10 TIIE ttORXING OREGOXIAX, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1C, 1920 ' ESTABLISHED BY HENBV L. I'lTTOCK. Published by The Oregonian Publishing Co., lo.'t fixth Street. Portland. Oregon. C. A. MORDEN, E. B. FIPKR, Manager. Kditor. The Oregonlan is ft member of the Asso ciated Press. The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for publica tion of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In this paper and alio the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. ' Subscription Kates Invariably in Advance. (By Mail.) Tallv. Rundav Included, one year IS. 00 ally. Sunday included, six "months ... 4.25 nailv. Kunrinv Included three months.. 2.25 Daily. Sunday Included, one month 75 La)ly. wlihojt Sunday, one year .5.00 Daily, without nunaay. six months .... 3.25 Daily. withouSunday. one month , 60 Weekly, one year .........'..... 1.00 Sunday, one year .......... 5.00 t Rv Carrier. Dally, Sundsy Included, one year .19.00 Dailv. Sunday included, three months.. 2. Dally, Sunday Included, one month 75 Dally, without Sunday, one year 7.8' Daily, without Hiuday. three months.. !." Dally, without Sunday, one month .... .65 How to Keroit. Send p'oatoffice money order, express or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at owner's risk. Uive postoffice address In full, including county and state. rojttaae Rnlrn. 1 to 16 pages. 1 cent; IS to A- pages. 2 cents; 34 to 4S pages. 3 rents: SO to 4 pages, 4 cents: 6 to 80 pages. 5 cents; 82 to 96 pages, 6 cents. Foreign postage, double rates. Kaatern Business Off Ice.- Veree Conk lln: Brunswick building. New Tork; Veree eV Conklln, Steger building, Chicago; Vr ree & Uonklln, Free Press building, De troit, Mich. San Francisco representative, It. J. Bidwcll. WRONG WAYS TO HELP RAILROADS. The Interstate Commerce commis sion has evidently been impressed by the arguments that the proposed horizontal advance In freight rates la unjust, for it has granted further time to the far west to present Its opposition. The advance is unjust because it assumes things to be equal which are unequal. The pur pose of the advance is to Increase the revenue of the railroads to an amount equal to the standard return on Investment specified by the Esch Cummins law. The deficiency varies greatly in different sections of the country, hence varying percentages of increase in rates would make good that deficiency. Any excessive advance of rates would bear more heavily on the west than on the east and south, because of the greater distances that freight Is hauled and the higher basis or calculation from which the advance will start. The transcontinental roads originally charged a higher rate per ton-mile than did those of the east and middle west, because cost of con struction and operation was higher, and sparse traffic made the cost per unit of traffic higher. Only on a few staple commodities like lumber have these rates been revised to agree with the lower cost of opera tion and the greater density of traffic which now prevails, for this reason a horizontal percentage advance In rates would add greater burden to traffic in the west than in the rest of the country. The roads have in creased rates on structural steel from Chicago to the Pacific coast from 65 cents to $1.25 since 1916, and the percentage -would be based on this high rate, which has been more than doubled in less than four years. They have also raised class rates with the same effect. Justice demands that the percentage be calculated on the basis of conditions as they are now, not as they were thirty or forty years ago, when railroad development in the northwest was just beginning. In their applications for relief the railroads have ostensibly conceded the justice of varying percentages for three sections of the country, and they ask for a smaller advance in the west than in other sections, the percentages being: For the east, 30.4: for the south. 30.9, and for the west, 23.9. But in dividing the country into three regions they have thrown Into the western region two sections where the needs of the roads are not the same. In the southwest thirty eight roads have declared 23.9 per cent not enough. to give them the standard return, and they have peti tioned for 32.82 per cent. Examina tion of the returns of the transcon tinental roads in the northwest shows that the advances of 14 to 16 per cent would be sufficient to yield the standard return. Fair treatment to both sections requires that the in creases vary according to their vary ing needs. Not alone would an excessive ad Vance Injure the shipper and con sumer; it might defeat its own pur pose, which is to increase the net Income of the railroads. For exam ple, the steamship line which is be ginning to bring sulphur from the gulf coast to Portland might take return cargoes of lumber to New Orleans or Galveston for trans-shipment over the short rail route to the middle west, or lumber might make a return cargo up the Mississippi for the craft which bring coal from Pittsburg to New Orleans. If 24 per cent were added to the present ex orbitant rate of $1.25 on steel from Chicago, it might come by the same route. The railroads need to be care ful lest by charging more than the traffic will bear they lose It alto gether. Use of the canal route has just begun and abundant tonnage Is available. The tendency to use that route is already growing, and if traffic should be diverted io the water It would not readily return to the all-rail route. The railroads propose to advance freight rates alone, and to make no change in passenger rates or other sources of revenue. The effect is shown in the following extract from the Traffic World: Railroads In eastern territory estimate the need of an increase in all revenue at 31.1 per cent or 80.4 per cent in freight rates. Southern railroads propose to ad ZZ fre,Bht rf 30.0 per cent to provide 20.7 per cent larger revenues. The needed freight advance in the west Is put at 23.9 per cant to increase all revenues by 17 Why should freight traffic bear the whole burden? Why should not passenger traffic bear its share? For many years railroad men have said that passenger traffic was carried at a loss or barely paid its way. If