6 THE MORNING OREGONIAX, MONDAY, JULY 2G, 102O ESTABI.ISHEO BY HENRY I- P1TTOCK. Published by The OreKonlan Publishing Co., VJi Sixth Street, Portland, Ori-Kon. C A. MC8UEX, E. B. P1PKR. Manager. i-ditor. The Oreg-onian Is a 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 a!co the local news published herein. All rishts of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. Subscription Kates Invariably In Advance. ( By Mail.) Tally. Sunday Included, one year lallv, Sunday Included, six months . . . - t:i IV. MinUMV inc U'IPfl. inree mwuwio. lally. Sunday Included, one month .' K.ti'n . 3.25 .io . l.on . 0.00 .$n.oo Iaily. without .Sunday, one year . .. lally, without Sunday, six months .. tally. without Sunday, one month eekly. one year - - - - Sunday, one year , ( By Carrier.) Dally. Ktindav Inc luded, one year . . . Ttnllu U.tnHv InfliulpH tllVM months Dally, Sunday Included, one month .... .73 Dallv, without Sunday.one year 7.S0 Pally, without Sunday, three months.. l.l'J Dally, without Sunday, one month Go How to "Uetnit. Send postofflce money order, express or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at owner's risk. Jlve postofflce address In full. Including county and state. rrottnee Rates. 1 to 11 pages, 1 cent: IS to 3 pages. 2 cents; 34 to 48 pages, 3 cents; 511 to 64 pages. A cents; lid to SO pages, 5 cents; H'J to 8 pages, 6 cents, i'oreign postage, double rates. Eastern RtiMnesH Office. Verree & Conk lin. Brunswick building. -New York; Verree & Conklln. Sieger building. Chicago: Ver ree & t'onklin. Fre- Tress building. De troit. Mich. San Francisco representative, I!. J. Rluwell. J'ENALTV OF KAILROAI BLCSDEBS. Though the railroads have been in tl-e hands of their owners for almost five months, the cost of government operation continues to pile up. Final settlement of claims of railroad com panies for the standard return guar anteed by law and for deferred main tenance expense has only begun, and tlitre will be a heavy bill for guar anteed income for the six months "-following March 1. The total amount which the government will have paid . out without possibility of recovery " i3 estimated at Jl, 500, 000,000. The government will also have invested about $1,200,000,000 in railroad se curities, payment of which will run from one to fifteen years. This is the price of the lack of statesmanship, of yielding to dema gogy, which marked the course of the government for the last five years before the war. Good policy dictated that the railroads be per mitted to earn enough revenue to enable them, to expand as traffic in creased, and that at'the same tims Ihey be brought under strict regula tion and that crimes of high finance and mismanagement be punished. But the New Haven and Alton crimi nals went free and in the effort to punish the railroads the government punished the people by depriving them of the facilities necessary to carry their traffic. That billion and a half is the penalty which the peo ple pay. Though the inefficiency of the government In regulating the rail roads has thus been demonstrated, many intelligent people want it to own and operate them. It is a safe prediction that, if it should, the de lays which had such disastrous re sults in the war period would be mul tiplied tenfold. The present conges tion of traffic is a legacy of govern ment operation and was aggravated by delay at the very time of return to private .operation. The labor dis i pute was acute on March 1. made so by delay on the part of Director-General Hines, but President Wilson de layed for six weeks the appointment of the railroad labor board. - That ' delay provoked the outlaw strikes which have blockaded eastern termi nals with cars, and the blockade con tinues. Under government operation 'delays, would be the regular practice, for the typical bureaucrat above all dreads deciding questions, because . . he fears to decide wrong, not having tie moral courage to take the risk IHE REI rERIL OF POLAND. The bolshevist peril which threat ned Europe six months ago has be come imminent, and the allies are new about to do what they then re fused to do go to the rescue of Poland. France was willing to move then, but Britain held back. The British labor unions were at that time so infatuated with what they called a workingman's republic in Russia that they were prepared to go to any lengths to prevent active hos tilities against it. From motives of xpediency and in the hope of peace and of relief from food scarcity by opening trade with Russia, Lloyd George induced France to consent to commercial negotiations. He seem to have learned that Russia had little or nothing to export and was mak ing trade relations a vehicle for se- curing recognition of the soviet, i fact of which he was amply warned. He now faces the menace that Poland will be overwhelmed and that the bolshevists will join hands across the frontier with the inde pendent socialists of Germany. This party quadrupled its strength in the new reichstag. The people's party, -composed of the plutocratic mon archists, gained equally arid is trongly represented in the present cabinet. The independent socialists would probably be ready to join the spurtacists in a revolution to over turn that government with the help cf the Russian red army. The red flood would then flow over Germany tc the Rhine, and all the power of the allies might be needed to prevent it from pouring westward over Bel gium, Holland, France and Italy. If this should happen, nothing could pi event an outbreak of radicalism in Pritain. It would surely flow south ward over Roumania, the Danubiarf states and the Balkan peninsula. European civilization would be in danger of extinction by the vilest - barbarism. This prospect has awak ened Britain to the fact that Poland has been fighting the battle of civil ization. Fortunately Lenin has played Into Lloyd George's hand, so that he may now do what he formerly found im possible. After repeated refusals he last spring granted passports for a British labor delegation to visit Rus sia and investigate conditions there. The delegates were guests of honor, but they saw enough to cool their en thusiasm for the dictatorship of the proletariat, though care was taken that they should not see too