THE MORNING OREGONIAN. SATURDAY. SEPTE3IBER 6, 1919. 10 ESTABLISHED BI HEBI L- PITTOCE Pnbllshed by The Orcsoninn Publishing Co.. IJi Slxtn btrseU 1-ortls.nu. wr... C. A. MOBPEX. B. B. PIPER. ' Editor. The Ornconlan Is a mtmber of ths Asso-rlst-d Proa. The Associated Pre Is -nnsivrly sntltlcd to tha u 'r ?u .. lion of all nm dispatches crdltd to ''2 not otherwise atdilnl In thin papr ana also tha local ns published herein. All J1"" f republK-atlon of social dispatches- Herein ara alo reserved. . rubsrrlptlna Kates InaribU In Advance: i By Mail.) rally. 5anday IncluUe.l. one year I'allv. Sindiy Included, six months . . l'aily, Sunday Included, three months . l'ai.y. Sunday Included, one month ... Iallv. w ithnut Sunday, one year I -ally, a Ithout Sunday, six months . . . Lally. without Sunday, one montn . eekly. one year , Punday. one year buaday and weekly By Carrier.) f ailv, Sunday Included, one year Iallv. Sunday Included, one month . . -laily. Sunday Included, three months . Iallv. without Punday. one year lallv. wltaoul Sunday, three mcntns . Ijailv. wltiiout Hunday. one month . $ 00 4.1'S .75 6.uo I .OO , S '': o.ov I . .10.00 .- . . . 2.2S .. I.sn . . 1 .. .85 How to Remit Send postoffuo money or der, express or personal check on our local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are t own er s risk, tiiva poatorflce address In lull, in cluding county and stale. ro-tae Rate 12 to 1 pages. 1 cent: 1 lo iJ pes. i cents: 34 to 4". P. n, .) to Ml pages, 4 cents: 'J ""' , cent.: 71 to -j pages, cents. oreln post age, double rates. Eastern Business Of flee Verree ft r"V lln. Brunswick building. -New Tork; orree t'onklin. Steger building. Chicago: V erre l onklln. Free Press building. Detroit. Mien tag Francisco rer.reseutatue. R. J. Biaweii. . CETT1XU BACK TO REASON. There are signs of growing reason ableness in the ranks of that element of labor both in America and Europe, which has been inclined to go to ex tremes without being irreconcilably red. Unions order their mutinous members back to work and await the effect of the campaign against high prices. The I'lumD ranroaa pian is not so aggressively in eviaence as a .i. .1,. ...,r furore soisio leave. 1I1UIIIU O V.. . -1 . ii..-. " " -- much in the day's news. The mod erate socialists, with thinned ranks, bid their erring communist brethren farewell, and the latter are rendered less harmful by being forced to flock by themselves under the bolshevist banner. Most effective In cooling men's minds has been the conclusive proof that all the general strike movements In this country, in Canada and in Britain sprang from one source Kus sia and were part of a general plan conceived by limine to cause a world revolution. The intent was to over turn real democratic government and establtsh Soviets, which would raise the blockade of soviet Russia, join the bolshevist forces in destroying the armies which ring them in and are steadily breaking them down, per manently establish the soviet in Rus sia and make communism supreme all over the world. Lenine and his satel lites saw that the only possible hope of survival for their hideous tyranny was to extend it to other countries. The governments of the several democratic j countries saw mat iaDor aisiuruamcs were incited to that end. and they struck hard, and promised to use all their power in striking harder, if necessary. The outcome is seen in a subsidence of radicalism in this country and In a decision of the British labor party to "postpone" the threatened direct ac tion strike. Robert Smillie. the leader of the British coal miners, still threat ens to force the government's hands to secure nationalization of the mines, but J. R. Clynes, a level-headed labor member of parliament, condemns di rect action as "the most indirect and roundabout way of getting anything done," and one which "would always insure a very good row." He re minded his hearers that in the rows of the past most of the heads that had been cracked were workingmen's heads and most of the blood spilt was working class blood, therefore he ad vised constitutional action. He gave warning that workmen who deliber ately restricted output or who failed to accept any form of industrial de velopment which could make labor more productive were .punishing themselves and their class without knowing It. When the sober common sense of such men gets the upper hand, as is evidently happening, we shall have an end of talk about Soviets, direct ac tion and the one big union, and men will settle down to work." The great trouble of Europe in particular is un der-production, which limits the amount of goods available to pay for the food and raw materials which must be imported from this and other countries. Europe is tired. Its nerves are unstrung, its political and indus trial organization is badly shaken. It rhows signs of bracing up. When it does. It will go to work and will have no time to listen to the red agitator. nr.HTixa WITH fiAS. As the history of the war is un folded we are led more and more to realize the greatness of the achieve ments of our men. One may confess to being thrilled by the story of the work of one branch of the service without deprecation of the value of any other. And the account of the things that our "gas and flame" serv ice did in France, as told by the Rev. James Thayer Addison, chaplain of the Thirtieth regiment of engineers, be longs in the category of historical ac counts that Inspire us with