passenger rates were raised to a point where they paid the standard return. It would better accord with good business principles and would give relief to industry. A the needs of the northwestern roads would be met by an. advance .of 14 to IS per cent In freight rates alone, it might prove that 10 per cent on freight would suffice if passenger rates were advanced in the same proportion The same principle mlsht be applied to different classes of freight, for some might bear a larger increase than others, which already, pay all that they can bear and let industry! live. Tne railroads should beware lest they crush some industries under a greater load than they can carry. and thus dry up their own sources of revenue. Adjustment of freight rates is an economic problem, which cannot be solved by simply adding a fixed per centage all along the line. It re quires consideration of the particular case, not only of each section of the country but of each industry and of each commodity, also of competitive conditions In both transportation and industry, which are now undergoing rapid change. SIX MONTHS IN JAIL. Six months of Jail is well designed to induce reflectiveness in the most haphazard mind. It was this' sen tence that Judge Rossman, of the municipal court, gave to a speeding motorist whose reckless career claimed a human life. Unless the prisoner is brother to the beasts, his soul sheathed in callus, he will have with him for company the memory of the man who died by his criminal carelessness. The whisper of regret win rise to the shout of self re proach, and Jthe fellow who once was the nonchalant pilot of a hurtling motor menace will stand before the bar of his own judgment a moral convict. Laws serve the best ends, if they are good laws, when the judicial au thority takes cognizance of the ag gravated nature of a particular of fense and applies the penalty with out stint. This man got the limit. even as he went. For the purpose of example he Is sufficient, if others will keep his case well in mind. Now that his lunacy for speed has taken its toll, and with pitiful thorough ness, his only service to the cause of motor sanity is to serve his term that others may take precantionary profit. A most unfortunate object he is, with blood-guilt on him be cause he would not heed the first principles of caution and the traffic laws. it is incomprehensible, as it is true, that motorists find speeding tne suDject for jest and count it a most felicitous day when they evade arrest, though openly violating the law. io any one of them, these un fuuiBucu oi tenders, may come a Dreamless, terrible moment such, as came to the man now serving sen tence. And the contrition of a life time will not retrieve the error or efface the memory. NOT AN TMTAS8K. Things really 'worth having are seldom dropped as plums from the tree of providence. Those who ob tain them are forced to climb, reck less of thorns and tumbles.' When they are won after this fashion their value is enhanced. They have been made more than ever worth while by work, an alchemic agent that transmutes effort to gold. It is so, doubtless, with thtj financial drive for the Oregon State Chamber of Commerce, which "has not gone for ward as speedily as the campaign ers would desire. If ever commer cial champions entered the lists in a good cause it is in this drive, and these are the men. That they have not lost heart through the vexations of retarded progress may be taken as assurance that they will crown their labors with success. The constructive programme of the state chamber calls for fin anHal brawn. Dollars recruited to its serv ice will work for the entire state, declaring dividends that will endure and multiply. The doner will waste his time who nicks a coin to see if ever it returns to him. For it win not directly. But indirectly, through stimulation of land settle ment, development of industrial proj ects, ana increased tides of tourists. it will come back with many others of the dollar family, to tinkle in the tin irom whence one went forth We've an obligation to be nractical. to judge investment by probability of return, to double the safeguards against unwise outlay. But to the piea ror state development funds the most conservative may listen with attentive ear and answer with liberal hand. State loyalty and sound busi ness judgment come to their r-on fluence In the financial cammim fnr the state chamber. No principal citv is greater than . the lands that H peyona it. And no state surname the self-imposed limitations of its citizenry, GENERAL PERSHING'S RETIREMENT General Pershing is to retire from service. In his letter to the secre tary of war he begs leave to lay aside i the uniform. "The assign ments tnat have fallen to my lot during recent years have been more or less important," he wrote. "It has long Been my desire to return to 11 t, n m mo. oeiore another year passes the man who directed Amer ica's forces in France will be simply a citizen, with the plain prefix of mister. By perpetual Donular hr vet, however, he will retain his mili tary ime, ror me custom of the pub tic win not admit a lesser rank. Was there a hint of stern militarv drol lery in General Pershing's reference to the "more or less important" du ties that devolved upon him as his military career drew to its close? America knows how transcenrlentlv important, those duties were, and it is nor empty chauvinism to hnnst that this wearied, grizzled veteran 1b or tne type that makes the land for ever safe from aggression or invuinn ne popularity of General Pershing uaa un, attacKed, in some degree uy men wno served under him. But to the majority of the American c-.it. lzenry nis record stands unsmirchori He was and is the first soldier of tne nation, who led their sons to death and victory, and the occasional rancor that lingers to upbraid him is but the natural product of times so troubled that all was not done wen, perhaps, because the course was rougn and unprepared. It has Deen said tnat General Pershing is i.no epitome oi military sever! rv a.nrl exactitude, and that his heart was callous to his men. Those who hav estimated the intrinsic attributes of nis cnaracter reply that the Spartan strain applied