much ' and should not talk with people who '. would tell unpleasant truths. Lenin asked them to prevent shipment of munitions to Poland, and-they asked for proof that such shipments were made. After their return to England ' lie wrote them a long, bitterly sar ' rustic letter ridiculing this request for proof, saying that it was in pos session of the British government ana actually urging them to start T. revolution in order to obtair. it. Their reports were decidedly unfavorable, though they still recommended trade and recognition. At the Vecent trade union congress a proposal to affi liate with Lenin's third international was voted down by a majority of twelve to one. British labor is losing its illusion about the beauties of bol shevism. When called upon to pro vide men and munitions for the pur pose of beating back the new inva sion of the barbarians, it may now respond. THE 0"LY KOAD TO PEACE. AVhat prospect of peace and of co operation of the United States with other nations In preserving peace that being the main object of the league is offered by the' democratic platform and by the pledge of Gov ernor Cox to continue President Wilson's policy? Mr. Wilson has de clared article 10 to be the heart of the covenant; the platform, in saying that the reservations were "designed to cut to pieces the vital provisions of the Versailles treaty," evidently refers particularly to that article. The reservation to article 10 is the one on which the republicans were nearest united and mosfunyielding. Then if Mr.'Cox shoulH be elected, he could not accept that reservation, and the republicans could not aban don it. He would hold in line with him the ' main body of democrats, but they could not muster a two thirfis majority. Twenty-one demo cratic senators voted with the repub licans for reservations, but seven more votes were needed to ratify the treaty with those provisos. The influence of a newly elected demo cratic president would prevent more from joining them and might win over some of the democratic reserva tionists to the stand-pat Wilson policy. If Senator Harding should be elected and if'he should again send the Versailles treaty to the senate with recommendations that reserva tions in line with those of Senator Lodge be attached to the resolution of ratification, it is highly probable that the necessary two-thirds ma jority would' be secured.- Only seven more votes were needed "last March to carry ratification according to re publican policy. The democrats were so disposed to compromise that al most half of them voted for that policy, and nothing but the influence of the president, exerted to the limit, prevented many more from joining them. With a republican In the White House working In free consul tation with the senate, the repub licans would be united and executive pressure would be exerted to lead the democrats in the direction in which they are already inclined to go. The prospects are good that the treaty and the league would be promptly ratified if Harding were elected. The only prospect offered by democratic victory is continuation of the deadlock. THE RETURN TO NORMAL. Book publishers "in both England and the United Slates who are said to have detected a recession of inter est in the occult, and who are de clining to publish more books on the general subject, may have been moved by the recent warnings of Sir Oliver Lodge, himself a convert to spiritualism, that the topi'e with which he deals is filled with potential dangers, and that it is not one to be recklessly approached by every im pressionable and credulous seeker after new sensations. A remnant of the scientist of old persists in . Sir Oliver, He still believes that the spirit of impartial investigation is everything. As for himself, he has been convinced but is unwilling to dogmatize. Research and not emo tionalism must be depended on to de termine the issue in the end. Sir Oliver sees the peril of ungov- erned and ungovernable gullibility. Better the old faiths that made men ztrong than a queer superstition clung to without reason. As John G. Saxe, poet of ' another generation, wrote: Time was when men bereaved of vital breath Were calm and silent In the realms of death. When mortals dead and decently In-urned Were heard no more, no traveler returned. Now all Is changed the musty maxim the strangest falls And dead men .do repeat tales. The undesirable harvest of his own propaganda the quacks and the charlatans that prey on the weak willed, the psychologically unstable and the grief-stricken is as apparent to Lodge himself as to any close ob server on the side lines of the great controversy. It is perhaps a sign that as the gap widens between his own bereavement and the ac tualities of the present, as the perspective becomes clearer, he him self finds it possible to regard the problem in a new aspect. Time is a great physician. Not ready to recant. it may be, however, that the scientist sees more clearly the consequences panic - stricken departure from better-trodden paths. We have been too long laying the bogies of ancient superstitions, the hobgoblin and the voodoo man, to substitute for them nothing better than the dark cabinet and the ouija board. uemana tor books about the su pernatural" wanes as sanity returns. The world resumes the level of nor mality. Sir Oliver's . warning is timely. But it probably was also un- needed. Aberrations of that kind are usually a self-limited disease. SLtMP IN DIAMOND BUYING. The American trade commissioner at Brussels reports to the depart ment of commerce that the diamond cutting industry at Antwerp is suffer ing serious reverses, as a consequence of practically complete suspension of oraers from the United States, The business, which normally gives employment to about 13,000 highly skilled workers, is working on a 50 per cent basis, and further curtail ments are expected. Nor is this con dition due to transference of gem- cutting to the United States, for trade journals report a similar condition where the work has been undertaken on our own side of the Atlantic It means simply that the extraordinary demand ' for diamonds which fol lowed the signing of the armistice has abated. American buyers have heretofore been depended on to take a large