10, . , THE MORNING , OREGOXT A V. FRIDAY. JUNE 11, 1920 ESTABLISHED BY IIT.NKY L. PITTOCK- ' Published by The Oreronlan Publishing Co.. 135 Sixth Street, Portland, Orecon. C. A. MOBDEN, B. B. PIPER. Manaser. Editor. The Orezonlaa la a member of the Asso ciated Preaa. The Associated Press la exclusively entitled to the use for publica tion of all news dlapatchea credited to it or not otherwise credited In thla paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. enter to take our food and our wel come, and render payment by snarl ing: at the flar. Subscription Ratrs Invariably In Advance. (By Mail.) Pally, Sunday Included, one year 8'22 Pally, Sunday Included, six months ... 4.-5 Daily, Sunday included, three months.. 2.-5 Dally, Sunday included, one month .... .75 Dally, without Sunday, one year e.00 Dally, without Sunday, six months .... S Z5 Dally, without Sunday, one month ..... Weekly, one year. 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Across the economic sky, where the clouds are yet tumbled in tur moil, interested observers behold the silver rift that portends a return to normal conditions. It is the resur gence of immigration to American shores. Those who are watching it, with an intentness that comments upon previous anxiety, predict that the restoration of the influx, which ceased abruptly as Europe entered the war, will insure to this country the labor balance essential to the demands of production and the con tinuation of progress. Not that America Is crying an urgent call for cheap foreign labor, but that there Is work to be done and these are the hands to accomplish it. With the return of the immigrant the observ ers foretell a willingness to toil. During the first five months of the present year there debarked at Ellis Island, the national quay for a large proportion of our foreign arrivals and future citizens-, more than 150. 000 immigrants, streaming downthe gangplanks and into the province of freedom at the rate of 1000 each day. Ellis island cares for 80 per cent of the nation's immigration, and the stock whose sons become the builders and statesmen of a genera tion hence have made that port of entry synonymous with acceptance of American obligations of citizen ship. In 1919, as contrasted with the existing inward set of the cur rent, the total number of arrivals at all ports was a meager minimum of 141,132. During the present month the officials of immigration at Ellis island calculate that more than 50,000 citizens of foregin lands will seek sanctuary, via that port, in free America. It is noted that fully one-half of those who now are landing at Ellis Island are widows and children the flotsam of fierce tides of conflict and star'vYtion in Europe. Presumably they have kinsmen in this country ho, for all the scathing batteries of radical criticism directed against the land and its methods, conclude that the United States is a fair haven for them and theirs. Emma Gold man the Irreconcilable, the raging, the rebellious, wept in soviet Russia when she suffered banishment her tears impelled by longing for the breadth and freedom she had spurned. Theory and the truth of Russia were as alien as oil and water. War widows, of course, are not pro ducers in any calculable degree, but their coming to America is an omen of imperishable trust. The remaining 50 per cent of im migrants Is comprised of the finest type of laborer and artisan, it is said. Many are returned reservists of our allies, already familiar with the country and their niche in its needs. Here, too, is an expression of com mendation beyond price the return of men whose faith in our national institutions and opportunities has not been extinguished nor dimmed by the strong winds of war. With Europe and its experiments spread before them they chose the first and speediest course back to the land of heart's desire. As an aside in com ment, and fraught with singular im portance, it is observed that national prohibition is not serving as a deter rent to renewed and virile immigra tion though earlier prophets said that it would. Quite evidently the foreign-born are entering this coun iry m quest oi lortier and more .'genuine liberties than the privilege of thrusting their wages into the hands of bartenders. Faith in America, such is the read lng of the immigration chart. Not in a single year, perhaps, will we attain the previous volume of entrance, for the established record is that of 1914, when the gates swung inward for 1,218,480 immigrants. What dunnage of human iuspiration, of will to achieve, of ze.t for honest toil, so vast a concourse of humanity must have opened in the new home land! .That there entered with these virtues many of the plagues of Pan dora's ancient chest of evil, that alien faces rose to mow and gibber at the land that gave them homes and offered happiness, was the in escapable result of too lenient and genial interpretations of the immi gration requirements. Not that Amer ica did not profit by the influx as t i . . . , noi mat immigration was then undesirable, or has ceased to be, but that a careful winnowing of me cnan wouia nave attained more felicitous results. Scholarly, self assured, glib-tongued entrants, loom ing above the mass of peasantry, were orten the perverted Intellects of foreign sociological cults that list destruction and disruption as way millions on me march to Utopia. ; The literacy test, now In effect should be applied with rare diserim. ination to the renewed current of mood ana brawn and brain that i seeKs transfusion to the body of our imiiuu. x-iti- ueuer it were to r- ; celve a host of plastic candidates for citizenship, to whom the principle of j Americanism might be taught with trust in its assimilation, of candi dates lacking the sparkle and finish of foreign education, than that one crafty, cultured, university-bred hy ena of unhappiness and unrest should THE KEPT PRESS. The "kept" press, as Senator John son calls newspapers which do not admire him, is