8 TIIE MORNING ORE G ONI AN, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1920 ESTABLISHED BI HENRY L. PITTOCK. Fubllahed by The Oregonian Publishing Co, 136 Sixth a i reel, Portland. Oregon. C. A. ilOKDEN, K. B. P1PKR. Manager. Editor. The Oregonian is a mtmber of the Aaso e'ated Press. The Associated Press la ex clusively entitled to the use tor publication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited 1h this paper and also the local news published herein. All rlshta of republication of special dispatcbea here in are also reserved. subscription Katre Invarlubly In Advance. (By Mall.) Dally. Sunday Included, one year 18.00 Jaity, Sunday Included, six months ... 4.-3 lJatly, Sunday Included, three months . latly. Sunday included, one moqth .... "5 laiiy. without Sunday, one year 6 00 laliy, without Sunday, six months .... J.21 lal!y, without Sunday, one month .... .60 weekly, one year 1.00 Sunday, one year a. Oil (By Carrier.) Dally, Sunday included, one year J9.00 Daily. Sunaay Included, three months. . 2. 5 Dai:y, Sunday Included, one month 75 Daily, without Sunday, one year 7.80 Daily, without Sunday, three months... 1.U9 Daily, without Suuday, one month Uo How to Remit Send postoffice money order, express or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency ass at owner's risk. Give postoffice address in full, including county and sia.te. Postage Kates 1 to IB pages. 1 cent: 1H to ;ij paxes. 2 cents; 34 to 45 pages, 3 cents; .0 to 04 pages, 4 cents; ttti to 80 pages. & cents; SJ to 04 paces, o cents. Foreign postage double rates. Kustrrn Itusiness Office Verre-e & Conk Jin, Brunswick building. New YorK; Verree t Conklin. Steger building, Chicago; Ver ree Sl Conklin. Free Press building, De troit, Mich. San Francisco representative, K. J. Uidweil. SOME MORK WORDS OV SLISH AM) SLVSIl FUNDS. The term slush lends itself hap pily to an appropriate characteriza tion of the Cox bluster and fluster about slush funds. It was a des perate and discreditable effort of a desperate and despairing' candidate to find something to say to the riurt of his opponent. Somehow the cam paign has lost Us early aspect of respectability and decency through the Cox excursion into the dirt of bar-room politics. In the mind of every citizen worthy of his citizen ship Is the picture of a candidate for president who by his character, his record and his methods will give a healthy and elevating tone to pol itics, conveying assurance to Amer ica and to the world that the new chief executive will measure up in every sense to the, traditions, the re sponsibilities, the duties and the dig nities of high place indeed the highest place . No candidate can with safety to himself risk shattering the image. Cox has done it. He should never have been led away from his first obligation to keep the campaign on high ground by discussing issues, ex pounding principles, declaring poli cies. If there was a slush fund, or the reasonable suspicion of its ex istence, he should have delegated some other of his followers among the committee officials to ascertain the facts and expose them. But he sets himself up as the chief witness for the prosecution as well as the prosecuting officer, and when he is asked to go before the senate in vestigating committee he invests himself at once-with the protecting cloak of a candidate's supposed pre rogative, and stays away, leaving others to make good what he from the stump has charged, but cannot prove, for the reason that it is not provable. But the senate committee is doing a fairly good job in its investigation . of campaign expenditures. It has developed more than one fact of in terest and importance as to the plans of both great parties. Without con sidering now the full scope and weight of the Hays and Upham state ments, it is well to suggest to the public that it was given opportunity to learn something about democratic campaigns, now and heretofore, which neither Mr. Cox nor any other democratic candidate or official would ever have told from the ros- ! trum. It is quite clean that the democratic management, as early as the summer of 1919, contemplated the collection of a fund of J5, 000, 000 to $10,000,000 and an elaborate money-collecting organization was perfected, and installed in a building at Washington, D. C, with several hundred employes; but it was aban doned only when it transpired that the overhead expense was greater by J10.000 to $15,000 per month than the total amounts collected. No wonder the high-geared plans were suddenly changed and put on a pov erty basis. The conclusion is cer tain that if the money-getters had been able to get what they went after, they would have stuck by the job. We are left to assume also i that Mr. Cox would never have been - so grieved and alarmed about any mythical or hypothetical slush fund if it had been a democratic fund. Why they could not get it may be another story. Nobody with a dollar of his own, unless he was an ardent last-ditch democrat, was willing to give it up to an administration which in taxes had already taken from him much of what he had, and in wasteful, prodigal and senseless expenditure had dissipated a great part of that systematically extracted modicum of the citizen's income. Where he had confidence, he lost it; where he had no confidence, he found it unnecessary and impossible to change his point of view. It was admitted by the democratic financiers who were at the helm that they had got $75,000 from one con tributor in 1916, $50,000 from an other (Barney Baruch), and $40,000 -. from another; and yet they are sure that any republican who gives more tnan $1000 is inspired by "sinister intent" and has set out to "buy the presidency and to settle industrial controversies with the bayonet. The productive and always accessible .faaruch unbuttoned his capacious pockets for the present campaign by agreeing to finance publication and distribution of a certain pamphlet at tne cost of many thousand dollars. ; By the easy device of having Baruch do it, the committee would have to give no accounting. ; Nor is it necessary to keep