proportion of the Belgian output. Other nations affected by the war have been too busy with the more serious affairs of reconstruction to concern themselves in any considera ble degree with luxuries, such as diamonds obviously are. With ces sation of American trade, therefore, the industry is threatened with col lapse. It is an ill wind that blows good to nobody. As much as the plight of some six or seven thousand Belgians may be regretted, this may be over balanced on the whole by the change of which cessation of diamond-buying is the symbol. We' can even find it in our heart to rejoice at this sign of a return to thrift. For.it is no secret that luxury purchases in the past two years have been largely made by persons who would have served themselves better by laying something by for the proverbial rainy day, .And the false notion that "diamonds are as good as a savings bank account" has been frequently punctured by those who have had occasion to realize cash on their precious stones. ORGANIZE FOR AMERICANISM. Valuable service is being done by the National Civic federation in pro moting organized work for promo tion oi Americanism and to ombat revolutionary conspiracy. Cessation of outward evidences of disloyalty, line tne beattle strike, the threats of revolution which accompanied the steel strike and the several outlaw strikes have encouraged the belief that the revolutionary conspiracy has died down, but there is good rea- son to believe that the reds have turned to propaganda and political activity, for which the presidential election gives them a good opportu- nuy. in its Review the federation reminds us of certain facts of the situauon. First, there is a definite menace, wnich it would be foolish to under- estimate or ignore. Second, "the radical element is purposeful, well I organized, fairly well financed, nu- merous" and in large part "danger- ously sincere." Third, "general public conditions offer favorable soil for the propagation of radicalism." I Fourth, the presidential campaign presents large possibilities to obscure clear thinking by appeals to preju- cliee. b lfth. the great mass of the I population is patriotic, intelligent, industrious and law-abiding. The federation proposes that every organization, business, labor, profos- slonai, social form of national service committee with local committees, pledged to work in defense and propagation of American ideals, of wnicn me cniet are: liberty, repre- sentative government, supremacy of emigmenea ruie or tne major- lty. It cites the example of the Na- tional Board of Fire Underwriters, which sent the following pledge to its members for signature: To exercise my Influence as opportunity may offer for the suppression of disloyalty and the promotion of Americanism: To support the widest possible dissem ination of American ideals through the schools, the press, the pulpit and In public lucctaiKH. That pledge was quickly signed by between 25,000 and 30,000 members. The federation suggests that each organization and its subdivisions-be aliened in the same manner, and that all appoint national service commit tees, which should be co-ordinated by a national advisory committee. Each would work in its own way in its own field with that part of the public with which it came in contact. would have a sub-committee on pub licity and would seek co-operation or its class ami trade publications, would "vigorously attack centers of disloyalty or lukewarm patriotism within its own sphere." The next object is particularly appropriate at tne present time. It is: r.acn snouia take Immediate steps to see mat tne question oi unqualified loy alty to American Ideals be kept actively to the fore during the present political campaign. To this end It should sub. ordinate partisan politics to an ahanlutn I insistence upon untainted loyalty as the sine qua non for every candidate and every platform. The I. W. W. appears to have sus-Iany pended its campaign of strikes, sa- botage and resistance to law and tolTnft present American rate is seven have directed its members to flock to the ranks of the non-partisan league. The latter oromotps revoln- tion by political mans and takea nrl-lian vantage of the direct primary to ap-I proprlate the name and organization of one of the old parties in several states, then to Introduce its socialist system. It followed that plan In North Dakota, attempted It in Idaho and Is now about to seek control of the republican party In Washington, Yet it is frankly socialist, scouts re- publican principles, is brazenly dis-lr loyal and is affiliated with the social- ist party. In spite of these notorious facts, it is possible that the league may win through division among its opponents and through lack of or-1 ganized opposition. In many countries determined. ,or- ganized minorities have gained con- trol through apathy and lack of or-I ganizatlon on the part of the major- lty. in this manner the bolshevists won power in Russia. Notwithstand - ing the superior intelligence of the American people, there would be danger of such an outcome " in this country If patriotic Americans should not unite their efforts to awaken the latent patriotism of the mass of the population. In face of the threat to American democracy, patriotism must not remain latent, but must become active. OCB FUTURE SUGAR SUPM.Tr. t-uoan sugar planters, who re ceived three and a half cents a pound for their product a vear hefore tho war, and who are said to have agreed recently not to sell below twenty. four cents, or about seven times the former price, are hardly to blame for taking advantage of the comnlais-' ancy of their American, customers. With us there never has been a seri- ous question what we should do in the face of any price demand. We would pay it, of course, if there were nc other way of getting the goods, We might get along on a half ration as we did by comparison with present standard of consumption a few years ago but apparently we have no intention of doing so. Still, there is no doubt that we chafe while we buy, and are ln a mood to go to any lengths, short of self-denial, to solve our problem. It Is vaguely known that crystal- lized sugar is not always the product of cane. Beet sugar is a staple sub- stltute,,but