on the kernel of the monarchy. Worse still, they showed an aversion tor the kernel, and under the impact bf disastrous war they fell off and exposed the native insignifi cance of the dual monarchies reduced to two small republics. Of an empire of 50,000,000 people there remain only an Austria of fix to seven millions and a Hungary ot perhaps ten millions. When free to choose, two-thirds of the population renounce all connection with their German and Magyar rulers. Only force aided by cunning could have formed such a discordant aggre gation of peoples. Only force could have held two-thirds of the population in subjection to ono-third. -Its nature demanded that it should continue to expand in order that it might survive. Having severed nations, it encountered constant efforts of the free halves to emancipate the subject halves, and must meet these efforts by -striving to conquer the free halves. Yet further acquisitions were a source of danger. for they disturbed the balance between dominant and subject peoples. On the other hand, emancipation of large parts of the subject peoples from the Haps burg yoke was a constant menace, for they acquired power to rescue tlielr racial brethren. Thus it became neces sary for Austria to subdue Italy, Serbia and Roumania lest they destroy the empire. Italy being too strong and too well supported morally by other na tions to make conquest feasible, it was dragged into an alliance, but Austria only waited for a favorable moment to attack tho otbor two nations. The power of Prussia destroyed hope of further expansion northward or westward and that of Russia blocked I the way to the northeast, hence neces sity compelled the Hapsburgs to reach out toward the southeast. There, too, they would come in conflict with Rus sia, but their ambition agreed with the designs of Germany, and with their Lloyd, George will lose his govern ment if h 'succeeds in ameliorating the peace terms. Great Britain's man loss is too heavy in nearly every home to stand concession. The story of brutality on the bark-entine- Puako brings back memories of the old sea stories over which the old men of these days gloated in their boyhood. Hope the bombers stay away until Mayor Baker returns. The "force" has enough to do with tho moral broom and scrub brush just now in averting the possible wrath. Professor Tufts ot the University of Chicago says the wife must make the home more attractive to offset prohi bition. Wonder if the "Prof." is mar ried ? If these latest bomb plots can be stucj on Bill Haywood there will bo great joy . in the triumph of justice, mighty slow Tjf movement, but mighty Bure. When bolshevist strikers order a premier to resign, as in the case of Premier Norrls of Manitoba, It is the right time for him to stay on the job. Judging by the way congress is start ing on railroad bills, Director-General Hines will soon have little left to do except run trains and lose money. thf iocs St. Helens, which celebrates Fourth as often as it comes and d it to great advantage, too. will have a warship from Bremerton this year. Every fellow in the Ad club is an original originality, and with hundreds of them here Portland will witness the u-ni-que incomparable. In seven months the teachers will get "the raise," if they live. There's nothing like hope, unless it's more hope. What has become of the Kadiators, who came down from Eugene years agone and showed us the proper caper? A small sum is needed to assure the Rose Festival about a dime apiece from half of us. Let all loosen. If the council ot four today makes reply to Germany it should be sent by a man named l-och. Thn Atlanta telephone strike shows that Czar Burleson still runs true to form. Barney Bernard is to star alone next season. He has been co-starring with Alexander Carr. Bernard's show for next season is being written by Mon tague Glass, who has been co-author of all of the "Potash and Pcrlmutter shows, having organized the characters in short stories. Bernard was due to appear in the new play this season, having been arranged for him to leave the east of "Friendly Enemies" after the Chicago run. Mr. Glass was assigned abroad, on the peace conference, leading to the playing be ing held over until next season. A San Francisco bit of gossip says that when the Oakland Hippodrome is completed some time in September, W. W. Ely, Hip manager at Portland, will be in charge of the Oakland houses Other managers affected by the change and moved will be Nick Pierong, from Tacoma to Portland; Lew NewcomJb, from the Casino In San Francisco, to Tacoma; A. L. Bernstein, present assist ant manager at Clunes Auditorium, slated for Casino manager in San