not kept by the in fluence of purposeful ownership or otherwise, from giving Senator John son a great deal of publicity pub licity of a kind and extent which his competitors for the nomination do not obtain. Daily there is an interview with Senator Johnson or a statement emanating from him on platform. organization, duty of delegates or something else. There is little or nothing from Wood or Lowden or Hoover or any dark horse on similar subjects. A kept press or an unkept press knows that the surest way to smother the political ambitions of an indi vidual Is to Ignore him. Yet Senator Johnson is not ignored. It is the other way round. Shall we say that the kept press which thus benefits the aspirations of Senator Johnson is poorly kept? Senator Johnson is a prime con vention news source. He has the Rooseveltian faculty of saying and doing things that attract attention. He also has Roosevelt's emphasis of expression, yet he lacks Roosevelt's originality. . It is hard to imagine Roosevelt applying to newspapers an epithet so greatly overworked in street-corner oratory, no matter how severely he wished to trounce them. It would have been something original and memorable. kept on strike for three months, losing $800,000 in wages, but "while they had asked repeatedly for a statement of the grievance upon which the strike was called, they had never been told by their union presi dent why they were striking." It In volved less than $2000 and its essence was a personal grievance of the pres ident against the operators. The industrial court is gaining favor. Mr. Allen says that "ten state legislatures and two constitutional conveAtions have already considered the Kansas plan." The idea is tak ing hold that an industrial dispute which cuts oft the supply of a neces sary commodity or public service is as truly an offense against the state as is any crime which the law re gards in that light. all that they actually earn beyond chance of question. If America were to start the process by starting the machinery, by relieving friction and by an example of industrial justice founded on individualism in contrast to socialism, it could not only save Europe but gain a rich reward. AN APPLE ORCHARD .MENACE. The appeal of the Applegrowers association at Hood River for "co operation in the drive against the apple tree disease which Oregon hor ticulturists call anthracnose is timely, and will be heeded without waiting for official compulsion in other dis tricts In which the menace exists. By whatever name it is known, apple tree anthracnose Is a threat against orchard existence; yet the method of combating it is so standardized BOYCOTTING SUGAR. that It is distinctly possible to keep We could get along with less sugar I It under control if it Is not probable than we are using, as a correspond- I that it will be entirely eradicated. ent suggests. In theory we need only j The principle is that of prevention. to remember that sugar was prac-1 Without going into too technical de- tically unknown in Europe prior to tails, it can be said that the sole the fourteenth century in order to I purpose of spraying is to make the be content to give up entirely this host, which is the bark of the tree, form of sweets. That which has I Inhospitable to the propagation of a been done can be done again. But new generation of the pest. The lat- there is a gap between theory and ter is propagated by spores after the practice. Having grown accustomed death of the old generation, and to our sugar, and being practiced in after the spores have found root in self-indulgence, it is a grave question the bark there are no measures in whether any attempt to organize a the light of present knowledge that sugar boycott would win. Its sue- are practicable for its eradication. cess would presuppose a higher form There Is theoretically a period in of social organization and a higher I which the older generation has died degree of self-sacrifice than are likely out and in which its progeny are to be available. I seeking only favorable ground In The early history of sugar in Euro- which to establish themselves. But pean countries is synchronous with in practice it is not possible to de- BT - PRODUCTS OP THE TIMES A PRIMARY SAFETY VALVE. The Scio Tribune and the Myrtle Point American find grievous defects in the nominating primary. The ob servant Tribune complains that the free-for-all phase permits too many self-selected and unfit aspirants to acquire nominations. The observant American finds fault because the pri mary is too exclusive it is confined to party members. The Myrtle Point newspaper would permit voters of any party or no party to participate in any party's affairs. The Scio newspaper proposes an advisory assembly, which is, of course, out of the question, as the republicans who once had one in Oregon learned to their sorrow. The Myrtle Point method of retrieving a system from failure is not altogether novel so far as primaries go, but it has not yet been suggested that Mr. Bryan, Mr. McAdoo and Mr. Wilson and their followers ought to be per mitted a voice in the present Chicago convention. But it is refreshing to witness the growth of interesting discussion of the primary's deficiencies. Admit tedly it provides no better candidates and no better officials than the con vention system, and when it does produce a conspicuously unfit candi date, alack and aday, there is no one we can denounce but ourselves. We offer as compromise for pri mary worshipers and convention re piners the proposition that a new public office be established that of political whipping boy, who will take the after-convention place of the boss, the ringster, the steering com mittee chairman, the trader and the member of the old guard. We pro pose, in short, ar paid officer for each party who shall be held responsible for all the missfires, misdirections and unsatisfactory results of tfre direct primary and be the objects of denun ciation, execration and oratorical ex