to himself, as well, and that American men in the field never possessed a finer friend. pnrt. land saw the) general upon the occa sion of a recent visit, when he had Deen mentioned for the presidency. j. ne city was . ted up" on military uigu.ta.rit-3, ana inough his audito rium audience welcomed him with spontaneous enthusiasm, it withheld an indefinable something essential to full tribute. The trouble was that t-ortiana people had heard the nebu lous stones then current. Yet Gen eral Pershing conquered Portland with a teai- surely a strange weapon for so stern a soldier. A little airl. whose father never came home from war, touchad his heart so surely that! the cold eyes filled with instant tears. The tribute came then, with noth ing lacking. Sorrow and service have been this man s portion. Destiny bereft him of his family circle in a peculiarly cruel and fearful manner. He bore that loss like a soldier, and answered America In an hour when his own grief had not dimmed if ever such sorrow wanes. "Black Jack" Pershing, soldier, going overseas with the fate of his country in his keeping - not a genius in tactics, perhaps, but a first-rate fighting man in every inch, of his lithe stature. He brought back victory. What more can be asked? In human hearts and na tional history there is a well-won place for Pershing. MR. BURLESON'S DEFENSE. Postmaster-General Burleson's re ply to the censure passed on him In the republican platform for- his bad administration of the telegraph and telephone systems during the war and for his disorganization of the postal service would have more weight if he did not quote in his support the very men who influenced him in his policy with regard to the wires. Mr. Vail and Mr. Carlton were the executive heads of the Bell telephone and Western Union lines, and had been working for years to extinguish competition and establish a monopoly. Mr. Burleson put them in charge of the wires and backed them In taking possession of the pos tal lines and ousting the officials of those lines, in order that all" wires might be operated as one system. That would have been a preliminary, from their standpoint, to private monopoly, and from his standpoint to government ownership, for which he has been working ever since he took office. By passing the law re turning the wires to their owners the republican congress defeated both schemes and established a claim to public gratitude for saving the coun try. from private monopoly and from Mr. Burleson's socialist policy. The postmaster-general's advocacy of a high maximum salary for letter carriers and his opposition to a hori zontal increase show that the great vice of his administration is incur able. He wants to hold down the average salary in order to make record for economy. The general advance of wages in other occupa tions and the great increase in the cost of living had left' the general scale of wages in the postal service so far below that of occupations re quiring equal skill, expert mce and fidelity and so out of line with liv- ng conditions that the best men were leaving the ervice in droves. Green hands were hired as tempo rary, employes at wages far higher than were paid to trained men and fficiency was seriously impaired. The situation demanded a horizontal ncrease, which Mr. Burleson con demns, but which the republican congress granted. Mr. Burleson and men of his type have Irritated government employes to the point of forming labor unions and asserting the right to strike, which would place the government at the mercy of its own employes. and therefore cannot be tolerated, While denying the right to strike, which Mr. Burleson has also denied. the republican party declares that the rights and interests of all gov ernment employes must be safe guarded by impartial laws," which is contrary to the Burleson practice. it has -proved its sincerity by the enactment of the pay increase for postal employes, which Mr. Burle son opposed, and by enacting the civil service retirement law, which secures a competence in old age and disability to old employes and leaves the government free ' to fill their places with younger, efficient men and women. FIGHTING THE PLAGUE. The brief news dispatch from Vera Cruz on Sunday telling of the deaths of two persons from bubonic plague will be interesting chiefly for its yet undetermined sequel, by which the capacity of the Mexican people for social action in a crisis may be fairly judged. The bubonic plague Is ter rible when uncontrolled but has rela tively few terrors for the enlightened community willing to adopt repres sive measures promptly and to pay the cost in temporary curtailment of minor liberties. In this manner in New York in 1899, when a case was received from Brazil, there was no spread of the disease because the federal authorities in . co-operation with city officials promptly declared and enforced drastic quarantine, and in Han Francisco in the following year, when bubonic plague was im ported from the orient and found lodgment in that city's Chinatown, it was practically confined to that area, in which forty-two deaths oc curred. England in 1899 escaned with four deaths, though a virulent case was imported from the East Indies. The result, when' comnared with about fourteen millions of deaths in a single epidemic in Europe of the middle ages, with the record of 86,000 cases and a mortality rate of o per cent at Marseilles just two centuries ago this year, is in itself a sufficient tribute to the sanitrv scientists who have been making con sistent progress for almost three- quarters of a century in their efforts to prevent the spread of disease. Though bubonic plague has a high rate of mortality, and derives some of its sinister reputation from the circumstances that it was called the "black death" 700 years ago, it is far better understood, for nimnu than influenza and a number of other maiaoies, and its specific germ has been isolated and observed in every eyeje of its development, while sun- pression has been shown to depend on the promptness and thoroughness with which anti-plague measures are taken. No-country whose health of ficials are alert and whose people are reasonably law-abiding need greatly fear