10 THE MORNING OREGON! AN, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, 1920 ESTABLISHED BV HENRY I- PITTOCK. Published by The Ores-onian Publishing Co., " 133 Sixth Street. Portland. Oregon. C A. MORDEN. IS- B. PI";' . J Manager. Editor. The Oregonian Is a member of the AMO" -. elated Press. The Associated Pref exclusively entitled to the ube for publica tion ot all news dispatches credited to i or not otherwise credited In this paper ana aiso the local news published- noreln. Ail rights of republication of special dispatcnes herein are also reserved. Subscription Rates Invariably in Advance. (By Mall.) Dally. Sunday Included, one year .... .33.00 Daily, Sunday included, six month . ... '- Llally. Sunday Included, three months- Dully,, Sunday included, one month .... -' uany. without bunuay. one year . - - Daily, without Sunday, six months ... Dally, without Sunday, one month, Weekly, one year ....t ..... Sunday, one year ....... I. ......-. - (By Carrier.) Dally, Sunday Included, one year .... Dally. 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They may join in such a de mand for improvement of rivers and river ports and for interchange of traffic with railroads, that congress will feel bound to give heed. Thi3 is a summons to railroad men to abandon their old rule-of-tbumb methods in figuring' rates and han dling traffic and to consider broad questions of transportation policy. APPLYING THE RATE INCREASE. While it may seem on the face of the interstate commerce commis sion's decision that the railroads must raise freight rates by the full percentage authorized for -the sev eral regions in order to realize the full 6 per cent net Income desired, and that therefore the adjustments to meet the case of particular indus tries and sections would cause sacri- " fire of part of that needed revenue, the decision in fact leaves a liberal margin for concessions to meet ne cessities. As the longest hauls are . from the Pacific coast to the middle west and east, the flat percentage in crease would hit the industries of this region harder than those of the other sections, but for the fact that the percentage for this region is lower and the margin . for adjust ments is wider than for other regions. In the aggregate the increase Is about $41,000,000 less than the sum asked by the railroads after allow ing for the reduction in valuation .made by 'the comriission. Against ' this fact must be set the fact that the railroads based their figures on ; the business of the year when traf- fic was worse and cost of materials was higher than in any other year and when cost of operation was en hanced by labor ' disturbances in many industries. Despite the out law strikes, all these conditions have already perceptibly improved, the price of some construction materials having fallen considerably, and the general advance In wages should end labor troubles. Congestion of traf. fic is being relieved, its volume is steadier than a year ago, more equip ment is Deing provided, and opera tion is gradually getting back to a gait where the percentage of net to gross revenue will be near the pre war figure, a i argin for adjust ment of rates below the maximum percentage or increase without re duction of net income below 6 per cent is thus provided, even in those regions where that percentage is no higher than the railroads considered necessary. In the mountain and Pacific re gion there is a fSrther wide margin. especially on the northern transcon tinental roads. They did not need ail or trie 24 per cent on freight originauy asiceu, and the 25 per cent given, together with the advance on passenger and other business, is not only ample to pay the wage increase, but to leave a .considerable surplus. The commission has authorized an Increase of 33 1-3 per cent on traf fic passing from one region to an other. All traffic parsing from the Iacific coast to the middle west and east will pay this increase for the entire haul, hence the Pacific roads will get an additional 8 per cent on their part of the haul. We shall have the anomaly of a higher rate per mile on long than on short hauls. If the railroads were to exact the full increase authorized on staple products of the Pacific coast which compete with those of other regions In middle western and eastern mar. kets, they would . not only collect more revenue than the law contem " plates, provided the volume of traf fic was not diminished, but they would do serious injury to the indus tries concerned and consequently to themselves. With regard to lumber. If shippers had no alternative, an advance of 33 1-3 per cent would make competition with southern yel low pine in the middle west impos Bible, would compel railroads to haul .: eastward empty cars which had brought export freight west, would - cut off much traffic in iroods con sumed by men engaged in the lum ber industry and might cause a net decrease in revenue in place of the increase desired. It is to the rail- roads' interest to prevent this, and they can do so by increasing rates much less than 25 per cent, yet can - earn 6 per cent net income. Lumbermen have the alternative of water lines, vessels for which are increasingly available, and they are turning attention more in that direc- ... tion. They already ship lumber to Atlantic coast ports by water for ..... rii naul several hundred miles inland. They may go further by .... . shipping te New Orleans for trans fer to Mississippi river steamers to -r ' tP-river points, whence there would ...... be a short rail haul to interior towns. They may ship to New York by sea. by barge through the Erie canal and up the lakes to Chicago. When the Panama canal was com .. ... Ileted the railroads were preparing to meet this competition, even at -the stale of rates then prevailing. That competition is now upon them, in- tensified by the larger supply of ton i nage and by the rate increases made In 1918 and at the present time. Kastern roads are not likely to ob T -1ect- for a line extending from Chi . cago to the Atlantic coast may be .'