not the only one. We are accomplishing something with corn, lough not enough to influence the tiarket price of cane sugars in gen - erai. But the present' situation serves as a reminder that at the close of another war in the late '60s we had a sorghum boom, which came near to answering the question for the future. The United states department of agriculture. moved by the sugar scarcity of that! time, although per capita consump tion was far under that of the pres ent, conducted a long series of exper iments both to develop a higher sugar content in sorghums and to periect a process for extracting, ciarujmg ana crystallizing it. In the former it was conspicuously suc cessful. By seed selection extending over several years it produced varie tier yielding as much as 20 per cent sugar, but sorghum never became more than locally important as a source of syrup because of the great difficulty experienced in purifying the juice by any known process ex cept that recommended by the de partment, a process that failed to attract investors because its principal factor was alcohol and this was sub jected to regulations unfavorable to its production for industrial pur poses. Notwithstanding this, a num ber of sorghum sugar factories were erected in Kansas and elsewhere about 1S90. Production in that year exceeded 25,000,000 gallons. Con trary to popular belief, the sugar ob tained from sorghum differed not at all in sweetening power or in chemi cal quality from that obtained from cane, since it consisted of more than 99 per cent of cane sugar and less than 1 per cent of impurities. The problem was entirely a commercial and an industrial one But sugar at three and a half cents a pound at the mill and sugar at twenty - four cents are two entirely different propositions. Even at ten cents a pound, or nearly three times the pre-war price, sugar would look cheap now and could be offered to consumers at less than half the pres ent price. . Never in the history of the country did opportunity so nro ttude itself before the graze of the or- Eranic chemist. We are relatively in the same position that the world found itself in when Napoleon began to foster industrial . science and by subsidy encouraged research that re suited in the discovery that we were not dependent on the tropics for our sugar. The sugar beet, which since then has been crossbred until its saccharine mission has been highly specialized, brought about a sugar revolution similar to that which we would like to see in the case of sor- trhum. An important additional stimulus to new sorghum research is that whereas the plant is capable of being grown over almost the entire temoer- ate zone, it reaches high productivity in retrlons not favorahu tn our nrin Id pal bread grains wheat in partic ular. There are grounds for suppos ins that in the eternal conflict be tween the necessities, wheat will claim an Increasing proportion of the area adapted to it, encroaching on sugar Jbeets in proportion as labor costs of producing the latter and their influence on soil depletion turn the scale in favor of the grains. From the point of view of the grower, sorghum has many advan tages over beets, and it is at its best in regions that find wheat, barley and rye unprofitable. To discover a method of making sorghum sugar profitably would be to increase our supply of the latter without trench ing on the "bread supply of the na tion It has been suggested that there is one other way to get cheaper sugar, that being to reduce consumption to the. point at which It stood a genera tion ago. We do not suppose that this will be done. Even at last year's prices, for all the hubbub that was made over them, consumption mounted to record heights. Obvi ously, the only way left to curb the rftPclty of thoso Cuban planters is to find a new source of supply. Un less our chemists can save us, it is hard to see - how -the: thing is going to be done. Figures prepared by the British chancellor of the STrheniior shnw that the rate of taxation ner head 15 " . . . f 'axauon per neaa is nigner in the United States than in ether country among the princi- naI belligerents except Great Britain times that of 1914, the British rate more than six times, the French rate four and a third times, the Ital four and a quarter times, the Clerman fourteen times, measured at l!ie current rates of exchange Though Germany has the highest proportionate increase, its present I rate per capita Is less than a fourth of that of the United States, less than I a third of that of France, only one seventh of that of Great Britain, but U r.early one and a half times that Italy. In fact, the average Ger- I maa pays less taxes than the people oI anv of the four principal allied 1 countries except Italy, Ir. Gompers is dissatisfied with I the wage award and calls it a "sop' I to the individual worker. True, it is; I but it is pretty good sop to wallop ne dodger in these times, and it is 1 not to be despised 1 LTruguay contemplates bringing about prohibition "gradually," but I any old soak who ever tried to re- I form by the tapering-off process I knows that the scheme won't work. I A. woman who leaped from a run I away" trolley car has a fractured 1 knee cap; another with four children I stayed aboard until the car stopped I Women are temperamental. The imagination of a Verne was needed to contemplate a flour mill a few miles south of the Arctic circle But no longer. They grow the wheat and the min ia on the way Oregon paid more than $27,000,000 ln federal taxes in the last fiscal "ear. which was doing very well to 1 support a government run on tho extravagant plan Tne French government is auc- tioning off eight million - bottles of champagne and Atlantic liners are abIc to accommodate only 600 pas- sengers a day. Linn is not tha only county that ca" start a war on thistles. The roil begins: Baker, Benton, Clackamas, I Clatsop, and continues to Yamhill, I W. J. Burns there s only one o I him is in the city today, but as far as noticeable there was no extraor 1 dlnary exodus last night I Parley P. Christiansen played his hand in the matter of asking co 1 operation for release of Debs and Harding trumped him. Money penalty for passing a street car discharging passengers is not erough. That