plosion. The primary is too polite. Who wants to be confined forever to de nouncing an impersonal and unre sponsive system? Who dares to de nounce the public for its errors? Tet there ought to be a- safety valve. the age of discovery. It was ex-1 ploited by the Portuguese and then by the Spaniards, who introduced its planting into America. The first canes set out in Santo Domingo were termine this with absolute accuracy. wherefore precautionary measures should allow for a margin of safety. This is provided for in the Hood River injunction to include copper carried there by adventurers. But it sulphate in the July and August was some centuries before the people sprays. Copper sulphate is an an knew or cared much about it. Its thracnose repellant. There are an price was enormous and it was re- encouraging number of instances in garded as a cross between a medicine which thorough and persistent spray and a curiosity. Queen Elizabeth lng has resulted in virtual eradica used to munch an occasional stick of tion in a single season, raw sugar cane, but she knew noth- The social duty of the orchardist ing of the many uses to which the is emphasized by the eternal corn finished product is now put. At the bat against fungus? and other ene equivalent of about ten dollars a mies. The 'safety of all is literally pound, even .royalty was not likely to the concern of each in horticulture, keep an open sugar bowl. Not until The single neglected orohard may coffee and tea entered commerce did undo all the work of the most con sugar become widely popular. Beet scientious . caretaker. The highly sugar was unknown until Napoleon's organized fruitgrowing community at suDsiay made It possible. There is Hood River has shown how much an interesting print still In existence can be done by united action, but in which Napoleon is depicted as there are other localities which ought offering a beet to his infant son, the to prof it by Hood River's example, king of Rome, with the command: Those who have seen anthracnose at Eat it; your father assures you it work need not be warned of the is sugar. Imnftrative nfirpssirv of thnrmip-h and All me sugarless centuries prior to intelligent SDravinsr: others should about 1300 are proof that white men be educated, and the few who do can live without sugar. But to try not absorb the SDirit of co-ODeration to do so now or even greatly to curtail voluntarily should be compelled to consumption, would involve revolu- take such measures an are necessary lion in our wnole dietary scheme, for the safety of the industry. reopie aenied- tnemselves more or "cc.iu.., mn me wa.r was on. Records do not stand long now- tut it seems improbable that they Udays. The Calro-to-Cape long-dis win ue persuaaea to no so on a tance flight already has been put in nationwide scale in time of peace. second place by the arrival in Japan Our, annual consumption of eighty- of the aviators sent from Italy under nine pounas per capita. Dy compart- tne auspices of their government son wnn less man ten pounds a cen- Thcv crossed Asia Minor, northern s"' '"' io a naDit too nrmiy India, Siam. Anam, China and Corea u"u LU oe auanaonea on tne issue and over some of the route were in of a few cents a pound in the price. SELFISH REASONS 1 OR HELPING EUROPE. Sir Auckland Geddes warns us that. try as we may to keep clear of country whose inhabitants have never seen a European. Together with the recent French air expedi tion from Algiers to Timbuktu the voyage promises to solve a number of problems as to the behavior of THE KANSAS PLAN CATCHES ON. Hostility of union-labor leaders to the Kansas industrial court is domi nant at the convention of the Ameri can federation or La.Dor, dui tne court goes on from success to suc cess, has practically stopped indus trial strife in Kansas and has won respect and obedience from employ ers, workmen and public alike. Op position of labor-union leaders can be explained by the fact, that it takes away much of their personal power and tends to change the whole char acter of their organizations. They are now militant, existing to fight by means of the strike or threats to strike. With the strike eliminated by the court, radical leaders the militarists of the labor movement are deprived of their occupation and unions may become what Governor Allen calls "a more benevolent type of organization." These effects, not prohibition of strikes, probably cause enmity of labor leaders to the industrial court. Policy forbids them'to admit that to be the truth, hence their diatribes about involuntary servitude and about the sanctity of a man's right to quit. Their power is undermined by the intervention of the public in labor disputes as a third and para mount party, on tne ancient prin ciple, as stated by Governor Allen in an article in the Review of Reviews, that the state has "the inherent right to protect itself and its mem bers against anything that is preju dicial to the common welfare." The phrase about "a man's right to quit" does not truly describe the effect of the law, for it does not affect any individual's right to quit unless he does so in' concert with a number of others for the purpose of paralyzing industry until their demands are granted. Kansas holds that the in jury done to the public gives it the right to forbid the strike and to adjust the dispute. Most alarming to Alexander Howat, president of the Kansas miners' union, is the readiness of miners to take their grievances into court vol untarily in defiance of a decree of his "war council," as Mr. Allen terms it, to fine them $50. Any union or officer of a union who appeals to the court is to be fined $5000, but several unions have incurred this penalty. They do so the more readily because they find that the court promptly relieves them of wrongs which Howat's organization has failed or neglected to have redressed. Thus miners have been relieved of a dis count of 10 per cent If they draw their wages before payday, the court having