. indifferent whether it hauls a car , from Chicago to Pittsburg or from ' xurK io t-iiisourg; in fact it may prefer the latter, for it would n get a 40 per cent increase In rate as . against 33 1-3 per cent on its shn v... of a transcontinental haul. We are at the beginning of a revo - . r lution In the transportation business, which the rate advance has hastened'. V Shippers will seek the most econom ical routes and, In doing so. will shake themselves loose from old , habits, for to many of them it will . e a matter of life and death to " escape the high rates of railroads. They are apt to turn to water lines, both by cea and on Inland water - - STATING THE DIFFERENCE. "What attitude will this self-appointed and self-anointed champion of dry Amer ica (The Oregonian) take on the candidacy of Congressman . Pat McArthur. who has frankly expressed himself against national prohibition? We pause for an answer. Pendleton East Oregonian. Let us hasten to relieve the drab suspense in the office of the Pendle ton paper. The Oregonian will, of Course, support Mr. McArthur. He has served efficiently In congress, lie has not played fast and loose on pro hibition or .any other question. He owes his nomination neither to the clever manipulations- of any local Tammany, nor any local Boss Nu gent, nor Brennan, nor Taggart, nor Moore, nor to the underhanded schemings of any wet lobby, serving an interest that hopes again to cater to the appetite of thirsty millions. Mr. McArthursaid four years ago he would vote wet if his district went wet; dry if it voted dry. It voted wet. though the state went dry. Mr. McArthur was not nominated because he was not a dry; nor will he be elected because he is not a dry. His election- means nothing as to that issue. - Mr. Cox was nominated at San Francisco because he was supposed to be wet. If he is elected, it will be through the wets. There is no hope for him otherwise. and will front on the Black sea In the east. It will be the main link In sea commerce between Europe and Asia. Its ancient glory promises to return. . THE QUADRENNIAL GAME. Every four years the United States is stirred from border to border from the hyperborean pinnacles of the frozen north to the glistening strands of the placid south, from the storm-beaten rocks of the surging Atlantic, to the golden sands of the shining Pacific" (see report of any political speech) by a political cam paign. Then the American people proceed noisily and enthusiastically to elect a president. It is the great quadrennial demonstration of the successful operation of a self-govern ing democracy. It is everybody's af fair, and everybody takes a hand. A reader from Eugene, writing to day, objects to the use of money for campaign purposes; and wants quieter and saner methods. It may be agreed that too much money is often used, but it is not agreed that the people should be left alone to de cide the great question. The very essence of life in a democracy is dis cussion or agitation. Organizd action tp persuade voters for or against a cause is what is called a campaign, and a campaign cannot be conducted without funds. No sane man will deny the necessity and duty of politi cal action by men and women united for a common purpose. Free speech and free assembly; fundamental prin ciples of a democracy, are useful only as citizens may learn for them selves through them the merits of any public proposal. They are ve hicles of political action; without them and- their constant use no de mocracy will survive. The people want to know about a candidate for the presidency. They want to hear from him and, so far as possible, to see him. They desire to hear also from others about him. The United States is the greatest nation in the world and the presidency is the biggest job in the world. Any expense, any effort, that will thor oughly inform the public about the candidates should not be spared, but Is wholly justifiable. Besides, electing a president is the greatest sport known, and every American citizen is, or should be, one of the players. . FLYING TO DEATH. They dare death once too oftem Whereat the grim fellow retorts. "You're on!" and collects the for feit of a-life. So it was with Lieutenant- Omar Locklear, whose " spe cialty was aviation hazards before the moving picture camera. ' His plane failed to come out of a hurt ling nose dive and the game of fly ing recorded two additional dismis sals by death, a companion crashing with him. Locklear was a pioneer in the new school of daredevil stunt flying. Portland picture audiences have thrilled" to his nonchalant, nervy change from plane to plane in mid-air. Taking risks was his voca tion. It is probable that it paid well enough up to that one tremendous moment when the doomed flier real ized that his plane would be wreck age and his stunting ' forever con cluded in the split fraction of an in stant. There are laws against suicide. There should be laws, while the wings of a new mechanical art are lifting, enacted against foolhardiness in flying. The public may well dis pense with the attendant thrills of witnessing a venturesome aviator plunging to his fate. It cannot be said that stunt flying helps the game. -Rather does it serve to retard its proper progress, and to impress upon all the belief that airplane traf fic is' utterly unsafe and hazardous. The barber who bobbed over Niagara falls in a cask, and whose demise was thorough and complete, was of a kidney with the men who are play ing the role of bravos of the air. Sound, sensible fliers, who are out to eliminate all possible risks, will soar many a thousand miles before folk forget that Locklear died in a. nose dive. For it will not be recalled that he tempted his fate. the neighborhood of The Dalles, its members constructed out of drift wood a raft on which they conveyed themselves and their belongings to the lower river. We wonder how many there are among the tenderfeet of 1920, who permit themselves to be turned aside by gruesome tales of "no gas" atrocities, who would relish an adventure every stage of which was punctuated by such diversions as whipsawing the material for one's own boat, or digging ox teams out of a mire, or surmounting other con stantly recurring obstacles, each in a different way! . Yet, as has been said, 1845 gave the northwest some sturdy citizens, whose names are still well known. Of the clan of Cham bers, except James and his family, who remained hereabouts, most of them found homes near Puget sound, where Chambers creek still perpetu ates the name. Other names re called by the year are those of W. G. T'Vault, Samuel