5 TJIE MORNING OREGONIAN, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1920 ESTABLISHIO) BX HENRY I I'lTTOOK.. Published by The Oregonian Publishing- CoH 13i Sixth bireat, Portland. Oregon. (C. A- morden, k. b. pikr. i Manager. The Oregonian 1 a member of nB, Af?" c'.ated Press. The Associated, elusively entitled to the use for Publication ft all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In this paper ana aiso I He local news published herein. All rignts of republication o special dispatches Here in aro also reserved. .3.00 . 4.25 . 2.23 . .75 . e.oo . .o . 1.00 . 6.00 Eobscrlption Bates Invariably in Advance. (By Mall.) Dally, Sunday Included, one year .. . . lJaily, ffunday Included, six months . Dally, Sunday .Included, three months J)ai3y, Sunday 'included, one month .. J-iaily, without Sunday, one year . . Daily, without Sunday, one month .. Weekly, one year .... Sunday, one year ...... (By Cirrler.) Dally. Pimflay Included, one year . . . . J-' Daily, Sunday included, three months. . -i-o Dally, Funday Included, one month .... . Daily, without Sunday, one year Daily, without Sunday, six months . ... Dally, without Sunday, three months... !. Dally, without Sunday, ou month " How to Remit Send postofflce money order, express or personal check on your lncal bank, stamps, cola or currency are at owner's risk. (Jive postoffice address In lull. Including- county and state. Postage Bates 1 to 1 pages, 1 cent: 58 to S2 pages. 2 cents; 34 to 48 P"-8es. jl ceqto; 00 to 64 pages, 4 cents; Go to so pare--, 6 cents; S2 to 86 pages, 6 cents, foreign po&tago double rates. Eastern Business Office Verree & Conic Jin. Brunswick building. New Tork; V erree & Conklin. flteger building. Chicago; ver ree t Conklin, Free Press building. De troit, Mich. San IfVancisco representative, Tt. J. El-dwell. r the beginning of the campaign he asked: ' Who is It that is complaining excepx a band of men who have fought without feel ing and without conscience & sick man who could not defend himself? If Mr. Wilson was so sick that he "could not defend himself," he was too sick to perform the arduous duties of president and, according to the constitution, he should have handed over- the office to "Vice-Presi dent Marshall. If he was well enough to run the government, he was well enough to defend himself against his critics. His physicians inform them that an increase in gen eral longevity is at hand, and that no'longer that is, in the near future will one applicant in seven be rejected because of physical un soundness, but one in seventeen, or some such ratio. These estimates are not prophetic they are unbiased prevision, in a sound business sense, of the physical benefits that will accrue from abstinence. is probable that Portland has sent I Bf - PRODUCTS at least several such to their last accounting. Some, to a certainty. There is a schoolhouse on the east side a schoolhouse that is the mod ern survival of a pioneer structure of pine logs. All about It are mod ern dwellings. Yet when the pupils of long ago hold annual session there, and strive to forget how many OF" THE TIMES Mai. in sr or Books Held to Hamper Essential Industries. Complaints of too much making of books, are trite enough. In Biblical times there was "no end" of it, and Cervantes saw them tossed Into the world ike fritters." Yet there is years have passed, they talk of the I special pertinence to the allegation persistently denied that he was un- ' pects, 'that they wiM employ discre- TRAGIC LACK OF DISCRETION. When the law equips its officers with weapons it assumes, and ex- brook that once raced past that place, seeking the Willamette. The brook is gone, for the city would have none of It but there are those, as we have intimated, who recall of a prominent , motion-picture star that "everybody seems to be writing I these days. Go Into the subway, and it's ten to one that the folks on either side of you. If you've been Those Who Come and Go. SUPERVISION IS DISCONCERTISG able to perform his executive func tions and he "fired" Secretary Lan sing for assuming the contrary to be the fact. The only way to reconcile his actions with Mr. Cox's plea for feminine sympathy is to believe that Mr. Wilson was not too sick to run the government, to dictate to the sen ate and to block every effort at agreement on the league, but that he was too sick to endure the criticism which he thereby provoked. The familiar expression for such action is "playing the baby act.". A further fallacious appeal to sen timent was made in the allusion to American soldiers as having fought for the league, evidently meaning the Wilson league, in order to end war. This is of a piece with all that has been said about fighting for humanity or to make the world safe for democ racy. The truth Is that the Amer ican army and navy fought in defense of American rights on the sea and against a power which attempted to form an alliance for partition of the United States. Service to humanity and democracy followed as a conse quence of that fight. They hoped tha-t victory would make A league possible, but they did not fight for the Wilson league, for it did not take 6hape till the fighting had stopped. Mr. Cox's whole argument on the league is founded on the unwar ranted assumption that everybody who favors A league must neces sarily support the Wilson league and that everybody who opposes the Wilson league is an enemy of any league. It is a definite departure from the facts. 