ordered that only a small fee, sumcient to pay the cost of extra bookkeeping, be charged. . Opera tors had been ordered to sell powder at cost, but did not state the price. The court fixed a price based on cost. Miners can no longer be compelled to strike in order to satisfy some personal grievance of their union officers. Those at one mine Ua.d been. European entanglements, we cannot planes under varying conditions, and keep clear of European disentan- it will not only give us- greater glements which are the legacy, of the knowledge of the world but will war, for they are already roiling 1 bring perceptibly nearer the day the waters on our social beaches." when flying will be purely a matter l ine swen oi tne jt,uropean storm I of routine. The t rench flight also has caused the strikes and revolu- proved, as its promoters designed It tionary conspiracies of the last two should, that airplanes will be of years. If the total disaster which he practical assistance in the economic pictures should destroy European development of the desert regions civilization, the collapse w o u 1 d of Africa, as the other African expe strain all the many cords, spiritual, dition paved the way to opening the intellectual, sentimental, material, jungles to civilization by discovering which connect America with Europe, that they are spotted with natural and the falling structure would en- airdromes, which will make future danger that which we have built on I trips comparatively easy. this continent. , The situation on a grand scale is similar to that which exists at the beginning of a financial panic. In order to save themselves, banks are driven to support other banks and This not from a Nick Carter thriller, but out of a news dispatch by the ordinarily sedate Associated Press: "Bloodhounds were put on the track of thieves who stole Ca- great business institutions, for if each ruso's cash and jewels.- The dogs were to care for itself alone, all picked up a scent." And, we doubt would be dragged down in common not, they were very hot doss when Philadelphia Newspaper Figure) Out Reason for Delayed Letter. The other day a registered letter was mailed in Philadelphia, addressed to "Hotel Prince George, New York City." The letter reached its destina tion four days later. No actual knowledge is had of the route traveled by the letter. But here is the probable procedure, says the Philadelphia Public Ledger. An in vestigator doubtless made a special trip from Washington to Philadelphia to consider the case. Marked merely "New York City," without any state being Indicated, the letter was, of course, a source of bewilderment. All the New York cities in this and every country were looked up. At last the investigator decided to take a long chance and send the letter to a New York city which appeared to be lo cated In a New York state. With his staff of postal detectives, the Investigator followed the letter to New York. Every "Hotel Prince" in the city was looked into without avail. Next, each person in the direc tory answering to the name of George was put through a grilling investiga tion, but none claimed the mysterious missive. "But," objected a junior Investiga tor, "the envelope distinctly says 14 East 28th St.'" "Ah!" smiled the master mind, "but that may be only a blind." It was discovered that there had been a hotel In Boston called the Georgian. Detectives sent thither, however, searched in vain and came back discouraged. Despairing of ever being able to find the address or the addressee, the master mind was about to consign the letter to the waste basket, when' his private secretary hurried in. "Sorry to be late," said he, "but though I left a call with the. clerk at the Prince George hotel " With a glad cry the master mind snatched up the letter. "Here," he said to one of the office boys, "if you happen to be going downtown this week you might drop in at the Prince George hotel and leave this letter." No trouble is too great for the post- office department to take in order to insure quick and efficient service. e Representative Sanders of Indiana went up into Pennsylvania recently to make a speech, says the Cleveland Plain Dealer, and while he was in a meeting one of the local oracles was called upon to make an address. The oracle unwound his beard from the rungs of bis chair advanced to the platform and with great hesitancy said: I don't know that I can make a speech. (Pause.) There are many questions before us, however, which deserve consideration and extended discussion. (Pause.) One of them is prohibition. (Pause.) Some think it is right and some think it wrong. (An extended pause.) I'm not saying whether I think it is right or wrong. (Very long pause.) This I will say. however, and I am sure you will all agree with me: Prohibition has caused a great emptiness in some parts." That final statement broke up the meeting and the oracle escaped with out going on record for or against liquor. e Out of a clear sky and mingled with rejSbrts of the week's prices for eggs, the Ivmgsbridge Gazette, Dev onshire, England, has this to say about the present status of religion thereabouts: "Easter services in the churches were of the same character as in for mer years. In many instances the attendance at the services showed an improvement, while in others there was a slight falling off in numbers." Could anything be fairer than that? A royal decree orders the trans formation of the residence in Toledo of Cervantes, the famous author of "Don Quixote" into a national mu seum under the supervision of the department of fine arts. Protests have been voiced in every city in Spain against modernization of Cer vantes' house and many academies and art organizations demanded that its original character be preserved. Those Who Come and Go. ruin. Looking only at the material side of the case, destruction of Eu ropean civilization would mean loss of the market, for the largest part of our surplus products, and loss of the supply of