K. Barlow, who de veloped the trail that is named for him and who was an early explorer of Mount Hood; J. C. Avery, founder of Corvallis; Solomon Tetherow, Colonel T. R. Cornelius, the Rev. William Helm, Joel Palmer, Presley Welch, W. W. Buck, John and Fred Maymire, Stephen Staats, William J. Herren, Rufus Riggs, James H. McMillan. James Terwilliger and others. These were old-timers in the territory when the eventful immigra tion of 1852, from which so much of our history is dated, set in. GREECE FINISHING OFF THE TERES In less than a month Greece has captured two former capitals of the Turks Brussa and Adrianople and has slain, captured or scattered the Mohammedan fanatics led by Mus- tapha Kemal and Jaffa Tayer, which have defied the allies for a year. Un less the allies hold them in check the Greeks may soon wipe out the last band of militant Turks and may bring welcome relief to the sorely beset Armenians of Cilicia and Eri van and to their compatriots at Trebizond. This war. is undertaken with the more zest by the Greeks because they have a long score to settle with the Turks. While the great war was on and ,while they were held in un willing neutrality by King Constan- tlue, the Greeks saw their brethren in Thrace and Asia 'Minor robbed, outraged, murdered or deported by hundreds of thousands. Having thus changed the ratio of the two races In the population, the Turks had the impudence to make the artificially changed totals the basis for disput ing Greek claims to more territory. The Greeks were forced to endure these outrages in inaction, for when they finally got into the war they had to co-operate with their allies in driving the enemy out of Mace donia ana serma. xne attack on Thrace was about to begin when the Turks surrendered and were given an armistice. Delay in making peace with Turkey proved that the Turks would not accept defeat until all their territory had been con quered. for it gave opportunity fo the Nationalists to rebel and to form an alliance with the Tartars and Bolshevists. Having had little part in the war, the Greeks accept with alacrity the task entrusted to them oy me great powers, and they are doing the job well. It is eminently appropriate that final destruction of the last remnant of Turkish military power shou! fall to Greece, for it is but one yea short of a century since the Greeks rebelled against Turkish tyranny finally gaining their independence i loou. me territory tnat they are now occupying was the last which the Greek emperors held before the fall of Constantinople. Thrace and the Asiatic shore of the straits and the sea of Marmora were conquered long before they took the capital and Greece bids fair to attain the same position as the Turks then held, with the important exception that a strip along the straits will be partly under jurisdiction of an inte national commission. Nothing wi: then remain of Turkey except Asia Minor exclusive of the Symrna dis trict and Armenia and Constanti nople. Greece will now be one of the great maritime and naval powers of Europe. Its territory will front on the Adriatic sea in the west, will completely control the Aegean sea BY - FRODCCTS OF THE TIMES School Arithmetics Now 1st t'se Dc elaureel Kali of Romance. Arithmetic Is supposed to be a matter-of-fact study, but the school arithmetics now in use are full of romance. " They need immediate re vision tf this most practical and Im portant branch of learning is to be kept In . touch with the realities of life. tor example, what respect can a modern boy or girl have for a text book which propounds so absurd a problem as the following: If a dozen eggs cost 27 cents, how many may be bought for S1.39? If a quart of milk at 6 cents a quart produces four ounces of butter. what will be the profit on five pounds of butter at 35 cents a pound? Or this: If five men, working ten hours a day. earn a total of -J75 in six days, how much will seven men working 11 hours a day earn in three days? An arithmetic that was up to date would contain problems like the following: If gasoline costs 28 cents a gallon and silk shirts X13 apiece, at what rate must a bricklayer be paid, work ing eight hours a day, in order to support his wife and three children, keep the family flivver running and buy two new shirts a month? Chi cago Evening Post. THE IMMIGRATION OF 1843. The immigration into Oregon in 1845, which is recalled by the death of Mrs. Martha P. J. Comstock. who as a girl of seven, was a member of a noteworthy party that reached the Oregon country in that eventful year, was of historical importance because of the motives that prompt ed it, as well as because it resulted in practically doubling our popula tion. There were a few more than 2000 inhabitants here then, and the estimate made by the historian Bancroft, that about 3000 started across the plains in that year, of whom about 1000 were diverted to California while en route, closely cor responds with the investigations made by our own official historian, Mr. rlimes, on the point in question. The tale that is told to the effect that California boomers even in that re mote period had agents stationed at strategic points on the western trail, to win travelers with accounts of the incomparable advantages of Cali fornia, its resources and climate and insurmountable obstacles on the way to Oregon, are remindful of more recent happenings. Recalling the charge made only the other day of a California conspiracy to divert utomobiles to the more southern route with tales of a gasoline famine n the north, one will be apt to be ieve that the methods of our neigh bors have not been reformed with the passage of three-quarters of a entury. There is, nevertheless, an other side to the old story. The year 1845 was momentous in the struggle for possession of the ter ritory on the Pacific coast. Rumors that the British were preparing to concentrate naval forces on this coast ith a' view to asserting title by possession at an appropriate moment had stirred patriots of California as well as of Oregon. This was prior to the discovery of gold on. Sutter creek, which was to take the prob lem out of the hands of diplomats and politicians. A few far-seeing statesmen are now suspected of hav ing secretely encouraged the immi gration for reasons of national in terest. We risk little in