1 AS GOES MAINE. Maine speaks for itself; and it speaks also for the nation. The republicans swept the state because the Voters desired to register their confidence in the republican party. There were no. complications of local or state issues. There were no per sonalities which rose as candidates superior to party considerations. There was no apathy or indifference as to who won, or why. It was an old-fashioned party victory, planned to put out the democrats and to put in the republicans, and intended as a message to the nation for what ever effect it might have in November. The plain meaning of the Maine election is: (1) The voters have lost confidence In the democratic party, and have tion in the use of such arms. The recent kilng of Bert Hedderley, suspected bootlegger, by members of a. prohibition'' enforcement squad, is an instance apparently unique for utter lack of discretion and is repug nant to public morals. Nor does the I catching trout from its dancing I lucky enough to get a seat, are writ ing something or planning to do so.' It was bad enough before the movies came, when authors had only the printing press ' to feed. Now, with the voracious camera to be sup plied, it is a question whether the I TAKING COX'S MEASURE. ' Both the men and the women of Oregon have had the opportunity to take the measure of Governor Cox as a possible president of the United States by hearing or reading wo speeches at Portland and his one speech at Salem. They expect a man who aspires for that office to have a statesmanlike grasp of the problems with which he must deal, to tell them plainly what policies he favors and in general terms how he would apply those policies. They expect him to meet the arguments cf his opponents by appeal to reason ttnd common sense, by truthful re cital of the facts on which decision onust be based, not by appeals to Ecntiment which lead judgment astray, especially not by bold mis statements of fact- Above all they expect him to prove fidelity to the principles of American freedom, not to make bids for the votes of those who plot revolution for the purpose of overturning the republic and set ting up the- terrorist despotism of a Tried by all tnese tests, jur. v-u is found wanting. - He talked, much nrotrresslves and reactionaries. but he was vague as to the meaning of thesa terms. There) is a, kind of progress which, being founded on sound principles of government and economics, holds aU the ground that Jt has gained, and there is another Vinfl which plunges along like a run away locomotive and lands the train in the ditcn. air. t-o. given a vote of renewed confidence fortunate in his choice of examples , ,. of real .progressiveness. Workmen's ( The votera are thT0Ug.n compensation "c ""I"," Wilson and one-manism. riffles and who summon back the days when the birthday penalty of every pupil was to be publicly ducked, .amid appropriate hilarity, in Its softly swirling pools. They hold no brief for that vanished brook. fact that Hedderley sought to escape that they speak' of Jt dearly addition of scenario writing to other with reerret. i literary composition is not Tnlinann praitlr nlitniroa ln(f 4Tia Willamette at the southern verire of I endangers the balance. Where are fha f itv a rather net-norm Viln lirtln I l-i'5 ' to come from If every stream that thus-far has survived. I body turns author? Who is to do It is something more than a brook, tne mechanical work of book and it has a deal of freshets to deliver, I "Picture" production with all aspir and one rejoices to believe that here I tc d the writing? is a stream that will have its way I In all seriousness it must be ques unreDUKea despite tne growtn or the city. No, though they line John son creek with factories, and bridge it and dam it and restrain it, there will be most excellent crawdad fish ing therein when all of us are old, and undreamed-of children range its banks. Yes, indeed, when the boundaries of the' city shall have crept far past it, and tire commerce arrest justify the alacrity with which at least four of the . five officers opened fire upon him, one bullet penetrating his brain. There are times when it becomes necessary for the police to fire at an escaping criminal, on a man sus pected of crime, or to fire in self defense or the defense of others. Such occasions readily suggest them selves and do not require setting forth. But in the instance of Hed derley, who sought to escape arrest, no emergency requiring the employ ment of pistols appears to have existed. Five men, four of them at close quarters, practically sufcrounded the car in which he sat. As he realized the trap the suspect started hl niitomohilfv TnRtanMv n wan thA target of four- marksmen. At least f man and,s wings into port via on of thorn shot to kill for Hed- giant nyaropianes. 3) The league of nations as an Issue is of minor significance. The result would have been the same if it had never been heard of. 4 Prohibition had only a collat derley is most indubitably dead. May we say that five officers are inadequate for the capture of one man, who has made no pretense of armed resistance? To assume that they were in desperate plight when the fugitive started his car is bosh. And, for that matter, Hedderley was well known. He was a marked man. and his escape would have been but temporary. Then there were the tires for targets, but no one seems to have fired at them. Instead, to th great danger of pedestrians and residents of the locality and to the irremediable injury and death of Hedderley four marksmen make a public street their reckless range. There is something entirely distaste ful to the average citizen in this tragic incident. 'It is the duty of citizens to submit to arrest and await the process of justice. If they flee, it is at their own hazard. But even this assump tion does not warrant indiscriminate killings under the cloak of law. Johnson creek will still be calling the sea trout up from the Willamette and offering tionea whether tne enormous devel opment of the literary end of the modern publishing, pictorial and al lied arts is not acting as a disturbing factor in hampering the free progress of the crafts and trades. When the labor of potential eteel makers and mill workers is absorbed by litera ture, the gain of this and other non essential industries is naturally at the expense of the essential Indus tries. .Perhaps the philosophic his torians of our times will discern in the urban Walton rare sport in his I ths diversion of productive labor to own dooryard. But "the 'smaller creeks gurgled their last long since, and one can not but ponder what exchange we received for them. They were corn- intellectual pursuits a basic cause of the high cost of living. New York Times. Besides the farmers and small-town panionable fellows, who spoke to I People moving away from their ac- the red-wing blackbird ' so persua- I customed habits, as the census siveiy that he paused and whistled aireaay so appallingly shows, the his mate and built the nest in their complaint is raised that the country willows there to sing "Ok-a-lee" doctor