8 TIIE MORNING OREGONIAN, MONDAY, JUNE 7, 1920 - 4. ' ' ESTABLISH KU B' HENRY 1.. PITTOCK I'ubU-hed by The Oregonlan Publishing Co. 135 Sixth Street. Portland, Oregon. C A. MORDBN. K. B. PIPfc-R Manager. The Oregonian 1b & me variable beauty of the northwest is bers of people in Portland this day that unless taxes are imposed after of persuasive power that brooks no i and hour who would listen to theandin acordance with close study of negative reply. Those who seek the , plea of Shouite's slayer with the in- economic principles, they will be ul- advancement of this state have long: j tentness of utter belief. Just a few since made its wonderful outof doors i months ago local officers of the led their most captivating and convinc- Eduor. ing argument. Witness Frank Branch ber of the Asm- Riley, who talks tired easterners in- elated Pres.. The Anaociated Pre Is tQ enthusiasm for vacation trips in exclusively entitled to the use for puolica- t ... tion of an new. Si-patt -he, credited to it i Oregon. Accepting thts dower of or not otherwise credited in this paper and beauty as an asset, for always we re al. the local news published herein, '".turn to the practical, it follows that VZX:1" d'SP f-.ty must be assured by the preser- vation oi trie state s natural aurac-tiveness. .$.oo . 4.25 . 2.::5 . 8 00 . 8.25 . .HI . l oo . 6.00 .$9.00 . 2.2.1 . .75 . 7.M) . 1.95 . .65 Subscription Rate Invariably In Advance. (By Mail.) Tallv. Sunday Inclndeii. one year .... H.l'.y. Sunday included, six months . . Jiailv, Sur.day Included, three months. 1 a!lv, Sunday Included, one month ... JaUy. without Sunday, one year Jaily, without Sunday, six month. . . . laily. without Sunday, one month .. .. "Weekly, one year Sunday, one year (By Carrier.) riaily. Sunday Included, one year . . . . . 5ally. Sunday Included, three months. lail. Sunday included, one month 1'uily. without Sunday, one year Jiaily. without Sunday, three months.. Daily, without Sunday, one month . . . How to Remit. Send postoffice money order, express or personal chock on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at owner's risk. f.lvc postoffice address In full, including county and slate. routine Rotes. 1 m 11 pasre'. 1 icnt: IS to 32 page;.-. 2 cents. 34 to S page,. 3 cents; 50 to 4 pages. 4 cent.-; t.t to MJ pages. & cents; S2 I.. U pages, '6 tents. I'oreign postage, double rates. Kailrrn Business Office. Verrce & Conk lln Brunswick building. New York; Vcrree & Conklin. Steger building. Chicago; Vcr ree & Conklin. Free Press building, De troit, Mich. San Francisco representative, n. J. Bldwell. WHO Tt'KNKD OK THE SVPrl.Y? One of the most incomprehensible features of the gasoline shortage is the almost utter absence of adequate explanation concerning its origin, kittle has been said of that, while pyr amids of persuasion, both oral and printed, have been decanted upon the motorist in the effort to enlist his economical assistance toward rem edying the deficit and bridging the gas rap. Self interest should dic tate that owners of motor vehicles conform strictly to the relief meas ures outlined, without evasion or more than moderate complaint, for the only immediate means of sur cease seems to rest with the sensi bility of the individual. But those who motor for pleasure, as those who serve commerce with' truck ana delivery wagon, and whose not in considerable investment in automo tive equipment is partially idle, have the inalienable right to arise and ask whose fault this is and where the blame rests. With the continued dis covery of new oil fields, the produc tivity of the old, and the present boom prosperity of the Industry as a whole, the query concerning the ab sent gallons of gasoline is -perfectly pertinent. The actual obstruction to a reliable supply should be definitely known and forever removed. It is said by some observers, claim ing to be closely in touch with the situation, that the shortage has its inception in the excess profits tax upon crude oil and is rooted .firmly wherever the derricks lift above the treasure sands. The paternal demand of the federal government, these say, that producers pay an excess profits tax of 60 to SO per cent or the in come from their wells, constrained many provident oil producers to cap! their wells and enter temporary re-! tirement, pending the tidings that the tax has been removed. As crude oil is the base of gasoline, the corking of the heavily producing properties created millions of dusty motor tanks. If the excess profits tax really has wrought this catastrophe all the violent things that have been said of it are in a measure justified. While the excoriation is proceeding, however, a few selected phrases of indignant reproof ought to be re served for the producers. In posses sion of the easiest means yet found of achieving wealth besides which the fruition of the alchemist's vision becomes genuine day labor the pro ducers deliberately evade the na- tional levy that is laid upon all other business and create an interlude in which less fortunate citizens can neither haul wood nor go fishing. That may or may not be the ex planation. At any rate, it is the only plausible one that has been offered, and it was volunteered by a returned oil man who recently has visited all the major petroleum fields of the continent. But it is so humanly probable, so in keeping with the pop ular frenzy of "gimme!"' that it has the aspects of an adequate answer to the gasoline shortage. How often are those who buy largely of their nation's own innate natural resources compelled, by the demands of greed to conjure a happier conception of absolute federal control? How often are they forced to reflect that.in logic and fairness, the natural her itage of their country is theirs, in trust to certain corporate bodies of men merely for the purpose of de velopment and public service,' and that false stewardship merits revo cation? These are strange times. Predic tion or tnem a lew Drier years ago would have been buffeted with laughter and sarcasm, as ludicrous and, illogical dreams. Who could . forsee the time when a nation of il limitable lands, fertile as the valley of the Nile, would go to market and