recurrence of the terrible bu bonic plagues of the past. Whether Mexico, admittedly in a state more like anarchy than orderly government, win be able to cope with the situation remains, as has been suggested, for the ' next few weeks to disclose. Other important Latin American countries whose popula tions have a smaller Infusion of ab original blood and which have not been torn by revolution, have re cently made considerable progress in sanitary reform and stand a chance of excluding the disease now that they have been warned in time. That the increasing importance of meeting at their source some of the other diseases of filth and malnutri tion which are not readily combated once they have obtained a foothold is realized by health officials gen erally is Indicated by the action of British. French and American physi cians at a recent conference in Paris at which it was decided to leave no measure neglected by which cholera may -be . kept within its present bounds in Europe. American inter est calls for severely restricted im migration from the Infested districts- Arrangements which are reported to have been made for clearing all pros pective Polish emigrants through the single port of Warsaw, where their passports can be vised by respon sible American Inspectors, are-good so far as they go, but they should be extended to cover the entire bat tle area of central Europe. The newly organized Jugo-Slavian and other republics also must be required to assemble their emigrants at a few central points of embarkation for the same purpose. - Roumanian and Bul garian ports should be provided with quarantining and disinfecting facili ties on an adequate scale as a prime condition of permitting their pas senger ships to clear for the United States. An even more important, require ment, however, is one that has been made apparent only with recent knowledge of the part that animals play in the dissemination of disease. A point for the international health conference to consider at its session in Paris in October will be the ad visability of continuing quarantine restrictions, not only untiK existing human cases have been cleared up, but until there is time to have de stroyed the last rat and mouse in the affected area, as virtually was done in San Francisco in 1900. The world is still somewhat handicapped by the theory enunciated in The Hague international health treaty of 191 Z, to the effect that a quarantine may be lifted five days after the last human victim is reported as cured. There is ample reason for believing that this is too liberal, and tnat there are instances which war rant much more drastic "restrictions. One merit of the strictest possible quarantine is that it furnishes an incentive for the people of infected ports to co-operate fully with munlci pal and federal authorities in making eradication speedy and effective. Let all gather in convenient places and "make medicine." that the in jury to Mayor Baker's ankle shall speedily be healed, for the mayor's personality must greatly be In evi dence In the next ten days to come. Women dissatisfied with treatment at Chicago would better not appeal to ban Francisco. The average dem ocrat does not consider woman in politics whatever, though a few of them maneuver him. The lower Missouri valley is the warmest section of country this week, but this is corn weather and hot days are to be expected. The people are lucky to escape cyclones and tor nadoes. The democrats will , have a won derful chance If they only nominate the right man, says William J. Bryan Presume his ouija board has told him the right man should have the Initials W. J. B. The Spokane iceman who inher ited $60,000 and an English earldom should be abundantly fortified against a cold reception by his British cous ins when he goes to claim his estate. A jury of his peers having found Dempsey not guilty, 'one may sup pose the proper thing for the cham pion to do will be to "trim" Mrs. Dempsey on favoring opportunity. The Spanish government has -issued an edict against speeding. First intimation we've had since Santiago that any Spaniard anywhere was exceeding the speed limit. In the coming campaign we are likely to hear a good deal from both sides about 100 per cent American Ism, and very little from either side about 2.75 per cent beer. The price of ice is to go up at Hood River. Here is a chance for A. Mitchell Palmer to make a melt ing' appeal to the delegates at San Francisco. Having heard what the republican party thinks' of the democrats, we shall now be edified by what the democratic party thinks of the re publicans. The Louisiana house settled for a time hope for the suffrage amend ment. When will women realize nothing can be gained from a south ern state? There will be two "fights" next week, arranged for convenient nights. part of .the general programme In which nothing has been overlooked. Wilson Is doing seme hand-picking toward the close of his reign. Yes terday he chose a Princeton man for minister to Greece. Portland settled down to the 8 cent fare yesterday, while Seattle is talking of a 10-cent fare to visitors and casuals. Election day In November is Hard ing's birthday. Some celebration that! Why did not somebody call tne turn. 7 The school election comes as the city Is tiring for the week and unless stirred and spurred many will neglect io vote. The Seattle bootlegger who offered to sell to a "sparrow cop" tackled the wrong "bird." which is unlike Seattle. There Is hardly as much as a piece of string for a clew to the Dubinsky mystery, put u it is a murder it will out. mats proper, Mr. Wells. Start the winds up the compass and the weather win take care of Itself. Chinooks are entering the river and visitors will eat fish that is roy- , I . It, ' 1 1 tu iu tiuuuiy as wen as name. , Mr. Burleson seems to think the republican party should have pinned a goia meaai on tiim. Wireless men in London threaten to strike and wireless men can. hit uncer tne guareu The nickel still has its uses but more dimes are needed. ' BY.PRODCCTS OF THE TIMES. Tie Bible Still the World's. Beat Sel ler, Judged by Every Standard. The Bible is still the world's best seller, owned by more peonle and actually read by more people than any other book ever written or com piled. This is its record year after year. The figures of the American Bible society show that in 1919 that society printed 3,400,000 volumes, of which 350.000 were complete Bibles. 