Is also disappearing that is, to the admiration and envy of all the village physician, who could be listeners. iae a not August uaj, 1 defended on at an 'an .11 h. in any year, and no lotion was as sovereign for tired and dusty feet as were their waters. They were re mindful, though somewhat smaller, of Tom's stream in the Water Babies where one might wash away the grime of chimney sweep ing and claim kin to the fairy folk. Certainly they were conducive to innocent hilarity, and the eye rested on them with the gladness that always springs at the glimpse of water over pebbles. Now, the simplest task in the world is to point out unanswerable at any when sudden affliction fell upon the farmer's family and to keep up his visits periodically until convalescence made them unnecessary, The old-fashioned doctor in his gig has vanished, and the new-fashioned doctor, who has spent a large sum on his medical education, nat urally seeks the rewards that prac tice in the larger towns affords. But people in the country fall sick just the same as ever. Who is to care for them? Perhaps the state will have to A BAU UNTRUTH. Portland was given an illustration errors in the conduct of cities. For J provide doctors, or the United States What the agricultural department Monday of the recklessness with I instance, having banished the which Governor Cox relies upon un- I brooks, diverted them into sewers trustworthy informants, on hearsay I and choked their courses with rub- testimony and on idle rumor in mak- I bish, having felled the trees that ing charges against those who op- I providence took long centuries to pose him. I create, the fathers of the town cast In his second speech at the audi- about them f6r beauty and say, "It torium, Governor Cox said: I is absent, we will make a park." Watchfulness at Library Destroys Writer's Pleasure in Art Book. PORTLAND, Sept! 14. (To the Edi tor.) Our city library renders excel lent service and the attendants are uniformly courteous and obliging, but there Is one particular in which I believe there could be some improve ment. All the art book3 and portfolios with Illustrations, etc, worth men tioning are kept under lock and key. Some there are of course who think George I. Pratt, capitalist and publicist of Springfield. Mass., heads a family party on an initial tour of the Oregon country. It was at hi3 Colony club one evening that he ana Harry Fisk and dozens of other man ufacturers and business men of the old Massachusetts .town, first got a vision of the wonderland of the northwest throueh the lecture of Frank Branch Riley. Mr. Pratt was 1 .1.0 v.a h nin arransre r second performance especially for art is for the elect only, but the the wives of the members, and then present need is to make its appeal nersuaded the lecturer to appear at more generally appreciated. Of course. the school of his aaugnrer at ,r't'- C -- i .o -noT-URhires. "We have who will chip a statue, steal a -mv pnpv told the truth," I Fornarina or mutilate a book to ; in- tm "in fact I am surprised I satisfy some queer miserly instinct now at his reserve. ine opruiKi"iu 1 vut jt ia tcj ianuj a. puur uuitimcmaij Republican has suggested that the I on Portland library patrons to lock r.tiiT-n nd aoDear In our new up aU books of this nature. mimioinal auditorium, and I heartily I When one has an hour or two and h rinea. Our citizens will pack I a general craving to get some art it to capacity to near ms oi'. . a. un., n auuui luiivei an ircsirt? lur tne oea.uni.ui t TCiti, um -aratprfront development distraction to have to ask a busy at and the prospect or tne auuinai umi lciiuahi. iu uhiuck tnt ana mat cdae kbc,j. annn. TnntpriAllzine. people 0.1 c : iui -Luis or tn&t particular dook tu beginning to take an active interest enable one to browse and it does not in Astoria and there is a belief ex- then conduce to one's appreciation of tant that it will soon grow into the art values to have that same attend- great city that its boosters have al- ant, courteous though they invariably ways claimed It will aimiu. 1 " . t.iwttyct supervise your examina- w.hh wh is m. real estate operator I tion. Ton may be able to fend the in Astoria, says that the demand for I intellect all right, but one's aesthetic Drooertv in the city by the sea now sensibilities, the true goal of art oil nviouR demands, so oe- I are not aDoreciatlvelv awakened bv termined are people to buy Astoria the ordeaL One does not feel like realty that some have Dougm u coming soon again, lest he be tin far from the city. iVLr. w eu 1 o 1 picihuij rememoerea. those present at the Hotel Portland. I Again it is extremely agreeable to 1 we ovuie to taKo out tnese doors i-r, TtPifancs. where Mr. and I when one has discovered some that Mrs. R. D. Parker, registered si tne mite a strong personal appeal to Perkins, live, there are acres ana him. These books are too high priced acres of blackberries, rtenaace 10 w tor most or us. Besides two weeks the Tillamook railroad and nan a 1 will make them ours for all time and dozen years ago there was nothing eternity. I appreciate the fact that hut a forest where the camp nasDBBii trie librarian seeks to protect the since carved out of the woods. Run- taxpayer's Interest, but I ask if that ning through Reliance are tne wvca same taJcpayer would not prefer to of a very old trail, it is sam tnat 1 lose a, dooK now and then to some was a military trial built by uenerai I small souled thief rather than have Orant or General Sheridan irom . 