is the one big danger point in city life Albany should not grieve ln disap pointment over the census. The 4840 allowed her are pretty live ones and make a noise. One need but recall the "old joga- free" days to realize what a $10,- I 000,000 fire did to Bombay. BY-PRODUCTS Oir THIS TIMES Village Play In Esglaad 11 as Lose and Noble Tradition Behind It. The village play in England has a long and even noble tradition be hind it. In many countries, even be fore the war. there were signs of an attempt to revive something of this tradition. Enthusiasts for local folklore were discovering traces, still remembered by the older Inhabitants, of "St. George and the Dragon" and other mumming plays, which derive from a past as remote as that of any other art older, perhaps, than any, eince these plays have developed from religious rites and ceremonies us ancient as humanity itself. There are many versions extant of the old St. George play but none. It may be. more accurate than that unearthed and acted to the huge delight of the villages by Miss Beatrice Home of Anstye in the county of Sussex. In comes I, little Billy Twin Twan, Just come from Press Gang;. Not very stout. Not very tall. But I think myself best man Amongst you all. Room, room, I pray. For I'm the noble captain That'll lead Kins George and all his men this way. In Cornwall, too, there is a flour ishing school of local drama of a more or less traditional type. Morton Nance has dramatized many of the old Cornish "Droll" legends, and he finds that his Cornish neighbors take to acting and seeing his versions like the proverbial duck to water! As may be imagined, this anti quarian spirit is not in evidence in most of the village plays, which are of quite modern origin. "Sometimes the plays are written by a native of the village, and here, however poor in quality, one feels the effort is always worth while. Often recourse Is had to one of the printed comedies qr farces. Among these plays there is a great diversity of literary and dramatic merit, and there is still a deal of spade work to be done by way of training the taste of those so-called "educated" people, who are responsible for the choice of village plays. Without necessarily implying that the village play need always be a "classic" it is all too rare to find village courage rising high enough to tackle a play of Shakespeare; though where this has been tried, as in the little village of Winchelsea, the results have been amazingly sat isfactory, at any rate from the stand point of those taking part in the performance, and they, after all, are he chief people concerned. As a matter of fact, much of the language f Shakespeare Is nearer country dialect than it is to the educated peech of the present day, and pro- ucers of Shakespearean drama in country districts have often been astounded to find that the yokels have rejected their explanations of what seemed obsolete phraseology as quite insulting to the local in telligence! Christian Science Mon- tor. It is said that Kipling's "Reces sional" was rescued from his waste- paper basket. Had It not been for the Interven tion and pleading of a friend that magnificent fragment, "Hyperion," would have been put Into the fire by Keats. The still more famo9 "Ode to a Nightingale" was discovered by the same friend behind a pile of books. Newman thought nothing of his 'Dream of Garontius." He wrote to please himself and would forthwith have burned it; but a friend saved poem which Edgar has set to splen did music and which provides one of the finest hymns in the language. Praise to the Holiest In the Height." One day Tennyson wrote to "Omar" Fitzgerald, casually mentioning that he had left a few verses behind him in his cupboard at his late lodgings and would be rather glad to recover them. Fitzgerald found them among the butter and sugar, written in an old butcher's book. They were "In Memorlam." Fitzgerald thought a great deal about Alfred's" verses, but very lit tle about his own. He translated Omar Khayyam in all its haunting beauty long before his death, and had a few copies printed, but seems to have told nobody about it. Another poet found a copy in the 2-penny box of a second-hand book shop and boomed it Into deserved fame. Browning destroyed everything he wrote before "Pauline," and tried to withdraw that from publication" in order to burn the last copy left. He did not succeed; but he made it so scarce that a first 'edition sold re cently for 2400. Scott threw the first copy of "Lay of the Last Minstrel" Into the fire and was only persuaded to rewrite it from memory by two friends to whom he had formerly read it. Even the first of his novels, "Waverley, was accidentally fished out of some umber where it had lain for years, little regarded. A puzzle in nationality had the marine recruiter ln Tulsa, Okl guessing: Louis C. Minette. applicant for the "Leatherneck Legion," said that his mother was an American who mar ried a Frenchman ia Italy. He was born on a ship flying the Spanish colors while lying In the English channel. At the age of 5 his par ents died in bweden and he was adopted by a German, who brought him to the United States. His adopt ed father is not a naturalized citizen. "Would you class him as a man without a country?" the recruiter was asked. "Man without a country, nothing." said the sergeant; "I'd class him as a league of nations." Fleet Review. Favorable action is being attracted throughout the country to the "con servation of vision" classes in the Cincinnati public schools, according to Dr. W. H. Peters, health officer of that city. Applications have come from other cities for admission cf pu pils. One child, brought all the way from the state of Wyoming by its parents, has been admitted. Sixty-two children are enrolled in the conservation of vision classes that Is classes whose members are bordering on blindness. Class rooms are selected for their favorable light; the desks ar.e movable, so that they can be adjusted to get the best light at different times of the day; text books are printed in larger t;-pe than usual, to obviate eye strain. Some children become so Improved in vision that they are able at the end of the year to return to their regular classes. Those Who Come and Go. "Tired