confidence in ourselves and in our future as a nation. Gas warfare was entirely new to us when we went to Kurope. We were horrified when the Germans employed It. but properly reached the conclusion that the devil can be fought success fully only with fire. We had neither the advantages of research in the science of killing possessed by our enemy, nor stomach for this particular variety of murder; yet. because there was no- other way, we accepted the weapons of the. enemy and turned them against himself. Before we had finished the men who invented gas warfare must have wished that they had kept their devilment to theru eelves. The fact that stands out is our ready adaptability to utterly strange conditions. The regiment was ordered to be organized on August IS, 1917. Trained in the beginning .near Wash ington, IX C, it entrained for France on Christmas day of the same year, fully equipped, and disembarked at Brest on January 18, 1918. There fllnu'.l a n r-i ml nf i r 11 c- i train. ; lng in France, and the first battalion 'of the regiment was actually engaged on the front line in less than three months from the time that its organ ization was completed. The command ing British general was outspoken in his praise of the "show" that the Americans gave. Nineteen platoons went Into action on March 19. There after there were engagements at Chateau-Thierry, in the operation at St. Mihiel and in the greater one on the Argonne. When the regiment was demobilized in March, 1319, it had a T record of 13S engagements, a record certainly unique in military history. Terrible as gas war must have been, it is significant that the one note of protest in the book is the chapter in which conditions' in Brest on the way home are treated. We read with in dignation such a quotation as this: In the course of ten months at the front. In every variety of position and circumstance Irom Vprea to the Swiss border, our men never had to submit to living conditions worse than those which surrounded them during their first week at' Brest and this. too. In camp which had been under con- struction for over a year and which had been in constant use by our debarking troops. Conditions there wera chronic, which would not have been permitted by any of our commanders for more than singla day. even under shell fire. But the story of needless and arrogant mismanage ment later remedied through influence out side the army Is loo familiar both to us and to the public to require repetition in detail It is good to read of the achieve ments of individual units, such as the gas and flame division, and the tank service, and every other branch that called for both bravery and Initiative, if for no other reason than that it helps to get the Brest affair off our minds. A WARM WELCOME. Portland welcomes the United States navy to its harbor. Only a part of the Pacific fleet is here, to be sure; but if one little old gunboat flying the stars and stripes was to anchor In a foreign port, she would be the United States navy, and that is the way Portland takes it. Her welcome Is not based on numbers it's matter of quality, and is of the best. Better still, it's so great it will go around and lap over. Portland could not be more pleased if Dewey in the heyday of fame were here. She is glad to see the rear-admiral and every man who salutes him, down to the youngest powder monkey, If that useful individual is yet in the - - -V V , - - We will not call them "gobs." for that hasn't the right sound; but if a word more to their hearts and ours will do, here it is: Come on, fellows, and take the town! WISDOM FROM THE PAST. When the delegates of thirteen states, after long discussion, had pre pared the great document which as the constitution of the United States has stood the test of 130 years, and has served as a model for other peo ples striving to formulate a chaTter of liberties. Benjamin Franklin, then 80 years of age, arose and said: "I confess that there are several parts of this constitution which I do not at present approve. But having lived long, I have experienced many instances of being obliged, by better information or fuller consideration, to change opinions even on . important subjects, which I once thought right, but foundto be otherwise. It is there fore that the older I grow the more apt I am to doubt my own judgment and to pay more respect to the judg ment of others. "I doubt too whether any other con vention we can obtain may be able to make a better constitution. For when you assemble a number of men to have the advantage of their joint wisdom, you Inevitably assemble with those men all their prejudices, their passions, their errors of opinion, their local interests, and their selfish views. From such an assembly can a perfect production be expected? It therefore astonishes me, sir, to find this sys tem approaching so near to perfection as it does, and I think it will astonish our enemies who are waiting with confidence to hear that our councils are confounded. like those of the builders of Babel, and that our states are on the point of separation, only to meet hereafter for the purpose of cutting one another's throats. Thus I consent, sir, to this constitution be cause I expect no better, and because I am not sure that it is not the best. The opinions I have had of its errors I sacrifice to the public good. I have never whispered a syllable of them abroad. Within these walls they were born, and here they shall die. If every