1- nnnst -ranee moun tains into the Willamette valley. The evidences of the trail are quite ap- h.it no one appears to Know its history. More Truth Than Poetry. By James J. Montague. "Portland should have a big repre- I them so Inaccessible. At least if it is not possible to let some of these books go out, it would seem that all but the' rarest books could be left unlocked when an at tendant is present, so we fellows of little nerve can browse about with out having all our enthusiasm dis- FATHER AD SOX. When Smith was twelve, or there about. Without a sinele qnalra or shiver He used to help the ice go out by riding on it down the river. If Smith's young son upon a floe Alonsr the rivr-.r should e-n sailinf. Inside the next two hours or so. The kid would get an awful whaling. When Smith was young, along in May When swallows o er the poiMl were skimming. He frequently would run away Ana spend, the afternoon in swimming;. If Johnny Smith should do the like I. e., splash round in chillv water. When he got home, the luckless tyke W ould get exactly what he oughter. In early youth. Pa Smith would hitch lis sled behind a oaesin? cutter. And often finish in a ditch Or land, in tatters, in the gutter. If Smith, the younger did the same. The rashly reckless little sinner. That evening, penitent and lame. Would go to bed without his dinner. Yet Smith is old and well-to-do. And even now, as age advances He makes a lot of money through His aptitude for taking chances. His offspring is a timid lad: All sorts of trifling troubles fret him. He never will be like his Pad. .because the old man will not let him. The Indian Giver. When Tennessee gave the voir to women she had no idea they would o mean enough to keep it. The Song of the Prohibition Officers. And when we got there the ware house was bare." They Have to Be. Have you noticed how much moT particular the candidates are about tneir necKties. now that women ir going to vote? Copyright, 10QO. br Ben Pvnt!!ct T.n i sentatlon at the conference to pelled by the necessity of constantly in Seattle wnen ini6" -- ha considered, eaiu l IdlJ JUl IV'll T . ' i p Aiincrton at the Im- "Washlneton win annoying a-n attendant to let u in here and there. DILETTANTE. DIRECTOR TO BE HAD AT HOME So Need to Call on Other City Talent for Boys' Chorus Leader. PORTLAND, Sept. 13. To the Ed itor.) I have just finished reading h-o- -Pi-sxirients Roosevelt and Taft. He boldly angled for the votes of those who regard Theodore toose velt as the great exemplar of prog' resa. for he mentionedthat leader no 1 1. .. APt.an In-IAM-in Ills TlOOn-l ... .. luaa iV-J.Ti ,, 1 era i pearing on tne result. 1 TCe re day speecn, Dui iwuK. v-.- . Bult ould have been tne same i Jt in ais,gravou 11 "'f"'.",";":: I had never been heard of. ' lender or xno ""-."7 (5) The "slush fund" chatter of claimed fellowship with :Wn.-H Candidate Cox cuts no figure, except did not mem on. tne . t to his-disadvantage. The-result would dent Wilson in that speecn, h ay& fceeD same if it had never tne "perieci accoru. -been heard of. existed Between. (6) The women divide as the men favors the Wilson style of ?"?r divide, though they are probably even xnat styie ' stronger against Mr. Cox. into tne mire 01 l"""-? " Maine is an average northern state, jravagaace, '"' - influences that control there pre ana ciass aisbeiiiuii. vail throughout the country. What jox story t ; happened in Maine in September Butte contains soma euggesUons of " ty,.o,hof. h- tti the kind of Drogress that he would I . . ",. . ..... . I have been told that when the work men's compensation law was passed in this state, that someone had the effrontery to carry It to the people. - How proud I am of the 'citizenship of Oregon, after know ing; that every county sustained that right eous law. So far as I know and I have a considerable acquaintance with- the newspapers of America, I am a.vubllsher myself there never was but one so-called large newspaper In America that ever openly opposed the workmen s compen sation law, and that newspaper is pub lished in Portland. ..... The statement has not the slightest foundation in truth. Every large newspaper In Portland supported the Oregon workman's compensation law. The Oregonian Is the largest Port land newspaper. During the legis lative session of 1913, when the com pensation law was under considera tion, and during the ' referendum campaign in the same year, when it doesn't do for agriculture would make a very ehort list. We do not know that it sends skilled emissaries in the country to teach the . art of canning fruits and vegetables, but if it does, might it not send men of med ical learning to supervise rural diet etics and hygiene? Uncle Sam has done so much for as it may be he can furnish us doctors. F. H. Col- make. If Pennsylvania has any such law acainst public meetings as he described, it could and should" be annulled as contrary to- the federal constitution. But the. cessation of I. W- W. catcalls when. Mr. Cox af firmed the right of the) people Implies that the X. W. W. nnderstood him to States in November, unless there is a marked change in conditions. .The only hope. of. Cox .lies in the wet areas of America. Dare he wade in ? was submitted to vote of the people, The Oregonian published in all more I citizens. than twenty editorials supporting the principle of compensation and, in I xtr. McMurray is not talking shop many or tnem, supporting this idea- when he advises everybody to visit ticai measure. th fairs this fall, bisr and little?. The Oregonian directly urged the Fairs are educators. The "cattle legislature to pass the law. When I show" has been a feature of New NOT AN IDEAL SCHEME. The city of Portland is not run for imply that they would bo free under the benefit of its employes; and the his administration to assemble for I employes should not be permitted to the well-known seditious purposes or run the city of Portland. It may their organization. Mr. Cox is too. be. dduhted if the Civil Service asso Ehrewd to antagonize true Americans elation will succeed in its remark- by openly espousing the cause of the reds, but he is not averse .to winning the support of the latter in such manner as will not alienate tnose who are already disgusted with the Wilson administration's half meas ures against disloyalty. His slush fund charges have slm Snered down to the statement that William. Barnes published a book and that certain rich men contributed liberally to its publication. How the republican party can be held respon sible for this book or how the sub scribers can get an underhold on the government through it he did not explain. His talk about the S15,000, able plan for a charter amendment designed . to revolutionize the civil service and place control with them. One clear ultimate purpose of the proposal is to open the way for unionization of the employes, in cluding the police and the firemen. What . else means the apparently innocent clause that "membership in any society, association, club or other form of organization of civil service employes