a rec ord of the millions of speeches and , other propaganda sent out free in the United States mails under con gressional-franks. In this case Uncle barn toots the bill. He pavs. too. when hundreds and thousands of federal office-holders take their feet . down from their mahocanv desks lock up, and give their time over to - political service. One democratic official was quite ; sure that $2,000,000 was enough for - a democratic campaign, and $3,000, 000 too much for the republicans. , . Yet the democrats own up to an outlay of $2,300,000 .in 1916, when "he kept us out of war." Having . been Kept aut of war, the expense "-."of living' has merely doubled in the . interim and a $2,300,000 campaign of four years ago would probably r cost not more than $1,600,000 now. ... The modest witness who thought $2,000,000 sufficient doubtless had in mind the fact that the democrats tart every campaign with a handi- cap of ten or eleven democratic states in the solid south, where fifty, cent cotton and most of the office holders come from, and where it is unnecessary for any democrat to spend a cent for a candidate on a national ticket. COMPARING THE CNCOMPARABIE. The mathematical certainty With which Mr. Gompers committee de termined that Governor Cox is a bet ter friend of labor than Senator Harding will delight all those who do not give a fig for logic. Mr. Cox, we are told, signed - a large number of measures in which labor had friendly interest while he was governor of Ohio. Mr. Hard ing voted for certain measures in the senate, in which labor was in terested and voted against certaig others. It is worth passing mention that the measures Governor Cox signed were passed by a republican legislature. Certainly they were noi political issues. Clearly the repub lican legislature of Ohio was not pouring water on a democrat's wheel. But the great point from the anti logicians' standpoint is that Senator Harding had no opportunity to show what he would have done had he been governor of Ohio when the same bills were passed, and Governor Cox had no opportunity to express his convictions on the measures tha came before Mr. Harding as sen ator. Nobody knows what either would have done had hp been in the other's shoes. It is a new idea as to the suffi ciency of tests. If it becomes popu lar in other nespects we shall some day hear that Smith is a better farmer than Jones because he raised more corn in Iowa than Jones raised in Vermont; or that Jackson is a better fisherman than Johnson be cause he caught more salmon in the Columbia river than Johnson caught tuna fish off Catalina island; or that Mary is a better cook than Jenny because she baked a greater number of successful pies than Jenny baked angel cakes. The art of comparing things that are not comparable may be inter esting but it is not informative. SPEARING OF DISCREPANCIES. By comparison, the discrepancy in the Oreson quota is a small matter. And yet it lias very great significance. Testifying before the Investigating committee. Treas urer Upham said the Oregon contributions totaled $l?r51. State Chairman Tongue In a public statement placed the Oregon quota at S'JO.liOO. County Clralrman Day said $20,000 had already been sent, and National Committeeman Ralph Williams placed the amount sent at between $20,000 and $-1,000. That Is to say, the sum sent from Oregon was eight times as much as Treasurer Upham, on oath, gave as the Oregon amount to the investigating com mittee. Portland Journal. Being a small affair, it is mag nified by prejudiced commentators of the masquerading "independent" stripe into a great affair. In this instance special pains are taken to ignore the fact that Treasurer Up ham's report covered the period from June 14, 1920, to August 26, 1920, the former date being when the present committee assumed charge of the campaign. The campaign to raise funds for the national committee in Oregon was carried forward last spring and the money was sent in from time to time. In all $20,000 was raised. No doubt it was used in the com mon fund necessary for legitimate committee activities, such as the expense of the national convention. Of the $20,000 the sum of $2551 was turned over - between June 14 and August 26. It is all perfectly clear and there is no possible excuse for misunderstanding or misstate ment about it. But there is another discrepancy in the little controversy over Oregon funds which our neighbor, engaged in the distasteful and enforced task of promoting the Cox falsehood about a $16,000,000 slush fund, con- entionally passes by. Mr. Cox, quot- ng from a fake and forged list, said the quota for Portland was $50,000. There is not a scintilla of proof for his statement. The reason there is no proof is that it is not true. CONCERNING DOGS. This genuine friendship between folks and dogs is. too fine a thing to be sprayed with toilet water. When we learn that Paris is a scented seventh heaven for shivering, pam pered little curios of canine crea tion, on whom silly and extravagant women lavish the love that children should receive, a wave of nausea pervades our cosmos. There are dainty little sets of dishes where from these princelings of dogdom are fed, and sweaters of wool and broadcloth, and gold and silver col lars set with jewels, and perfumed soaps for the puppy's bath and other costly equipment that bespeaks tho degradation of the dog. France is far away, and the follies of Paris are light reading, but even here we are not untainted with that strain of neurotic nonsense that would make the dog more of a parasite than a pal. Folks and dogs have been friends for so long a time, and with such mutual enjoyment and appreciation, that it is a shameful thing to per vert this' real companionship. The memory of myriad dogs that served us, and warded off our enemies, and wagged their tails to the rout of gloom, and sounded the joyous bark of welcome or the deep-throated growl of sacrificial battle, ft far too precious a thing to be destroyed by modern fad and caprice. The world at large still knows and loves a good dog, and it needs no finely- bred exquisite