one of us in returning to our constituents were to report the objec tions he has had to it and endeavor to gain partisans in support of them, we might prevent its being generally re ceived and thereby lose all the salu tary effects and great advantages re sulting naturally in our favor among foreign nations as well as among our selves from our real or apparent unanimity. . . . "On the whole, sir, I cannot help expressing a wish that every member of the convention who may still have objections, to it would with 'me, on this occasion, doubt a little his own in fallibility, and to make manifest our unanimity, put his name to this in strument." It may be asked if there is no ap plication of the lessons of this im pressive and memorable incident to the attitude of some American citi zens, in and out of the United States senate, toward the league of nations. If America rejects the Paris cove nant of the league of nations there will be no league of nations. rEACH CROP MANAGEMENT. The enormous peach crop' with which the trees of the northwest are now laden, and the lack of success of many growers in finding a market at prices that will pay a return on labor for picking, packing and fur nishing containers at double the cost of a few years ago, furnish once more a text for a little sermon on orchard management. The number of grow ers who, notwithstanding all the edu cational propaganda of the recent past, continue to ignore the patent difference between ordinary and high grade fruit is still larger than it ought to be. As In every bumper-crop season there is a large proportion of small fruit. Excellent though this is, in flavor and color, the fact remains that it not only entails additional labor in handling but encounters a reluctant buying public. ' A homily might be written on the insistence of buyers on what is not a major virtue in the peach, or any other good fruit, but we shall be content to record that It exists. The point is that a little labor devoted to thinning along about last June would have converted many a totally unmarketable crop into a mar ketable one. The difference is ob vious. And so long as buyers con tinue to pay. as they do, as much as 50 cents a dozen at retail for impos ing looking peaches and decline to buy little peaches, even at less than the cost of getting them to town, it would seem that the time given to this detail early in the season was almost as good an investment as the original amount expended in bringing the or chard into bearing. The same is measureably true of fruits in general. People have been trained to insist on "quality"; noth ing but the best suits any buyer any more; Ve can talk of the food value of the lower grades until we are weary, without convincing the people who are buying this season's goods. There Is no prospect of an early change. The orchardist who realizes that it is as important to sell fruit as it is to pro duce it will adapt his management to human nature as it is revealed in the market place. CHANGES IN THE CABINET. Secretary Redfield is not the first man to retire from the Wilson cabinet with wounded pride. There was Gar rison, whose continental army scheme was regarded favorably by the presi dent until he had stumped the middle west for preparedness and had thought it lukewarm, erroneously as things turned out. There was Bryan, who was reduced to a mere- cipher when he disapproved even the little vigor which was put in the Lusitania notes. There has been a succession of attorneys general, but McReynolds was made a supreme judge and Gregory says he wanted to attend to his own business. There was McAdoo, but he wanted to get rid of the rail roads before the real trouble began, and he also wanted to make money. Mr. Redfield has had a very irksome job during the war for a man who takes pride in his work and in the record he makes. Between the muni tions board, the war trade board and the enlarged activities of the depart ments, his department was shorn of much of its importance and was merely keeping alive until peace should permit it to start at full speed again. After the armistice he thought he saw his opportunity to get busy again by reducing steel prices, but again he was blocked by the war power in the person of Director-Gen eral Hines of the railroads. The president sustained Mr. Hines, and that was the last straw on Mr. Red field's back. Holding a cabinet job under Presi dent Wilson is no easy matter for a man who refuses to be a cipher or a clerk, but others held on well, some of them tod well. That is especially true of Postmaster-General Burleson, whose retirement would cause regret to no one except the Western Union Bell telephone interests and those postmasters who owe the security of their jobs to him. But he holds all the strings which will direct the pre liminaries to the democratic conven tion next year, so perforce he must be carried, heavy load though he is. THE APPEAL OF THE PEOPLE, The controversy between President Wilson and the senate about the Ger man treaty has culminated in genuine American style in an appeal to the people for a verdict. No former peace treaty has been the subject of such an appeal, for on no other was there oc casion for it. Former wars have re lated to quarrels with single nations and were ended by treaties with those nations. The war not yet formally ended was fought by this nation in al liance with other nations in defense of elementary national and human rights, and must be