8 THE . MORNING OREGONIAN, SATURDAY, JULY 17, 1920 ittcrrtthrjS 9nt jpmutn KhTABLISHKD bl HENRY I- PITTOCK. rubl:thed by Th Onionlia Publishing Co. lo5 bixth Street. Portland. Oregon. C. A. UUSDEN. B. B. PIPER. Manager. Editor. Th. rtraannl.. la a mtTh- of the ABSO- cuiea tresa. l no abwcwmw eic.uaively entitled to tho use lor p-' ic- . . . i ...diiM M it , i iuu ui au hvwb u iic. - - or not otherwise credited In tht papr and mlo tb local news published herein. Al ngbta ot republication of special dispatches herein are alco reserved. I the plain people their heritage of . Daimler'for his gas engine, the quest sport. I takes us no further than to 1834. For example, there is Dr.-Horna- tCarl Benav whose water-jacketed cyl day's. suggestion that license fees ' inder engine jeally made the automo- fcubacrlut-an iUta Invariable In Advance. By Mai!.) Iaily. fun day included, one year .... .w Lally. fc-unday inclutled, six months ... ;-J-o Daily, tun day included, three month. 225 L'sily. Sunday Included, one month .... ' Umly. without Sunday, one year 6.00 . ini.i wunoui Minuiy, six monine .... - l'vily. without Suaaay. one month .... JJO Weekly, one year .................. -Jr bunday, one year ..................... 5.00 By Carrier.! Iaily. Sunday Included, one year 2'S2 I'ully. Sunday Included, three months.. 2.2S lally. Sunoay Included, one month .... l'aily. without Suntlay.one year l'aily, without Sunday. thTee month.. l-5 ' Lai:y. without Sunday, one month 63 How to Remit. Send postofflce money order, express or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at owner's risk 1 i vat nnatofflce address In fllU inrliiin ...tontv anri I a Postage Kates. t to 18 paces. 1 cent; 18 to 1J pages. 2 cents; 84 to 48 pases, 3 . - r. . K.i . a. A .. .a Alt tn M I paKea. 5 cents; 82 to 9 pases. 6 cent. - Pureisn postase, -double rates. Kaatern BUNlneas Ofttce.- Verree Conk- lin. Bnrnswlrlt bulldlns:. Nsw York; Verree fc Conklln. Steger bulldln. Chicago: Ver ree ok Conklln. Free Press Dunning. u- Imlt Uh San. Vranfian. MnrMknUttlVft. ; R J. Bldwe'n. should be- increased. The license fee at best has never been advanced as a measure of protection, but as a means for gathering funds for prop agation and protective administra tion. It Is only In this guise that the direct license tax on anglers and hunters is at all tolerable. Quite sensibly the fee has been held down to a minimum, within the financial reach of all. so that sport may not become the vested privilege of the well-to-do, but the common pleasure of all. To raise the license fee to the point where personal economy would bile feasible, did not perfect this de vice until 1886., Compared with the sixty-four years that intervened be tween the atmospheric-pressure en gine of Neweomen and Savery and years from Watt to the present day, progress of transportation since the Invention of the internal combustion vehicle has been as the flight of the hummingbird to the crawling of the snail. It is interesting to recall that only twenty-six years ago last Fourth of July seven miles an hour was the au- Infamy of Germany's conduct has brought about that, however much the allies may disagree on other sub jects, they stand together against Germany. Delivery of coal as partial repara tion Is of vital necessity to both France and Italy. Owing to destruc tion of the French mines and to de- the steam engine of Watt, or the 151ficlent delivery by Germany, about lessen the number of licenses issued tomobile record, and also that about could have but one effect the ma- that time an attempt to propel a trlculation of poachers, a most per- strange motor" craft through the nicious result for any protective streets of Chicago was prevented by reform to attain. Lessen the bag the police. Practically all that has and creel limit If need be, shorten been accomplished in motor trans- the season and circumscribe the methods of taking game and fish, but leave the moderate license fee alone. It is one of the guarantees of a democracy wherein laborer and magnate have an equal standing. portation is recorded In the annals ot a quarter of a century. WHAT SILENCE MEANS. When asked whether prohibition would WHICn BALKM LAUGHS NOWt Salem, Oregon, is entitled to chuckle again over a sequel to its little pleasantry of a few years ago. when it proposed In a letter to the forty other Salenis In the United - A BROOD OF NEW PARTIES. Being a bolters convention, the third-nartv convention naturally gave : rise to two bolts. What else could be expected? The only thing that its several elements had in common . 1 1 V..k 1 MnkllAan avtl democratic parties are too conserva tive for all of them, but they repre sented every degree of radicalism . from the progressive of 1912 who has sinrA rnntinued to travel to the left. to the out-and-out Bolshevist, who wants revolution, red. terror and the soviet commune tomorrow. , With grief the forty-eighters dis covered that the labor party is com- rrKA rt vor Solsri nviKt ft- th&t it VlP- lieves In free speech for itself only and also believes n free confiscation and In free revolution In every other country. So they flocked by them ' selves, but deferred nomination of a ticket. The labor party was too socialistic for both the single-taxers and the non-partisan league, and the league was too socialistic for the singie-taxers, so tney eacn iiock uy themselves and ntmt a ticket each. . Out of this witch's caldron of ; political misfits emerge three new pa i ties farmer-labor, with Parley P. Christensen as its nominee for -. president; single tax, with Robert O. Macaulev: non-Dartisan league, with . Rfihnrt M. La. Follette. The fortv- eighters are off on one side, unde-' ;.' elded whether to make a nomination. There are thus 6ix tickets in the .' field, with a possibility of two more, : for the prohibitionists refuse to die as a party when their Issue is dead. ' These should be enough to satisfy - tho most fastidious political taste. -'. If La Follette should