crediting those who then sought to persuade wayfarers to travel south with being inspired by sincere belief that the is sue would first be fought out there. With California under the flag, the case for Oregon, it seemed to them, would be much simplified. There were differences of opinion as to matters of method and expediency; but there was unanimity as to the purpose to be achieved. In any event, twice as many con tinued on the way here as were per suaded otherwise. To the immigra tion to Oregon of the two years fol- owing, settlers who had thus changed their plans but afterward repented contributed a considerable quota. Until the discovery of gold, and the altered character of the westward movement which then ensued, Ore gon was pre-eminently the place for the home-seeker. The historians who have sought to analyze the motive underlying the movement of this earlier period have been betrayed largely by a superficial view. There was one, for example, who attributed the hegira almost wholly to a "rest less spirit, dissatisfaction with home, want of a market and distance from the sea." It is assumed by others that poverty loomed large behind the spirit of restlessness. But this does not sufficiently account for what must be set down as an aimless and thoughtless rush of large numbers of well-confiitioned people to seek the privations and hardships of an un known frontier, unless the origin of the western travel of the early forties is more deeply probed for. Of the motive of poverty there was a little, but not much; of simple desire for adventure and change,- there was a little. Market difficulties were chronic in that time and for long afterward. The motive of patriotism. united with desire to make homes in a smiling and fertile land beneath the stars and stripes, must be in voked in order to satisfy the impar tial inquirer who in reading the rec ord sees also that which is written between the lines. The Chambers party, one among several of that year, was headed by Thomas M. Chambers, father of James Chambers, the latter the step father of Mrs. Comstock. Captain Chambers was a striking character, in whose veins ran the blood of An drew Jackson, whose cousin he was. Something of the Jackson spirit probably determined the undeviating course he took that brought him to the goal of his desire, avoiding both the lure of California and the peril of the Meek cut-off. For 1845 was also the year of that ill-starred adven ture, which would be worth a chap ter by itself. There is also an in teresting relic in the possession of the Oregon Historical society that Those Who Come and Go. COMMtNISTS BROUGHT TO JISTICE. Conviction and sentence of Wil liam Bross Lloyd and his nineteen fellow-communists is notice to all revolutionists that there is law to punish them and that it will be en forced. In insolent reliance on the mpotence or forbearance of the American people they undertook to use the rights granted by the Ameri can constitution in overturning the government. Their plans have been halted, though the sentences Imposed are so light by comparison with the gravity of the crime as to be admoni tory rather than punitive. No doubt we shall have the usual outcry about violation of the rights of free speech, free press and free assembly from the convicted conspir ators and their brother-communists, Appeal to those rights as a shield for their crimes Is a specimen of typi cally bolshevist logic. Grant of the rights mentioned does not debar the government from preventing and punishing abuse of them, that Is, use of them for a criminal purpose. To say that the rights mentioned in clude the right to incite and concoct conspiracies for change in the form of government by force is absurd on the face of it. It is the height of absurdity when this plea is offered by those whose declared aim is to establish a dictatorship of one class which would deny free speech, press and assemblage to all others. How little respect communists have for those rights of others than their own party was learned by the BrlMsh labor delegation which recently vis ited Russia. When bolshevist liberty was mentioned to one of the dele gates, ne laughed In derision. What these mouthers about liberty would do. if they had the power, is to es tablish as damnable a tyranny a3 rules and ruins Russia. - No credit is due to the federal gov ernment for the successful prosecu tion of Lloyd and his gang. They were convicted by the state of Illi nois under a state anti-syndicalism law, as were those revolutionists who were convicted in Oregon, Washing ton and California. The federal law is so weak that Attorney-General Palmer asked that It be strengthened in order that he might bring the reds to justice, but bills were no sooner introduced in congress than dema gogues raised the cry that free speech and free press were In danger. though nothing was in danger but the right of free revolution. This bluff so scared the timid that they put the bills to sleep. At the same time Secretary of Labor Wilson and nis assistant, Post, liberated alinn reds as fast as Mr. Palmer caused tneir arrest. The federal govern ment has abandoned the dutv of h. fending itself against its would-be uestroyers to the Individual states, A Washington reporter, happening to pass the St. Elizabeth's hospital for the insane, noticed an inmate standing and painting a wall with a dry brush, saya the Fourth Estate. ine reporter, somewhat of a sports man, noticed a racing sheet In the back pocket of the painter and think ing to have a little fun. he said: "Who are you picking today V "Take Little Eva In the fourth race at Laurel," said the nalnter. Shu's . 