ended by a treaty affirm ing and establishing those rights and rendering them secure against attack in the future. Because this Is so and because It Is the subject of acute con troversy it is proper that the people should decide whether they approve the method by which the treaty seeks to attain these ends and whether they are ready to assume the responsibil ities which it imposes. . The president has an advantage in presenting his case to great audiences in the fact that he can appeal to their hearts and can expound the broad principles on which the treaty is founded, and he has great powers of persuasion. He scores heavily when he points out that criticism has been centered chiefly on three articles, par ticularly article 10 of the covenant, on the assumption that it would cause war, and that little attention has been given to the effect of that and many other provisions of the league cove nant in preventing war. If the league had existed in 1914, there could have been no war because Austria would have been bound to submit its quarrel with Serbia to arbitration or media tion, and because Austria would have known that if it invaded Serbia and Germany if it invaded Belgium, the whole world would fall upon them. Before they could have made war without incurring this penalty, they would -have been compelled 'to go through all the processes of peaceful adjustment provided by the covenant, which would have consumed nine months. Yet Senator Lodge calls the obligation assumed under article 10 "everlasting meddling and muddling in every quarrel, great and small, which afflicts the world." To every American who has ex amined the causes of the war suf ficiently to know that these were the suppression of nations under alien yoke, or the tearing of nations apart. It must be an inspiring thought that the treaty unites the sundered na tions, sets the suppressed nations free and guarantees their freedom against assault by any other nation which may desire to conquer them. That thought is inspiring Decause free men in stinctively rejoice at the spread of freedom-and because liberation of the oppressed is itself security for the world s peace. The president scored again when he showed that the league gives to na tions which complain of oppression and which were not formerly subject to the central powers the right to en list the league in their cause. The league does not close the door on Ire land, Egypt, India, Corea and other nations which have appealed fo the senate. It opens the door by giving any member the right td bring up the case for consideration. Every good American whose judg ment has not been warped by parti sanship shares Mr. Wilson's opinion that consideration of the settlement growing out of the war should exclude all thought of party, but should be broadened to embrace the relations of the United States to all other nations, and the extent tg which our national interests impose an obligation to pro tect those of other nations. The presi dent's solemn declaration that he has forgotten party is likely to provoke a smile, accompanied by a fervent wish that he had forgotten party sooner. If he had forgotten in April, 19i7, and had called to his aid in conducting the war the ablest and most patriotic men of both parties; if he had for gotten party even as recently as last October, when he wrote a certain let ter, and had summoned the senate to aid him in negotiating peace, there can be no doubt that a more brilliant record would have been made in the war and there would have been slight controversy over ratification of the treaty. He missed the opportunity to rise to the loftiest heights of greatness because at those critical junctures "he permitted party to narrow his vision. . No less lamentable a failure on the part of the majority in the foreign ro- lations committee of the senate to rise above party is indicated by the reser- vations which it offers to the treaty more particularly by the terms in which the reservations are couched. It is fit and proper that the United States should make reservations more clearly defining its obligations and its rights, but these should be so phrased as to be a complement to the treaty, constructive and therefore strengthen ing. The committee's reservations emphatically have not this character. The word "decline" is so prominent that it gives the whole series the ap pearance of an angry "I won't." It reads like an ultimatum to an enemy, whereas it should be a proposed modi fication or clearer definition of terms to the allies for presentation to the common enemy. Reservations should be so framed as to incline the allies to accept; their present form Is provoca tion to reject them. If they should be rejected, the United States must make a separate treaty with Germany. It would then cut a sorry figure before the world and posterity as a great na tion which, having suffered least in a world-struggle, had flung away the opportunity, neglected the moral duty, to take the lead in redeeming the world from anguish. Weakest and clumsiest is the reser vation against articles 10 and 22. It seems to declare that the United States will not do any of the things which this nation would be bound to do by those articles, but in the last lines It avows readiness to do them "by action of congress." As this pro viso does not modify the other ar ticles providing that American dele gates shall participate in proceedings of the league, it leaves the delegates powerless