return with potatoes that cost more than sirloins were wont to? Or who so idly speculative as to fortell a criminal era in wheih sugar and gas oline would be the choice plunder of thieves loose-moraled gentry who had deserted second-story pilferings for the profit of stolen comestibles and motor fuel? All these have come to pass. With the dearth of gasoline in Portland motorists make bitter plaint that their tanks are drained by sneak-thieves, who bootleg the spoils at prices of excessive altitude. It might be funny, so the milkman . says, if it weren't so peculiarly per sonal and serious, in its humorous aspects. THE VKTO OF TIIE Bl'DtiET Bil l. President Wilson has destroyed one of the most valuable laws passed by the present congress. Need of a budget system has been realized more generally every year since ap propriation of a billion dollars, in two years prompted somebody to coin the phrase "the billion-dollar congress." The demand became loud when un der the present administration the total reached a billion dollars a year. It has become urgent and insistent since the war started the administra tion on a career of spending which it is mentally and morally unable to halt. The budget bill was a well tievised measure to inject business methods into the government, to pre vent waste and to compel observance of the law by officials who have been running wild for four years. .' Because he finds in one provision of the bill a suspected encroachment on his executive powers, the presi dent vetoes it. The strictest con struction of the constitution may sustain his argument, for the bill took out of his hands the power to remove the controller-general, and that power seems logically to go with the power of appointment which is vested in the president. But there are sound reasons why this particu lar official should be not only remov able but appointed by congress, though the bill gave the president power to appoint him. His principal function is to check the expenditures of the departments by the appropria tions under which they are made In order to see that the appropriation law is observed. He is also to give congress his opinion as to whether each sum has been wisely or necessar ily expended. He is therefore pecu liarly an officer of congress, its watchdog, to guard the public funds against improper use by the executive branch. Proper performance of that function requires that this officer's appointment and removal be in the hands of congress, and that the ex ecutive, upon whom he is to keep check, shall have no power over him to impair his independence. He might properly have been regarded by the president as an officer of congress in the same sense as the sergeant-at- arms, clerk and others, therefore to be appointed and removed by con gress alone. Mr. Wilson is a strict construction ist when he suspects encroachment on his own "powers, but he is a very liberal constructionist when he at tempts to enlarge those powers at the expense of another branch of the government. eral service arrested a crazed mystic who -taught to dozens of Portland residents witchcraft and magic far beyond the circumscribed traditions and capabilities of the Yakima reser vation. The credulous paid him money for teaching them how to cure yellow jaundice by poking grandmother's chemise up the stove pipe. He had worsted three witches and cast out oodles of devils and minor fiends, acording to his claims and his followers. Not all the gray wolf sorcerers, nor all their be witched followers are on the reser vation though this is the twentieth century. THE FACTS IN THE SUGAR CASE. The facts cannot be evaded. All except a small part of the Cuban crop was offered to the sugar equal ization board on July 29, 1919, "un der such terms as may be agreed upon by the contracting parties at a price moderate, but compensating to the producer and well within the economic reach of the consumer. For the part already sold private parties had paid 6 14 cents a pound. an indication that the government could have bought at that price. This offer was submitted to the president on August 14 with a recommendation that he authorize the board to nego tiate for the crop, in which all the members of the board except Dr. F. W. Taussig joined. The board said that by purchasing the entire crop in 1918 it had assured to the people "a regular and sufficient supply of refined sugar, and at a wholesale price not exceeding 9 cents at refin ing points, being the lowest price for refined sugar in any country in the world." But for the purchase "the BV - PRODCCTS OF THE TIMES timately paid by some others than those from whom" congress intends to collect them, will impose on the consumer burdens far exceeding tne revenue which the government col lects, will dry up the sources of capi tal for expansion of industry and the sources of public revenue also. Those are the vices of the excess profits tax, which the preceding congress imposed under the. delusion that it would be paid by the ncn. it is not., it is paid by the consumer, rich and poor alike, but disproportionately by the poor, and it is doubled before the goods on which it Is paid reach him. It takes surplus income which should be invested to supply the country's crying needs or it drives that surplus into unproductive investments, or tempts extravagant expenditure by men who say to themselves: "I may as well spend this money or Uncle Sam will take it." Leaders in con gress may well have decided that, with such a man as Mr. Wilson in the White House seeking a" pretext to veto any bill that is fathered by his political opponents, it would be better to put up with the clumsy tax law that we now have than hastily to pass such a law as would meet Mr. Wilson's approval, for they must realize that another fiscal monstros ity, would probably be the result. This congress has passed several laws which in ordinary times would have made the recent session mem orable. Among these are the railroad and shipping laws, which the presi dent says he accepted only because I despaired of anything better." An other is the mineral land leasing law, which lifts an embargo on develop ment of western resources that can