accept the ;, non-partisan league nomination, his ; career would end in a ridiculous antl climax. Beginning as. a republican : who fought the Wisconsin machine r until he smashed it, he then became the reform governor who forced through many generally progressive laws which set the pace for other . states. But he rapidly became more radical until he was completely out . of tune with the republican party. . and as a chronic candidate for the presidential nomination he was ; soured by disappointed ambition un . til In the war his radicalism degen erated into disloyalty. He has long been an incubus to the republican party, and it would welcome his - final departure from its ranks. J The convention of assorted radicals . ha? served a useful purpose. It has " opened the eyes of the parlor bolshe vists to the revolutionary and intol erant character of the self-styled aeienaea. it nas rorcea tne rarmer- muor crowa to snow now Bmau it ; really Is and how revolutionary are , its principles. Ta it free speech, amnesty and no sedition laws mean red terror for all others who seek the benefit of such alleged reforms; "democratic control of Industries" means frankly communism; "public i. ownership of public . utilities and . natural resources" means confisca tion or nnvate Dronprtv. for thr is ,.co suggestion of compensation; de nunciation of the peace with Ger- ' many means exoneration of Prus- sianism, and so on. The wonder is that any supposed intellectual could be deceived- lnto the belief that greater freedom "or more nearly Ideal justice could be won by the tri umph of such men, or that a party so incapable of conducting its own affairs could rule the republic. h. aoveo; cUT.T. V..T, .'X States that they change their names, custom to confine the speech to a dis-lin order to simplify the postal guide cusaion oi tn party pisiform. The plat-1 ana avoid future misunderstandings, Associated Press dissatch. Columbus. O.. I , B"" reiueiuuer uw neuieoun ih- Juiy -is. I dignation, and the seriousness, with So It is. So are both platforms. I which this suggestion was received One mav wasto rits tim in tmssine 1 " &aiem, jyiassacnusetu tne town it win do Dome in mina, woicn never what either platform would have said. If it said anything: but it Is no waste of time to surmise what a can didate should say on a vital subject, i he says anything. If he says noth ing,' there will be fruitful discussion as to what Is meant by his failure, or refusal, to say anything. Candidate Cox knows that he has tho name and fame of being wet. His record is wet. Mr. Bryan says he Is wet. Boss Murphy. Boss Nu gent, Boss Brennan and the other half of the restored Industries In the war zone are idle, while German Industries are in full operation ex cept where they lack raw material. If this condition were to continue, Germany would win one of Its war aims, which was to extinguish France as a serious competitor. Ital ian industry is under a like handi cap, and Italy, already . poverty stricken, is paying famine prices for American cqal. Britain's labor trou ble have reduced its coal output. so that exports have diminished when tht necessities of its allies demand that they be increased. But the in creased power of the German peo ple's party, headed by the captains of industry, is exercised to withhold coal from France and to use it for revival of German Industry. If the allies had weakened on the coal question, Germany would have won an Important point for which it fought the war. The interests of the United States in enforcing the peace terms is iden tical with that of the allies, for that Is essential to the purpose for which fought destruction of German military power and defeat of the ends for which Germany fought. No KEEPS HIS FEET ON THE GROUWDI Hardin c Tfo Miracle Worker. Bat Statesman of Common Sense. Takima Republic Even supposing that Mr. Harding Is a reactionary and a member of the ruling junta of the senate, whatever these expressions may mean, we think no one will have to stretch his imagi nation much to believe that If he had been president during the last eight Those Who Come and Go. burned a witch In all its history, but banged them. Instead. Now the census returns show that Salem, Oregon, has a population in 1920 of 17.679, which represents a gain for the decennlum of 8S8S, or 25.4 per cent, while Salem, Massa chusetts, has 42,616, whfch is a de crease of 2.7 per cent. Should the Oregon Salem go on increasing at the rate of 25.4 per cent per decen nlum, which it is not at all impossible IKlI If nrfll w.;ia I - Maw TT! bosses made a last-ditch fight for I , , !.' n. . . . 1 acbAiv, uamcoano i.i'ii Lilt uvo Lici ill v him because they looked upon him as wet. Candidate Cox purposes by hls silence to confirm that opinion which in the circumstances amounts to actual knowledge. What Is the reason? To the wets he will continue to be wet; to the drys be will hold out the promise of law enforcement. But can he ride both horses? It may be doubted, at the rate of 2.7 per cent every ten j ears, as to the probability of which we offer no prediction, it Is only a matter of a short while before our Salem will be the Salem of Sal ems. What then will become of the Mas sachusetts Salem's contention, in which, however, we take no stock, that "when anybody speaks of 'Sa lem.' the audience, be it two ears or Mr. Bryan is also ominously silent twccontinents wn', add -Mass.'"