to act on the most vital of all matters. If it is intended to re serve to congress final authority to decide on the questions named it is superfluous, for all obligations of the treaty are subject to the constitutional restrictions of the several countries. As authority of congress is required for war, so is that of parliament in Britain, France, Italy and practically every other country. - That reservation is useless except to limit the authority of American delegates to the league, for it adds nothing to nor takes any thing from the articles in question. It is a weak, puny thing to bring forth after all the fire that has raged around article 10. By proposing thirty-five amend ments which refuse participation of Americans in a number of commis sions, the committee majority de scends to petty selfishness and scorns an honor which Europe seeks to pay. These commissions are to define boundaries, conduct elections to de cide the fate of disputed territory, to regulate international waterways, and perform similar functions. The United States has been welcomed to such work as the most disinterested of the nations and therefore as the most trusted, also as the one which, having done least in proportion to its re sources in the war, should do most in the after-war settlement. Senators would in effect answer the summons by saying: "We don't want to be bothered with your little affairs. Set tle them your own way." It devolves on the United States to do its full part in reorganizing the world for peace and democracy, be cause we came late into the struggle and have not expended In blood and wealth and energy a tithe as much as other nations. We in effect acknow ledged when we went in that the al lies had been fighting our battle from the first, and we profited by what they had expended before we lifted a finger. Then it is our bounden duty, unless we wish to brand ourselves as a slacker nation, to take upon our selves more than our proportionate share of the labor and trouble which has been caused by the war. AH our talk about service to humanity and democracy is a sham unless we trans late it into action, and the treaty which the senators seek to mangle points the way. The European custom of planting fruit trees along the roadsides, now urged upon us by some enthusiasts as part of the good roads movement, is beset with obstacles of a practical nature. The small communities of the older countries are more highly or ganized and. above all units are small er and distances shorter, so that pro vision for the care of the trees and their crops is possible in a manner hardly conceivable along the projected great highways of the United States. It would be worse than useless to plant fruit trees without tending them, for this would only invite the spread of plant pests. Besides, the difference between the situations here and abroad is the difference between a garden and a forest. The larger scheme of adornment seems more fitted for our landscape, and probably in the end will prevail. Yet tree planting is worth considering and its beginning ought not to be too long delayed. l here must be something wrong with the Western Union Employes' -association or it would not have black balled Postmaster-General Burleson. It was organized by the managers as an antidote to the union and was pre sumed to ba friendly to the company's friends. The company has no better friend than Mr. Burleson. Then why this ingratitude? Here's a nice question of. responsi bility: A policeman stopped a car insufficiently lighted and a street car, booming along at a twenty-mile gait, knocked it sixty feet, with customary consequences. Who pays?" There is absolutely no affinity be tween the Chinese and the Irish, but the Chinese adopted an Irish weapon the boycott to fight Japan and they have certainly made an impres sion. Dr. Parrish must be supported in his- determination to stop spread of influenza by quarantine. Portland does not want repetition of last win ter's experience. Governor Hart will not seek the president and it is unlikely the presi dent will go to Olympia. How sad! Something like that happened in Ore gon long ago. Little need there will be for guards during the president's visit. Portland is law abiding. Only danger will be in crowding by people curious to see him. When the weatherman says "prob ably" this time of year, take your um brella, for always he gives good meas ure. The hodcarriers want more money seven dollars a day and it is not everybody who can carry the hod. Kcdlield has had enough. Those Who Come and Go. "After you get out of the sand and j onto a good gravel road, you bless the good roads campaign in Oregon," ob served Cyril Brownell of Umatilla, member of the legislature. "The gravel road, the Columbia River highway, up our way, is a fine piece of work, and everyone is satisfied with it. Accord ing to the law adopted by the people in 1917 the road is to be hard surfaced, but the gravel will do for the present, and we'll never have to say a word about pavement, because the traffic will take care of that. After a while the traffic will demand hard surface. Meanwhile I am now more Interested in developing the side roads, the feed ers to the main line, for the side roads will develop the country. With the one mill market road tax next year and the county share of the automobile tax, counties will have enough funds avail able to do a vast amount of construc tion of farmer roads." Wood pulp forms