many manufactures which we do not produce or cannot pro duce in sufficient quantity or at moderate cost. Trade between some countries of Europe has already re lapsed to the primitive system of barter, and our trade with that con tinent might return to that system if general collapse of ordered gov ernment came. That collapse would the cologne played out. We confess to a momentary thrill at the news dispatch announcing the appointment of John L. Considine as supervising federal prohibition agent for the Pacific department. But no, there are still a few of the old guard left. This Considine is John L., not John W. Those traveling men here next week are not to be overshadowed by what is coming later. They are the hot stuff hnvs" in their linA nnH sena a iiooa or retugees to our shores, like old Noah, he first excess-bag "-crciy OI me communist revo- gage man, they, will not mind the lunonary stamp Dut oi tne,. higher weather, either, oraers aristocrats who know no means of making a living, men of learning, scientists, business men of the highest ability, together with One experience it might be well to give young millionaire Van Buren in his fantastic quest for freak jobs is a session on the rockpile. The Greenhorn district Is too handy of access and the big gold discovery will not start a stampede; but the "stuff" is there. Democratic conventions have "de plored" and "condemned" from habit. A republican convention "has the goods." Colonel House says his forthcom ing trip to Europe is to be on "purely T peple wno wonId Drtn8 feeling that the colonel is not exag ...... ..M iner oi crazy eco- gerating in the least. uuuiiu mm puimcai ideas, 't ne strug gle Detween the classes which would have brought Europe to ruin would be transferred to this hemisphere. While the teds would strive to apply their theories of government and in dustry, tne whites would call for reconquest of Europe for civilization America nas the power to avert these possibilities by giving such help iu nurupe .as is wen within our power. If the war had continued another year, we should not have hesitated to draw far more heavily on our resources than would be nec essary in order to set industry in motion, provide enough food and clothing for the destitute to renew their earning power, stamp out the epidemics which are wrecking whole nations ano restore sound finance The call is not for armies and navies. Dut on a large scale, for the same kind of help which is given to stop a business panic o.' to restore a city that has been destroyed by confla gration If the resources of America should be combined with those of Europe for such purposes, those next fifty or sixty years of which Sir A. Geddes speaks might be made the most glo nous instead of the most, disastrous in the world's history. Imperfect as will be the after-war settlement In many respects, it will remove the worst, causes oi war ano will nave c,.nr niinnlno It. In rfSv. t.j i wi . . - . " """""rj vroveui tuiure thanks to Uncle Woodrow. nio. w l. i. ui txi i BucaL auciai con vulsions may evolve a system which I Short sessions and long hotel bills! so cipseiy approaches ideal Justice Thrifty Chicago! as to can iortn tne latent energies of workmen by securing to them I "We need more rain" Just now, It may be San Francisco will pay attention to the "lunger" in this dec ade. It paid Los Angeles. The plot of the stolen war stamps is reaching the mysterious stage that conceals a thrill. . The southern delegates are the real dark horses at the -republican convention. Taft will be in Chicago today, but not In evidence a, the Coliseum un less wanted. No use to look for. a dark horse until all the other candidates are stalled. When, say, a porter runs a luggage barrow against your pet corn, and you bark out "Confound you!" do you realize that you are consigning him to the place of pedition hell, in short? Those who are familiar with the "Te Deum" may remember that the last words are, "May I never be confounded." So well, the moral Is one of those obvious ones. Again, you may be hunting for a stud anything. You get cross, and: Where the devil is it?" you demand. Are you aware that what you are reallv savins: is. "Where the devil is it?" You are invoking, literally. the aid of his satanic majesty! You should be careful. The old country dame who ejacu lates "Lawks-a-mussy ! hardly real lzes that she is Litanlslng. Her ejac ulation is but "Lord, have mercy on us!" Our fighting men always swore terribly in Flanders." and. to take a mild example from a crop of unprlnt able ones, how many men nave "blasted" each other? If effect fol lowed the Imprecation, then well. you've seen a blasted tree? "Oh, dear!" is quite respectable, but it is really an Invocation of the deity. 'O dl mlo" (Oh, my God) ls,the origin of "Oh, dear." London Answers. While he was making his way about his platoon one dark night a sergeant heard the roar of a G. I. Can" overhead and dived into a shell- hole. It was already occupied by a private, who was hit full In the wind by the non-com's head. A moments silence a long, deep breath, and then "Good Lord,' Is that you, Barge T "That's me." "Thank heavers, I was just waiting for you to explode. A m e r i c a n Legion Weekly. . A little girl walked into a confec tionery, placed a nickel on the coun ter and called for an Ice cream cone. "Ice cream cones are 7 cents, little girl." the fizz clerk announced. "Well, then, gimme a "soda pop." "Six cents." "Got any root beer?" "Yep. 6 cents, too." The little girl sighed disappointedly and started out, leaving her nickel on the counter. "Here, little girl, you're leaving your nickel," the clerk called to her. "Oh, that's all right," the - child shouted back. "" "It's no good to me lt won't buy anything!" Indianapolis News. "Following the Mountain Meadows massacre, we marched into Salt Lake City, and the town was absolutely deserted, all the Inhabitants baying been ordered to take refuge from the American troops," says Charles