Fran cisco. Marjorie Rambeau opens an engage ment of five weeks as stock star at the Curran in San Francisco, beginning June Z9. a It Is reported by Chicago gossip that Francine Larrimore, co-star in "Scan dal," is to marry young Townsend Netcher, prominent young loophound and owner of the Boston store, one of Chicago's great department stores. A blazing engagement ring on Miss Larrimore's finger started the gossip, and to intimate friends Miss Larrimore admitted the talk was based on soma sort of fact. Netcher left recently for Calfornia and Miss Larrimore has been pestering Walter Hast to send "Scandal'' to the Pacific coast for a run befbre taking the show to New York. . Corine Barker. Portland girl, whose beauty in "Remnant," "On With the Dance" and "Shirley Kaye" brought her prominently before the public, has been slated to play the female lead of the first Hobart Henley picture. Mr. Hsnley announces that he will be prepared to "shoot" the first scenes next week and meantime he is busy completing the rest of th cast for his first Independent production. John Cumberland, the leading man. and Miss- Barker head the cast in the first of the four special productions Mr. Henley has agreed to make for the In dependent Sales corporation. Picture making 'is not new to either of thtse players. Mr. Cumberland played the well-remembered husband in "Nearly Married" with Madge Kerfhedy. Miss Barker has appeared in several film productions, her most recent picture being "One Week of Life." Thi3 was shownv recently in Portland and th critics commented favorably on Miss Barker's work. The title of Mr. Henley's first picture has not been made public other than statement saying it is the scenariolsee version of one of the most popular works of a well-known writer. Thii writer is eaid to be Edna Ferbcr. Though the Florida country abounds In game turkey, deer and bear, with an occasional 'gator Dr. M. Sample of Haines City, Fla., who- arrived at tho Seward vesterday. confesses that he never shot anything larger than a rab bit, and that his score is one hope lessly scrambled bunny. Dr. Sample. accompanied by Mrs. Sample, ts now on a tour of the United States, which will be completed at New York about September 1. At Haines City he grows oranges, and during his recent visit to Los Angeles he paid the far famed California groves the scrutiny of an expert- "Prettier oranges," commented Dr. Sample, "with a clecpct tinge of red. But. say. they can't compare with the Florida product in fineness and flavor. Government analysis shows our oranges to possess SJ 1-S per cent more of juice, and we grow only the thin-skinned variety." More Chinook salmon,, and larger passed over the Oregon City falls of the Willamette during the past month or so, on their way to me span mine grounds ot the upper river, than in any previous season of recent years, ac cording to the first-hand observations of F. M. Brown, secretary of the Ore gon fish and game commission, who has been watching tho course of the run at the fish ladders. "An immense tonnage of ChlnooK was taken by hook and line," said Mr. Brown yesterday. "On a single Sunday I counted 600 boats from Oregon City down to the dead-line below Jennings' Lodge. The fish were running well, and a con servative estimate of tho salmon caught that day alone would be from 18(0 to 2000 fish. The run is dwindling rapidly now, though fish are still be ing caught at tho falls. But the jai-k-salmon are on their way. and batt-fish-ermen are beginning to make pood catchea of these nondescript relatives of the regal Chinook." H. C. Swetland, banker of Chicago and Ashland. III., with Mrs. Swetland. Is registered at the Perkins. Back in the corn country Mr. Swctlar.a ts some what renowned as a breeder of rinc livestock, and on his present visit con fesses to an admiring Interest in the ranching progress of tho west. When last he visited the coast the country was. yet in the "wild and woolly pe riod of growth. That was In 1883. "I am pleasantly Kurprised." said Mr. Swet land. "by my observations on mis De lated visit. I had heard, of course, but a fellow must see for himself to appreciate the strides thl3 country has taken. Alex Sparrow, whose job is to watch the precincts of Crater Lake, as a mem ber of the national parks staff, is a recent arrival at tho Imperial. The cerulean blue of the celebrated pond on the mountain top is an everyday tone to Mr. Sparrow, and the ozone of the hills, fresh with snow and balsam, is a fillip to life that he no longer regards as out of the ordinary. "The lucky stiff." observed another guest, as he glanced at Mr. Sparrow's chirography with its story told in one line. - . The