part of the raiment of almost every woman, and a great many men. Fiber silk is made of pulp from a tree which grows in Austria Hungary, according to H. L. Silverman, who is at the Benson. The fiber silk has a woven edge, because it cannot stand cutting, and if cut will unravel. The material is kept in oil until it is ready for dying, and once dyed it is immediately made up and disposed of. instead of being put away, for the fiber will not retain the colors like genuine silk! the colors fading in time. Ac cording to Mr. Silverman, the fiber silk is in the hands of a British company, which has a monopoly on the business, and all the fiber silk used has to come through this one concern. Like every thing else, fiber silk is experiencing a shortage, and, like everything else, is expected to soar in price. At Riddle the populace is hostile over the plan of the state highway commis sion to eliminate that town from the Pacific highway. The town has insti tuted letjal proceedings to compel the commission to build the highway to Riddle. The contention of the commis sion is that Riddle forms the apex of a triangle, and that three miles can be saved by using the base as a direct route and leaving out Riddle. The ex planation is entirely unsatisfactory to the residents of Riddle. Mr. and Mrs. P. A. Wilson of the rebellious town are at the Hotel Oregon. Two of the members of the executive committee of the Fire Fighters' associ ation are Sid Johnson of East St. Louis and John F. Kirwin of Little Rock. They arrived at the Multnomah yester dav and had a long conference with officials of the Portland branch of the association. The fire fighters are smoke eaters who intend to have a big convention here. It is not to be confused with the fire chiefs' conven tion, which will also be held in Port land. In these piping days of peace Frank H. Shepherd is no lonper saluted and addressed as major. During the war Mr. Shepherd, who is connected with the Oregon Agricultural college, had much to do with having boys trained as automobile mechanics at the Benson polytechnic and at other institutions in the Pncific northwest. Mr. Shepherd is registered at the Imperial. Endeavor, Penn., is where N. P. Wheeler Jr. registers from at the Hotel Portland. He owns considerable tim ber In Oregon and is here to give it the once over. Rather than come by steamer or rail, he drove a machine to the Rose City from Pasadena and isn't enthusiastic over the road between the two points, owing to the large amount of construction work in progress. Grass pants is the way the old-timers familiarly refer to Grants Pass in Josephine county. The name was prob ably twisted by some placer miner who had been sluicing in the Kerhy dis trict, and it stuck. J. D. MacViear of Grants Pass, who is interested in road contracts down that, way, is registered at the Hotel Portland. After waiting at the beach until they saw the fleet steam past. Mrs. G. W. Phelps and daughters. Margaret and Genevieve, arrived at the Imperial yes terday from the coast, where they were passing their vacation. The family is on the way home to eastern Oregon, where the husband and father is a cir cuit judge. President of one of the leading tour ist agencies of the country is I. Frank of New York, who is at the Benson. Mr. Frank's company routes a large number of tourists to Portland during the year and he is making a personal tour to see about the character of ac commodations his clients receive. As a member of the board of gov ernors of the Greeters,' Charles Schreider, assistant manager of the Hotel Portland, left last night for Chi cago to attend a meeting of the board. While in the east he plans to visit his old home in an Illinois town. Frederic T. Bowles of Chicago, who' has been active in the shipping board work, la at the Hotel Portland with his family. When Portland was turn ing out ships in one, two, three order Mr. Bowles was a frequent visitor to Portland and the yards in this dis trict. H. W. Sheerin. one of the 23 or 30 inhabitants of Suver, Or., is at the Multnomah. Suver occupies a small space on the Luckiamute river in folk county and the surrounding country has walnuts, high-class stock and plenty of small fruits. Carl Wodecki. a commission man of the The Dalles, is In Portland on busi- i ness and is at the Imperial. Recently The Dalles has been treated to one of the niftiest electric storms in many years. ' After two weeks at Beach Center, R. E. Doyle, clerk at the Hotel Oregon, is back again full of clams. Meanwhile Manager Meyers is at Newport also wrestling with the clam in his native lair. Alex Poison of Hoquiam and M. C. Reed of Shelton, Wash., lumbermen, are in the city, drawn here by the spruce Investigation new being held at the federal building. They are among ar rivals at the Benson. Having visited his brother, W. B. Hauser at. San Francisco, who is ill, E. V. Hauser, owner of the Multnomah, arrived yesterday to find that another brother, W. E. Hauser, had breezed in from New York. Cecil which is a small town in Mor row county, through which the emi grant road trickles, hag a representa tive in Portland, Mrs. Hendriksen of Cecil being at the Hotel Oregon. W. E. Boyd, one of the new proprie tors of the Benson, has arrived from Fargo, North Dakota,' and is looking around the establishment and familiar izing himself with Portland. Bismark. N. D., and Berlin. Wis., were on the Multnomah register yes terday. F. N. Hunter came from the North Dakota