to replace the towsled f riends of the past and to lap daintily at cream from choice china. The taste of those we most admired ran ever to bones, consumed with many a lusty crunch and happy grumble while the-sagacious eyes of the diner roved the backyard for possible ag gressors. ' Now a dog, to qualify as a dog, does not need girth and substance. He may be broa"d of shoulder and heavy of haunch, with terrible jowls, or little and slender and vivacious, with a muzzle that fits in the palm. But he must possess those tradi tional requisites of the dog-soul, courage and understanding, enter prise and camaraderie. If in addi tion to these the fates have given him kindliness and laughter then is his possessor numbered among the favored. As for loyalty no specifi cation is needed. It is the birth right of the species, and won them their places "by the fire. Even the pampered canine pets of society the soaped and scented little imita tions of dogs are probably loyal. Left to their own devices they might recover their self-respect, and fare forth and chase a cat and pick fights with ponderous old mastiffs, and speedily revert to type. If ever there were sad dogs, cursed by kind ness, these are the fellows. Give us a dog, pedigree unimnor- ! taut, with a roving eye and a Jocular bearing-, courageous but not quarrel some, repentant for his misdemean ors but never hopelessly sanctified a dog to leap when you laugh and to draw a long face, his sober old head on your knees, when gloom descends. Let this dog be such as will delight in steak-bones and sweet-cakes, but for all that a dog not above exploring the democratic depths of the trash-heap or racing a rat to its haven,. - Let him, be sen sible of his station, but not superior, considerate of children and tolerant of puppies, but hard of gaze and bared of fang when prowlers come or his equals snarl the challenge. For such a dog there is ever a place by the fire a nook in the heart. He may dig in the garden and leave venerable soup-bones on the front lawn. The muddy feet of him may be planted joyously on suit or frock. Frequently he fosters fleas. Never theless his master is a fortunate man, blessed beyond others, and he knows it. A DREAM BRIDGE. The proposed $6,000,000 Burnside bridge, judging from the published picture, would be commodious and beautiful to look upon. We should like to see such a bridge spanning tha Willamette. But $6,000,000 is a lot of money. The structure it is designed to re place cast, we believe, about $250, 000. Of course a. new one like it would cost more now, but nothing like $6,000,000. The present struc ture is and has been for a long time, the least used of the several Portland bridges. Possibly if it were replaced with so handsome a struc ture as that proposed it would be come the most popular of all because of its beauty, and some day the pub lic may be so plethoric and feel so generous that it will jump at the chance to pay $6,000,000 to please the esthetic tastes of automobile and truck drivers and of the many others who can now hardly bear to go near the river because of the skeleton like appearance of the bridges. Of course the public will not now vote $6,000,000 for a bridge, beauti ful or otherwise. It is folly 4o think of it. The first year's interest charge alone would more than pay the cost Of the original Burnside bridge. Two or three years' interest on $6,000,000 ought to build a bridge that would care for all the traffic needs of that locality for ten or fifteen years. AN INDUSTRY FOR OUR CONVICTS. Cruel and unusual punishment, in deed, is that which decrees that in mates of the Oregon penitentiary shall serve their terms in idleness for lack of the industrial employ ment that other states provide for convicts. No right-minded,' humane citizen of Oregon can do otherwise than approve the proposal that an adequate legislative appropriation be made for the establishment of a prison industry. Time falls heavily on the heads of the imprisoned, and only the heartless will declare that it is society's duty to add the extra punishment of utter idleness. In Reading Gaol, where he was imprisoned for debt, Wilde wrote of prison life with the certainty of knowledge plus the inspiration of genius. He commented upon the singular obsession that each day was like a year, a year whose days are long, to those men who "rust life's iron chain, degraded and alone." There is no mawkish'' trend to the sympathy that holds that the lot of the convict, bitter as it is, should not be further embittered. In the solitude of their cells the prisoners whittle at wooden toys and trinkets, striving against the remorseless cur rent of time that rolls over them. Oregon once loaned Its convicts through contract to a stove foundry, and the imprisoned men were saved from idleness. There were objec tions to the system, more or less valid, and it was discontinued. Since then the use of convict labor in road construction, one of the projects utilized to fight idleness, has been proved uneconomical. They have been sent to the flax fields, but at best this is only a stop-gap to the current of enforced idleness. "What these men need, while they are pay ing their debts to society, is the fortification of steady industry to fend off the devils of introspection and despair, to curb the inclination to revolt, to render them of service to themselves and to the state. They are not wastage, to lie neglected un til their terms expire. For the most part they are men who will return to the world, and the theory of their punishment is that they shall return as better men. By all means let there be an in dustry established In the Oregon penitentiary. Only those who are actually serving time' and counting the dreary processional of days can even guess the cruelty of idleness. Interminably advancing the days march down upon them, the days that are longer than years. BACK TO A NEW BOIL IN FRANCE. The debt of French farmers to agricultural scientists of the United States is increased by the discovery of an American thst the old, widely held theory of the valuelessness of the subsoil la wrong. The practical effect of this contribution to prac tical knowledge is seen in the act of the French government rescinding its former order closing the war devastated districts in the "north to their former inhabitants.