200-to-l shot and she's carrying 88 pounds she can't lose." The reporter, perhaps thinking one hunch as good as another, went down to the office, drew out 25 advance salary and put it all on Little Eva. Then Little Eva stumbled on the first quarter and was out of the race. About two weeks later the reporter was passing the hospital and he again noticed the painter, busily painting with a dry brush. "Well," he said to the painter, "I put 825 on Little Eva, at 200 to 1. carrying 88 pounds. In the fourth race. She stumbled on the first quarter and lost." "You took my tip," said the painter. "Yes," said the reporter. "Get a brush," said the painter. A few years ago there was a scan dal in the east growing out of the salo of land in the Florida everglades to non-resident buyers. Today some of th same land is producing fabulous returns in sugar cane, according to Lloyd W. Thayer, of Palm Beach, who has been a Portland visitor for two weeks, a guest at the home of C. B. Hurtt. of the Hartinan & Thompson bank. Mr. Thayer represents the Southern State Land & Timber com pany, which owns several million acres of land, is just now engaged in draining 400,000 acres and has a part of its holdings producing. The Penn sylvania Sugar company Is planting a tract of 70,000 acres to sugar cane, and in the opinion of Mr. Thayer that is the section that will increase the visible supply of saccharine tp satisfy the sweet tooth of a hungry world. He left yesterday for California where he will sojourn a few weeks before returning to the Florida peninsula. Fishing at Fisk lake once a month and other outdoor sports will be the chief business, of Sam Garland, the sil er-tongued orator of Lebanon, for some time to come. Mr. Garland, who was formerly state senator for Linn county, was in Portland yesterday. He is returning from California where, with his family, he has been touring since last September. Being a democrat of democrats, Mr. Gar land timed his arrival in San Fran cisco to coincide with', the national convention, and he is well satisfied with the party's prospects. Mr. Gar land insists that as soon as he and hia family chugged across the Oregon linr to the Siskiyous there was a dif ferent atmosphere, a different feel ing and a different spirit, for Oregon Is home. Thomas Kay. former state treasurer ariti now republican nominee for repre sentative in the legislature from Marion county, was in Portland yes terday to discuss changes in the state compensation law. Mr. Kay is one ot the five representatives of employers on the commission , another five representing labor and a third five being representatives of the public. Mr. Kay says that he has no intention at this time of being a candidate for speaker of the house in the 1921 ses sion. rumors to the contrary notwith standing. Of course, ho explained conaitions may arise which might in duce him to be a candidate for speak er, but he Is nursing no such ambi tion just now. DEALERS' PAMPHLET SLHPBISES Dairyman Never Had "Glowing Praalan of Kant Profits," HILLS BORO, Or.. Aug. 3. (To the Editor.) -.Two or three days prior to the announcement that Ue city ol Portland was going to prosecute the officials of the Oregon Dairymen's Co-operative league, the league mem bers In this county received a nice, expensive booklet from the Portland milk dealers wherein are set forth the many alleged Iniquities of the league. It seems the milk distributors have just discovered that they have a deep affection for the dairyman very deep t deep as his pocketbook. And it pains them very much to think that the dairymen would join any associa tion having for iu goal the better ment of his financial condition. 1 svppose they consider their oratory very convincing arguments, but it More Truth Than Poetry. By Jamea J. Montague. THE STORY OK OLD SOL CAHOON. When Sol Cahoon came up from Maine io close a codfish dicker. We warned him of the evil bane Of city bootleg liquor. "Lay off that stuff, old man." we said "Eschew the raw tobasco, Or in the baggage coach ahead. They'll cart you back to-Casco." And then we told of Homer Bligh Who sipped from a decanter That he had bought for high proof rye. And went to rest, lnstanter. Of Abner Glass, of hardy life And marvelous endurance. Who took one drink, and now his wife Is getting his insurance. But Sol Cahoon went forth one night. rucureo a ooot-lcg flagon. COesn t BOUnd un in th rl-iirv rr a n whn 1 a . has been making the entries on the i'ifeS S "X' ' deLiSht rea"sVasdte ' - cion. died 5 p Hls awful hootch revilins: They talk glibly of "promoters," Next morning, with a glow of Dride exploitation." "high financiers." "in- The old man turncS up smfling side ring." manipulation." "control of " prices." "glowing promises." etc. I have kept pretty close tab on league affairs for two years past, and that's he Ilrst I ever heard of such things. No one has ever held out "glowing promises" of "vast profits" to league members here. It is the hope that we will, by co-operation, be enabled to secure a greater per cent of the fctail price of milk, that has caused us to band ourselves together. They call it "selfishness." Well. I A reader of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch furnishes the editor with a list of old superstitions which were part of our folk lore In that part of the country before we had to have folk lore societies to preserve this sort of thing: A rooster crowing at the front door meant visitor coming. A twig catching a young ladv'a dress meant a beau. An itching ear meant that someone was talking about you. To turn back after starting meant dou iuck. Opening an umbrella in the house meant bad luck to the house. n. measuring worm on a woman's frock meant a new dress. An itching left hand meant that you would marry soon. An itching right hand meant that you would shake hands with stranger. ' Seeing the new moon over the left shoulder meant one would soon get money. Probably most of us are supersti tious about the number 13, . just as people were a long time ago. Our own superstitions will amuse a sub sequent generation, as those recalled by our reader amuse us. Only a sub sequent generation- can safely laugh at superstitions. Socrates was put to death for laughing' at some of the superstitions of the Greeks. Let us, then, laugh at these and take the superstitions of our own time as seri ously as you please. A beaver in a park was expert- "Cottages at Newport are filled with summer visitors; there is an abun dance of seafood and great fishing.' reports Glen Hlte, manager of the Hotel Washington, who has returned from Lincoln county, where his family were pioneers. "People are lookine for a boom at Toledo when the timber In the Si lets is developed. There Is considerable activity now, not only in tne umber business but also in harbo Development. work Is now in pro gress on the south jetty and the north Jetty will soon receive attention." Mr Hite says that the bay and sea are so smooth that the water is dotted with Do&ts of amateur fishermen. There have been five surveys mad for the road to connect Sandy and uresnam witn the Mount Hood loop.' says Harry Hamilton, who haa beai vacationing at Brightwood and is now oacK on the job at the Imperial Every survey, to hear the ranchers talk, runs straight through the center of some field. Progress is being made on the section of the loop from Zig zag to Government camp, three crews being worked one coming, one on the Job and one going." No matter what route the state highway com mission selects to connect between Multnomah county and Zigzag it will have to go through Brightwood. Spar-varnish and wood alcohol, A dash of prussic acid And sal ammoniac," said Sol His face benignly placid. "I know what these drinks here con tain They keep you In condition I drink -em right along in Maine tor Maine's HAD prohibition. Worse and Worse. Things are gettlnsr sn brt nnn-ri.