but happy" is the slogan of the returning Elks from the Salem convention who are resting up in Portland, following their strenuous experiences in the capitol city. Den ton Burdick of Redmond, state repre sentative and candidate for re-election, was at the Imperial yesterday, and swore that although he was in Salem only three days, he had spent fully 99 nights there during the same period. "It's a great life." was his comment, as he suppressed a yawn. Burdick has a reputation as a fish erman in his home town. He knows fish from A to Z and from tadpoles to sharks. When told about 20-pound rainbow trout that are said to in fest the waters of that district, he want the story one better and said that he himself had seen Dolly Var- den trout that tipped the scales at no less than 30 pounds. Roy W. Ritt- ner, state senator, of Pendieton, wno is also slowly making his -way back to his home town from the conven tion, backed up the story. He and Burdick had fished together, he said. both before and after the state went dry. There is one man in Portland today who Is the victim of a great regret. and that is J. A. Ebbers of Chicago, who is a Shriner and was called east the very day the Shrine convention began. Mr. Ebbers is the vice-president of the Overseas Trading cor poration of Chicago, which maintains a branch office in Portland. When everybody was waiting for the great Shrine festivities to begin and the visiting nobles were swarming into the city, Mr. Ebbers received a wire calling him back to Chicago. He missed all the fun and all the parades n'everything. In the east and all the way back from the east he was met by returning nobles who told him of the wonders of the "convention city of the west" and how the city was turned over to the Shriners and all glorious times they had had. Mr. Ebbers is leaving for Japan Tuesday for a tour of the entire' orient, after which he will make his permanent residence in Japan. He Bays he will never outlive the regret that he missed the "greatest convention ever held in Portland or anywhere else." R. A. Long of the Long-Bell Lum ber company of Kansas City, which modestly admits the charge of be ing the largest producer of lumber in the world, has returned from a trip made to Astoria last week and is registered at the Benson. Mr. Long is still shy about admitting juel where and when the Kansas City company will install its first mill, but he intimated that the site would be selected in the next few weeks. The first mill will have a capacity of 100.000.000 feet annually, he said, and the total annual output of the three or four mills to be installed in the state will approach the 500.000,000 mark. This would raise the total yearly output of the Long-Bell mills to the billion mark. "There is plenty of timber left in this country." Mr. Loner said. In reply to a question about timber resources. "This gen eration won't see the end of the sup ply, nor the next, nor even the next. Tf that nroblem was all that this country has to worry about, it would be a great life. Mm. J. W. Butler of New York be lievesMn seeing America firBt. and one of the dnaior requirements seeing America first is to make a trip over the Columbia highway, sne sajs Shp arrived in Portland yesterday after an extended tour over the Ca nadian Pacific which included visits at Banff. Lake Louise, points of in terest in the Canadian Rockies, Van couver. B. C. and Victoria. The en tlr trln wan maDDed out for her by tourist agency in New lorK. wno arranged a trip over tne msnwuj ao one of the major scenic attractions of the west. After the trip up the Columbia today, Mrs. Butler is going to- California, taking In the osemue park and all the scenic attractions down to southern California. Including Lake Tahoe. returning east via the Grand Canyon and the Yellowstone. Mrs. Butler has been abroad, out sne declares that there are no scenic vis tas in all the world that can compare to the grandeur of the western moun tains. Flushed with victory, gained through the election of Dr. J. tt. liosenDurg of Prineville as president of the Ore gon State Elks' association, fc.. f. (Pat) Mahaffey. is now on nis way home to Bend from Salem where he attended the third annual Elks' state convention. Pat was one of the lead ers in one of the most vigorous political campaigns ever waged in Oregon Elkdom? but his opponents are taking their defeat with good grace and have pledged support to his cam paign to construct a $125,000 hunting and fishing lodge at the neaa oi tne Metolius river. This project has already received the support of the grand lodge of Elks and final support of the plan will be sought at the next grand lodge convention at Los An geles next summer. "It Germany had followed the teachings of Martin Luther our boys would not have died ln France. We're going to see to It that we don't make the mistake the Germans did," said Dr. W. P. White, regional director of the Moody Bible institute for the Pacific coast, who is regis tered at the Portland. Dr. White is at the head of the Bible study move ment, which begins its sessions at Gladstone park today. The movement was 'naugurated more or less as an experiment, said Dr. White, ln an effort to lead the people to spend their fall vacations in Bible study. He will remain here all this week and over Sunday. Next week he goes to Ashland on a tour which takes him to Mt. Vernon, Cal.. and back again to Vancouver, B. C. A large delegation of Klamath Falls Elks motored down from the oonvention to spend a few days in Portland "resting." The party in cludes G. W. Houton, E. J. Bodge, C. J. Martin, M. Lovenik. C. E. Riley, R. M. Nlckerson, J. J. Johnston, C. A. Hayden and O. W. Robertson. All the party, with the exception of Robertson, who hails from the land c& sagebrush, rlinrock. coyotes and wheat. In the vicinity of Condon, are from Klamath Falls. C. A. Hayden was re-elected treasurer of the state association of Elks at the convention. The fame of the Columbia river highway has penetrated to far-off Nippon. Yesterday when T. Ikeda and M. Tsukasaki, departmental of ficials from Japan, arrived in Port land from Seattle en route from Tokio, the first thing they thought about and did was to take a trip over the highway, about which they had heard so much. They returned to the Portland hotel last night de claring that the highway was "indeed splendidly beautiful." Today they are paying an official visit to T. Sugi mura, local Japanese consul. Qulclc Cooling; Ifelnn Glsm. London Tit-Bits. The brittleness of glass Is due to the quick cooling of the hot sub stance. It is known that constant motion tends to rearrange the mole cules in any substance and similar effect is observed when glass ?