relieve both the gasoline famine and the railroad congestion. Though Mr. Wilson controlled both branches of congress for six years, he failed to get that embargo lifted. The water- nrice would have been much hicrher " The board nredioterl that "the world power bill would in a few years have sugar shortage for the year 1920 will given immeasurable reuei irom tnose be more acute than for the year 1919." Receiving no answer, the board wrote to the president again on September 20, warning him "that the time is fast approaching,if it has not arrived, when we will be unable to control the Cuban crop of sugar for 1919-20 unless action is taken at once." The only reply was a note dated September 22 saying of the board's letter: "I shall bring it to the attention of the president at the first favorable opportunity." But -the same day the Cuban committee wrote to the board withdrawing the offer and saying: Unfortunately the logic of the situation has not impressed the government or. in evils, but the president subjects it to a pocket veto. This congress also took . a step toward economy and order in national expenditure by passing the budget bill, but that was vetoed in an excess of jealousy for the executive prerogative. In the same class was the veto of restric tion on department publications which fill ten thousand waste baskets in a time of acute paper famine. Much of the president's irritation is doubtless due to the exposure of reckless waste of over a billion dol lars on an aircraft programme which netted only a couple of hundred flaming coffins at the front; of many more millions squandered on cost Many of Our Common Words Have Hnd Queer Origin. We are entering one of the quadren nial periods that enrich the language. The Manchester Guardian recalls that the now dignified word "constituency" was anathema to purists 80 years since. When Macaulay. accepting a noble woman's invitation, mentioned his appearance before a constituency. she replied she would admit him, but not the word. American ears were early Inured to political slang. Most people are familiar with the theory that "caucus" originated in the de risive tory appellation. "caulkers" club," and with the fact that it was really born much earlier from an In dian word adopted when Sam Adams was young and the Caucus club met. as John Adams wrote in his diary, in Tom Dawe's garret. It simply showed squeamish ness that 50 years after it entered common use. John Randolph in uttering It added. "Excuse the slang of politics." Dark horse is nearly aa old; derived from racing, it refers to a horse whose record, not whose coat. Is dark. Disraeli lined it early in the century unhesitatingly in a sporting novel. Von Hoist, writing about 18S0, apologized for "the slang of our day" but then Herman was a German. It would be a nice question to de cide just how long ago "boss," derived from the Dutch English speech in South Africa shares it with us took on political meaning. It is clear that it did so bcforev"boodle," a word from the same source. "Boom" Is one of the few terms whose exact moment of birth we know it appeared in the St. Louis Globe-Democrat for 1878, and its inventor has told how he was struck by the likeness of Grant's ris ing popularity to what pilots called a booming river. The word "poll" for voting place is used wherever Anglo Saxons vote, but Americans nearly al ways use-it in the plural, Britons often in the singular. "Lobby" In the politi cal sense is our own, so is "primary"; so are a dozen others. What a sen tence could be manufactured to shock Macaulay's fastiditious friend, incor porating "snap convention," "float ers," and all the rest! And political managers win give a small fortune to "ny one who will invent a new phrase as good as "the square deal" or "snivel service reform." New York Evening Post. Those Who Come and Go. BIti-HEARTED BOYS. Big-hearted boys they were and are. Though Voltaire sired the sar casm that God is always on the side of the heaviest battalions, the defeat of Germany refuted it. And America will always proudly Incline to the be ef that her boys won because of their great hearts and manly attri butes, rather than through the com mon mastery of arms. France knew 'les Americains" as gallant, laughing. spendthrift prodigals who stooped to pat the heads of children, and lossed the littlf sons and daughters of the republic to their broad should ers, as big brothers would. The American expeditionary force made more material demonstration of this spontaneous kindliness when, in the midst of war, its members adopted temporarily more than 3700 French children whom the war had made fatherless. With the organization of the American Legion upon the return from overseas, when other interests pressed them closely, "les Ameri cams" did not forget their small wards left behind. And the Legion through an official campaign now in progress, is calling upon its thou sands of posts to readopt the home less children whose fathers fell when the way to Paris was barricaded witn valiant bodies. Left to the pity of France herself a land neaped with reconstruction prob lems and beset with financial strin gency the war orphans, however warm the heart of their own land, would become little more than friendless waifs. The Legion is proving its own nobility by this ben efaction, characteristically disguising its service by terming the adopted orphans "post mascots," and unwit tingly reasserting the truism that "the bravest are the tenderest, the loving are the daring." keeping with its traditional policy the plus contracts for cantonments, ships mit the market to be ruled by the natural and munition factories; of the heart law of supply and demand. less barbarities committed on sol A copy of that letter was sent to diers by court martials under a me the president on September 23 with dieval military code; of the neglect a note saying that American refiners to care or troops on demobilization; had been informed of the conditions, I of the navy departments failure to so that they may purchase raw send ships to the war zone in the sugar as per pre-war times." I critical period of submarine war: of That sugar was sold to European