shall not constitute or be cause for reduction in rank or compensation or removal of such person or groups of persons from jam service .' unaer mat clause a civil service employe not only could 000 fund is not so loud since it has join with others in forming, a labor been proved that no such fund was union, but he could join the Boot attempted and that his much ex- leggers" Mutual Protective societv. ploited quota list had been rejected 1 or the Russian Reds, or the Black before he saw it. I Hand, and his employer would be In addressing th women Mr. Cox I helpless and hopeless about it. He f.aid not scruple to presume on their would not do it, it will be said. No supposed ignorance of public affairs aoubt, but it is not a matter which by making flagrant misstatements of hould be left to his conscience or fact. He said: - I Judgment, against the interest or Ixn? before yon knew what the league I desire or option of the city. States senate signed a round robin that about the scheme and says so. What they were against the leagu. he sees is that it is a definite plan EverybodV knew on Februarv IE. to capture the civil service in the 1919, what the league was intended I interest of perpetuity of jobholding. to be. for on that morning the first The Plan to permit the mayor to draft of the covenant was published name one member of the board, the throughout the world, and the round I employes another, and the public a robin was not signed till March 3. tnira means notfling else. The re The thirty-seven signers of the round sult "would be an immediate political robin did not declare themselves organization to control the election "against the' league"; they said that of the third member and to influence peace with Germany should be made I also election of a mayor. Thus first and that "the proposal of a league of nations should be then taken up for careful and serious con sideratlon." They thus- did not con demn THE league which Mr. Wilson civil service administration is not all had proposed, and were disposed to 11 should be; yet it is well enough to consider A league to be formed after say that the public is more critical conclusion of peace. If Mr. Wilson of the policy of permanent tenure had followed their advice, which the 1 for men and; women in public place senate by the constitution was bound I than it once was, and it would like to give, peace would long ago have I to see a middle course adopted V been concluded and the nations I wherein those who should be fired (might have formed a league of which can be fired easily and those who Vhe United States would have been I should not be fired cannot be fired i. member. Delay of peace and of I at all. .The old idea of once-ln-a-job-Anierican co-operation in a league, I always-there has lost some of its on the calamitous consequences of I popularity. which Mr. Cox dilated, results from r-VMr. Wilson's refusal to follow the I Though Governor Cox neither de senate's advice and from his refusal I nies nor affirms, but rather evades to accept such modifications as would I the assumption that the liquor issue secure a two-thirds majority for rati- I appears in his candidacy, pertinent fication. Mr. Cox s whole argument I facts concerning prohibition are al- thus had no foundation. . ways in order. So it is that we hear Mr. Cox evidently appealed to the from the insurance companies on the emotional side of women wtien he effect of the reform with regard to referred to President Wilson's sick- mortality tables. They testify that ness. and he showed equal disregard I their most accurate and trusted tor the-.facts when he, said that at medical authorities and statisticians we would have the civil service in practical politics, where it does no belong. It may be true that the present And they make parks, formal affairs that are well enough as pitiful sub stitutes, and bid the children in to play. Very well, but where are the red-wings, and the trout, and the I lier in St. Louis Globe-Democrat crawdads and the song of the cedars? Go ask of yesterday. One knows that creeks become the perils of sanitation if they are unloved and unguarded, when the According to the Dry Goods Econo mist, Miss Sarah Moulton, member of an old and respected family, was the first saleswoman in America and her city grows up along their courses. I employment in-the early 0s by Ben So Bubbly creek was fouled and so it I jamln Franklin Hamilton in his store C. C. Clark have a crowd on hand will have some representatives, but Portland should have a group present, too. The five western states intereBt ed in the arid land question will join -,,,,.. Oreeon is much in lino - ,1 .nSc2VrVMo article in tae Sunday renian Presentation at the meet- regarding the proposed boys' chorus 1 wmcn is Deing lormea at tne 1. 01. lnB- I C. A. under the direction of a Mr -r. f th nioneers who crossed West of Seattle, who, I understand, is theT Plains is Mrs. R. D. . Wrdlck. who connectea with the Whitney chorus is at the " ""' T wrflink It seems rather queer that Portland TV alia waua. """" ln -wItn should have to call upon Seattle'talent came overland in the same train wtr. jn order to thA lata Dr. Blalock in 1S75. ln' m.j v,.... , , -hut rail- I " -- rt 1 . a. iu vui iiiiuM -una doesn't seern so long ago, out ran Qf the f,negt dlrect0ra on tne Paclf ic road trains uia not set coast. I have been In the public Walla country until many years " schools and heard choruses and part they penetrated further soutn, ana aongs glven bv the pupils of all va Mrs. Wrdick experienced all tne riOUs grades, and in view of the small thrills of traversing the old uregon amount of time given to this work in trail in a prairie scnooner. """ i the school it will compare most f a- panying Mrs. wraicit to Jr"l":, " voraoiy with the concert given in her granddaughter, violet ceutu. fortland a short time ago by the wnitney cnorus or Seattle, which is whn enr comes "There she I supposed to have been in training for from the orow's nest, as me some years. ..v..iu h.iffou th seas. Captain Oscar I 4. es no reason why. with the . . . 1 1 1 i . L. smlv I nt-nnA ammm. n V. .. 