town and O. C. Irwin from the Wisconsin Berlin. Dr. O. A. Osborn, a well-known resi dent of Salem, passed through Port land yesterday on his way to Pendle ton. He tarried at the Imperial for a day. W. G. Tait, one of the bankers of Medford, that enterprising town hav ing several, is at the Multnomah for a few days. More Truth Than Poetry. By .James J. 31ontague. BON VOYAGE. (The United States shipping board is soon to launch a vessel which will be named the Casey, in honor of the fine overseas service of the Knights of Co lumbus.) Long may her smoke trail wreath over .the ocean. Long may the good Irish name of her be A symbol of service, and faith, and devotion. Three graces that follow the emblem K. C. Liner and merchantman, troopship and tanker. In Liverpool, Rio or Brest or Be nares Shall break out their flag as she swings to her anchor. In graceful salute to the name that she bears. The storm may break round her, but never she'll fear it. Though typhoon may smother and tempest assail. The Greatest of Captains shall guard her in spirit, And pilot her out of the teeth of the gale. And HlJ wio looked down when the caravels drifted To seek a new world beneath heaven's high dome, Shall watch till the mists that enclose her are lifted, And safe from her journey the Casey comes home. High be the mission and honored the name of her. Whatever her course o'er the waters may be. Brave the behavior and glowing the fame of her. Worthy to carry the emblem Tv. C. Safe be each journey and swift each return of her. Smooth he the seas she is destined to plow With the Red, White and Blue stream ing out from the stern of her. And her good Irish name on her bluff, honest bowl is Always a Rungrlar. Ludendorfrs admission that he lied to bolster the courage of the German army, proves, in the light of results, that he was about as clumsy a liar as he was a general. The First Han Nerve Anyway. If there is any choice, we prefer the bolshevik who stays in Russia and takes chances to the one who stays over here and writes red editorials. Just Watch. We predict that $18 shoes will do more than Isadora Duncan ever did to popularize barefoot dancing. DAY OF THE TO.VCIE IS IJOE Thrift and Production Will Beat Bring About Reconstruction. PORTLAND. Sent. 5. (To the KdM tor.) Otto H. Kahn's specific for re construction as reproduced by The Or egonian appears to be as good a solu tion for correcting the unfavorable fea tures of the times as has been pre sented. There can be no doubt that the primary factor in keeping things level is the desire to produce and to save. Neither over-production nor under thrift is a happy medium, but saving the waste is. His reference to Kngland's salvage in three years of one-half billion dollars' worth of what otherwise would have become "scrap" is but one of the many pre-arranged details of England's re construction plans. What could be more desirable or effective than such a commission or set of commissions as he suggests to provide programmes through the wisdom of the best ele ments of farmers, merchants, profes sional thinkers, financiers and labor leaders to study and perfect practical and feasible plans for gradual recon struction in fact? As we cannot create peace by com pacts, neither can we create reconstruc tion by a massage of words. Every in dividual must help, within and without his or her personal confines, in the work. A ship doesn't sail Itself. Neith er can a commander or a lack of team work provide the achievement desired. Produce, work, save, think, live, en joy, in moderation. There's work to be done and everybody must take a hand in it. The tongue has had its day. Business method must follow a well seasoned programme covering every thing needed to bring real peace of mind, of home, of city, state and coun try, and business and common sense de mand the right of way. The real peace patriot will sacrifice something pri vately to assist in the grand scheme publicly. Save all waste and the by product will make for the peace we must earn. J- M. ISLHS OF MY DRKAMS.' In illimitable vast of ocean blue. Oh, iiles like gems, set in sapphire hue; Through the mist of mem'ry you hazily gleam. The far-off. land of my lazy dream. Oh, unutterable depths surrounding you. Breathe a myst'ry at night and when morning is new The senses are drugged with the strange and the sweet Of the trophic air, and the pulse of the heat. Oh, ineffable mem'ry of a day that Is gone. Of idle hours spent in love and In song; Ever asain in my fancy you beam, . Oh, far-off land of my lazy dream. MIL,1KK,1J i.ltltlil"..M'. Corvnllis. Or. We Are Dwelling in the Night" (t Booth Tarkington, widely known novelist and humorist, is the con tributor this Sunday in the gripping series of special articles by world renowned writers on "Spiritualism and Psychic Phenomena." He confesses frankly that he is not a student, but in that fascinating manner of his he writes masterfully of the mystic death, and gives ' due credit to those who have made this subject a deep study. We will not admit that the spiritualists have won their case, but agree that they are doing a great work and should receive every encourage ment. This story by Tarkington is the big feature in the magazine section Sunday morning. FAKING NATURE IS XOT NECESSARY IN OREGON So says DeWitt Harry, who contributes an interesting story on what the films have done to make Oregon ecenery attractive to the entire world. He follows the camera man to