vigor tf the Pose Festival rush is already manifest in the patronage barometers of the hotels. Several of the downtown hostelerles have reser vations booked for the entire week, while all admit that demands for rooms are sweeping In with constantly in- crtating volume. From these indica tions the clerks predict that the fes tival crowds next week will make previous assemblies in honor of the Portland flowers look like rallies of the populist party. The bigger the bear and the gruffer his growl, the keener is the pleasure of Marion Jack of Pendleton, who would rather hunt bruin than run for president, and whose tally runs into the dozens. Mr. Jack left his Umatilla wheat ranch to Its own devices yes terday, when he came to Portland as a member of the state game and fish commission, to attend the special r.eet ing of Inquiry called by Governor Ol cott for Friday morning. He Is regis tered at the Imperial. Twr(r.H Years As. Frem The Orsonlsn of Jans 5. 191. Denver. The strike at Cripple Creek was stttlod yestrrdny at a conference between C.ovcrnor Waite. J. J. Hagcr man and David II. Moffat. Jubilee exercises of the east sida Y. M. C A. were held last nisht in the Centenary church, with a big chowd In at tendance. The Willamette continued to rie raoidly yestrrday and at 7 P. M reached the 31-3 foot mark on the gov ernment gauge, a rise of nine-tenths oi a root in .4 hours. . i Tteturns from the election are coming in from over the state with unprece dented t-lowness, but leave no doubt ot the triumph of the republican ticket. Fifty Years Aire.. Krom The Or(onitn of Juno C. 1S6J. Washington. The standing army ia decreasing at the rate of 1000 mon per month, so it will be necessary to -cruit 231 men per week in order to keep it up to full strength. Members of Multnomah, No. 2, Willa mette, No. 1. and Protection, No. 4. en gine companies, at meetings held Jasl night, voted to participate in tho Fourth of July parade. We learn that crvps in the John Day valley have suffered lately from drouth. More Truth Than Poetry. tlj Jmnri J. Montague. "I recall the time when there wasn't anything on wheels that could set the pace lor him," reminisced Phil Met schan Jr., as he traced the signature ot Dr. G. S. Wright of McMinnville, on the Imperial's crowded register. "In those days. Doc was a Salem boy. and he was famous as a bicycle rider and racer." Dr. Wright is McMinnville's talented tooth-tinker nowadays, and once represented his homo district in the senate chamber of the Oregon legislature. Ed Burke, who used to pilot the "black maris" from police headquarters to hundreds of dramatic centers fires, shootings, riot calls and family clashes left the service some months ago to become a city salesman for Armour & Co. But the virus of gasoline was too strongly circulated in his system, and the old tasks tugged at him. So Burke has opened a garage of his own on Mil lard avenue and is again grease grimed and utterly content. LINKS TO LENINK. (CoDyrlcht. inii. by Bll svnd rnt'. Tne V (Lenine Plans World Mastery. Headline. So, Herr Lenine (I'll have to call you llerr. 1 do not know the Russian word for MiFter. And If I did. I hardly think I'd care To rifk my throat on such a larynx twister) So, Herr Lenine. as I observed before. Like Attila, you dream of domination.' You hop a. vvtiilo to bathe the world in gore And finish as the boss of all creation. But Nick, it can't be dons. You've got no chance to be a second Hun. When Attila went out to treat 'em rough The world believed that kings were God's anointed; The populace expected cave man stuff And rulers seldom left 'cm disap pointed. They dotted their hats to monarchs all their lives, it mattered not who happened to bo reigning. When kings stepped 'round to confiscate their wives They married new ones, calmly un complaining. "She burden of their song r.an ever thus, "The king can do no wrong!" But nowadays, when potentates de clare That 'round their thrones their sub jects ought to rally. Tho people take 'cm by the heels and hair And toss 'em rudely In the nearest alley. No longer at a ruler's lightest nod The peasants shout and courtier wax ecstatic. Though, Herr Lenine. we know you think it odd. This world of ours has all gone dem ocratic. And you arrived too late To gain the title of Lenino the Great. Tucrt I.nrV. When the suffrage amendment is final ly enacted certain ladies are going to have an extremely hard time finding another excuse for violating the stat utes. Add Horrors of War. Strange how a world struggle cal louses people. There are thos-e among us who take only the merest passing interest in the result of the Willard Dcmpscy fight. so It's a Beaut. Too. Why