1 . : j Karlsen, the stopper, win u n; ' ." " . : , B "" "UI white man on board, captain ivui iu . ruruarm cannot . . v. nT.iitnAmo n Tpaieruav I w a ii.vius liii&l will u Known oasslng through to San Francisco to as a Portland chorus with its own f .n. n n the Chivo Maru. Ths Portland director that wl'l equal, if cantain has signed a contract with a not excel, the one from Seattle. J fomnanv to be mas- I 'or one, have a boy that I won its sentence of extermination. It had been "a stench spot for years," and In its stead Chicago I will build a beautiful boulevard. There must have been a time when it was clean. One wonders what manner of . boulevard thi; engineers will build, one-half so fine and com forting" as' was' the stream before its outlawry, even though its eddies were muddy and catfish were its the referendum was invoked by un known persons, after the law's adop tion, The Oregonian denounced that ambush attack upon the law. When the act was before the people The Oregonian with all vigor counseled the voters to vote "yes" and sustain the law. In his address Governor Cox did not name the newspaper he had in mind. We do not know that he in tended to refer to The Oregonian, but we suspect. he did. He had in the course of his earlier speech made distinct references to this newspaper. Following his statement that a large Portland newspaper had opposed in Saco, Maine, aroused so much In dignation that the Hamilton estab lishment was boycotted. The Economist is in error, declares Richard Spillane in the Philadelphia Public Ledger. Long before Sarah Moulton was born; in fact, before George Washington was elected pres ident, a saleswoman was behind the counter in a little shop in what now is Park Row, New York, not far from the present site of the Tribune build ing. She sold cookies and all sorts of odds and ends, while her husband with whom she had come from Ger many, bought pelts from trappers and laid the foundation for one of the largest fortunes in America. She was not boycotted, and neither t7:" , ir,r r-omnanv to be mas- . Ior one, nave a Doy that 1 would if".""" . .n Da very clad to ha-e film un hi ter pi a targe - work, but would much prefer that he tne coast. .11. be a member of a chorus which might be Japanese. I De looked upon as a whollv Portland be citv of i-prtiand. UKO. H. UPTHEGBOVE. 344 East Forty-first street north. . .v. f ,tnm on record Production and which would . of. ''T.". AHMir "edit to the musical hit oeaeiae mumiaj, J - - Mayer of New York, wno is resiMwu . ...! T-i ,T,4 "TVi a wind at ih Motel fortianou i" or, a F,!n toa-ether formed a fine com hindtion and then there was a high tide, to help things along. The base ball park was flooded with water. The Necanicum river was backed up hv the. tide and overflowed its banks Although I had rubbers, a raincoat nd umbrella. I was soaked to the BOY'S HOME ENVIRONMENT GOOD England for a century, but it gets its biggest and best development the farther west it goes. Everybody I was her husband, so far as historv should go at least one day, even if I discloses, for she was Mrs. John Jacob only to find fault. I Astor the first. And probably there were some In abandoning and tearing down I saleswomen who antedated Mrs. Astor their sanitarium building on Mount I in American business. Tabor, which is much less a flretrap than many that might be classed as I Elsie, about to De married, decided such, the Seventh-Day Adventlst peo- (at the last moment to test her sweet- pie show a spirit of appreciation of I heart; so, going to her friend Maude. civic duty that is commendable. I the prettiest girl she knew, she said to her, -although she knew it was a Tlfere always will" be suspicious I great risk: evere Sentence Imposed on Yontli Contrasted With Mildness of Others. PORTLAND, Sept. 14. (To the Ed tor.) I have Just finished reading Hon. II. TTnlohn s article on restricted skin in walking a couple oi diocks to i paroles printed in The Oregonian Sat catch the train." I urday, also the editorial "Harsh Jus -Itice. As I am a personal acquaint E. S. Harkness, who Is a airector oi of the vo,.th m-ntenr-ert to ton the Union Pacific Railroad, company, years in the penitentiary I am going to write a few words in his favor. I am not particularly partial circumstances in the case of a wife workmen's compensation, he said accidentally drowned in the presence that the same newspaper was de manding that he state his position on prohibition! - The last The Ore gonian did.. The. general Inference of the governor's audience was that the reference was to The Oregonian, of her husband. The first wonder why he does not drown with her leads to them. Record. Representative McArthur says 300 members could easily do the work and many there knew that the state- of the house ot representatives. But ment, whether he referred to The thlnk of the awful strain they'd be Oregonian or to any other newsnaner under to fill up the Congressional of consequence in Portland, was not true, but was the direct opposite of the truth. Here is a direct Insight Into the character of the Cox slush fund charges. He has given ear to every little politician who has sought to whisper scandal to him; he has ac cepted hearsay testimony from unre liable sources; he has taken the word of untrustworthy Individuals; he has combined the false tales he has Twenty thousand aliens applied for admission at. Ellis Island last week. Immigration at that rate will keep the assimilator working over time. " i According to Irvin S. Cobb, hu morist, the "sun bear," long be lieved extinct, still roams the lava beds of Oregon. For the life of us heard and given them the dignity of wo can 1 8eo hat s funny about his own accusation. It will be an I that. unfortunate day if we shall elect a president whp is so easily and so I A Brooklyn judge urges the estab- willingly swayed in his judgment of I lishment of family courts to settle I eau it. worship , the mountain as a "I'll arrange for Fred to take you out tonight a walk on the beach in the moonlight, supper, and all that sort of thing and I want you, in order to put his fidelity to the proof, to ask him for a kiss." Maude laughed, blushed and as sented. The plot was carried out. The next day Elsie visited her friend and said, anxiously: ' "Well, Maude, did you ask him?" "No, Elsie dear." 