& b-j'lcd in a weak solution of salt in water and allowed to cool gradually. The toughness of the glass is increased very much and the effect of quick heating is less disastrous to it. This is easily applied to articles such as glass tubes for lighting purposes snd prevents much breakage. , t.OV. COX I.M1KRITS SO ASStTSI Wilson l.tra Him .Notblna: on Wiles' to Build Ilia Campaign. , PORTLAND. July 24. (To the Ed itor.) Though long blinded and stupefied by the absolute dictatorship of President Wilson, the democrats now find themselves doubly be wildered .at their sudden leap from it directly into the arms of tiie very men who fought it tooth and nail. They must now follow the old power that has arisen again in the east bear ing the ancient name of Tammany. The new triumvirate they must fol low is made up of 'Tammany. Coxism and booze." The circumstances and incidents of that harmonious and peaceful meeting between Cox and Wilson are as yet obscure. The litthe light that filters out from its dark ness gives us the cheering news that Wilson is not sick and that Cox and he are absolutely one regarding "the league of nations." ln general scope. Wilson is of the opinion that the platform will have the united support of a united party. Wilson has evidently not had his ear closely to the ground of late. Tho mutterings of resentment to his un satisfactory administration come out of the mouths of many of his own party; thousands upon thousands have left him for reasons more than one. it is not alone his ou tre, cui dance that has sickened' them but his woeful lack of buwiness per spicacity as well. He does not leave a heritage of even ordinary adminis tration accomplishments as an asset for Cox to use in the foundation of his campaign. How can Cox defend Wilson's league of nations idea when it already has disrupted the democratic party? How can. the Wilson Idea of Mexico, of Armenia, be defended by him? Yet, he pledges himself to uphold and sup port them. would Tammany, in the race oi these questions that already have split the party, permit such thing? No, a thousand times no. Cox must gloss over these great blunders with wily sentences de signed to catch the beer vote. He will smoothly cover them up with innuendo to the element that wants light wine. If the wonderful accom plishments of Wilson's policies are to be exploited again this year, the ex ploiters might do well to adverse to 1913-1914. when we had reached tne lowest political vitality in years under his rule. They might tell the dear people why these millions of idle men were searching the country for work Just before the opening of the European war. Can you imagine Cox or any other democrat referring to those wretched conditions? Tet, they are directly chargeable to the Wilson administration. Republican speakers likely will have much to say on this particular point. The democrats this year have a multiplicity of rankest blunders to defend. Tammany even repudiated Wilson and his weakness. It wants something stronger. It wants wine and beer. How would "Wilson kept us out of war" transformed to "Cox kept trs in boose" sound for their campaign war cry? J. W. COWG1LL. IvING SUGAR HKICiNS IX CIB Great .Crops, II lab Prleea. low Pro duction -Coat Enrlrk Planter. Sugar, like shoes, we once took for granted. Now procuring enough for the preserving season may be a prob lem and sugar "speak easies" are no, uncommon in lands where the supply is rationed. Writing to the National Geographic society, William Joseph Showalter says: "With a sugar production nearly doubled and prices more than quad rupled since J J.1 1'. one can readily see why Cuba is the world's El Dorado of 190, and why sugar is its king. "The imagination is almost over powered in attempting to comprehend the vast proportions of the sugar in dustry of the island as it exists this y;ear. "The cane produced is of such tre mendous volume that a procession of bull teams four abreast, reaching around the earth, would bo required to move it. The crop would suffice to build a solid wall around the en tire 2000 miles of the island's coast line as high as an ordinary dwelling house and thick enough for a file of four men to walk abreast on it. "The sugar extracted from this cane would load a fleet of steamers reach ing from Havana to New York, with a ship for every mile of the 1200 miles. "How much net profit the cane grower reaps at 1920 prices is hard to estimate, but that it is large will ap pear when the methods of cane grow ing are stated. To begin with, after the first crop the planter does not have to bother with seed time for abort ten years. The soil is so deep and so fertile that one planting pro duces ten harvests. Neither does cultivation bother him after the first season, for the blades stripped from one crop form a mulch that keeps the weeds from competing with the next one. "Think of the profits that the American farmer would make out of corn if he could get ten crops from one planting, and did nit have to plow nine of them at all to keep down the weeds. "Another item in the low cost of oroduclng sugar is the cheapness of the motive power. The cane is hauled in ox-carts. The oxen live from six to ten months a year on the blades stripped from the harvested stalks, and the remainder of the year on suc culent guinea grass. Think how DrosDerous would be the American farmer if he could have animal motive power requiring not a pound of grain to feed it. A BABY SOMEWHKKE. I knew she'd borne a baby By the sweet light in her eyes. For 'twas soft as morning breaking On the brow of summer skies: Tes. 1 knew she'd borne a baby By the sweet light in her eyes. I knew she'd borne a baby- By the brightness of her face. For 'twas like the Virgin Mary's, All divine ani full of grace. Ah. 1 knew she'd borne a baby By