I the extreme kindness shown by Sec countries or American refiners at 6 I retary. Baker to slackers; of the nest to 7 cents. The price of 514 cents I of parlor bolshevists in the labor de paid in 1919 was considered by thelPartment who protect the reds from growers high enough to stimulate deportation. Mr. Wilson cannot for- production, as were corresponding Bive congress for ruthlessly slashing prices paid in Hawaii, Porto Rico, the swollen estimates of the depart Louisiana and to beet sugar refiners. It secured to the American people sugar at retail for 11 to 12 cents a pound, the lowest price of any coun try in the world except Denmark, which paid 10 to 11 cents. An addi tional cent for the 1920 supply would have given the American peo ple sugar at 13 cents. ments, thus forcing on them a real ization that the glorious days of free spending are ended. The president's unfeigned relief at the adjournment of congress is doubtless equaled by the relief of that body on abandoning the hope less task of getting any more con structive legislation past the obstruc There was still an opportunity to I tion at the White House. -Little can acauire a larce part of the nrnn In be done at the short session of October if legislation could have been moribund congress which will begin passed expeditiously, but it was not,l'n December. The people must look owing to the treaty debate which lo a hew president and a new con then occupied the senate. I gress for the remedial laws on which All other important countries now I w-orK should have begun immediately control sugar, but in the United I after armistice day, but the present States the law of supply and demand congress has good cause for pride has been manipulated by speculators I over wnat it has accomplished in to raise the price to 28 cents. The face of the obstruction which it en difference between what the people 1 countered. pay and what they might have paid In the Metropolitan Museum of Art, writes Ered B. Pitney in the New Tork Tribune, is a 17th century wheel-lock pistol that belonged to King Charles I. It is of the short-handled form typical of the period, and the slender barrel Is incased for nearly half its length in decorated gilt bronze. Inset In the handle are silver plaquettes showing mounted huntsmen armed with pistols urging hounds on deer and on the butt there is an engraved plaquette showing1 a huntsman in buff coat with slashed sleeves and a wide hat with a feather. The maker's name, Felix Weeder, Zurich, and the date, 1630, are Inside the lock plate Experts agree that its quality marks it as having belonged to a great per sonage, while it Is not unlikely that it was made especially for Charles I and that the figures on the plaquettes are intended for portraits of him. The pistol belonged to the late Canon Har ford of Westminster abbey, whose note, attached to the pistol, said: "This pistol was bought by Charles Joseph Hartford, M. A.. F. S. A.. M. P. of Stapleton Park. Gloucestershire about 1790, of a Scotch nobleman in whose family it had been handed down as having been in the celebrated collection of King Charles I." Prince Rupert was particularly itv I want a good-sized outside room on that side of the house where the parades will pass," ho remarked to Ross Flnnegan. clerk at the Benson hotel, yesterday. "Here Is a very fine room on the fourth noor. aaiu Ross. "There, my dear, what did I tell you." the visitor remarked to his wife, "I knew if we came earlier we could get a room. Now we'll just keep it for the entire month of June and we'll have the laugh on those Salaam pals of mine. The Shrine com mittee wrote me they could not get a room for me for love or money, now we've got one of the best rooms in the house, and we'll keep It. I know It has cost us something, but bless mv soul, it's worth it." Finnegan had listened to the conversation of the worth v Newark. N. J. citizen. les he said, "vou'll be able to see a fine T. P. A- parade, another excellent Kiwanls street showing, probably the Masons and the Pioneers will be out in force, too, and maybe the state jewelers, but I'm not sure. You'll see all these parades, but er we shall have to ask you to vacate your room in advance of the Shrine. Our rooms are nledced." "What," stormed the easterner. "What?" "Sorry." said Finnegan. "Sorry, nothing, don't you understand we have come across the country two weeks ahead just to get a hotel room here?" "Well. I am sorry," said Finnegan. "but I can't help you out. but if you go to the Shrine committee in the morning they will be glad to find you a nice room in someone's home, and they say jou can still get seats at some of the grandstands for the parades." They were two dear young things on a Twenty-third-street car. it was crowded to the fenders, and they clung to straps as they discussed modern traction problems. One was dark, vivacious and colorful. The other was a shade this side of bru nette, with a demure manner that became her excellently; Is it st ays like this on the way out to your house; asked tne iiveiy one. Gracious, I don t see how you stand it. But you hafta stand it. don t yuh? Anyway, we're standing!" The de mure one shifted her poise to the left rilby, with a shimmer of silken osiery. "Naw," said sue, "it ami Iways like this. Worst thing is that these conductors never call your treet. and you hafta look for the orner store to know where to get ff. You remember that party we were at last Saturday ntght? Well. was sitting here thinking, and the ar was as still as a cnurcn. ah once I heard someone call, Ella! My heart just jumped right out at me, and I thought well, you know what I thought. But it was only hat fool conductor. 1 guess he just woke up." represents the cost of the president's neglect. WILSON'S ATTACK ON CONGRESS. President Wilson's partisan mind Is incapable of recognizing the very solid good that has been done by a The storekeeper who set the big fire that destroyed nearly a block a week ago in Oregon City has con fessed. The poor fool did it to realize on his insurance, regardless of en dangering lives of. sleeping people and the immense damage to other men's nronertv. Arsnn 1 nt a hano. congress controlled by the opposing intr matter in nMu , party, or that the president himself but a very good penalty goes with it! i iiicLiuiy icdpuiidiuic iui Lite ueiay The recent fire in Oregon City has been traced down to the owner of a music store, who has confessed, ac cording to the police, that he set it Vi i r. . . 