not send James Hamilton Lewis over to treat with Lenine? He carries a perfectly good passport on his face. WHY FARM HELPERS ARE SCARCE Co-partner in one of the most famous gold mines of this terrestrial sphere is John H. Wourms of the Hercules mine at Wallace, Idaho, who is at the Portland while visiting with Portland friends for a few days. The Hercules Is of the same financial family as the Portland Hotel, for Jerome, Eugene and Harry L. Day, principal stockholders in the big Wallace mine, are also the own ers ot the hostelry at Sixth and Mor rison streets. Touring tho Pacific northwest ana keenly enthusiastic over clime and scenery, is A. M. Weir of ciiton. W. Va., now tarrying at the Hotel Ben son, accompanied by Mrs. vvcir. Mr. Weir is president of the Phillips Tin plate works, a large Ohio industry which turns out stacks of pieplatcs for the ultimate transformation of the Ore gon berry crop. F. B. Waite. wh) used to sell town lots and suburban property down at Sutherlin, paid a business visit to Port lsnd yesterday and Is staying at te Imperial. C. J. Shedds merely dittos his nam- when he registers at the Perkins. hails from Shedds. Or., where tho fam ily lent the town its water-proof moniker. One Telia of Conditions That Caused Him to Come to City. ror.TLAND, June 4. (To the Edi tor.) In answer to "Practical Farmer" I would like to say a few things. Being a worker I went three years ago on a farm and, as "Practical Farmer" says, it was a modern farm: had a very nice house with hot and cold water, dining room, parlor and everything which goes to make a real home. The farmer's wife was very anxious to make everything comfortable and dinner was good and served promptly. I never had any complaint about the food, but here is where my farmer failed. I was given a bunkhouse to sleep in. It was damp and lightless. Tho sun could never shine into it and they would store almost anything in it. At fruit picking time it was converted into a packing house. If any farm r' helper is sweet tempered enough to stand for these things I would lik to hear from him. This comfortable home did not do much to make me com fortable. I was invited only once to the parlor to hear some music. The work was plentiful also, but if I had been given Sunday I would not have complained. I an not afraid of work, but the idea of working from 6 A. St. to 8 P. M.. which was the time we were through milking, for ssven days a week did not mvke me feel very happy. Never a chance to .read or go around and make friends. So, after five months. I got tired and quit and came to town, not that my mind is centered on pleasure. In fact I never went to a movie and have had but one Joyride since I came here some 20 months ago. The job I hold now requires a good deal of backbone and sweat, but I can make myself com fortable. Let the farmers consider their help- Hojers as men and not as tramps ana trouble In securing good. M-ady men. P PETREQLIN. Mrs. Harry Turner and daughter. Miss Frnaces Turner, of Butte, Mont, are visiting in Portland at present aud are registered at the Portland. J. E. Somcrville. retired druggist, of Pendleton, accompanied by his daugh ter. Miss Evelyn, is at the Imperial during a brief visit to Portland. Mr. and Mrs. Guy Buffington of Pen dleton are at the Oregon for a few days, down from their broad acres in the Umatilla country. B. F. Brock, retired timberman of Stella, Wash., is among recant arrivals at the Imperial. H. McKlel, whose store is the shop ping rendezvous of Clatskanie, is reg istered at the Oregon. i.om-:lif.ss. Thoualesnes Harts Art. Washington (D. C.) Star. "Which are the pictures in your gal lery that you value most highly?" "I dunno," replied Mr. Cumrox. "Mother an' the girls told the man to go round and takf off the price marks I had put on 'em before 1 had time to learn 'em by ncarl. To mingle with a merry crowd where voices ring and sing. To listen to the tumult loud and heed each passing thing; To laugh and smile and pas3 the Jest to keep the spirits gay. To bo among the roisterers best in frolic's swing and sway; To give a band in glad applause when others strive to please; To be a "kindred spirit" to the vary least of these: To wear so well the social mask that you suspicion cheat. And none e'er guess your loneliness is loneliness complete! GRACE E. HALL. Oar Country la Criticised. Cartoons Magasine. A Frenchman who had traveled a good deal In the United States being asked how he liked the country, answered: "Oh. I like see conlre ver mooch: mais it ess ver fonny. In my contree sere Is one religion and great many soup, mais in asis contree. eere is onlee one soup and ver many religion'. Cest drole."