Becker, of Westfall. Or., who Is at the Imperial. "The train that was mass acred passed me on the road, travel ing fast, as it had horses and mules. This was in 1857, and the Mormons were pretty active. Two other gov ernment employes and I were cap tured when one of General Johnstone's suddIv trains was destroyed and we were held prisoners until spring. I was treated kindly enough and was kept at the ranch of a man who mar ried the eldest daughter of Brtgham Young. Brigham came and had din ner several times while I was there and he was very democratic He was anxious to know whether John stone had enough supplies to get him through the winter. The people were told that the American army expedi tion would be destroyed by heavy snows, but the expedition wintered in fine shape and in the spring he was ready and organized five volunteer companies among the bull-whackers. From time to time it was suggested that I leave and go to California, but an Englishwoman, who was a house maid, warned me to remain, saying that I was safe, but if I left the Destroying Angels' would murder me and bury me. The Destroying Angels were the fellows who did such jobs, according to frontier report, and I guess there was some foundation for the rumors. Anyway, there were Danites, and I met Rockwell; who was supposed to be the toughest one of the lot. He was a massive man. with a beard and wore his hair in little braids down to his shoulders. Before Johnstone went into winter camp, the Danites burned the grass and "prevented the advance of the American troops. But. personally, I was treated with consideration when taken prisoner." ( "Labor is becoming more plentiful," says W. B. Dennis of Carlton. "A year ago we had trouble trying to find enough men for our sawmill, which is about 12 miles from Carlton. Now, however, we can keep a full crew all the time. The price of labor Is also dropping, and where it was $5 and $5.50, it is now $4.50 a day." Even though the bond market is slug gish. Mr. Dennis wants to see the highway commission proceed with finishing roads. He estimates that a mile of paved road has an economic value of $2500 a year and this en hanced value overcomes the drop in the price of road bonds. Oregon road bonds, the last Issue, are selling for about 5.50 per cent, as against more than 6 per cent for liberties, and 7 and even 8 for Canadian securities, so Mr. Dennis figures that Oregon is getting its money comparatively cheap. "For 20 years I've been on the road selling goods," began a traveling salesman at the Benson. "I've come to Portland, opened my line and in vited the trade to inspect and give orders, and I haven't received a sin gle order. I've never seen business so bad before. The only way I can explain the situation is that mer chants don't want to stock up I'll admit the prices have advanced over what they were last season because they think that something is going to happen and they don't know what it will be, but they don t intend Deing caught loaded up. Leaving Salt Lake City Saturday, H. A. Colohan of Seattle and George F. Stannard of Kalispell arrived at the Multnomah Wednesday, making the trip by machine. "As a whole. they report, "we found the roads very good. Coming into Pendleton irom the east over a mountain, the road of which we didn't know, and at night, we broke down and our lights went back on us. Well, we had to stay out in that wilderness all night the rain and wind. It wasn t tne most pleasant thing in the world, but we survived, all right. Mrs. Idah MoGlone Gibson, who is on the publicity stall ior tne a. Mitchell Palmer boom for the demo cratic nomination for president, passed through Portland yesterday. Mrs. Gibson, who was one of the two women who witnessed the signing of the treaty at Versailles, contends that Mr. Palmer is the logical man for the democrats to nominate and the only flv in the ointment would be for the republicans to nominate Gov ernor Sproul, from Mr. Palmer's state of Pennsylvania. "Sherman county will have a wheat crop of about 3.5uo,ouo Dusneis tni: vear. and at $2.50 a bushel. It will bring about $S.700,000 into the coun ty, declares R. H. Guthrie. "These are merely approximate figures, but they give some idea of the crop of Sherman county, the smallest in the state. The prospects are for a bumper crop and when it rained a few days ago the rain was worth $100,000 an hour. NAME -RHYMES WITH 'GAZELLE Washington Town at Last Gets Rid of Olfactory Spelling;, j NASELLE (Nasel). Wash.. June 9. j (To the Editor.) I want to tell some-: thing to the world. This Is what I want to tell: Our town is no longer "Nasel," of doubtful pronunciation, but "Naselle," thanks to Mr. Burleson, who has granted permission to spell our name so that he who runs may read and pronounce with no hint of a nasal twang. So now let travelers, commercial and otherwise put Naselle not Nasel on their maps. In case you are not acquainted with the whereabouts of this spot, where, nevertheless, "the hub of the universe sticks out visibly." let me tell you that Naselle is in the southwestern corner of Pacific county. Washington, and to reach It you take the steamer General Washington at Astoria and cross the Columbia - to Knappton, where you will find an autobus that will take you through a beautiful for est over a road that boasts more turns to the mile than any other road In America. By the time you reach Naselle (how I love to write the new name!) you are so filled with admira tion for your chauffeur that you would willingly pay a dollar instead of the half dollar which is his charge. Perhaps I ought to say that Naselle was named for an Indian chief who had a camping ground on the river which bears his name before the first white men came here, which was in the early '70s. Several Pacific county towns are so fortunate as to have names that preserve a bit of the old Indian lore. Nahcotta and Ilwaco are named for chiefs and Willapa -was the name of a tribe for whom the harbor, river and town