- The .whole agricultural policy of the nation may be modified, indeed, as the result of experiments conducted on a farm on Long Island, New York, by which it was demonstrated that soil that long has lain several feet below the surface is capable of reclamation. The importance of this-, lies in the vast extent of French territory that was laid under bombardment. In the Long Island experiments the devastating work of artillery was simulated by systematically placed charges of dynamite. . Ground, that had been virtually turned upside down was afterward subjected to mechanical treatment and its fertil ity was largely restored. The es sence of the process Is that the cost is not prohibitive. The accepted definition of soil it self has been responsible for some of the mistaken theories attached to it. The term, which is applied to the extremely superficial portions of the earth's crust mixed with organic matter called humus, has usually been regarded as non-inclusive of subsoil in the agricultural sense, though progressive farmers in America for -a long while have un derstood the value of subsoil plow ing and have taken advantage of it to multiply crop yields. The order for abandonment of the. ruined territory of the north was only in part due to danger from unexploded missiles in the ground. The view was held quite generally that the peasant landowners would be unable to make a living irom tne land and that provision would be necessary for them elsewhere. Nature has a way, though she takes her own time at it, of atoning for violence done to her plans. Veg etation that springs up following a' great upheaval illustrates the method. At first only the plants survive that are rooted superficially and that deri've the larger part of their sustenance from air. These, dying, furnish a small quantity of needed humus, which encourages other and more exacting plants to take quarters there. The process continues, after a crop rotation sys tem of nature's own, until all the elements of fertility, both organic and inorganic, are - found in the newly exposed layer. -The reformatory work of nature, which apparently leaves so much to the factor that we call chance, is hastened by being systematized, and new the perfect flower of American efficiency blooms in fields that a year or so ago were believed to be condemned indefinitely to unpro ductive idleness. French peasants are being made acquainted with lime and clover, twin soil specifics that find ardent advocates in Oregon. The sovereign panacea, as it ever has been, is personal industry, but there is no lack of that among the French agricultural classes. If the Mmate holds pood that 1,000,000 arable acres in France were devas tated in the war, the discovery here tofore alluded to amounts to a gift to France for a long term of years of that area of productive land, without expense, however, . to the donors. It is further to the credit of Americans, though of relatively lesser importance, that certain ad ministrative details of agricultural reconstruction are being worked out by the American Committee for the Restoration of Devastated France, of which Miss Anne Morgan is the head, and " by the units of Quakers who took over the rebuilding of certain communities to prove that conscientious objectors to war may not object to giving their money and their services in a humanitarian cause. Aside from the natural jape that every kittenish old spinster will ap prove of the cat-step, as indorsed and presented by the recent convention of dancing masters in Gotham, there appears little need for comment. The cat-step is toited as a lightsome yet less objectionable antic than its predecessors, the shimmy and the chummy-hug. Before these was the rag, and before that the tango, if memory serves us rightly. Critics of the dance have wearied of hoping for an elevated dance hall. They are chastened, even saddened, by experience. As to the cat-step, they await it without enthusiasm, re straining their pessimism. The new dance is more properly known as El Gato. but in New York it was instantly dubbed the cat-step or the pussy-foot glide. These sobriquets cannot be said to commend- it. We fear the worst. Leprosy may soon be listed among those plagrues that science has com pletely conquered and all by rea son of the fact that men of science paid heed to the curative properties of a tree esteemed by the natives of British India in the treatment of lep rosy. It is the chaulmoogra tree in whose oil the natives had found a beneficial effect, though not a cure They had used it for centuries, but it was only recently that occidental practitioners concentrated chaul moogra oil and utilized it at the Hawaiian leper colony. The results are hailed as almost certain proof of a specific for leprosy. During the past year fifty-eight patients have been discharged as cured. And that is wonderful news, indeed, when one recalls that since the dawn of his tory lepers have been aptly known as "the Jiving dead." They are hunting tne deer the deer as he bounds through the for est today, and quite frequently plug ing a steer who oughta keep out of the way. But somewhere some for tunate guy, who took a good look ere he shot, is setting real buck meat to fry and brewing of coffee a pot. . v The former Willamette university economics professor who played the republicans and democrats against each other until he got a $7500-a year job from the democrats, seems to practice economics as well as preach It. i Still, none of us Is- so extrava gantly optimistic -as to believe that the Porte s decision to send an am bassador to the Vatican is the prel ude to a grand abolishment of all sectarian lines in religion. About this season of year the only successful rival of the man who made two blades of grass grow where only one grew before is the chap who planted beans in his corn field and is dining on succotash. Our