? for the present. SOCNOS LIKE A BCD. It may be true that population by itstlf is not everything In the making of a town. Otherwise. Salem in Brit ish India, with its 70.621 souls at the Harry McAllister, suave, smiling and as well-groomed as ever, is in town from Wallace, Idaho, on bis way to Seaside with Mrs. McAllister and their young daughter. A few years ago Harry McAllister probably knew more men In Portland than any other years he wouldn't have kept us out citizen and in 1912, when the Elk of war. He probably would have held their great reunion, he was the plunged us into war very suddenly after the Oermans sank the Lusltanla. That Is what Roosevelt would have done. It is what 'most anybody' but Wilson would have done. If it had been done the war would have ended in a hurry, and. it would have cost the country but a small fraction of what It did cost. W hen the war was over Harding as president would not have gone to Europe to settle the affairs of Eu rope, but he would have picked out a commission of men such as Root, Lodge and Taft and given them lnr structions to make peace with the nemy. H probably wouldn't have had a league of nations covenant to I arrive submit to the senate after the peace conference was over. If he had it would have been a document separate from the peace treaty. The treaty would have been ratified without de lay, and the senate, exercising its judgment In the constitutional way, would have approved or disapproved the league idea If that had come be fore It. All this would have been done months ago and the nation would have been well on the way to a set tlement of the questions raised1 by the war. Its president would not, per haps,' have been a world leader, anx chap who had to plan the details. Later Mr. McAllister was a candidate for heriff and was nosed out.- "It was a good thing that X was defeat ed," admitted Mr. McAllister yester day, "for it taught me to save my money." For several years Mr. Mc Allister has been In the mining busi ness In the Coeur d'Alene country. The weather around Wallace is now so torrid that the stock exchange has closed, and as Mr. McAllister is a stock broker he decided to .do what everyone else in Wallace does who has money when the warm weather seek a cooler climate. Zig Zag dosn't appear on hotel reg isters very often, because the few people who live at" Zig Zag when the snow Is gone, rarely come to town, but D. B. Brown is an exception and he registered yesterday at the Hotel Oregon. Zig Zag is a spread in the road near the base of Mount Hood and takes its name from a stream which starts up In the snow. The PRESS OX NOWrVATlOX OF COX. Convention, Repudiating Own Work. Run True to Party Form. San Francisco Chronicle. The democratic convention ran true to democratic form. It proclaimed its trust in the president because it had to swallow his policies and platform precisely as he directed and then proceeded to repudiate Its own work by turning an entire dynasty out of office In a bunch. While the demo cratic party has taken over the Wil son policies, it has jettisoned Wilson and we can discuss policies and not personalities. And let us now pro ceed to grind the democratic party Into fine powder. Wilson Dynasty Frustrate. Detroit Free Press. In making Governor James M. Cox of Ohio the democratic nominee for the presidency the San Francisco con vention put an end to all plans for the establishment of a Wilson dynasty In the White House. The delegates' at San Francisco indulged in action that looked much like an open and deliberate repudiation of Wllsonlerm in all Its aspects. In spite of factional dislike of the nom inee, in spite of the Ill-feeling gen erated by the war of the ballots, the San Francisco convention has chosen the most formidable candidate With in its reach. More Truth Than Poetry. By James J. Montague. Platform and Candidate Harmonise, New Tork Times. The democrats enter the eampagin with a candidate worthy of the noble government, with state co-operation. I and compelling cause which they are is building m link or the Mount nooa i resolved snail trlumpn tnrougn tneir loop road from zig zag to oovern-1 victory at the pons. Their piatrorm Mrirtn. attlHl.nl V, a a ha.n m.a 4m this country of those parts of the ed nd U8eful adviser intent only on treaty which deal with Germany proper. Several clauses of the armi stice remain unfulfilled, and the getting American affairs back to normal basis. It is not hard to believe Harding United States has the right to end it would have been that kind of an ex and to send the armv at Coblens far- ecutlve, and we think it will be ther Into Germany. If the Germans "redJ by thoughtful persons that if y,- ,. .Ani,tr.Mn I w had had that kind of a man in the magine that the league controversy whlt() Hou tne natlon would have implies any weas-ening in American b.tn better served than it ha. been ment Camp and beyond. has been in progress years, but the contractors have to hustle during the few months when the road! is free from snow. The com- Dletion of the loon road around the mountain may be celebrated about 1922 or 1923 The work I their purpose, their candidate are in couple of I harmony. They seek good govern ment and sound administration at home, and such an advance toward the moral regeneration of the world as may be attained by the effort of brave and sincere men unselfishly devoted to the principles they profess determination to compel disband- ment of their army and destruction of their armament, they are doomed to a rude awakening. by the great apostle of the New Free' dom, who has always known more than all the rest of the people put together; who has always looked for ward and not backward; who has kept his eye on the man Instead of THS SEASON OF SURCEASE. I the dollar and has posed as the friend Vacations? The woods are full oflor the ideal instead of the practical. it is possible, according to this the ory, to have a president on the job who Is too great, too able, too much of a miracle worker. It's high time we were trying one who Is Just a plain, ordinary citizen who walks with his feet on the ground. If the fame of the bathing beach at Honolulu has spread to the continent. the fame of the Columbia river high way has also spanned the Pacific ocean from the mainland to the Ha waiian Islands. Having heard tour ists talk so much about the great Ore gon attraction, who declared that the Cox a Proved Vote-Getter, New Tork Sun. Governor Cox may be expected to put Into this contest both speed an power. He has shown himself a hard