were named. But to come back to Naselle which you will surely do if yqu have once been here please tell the world that the town and river formerly called Nasel are now Naselle. To help you to remember, please read my poem: Sonar to the River Naselle. O beautiful stream gently flowing for aye. Through banks of exuberant green. Thou lovely Naselle. Of thy praises I'll tell. While thou'rt gliding through shad ow and sheen. Through virgin forests of hemlock and spruce. Thy waters move darkly and strong. And the spotted trout leap. Or all quietly sleep. Where the silence is sweeter than song. Through thy fair glades, when the sea breezes blow. How sparkle thy silvery feet! And the willows bend near Thy low whishers to hear. And fling thee their soft kisses sweet. river of beauty when moonbeams fall down. On thy bosom expansive and fair, O river of dreams. When each shining wave gleams With a star gently cradling there. Dear river Naselle, I love thee full well. And I hail thee intrepid and free. For with laughter and song Thou art hasting along. To bury thyself in the sea. MRS. J. A. WHEALDON. More Truth Than Poetry. By James J. Montsrne. THE MOVIE HERO. I regret to be recorded with the knockers, I would rather be both generous and kind. But I've witnessed fifteen-hundred movie shockers. Which have fixed but one Impres sion on my mind. Though the villains sometime use the aid of reason In the setting of a movie-drama trap. Or the plotting of their bloody minded treason. Every hero In the movies is a sap! He will go to ruined buildings In the night time. When the " villain's trusty rough necks lurk about. And a simp would know that this was not the right time -For a man whose life was threa tened to be out. Do not think that he deserves a bit of credit For escaping from the villain's flashing knife. He is just a plain, pin-headed yes. you've said it It's the playwright who preserves his worthless life. He will go to make his fortune In the city Leaving lovely little Laura on the farm. Trusting blindly to the chivalry and Pity Of a villain who don't mean a thing but harm. She'd be kidnapped by this black moustached I a go. Who's devoted all his life te plan ning crime. And be on the seven-fifty to Chicago But the playwright brings the hero back in time. He will hock the ancient homestead of his parents. He will put a chattel mortgage on the horse. Both of which the crafty villain's base adherents Seize, the minute that the law can take its course. All the prospects of reclaming them diminish. Till the brave and able playwright comes to bat; He makes everything grow rosy at the finish. But the hero is a simp, for all of that! Big Opportunities. No wonder an office boy won't work for $15 a week when so man;- Wall street brokers will give him bonds to carry. ' N o Need of a Peace Conference Anyway the present political war will be settled in November without even an armistice. Increasing? the Shortage. Many solid-looking platform planks will be nothing but scraps of paper directly after the election. (Copyright. 1920. by Bell Syndicate Inc.) The Mountan Top. Br Grace E. Hall. SERVICE MAN'S VIEW OF CASE Wealth and Success No Excuse for Pardoning Henry Albera. PORTLAND. June 10. (To the Edi tor.) William Isensee in his letter printed in The Oregonlan says: "Henry Albers, an intelligent, ener getic, successful business man, who In a maudlin condition spit out some of the poison he bad swallowed for some time past!" Albers may be all that Mr. Isensee claims for him. I bave no doubt that he built up interests that were bene ficial, but was.it not done with Amer ican money and on American soil, and did not the Americans in this neck of the woods make it possible for him to accomplish what he did by their co-operation? If so. why should he be excused for voicing his German sentiments? Admitting that he was "in a maud lin condition," or in other words just plain drunk, at the time, that does not excuse the act. We were at war with Germany and it was up to every American to further the cause. to do all that was possible to stop a conflict that was menacing the liberty and democracy of the whole civilized world not to offer a fortune made in America with the co-operation of Americans for the defeat of the coun try in which it was made. This. I understand, -Albers did- I was not in this country at the time this happened. I had listened to the call of my land the United States and was on the other side of the Atlantic assisting with all I had (my brawn and brain) to defeat the beloved kaiser of Albers. I spent eighteen months in the serv ice in France, fifteen months of it where I .could see the operations of Albers' chosen people, the Huns, as they were trying lo defeat every ef fort of tha lli"S in their struggle for freedom from tyranny, while Albers was over here among my people wax ing fat from the profits of a business established with the co-operation of my countrymen, offering to use these same profits to aid the enemy. Today Albers is using his money to gain freedom from a just sentence Im posed on him for disloyalty to tne country for which the American ex peditionary forces fought, bled and died thousands or them maimed in battle or sick from exposure. In many cases men have been forced to aban don trades in which they were skilled and start anew, not strong men as thev were before the conflict, but men broken In health and body. It Is these men who would b-3 insulted were Al bers not punished. The least any American citizen of Portland or any place can do is to use every effort to bring Henry Albers to Justice and pay no heed to the fact that he Is a big business man. Let the law be the same for the rich man and the poor. ROBERT L MERRILL. 