horoscope predicts that Sep tember will be a fortunate month for us if we are lucky containing thirty days and a full moon, with the rent falling due on the tenth, It is reported that Ellis island immigrants "rioted" when they be held full sugarbowls. We felt the same way when the epic headlines shouted. Sugar has fallen!" Turkey will send a minister to the Vatican. Two-handed swords and scimetars were the calling cards o the crusades. Surely, we progress . Dancing masters declare that danc ing is an ,interpretation of music Thank heaven, no one has yet thought of interpreting sacred music. However, the great issue on which Governor Cox has not as yet com mitted himself is whether he pre fers his beer on draught or bottled. The retreat in the direction of Moscow promises to rival a certain historic military movement in the opposite direction. i Cost of operating the penitentiary has increased 115 per cent. Tha moral would seem to be to abolish the penitentiary. We presume from his wife's charges that Charlie Chaplin regarded mar riage as something of a slapstick comedy. The revolt of the corner grocers literally "spilled the milk" when the pacific ruling of the commission was received. Revised census figures give Los Angeles another 1000 population. They were revised before the earthquakes. BY-PRODUCTS OF THE TIMES How a Thrifty Croeana Saved Storage on Ills Liberty Bonds. A local Croesus, who has a good rating in the financial directories, re cently visited his bank and requested a loan of $10, says the New York Evenine; Post. "But you have a deposit of about $40,000!" exclaimed the president of the bank. "'Why should you wish to borrow a trifle like that?" Croesus persisted in his demand and the bank president smilingly gave him a check for the desired amount. 'What collateral are you offering?" inquired the president. 'One hundred thousand dollars in Liberty bonds," replied Croesus, drawing an envelope from his pocket. "Here they are. Good morning." But the president halted him. "Now that the loan has been made in the usual fashion," he said, "would you mind telling me your object in putting up $100,000 as collateral?" "Just this," explained Groesus. Think how much it would cost me to keep these bond3 in a safe de posit vault!" On his way to Europe, Douglas Fairbanks attended a lecture on phil osophy by a, young Instructor from Columbia unlvesnlty, who entertained the ship's passengers one night with a few selected thoughts on the cos mos, says a writer in the New York Post. The following night, as the story was told later by fellow pas sengers, Doug sought out the Colum bia man. "I hear you're a philosopher," said the movie star. The instructor admitted the fact. "Well, I've got a philosophy, too," continued Doug. "I'll tell you about it." For two hours he explained his views to the young instructor, who listened like a philosopher. "Do you think you could use my philosophy in one of your books?" in quired the actor, as he wound up his discourse. The Columbia man thought that he could. "Well, if you do," Doug requested, don't forget to give me credit for what I told you!" Will Irwin, in an address in Green wich Village on birth control, told e story of a chap named Hlggins, who got home one night to learn that his wife had given birth to triplets three healthy, bouncing boys, says the Boston Globe. Higgins, overjoyed, went to the boss' office next morning and re counted the rare and wonderful thing which had befallen him. The boss felicitated him heartily, and the next day Hlggins was sent for. He hurried to the office again to find the entire firm assembled there. A handsome silver cup stood on the mantel, and this trophy, in an elo quent speech, the boss presented to him in recognition of the triple bless ing which he had bestowed upon his country. Higgins took tha cup in his hand. bowed respectfully and said: "Excuse me, sir, but is this cup mine now, or do I have to win it three years in succession?" 1 A medical corps officer chanced upon a negro acquaintance of civil life one day in France. "How do you like the army, Moaef" he asked. " 'S'll right so far, cap'n," replied the negro, "but ah don't know how I'm going to like it when dem Ger mans shoots at me." "Don't worry about that," replied the officer. "All you have to do is zig-zag." And he demonstrated. The next time the two met the nego was in a hospital. "What's the matter with you, MoseT' asked the officer. "I ain't sure, cap'n, but ah think I must have been ziggin' 'bout de time ah oughta been zaggin.' " American Legion Weekly. Julian G. Herkimer of the Anti Saloon league said in a Pittsburg lec ture: "A Pittsburg woman, in the days before the state went dry, took a bath one winter evening and then as she felt chilled, she swallowed a table spoonful of whisky. "Afterward she prepared her little daughter for bed. She was bending over the youngster, unbuttoning her frock, when the child gave two or three sniffs and said sharply: "Why, mother, you've been using father's perfumery!' " The original "tree of knowledge" in the Garden of Eden, reputed by tradi tion to have been the one from which the serpent tempted Eve, has literally fallen a victim to the ambition of some British Tommies on furlough to have themselves photographed in its branches, a dispatch says. Their weight proved too much for it, and the tree crashed to the ground. A British court of inquiry has decided that the Moslems be awarded $1750 to build a mosque on the spot. To ronto Globe. "So you don't believe there is a thing as genius?" "Not nowadays," replied Mr.lDustin Stax. "What is your idea of a genius?" "A man who can think of some way to help the railroad business without raising rates." Washington Star. A conceited Welsh student-pastor was preaching in English in a Derby shire chapel. To impress his -English hearers he said he would recite the first words of the Bible in 20 langu ages What he did Was to recite dif ferent passages in Welsh each time. Suddenly be saw a man laughing at him. "And twelfthly," he said, "as the passage goes in Arabic, Oachw! Cymro peidweh yn chwerthln