campaigner and a good vote-getter. It is no ordinary office-seeker wh can win and hold a republican seat The long-threatened, long-expect ed. long-ranee thunderbolt hurled by last count, would be the greatest Senator Johnson at Judge McCamant Salem of all of them. It is pretty leaves that gentleman still perched geuerally conceded, however, that cn his lofty eminence of anti-John- rate or progress is a pretty good crl son defiance. According to all the terion. Go-ahead-itiveness certainly rules he should have been annl- does count. And here the record Is hllated. But to our Inexpert eye it clear. A gain of 25.4 per cent on the looks as if the Jovian senator had one hand and a loss of 2.7 per cent missed. Or perhaps it was just a on the other tell the whole story. dud. Mr. Johnson accused Mr. McCam ant, delegate to the Chicago con vention, of betraying the people of Oregon. The betrayal consisted in the McCamant refusal to vote for Johnson for president, when the sen ator by a narrow plurality. It will be remembered had carried the Oregon presidential primaries. Judge McCamant has heretofore stoutly The time is nearly propitious for the folks up in Salem, Oregon, to renew their campaign. BRINGING GERMANY TO TIME. . Once more the Germans have tried to bluff the allies into letting them escape from fulfilling the terms of peace, but their bluff has been called. . Once more the allies have had to nrnv that on one Tkoint at defended his action, contending that ,eaBt they are united compelling ne nau urnen no pieage to accept tne Germany to execute the treaty. And people's choice (so-called) and that once more we mav extect that after he had publicly announced before Mn .e.rf,mer.t n.rm.n. will the primary that he would under no break u unlesa the allies take Bevere circumstances vote for Johnson. I n,iv moceoa rumanu- t;n Let us leave the argument there. noMa - tr,atv to h a srrar. of naner. since there is no blood shed and no great harm done.. Judge McCam ant might have voted for Johnson a thousand times at Chicago, and been joined by several hundred oth ers, and Johnson would not have been nominated. Some other con vention may some day honor Senator Johnson by making him its candidate. but among the thousand delegates at Chicago there were at least eight hundred who were agreed absolutely that their choice should fall on some other. The Johnson-McCamant Incident illustrates anew the ineffectiveness and executes it only if self-interest dictates or under compulsion. The present trouble which the allies are having with Germany is the plain consequence of the Origi nal error of Judgment in granting an armistice before Germany was fully occupied by the allied armies. Occupation of a strategic position liko the line of the Rhine and en forced surrender of the 'fleet and of large quantities of arms might have been sufficient guaranty with almost any other nation for the faithful fulfillment of terms of peace, but trift sallies riarl rtnrt ahnnrtant nmnf .a v. - . t . . : . i i I " .u .uu.u,i, U1 uo ptraiucauai pu- thlit it would not be enough with mary law. ui tne ten aeiegaies irom flermanv. The doctrlns, that min-bt Oregon no one was personally for ,.,nt ,, tn,t tret,.s arB mn only- to be broken had been Johnson. Mr. McCamant led all others In the state's poll, probably because he had said he would never vote for Johnson. Every candidate who " pronounced for Johnson was beaten. Why? Because the major ity of republicans were against them in Oregon. There are less favored states, of course, where the season of respite from endeavor finds the freed toller struggling with the perplexities of time-tables and rue fully scanning his bank balance. To such the gift of vacation Is even as the offering of a white elephant from some friendly rajah who wished to make his favor felt. Ob viously you cannot stable, the beast in town, and his tonnage speaks for fields and forests far away. But there are no such problems here. Vacation bides at the-very door of the city. and but an hour or so suffices to set its pilgrims down in some un rifled depth of ancient wood, with hills and streams adjacent thereto. or on the. alluring sands where Pa cific, comes thundering In with Its diapason of mysterious infinitude. So that's arranged. . Inasmuch as the best authorities agree that the vacation is indispen sable,, it follows that it possesses a value in accord and constitutes a treasure to be expended wisely and well. There are no set rules for the pleasurable passage' of time in vaca- tion-land, but there are certain ob Jectives that must be attained If the season Is at all successful. And the first of these are fresh air and exer. else, in copious portions. Anywhere will do, so long as there is space to stride or hills to climb, creeks to ford and waves to swim, for it is there that the calm, pervasive tonic of Dame Nature seeps into the tired tissues and builds them up in strength. - Whether it be a trout or a sunset, a hilltop or a huckleberry patch, tho specific programme of va cation is but an incidental' to the game of catching up with health and happiness. If all the league and alliances composing the third party should succeed In having their names In cluded In the party name, the latter will be longer than any of the many branches of the soviet government. But it will be appropriate, for the third-party men are chiefly noted for lavish consumtption of words. BUILDING OF RAILROAD URGED Wenatchee Man Argnes (or Contrac tion to Develop Present Resources. WENATCHEE. Wash. July 14. (To the Editor.) Noting the favor able newspaper articles regarding proposed Irrigation, and noting that a great many people of your state, as well as The Oregonlan are quite fa vorable to the project, let me add that It would mean 'millions of dollars, not only to our section, but to Port land and Oregon as well. The Intention of this article, how ever, is to cite your attention more fully to the already developed re sources existing