743 East Ftrty-ntnth street North. Patches of golden sunshine. Splashes of greenish shade. Patterns of lace and filigree Over the fresh sod laid; Fanciful frescoes painted On hillsides in bright array. While over the blue a cloud or two Drift leisurely on their way. Odor of earth fresh sprinkled With drops from the blue-rimmed bowl. Stirring of drowsy nature. Like the 'wakening of a soul. Murmur of pine and fir tree. Air that is spiced and sweet, 0,,a wonderful thing is the pregnant spring. Where the mountain and skyline meet. Bill Lyons, who insists that he is a former senator, and registers from Denver. Colo., checked out of the Ho tel Portland yesterday with the an nouncement that he Is going to San Francisco to see that McAdoo is not only nominated but elected as welL When not talking democratic poli tics, he is a traveling salesman. Those who imagine that Eden is on the Euphrates are mistaken. Eden is in Wahkiakum county, Washing ton, and is ten miles northeast of Astoria, Or., but to go from Eden to Astoria the Columbia river must be crossed in a launch, records A. Solka, at the Hotel Oregon. Mr. and Mrs. Jay Upton of Prine- ville are registered at the Benson. Mr. Upton was recently successful In his quest for the republican nomination for state senator in the largest sen torial district in Oregon He has no opposition. George H. L. Sharp of Boston, Mass. arrived at the Hotel Portland yester day to go to Hood River to look after his apple orchard. Mr. Sharp divides his attention between buying wool and raising apples. F. S. Bramwell, who tried to pry loose Dr. J. C. Smith of Grants Pass from his old seat in the state senate, at the Hotel Oregon. Dr. Smith will continue to answer the senate I Henry Albers and Dr. Marie Equl, h rolleall as per usual. I tries to show us that because , Henry Albers was a prominent business man F. W. Sumner, an Ironmonger or I he should be eet free. Everett. Wash., is at the Hotel Ore-1 T say he should not be set free. gon. In addition to owning the big I prominent business man or not. He iron works at Everett. Mr. Sumner is I'violated the law and should be pun- fond of shooting at and hitting clay I ished. We cannot have one law for One Law for Rich and Poor. PORTLAND. June 10. (To the Edi tor.) In reply to the letter of Mr. Issensee in The Oregonlan, I will say that he has a very poor conception of a violator of the laws. By comparing In Other Days. Twenty-five Years Ago, From The Oregonlan, June 11. 1895. Shanghai. The report of the total destruction of the missions at Cheng Tu. Kait Ting and Yoa Cho Pu in the recent massacre has been confirmed. Chicago. Eugene V. Debs and oth er members of tne American rtaiiway union will be sent to Woodstock jail tomorrow. A salmon canner says that the run of salmon In the lower river so far this season has been remarkable and that more fish have been packed than at this time in many years. The third car of strawberries will be shinned east from this city today. Good prices are being received and the market is firm. pigeons. ' Ivan Anderson of Skamokawa. Wash., arrived at the Perkins. . Miss Clara Bjornsgard. also of Skamokawa, registered at the. same place. Then they invested in a marriage license and joined the honeymooners. George H. McMorran, one of the gu,iding spirits of the state chamber of commerce, is at tne imperial irom Eugene to see how the drive is get ting on. Isaac Blann of Mitchell came to town with a shipment of stock and is registered at the Perkins prepara tory to returning to the range. Harry Wlgard and A. D. Anderson, well-known residents of Madras, Or., are among the Multnomah arrivals. the rich and one for the poor. If I remember correctly, Mr. Will iam Issensee was forced to buy liber ty bonds during the liberty loan drive. So we can easily see why the "holler" I comes from him. L. R. BABB. 194 East Thirty-fifth Street. Egss Now Used as Exchange. Exchange. Eggs, instead of coin, are used as change in the small towns of east Tennessee. One storekeeper from I Powell station, Tenn., says all his customers use eggs to make pur chases. So great has been the supply that in two days he gathered a total of 16,000. Eggs are hauled to the municipal market in wagons, as if they were potatoes. Only the wagon beds are well lined with straw and sawdust. Fifty Yeara Ago. From The Oregonian, June 11. 1870. San Francisco. A party of whites lately on a pleasure trip to Yellow stone Falls had their horses stolen by a band of Indians who were pursued, and while attempting to cross the Yellowstone on a hastily constructed raft were swept over the falls and drowned. The fire alarm yesterday was oc casioned by sounding a Chinese gong at the Joss house to call up a large bunch of celestials to take the steam er for the mines. The musical treat and festival given last evening by the ladies of the Con gregational church was a decided suc cess. New Oregon potatoes sold yester day at 40 cents a bushel. Four new books have been added to the public library. rtAMPLE SET BY EASTERN TOWN Sneer Hoycott Started In Connecticut L'rged on Others. BRIDGEPORT, Conn.. June i. (To the Editor.) Ten thousand families in the city of Bridgeport. Conn., are pledged to use not more than one pound of sugar a month for each in dividual until the price is down to 8 cents a pound. Let 10.000.000 families in the United States keep this pledge for one year and we will have 8-cent sugar. Won't you all. rich and poor, seize these earth - craven monsters and throttle them now at this opportune time? Press them all along the line If you will, but I beg you for the little children's Hke, hit the sugar trust hard. You will find It no sacri fice, but a benefit to your health. I am sending this earnest plea to one newspaper in every large city in the United States today. Let every one who reads It pass It along, to gether with a pledge, and the good work - Is soon done. Neither legisla tion nor any other power except the whole people can do it. The power i theirs if they will use it. JAMES D. FRASER. 1810 Stratford Ave. . Employment on Vessel. WEST TIMBER,' Or., June . (To the Editor.) To where must a person go to get employment on a ship go ing to Australia? Apply to sea service bureau. Con. cord building, Portland.