1 If . 1 . j 1 . . - ho hart actor! hv Qnrl with rho a H,ri ' " many and consent of the senate, as the con- . the re.cent song hits we cant maL w c uiauic nun greatly. of urgently needed legislation. His own arbitrary conduct precipitated the controversy over the league of nations which has been the main cause of delay. If from the outset stitution requires, the treaty could have been concluded much sooner. the covenant would have been in eluded in it, the chief cause of con troversy being thus removed, ratifi cation could have been effected within three months after signature the country, now could have been at peace and congress could have de 1 voted the last nine months to the v. ...v - .11 I Mr, t. It. 1 1VQLF. 'He had the powers of the gray dent so deeply deplores. The presi-1 he candidates are finding in Chi- dent also might have been in good cago, The falling off of percentage of increase in New York's population is due not wholly to decrease of immi gration. Babies come high in the metropolis. The first snowfall of the winter is reported on Mars. This may account j legislation. lack of which the presi- for the chilly atmosphere some of One of the eternal truths is that the destruction of beauty can never be repaired. However deft and lov ing the solicitude, however deep the chest of consecrated gold, the glory of its first form does not return. For cathedral and master canvas, once shattered and rent, are as visualized ideals that have been ravished, and the dreamer who wrought their be ing is in the slumber of ages. True of mortality's masterpieces this is of surpassing truth in its application to the unstudied art of nature, whose Infinite conception set the larches on the flanks of the hill and strewed the turf with larkspur and anemone, with ladyslippers and shy violets These are material beauty, and for no other causes, though a myriad practical reasons may be ascribed does the casual stranger enter Ore- umoer woir. My son fell sick. 1 went to Shouite's teepee and argued with him to let my boy alone. He ran at me, brandishing his toma hawk. Then I shot him four times and went away from that place." The jury freed a Yakima Indian last week, when he gave the fore going narrative of why and how he had slain the tribal medicine man. The deliberative processes of the jury doubtless were swayed by the easy assumption that it was not the busi ness of white men to administer jus tice in an affair that concerned the redmen only, much as Portland citi zens have observed that, after all, the strire or tne Chinese tongs and the resultant obsequies are the intimate personal perquisitiea of the tongsmen so long as the bullets do not flv wua. men, too, Shouite, if he laid claim to the malignant magic of the gray umoer wolf, died most exne umousiy wnen ne was but taken at his word. The white man's liiuHoa though it may have skirted the law. wouia appear to have functioned with rare discernment. The plea of the medicine man's slayer reads as a paragraph from some dim archive of aboriginal superstition. Savagery strides forth from. it. and the howl of the lobo antedates the arrival of Captain Gray at the mouth of the Columbia. It is so remotely romantic and elemental health, applying a vigorous mind to solution of the problems of recon struction. The railroad law is the product of close inquiry into a most intricate subject, was passed within the limit of time set by Mr. Wilson for ending government operation and Is gen erally approved by those whose wishes ought most to be considered those who use the railroads. The shipping law deserves the same praise. Both of these laws were sup ported by democrats as well as re publicans in congress, but the presi dent implies that nothing but imper ative necessity of some new laws re strained him from vetoing them Congress has acted on his request tor legislation to remedy the high cost or living, tor it continued the food control law in operation. He had an opportunity under that law to buy the Cuban sugar crop at a price wnicn would have insured the con Burner sugar at 14 cents. Owinir to his neglect to exercise the power given mm by the congress which he maligns, we now pay 28 cents and may pay more. The same law gives to the attorney general drastic power to prosecution of profiteers but he has used it so ineptly or so discrim inatingly that the worst offender"! the speculators who Intervene be tween producer and consumer t-n l""1' cauci almost is tempted tolree anu lne oniy cnecK to rising icgaiu wilii aurairauon the fictional 1 prices is appnea Dy the federal re ..Wllif. r 1 ., . . . 1 serve ooara, uui its remedy strikes When all the power of streams big and little In this region shall be de veloped the heating problem will be settled. "White coal" is the stuff. aoiniy 01 tne newswriter whose fingers pounded it out. But it is court record, undoubtedly, and stands as the proof that the unusual is con tinually pouncing out upon the or- tron on pilgrimage and- remain to dinary build a greater state. The wild and ; for that matter, there are nu in terested in the royal collection of arms as keeper of the armory. The Scotch were the chief supporters of the Stuarts after the civil wars in Eng land, and as the royal collection was dispersed after the death of Charle I. it is quite possible that one of hi pistols found its way into the posses sion of the Scottish family. Under the caption "A Forgotten War. Prophecy." the Springfield Re publican reprints the following, writ ten by a military expert and pub lished in the Army and Navy Journal of August 7. 