here, which would be source of untold wealth to your people if a railroad were built from here to Pasco, a distance of 105 miles. There is a railroad line from here to the British line at Orovllle, with scenery on the road to the volcano I and win thricA over th nouse is insignmcani oj companauu, a party of residents from Honolulu arrived yesterday. to see tor tnem selves. In the group are Mrs. W. H Babbett. Miss E. C Babbett and H. C, Babbett. They are registered at the Hotel Portland. County Judge Malone. of Benton county, reports that "op conditions or mor( votes fTQm h,m ,n thf) coun' in nis section are gooa, annousu mo recent rains hammered down some of the fall wheat. Judge Malone Is particularly interested in the road problem in his county and is still hoping that the state highway com mission will make good on the prom ise made long ago to develop the Alsea road. governorship of a leading state whlc is normally, traditionally and fa mousy republican. Wetness Will Have No Effect. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. No doubt the wetness attributed to Cox will draw many votes to him but whether it will not take as man try, from the women especially. it least an open question. He is plain American citizen of a Judicla temperament and disposed to be f4 to all Interests. A PROTEST. The president vetoed a bill receatlr because its grammar was faulty. Tls the voice of the statesman; Just bark to bis clamor; "Look a' this, what the newspaper spills; a Us members of congress has got to learn grammar Or Woodrow will veto our bills. No matter how good is said bills tor the nation. He says he will turn 'em all down. " Unless they've got la what he calls conjugation. An' the adverb agrees with, tho noun. Now how can a fellow like I get elected. In a district where grammar is nix. And a guy ain't supposed, not even expected. To know no rhetorical tricks? Old LiOdge can converse like the col leges teaches. But say, it is different with me! If I was to pull that "to-whom" stuff in speeches, I would not bo no congressman. See? Tim Sullivan wasn't bo college pro fessor. But you notice he never was beat. His gang never tried for to pick, bis successor As long as he wanted his seat. But If Tim had have talked these hero tenses and cases. Addressing a meeting some eight. And you could of looked at his fol lowers faces, Tou'd seen something doing, all right. I've drawed lots. of bills for tho good of my city And nobody's lifted a hammer: They passed just as soon as they left the committee In spite of their help-wanted gram mar. And if Woodrow is going to call for declension. A member of Tammany hall. Whose monicker's one that I needn't to mention. Will get out of congress that's all. Proverb, and his cellar A Tool and his cellar are soon parted. Sunlight Won't Quench TnlrsC A lot of people are mbre Interested in hoarding moonshine than they are in saving daylight- (Copyright. 1920. by the Bell Syndicate. Inc.) In Other Days. Whatever Portlanders may think of the weather yesterday. Miss Cornelia J. Spencer contends that it isn't marker to what she experienced in Salt Lake City. Miss Spencer, who is at the Hotel Portland, has been attending the National Education as sociation convention on the shore of the great Inland sea. Joseph Patterson, newspaperman of Newport, who handled the publicity for the good roads amendment to the state constitution in the June cam paign, has deserted the cool breezes ot Yaquina bay and the crabs and Will He Make It m Referendum t Bufalo Express. If he (Cox) is going to carry out the original administration plan of making this election a referendum, a league of nations, without reserva tions,, he will need. to do more than offer a formal Indorsement of the president's favorite policy. He will have to go to the White House for his ideas and talk Wilson and the league of nations as Wilson himself would have done. thoroughly drilled into the minds of the German people for two genera tions until they have become inca pable of conceiving any other way of dealing with other nations. Noth ing but the presence of the allied Johnson. They were divided among ,.., in .,, ,.( ,,.. three candidates and in this way only all tne territory that was to be ceded J" '"7 camea yregon. could have convinced them of utter n it oe agreea mat u is proper defeat and of the uselessness of re for any candidate for president to Sis4anr or evasion. carry the state, and have its vote In The first pIea ,Jor peace havlng a national convention, by a plurality. been sent to-president Wilson, the it will also be conceded that it Is inference is that he was prlrnarily uo piuper to s.ect aeiegaies nosuie rB.ponslb,e for granting the armi- IVJ (.ailUlUBLO. 11 1E UllloVtr IU III (J GAME AND TISH PROTECTION. While streams and fields and thickets endure we will have with us always the occasional game or fish "hog," with his boast that he has taken more trout or slain more birds in a given period of time than any of his fellow sportsmen. That last clas sitication is- inadmissible, however, for by no elastic, easy courtesy does such a porcine plunderer gain admis sion to the fellowship of sport. It is with delight' and approval that the genuine sportsman watches reform ers target their shafts on the thick hide of these offenders, and looses an occasional arrow himself. For they are outlawed, both In law and theory. But Dr. William 1. Horna day, director of the New York Zo ological park, one of the foremost champions of game' preservation, is often carried far afield in his Heal, suggesting restrictions that are im practicable and undemocratic. Dr. Hornaday attacks the game and fish "hog" with spirited zeal, but he errs in assuming that the mass of collected evidence proves tho culpability of a majority of sports- . men. The realm of gun and rod in America is far flung, and Incidental violations of the sportsmen's code. though bulking huge In the mass, are far less frequent than one would imagine