various scenic points in Oregon and tells what the motion pictures have done to advertise this western state's outdoor attractions. IS HE THE MASTER CRIMINAL? To look at his photograph, you might think George F. Hamby an ordinary well-to-do business man, but criminologists class him the most astonishing criminal in his tory. His is an unusual interview which appears in The Sunday Oregonian. He has puzzled the greatest criminologists of the country. STRIKES ARE IN THE AIR. And W. E. Hill, creator of the clever cartoon series, "Among Us Mortals," depicts with his facile pen how strikes affect the strikers, the employers and the public generally. ARE YOU GOING TO MONTREAL? This big city above the Cana dian border is the only "wet" spot between the Arctic circle and the Canadian border. Every night in the week its bars hanp; out the S. R. O. sign. This amusing story tells how the thirsty are assuaged where wine, women and song can legally commingle. Everybody's doin' it even the artists' models in New York are out on strike. A Gotham writer tells of this most unusual walkout. The story is brightly illustrated. The Funnies Of course, the youngsters will insist on their comics again this Sunday, as The Oregonian's new comic section is growing in popularity week after week. In Other Day. Twenty-five Yrara Ait". From The Jlornlns Orcgonlan, Sept. ft. ISM. Elkins, W. Ya. Ex-President Harri-' son delivered an address today at the republican convention of the second congressional district, which nominated Alston Cordon Dayton to run against W. L Wilson, chairman of the house ways and means committee. San Francisco The Tanama Railroad company has made its rates applicable from New York to Portland and other north Taoific ports. The first-class rate is $1.13, second $1.05. third SS cents, fourth, 90 cents, fifth SS cents, B. C. D. and K. 80 cents. Chicago The celebrated Viking ship, which crossed the Atlantic and was ex hibited at the world's fair, sank in the river during a storm Monday. Xew Orleans "Nonpareil" Dempsey and Australian McCarthy fouKht a 20 round battle here that was declared a draw, in accordance with the articles stipulating that if botli men remained on their feet at the end of tho 20Ul round it was to be so decided. Fifty Years Ago. From The Morning Oregonian, Sept. 6. ISO.fl. St. Louis Contracts have been let on which construction is under way on 500 miles of the Kansas Pacific railroad between the Missouri river and Denver, to be completed by January 1. The Siamese twins have come back from Europe -and are still bound by their bond of flesh. They are now 58 years of age and announce their de termination to go down to death to gether in a quiet way in .North Caro lina, where their families reside. Salem William H. Seward arrived here this evening and was received with proper honor. He goes to Albany tomorrow, returning here the following day. Tho steamer Hanger was totally de stroyed by fire Saturday nis.M at Sau vies island. Only the machinery can be salvaged. Noises of the Town. By Grace 10. Hall. It is said of a noted writer in record handed down, "He found the key of living in noises of the town;" He loved to mingle ever wi,th masses going by. tbe the the To catch tho touch of humor or the pathos of a sigh ; And always he could fathom under currents swift and strong, That he wove in gripping stories that have cheered the world along. He "found the key of living" Have you tried that key to find? I have pondered well tho statement that describes that master mind; It is more than written volume often tells, when sifted down. Just to "find the key of living in the noises of the town"; Every sound must tell a story If we catch the major tone. For the bedlam of the city is a history never known. Few there be who pause to listen or in terpret what they hear. Though the whistle, bell and clangor tell their talcs so plain and clear; And the pathos is unheeded and the humor goes to waste, While the human drove Is speeded on its way in breathless haste; Weary minds long ut tor surcease. idle ones to Tony turn, And the maelstrom seethe forever where the human passions burn. Workmen hurrying from the factory. from the bench and shop and tray. Seek the homes that wait their coming at the closing of the day; Misses pert, with fearsome hairdress, gaudy plumes and raucous voice; Aged ones whose hours of labor are a sentence not a choice; Strutting ones whom fortune favored through a circumstance, maybe. Arrogance and servile boudago pass one by eternally: And each tells a vital story that is never written down. Save when some one grasps the mean ing of "the noises of the town." Al'Tl M. Do you remember, sweetheart, how along this woodland path, We walked last June, when every thing was green? The flowers bloomed around us. and our hearts with beauty thrilled. For a glorious summer bounty filled the scene. But here today we wander midst a very different world We cannot recognize our p.tth at all; The changing leaves, the stalks, the pods, the fruit, the berries red Our very souls with rupture view the fall. And where was all this glory when we walked the ,ath last spring? Deep hidden in the green and in the flower. And so in lives abiut us, people whom we dally meet Their souls arise to greatness for the hour. EMILY GRANGER. Portland. Can't Fool Art CrUI-. London Opinion. Art Dealer "Here we have a fine OH Master." War Profiteer "Nonsense! Anyone ran se it is meant to be n vounir cirl "