1914: "The present war In Europe will not be the last war, as some are rash ly predicting. As long as racial prej udice exists and until there is uni versal brotherhood wars will occur. The treaties that will be signed at th close of the war will last until th vanquished 'have gained sufficien strength to attempt to regain thei lost honor and territory. The wa will be a short and decisive war. More men may be killed in battle, but th percentage of the casualties will scarcely be larger than In forme years. Owing to improved methods o sanitation and In training soldiers, th number of deaths from disease will be reduced to a minimum. The devel opmenls of modern implements warfare will shorten the time of th war and reduce the amount of su fering and financial loss. Within a year Europe will be in peace again, and in a few years will have recovered almost entirely from the effects of the war. lit will not be so terrible that in another crisis like this nations will refuse to go to war." A. W. Norblad. known to his Intl mates as Al, and to the rest of tne state as Senator Norblad, has prom ised a certain Portlander one of the amed Columbia river salmon all done up nice in a cake of Ice for more ban a year, and each time he comes o Portlands he starts making ex cuses about failure to aenver. nesiaej representing Clatsop county in the state senate and watching over the destinies of fish legislation in the u oner branch, the senator takes time now and then to practice law. One of these days when a new congressiona district is carved out of the coast counties his supporters say he will graduate up with "Pat" McArthu-r and W. C. Hawley. And it is also witnin the realm of possibility that one of these days he is going to ship that cebound salmon to Portland. He leit for home yesterday. CITY'S SHADE TREES MISTREATED j Bad Franinar and no Pruning; Give Streets Unkempt Appearance. PORTLAND, June S. (To the Edi tor.) Portland needs a haircut. As a man Is untidy, unkempt and unat tractive with long, untrimmed and unbrushed hair, so also docs Portland appear along many of her streets in some of the residential sections of the city. Go through the streets from Third to Sixteenth; drive in the old section from Couch to "Overton; along Broadway and through Irvington; take a little spin out Belmont in short, go Into any locality where trees have reached, or are attaining maturity. Along Holladay some branches hang low enough to brush a child's head. At Nineteenth and Belmont one -tree throws a branch nearly across the street and it hangs so low as to almost touch the top of a car. Then, there is the other extreme. The Portland vogue in pruning maples is is little short of ruthless butchery. Instead of eliminating merely the superfluous branches and pruning the maples in a shapely manner, useful as well as useless branches are sawed off square. Result: Resemblance of an inverted multiple-tined pitchfork with handle stuck in the ground. Last evening 1 observed such an example of tree butchery in front of a very handsome residence where there was a broad beautiful lawn artistically set with ornamental shrubbery. It will be at least two years before these trees regain their beauty and use fulness, being in the meantime only eyesores. Several years ago a prominent citi zen of Portland commented on this aspect of our city's residential streets; but It appears to bo generally unnoticed, at any rate, ignored. This year we expect many visitors from eastern cities. Easterners are accus tomed to shapeliness of their trees at all times; and this condition Is obtained through sensible and regu lar, not spasmodio and violent trim ming. Visitors from eastern cities will be quick to observe our thought lessness and carelessness in this par- cular. When foliage exceeds the root sup port, the leaves turn, wither and rop in summer and early autumn be cause the roots cannot supply tne requisite nourishment to an over abundance of leaves and branches Particularly is this true In such sec tlons as the upper stretches of Fourth nd Fifth streets. The pavements and sidewalks divert the rain and sprin kling water from the trees to the ewers: and houses being close to the walks, there is small open ground space through "which water can reach the tree roots. Most trees in Portland can be rimmed to advantage from three to five feet farther from the ground than thev are today. This will not impair, but Improve the appearanc of the trees and the attractiveness o the thoroughfares. It will permi passersby to view our homes; and a additional advantage will be a bette circulation of air. To appreciate this condition, go into the old part of town and note the tremendous mass of dense foliage too dense for beauty in the day and for health during th sleeping hours. A commendable ex ample of an attempt to bring one o our handsome grade school Dutioing into view of the public Is the recen pruning of trees in front of the Couc school. It probably is not an exag geration to state that Portland has hundreds of beautiful homes that visi tors to our city this summer will not be able to see because they will be obscured by untrimmed trees. We have had a "clean-up week as it pertains to garbage and ret use. Now let us have at once a tree-trimming campaign. A TRICU FRIEND. More Truih Than Poetry. By James J. Heatiga. I'm willing to give up my room for the Shriners during convention week, and I'm willing to cat at sec ond table like I did when a kid at home when we had an overflow of company, but you can t cneat me out of my bisr chair up here oy tne iront window of the lobby," insisted' one of the lobby hounds at the Multnomah yesterday as ho lounged about com fortablv reading the Sunday papers This particular guest at the aiuitno mah. who, by the way, has been mere for years, never starts the day right unless he can nave tne same easy chair at the same window each morn Ing for two steady hours. It s a dally habit with him and It nas oecome e strong that he couldn't finish the day without It. Kay uiarK nas proiuieu to place a "reserved sign on in particular chair during tne week. "I Intend to take a trip over into eastern Oregon and inquire into sal aries of all county ofliciais in ever countv of that section," said Jon Bell, state senator from Lane county who Is chairman of a special coimty salary committee of the upper legls lative branch. "Our committee i empowered to Investigate all county and state salaries and bdoui tne om thino- we