-. guess that's right. We would like (that there is talk of rationing oui'ja Suaplcloua. We don't know what's become of the whiskers Kansas farmers used to wear, but the print paper shortage ia maRing some people very ruthless. Just Let 'Km Try It. The Italians have decider in cal the money belonging to the profiteers. """ reminas us that the mice once decided to bell the cal. (Copyright, 1J0. by the Bell Svndleata. inc. i Drakes ends in fatality. Another fact is that not everybody can drive ana meet the tests of emergency. While there are hills and vales and bluffs there will be accidents. Ponzf, the juggler of finance, ad mits Columbus and Marconi rank him, but says he is next. A man who can make dollars from nickels need not sit far back of a real estater or lightning catcher. Little things neglected cause dis aster. The going dead of an enirina when climbing and forgetting the ! mentally placed at work on a tree 12 feet long and two feet six inches thick, just as the town clock sounded the hour of noon. The beaver began by barking the tree a foot above the ground. That done, he attacked the wood. He worked hard, alternating his labor with dips in his bathing pond. He bathed and labored alter nately; then he ate his supper of bread and carrots, which the keeper brought him, and paddled about in his pond until half past . 5 o'clock. Ten minutes later, when only one Inch of the tree's diameter remained in tact, he bore upon his work and the tree fell. Before it fell the beaver ran as men run when they have fTred a blast. Then as the tree lay on the ground he portioned it out mentally and began to gnaw. He worked at intervals all night; cut the log into three parts, rolled two of the portions Into the water and reserved the other third for his permanent shelter. The work done, he took a bath. Christian Science Monthly. America would have less difficulty in believing Japan's promises that Its occupation of Saghalln is to be only temporary, If it were not for tlje fact that the same promises were made about Shantung. The world is not merely movine-. it's galloping. The shoe workers in Haverhill want increase of 818 a week, which figure eighteen many years ago was fair pay for the week. The park superintendent shows hesitation in moving to eradicate the earwig pest. Perhaps a good earwig- ging irom nis superiors would help him make up his mind. Convicts at a penitentiary baseball game killed the umpire, also a con vict. Well, he must have been past reforming or he wouldn't have been an umpire. The Cedars was established for a purpose. Occassionally a "bad egg" gets in. Nevertheless, the inmates are human and must be treated as such. The business of robbing the countv bank is picking up. The gang at llo- line, ill., got away with 820,000. Perhaps the only way the milk wrangle can be settled is by cham pions with four-ounce gloves. In Kansas, where liars flourish In hot weather, six-inch hailstones Jiave ruined crops and auto tops. J. P. Morgan plans a thirty-three-story office building in New York for high financing. Another has rolled off Terwilliger boulevard, yet hundreds negotiate it in safety. Georgia shows little census gain in the decade. Too many colored exo-dusters. has an eloquence cf its own. It Is a 1 Unhappy Poland, as ever, and not whipsaw which the Chambers party a sign of relief. The allies are too brought along, and with which, la busy. England today has no law school in existence. Harvard's Law school la not only the oldest existing law school in the United States, but it is the oldest existing academic law school in the English-speaking world. They have a professor of law at Cam bridge and a professor of law at Oxford, in England, but they do not teach law in the manner of a profes sional school. They simply lecture upon law, or endeavor to give a scientific preparation for the profes sion of law, but do not give a scien tific, professional training. Admiral Browning of the British navy Is a wit as well as a disciplin arian. A story is told of his quick repartee when he was captain of a battleship. A ready-tongued member of the crew was brought before him charged with having broken his leave outrageously. The evidence being heard, the captain asked the culprit, "Have you anything to say in your defense?" "Nothing, sir," came the reply, "except, to err is human, to forgive divine Shakespeare." "Nine ty days' detention without the option of a fine Browning," was the apt but stern rejoinder. The fashionable physician walked in. in his breezy way. and nodded smilingly at his patient. "Well, here I am, Mrs. Adams." he announced. "What do you think is the matter with you this morning?" "Doctor. I hardly know," murmured the fashionable patient, languidly. l"What is new V Life. P. J. Neff and J. W. Mitchell of Medford. were in Portland yesterday to talk fishing matters with state Game Warden Berghduff. They wanted to discuss tne proper methods of screening irrigation ditches to save game rish. According to the visitors, the Rogue river valley is full of fish an.