'TNo! Why notr "I didn't get a chance; he asked me first." It is to be hoped that the fresh at tempt to scale Mount Everest, an nounced by Sir Francis Tounghus- band at the anniversary meeting, of the Royal Geographical society, will prove more successful than those made In the past. The difficulties are great, because the natives .inhabiting the districts round "The Abode of Snow," as they others. OUTLAWED CREEKS. You .see, it was this way when men cut down the forests and cleared spaces for the cities they were face to face with the issue of beauty versus utility. So the de mure little hills, with their maples and firs, and the vagrant, sparkling creeks that rambled hither and yon, and the pine that rose high above his fellows having sprouted when Columbus was sailing chips in Italy were leveled and felled and filled and cut into board lengths, if the jumbled accounting will be par doned, to give room for stores and cottages and warehouses. We are domestic disputes. They'd better hurry and establish them while there are still a few families left. Mayor Baker ia right in closing the first crack that would let "re form" get into local civil service. Keep the system out of politics. Sugar has dropped another f 2 per hundred. We only hope that the profiteers are holding the sack. One of the crying needs of the day is a successful operation that doesn't kill the patient. Secretary Daniels sees no "sign" in the Maine vote. The state went the reminded of this by the fact that wrong way for signs. nnlv recentlv in Chica&ro thev have made good riddance of a particu- Let us wait awhile before we grow larly troublesome brook, known to pessimistic over a possioie loss in children and municipal geographers I prunes. as Bubbly creek. The soil that heard its gossiping long before Marquette and Joliet .halted at the place of "the wild onion" knows Bubbly creek no more. Something of the sort, soon or late, happens ' to all creeks that thoughtlessly choose for their mean- I derings the sites of future cities. It Tie something on the Senators to keep them out of seventh place. It was wet enough here Monday to suit even Mr. Cox. ....... "As Maine goes' 'is gflod enough. Let her gol god. and regard those who endeavor to reach the summit as guilty of the utmost profanity. But for this It would probably have been scaled long ago, for experts maintain that its ascent might well prove less for midable than that of many peaks already climbed. London Chronicla A number of hitherto unpublished letters from Mathew Arnold, Thomas Hardy, George Cruikshank, Du Man rler, Rossetti, "Walt Whitman, Robert Browning and Thackeray have been Included in "Frederick LockerLamp son," a character sketch by Augus tine Birrell. which the Scribners have just brought out. Locker-Lampson is little 'known in this country except possibly as a collector, the Rowfant club in Cleveland being named after his own library. Notes on some of his rarest and most interesting books are Included in this volume. Hub It seems to me that you come to this office a good deal more than there is any occasion for. Wife I can't help it, dear. Tour manners in the office are so much nicer than they are at home that really enjoy the contrast. In Other Days- Twenty-Five Years Ago. rVom The Oregonian of Sept. 15 1895 Henry E. McGinn was last night ppointed jude of the slat rir,..,it court of Multnomah county, to suc ceed, the late Judge Hartwell Hurlev. The bowline- team rr , - nr..i. mah Amateur Athlptlc. the Taooma Athletic club team last uiSot Dy a total score of SS6 to 71 T. Dr. Jesse L. Hurl but. ArrAtaw .a? the Methodist Sunday School Union and Tract society and one of the most notea sunoay school leaders of the nation, has arrived to attend the Methodist conferences. The controversy between the citv water committee and the school board is still unsettled and the -water mav not be turned on when the schools open next Monday. Fifty Years Agro. From Tho Oregonian of Sept. 15, ISTV Jacksonville, Or. Malisrnant tv- phoid fever is prevalent in the south ern part of Josephine county and sev eral deaths have resulted. Salem. The vote on governor ws officially canvassed by the legislature yesterday which found that 11.72S votes were cast for Grover and 11.096 for Palmer. - CaL Scoville. who drove the first mail coach out of this city for Salem 15 years ago, also drove the last stage of the kind on Sunday, the railroad having displaced the stage. to wo in Portland for a few hours yes- terdnv and registered at tne tiotei Portland. Mr. ana Airs. narKntsa uavci bandits, neither do 1 condone the act been touring California ana wniie in for which be was sentenced, but the city yesterday "they were taicen knew him in Spokane six years ago out to view the compaay property i as a bright, pleasant, promising boy hr and incidentally given a spin I attending school and Sunday schoo over the Columbia highway for a few I and surrounded with home comforts. miles. Last night they heaaeo. nortn. ne, comes irom respectaoie people, hi i nan sister ana tier nusoana taKln; Th.rn r mora forests in any one I him when he was a baby, and I am of half a dozen counties in Oregon i sure mere was notning in nis no than in all of Japan, but Japan main-l to foster moral delinquency. So the or Torestrv ana is 1 mwio. . im t-u umaiue in xiuence or tne movies, tne majority of which are unfit for children to see It seems to me it Is blind Just'ce as well as harsh, when a youth' of 18 years is sentenced to 10 years among hardened criminals, and a man who kills a pedestrian while speed ing is given six months in jail. J. G. D. tains a bureau giving close attention to its trees. Dr. Hisashl Mochizuiki, forest expert of the bureau of the department of aerlaulture and commerce, Tokio, is registered at the Benson. He is in the United States to study forest methods, protection and reforestation. Gus Stadig of Lower Bridge, which am is the name of a postoffice on the Deschutes, arrived at the imperial yesterday to attend the meeting of the executive committee ot tne i gon irrigation congress. Walter Meacham. who is secretary of the commercial club at Baker, is another member of the committee wno nas arrived to Join those already on the ground. En route to Shanghai to take com mand of a vessel being duui tor tne Brunnsgard-Krostad S. S. company of Norway, Captain H. Paulsen of Drammen, Norway. is at the Multno mah. The shiD