will leave alone is our own The pay of a legislator is so blamed weak that It we attempted to uo any thine- with It would Just naturally li down and die." Senator Bell returned to his home at Eugene last night. WORTH A CHANCE. I have heard a lot of talk about a frame-up, That the bosses who control the G. O. P. Haven't got the least intention that the lads in the convention Shall get messy over who's tha nominee. Everything, my friends aver, has been decided. The proceedings will be featureless and tame. And there won't be any riot not a thing but peace and quiet But I'm going to Chicago just th same. It is possible they'll follow out the programme. And that ail will bo delightfully serene. Disappointing those who hanker for the turbulence and rancor Of conventions when T. R. was on the scene. It is possible as well that there'll be trouble. That the furniture may fly, and ink-wells whizz 1 a medley of dissension, and fm firm in my intention. To be sitting at tho ringside If there is. San Francisco. Tm Informed, will be symphonic. When the democrats go into session there: They'll give cheers, prolonged and nearly. lor the glory of the Party. And loud cries of mutual love -will fill the air. Though they haven't picked the man to tote the banner. They've a number who are fitted for the part; Not a cross word is expected when the ticket is selected But I'll be in San Francisco when they start. For Tve been to see convention from my boyhood; ' Some were mix-ups from the jump, and some were not; Some were slow to get in action, yet replete with satisfaction. And I've never seen a dull one In the lot. So, although I'm never keen for rail road journeys. And I'll have to hock my clothes to pay the fare. If I'm well enough to travel when the chairman slams his gavel. At the democratic pow-pow I'll be there. Little Affinity. Soap and politics don't seem to mix. m The Only Remnant. In a few weeks the one reminder that a democratic convention was held in San Francises will be Mr. Bryan's goat. Natural Ambition. A candidate is a politician who wants to be a statesman. (Copyright. 1320. the Bell Syndicate. Inc.) In Other Days. Better notify the coroner before trying experimental substitutes for gasoline, get a heavy policy and leave the wife and babies at home. Everything in Chicago Is -free" for delegates just now except drinks, and they do not count much in a maximum of 60 degrees. Falling temperature and rain helped the gasoline situation much yesterday. It was a poor day for joy on the roads. Tourists should not be stranded in this region for lack of gasoline. They are visitors and as much guests as anybody. Chivalry might enforce "no smok ing" in the Coliseum, but chivalry will be a lost dog in Chicago this week. It hardly is a crime to steal whisky from a bootlegger; It just shows acu men and enterprise. Mr. Bryan is running in the bet ting like silver in the market 20 to 1. the innocent with the guilty. in bewailing the failure of con gress to revise tax laws, the presi dent gives no attention to the essen tial facts of the situation. Experience with, the present war taxes proves punchboard. Never mind the thermometer. Tou'U see roses aplenty. - After performing a successful oper ation on Mrs. Harry Moires, wife of a Chicago hotelman. Max Thorek was asked by her husband what his fee would he. The operation having last ed 14 minutes. Dr. Thorek replied he thought $14. or $1 a minute, would be satisfactory. Mr. Moirs wrote out a check for U4.000. What's that for?" asked the sur geon. I'm making it J1000 a minute," re plied Mr. Moirs. "Saving my wife's life was worth it." Precept and Practice. The city man doth plant some seeds. Sufficient for his summer needs He thinks. He simply drops them in the ground. Then gayly knocks a ball around The links. He argues with-an air profound On how food products should abound; Then sinks A little fortune In the weeds. Which bawl him out. as ne proceeds. A jinx. PHILANDER JOHNSON. President Ulmanis of Letvia, a nation of 1,250,000 people whicn was corn of the great war, has lived in America, and speaks the English language with American vigor and slang. He worked on a farm in Nebraska, became a stu dent in the University of Nebraska and was later an assistant instructor I in the agricultural department of that Uneasy lies the head that owns alcoieKe. He is full of American ideas Mrs. S. Christofferson, the first onnun in Oregon to go aloft in a airplane, registered at the Imperia veKterrtav from San v rancisco. n Is the widow of Silas Christofferson nrec-on aviator, who met nis aeatn fatxr vears airo in an airplane acclden tin rhi-itnf ferson took her firs honeymoon trip with her husband in his own machine. J. S. Flint arrived at the north Portland yards yesterday with a car load of stock from nis larm near Junction City. He is stopping at the Oregon while here disposing of them. Sam Kozer, newly appointed secre tary of state and tne repuDiican nom inee for the office, was an over-Bun- day visitor with friends in Portland. He stopped at tne imperial. ne re turned to Salem last evening with John W. Cochran. Portland newspa perman, who has been appointed dep uty secretary by Mr. Kozer. Mr. Cochran takes over his work at Salem this morning. C. J- Calkins, well known orchard 1st and apple grower of the Hood River country, is here for a brief respite. With Mrs. Calkins he is a guest at the Multnomah. At this particular season of the year when' the city folks are trav eling down to get their feet wet In the "sad sea waves." A. C. Adams de cided it was time to come city-ward for a little rest. He is registered at the Oreiton from Newport, where, he reports, the summer colony of tour ists is just beginning to arrive. F.very hotel in Portland yesterday had Its full quota of Elks from As toria. The Clatsop county antlered herd were here for a big Elkdom do ings Saturday night and they used up all the spare rooms at all the down town hotels until they returned home by various ways during the day. John M. Dolph. prominent eastern Oregon stock grower and brother-in-law of the late George Perrlnger, Is a guest at the Benson from Pendleton. H. R. Edwards, who sells