-i motoring tourists. Sam Crouch, of nuseourg, was also in the city yester day and was rooting for the Umpqua river, declaring that everyone got a big catch Sunday. "The last time I went fishinz- down ClatsKanie way I fished because I wanted something to eat. That was over 30 years ago. Now I'm imlnir back to the same old stream to fish for fun." said Simon Benson, chair man or the state highway commls ion, as he left yesterday for his old stamping grounds. It was in the vicinity of Clatskanie that Mr. Ben son began building his fortune. He intends looking around for a couple of days to see how the country has cnagea. "Bathing girls are likely to cause a serious accident In our mill." said deorge Jacobs of Twin Rocks yes terday. in the saw room on the second floor the boys can look out at the beach, a few yards away, and see tne surf and the bathine- rirls. I've told the boys they'd better be careful, for they can't keep their eyes on the bathers and saw wood without running the risk of sawing orr a few fingers or maybe a hand. Guess I'll have to place curtains on the windows or frost the glass as a means of safety first." Leaving the beautiful weather of Manhattan beach for the heat of the Portland pavements. V. D. Walker Is at the Imperial. Manhattan beach is the first beach station on the Tillamook railroad. Just now ther are plenty of blackberries In the foot hills a few hundred yards back from the station, which the summer vis itors are picking and doing their best to can without much sugar. Mr. and Mrs. A. Berdam of Great Falls, Mont., were among the tour ists present when the last batch of "hot stuff" was spread and rolled, completing the hard-surface pave ment between Hood River and Port land Monday afternoon. Mr. Berdam Is connected with the United States bureau of animal Industry and with Mrs. Berdam has been motoring to Portland from Montana. They are registered at the Hotel Washington. William von der Hellen. who has the contract for grading 22 miles of the Crater lake highway, wae in the city yesterday submitting a bid to the government for rock surfacing seven miles of the stretch. Mr. von der Hellen says that he will have the grading finished by October 1. to have for a 16-hour day for several people something like what other laborers get for an 8-hour day for one person. "Selfish"? That's the time they hit the nail on the head. They say also that two factors enter into the cost of milk in the home. First, co&t of production, sec-! ond. cost of distribution. The dairy- man didn't know that cost of pro duction had anything to do with it. That must have been forgotten when hl check was made. They also make much fuss ahnnt the league employing an attorney. Well, 1 i just like to know of anv transac tion of importance from the cradle to the grave in which the formalities of law can be Ignored. Many infringe ments of law are not criminal in them selves. Getting married, going hunt ing or fishing and driving an auto mobile are not wicked acts., hu? lust do any of these without getting a license ana see where you land. And still this slush keens pominar. itsitraaya mall brought some more. Apparently there is considerable money behind this camnaiirn. The dairyman is wonderina- who !a supplying 117 MRS, W. E. RICE. TWO OLD SAYINGS RECALLED Do "People like to Be nsmhnntriir - n iou Always Fool Tkrmf VANCOUVER, Wash.. Auir. 2. ITn the Editor.) In conducting their 1920 campaign the democrats are evidently banking on the truth of that saying of P. T. Barnum. "the American people like to be humbugged.' In 1916 the humbug was "he kept us out of war," when at that time president Wilson and his close ad visors, if members of the president's cabii.et may be so designated, knew that we would inevitably be drawn into the conflict. The humbUK in 1920 is three-headed, "peace, prog ress and prosperity." Certainly we will have peace. We have had actual peace since Novem ber, 191S. and that actual peace will continue, although a state of war still exists because of the autocratic obstinacy of President Wilsnn an that state of war will continue in definitely if Mr. Cox is elected and carries out his promise to continue tne Wilson policy of no reservations for the league of nations, as it will be impossiDie to obtain a two-thirri ma jority of the senate for unreserved ratmcation. In the matter of progress anrl nm. perity. future democratis. .performances may do juagea oy past actions of that party. Progress has been made in the dlrcetion of wastins- hlninnc of dollars of public funds nrt nf clogging the wheels of government with thousands of unnecessary clerks and office holders, all deserving democrats. The great majority of important chairmanships in both branches of congress was held hv southern members, and the south is tne least progressive section of the union. Those who can remember the two administrations of Grover Cleveland or even the period between March 4. 1913. and the fall of 1914. when the war stopped Importation of for eign goods and started American plants on the production of war goods for Europe, will not be fooled by the democratis promise of prosperity. That oft-quoted saying of Abraham Lincoln, "you can fool all the people ume oi tne time and some of the peopie an of the time, but you can't fool all of the people all of the time." may apply to the present situation. Mr. Wilson fooled all of the people in - - - " " oumo ui ine people (a ma jority, in un. it now remains to oe seen wnetner or not Mr. Cox can loot a majority in 1920. FRANK W. STONE. In Other Days, Twenty-five Years Ago. From The Oregonian of Aucust 4. 1S. San Francisco. Lumbermen nt th Pacific coast, met here yesterday to formulate a plan whereby the pine lumber mills and manufacturers of the coast may combine to raise prices and shut out foreign competition, es pecially from British Columbia. Philadelphia. In a horseshoe-making contest in this city last night Pugilist Bob Fitzsimmons broke the record by forging 30 horseshoes in 27 minutes. Dr. J. Hunter Wells, who recently left this city as medical missionary to Corca. is physician-in-chief to the Royal hospital in Seoul, Corea. William Wadhams has sold out his interest and severed his connection witn tne Incorporated firm of Wad lams & Co.. and is now a member of the firm of Wadhams & Kerr Bros. Fifty Years Ago. From The Oresonian of Ausuat 4. 