650,000 were complete New Testa ments and 3,600,000 were portions of the Scripture. During Its existence of 104 years It has printed 140.000.000 volumes,' of which 6.678,301 were New Testaments distributed to soldiers of our and other armies. This Is a great record, but there are other large pub lishing houses which isue Bibles in various sizes and styles, chiefly in the United States and England. These add hundreds of thousands to the number of Bibles and Testaments is sued every year. No book in all the ages has stood the test of popularity and run the gauntlet of criticism as has the Bible. Profound volumes of criticism of the Bible from those who reject it ut terly as or divine origin and find great fault with its contents, to those which are of the "higher criticism" and give it varying degrees of humaa and divine origin, have been written and more or less read, but they are scarcely to be found anywhere save on library shelves or In the window of second-hand bookstores. The Bible has outlasted them all and will conn tlnue to do so, because It gives some thing to suffering, groping, tolling humanity which they do not. No other book of any religion or of no religion can compete with It in what it offers to the human soul, and there- rore notning can crowd It out or take Its place or make It void so long as man gropes in darkness and tor row and needs a hope and help which human words and hands cannot give. Regardless of belief In the verbal in spiration of the words it contains. there is that in the Bible which gives rest and peace and hope to the human soul, and a book which does that can not be destroyed. St. Louis Globe Democrat. The brilliant Robert Underwood Johnson, who has been appointed to the Italian ambassadorship, was one day condemning "high art." He said: 'The artist who self-consciously turns .out works that the general pub lie can'.t understand well he deserves the rebuke that Carlyle once got without deserving it. "Carlyle was showing an old Scotch friend his sound-proof room built on the top of his house In Chelsea. The old fellow examined the room whence nothing from the outside could either be seen or heard, and then said with a chuckle: man, ivs grand! Here ye may study and write all the rest of your life and nobody be one bit the wis er.' " Knickerbocker Press. A certain young man, extremely well known in club and sporting cir cles, was so stirred the other day by tne thoughts of the nationwide drought that he sat him down and composed, a lament, which he fondly believed to be poetry, and called it "A Cocktail." He sent It to a weekly journal with a wide circula tion among society folk and the edl tor appreciated the value of the young man's name as a contribution, also the value of his contribution. The "poem" duly appeared and then the proud author received a communt cation bearing the letterhead of-the paper. Ah, my check!" he thought, and hastily opened, the envelope. Sure enough, there was the check and i note, which read: Dear Sir: A man of your expert ence, of course, knows what a cock tall is worth. We inclose the regu lar price." San Francisco Chronicle. Sir Auckland Geddes, the new Brit tsn ambassador at Washington, was a splendid athlete in his college days. and excelled at rugby. T. P. O'Connor, the brilliant Irish journalist and politician, is now the oldest member of the house of com mons In point of service. Arnold Bennett, one of the highest paid authors in the world, was struggling lawyer before he turned to literature as a profession. A legend has grown up that Georges Carpentier, the European champion pugilist, now touring America, worked In the mines In his native town of Lens. This Is incorrect. Carpentier Invested his savings in the mines of Lens before the war, but he began life as an office boy. Rocky Moun tain News. It is estimated that the gross yearly Income of moving picture theaters In this country is about 750 million dol lars. In 26 years' time the public has been educated to spend this huge sum. There are 15,000 theaters, with a total seating capacity of eight million. This year 1200 more theaters will be built at an aggregate cost o 72 Viillion dollars. San Francisco Argonaut. a . The following appeared a few days ago In the State Register, Springfield, IU.: Many are the stories of Henry Ford and his automobile, but HiMs boro is relating what is called th best of the season and the facts in the ease are true. It happened In one of the leading churches of the city that the pastor took for the text o his sermon, "Better Church Attend ance." The pastor held that the au tomobil had taken more people away from the church than any other thing. He concluded with the exclamation "The Ford car has taken more peopl to bell than any other thing that can mention." .Whereupon an old lady in the congregation began to clasp her hands and moan: "Praise - the Lord! Praise the Lord!" "What's th matter?" asked the pastor, to which he replied: "The Ford never went any place It couldn't make the round trip and I'm sure that all those people In bell will be back.- So praise the Lord!" a A rare and splendid collection of 92 drawing by old masters, owned by Lord Lansdowne, were sold at auc tion In London recently. These were a. remarkable find, having been dis covered at Bewood, after having bee put away and forgotten tor many years. They were probably purchased by the third marquis between 1810 and 1830, and include works by Cas- tague, Holbein, Rembrandt, Van Dyke. Poussln, Guard! and Boucher. One of the Holbeins was In the collec tion of the earl of Arundel, who was buying works of art to the time of Charles I. Those Who Come and Go. "Here is a sample of the courtesy shown strangers," said one of the T. P. A. visitors. "I knocked the rubber heel off my shoe going up in the elevator last night. It was five minutes-to six, and the shoe simply had to be fixed. I inquired of several bootblack stands where the shoe could be repaired, and one chap directed me to a repair shop. When I arrived it was after 6 o'clock. The man behind the counter looked tired and cross. I asked him to attach the rubber heel, and he refused. 'I've been worked to death and should have left here an hour ago,' he de clared. 'But.' I explained, I am a stranger in your city, here attending the- convention, and I have an en gagement tonight and this is the only pair of shoes I have.' Give me the aeel and shoe.' said the man. and in minute he had the heel on again. As you're a stranger.' said he. T won't charge you a cent.' So I gave him the best cigar I had In my pocket." Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Silkwood are honeymooning at the Imperial. Mr. Silkwood la a T. P. A. who makes Portland his headquarters The bride, Maude Elizabeth Whitmore. of Aurora, Nebraska, arrived at 7 o'clock Mon day night and was married within an hour. It was a trying day for the groom, however. When he ap plied for his license, he was told about a physician's certificate, and it was two hours before he could find physician In an office, and then he had to go back to the courthouse, present the health diploma and re ceive the license from the cupld in charge. Then, -after the bride-to-be arrived, Mr. Silkwood had to hustle around, to flna a minister, for It appears tnat most or inem were away from home just when he wanted one most.. "Riding from Condon to Arlington. yesterday, the country looked as beautiful as the Willamette Valley ever did, owing to the soaking rain we have been having." says J. E. Crowe, of Condon, at the Imperial. There will be a great wheat crop In our county this year." Mr. Crowe has about finished his new hotel and will have the opening around the middle of July. Except for the cur tains, shades and carpets, everything In the place has been made in Oregon, The gasoline shortage is noticeable In Gilliam county, continues Mr. Crowe, for the boys who used to chug into town two or three times a week In their gas wagons are now riding In once a week on horseback. and are conserving the gasoline for the farm machinery. While his friends were planning a big wedding breakfast for him in Condon yesterday, Phil Newman and his bride were at the Multnomah hotel. Mr. and Mrs. Newman stole a march on their friends and will prob ably have to par the consequences when . they return home. Some 13 years ago Mr. Newman arrived at conaon from Erin. Now he is a wealthy sheepman and one of the few who sold his wool this year at a good rtgure. while other growers were holding off, a buyer made a price to Mr. Newman and he accepted it on the spot. Getting married is likely to rattle anyone, and yesterday at 3:45 I. M. Mr. Newman, In the midst of receiving congratulations. remem bered that he had forgotten to eat breakfast. w. E. Earnst of Waldport. Or., is at the Hotel Oregon and Is in no hurry to return home. Waldport Is typical ocean village, on the shore of beautiful bay, and there Is more sea food available at Waldport than at almost any other coast town in the state. Waldport Isn't much of a Dlace for summer vacationists because it Is I difficult to reach, but going south from there to Yachats a vacationist I will find all the scenery, game, fish and agates desired. The forest serv ice has decided to Improve another mile of the road to Waldport. If the visiting Shriners starve for meat next week it isn't the fault of William Gross and Clarence Edwards of Condon. Mr. Edwards brought four carloads of cattle to Portland yester day, and Mr. Goes escorted three car loads. The shipments will come In handy, as Portland will have to serve many extra meals every day next week. If 75,000 visitors come, as ex pected, it will mean 225.000 extra meals daily. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Marks and fam ily of Canyon City and Mr. and Mrs. William Schroeder, also of Canyon fltl, m A t n n ... TT 1 3 . the Imperial. Each family needed an individual car. They report that the gasoline shortage is not as bad as the roads. Mrs. Marks is the daughter of E. P." Gray, pioneer sheriff of Grant county, and Mrs. Schroeder Is the daughter of John Blake, a pioneer merchant of Susanville, Or. Mrs. Macgenn and daughters, of Empire City, Or., are at the Perkins. Men. Macgenn Is the wife of the skipper-bard of the steamer Rose City. To get to Empire City the traveler must go from North Bend and the route is over planks laid end to end. in two narrow strips, for otherwise the wheels of a machine would sink in the sand. "There doesn't appear to be a gasoline shortage In the backwoods," says George H. "Kelly, member of the Port of Portland commission, who returned home from an outing trip yesterday. "I was 60 miles back In the woods, 25 miles beyond Oak Ridge, and bought gasoline without trouble. When I arrived at Eugene I found gas available." F. J. Miller gets to Portland from Albany pretty frequently. If It isn't road work that commands his atten tion. It is chamber of commerce duties, or business for his iron works. At present the excuse for coming to Portland is that he Is grand sentinel of the 'grand chapter of the Order of Eastern Star. J. R. Clinton of Astoria. Is mingling with the crowds in Portland. Mr. Clinton was born in Astoria and says that his family were there so far back that they had to 'help dig a channel in the mouth of the Columbia so the expedition of Jack Jacob Astor could come in-and establish the settlement. "Berry" Wann, who used to be an Instructor at the Oregon Normal school, breezed into Portland yester day after an absence of about 15 years, more or less. He Is now an Insurance agent at Oakland, Cal., and Is here attending th Kiwanls conven tion.. S. L. Newell, a stockman of "Madras. Or., Is at the Perkins, having brought a shipment of stock to feed the visitors next week. J. R. N. Bell of CorvaIlls. who has been chaplain for the grand lodge of Masons in Oregon for a quarter of a century or more, is at the Im perial. Sam Mothershead of Burns, one of the democratic stalwarts, is in town to attend the festivities, accompanied by Mrs. Mothershead. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Deaper and Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Collohan, motored from Yakima. Wash., to the Hotel Portland, on a business trip. AMERICANISM OP" CONSTITUTION rreeflom to Rime Is Essence of Lib erty. Saya Republican Candidate. Warren G. Hardin In address before Ohio bociety. Certain fundamentals are unchange able and everlasting. Life without toil i.ever was and never can be. Ease and competence are not to be seized in frenzied envy: they are the reward of thrift and industry and de nial. There can be no excellence without great labor. There is no re ward except as it Is merited. Lowered cost of living and increased cost of production are an economic fraud. Capital makes possible while labor produces, and neither ever achieved without the other, and bu..i of them together never wrought a success without aenlus and management. No one of them, through the power of ) great wealth, the force of knowledge, or the might of great numbers, is "kbove the law, and no one of them shall dominate a free people. There can be no liberty without se curity, and there can be no security without the supremacy of law and the majesty of just government. In the gleaming Americanism of the con stitution there is neither fear nor favor, but there are equal rights to 11, equal opportunities beckoning to every man, and Justice untrammeled. The government which surrenders to the conspiracies of an influential few, or yields to th intimidation of the organized many, does justice to neith er and none, and dims the torch of Americanism which must light our way to safety. Governmental policies change, and laws are altered to meet the changed conditions whloh attend all human progress. There are orderly pro cesses for these necessary changes. Let no one proclaim the constitution unresponsive to the conscience of the republic We have recently witnessed its amendment with less than 18 months intervening between submis sion and ratification, with some man ifestation of sorrow marking the fundamental change. It promptly re sponds to American conviction, and is the rock on which is bullded the temple of orderly liberty and the guaranteed freedom of the American republic The insistent problem of the day magnified In the madness of war and revealed In the extreme reaction from hateful and destroyed autocracy to misapplied and bolshevlst democracy, like the pathos of Impotent Russia, la the preservation of civil liberty and all its guaranties. Let Russia ex periment in her fatuous folly until the world Is warned anew by her colossal tragedy. And let every clam orous advocate of the red regime go to Russia and revel In its crimson reign. This is law-abiding America! Our American course is straight ahead, with liberty under the law, and freedom glorified in righteous re straint. Reason illumines our onward path, and deliberate, intelligent pub lie opinion reveals every pitfall and byway which must be avoided. Amer ica spurns every committal to the limits of mediocrity, and bida every man to -climb to the heights and re wards him as he merits it- This is the essence of liberty and made us what we are. Our system may be im perfect, but under it we have wrought to world astonishment, and we are only fairly begun. firk riGinufa in the old day, Mr. Colics TTss Strang Recollection of Deep Mad and Bard Work. PORTLAND, . June 15. (To the Editor.) As one of the real old time members of the Portland volunteer fire department I was very much interested In reading the very enter taining sketch of its early history, with much of which I was personally conversant, as published in the maga zine section of the Sunday Oregonian. While I do not claim to bo the oldest member of that department, I will state as a matter of fact, that I was a member of old Multnomah No. from 1857 to I860. We first had the little old Vaughn tub, after which we got our new machine which was heavy draught and a man-killer on the brakes. Frank Goodwin was our first fore man and Brooks Trevett, assistan and secretary. Later on A. B. Hal lock was foreman and. If my memory is correct, Joe Buchtel assistant. recall, among others, as members at that time George L. Story, A. L. Davis. Steve Skidmore. Joe Bachman. C. L. Ripley. Henry Leraine and Abe Stuart. It was no picnic to run with the machine in those days, when tbe streets were not paved, and often knee deep in mud. A portion of the time I ran with the hose and It was no uncommon thing to be called out, perhaps on a false alarm, on a Sun day evening, when a fellow had on his Sunday-go-to-meeting clothes pre paratory to taking bis best girl to church. After running a mile to the fire and unreeling 500 or 1000 feet o hose in tbe mud foot deep, and reeling it up aga'n and hauling back to the station, at the expense of a good suit of clothes, he was neither in presentable shape nor pious frame of mind to attend the evening services. I recall an Incident: Returning from Vancouver on the steamboat one very hot day, I heard the clang o the fire bell Just as we were landing at the dock. Losing no time. rushed post haste to the engine house at Second and Oak streets. The fir was in the old California house, on Second near Morrison. There wer only six ot us to pull tbe old machine out and a few more joined us on the way. It was a very hot day and an extremely hot old fire and we were very short handed. We worked like Trojans for two hours in. the awfu heat and as usual, about the time we got the fire out, the shirkers cam flocking In to be In time for roll call, and being fresh themselves they got hold of the ropes yelling "shake he up boys," and started on a big run for the engine house. Of course, w who had pulled the engine out and put out the fire, "were all in," and when we reached the engine hous a. number of us collapsed. Such were some of the experiences of pioneer fire life. JOHN W. CULLEX. 733 Fourth street. Error In City Founder's Name. PORTLAND, June 15. (To the Ed Itor.) In an article entitled "Rose Festival Falls on City's 75th Birth day," in The Oregonian. mention made of Amos L Lovejoy as one of the founders of the city. Mr. Lovejoy's name was Asa L. Lovejoy. This error I have noticed several times lately in articles about the early history of Portland and also occurs In the history of Oregon by Eva Emery Dye. Amos L. Lovejoy Is a son of the founder of Portland and was not born until several years after the city was founded. Asa L. Lovejoy also had a younger brother named Amos L. Lovejoy, but who never was in Oregon. A. C. GOWDY. 261 Blandena street. ) . Citizenship and Realdenee Abroad. WIVLOCK. Wash., June 15. tTo the Editor.) John Thompson, born in Canada and a naturalized citizen of the United States, went back to Can ada in 1906. remained until 1919 and did not register with the United States consul. Does he lose his citi zenship in the United Ststes? A CONSTANT READER. Failure to register with a. consul while absent from the United States does not forfeit one's citizenship. More Truth Than Poetry. By James J. Montague. A Chang of Heart. I mind that In the days of old. A certain spite I used to harbor, A certain grouch I used to hold. Against my soft voiced friend, the barber. He knew that I despised shampoos I always savagely repel them H knew that tonics I. won't use. And yet he'd always try to sell them. He'd talk about my thinning hair. That tactful people do not mention: He'd make a bald spot here and there A subject of verbose attention. And every time the barber shop Became a bit subdued He'd say, "Tour hair la c-rav on inn For half a dollar I can dye it." How often I have longed to rise. in a burst or Indignation, Pour down his throat his dopes and ayes . And thereby end the converasf inn But when a razor's poised above "ne 9 neck a blade of deadly keenness . fs best to be most careful nf A temper that Inclines to meanness. But now my barber's on a strike. iiy disposition is more mellow: do not hate. I rather like The kindly, gentle fina-ererl fellnw He clips my hair and gives me shaves. tsui noids with me no more com munion: And rm rejoiced because he eaves xiis conversation for the union. Loklna; Oa. Russia hasn't been admitted t league of nations, but she knows where all the knot holes in the ' fence are. s Especially In Campaigns. An altruist and his money ara mm parted. s Tbe Open Season. Crows fly high In convention time. (Coprrlrbt. 1SC0. by Bell 6yndleat Inc In Other Days. Twenty-five Yearn Ago. From The Orea-onian of June 15. lsng. Seattle In the first of ths roast championship baseball games played nere yesterday tne Portland Amateur Athletic club defeated the Seattle Athletic club. 17 to 1. Congressman W. R. Ellis of Hepp- ner, accompanied by his wife and son, is at the Perkins hotel. The Protestant Episcopal conven- tlon of the diocese of Oregon com pleted Its labors yesterday, after a session of two and a half days, and adjourned. The O. R. & N. will run a special coach Monday for the benefit of Port- and Elks who will visit Cascade Locks. Fifty Y ears Ago. ' From The Oresonlan of June 15. 1S7V Washington The present consump tion of wood in the United States Is enormous. In a single year the loco motives consume $56,000,000 worth of wood and 150.000 acres are cut an nually for railroad tics. The grand lodge. A. F. and A. M.. will meet next week at Astoria and excursions to Cape Disappointment and Fort Stevens are on the pro gramme. Dr. Glissn will soon commence work upon his brick block at the corner of First and Ash streets. Mrs. F. F. Victor, author of "The River of the West." returned last evening from a tour up the Columbia nd snake rivers. FR.E-WAW KKKICIKN'CY' ABNORMAL Competitions for Jobs Forcrd Men to Work Beyond Their Strength. COTTAGE GROVE, Or, June 14. (To the Editor.) Rarely Indeed do I read the editorial page of The Ore gonian without finding Interesting and valuable information on one. or more often several, live topics of the day. The editorial on "Doing Justice to Labor" is a splendid example of the service an editorial page may render. It should be read by every workman and employer In the state as an agent for clarifying the indus trial situation. But there is one phase of the ques tion I have never seen discussed. The. "pre-war efficiency" of labor was, to some extent, the result of highly un desirable conditions. Business was In a bad way and low returns to both capital and labor had curtailed pro duction to the point that there was not enough active industry to keep labor occupied and the competition for jobs was keen. Many men, driven by the needs of their families, worked beyond their strength to hold their jobs while other men hung around waiting tor tne pace to compel men to fall out and leave an opening for them. Let us sincerely hope that conditions will never again force labor to a full 100 per cent of "pre war efficiency." Most worklngmen take a pride In doing a good day's work and with sturdy American honesty try to earn their pay. Men who claim only 60 per cent or 60 per cent efficiency from their employes will do well to start a reform around the office and maybe they will discover that the trouble is close home. Management Is half the game. OMER MOORE. Waaea of Employe Who Quits. WAUN'A. Or.. Juno 15. (To the Ed itor.) A. says that when a man quits his job the company can withold his pay for three days. B. says 24 hours and C. says that the man has to re ceive all that is coming to him Im mediately. Who is ris?ht? A SUBSCRIBER. When an employer discharges an employe or where the employment Is terminated by mutual agreement wages earned are payable immediate ly. When an employe not under con tract sees fit to quit all earned and unpaid wsges are payable Immediate ly, provided he has given three days' notice: if such notice has not been given such wages are due and pay able three days after he quits. When employes enter upon a strike wages earned are not due or payable until the next regular payday, but must be paid in 30 days if the regular payday does not fall within that time. The law for the foregoing is chapter 24, general laws of Oregon, 1919. Secret Service Positions. PORTLAND, June 15. (To the Ed itor.) Please inform me in reference to getting an appointment with the secret service and to whom I must apply. WILLIAM ANDERSON. Write to Chief of Secret Service. Treasury Department. Washington. D. C. Qualifications for Chrlstealsg. Louisville Courier-Journal. "We want some girl to christen this ship." "What are the qualifications. Gov ernor?" "Almost any girl will do who has a bottle of champagne."