hardware to Tillamook county people, is regis tered at the Imperial from Tillamook. He Is here on a business mission. TO ORKftOJi. It was in April, with its rain-washed sky, I came to settle down in Oregon: The white fleece clouds above me sailed by. Benea"th the gleaming of a brighter sun. saw the blooming flowers, and caught the scent Of fresh woodlands and pastures, brieht and green; The ever-flceting shadows came and went. Weaving a spell o'er the beautiful scene. I saw Mount Hood with mighty tower- incr head Reared among the clouds, white with snow: Standing as a monument to the dead Historic age of long ago. I saw the valley sparkling with dew The Columbia rushing onward to the sea: A waterfall dashing down ward through A canyon, tinkling with melody. I saw a miehty circling eagle mount Into the uppermost realms on steady wing; Oh. mv poor pen cannot recount. All the glories of Oregon, In spring. CARL FRANKLIN BANUliKT. t C'nnse of Farm Labor Trooble. SHERIDAN. Or.. June 4. (To the Editor.) A recent editorial in The Orearonian on the "Food Situation blamed the high cost of labor more than anything else to the general exodus from the farm to the city. I think this is a wrong idea the real reason seems to be to me that the farmers are unable to nx the prices of their produce. The cost of production- when selling is never taken into consideration at all. He has to sell his products for what the other fellow cares to pay for them and buy the other fellow s stuff what he likes to charge for it. In any other business the cost of the article Is the very first consider ation and a profit the second, but to farm produce this does not apply for some strange reason. When the farmer gets the same deal as the city man you" will find the exodus will be the other way. ROBERT BUTLER. T-wenty-flve Yearn Ago. From The Oregonian of June 7. 1W15. San Francisco. Nineteen survivors of the ship Colima, which foundered n a hurricane off Manzanillo. arrived today on the steamer San Juan. Strawberries sold on Front street yeEterday at from 2 to 4 cents per box. An advance in price is expected to day, as the berries are now of good shipping quality. Flour Is quoted by the Albina mill at $2.60 per barrel. Some of the small millmen say there is no money in manufacturing flour at this price and some of the small mills may close down. At a largely attended meeting of citizens held last night in city hall it was decided to celebrate the rourth In a manner to eclipse anything seen here in several years. J. Aronson. a motion picture opera tor of Seattle is a guest at the Ben son. I and hustle. 11. Duvall. manager of a Spokane flouring mill, Imperial. Largest Cargo of Lumber. PORTLAND, June 4. (To the Edi tor.) What is the largest amount of lumber ever carried on a ship or steamer from the Columbia river? J. A. VERSTEEG. The largest lumber cargo ever car ried from the Columbia river was taken in June. 1910. by the steamer Knight of the Garter. It amounted to 5.023.000 feet. The British steamer Algoa, which called here in 1913, carried a larger cargo, but loaded only 3.264.OQ0 feet here, and the remainder at Eureka, Cal. Klfty Vran Ago. From The Oregonian of June 7. 1870. The seventeenth session of the Ore gon conference of the United Breth ren church was held at Philomath last week, at which appointments for the district were made. Bishop Gloss brenner of Ohio presided. Jacob Kamm returned yesterday by the steamer Moses Taylor from a tour of the states with his family. New York. Horace Greeleys Illness has assumed a serious form. Appre hensions are felt for his recovery. The republlcaon ticket was elected in Multnomah county yesterday by a majority of about 400. The majority for congressman is about 430. LAMENT. This world of ours, all full of bowers And rocks and shady dells. May be today all blithe and gay The next a dozen hells. The girls that smiled the hours be guiled And made the old world gay. Have either wed perhaps are dead Or else have" moved away. Now when I dine, I always pine Because the eats are punk. And when I drink, this new red ink. The kick has always shrunk- The weather's fair, bnt gas is rare. And getting rarer still. So I'll sell my bus to Gloomy uus Another bitter pill. Now how's a guy when the world's awry And drinks are kickless too. To have a time on days sublime I sure don't know, do you? W. LYSLE PERRY. Condon, Or. Smaller Freahet in Prospect. BATTLE GROUND. Wash., June 4. (To the Editor.) Will, you please let me know how the back water is ex pected to be this year? SUBSCRIBER. It all depends on how fast the snow melts in the mountains. Rainfall throughout the drainage area has been less than normal, so if usual weather conditions prevail, the sum mer freshet should be a little less than usual. Theater Managers Sboy. Baltimore American. "How was it that Miss Carol, with that fine singing voice of hers, could not get into musical comedy?" "I is registered at the j guess the managers thought it would Set lUU uau & ..itc, h. Birds Protected by Law. MILWAUKIE. Or.. June 3. (To the Editor.) In our neighborhood are two men who kill every robin and a small bird they call "cherry bird" they see; also several big boys who have "BB" guns, which carry quite a good size ball.' One boy said he killed five Sunday afternoon 'and when asked what kind of birds were they, said "Oh I guess they were sparrows." Will you state what birds, if any, may be killed, and to whom apply for protection for them? The only birds not protected by law are duck hawks, western goshawks. cooper- hawks, sharp shinned hawks, prairie falcons. English sparrows, great horned owls, cormorants, crow8 ravens, magpies and blucjays. Per sons found killing ether birds should be reported to any game warden or peace officer or to the fish and game commission. l.nxt Crnterboard Defender. WALLA WALLA. Wash., June 4. (To the Editor.) To settle a contro versy, please state when was a center board last used by an American craft as Amer'can cup defender in inter national yacht races. EX-MARINE. The Vigilant, built in 1893, to meet the Valkyrie II, was the last of ton American center-board racers. t- I i t: I, 1. - f i i 1 . i- - !' - - a I -i-