1S70. Paris. An official dispatch from Metz announces that after three hours fighting the French took the heights wl.ich overlook Saarbrucken. The first installment of French troops frcm Rome has arrived at Marseilles. Vienna Austria is mobilizing 60 -000 men to watch Bohemia. ' Salem is to have a city calaboose, the council having accepted a bid to build one for $297. The Kentucky, from San Francisco for this port has been out 32 days. The Tordeusklold and Lovied, loaded with railroad Iron for the Oregon & California road are out, the first nearly 190 days and the latter 147 days. Portland and Oregon compare very favorably with Tallahassee and Flor Ida. according to Miss Mary Harden and Miss Alice Haughter. who are at the Hotel Washington. On the other hand. 'the Rose City Is almost as in teresting to Miss Wllletta Evans as her home town of Etenton, N. C. O. K. Olson is at the Imperial from Redmond to see about having hie foot fixed. Last week his foot went back on him without cause and so he se cured a crutch and came to Portland Mr. and Mrs. J. r Alpeles regis tered at the Hotel Portland from Los Angeles. They came by motor and what they wanted above any thing else was a room with bath. Donald McKay, a stockman from Gateway, Or., ie among the arrivals at the Perkins. PARTY THAT CATCHES RADICALS It's the One Tfcat Gives Free Round Trip Excursion to Kills Island. PORTLAND. Aug. 3. (Ti. the l,li. ottm me jrortiana Journal on juiy : There Is a nnlitirnl imi ih., .k- t al will give out. The attempt to raise i jiuuauaooo auout Gnvprnn, r-n u- prohibttion question is effort to divert ths attention in dry Orcrnn from tk. ,.. ament of Candidate Harding. . . . He is uacaea oy tne solid pro-German vote on a no-league platform. . . . His leagut plank la a made-ln-Germany nlank. German planks for Hardinir's luni-n. platform! Ye gods! W ho is It that believes the pro-Ger man vote is solidly back of Hardinr s league pfank? What rational man or woman can see the occasion, even, for such a childish and insane statement? tne pro-uermanB. the bolsheviki. the seditionists and the I. W. w. are not going to support Harding. Far from them be it to do so. They belong to no part of Mr. Harding's true American principles. They be long and vote with the party that furnishes them free excursions to EUis island and returns them safe home again. The Journal begins another cam paign in its accustomed manner. It seems always to be hard up for truth. The shallowness of its political man ners reflects the genuine character of its worth"-as a medium of enlighten ment to intelligent men and women who seek for political truths. Political secrets: ."Made in Ger many." What rot! There is a suspicion of desperation in its remarks. 'Goaded and stung to despair by the rank failure of Wilsonism, in which it took so prom inent a part, it becomes frantic at the plight its own disrupted party is in. But it is idle for the Journal to vituperate Harding. Perfectly idle'! There is no one who forgets the energetic political propaganda the Journal and Wilson party put into force to catch the pro-German vote in 1916. No one has forgotten that dissembling cry1, "He kept us out of war." But that cry Is dead. Wilson Ism is dead and the Journal is nearly so, politically. Where, where Is the self-respecting democrat (and there are many) who will go around with such a lie in his TOO MUCH MO.XEY !' CAMPAIGNS People Should be Left to Decide Presidency for Themselves. EUGENE, Or., Aug. 1. (To the Ed itor.) In an editorial article en titled "Publicity for Campaign Funds" The Oregonian it is stated. among other things. "The public demands that the contest be waged iu such a way that large sums of money must be spent" and further on it says: "The people expect the candidates and many others on their behalf to travel all over the country and to speak on the questions at issue. They expect pamphlets and all manner of printed matter to be liber ally circulated. They expect men to be busy getting out the vote." This Is in part correct and in part incorrect, if you will pardon my criticism. I believe that the ma jority of the thinking men who are interested in politics without at the same time being politicians are con vinced that there is entirely - too much of the tactics above described. If it is safe to assume that a man's record of efficient and loyal service to the nation is a sufficient reason for considering him as a presidential candidate, then that record itself should be his principal claim to con sideration of the voters. Of course, it Is reasonable that he should make his attitude clear as regards issues which are to be dealt with upon his taking the oath of office, but making himself clear on such matters does not call for the expenditure of mil lions of dollars or the hiring of hun dreds of "silvery tongued orators. The method in vogue in this coun- try more closely resembles a tremen dous selling campaign conducted along gigantic lines and without regard to cost, providing the results materialize, than a dignified expres sion of choice on the part of free citizens as to whom they wish to make their chief executive. In the opinion of the writer a return to saner and more dignified election methods would reflect great credit on any who might care to sponsor such a move. L. W. JACOBS. STATE'S EARLY MASONIC LODGES Correction Made of Statement as to Senator Stelwer's Part Therein. OAKLAND, Cal., July 28. (To the Editor.) I have Just read, with sad Interest, the notice of the death of ex-Senator Winlock Steiwer, with a brief account of his public services, in which it is said he "was instru mental in establishing the first Ma sonic lodge in eastern Oregon." That statement is erroneous. The first Masonic lodge in eastern Oregon was established at The Dalles when Sen ator Steiwer was a child, and the writer of this correction was himself initiated into the Masonic order in a lodge at Canyon City in 1865. when Senator Steiwer was . only 13 years old and still living at the home of his childhood In Marlon county. There were still other Masonic lodges in eastern Oregon before Mr. Steiwer could have been received In a lodge of Maaons that is, before he at tained the age of majority. I hope it is unnecessary for me, a friend of the senator from the dnys of his youth, to say that I am not prompted to call attention to this error by any wish or willingness to remove one stone, however small, from the cairn his deeds have erected to his memory, but solely by the mouth as "Harding's league plank is! thought that it is important to keep a made-in-Cermany plank"? the facts of history straight as we GEOKGE ATWOOD. I go on. W. LAllt HILL.