will be in the freight and passenger service between Chi nese ports ana tne west coast oi America. There will be a Japanese craw. The deck officers, seven of them, are with Captain Paulsen at the Multnomah. Where are all the houses and anartments In Portland?" asks C. Met- calf at the riotei wasningtou. accod. nanied bv his family. M.r. Metcaii came to the Rose City from St. Helens and wants to locate in Portland per manently. The main obstacle to at tainment of that ambition is the in ability of the Metcalfs to find either apartments or a suitable bouse. Havins shaken hands with Gov ernor Cox; J. P- Burns' mission to Portland ended, and' he headed back to Condon, the town where he was once mayor. Mr. Burns was a mem ber of the democratic reception com mittee and came to the Multnomah to helD assure the candidate that it may not be too bad a year for democrats in some sections of the United States. THE WIX.D ROSE. A wild rose is a wild rose still. Nor more nor less its beauty seemeth. When shadowed by the envious hill It o'er the hurrying river dreameth. The measure of its ardent cup It brims with ruby drops o'erflow-ing. And ever fills perfection up Unto its odorous rim not knowing. A king, a lord, may pass that way. They 11 catch no sweeter breath ascending Than peasont in his hodden gray Half worshipfully above it bending. Ah. there be friends who walk awhile Beside us through the summer weather. But with the summer fades their smile We walk no autumn paths together, wakes a passing Though romance thrill. And fancy fades and breasts must sever; A wild rose is a wild rose still. And shall be sweet and true for ever. GUT FITCH PHELPS. DEMOCRATS ARE LIKE BOY'S CALF Had to Be Held By Ears to Get Sof- frage Food Into Tbem. SALEM. Or.. Sept. 13 (To the Ed itor.) Governor Cox who claims to have pre-empted the office of presi dent of the United States for the. term succeeding Mr. Wilson's, spoke to a large audience, a majority of whom were republicans, at the ar mory, in Salem on schedule time. He was introduced by Mr. Irvine of the Portland Journal, who before presenting the speaker to the audi ence placed him among the angels with a halo for a crown. The speech was very well received but not very enthusiastically cheered: the most en thusiastic demonstration occurred when the speaker mentioned the name of ex-Governor Chamberlain as a democrat. Aside from a few complimentary re marks relative to the state of Ore gon ana its people, nis aaaress was much the same as ne nas Deen ae- livering on his pilgramage through the country. He still insists that the famous form No. 101 was officially issued by the republican committee, notwithstanding the author of said 101 has denied it under oath. He also affirmed that Mr. Harding had not defined his position or the league question because he did not himself know what it was. He also read from a list of votes given by Senator Harding on matters relative to the said league, at different times, with out explaining that they were given under different conditions. He ther said he would define his own position so clearly that there could be no mis take concerning it. Those were not his words, but that is what he meant. He said he now stood on that ques tion just where he stood when he was nominated; just where he stood when he made his notification speech; just where he will stand on the 2d day of November and just where he will stand on the 4th day of next March. Now, is that not clear? It reminds me of Captain Cuttle's opinion con cerning the loss of a ship supposed to have foundered. When, asked for his opinion he replied: "If so be she has, why so; if so be she has not, why, so be also." The ladies, of course came in for a little "taffy" and were informed that he was glad to know that they had been a-ranted the suffrage. He said that you could pull the wool over th pves of the men. but you could not do it over the eyes of the women, and then began drawing the fleece over their optics, or attempting it. The democratic position on the suf frage question reminds me of Jimmie's calf. Jimmie, alter visiting tne tarin- yard one morning where he- had wlt- Folice Deaf to Cnt-onta. PORTLAND, Sept. 14. (To the Ed itor.) I have- no doubt the police department felt itself awfully smart when it arrested a number of citizens ofr cutting the corner at East Water and Clay streets. If there is one cor ner in the city where this technical offense can be committed with im punity, it is at this corner. The same police will ignore the motorcycle, the truck and automo bile with a loud cut-out, and permit this sort of an offense to be com mitted right under their eyes. Any day you may see violent voiced machines go right past traffic policemen, much to the injury of the nerves of the Dublic, and- nothing i3 done. Sometimes I question if the police address Is now Bend, but he used to I know that there is a city ordinance visit Bend when there wasn't any which proniDits a macn.ne rrom trav town there only the bead in the ersing the streets with the muffler I J. JT. Lyman, who is general agent of the freight department for the Great Western railroad at Minneapo lis, is registered at the Hotel wash ineton. Accompanied by Mrs. Lyman, he is making a pleasure tour of the Pacific coast country and is well sat isfied with it as far as he has gone, W. R. McCormack, who has been in the sheep business for 30 years or more, is at the Imperial while at tending to business in town. His nessed the process of feeding a new calf which the Elizabeth Barrett Browning of the nera iwitn apologies to Opal Whitley.) had presented to the household, came rushing in the house to his mother, all excitement, sayirkg. "You ought to see Brownie's calf: we had to pull its ears off to get it up to suck and then had to pull its tail off to -get it away." The dem ocratic state of Tennessee had to be dragged up to the point of perfecting the constitutional amendment and held there by the ears until Secretary Colby had placed it beyond recall, when forth the democrats claim to have done the whole thing. D. "WEBSTER. river. open. SOMEWHAT WET." Perhaps it is only an incident rare Not the slightest connection with beer. But the fact still remains Those were very wet rains We had all the time Cox was here. J. J. W.