the beauty of her face. I knew It by the halo Which lay warm upon her hair; By her lips, forever smiling. And her throat so white and fair; Oh. I knew it by the halo That lay soft upon her hair. I knew it by the queenly strength Around her spirit thrown. Which conies to those who walk with God In noble pain alone: I knew it by the queenly strength Around her plrit thrown. I knew it by the kiss she gave The man whom she had wed: 1 knew it by .he things he did And by the things he said; Oh. I knew it by the kiss she gave The man whom she had wed. GUf FITCH PHELPS Indiana .o Hume Builders. Exchange. The 350,000 American Indians in the United States are gradually being "absorbed in the body politic of the nation." They have changed from game hunters and wanderers to land holders and home builders. About 37, 000 farmers are cultvating almost 1.000.000 acres and 47.nnn own live stock worth about $38.0tm.00. It .s said that there are a few Indian stu dents In almost all colleges In the couutry. More Truth Than Poetry. By Jaiura J. Muntagur. 1KRE IIIMOH. I've heard of star - reporters, who, when liquor freely flowed, Would roost around a gin mill till they'd laid aboard a load. Then stagger to their office desks and, with a foolish smile. Dash off exciting stories that were oears ior zip and smile, though some seven thousand star-reporters I have met. never seen a single stew writs But. I've one real story yet. I've heard of gifted speakers who, w hen they were nicely sloughed. Could move to tears or lauchter al most any sort of crowd. Who, once the fires of eloquence were lit with alcohol. Could make applause re-echo through the brilliant banquet hall. But, though" with many orators and speakers I have mingled, I never yet have met one who spoke well when he was jingled. t I've heard of mighty statesmen who would flop into their chairs And, with the aid of liquor, straighten out the world's affairs. I've heard how they have labored with the bottle every night io gam the strength they needed when they steered the nation, yet I've met a lot of statesmen, but I can't recall to mind A one of my acquaintance who was this especial kind. I've often heard John Barb ycorn has been the patron saint Of many famous gentlemen who write, and sculp and paint; That if he quit and left them flat. their inward drive would cease, we would straightway be de prived of many a masterpiece, though I know some geniuses. And But, i ve never met one ever built a masterpiece, to- Who gether with a bun. Inalienable. Paramount among state rights is that of Ohio to ship a president, F. O. B., to Washington every now and then. Iroof PoKitive. Hereafter everybody who went to ' the democratic convention will be lieve what Californiana have been saying about their climate. The Difference. The candidates of three parties want to get in. Debs wants to get out. (Copyright, 1920. by the Bell Syndi cate, Inc) Little Boy Scout. By Grace E. Hall. Little Boy Scout, where the dank woods are calling We see the dim footprints you left on the trail: Ota streams where you fished are the v autumn leaves falling. The grouse broods are crooning there's sound of the quail. We listen oftimes for your laughter and whistle. There comes but an echo our lone hearts to chill; The breeze is a sigh as it touches the thistle And tosses its white floss against yonder hill. Little Boy Scout, did you pledge your devotion In secret to one who commands from on high? Ah. well you have kept it! . With tender emotion Tou took up the last march and bade us good-bye. We would not recall you to pathways or sorrow. Too rugged the trails for a laddie like you: We'll meet you in camp on that happy tomorrow. When all of your dreams and ours shall come true. In Other Days. Twenty-five Trara Ako. From The Oreeonlan of July 21. 1S95. Pocatello. Idaho. Reports from Market Lake today stated that nine white persons were killed by the Ban nock Indians near Jackson's Hole yesterday. Tokio. Cholera is raging in Japan and nearly every province in the em pire reports a heavy death rate from the disease. Now that it is practically certain that Third street is to be paved with asphalt, property owners are anxious that the work be started. Some important changes ana im provements have been made to the Morrison-street bridge since it was made free to the general public Fifty Years Ago. From The Oresonian of July 26, laTO. Berlin. Italy issued a proclamation of neutrality at Florence today. There have been demonstrations in favor of Prussia at Milan, Padua and Genoa. Raleigh. N. C. The Ku Klux fired on a body of negro militiamen here last night and the militia returned the fire. The militia slept on their arms throughout the night. Railroad surveyors crossed the Wil lamette near Milwaukie yesterday and are now running lines toward Hillsboro to determine the desirabil ity of building a road into that dis trict. Grain and all crops of early plant ing ln eastern Oregon are doing well, but all late crops were Injured by the extreme heat and drought. WET, DRY SLOGANS ENLArtGED Driirni Offered for Democratic and Republican Buttons. HOOD RIVER. Or.. July 24. (Spe cial.) Judge Lowell's campaign slo gans seem to have hit the right spot. Now allow me to suggest as appropri ate sentiments for button pictures of the two candidates the following in terrogatories and answers: Beneath Cox' picture, "Wet?" "You bet!" Be neath Harding's, "Dry?" "Aye, aye!" A picture of each with its motto could be placed on one button as a constant reminder to the wearer, the unsophisticated follower of Cuckoo Cox, that there is a tremendous dif ference between those two candidates on the indirect but vital issue of the 18th amendment to the constitution of the United States. Tammany knows! Bourke Cock ran knows! Tom Taggart knows! Governor Edwards knows! The 356 Immovable advocates of the Cockran wet plank at the San Francisco con vention know! And William Jennings Bryan knows! They don't need a button to remind them where the wet and wily Cox stands. They know! No one need be deceived. W. J. P. A "latter of Xante. Birmingham A?2re-Herald. "This man is a naturalist, you say?" "Tes, madam, -lis favorite animal li the hippopotamus." "How extraor dinary! And he has such a pretty wife."