a caewch eich ceg " which means "if you're a Welshman, etop laughing and shut your mouth." At an amateur performance an artists gave imitations of several popular actors, one of whom hap pened to be present. Afterwards the ambitious amateur sought an introduction to the "star," and asked hopefully: "Did you see my imitation of you?" "1 did," replied the great man, promptly. "Then, sir," persisted the aspiring youth, "may I ask you to give me your opinion of my art as shown in ysuch sauSyjJ, that impersonaton? "Well, my boy," the great man sa "one of us is rotten!" Those Who Come and Go. F. O. Finn of Victoria. B. C, has arrived at the Multnomah. Victoria having survived the visit of the Im perial Press association and showed the pressmen everything from the Butchart sunken gardens to the ban quet room of the Empress, attention is now being directed to the prohibition question. The election is coming on and there is a goodly percentage of residents wgo would like to see the laws sufficiently elastic to permit a barter in liquor, figuring that if Victoria is "wet" it will offer an in ducement to tourists from the states. Most of the physicians in Victoria are riding in new automobiles, for under the law a physician can issue 250 pre scriptions a month for liquor and the charge is $2.50 a prescription. Up to four weeks ago a prescription was good for two quarts, but now all that a prescription will yield is an eight ounce bottle about two swigs but the doctors haven't cut the price of the prescriptions. There are more second-hand auto mobiles in Seattle than I ever saw be fore," declares Carl Steam, of that place. Who is registered at the Ben son. "I don't know where all these used machines came from, but there is an abundance of them." Mr. Stearns, who is manager for a motion picture concern which is filming "The Four Cowboys of the Kucalipes,". or some thing like that, admits that the the ater business in Seattle Isn't hitting on all cylinders of late. He at tributes the falling off in attendance to the very pleasant weather which Seattle has been experiencing and be cause of the weather people have pre ferred being outdoors. The wet sea son is approaching, however, and the girls in the glass ticket offices will soon be busy asking "How many, please?" F. W. Beach, who is secretary of the hotelmen's association and serves in a similar capacity for the caterers' association, sah that the garbage from " the hotels and restaurants of Portland is worth $30,000 a year. This by-product has been sold to hog ranchers, but some of the ranchers have notified the kitchens that some one is making so many restrictions that they won't be able to line the garbage, so a committee has been ap pointed by the caterers to see about buying an island in the Columbia river and having the restaurant and hottlmen go into the hog raising business. Very well satisfied with the nomin ation of Sam Shortridge as the re publican nominee for United States senator in California was Michael De Young, publisher of the Chronicle. Mr. De Young has been registered at the Benson and while here he kept in close touch with the primary election in his home state. When he checked out to return to San Francisco, he ex pressed himself as pleased over the success of Mr. Shortridge, who Isn't what might be called a prohibition candidate. If ha finds a hotel which looks good to him and with the price right, he will buy, says Joseph Bixler, who is at the Multnomah. Mr. Bixler has been in the hotel business in Omaha, but recently disposed of his holdings ana is on the Pacific coast to seek i place where he can invest. Accom panied by Mrs. Bixler and son, he has motored through Washington and if ne cannot find what he wants In Portland, Mr. Bixler states that he will see what San Francisco has to offer. Phil S. Bates has returned fron Long Beach, where he has been con valescing for some weeks. He was stricken with ptomaine noison earlv in February and spent most of his time in hospitals until he went to the beach. For a long time he has had no use of his lower limbs, but now he Is able to walk without the use of crutch or cane and has gained about SO pounds in weight, although still some so pounds under normal. Tt. J. Ginn. who is one of the coin missioners of Sherman county as well as one or its leading merchants, is at the Perkins. Mr. Ginn's estab lishment and home are at Moro. which is the trading point for the owners of the vast wheat fields of mat vicinity. The wheat crop of Sherman county this year promises to Dring in several million dollars "There have been a number of ar son cases in Seattle of late." savs Frank Beatty. who has just returned from the Puget sound country. While in Seattle Mr. Beatty recovered some stolen automobiles and landed arsonist or two. Burning garages for the insurance is becoming somewhat of a pastime in Seattle. Not content with being president of one bank. Felix W. Ewing shows oy nis Dusiness card that he is tha president of three such financial in stitutions in California. Mr. Ewiner. who is registered at the Multnomah. acknowledges Ventura as hi3 place of residence Mr. and Mrs. George W. Barker, of Butte Falls, are among the arrivals at the Hotel Oregon. The population at Butte Falls is somewhat anxious to know what is to be done with the railroad, recently sold, which con nects that town with Medford. Wert Sappington, whose father used to look after the water rates for the summer visitors at Ocean Lake aryjl Twin Rocks, on the Tilla- mooH. jfcauii, is regisierea at ins ered at theim- sTf.