after perusing a hornaday Indictmtnt.. Not only is public senti ment a4.inst gluttonish game and fish slaughter, but the law is unl- .fcrmlv against it and is uniformly ' enforced. We nave attained an era of sanity in game and fish protection, and while the splendid work of pro tective propaganda should not cease there is little reason for alarm and apprehension concerning the sur--vival of-our wild fowl, big game and game fish. The errors of the past will not be resurrected, and though more stringent laws would In certain instances be advisable there is dan- candidate, unfair to the state, unfair to the delegates themselves. stice and that he alone carried the matter so far as to leave the allies no alternative but to assent. But it has been stated that Marshal Foch THE FIRST AUTOMOBILE. believed Germany to be crippled be As the smoke of controversy overljond recovery and that the allies who built the first automobile clears I were nOt justified in expending an away, we salvage an important fact I other life in further fighting. Re- froni among the debris. That islcently it has been said that Lloyd that, no matter whom the credit be-I George was eager for the armistice longs to, it is less than thirty years I because he feared that continuance since the occurrence of the event. Itlof the war would establish American shows how fast the world of lnven-1 commercial supremacy, also because tion le moving In the current genera- I he was hungry for the political fruits tion. lof victory. Whoever is responsible In a laudable effort to pour oil on I the allies acted without regard to the troubled waters at Kokomo, 1 long and painful experience of the where two concerns are conducting I depravity of German mentality. If campaigns to establish priority fori they had continued the war until the the first successful car, the Indian- I Germans were driven by force to the apollt- News suggests that something I Rhine, all military authorities agree might be saved by admitting that! that they could have destroyed the three years prior to 1892, the yearl German army . totally before it in which it Is admitted the pioneer I reached that river. By not adopting Kokomo horseless carriage was taken I that policy, the allies rendered nec out on its trial run, an Indianapolis I essary continuance of the blockad blacksmith "built and ran what he I until peace was signed, although called a motor wagon." This was in I from the day when hostilities ceased 1891, and a touch of verity is added the prosperity of Germany became by the statement that Benjamin Har- I an asset of theirs, as the source from rifcon and Thomas Taggart were I which they must collect indemnities. among the first passengers. Mr. The y- had to maintain the blockad Taggart, who is far from being an I until Germany ratified the ' treaty, old man. now, was thirty-five at the though- by so doing they Impaired time of this historic occurrence, an-1 the assets of their debtor. From other reminder of the eventfulness of I that error of policy has flowed much life in the twentieth century. We I of the economic disturbance which very much doubt that Mr. Taggart at I still prevails. the time-of that first ride was daring Germany's violation tf the treaty enough to predict that before eight! has - been encouraged by discord more presidential elections had rolled among the allies, much of which has around there would be upward of I been incited by propaganda and 7,000,000 motor vehicles in the United I which has been exaggerated by Ger States and that the problem of get ting fuel enough to propel them would have attained the proportions Harold Bell Wright, preacher-au thor, whose specialty is novels of the uplift type, has -obtained a divorce Presume we must now await the ordeal of "The Losing of Barbara I land? Worth." prospects of a line from there to the clams and rock oysters for the awel Canadian Pacific railroad. You have two lines running from, and through Pasco to Portland. With this line, built from Wenatchee to Pasco, would give a water grade, free from snow blockades in the winter and mud slides in the spring, direct to Port land. We shipped more than 12.000 car loads of fruit from here last year. and as the present orchards will pro duce more each year as they grow in age, and other orchards will be plant ed, it means many more carloads In the future.. The Okanogan is just be ginning to produce. Passengers leaving for either point would eliminate the present detour via Puget sound, saving time and ex pense. Such conditions would put the Portland wholesale houses in this district. Most all California tourists would pass through Portland by this route. The people from Oroville to Pasco are as a unit favorable to the build ing of this road, as was proved by a delegation of our citizens that visited each locality in a body to ascertain facts, and would help further the en terprise. We of the Wenatchee valley would be willing to give a percen tage of the boxed products of the or chards, as well as the different busi ness concerns, to help it along. The estimated cost of the road would be about $3,500,000. Is not this worthy of the consideration of the residents of a rich city like Port- N. N. BROWN. WHAT OF DAIRYMEN'S CHILDREN f Farm Mother Says Their Labor Alone Now Saves Industry Prom Rnln. HILLSBORO, Or., July 15. (To the Editor.) Will you permit a mere woman to say a tew words now on the milk situation? I am a dairyman's wife. I have fed and milked cows, got in green feed and cleaned stables, planted and hoed corn and kale and helped haul hay. and doctored sick animals. On this last Item I will-not go Into details. Suffice It to say that I have done veterinary work that would make many women faint. And many times I have done these things that my hus band might work away from home to get money to pay our feed bills. Mayor Baker is rieht. If evert I A good deal has been said about man contemplating entering politics I the laboring man's children, now