- wr m-c. peri KANSAS RECORD BE Growing Grain Transformed Into Biscuits In 23 MInutea at Waitsbnrg. MEDFORD, Or,, Sept. 1. (To the Editor.) In The Oregonian Sunday last appears an article dated Cham- pan, Kan., purporting to be the rec ord of the manufacture of biscuits from standing grain. The article says that in 55 minutes grain was trans formed into brejh ready for human consumption. IU ) q The strange thlrrg frrTfat The Ore gonian should have reported the cir cumstance as a fact and a record. If you will refer to The Oregonian's col umns of a few years ago, you will find the record of a performance much more noteworthy. I think i was during the harvest of 1900, a the little town of WaitBburg, Wash, that grain was taken by combined har vester and automobile to the Preston Parton mill, and there ground into flour, and baked into biscuits in much less time than 5s minutes. By the way, the Preston-Parton mill is one of the oldest mills in Che northwest. I think the story will show tha the grain was cut on land owned by N. B, Atkinson, then president of the Farm ers' Educational and Co-operative union of the state of Washington. The work was under the direction of R. H. Ormsbee, then city attorney of Walts burg, and E. L. Wheeler, editor of the Waitsburg Times. An account of the feat was published in all the milling journals of the country, and If I am correct in my recollections of the events following, not a challenge o the time was made anywhere. ,J think the time was about 13 minutes, from waving grain in the fields three mile from the mill to baked biscuit served to the crowd that had been attracted by the record-breaking effort. Why give credit to Kansas boosters or work better done near home? ANXIOUS FOR PRESS UPHEAVAL Writer Proposes That Portland News papers Exchange Editors. PORTLAND, Sept. 2. (To the Edi tor.) McCready Sykes, writing in Commerce and Finance, of New York, in a late issue of that weekly jour nal of business and economics says: Viscount Burnham is proprietor of the London Llaily Telegraph and as chairman of the International Press Conference has been visiting in Ottawa. He teils of a plan under way in Eugland for the In terchange among- newspapers of their ed itors, somewhat after the fashion of ex changing professors among universities. English adltors will exchanxt desks, for periods of a year or so, with those from other parts of the empire, and Viscount Burnham would like to see the Idea car ried out between England and the United States. Mr. Sykes believes that "English and American newspapers have both much to learn from the other," but makes the positive assertion that "there are no English editorial pages as good in an all-around way as those, for example, of the Springfield Republican or the Portland Orego nian." He observes, in conclusion, that there are two publishers who might profit from such an exchange in this country "if Senator Harding and Governor Cox were to exchange news- apers they would double their re spective subscription lists." It strikes me, too, that if the inno LtiorT is to be tried out we had bet- er try it among ourselves first, and hat this might be done with profit t editors and readers alike right ere in our own city. Havlnc failed s an editor, it. is perfectly proper for me to advise men who have made uccess as editors in their respective ields, so I make bold to suggest that he editor of the Oregon Journal ex hange desks and duties with the edi- or of the Portland Telegram; that Mr. Fred Boalt, editor of the Portland Daily News, trade places for awhile with Mr. Edgar Piper, editor of The Oregonian, and that Mr. C. C. Chap man of the Oregon Voter take over he editorial duties of the Oregon La bor Press, while Mr. C. M. Ilynerson ditor of organized labor's official paper, edits and docs things in gen eral to Mr. Chapman's Voter. .1 leave to your own powers of de duction and imagination and to those of your readers the-probable results and effects of- my suggestions. If la vorably acted on. EUGENE E. SMITH. TO JCMP-OKK JOB." O precious ruins, wreck of wind and wave ! Once more from these beloved sands I view Your crumbling contour; broken architrave. Deeply do I deplore that Time, .false knave To his own handiwork, so much of you Each year demands; for even as he gave So does he take away, nor deigns to rue His depredations but the more does crave. How mem'ries throng of those sweet days of yore. As. pensive, on your marred form I gaze; Td give the world to realize once more The glad abandon of those care tree days E'er I had glv'n to years a measured score. What Joy! with pail and shovel then to raise Sand-masoned castles; drag along the shore The- brown-bulbed kelpweed; watch the sunset's blaze. Then were rou truly. In my childish thought, A shoe prodigious, lost, when to the sea Some hunted ogre, who had early fought. Strode to escape his wrathful enemy. So deeply planted In the sand and taut It lay this mighty shoe no pow'r could free: Till centuries a stone of it had wrought. While battering breakers beat Us walls in glee. One morn the sun lit up a wonder new, For. framed within Its arching sole appeared Immaculate on old Foulweather's view, A fairy lighthouse. Proudly it up reared A spotless column to the distant blue; And when night's sable veil its lines had bleared. A single brilliant star, that hitherto The blackness had not known, burst from the weird. Ah yielding rock. Time's ever-sweep ing wind. The waves of stern reality drives on : Dashing these youthful dreams of humankind E'en as they crumble you. And when anon Of present man naught there remains to find But dust of you, only the emooth sand, wan. His being, past. In stone will be en shrined A legend, cherished, tell of you agone. EDITH J. PERNOT. ANSWERING. I paused with my soul on a hill top. For an Instant sufficiency knew. And I asked of my soul on the hill top, Why climb for a loftier view? Then my soul bade me look to the valley. Where some walked with down eyes, ryieldinar to gloom in the valley. cast ArW I knew thus my soul'on the hill rest was answering, uuwn u f uuu ' " " And again I grew strangely restless Kor beyond beckoned heights sub lime. JANETTE MARTIN. Top Hand la Crlbbage. UKIAH. Or.. Sept. 1. (To the E tor. Kindly publish top hand in cribbage and what it consists of. SUBSCRIBER. The best possible hand in cribbage counts 29, and consists of three fives and Jack, with five of the same suit as Jack turned up. In this hand the fives alone count 13-8, the fives with Jack another I5-S. the fives make another 12 for pairs and His Knobs the other one: or 29 in all. Identity of Poem Sought. PORTLAND, Or., Sept. 