that There are as many claimants for the sack of sugar taken from the Pawner sent to Jail on suspicion a I there would be foe a gold niece picked up on the street. iieien -rait, president of a wo man's college and daughter of the ex-president, spoils her career by marrying. let that is the better way. The ascemt of Pike's peak, a cen tury ago. Is a trivial achievement when contrasted with the more re cent alpine exploits of sugar. would consult his wife there would be many fewer "also-rans." Well, at that, It might be a good thing for us if Sir Thomas Llpton did win the cup. Too much success I cows, and many times their mothers milk Is so high. What about the dairyman's children? You didn't know they existed, did you? I can show you little children from 8 to 12 years of age who rise at 6 o clock to ' help feed and milk the has become monotonous. x m opposed to screens, I am.' observed a prominent fly of the pub lie market. "They interfere with, our soviet system." The milk-punch cow has arrived. A North Carolina farmer found two of his bovines "beastly" full on a lot of mash. . And Harold Bell Wright, who tells the delicious love stories, has got his decree. Fame comes high in a way. A thunder storm that drops in un expectedly will not injure the fore caster's reputation as a prophet. of a burning Issue Whether It was 1891 or 1894 that saw the first car in operation, the speed with which it has been devel oped Is amazing. Even If we are in clined to go back to first principles ter that extremists will take from and give griQcigal credit to Gottlieb man hopes. At soon as the allied premiers, meet and talk things over, disagreements are smoothed over and whenever Germany attempts to profit by them by violating the treaty or seeking its revision, the allies pre sent a united front. That happened prior to exchange of ratifications, again at the San Remo conference, If Los Angeles is to be the big city of California she - must take the things that go with the honor. take the place of a man in the fields. That's why milk is produced and sold In this county for $2.80 per hun dred weight. Eliminate the labor of women and children and half of the cows would go to the block immediately, for they could not be kept If the labor of oar ing for them had to be bought. But are these condition right? It takes the farmer-dairyman's whole family and a considerable Investment to earn less than the average laborer earns. These things can be proved. An impartial investigator won't have any trouble in getting these facts that the dairyman is not getting anything like a just return on his labor and In vestment. MRS. W. E. RICE. terlng pavements ot Portland. He is on the book at the Hotel Oregon. M. P. McCowan. who has the repu tation of having made the survey for the road to Crater Lake from Med- ford, is an arrival at the Perkini The location which the state high way commission is to make will prob ably be determined, at least In part. sometime this year. E. L. Hales, who has a hardware store at Wallace, Idaho, arrived at the Hotel Portland yesterday while her on a business trip. . Mr. Hales drove the distance by machine and succeed ed In getting enough gas along the line to enable him to make the run. Mr. and Mrs. C. A- Ficke of Daven. port, la., "where the tall corn grows," are out in Oregon visiting with Mr. ana Mrs. c H. watzek. of wauna. a lumbertown. The Flcke and Wat- zeks are quartered at the Hotel Port land while viewing the sights. No one In Portland read the newt of the Los Angeles earthquakes yes terday with greater Interest than Mr. and Mr J. W. Morris, who are at the Multnomah with their three chil dren. The Morris family had just arrived from Los Angeles, which Is their home. , Sherman Miles, who used to make out income tax statemen,ts for other people when he was In the depart ment of tne collector of Internal rev enue, now has to make out statements of his own, for he is In the banking Dusiness aown tt. rieien way. George H. Durham was for years in the banking business In Portland, but now he makes his headquarters at Grants Pass and doesn't mind the pul verized granite dust- Mr. Durham came to town to look around and reg istered at tne imperial. M. E. Jarnagin of Coburg, Lane county. Is at the Imperial. He is treasurer of the town. Coburg wants the Pacific highway to percolate through that place. H. H. Corey, member of the public service commission, passed through Portland yesterday, registering at the Imperial. He is a candidate for re election. Mrs. H. K. Brooks and son are at the Benson from Bend, where her husband Is one of the sawmill mag nates. . Sam Vsn Vactor. one of the beet known residents of Morrow county. is In Portland and is registered at the Imperial. Charles Gram, state labor commis sioner, is registered at the Seward from Salem. M. H. Abbey, one of the members of the port of Newport commission. Is at the Hotel Oregon. Carries Liquor on On Sboulder. Bismarck (N. D.) Tribune. Governor James M. Cox of Ohio has before him the great and dan gerous task of carrying liquor on one shoulder to please "wet" democrats and of carrying water on the other to avert defection of the Bryn wing. It Is perhaps fortunate for democ racy that the party has a candidate who cannot be accused of being nom inated by the White House. . Not a Lender of National Type. Baltimore Evening Sun. Mr. Cox has made rather more than a creditable record as governor of Ohio. A mass of progressive legisla tion has been put on the statute books during his terms of office. And as a result of his leadership these things can be said in his favor. But the fact remains he has never given evidence of being a leader or an official of the highest type. If he shines in the campaign it will likely be merely in comparison with the lesser luster of the republican candidate. - Twenty-five 1'emra Afro- From Th Oresonlaa of July 17. 