2. (To the Editor.) The writer would be obliged if you could help him to the author ship of the following poem. I believe it is called "The Canadian Boat Song." and the following verse, quoted as nearly correct as I can pos sibly remember, may enable some courteous reader to furnish the in formation desired. From the lone shieling on the Misty title Mountains divide us, and a world of seas. Still our blood is red, and our hearts are highland. And in our dreams we see the Hebrides. JAMES GILLESPIE. Cool Contemplation. Anxieties that fret the soul Make summer harder as a rule; And he that hath his winter's coal la greatly helped :n keeping cool. Washington Star. More Truth Than Poetry. By Jimci J. Montague AS TO ALIENISTS. (An eminent alienist declares that th fans that xhrow pop bottles at baseball umpires are not' properly balanced men tally.) When fans declare: "We'll kill that umps The ugly-faced galoot!" And leave the stand in frenzied Jumps Their threat to execute. And beat the wretch with club and fist Amid the terrific noise. "Dear me," observes the alienist. They've lost their mental poise!" When Deacon Jones of Poplar creek, 1 lies off his trolley wire, Lets out a loud and piercing shriek: And stia his house afire. And clambers up the town hall stairs To 6hoot his brother Dave, "Well, well!" tho alienist declares, "That's no way td behave!" When William puts a halter on And says that he's a cow. And, all the fodder being gone He can't get breakfast now. And that a little barley serves To whet his appetite, "Oh dear!" the alienist observes, "He isn't acting right!" "It's fine when anyone appears To have a mental twist Or be snarled up between the ears To call an alienist. To such a case he always- brings A world of learned lore. And tells us such a lot of things That we have known before! Wist Will They Do No, Poor Things t A large number of splendid suf frage orators are out of a job. Have You Heard of Htm Latelyr The president's former confidential adviser seems to have added himself to the house shortage. ' At the Beach. It's the girl who freckles that wears a veil. (Copyright by tha Bell Syndicate. Inc.) The Battlefield. By Grace I- Hall. I'd like to send a helpful thought on shining wings away. To other souls, perhaps distraught by worries of the day; I'd like to send an urge of heart that their bruised hearts might feel, A balm of spirit for each smart, a sin cere, deep appeal To lift the head with courage true and try once more once more. Unnumbered victories wait for you they may be at the door. You need not go away from home te gain to heights renowned. The greatest triumphs ever known within the home are found; The greatest struggles fought and won are not on fields afar. But In the hearts where, fighting done, there still remains the scar. I'd like to speed some helpful thought on golden wings, today. For some give up before they've fought and weakly runaway; And losing then, may ever spurn the effort It takes To win the badge that courage earns in conquering mistakes: The souls of men are battlefields where passions' streams run red. And he who to the foreman yields soon rests among the dead. In Other Days. Tweaty-flve Years Ago Today. From The Oregonian of Feptember 3. 1S!3. Seattle By a decision of Judge Gilbert, concurred in by Judge Han ford, Receivers Oakes. Payne and House were held to answer charges of maladministration in office, pre ferred by Brayton Ives, president of the Northern Pacific. Pendleton C. F. McKlnney. lumber man, warns citizens of attack planned by Indians. Medford The school board has de cided to erect a $11,000 brick school building. City health officers are laying plans to ward off cholera epidemic, fear ing Its outbreak from ships in the harbor, recently arrived from tha orient. Fifty lean Ago. From The Oregonian September S. 1S70. London The Prussians report that Lieutenant Von Sehemoff, sent under flag to demand surrender of Verdun, was fired on and his trumpeter killed. The contract for the erection of St David's church in East Portland has been let. The Oregon conference board of church extension held its regular meeting in the evening. Th. -Rronklvn Flouring mill has re ceived a quantity of new machinery for installation. TREATY n EJECTED BY PRESIDENT Blame for Failure of VrraaiUea Pact Placed on Wilson. PORTLAND. Sept. 2. (To the Edl lor.) a correspondent of the demo cratic evening paper, while discuss ing the treaty question, remarks that "it has been six months since the league of nations was rejected by tha United States senate. Altogether wrong. Neither "a" treaty nor "the" treaty has been rejected by the sen ate The treaty as it came from the senate was rejected by Prsident Wil son and since the senate is as much a part of the treaty making power under the constitution, even as made by "the fathers," as is the president, the rejection by him of the treaty, as it was handed to him by the senate, accounts fully for the present Jumbled state of affairs. And this is a wise provision of the constitution. No treaty can be en tered into by the United States with out a favorable participation in its formation by two-thirds of the sen ators, and these men come, from all parts of the country, elected by a di rect vote of the people. Being so chosen, why shouldn't 64 men more' nearly represent" actual public opin ion than any one man who was elected by an Indirect vote? And this, even though that man did keep us out of war, ana out ior wnosa iar sightedness the United States might have been drawn into the great world conflict with Germany which would have necessitated the raising of a vast army and the spending of billions of dollars. Adm'ttedly it Is a great,man who could do all this, but the-constitution' doe.i not give him the power to make a treaty that :ha!l be binding on this country. He h.sthe power to reject-' a treaty, h'iever, and has done so.' T. T. (JEER. German Exports Less. London Sphere. Germany exported about S. 000, 000 metric hundredweight of potash last year, as compared with an annual pre-war exportation of from 12,009,. 000 tlS,000,000.'