1805. Washington. The report of the Olympia inspection board, made pub lic today, shows that she has broken the record of the American men-of-war. She developed 19.6 knots speed. Lewiston. Idaho. The annual race meeting on the Nes Perce traoks closed today. Washington Major C. J. Post. In charge of river and harbor improve ments in Oregon, has made his an nual report. A Jetty at the mouth of the Columbia river is under consid eration. New Tork Maria Barbaria, who murdered her sweetheart, was found guilty of first degree murder today and will be the first woman to be electrocuted. Fifty Years Ago. From Th Oresnlan of July 17. 17";, It is stated that the upper Wil lamette river above the falls la nearly down to low water mark and that boats find navigation difficult. PARIS. The government has no news of th reported massacre In China, and the story is generally con sidered false. Berlin. Confidence la restored and stocks are rising. War Is considered as certain. The democrats of Indiana demand that Thomas A. Hendricks shall be their next candidate for the pres idency. LIMIT ON DRIVING BY BOYS. Pica for Farm Lads Who Br-infr. Anton to Town With Produce, HILLSBORO, Or.. July 15. (To the Editor.) The new automobile license law just Into effect Is Just and fair. whereas a reckless driver will be de prived of his license to drive an au tomobile. But that provision in the law which will prohibit persons under 16 from driving is a narrow and un just gauge of the situation. It is un fair to class the farm boy with the Alsea has a sex problem ending in murder. There is no town so small that it cannot have one. Nobody takes a sympathetic strike seriously but the lawyers and the courts. , and it Is happening now at Spa. The best- There can be nothing but misery come from "baby larming" at Its From San Francisco to Oakland. PORTLANTY. July 14. (To the Ed itor.) Kindly tell me how far Oak irtH is from jan Fmnrfai-rt V, , ... 1 . It takes the ferry to cross and th shiftless, "hard-boiled kids" mentioned fare. SUBSCRIBER in 1 no wrcBu.no.... i.uo aruunu T"he distance is about six miles. tb time about 15 minutes, the fare 15 cents. Representative Hawley Address. WENDLING. Or.. July 15. (To the Editor.) Please publish Representa tive W. C. Hawley's present address. READER. Mr. Hawley's address Is Salem, Or. making life uncertain for pedestrians. Farm help is scarce and In marry in stances the farm boy has been de. pended on to drive the automobile to town with farm produce and to bring home groceries and other essentials for the farm home. Many boys of that age on the farms are now more proficient and careful drivers than some men twice that ag. Record proves that it Is not the boys who cause accidents. A FARMER'S WIFE. Potential Labor Wasted in Portland While Oregon Clamors for Help. Were you aware that Portland rapidly is becoming the national rendezvous for the Journeyman floater, the Itinerant laborer wh labors when the notion pleases him and nob at any Other time. De Witt Harry says so, in a special article in the Sunday issue, and he gathered his material where the fellowship of floaters is in perennial convention the city parkways. This is a story of facts that will widen your eyes, well told and timely and replete with actual data. Read it and profit thereby. Bryan's Speech at the Convention There have been some rather tragic disappointments in the career of William Jennings Bryan, but none may say that he did not take his medicine manfully. They concerned himself alone in other days, but with the victory of the "wets" at the democratic national convention in San Francisco they concerned the common cause to which the "great commoner" is pledged. It was then that he said, "My heart is in the grave with the cause." Bryan's speech in advocacy of a prohibition plank -was an able and eloquent appeal to the party that denied it. It is given in full text in the Sunday issue. - A Thundering Good Lawyer! Who is? Why, Mrs. Annette Adams, of course, the newly appointed assistant attorney-general of the United States. In the Sunday magazine section, with illustra tions, this able woman attorney is introduced by Mayme Ober Park ' in a special story written for The Sunday Oregoman. She is a western woman, who gained high appointment through clean-cut merit in competition with the best legal talent of the coast. You'll want to know her. Solving the Divorce Problem If you had missed your romance, or thought you had, would you turn to divorce when you knew that never again might you re-marry? A great many. theorists of ex cellent judgment say that such a provision would give pause to petulance and lengthen the happiness of married life. They say it would swat the demon divorce so effectively that he'd take the count. YouH find this discussion in amplified form, with illuminating instances, in the Sunday issue. The .White House Orchids Men have given their lives to the collection of these rare tropic blooms, the most exotic and highly prized of flowers. The price at the florist's, as any swain will tell you, is almost prohibitive. But the first la.dy of the land has the finest collection in America, representing the choicest orchids and garnered from every quarter of the globe. An illustrated article in the Sunday magazine section. Present Industrial Conditions of Belgium A Portland man brings word of things as they are today in the domain of King Albert, and has -written an analysis of his recent observations for Ths Sunday Oregonian. This instructive and appealing portrayal of the hero nation is by George M. Vinton, who recently visited Belgium,-and ' appears in section five of tomorrow's issue. Columbia Basin Needs Only Water Let the Pend d'Oreille river loose in the irid empire and straightaway more than 1,700,000 acres of fertile land will bear abundantly. R. G. Callvert, of The Oregonian, who recently isifced the district on a tour of inspection with other newspapermen, writes of this mammoth project in the Sunday issue. All the News of All the World THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN