8 THE MORNING OREGON IAX, TUESDAY. JUNE 13, 1922 ESTABLISHED BY HENRY L.PITTOCK Published by The Oregonian Pub. Co., .. 135 Sixth Street. Portland. Oregon. CA.MORDEN, E. B. piper. Manager. Editor. . . . . Bociaiea frees. The Associated lres u exclusively entitled to the use for publi cation at all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper end also the local news published herein. AH rights of publication of special dia-. patches herein are also reserved. Subscription Rates Invariably In Advance. By Mall.) tft!ly, Sunday Included, one year ....$8.00 Daily, Sunday Included, six months . 4.25 Daily, Sunday included, three month 2.28 Daily, Sunday included, one month -75 Daily, without Sunday, one year 6.00 Daily, without Sunday, six months 3.25 Daily, without Sunday, one month ...J .0 Bunday, one year . . . . . .......... 2.B0 (By Carrier.) Daily, Sunday included, one year . ',.,99.00 Daily, Sunday included, three months. 2.25 Daily, Sunday included, one month . . .75 Daily, without Sunday, ene year 7.80 Daily, without Sunday, three months.. 1.95 Daily, without Sunday, one month . .65 How to RemitSend postoffice money order, express or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at owner's risk. Give postoffice addres tn full, including county and state. Postage Rates 1 to 16 pages, 1 cent; 18 to 32 pages. 2 cents; 34 to 48 page. 3 cents; 60 to 64 pages. 4 cents; 66 to 80 pages, 6 cents; 82 to 66 pages, cents. Foreign postage doable rate. Eastern Business Office Verree A Conklin, 800 Madison avenue. New York; Verree 4 Conklin. Steger building, Chi cago; Verre & Conklin, Free Press build ing, Detroit, Mich.; Verree & Conklin. Monadnock building, San Francisco, Cat OREGON'S POSITION ON THE MER GES. The value attached to the friend ship of Oregon by the transconti nental railroads is evidently high. If it were not so, the Union Pacific and Southern Pacific would not be so assiduous in pleading their rival claims to the Central Pacific since the supreme court has made it an object of competition between them. In former times there would have been a battle to secure con trol of the stock, but the transpor tation act of 1920 has changed all that. The supreme court has sim ply defined the- legal status of the Southern and Central In relation to one another, pending action of the interstate commerce commission. In forming the railroads Into compet ing systems, and by declaring the merger contrary to the anti-trust act It gave the commission greater freedom so far as that legal status is concerned, though It could not alter the physical facts. The fate of the roads is to be decided In accordance with the public interest by the commission after hearing all sides not only the railroads but the communities that they serve and the stock market will play no part. At this hearing Oregon will have equal opportunity with all, and can throw its weight which ever way its Interests lie. As between the two claimants to the Central Pacific, the Southern Pacific says that its system and the Central have grown, up together and have -become so entwined that they cannot be separated without injury to both and to the communi ties that they serve; also that the government by implication sanc tioned the merger by accepting payment of the Central's debt from the Southern. The Union Pacific contends that the supreme court's decision revives the situation con templated By congress in 1862, when It provided that the Central and union should compose one through line from the Missouri river to the Pacific coast, and that this intent should be carried out by restoring the independence of the Central, failing which it Is pre pared to buy the Central. But many things have happened since 1862, and the commission has to deal with and we in Oregon have to consider the physical facts as they exist in 1922, with full power to adjust them to the purpose of the transportation act. The prin ciples by which the commission Is to be governed, as stated in the act of 1920, are: Competition shall be- nregerv.ri n. full. as possible and wherever practicable the nxisima- routes ana cnennels of trade and commerce shall be maintained. Sublect to the foroKOlnE rennirements. the several systems shall be so arranged that the cost of transportation as between compet itive systems and as related to the values ni tne properties through -which the serv ice Is rendered shall be the Ra.me. si far as practicable, so that these systems can employ uniform rates in the move ment of competitive traffic and under etucieni management earn substantially the same rate of return upon the value of meir respective railroad properties. As a part of the Southern Pacific system the Central constitutes an alternative east-and-west route be tween. Sacramento and Ogden, where It affords the Union an inlet to San Francisco and all its Cali fornia lines. It owns a large part of the main line used by the South ern between San Francisco and Portland, without which the South ern's Oregon lines would be Com pletely severed from Its California lines. It owns the partially built Natron cut-off, which would give it an entrance to southern Oregon and the Willamette valley for traf fic to and from Ogden in competi tion with the route over the South ern to Portland and thence over the Union. It has full use of the San Francisco terminals and shares with the Southern the traffic of the latter's California branches. Deprived of the Central, the Southern would have to grant it joint use of the San Francisco ter minals, and either to arrange joint use of each other's parts of the San Francisco-Portland line or to sell its Oregon lines bodily to the Union or Northern Pacific. In the latter event all the work that it has done of late years for development of Oregon by building lines to Tilla mook and Coos bay would accrue to the benefit of its competitors. and probably it would cease to buy its large requirements of lumber in this state until driven back by ex haustion of the southern pine for ests. Its great resources would be turned from this section to develop ment or the southwest, and it would concentrate on development of the commerce of the California ports. Portland, which is now its only northern terminus, would lose it as a competitor with the Hill lines and the Union Pacific, when the former lines are devoted- to the service of the Puget sound ports and the latter has been leaning that way, at least until Portland began to expand commerce without its aid. If the Ceutral Pacific should be come independent and should make trades with the Southern to con nect up its lines in the south, it might arrange for through traffic to Portland over the combination of their north-and-south line. It might complete its Natron cut-off aci a feeder tapping the Willamette valley, but by comparison with the Southern and Union it would be financially weak, would have few- j feeders and would, in the event of the Southern's retaining the Ore- gon lines, probably prefer to use them. Its sole outlet to the east being over the TJnion from Ogden, j it would De overshadowed by its ' . .. , , (Stronger connection, which would dictate division of rates, would di rect -traffic over its own line , in order to secure all or the lion's ! share of the haul, and would not i Assist in financing the Natron line, as that would draw o the Central much traffic that might be di verted to its own tracks after giv ing the-Southern the short haul to, Portland. : The Central has little local traffic in the long stretch be-! tween Ogden and the Sierras, and would have to live on the through traffic that it could get In compe tition with the Southern In Oregon and California and on the overland traffic turned over by the Union at- Ogden. . Consolidation of the Central with the Union would give the latter its own line to San Francisco In addi tion to those it already has to Port land and Los "Angeles,1 all connect ing with its splendid line from Ogden eastward. Should the Cen tral become) independent, the Union's major Interest would be in Portland, as it now is, though that has not prevented the Union from building docks and forming con nections with trans-Pacific steam ships -at Seattle. If the Union should own the Central in addition to its present lines to Portland and Los Angeles and- its trackage rights to Seattle, it would hold the strong est position in all four principal ports on this coast and could, by its control of traffic, do much to decide which should grow and which thrive or stand still. It might ' extend the Deschutes line from Bend through Klamath to connect with tihe Central at West wood, Nev., giving central Oregon an outlet either northward to the Union or southward to the Central, and it should complete the line across the state which now ends at Crane. - . . . With, so many alternatives before them, each bristling with contin gencies and possibilities, the people of Oregon should deliberate deeply, .dispassionately and with a lorg look into the future before decid, ing to which they shall give prefer ence. Their first consideration should he the development of their own state and of the commerce of their ports, which are the gateways from the state to the world, and their aim should be to secure trans portation lines which fully, recog nize and act upon their common interest with the state. In judging between rival claimants for Its backing, Oregon would do well to look back and recall the many years dgiring- which the greater part of the state was a blank on the railroad map, when railroads merely skirted its edges and ran only short branches into the back country, when the commerce which would naturally flow to Portland was sent to rivals on the north or south, in fact when Oregon was the neglected stepchild of all the railroads. Now that two great combinations bring to mind the words "Codlin's your friend, not Short," Oregon should be in no haste to give its confidence . to either, but should first be sure which way its own interest lies, then should follow that way with determination. DIRECTOR NEWIIX. '. Mr. Newill has been an earnest and capable school director. His integrity is unquestioned. He has the advantage of experience -gained in a term of office. Development of school plant and facilities has been hampered for several years by lack of building funds. It is now hoped that the district will be provided with at least .3,000,000 for carrying out of an immediate building pro gramme. , The needs and requirements of the district are not learned in- a moment. A new director, whatever his other attainments, would not be particularly valuable in deter mining what is wisest concerning immediate expenditures. The Oregonian believes that the benefit of Mr. Newill's knowledge and experience should not be sac rificed at this critical period. He should be re-elected. THE ONLY WOMAN MEMBER. Portland will take particular pleasure in entertaining Miss Alice Robertson, representative in con gress from Oklahoma, at the Hose Festival, not alone because she is the onljf woman member of con gress. Her character and conduct justify extension of the franchise and of the right to hold office to woman, in which Oregon was one of the leaders. She commands at tention and respect and her opinion is valued in the house, not because she is a woman but because she is an able legislator, displaying wis dom and high purpose in serving the country. When Miss Robertson went to congress, her position was not easy. Male members did not take kindly to the appearance of a woman among them, especially as the only prior woman member had not left a favorable impression. They feared that she would want to pry into other people's affairs and would talk too much, but she roved an agreeable surprise. This snowy-haired woman of 68 did not push herself forward. - She did not like to be pointed out as the only woman member or to attract attention, so she took an out-of-the-way seat, attended regularly and listened for weeks before she spoke. When she addressed the house for the first time, a corre spondent of the Boston Transcript says, "she told the house more in two minutes than it had heard all the time the bill had been under consideration." A month later an unpopular member went on a rampage, and other members failed to suppress him, but "Miss Alice took the floor and for all the world reminded one of an old-fashioned school marm dressing down an un ruly pupil" and "the member was properly squelched." Nor is Miss Robertson provincial or sectional in her opinions. She takes a national view of national problems. When the house leaders were trying to cut down the man power of the navy id accused ad vocates of the treaty navy of try ing to save the jobs of constituents in navy yards. Miss Alice spoke -up. She reminded the little navy men that she came from an Inland state and that no constituent of hers worked in a navy yard, but she tu going to give her country the navy that the administration said it needed. When representatives of various women's societies called upon Miss Robertson to support fads in which women are presumed to be particu larly interested, they learned that she does not consider herseir the representative of women and their ideas and, when they seemed- to try dictation, "she flayed them then and there on the floor and in pub lic addresses." -. By these displays of indepen dence, sound sense and patriotism, the member from the second Okla homa district has Von the esteem of her fellow-members. She speaks for only a few minutes, but when she speaks they listen, and they would like to see her. re-elected. "They admire her plain, homely, everyday qualities," says the Tran script; "her ability to distinguish between right and wrong in the twinkling of an eye; her refusal to play politics when a fundamental principle is at stake; in a word, her horse sense." Those qualities will win the admiration of the people of Portland, and they will welcome her as their guest. iS THIS BOSSISM? Political conventions are always machine-made and boss-ruled. Any primary standpatter will tell you that. Moreover, every primary standpatter can give you dates and incidents of twenty-five or thirty years ago to prove it. So fixed Is the character of po litical conventions that the polit ical platform convention over in Chehalis the other day must cer tainly have been machine-made and boss-ruled. Any. primary standpatter who doubts it or. dares to deny It is unworthy of the name and is untrue to primary traditions and primary propaganda. Yet this convention, which your primary worshipper Contends could not be representative and existed only to betray the will of the peo ple, indorsed the direct primary. . It is very confusing. Here Is a system which, according to vera cious accounts, puts an end to par ty bosses, yet the party bosses say they like it. Is it possible that the people of Washington want the di rect primary repealed, and that because such "is the will of the sovereign people the bosses are de termined to thwart it? It is in credible. " -. ' This is the second time the same thing has been dona in Washing ton. The convention two years ago took similar action. Will not some Oregon' protector of the primary, preferably one who shuddeTS at the very mention of Larry Sullivan, tell us how it could possibly have hap pened? finance and European Politics. German reparations are brought down, by the statement of J. P. Morgan, to a plain question of terms on which bankers would undertake to sell German bonds to the invest ing public of the world. Mr. Mor gan brings out the close connection between Gerfnany's payment of the debt and the political situation in Europe. . Germany has accepted'the terms named by the reparation commis sion, that the budget be balanced, that issue of paper money stop and that Germany submit to control of its finances by the commission, on condition that a loan be sanctioned as a necessary means of compliance with the terms. The international conference of bankers was called to advise whether and on what terms a loan could be obtained. The bankers consider Germany's exist ing debt and the annual obligation to meet it in comparison with Ger many's resources and revenue. If Germany is to remain at peace, se cure against diversion of revenue to military purposes and free to re store its industries and commerce, it will be better able to meet its obligations than would be the case if It were subject to Invasion and military occupation or were to quarrel with its neighbors and at tack them. A loan would be more feasible if Germany had a reputa tion for meeting its obligations and showed an honest purpose to con tinue doing so, not only because its credit standing would be higher but because its creditors would be less likely to use military force for collection. There we find the connection be tween finance and politics, between the banker and the statesman. The part of statesmen is to produce the conditions under which German bredit will be good for the amount of the proposed loan. There must be agreement among the allies as to What annual reparation pay ments Germany shall make, those payments must be within Ger many's capacity to pay, and the creditdfxnations should agree not to impair Germany's capacity to pay by resort to military coercion. either together or singly,- in case payments should fall short, so long as an honest effort is made to pay installments in full. " France, by voting against consid eration by the bankers of the an nual payments, has prevented that unanimity among the leaders' which Mr. Morgan pronounces one of the fundamental conditions. By asserting its right Under the Ver sailles treaty to use military force in exacting payment independent of its allies, France hinders "estab lishment of the credit of the bor rower," which is Mr. Morgan's other fundamental condition, French policy stands in the way of economic reconstruction, of which adjustment oi reparation and resto ration of German credit is the key. Not alone France is responsible. That republic has been inspired wth deep distrust by Germany's reckless financing and attejnpts to escape payment and by Great Brit ain's disposition to be lenient when Germany was delinquent- The Brit ish government has lately opposed every positive move to hold Ger many strictly to. performance of its obligations, and has shown more anxiety to revive commerce with Germany than to force that country to compensate France for the enor mous destruction that it did. In order to repair that destruction France has added billions of dol lars to its crushing war debt. In all justice Germany should have provided that money and should pay the Interest that France is pay ing. A large and powerful element In Great Britain also agitates for a large reduction of the total German indemnity on which France has calculated, t France is therefore suspicious of any step to reopen discussion of annual reparation f ; payments' as possibly leading to scaling down of the total. ' The very fact that Mr. Morgan discusses the subject solely from the standpoint of a banker makes plainer the close relation between world finance and European poli tics, for his discussion of finance leads straight to politics. Germany wants a loan to pay the allies, and the United States wants to collect what the allies owe this republic. If Germany paid the allies, they would pay us, and pur national debt could be reduced." Germany can not get the loan unless peace is assured, and unanimity among the allies is essential to peace. It fol lows that the United States has a direct interest in preserving the peace of Europe, therefore in bringing the allies into agreement. It can best serve that interest by active membership in the repara tion commission, where it should be able to bring France and. Great Britain into agreement on both po litical and financial questions. An alternative is to force France to yield by putting on the screws to collect the French debt to us, but to play Shylock with the nation which has suffered most by the war would be most repugnant to the American people. That course would align us with Great Britain against France when tli former is by no means wnony right nor the latter wholly wrong, also when the inter est of peace demands that our In- fluence be used to draw those twof1016 than to nod: 80 away they B nations into close harmony, not to widen the present deplorable breach. - COLLEGE TOWN ATMOSPHERE. Christian College, as It now sur vives in the Monmouth state nor mal school, does not stand alone as an example of the. inspiration of an academic institution upon the neighborhood which gave it birth. Its history is repeated In those other communities 'which in the pioneer days of the west took a stand for education, particularly the sound, moral and Christian, education of which their schools were not only the visible symbol hut the actual realization. Tears have passed, formal organizations have changed as at Monmouth, but the actuating spirit has remained the same. It would be difficult to overestimate the effect which such schools have had, first upon the people of the closely tributary ter ritory, and second upon the entire state. . The reunion of alumni which It Is proposed to hold at Monmouth this week derives a Certain im portance, but not all the signifi cance Capable of being read 'into the event, from the fact that it is a semi-centennial anniversary of the first granting of the higher scholastic degrees. But every col lege reunion is extremely worth while, particularly when it is a re minder of early faith in right thinking as to fundamentals as a sovereign safeguard for the people. The first prospectuses of Christian College, as did- those of other col leges In pioneer times, heavily un derscored the promise that morals and ethics) would not be neglected in the curriculum. There was less variety, perhaps, in the course of study than there is in colleges now adays, but in the elements of thor oughness and insistence on a right beginning they set an example which ought never to be ignored. If every small eollege were to be suaaeniy swept away by some unimaginable cataclysm, it would be possible for years to come to identify the communities In which they -formerly existed. The signs would be unmistakable. They" would consist of cultured homes, happy and mostly prosperous peo ple and insistence that the intent of .education is to teach us how to live as well as how to make a living. This is a heritage of which no event can deprive the commu nity which ever has enjoyed such blessing. Women apparently normal mind ed commit suicide whose education and training naturally would lead them to abhor such end. Who knows and who. shall question? They may be more gifted and see a future far different from that depicted by. the theologian. The mere fact that nobody; knows' does not offset the mind that thinks it knows and journeys to the dis covery. Statistics show more poets In proportion in the west than in the east. This does not include those who think they can write poetry by making "worse" rhyme with horse," and the like. The champion orator at Pacific university talked a judge out of fining him $5 for speeding. The judge probably got, the $5 worth in entertainment from the perform ance. . It doesn't surprise us a bit that some of these futurist artists are now trying to blame their work to ghosts why don't they say "spir its," and be frank about it? In short, the American bankers can't see any advantage in making a loan to Germany until they have some assurance that the loan wilL be paid back. It will be noted that none of the tops of the forty-story buildings In New York blew off in the storm Sunday. All the danger was on the surface. Making a cheap motor fuel of corncobs will not affect the pipe industry. One can save enough on gas to buy a good pipe. Presume it w-ill just be Eddie Rickenbacker's luck when he does get killed to be run over by some body s Ford. The man whose Income tax statement showed "Amount due. OOOOQ," is not worrying about quar terly day. With third in rivalry with Sixth street in floral decoration, the fes tival visitor should see something florid. A Texas off man is suing' his fiancee for $50,000 for breach of promise. He's evidently a crude oil man. ' - When the weather gets the hot test, that's the time to lay in fuel. If you are too warm, the snow balling is good on Mount Hood, The Listening Post. By DeWItt Harry. APARTMENT, HOUSE comedies are amusing. .Take the case of the woman, new to the life, trapped in the automatic elevator. It was her second day in the build ing. On the first day she had rid denthe elevator under the expert guidance of the manager. She enters the building with her latch-key and approaches the lift in fear and trembling. Lfttle does she know that the worst is about to happen. She is just a little shaky as she lifts the catch and swings back the door, stiff with heavy springs. She enters and studies the array of buttons and just as Bhe decides number three Is the one and reaches out, the ma chine, with a crash and a lurch, begins to rise rapidly. She grasps the side of the car and it rises to six, where a burly man slams the -door, nods eoolly, find startB for the bottom. - There he gets out without further notice end, as the door slams, a Subdued little click is heard and away the car goes orlce more, this time to five. Here two women get in, smile and hod. "You going dowfl?" they ask and the novitiate" is too frightened again for another tround trip. Again she fails to make her escape and is trapped inside, for before she can collect her senses and press the button the car goes up and brings down a couple of newly weds, who do not seem even to know that she is in the car. Finally she decides to risk all and try to get out of the cage, but again she Is stopped, this time by a woman who gets in and asks, "Going up?" Again the nod and away the car goes, one story, and as the door slams she throws her self against it only to find that It is stuck and .she cannot open it. By: this time she forgets what the buttons are for and cowers . back in terror until the cage again gets! under way for the top of the build ing arid then when it reaches the ground floor she bolts at the heels of her companions and walks up stairs. Two hours even riding in her prison cage. Scoffers, this is not an Invention. The story Is cor rect; it actually happened. '.'-'' Try These Some Wash Day. (With humble apologies to Miss , Tingle.) STUMMT CAKES. Take TA pounds superfine fourth grade Minnesota flour lt should be taken when no one is in the store or it will be difficult to keep. Cut the flour In small slices according to size and spread It on a board, which should set perfectly level on one corner. Having filled a large tub with equal parts of saltpeter and oniori peelings, drain off the extra shortening that will form in a crust; and, having simmered the remaining ingredients in a close vessel a colander will do, if It does not leak mix up the whole beat it for two or three days; then bake immediately in a lead stew-pan. Some cooks use a canvas bag, preferably green-trimmed with yel low chiffon, but we eaution our readers against deleterious effects produced by the vermifuge which forms, the concrete o this article. Serve hot with petroleum sauce, daintily scented with swede essence of epicae. DE-LI6H-US! . . B1LBATES. -" A customer from California was in the city. The salesman assigned as entertainer discovered that his charge possessed an all-absorbing thirst. The salesman sought to gratify it. by finding a "tiger" and approached a house he suspected of being a "blind." As they did. not have the "work"' and didn't know the signs they decided to park on the curb and wait for some steady customer. Six men came down the street and walked up on the porch. One rang the bell; a woman an swered; he grabed her wrist and they all went in. The eouple at the curb bravely tried the same stunt. What do you want?" The woman was excited. "Are you, too, on the moral squad?" A raid was om; the thirsty ones did a fadeout : This is surely the day of women's rights. And it - looks as though they're going to take over the whole works, relegating the mere male to the bleachers. A family inx the Peninsula district has a hen. She' a good layer. And she celebrates each of her eggs; no sir; not by cackling; she crows. It may sound like a cross between the emergence of a reluctant cork and a rusty filei but it's an. honest to-goodness crow. ' The . resident rooster is dumb and distrait, evi dently sensing the inevitableness of the new order of things. Ye L. P. editor is hereby authorized to fur nish skeptics with the address. Here's a couple of good ones from last- week's " Emmett, Idaho, Index A sure remedy for Indigestion is to work your stomach less than your lawn mower. VJo down the street carrying a fishing polo- at this time of year and everybody you meet will asK you if you are going llsninsT. .We wish that it were possible to get the original of this excuse handed in this week by a small Albina youngster to her teacher, for it would make a notable addi tion to Miss Mille Schloth's collec tion. The father evidently the author fo the note, not too gener ously endowed with education, had a habit of running his words to gether with no punctuation dr capital letters. The result, was as follows: "Dear Teacher: Please excuse Mary's absence she had to stay home to help her ma wash her Pa. The weaker sex! Last week the Multnomah club held a picnic and here was the programme for one" young woman member. Rose early in the morning and did a big washing. Ironed until noon and then cleaned part of her house. At the picnic in the after noon took part In three volleyball games and one game of baseball. Later entered in the swimming races. After lunch under the trees danced until after 11 P. M. Then home with a party and danced until 8 A. M. This was on Saturday. On Sunday she complained of feeling a little bit tired. Those Who Come and Go. Tain of Folk at the? Hotels. Figuring that there was money in the fish business and that the industry is not being overdone, A. J. Wiggins went into it and he now has the baby plant on the Columbia. Mr. Wiggins was in town yesterday from Astoria. Formerly he was witn Ladd & Tilton and later managed the Grant-Tallant plant for a time and finally went into the game him self. Fishing is pretty good on the lower Columbia, reports to the con trary notwithstanding. The master fish warden of the state declares that in May the boats averaged four tons, which at the price fixed would mean J 800 for a boat. There Is not, however, the great, big catch that the packers have been hoping for and which the fishermen want. "Chio has a promise of good crops and good prices; the people are opti mistic and business in general in that state is on the upward trend," reports M. J. Shoemaker of Rose burg, Or., who passed through Port- land vaefprilfl nn hin wnv hnmf after spending three months in the east, The depression of which Mr. Shoemaker heard before going east failed to come under his observation in the 90 days that he was looking ! around Ohio and many ot'ier states and he is convinced' that the slump has passed and prosperity is now returning in a substantial manner. George Melvin Millef of Eugene, brother of the late C. H. Miller, otherwise Joaquin, is registered at the Imperial. He is here to meet his niece, Juanita, when she -returns from Canyon City, Or., on her way to Oakland, Cat George M. Miller says that there still stands in Eu gene the cottage wherein his poetic brother lived before Joaquin and his wife started on horseback over the mountains to Canyon City. The Eugene dwelling is located next to the Griggs hotel at Fifth and Wil lamette streets. Josephine M. Dixon of Cherryville, Or., is at the Perkins. Cherryville is located on the Mount Hood loop, but recently the road has been bo bad that It has been difficult to reach Cherryville from Sandy. How ever, the latter part of the month the highway commissioners intend letting a contract fbr rocking the surface of the loop and the job will probably be completed before the autumnal rains set in. The officers of the Loggers' In formation Service are at the Benson holding a special meeting. Those in attendance are E. B. Chlnn, presi dent and manager of the Chlnn Lumber company of Vancouver, B C; L. G. Horton of the Northwest Lumber company of Seattle, I T. Murray of the West Fork Logging company of Tacotna; E. G. English of the English Tlmher company and tne L,ynn rimoer company or oeatue and P, A Wilson of Vancouver, B, C. William H. Schroeder and family of Canyon City, Or., are among the Imperial arrivals. Mr. Schroeder is the president of the First National bank in his town. "-The Schroeder family came to Portland as soon as the celebration of the anniversary of the discovery of gold in the can yon was terminated. While it lasted the celebration was a hum-dinger, even though the skies opened and rain poured night and day until Main street was oozy mud. - About every citizen who comes to Portland these days uses an extra line on the hotel registers to do a little advertising for the eM Oregon trail. Charles F. Hyde and P. L. Ba'er are availing themselves of this opportunity on the Hotel Portland book. Mr. Hyde is an attorney and announces that Baker will have one grand and glorious celebration on July Fourth, with the citizens and citizeneBses garbed in pioneer cos tumes. - Salem is planning an elaborate float in the annual Rose Festival parade of Portland. C. B. Clancy, a Salem florist who has decorated the Salem entry In the past to puch good purpose that tne aaiem iioat cap tured prizes, is registered at the Hotel Oregon. The Cherrlans are back of the Salem float and they are looking forward to walking off with a prize this year. "We had a $1,000,000 rain,'' an nounces William M. Peare of La Grande, registered at the Hotel Port land. "The ground was in need of moisture and it rained, a regular soaker, for three days, and now the farmers are happy, for the ram in sures a good crop." Ml. Peare, who is secretary of the state board of optometry, is here on official busi ness. W. T. Lee. assessor of Klamath county, having succeeded his father to that position, is at the Multno mah. Last season he had charge of transportation to Crater lake from Klamath Falls. Tourists, who have time, like to enter Crater lake by Klamath Falls and go out by way of Medford, or vice versa. Percy R. Kelly and wife are among the Hotel Oregon arrivals from Albany. Judge Kelly is In the third judicial district and recently decided that a county cannot apply market road money on State high ways, a decision which is affecting the road programme in a number of counties. Dr. C. A. Miller of Fort Warden, Wash., is at the Imperial. Fort Warden Is where several hundred members of the national guard of Oregon will camp In the near fu ture. The majority of the guards men, however, will be at Camp Lewis. Skamokawa's motion nicture mag hate, L A. Silverman, is at the Hotel Oregon. Skamokawa; in Wahkiakum county, is on the Washington shore of the Columbia river, about six miles northwest of Cathlamet, the county seat. ' John Porter of Range, Or., is at the Imperial. This is a postoffice 63 miles south of Pendleton, which is the shipping point for the Set tiers around Range. The postoffice is on the edge of the Whitman na tional forest. Mr. and Mrs. Ira High of Boise, Idaho, were registered at the Multr nomah yesterday. They have been attending the convention of realtors in (California and expressed them selves as well pleased with the meeting and the trip. . C A. Howard, secretary 6f the Rotary club at Coos Bay. is among the arrivals at the Hotel Portland. A. W. Gowan, an attorney Burns, Harney county, is at the Hotel Oregon. F. E. Veness, a lumberman Of Winlock- Wash., is at the Hotel Oregon. - Sothing Secret From Her Chum. Judge. The Dentist There, now! No one on earth can tell that those are artificial 1 teeth. The Patient My dearest chum can telL And she will. Frenzied Honor Is Defied. - Judge. "If you don't marry me. I'll drink myself to death." "Don't be silly. T6u know yon can't afford it." Burroughs Nature Club. Copyright, Houghton-Mifflin Co. Can Yon awr These Questions! 1. Is it true that cockroaches will hunt bedbugs? . Please tell me if a snake as legs, also how to find them. 3. What is our rarest hird? Answers -in tomorrow's Nature Notes. Auircn to Previous Question. 1. How long does it take a pea fowl's eggs to hatch? About 1 three, weeks similar to those of the domestic hen. 2. How is it possible for a plant to "eat" insects? "- The Sundew family ha -vie glands in which is formed an acid secretion which has power to dissolve insects caught in the leaves. This secretion works out at the tips of hairs on the leaves, making them look as though damp wjth dew. -., 3. I should like to know what anl mal, if there is one, can live and breathe comfortably both in and out of water. There are a number of mammals. like seals, whales, walruses, por poises, etc., that live both in water and on land, but Whey must get their oxygen from the air, not from water. Through various adaptations of their organs they are able to go under water and stay there some moments. but have to come up to exhale and inhale. Alligators and turtles are examples of cold-blooded creatures that also can go under for some time, but they breathe air. Frogs in the course of their career do breathe both air and water, but not in the eame stage of development Gold fishes in insufficiently aerated water will come to the top and gas-p for Oxygen, and can even live some times for as much as an hour out of water, but not "comfortably," thai is, normally. , POOlt MAN HAS NO CHANCE HoW Can He Get Important Office t Under Present System f - Cottage Grove Sentinel. Marion and Lane county re publican county central committees, in suggesting a modification of the primary law. or the complete .elimi nation of the primaries, and i partial or complete return to the convention system, are simply giv ing voice to a sentiment that is gaining headway over the entire country. The cry for a reduction in the tax rate gives impetus to the movement to do away with the primary. Ther are a great many who dislik tampering with the primary who are willing to take a chance on do ing without it in order to elimi nate the added biennial expense. Frequently the expense runs as High as a dollar for every vote cast. A lot of the votes cast are not worth that much. . , The poor man had some chance to satisfy political ambitions under the old oonventlon system. Under the primary system he has none. Iso lated sections of the GOUnty, sec tions with a small part of the population, were cared for under the old convention system. Under the primary system the offices go usually to the centers of the voting population. It can not be other wise. The newspapers may be reasonably expected to oppose a return to the convention system, for the primary system is a source Of considerable piofit to them and gives them power they can not hold under the conven tion system. Under the primaries candidates are absolutely depend ent upon the advertising columns and news columns of the papers. A candidate who can not get into the news columns of the state free of charge has little chance of winning high office. The man who has been able for years to get into the news columns and who is able to do the same thing during a campaign has, under the primary system, what is better than a huge campaign fund. This was demonstrated in the recent gubernatorial race. To adopt any method of reaching the voters that eliminates the news papers is too expensive for con sideration by any except the wealthy when any great number of voters must be reached. ; While it is reasonably certain that something is going to be done to the primary system, no loader held sacred, it is not at all certain that there is to be a return to the old convention system. The Sentinel does not view with alarm the return to something simi lar to the system that existed years 6T ferent and the contention system could not exist with its did faults a portion of the time that the pri mary system has withstood the as saults of its eriticisers. QUESTION MUST BE ANSWERED People Want to Knew Why Primary Has Failed. Priheville East Oregonlan. Many and various are the Indict ments which have been hurled at the direct primary by its foes. It has been declared responsible for In efflcent officals. for dishonest polit ical practices, for high taxes, for extravagance in office, for hundreds of lesser shortcomings of the men whose place it created for them. But the most serious indictment it has yet received came from the peo ple themselves in last Friday s elec tion. Throughout the state men and women of both parties are asking the question, "Has' the direct pn mary failed?" The question must be answered soon. Possibly this fall we will see a measure on the ballot to abolish or to modify the provisions of this law. If -not this year. It is coming soon. If it is not to be made worse, the substantial thinking people of the state must give their earnest attention to the remedy. . With a total registration of 1590, of whom 1535 declare -themselves members of the two leading par ties, 915 republicans and 630 demo crats, the results of the reeent elec tion show that only 318 republicans and 168 democrats went to the polls in Crook county. Of this number 36 republicans and 20 democrats were sworn in at the polls, showine that only a little over 30 per cent of the voters of the country expressed their desires regarding the candi dates. We have nominated a governor with less than ten per cent of the people of the county favoring him. We have expressed with that small percentage of our people interest loff themselves in the most import ant office in the state, a verdict similar to that which the voters of the state expressed in the same manner. Is it any wonder that staunch supporters of the old system of politics Insist that the direct pri mary has failed? Protection Is In Slajht. Exchange. " "You don't approve of cheek dancing, do your' ' "No. Just think of all the stuff the girls use on their faces." More Truth Than Poetry. By Jnnies J. Montague. TOUGH LUCK. The frogs are piping in the pond , Just right, they are for bait And in the river on beyond The hungry pickerel wait The brook below the garden patch Is brimming full of trout That little boys might go and catch - ' If only school was out! The water In the swimming hole Is great the fellows say. And one needs lots of self-control To stick in school all day. It's tough to listen to the gong That bangs till half-past three When you'd be swimming all day long If only you were free! Strange birds a new and funny kind Are in the old back lot. And it would be great fun to find What sort of eggs they've cot. But you must watch 'em like a cat And see just what they do, - And there is never time for that With school and home-work too. The fishing and the nesting time 'Will both be ower soon! To little boys It seems a crime TO be locked up in June, When all the air is full of spring, And past the schoolhouse gate. There's life and fun In everything, , But such, alas! is fate. Grave Error. Sbme of these movie actors seem to think they can marry as often in private life as ' they can on the screen. . . Naturally. The bolshevikl are said to be jeal ous of all other European nations, but the report may have started be--cause red and yellow make green. Blue Outlook. Somehow or other, since the big War started, we never pinned much fatth to peace conferences held at The Hague. (Copyright. 1922, by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) In Other Days. Twenty-five Years Ago. From The Oresonian of June -13. 1S9T. . A pair of large gray eagles caused considerable excitement on Front street yesterday, flying around close to the ground and seeming very tame. A meeting was held last evening in the Worcester building of the Queen Victoria diamond jubilee committee. , The mystery surrounding the dis appearance of Anton Pfanner, For est Grove banker, has hot yet been solved. Berlin. With the arrival of Ad miral Tirpitz, chief of the navy de partment, Emperor William's plans to increase the naval stake have been taken up in earnest. Wfry Years Ago. From he Oregohian of June 13, 1872. London. Gladstone today stated that the present condition of the Alabama negotiations made advis able postponement of the Geneva conference for eight months. Washington. President Grant wrote his acceptance of the Phila delphia nomination today. Salem has raised $1300 toward a new town clock and needs only $200 more. The Portland town , clock might be given away" unless they decide to light It at night The Oregon and California rail road track will reach Oakland by the end of this week and regular trains will soon run between there and Portland. ' STRIKERS HELD CONSERVATIVE Right of Both to Organise Ought to Be Conceded, Says Writer. PORTLAND, June 12. (To the Editor.) "Man's inhumanity to man hath made countless thousands mourn." Rather .old, but still ap propriate. A great deal might be said re garding the strike of the longshore men's union. However, I will try to Cut it down to save time and space. I think the longshoremen may be considered conservative, inas much as they willingly agreed to" the demands of the board which was appointed to settle the differ ences between theih and the em ployers. The radical element of the em ployers is using the radical element -of labor to destroy the conservative element of labor, and the city is helping to the extent of $1000 per day of the taxpayers' money. There is no doubt that organized labor has, at times, abused its power, and that organized capital the radical element does so very often. Labor must protect itself or this class of employer would re duce it to slavery. Organization being its one great means of pro tection, it should be conceded as Its right, as well as that of capital and employers, to organize. It is being proved by men of con siderable wealth who hire a very large number of workers that the workingman can be treated like a real human and they continue to amass wealth. We are cutting taxes by curtail ing the schdoling facilities for our children, fewer teachers and less improvements in school buildings. We may be on our Way, but where? L M. DEFECTS IN OFFENSIVE FORM What the Reeent Orrcon Election Brought Forth. Springfield News. It would seem that the recent primary election brought out in their most offensive form all the defects that have been held to be chargeable to the present Oregon primary law. Great dissatisfaction with the workings of the law as it now stands has been expressed by and through the press of the state. -The dissatisfaction seems to be greatest in the republican ranks. Because a direct primary law has been looked upon as an advanced expression of the democratic spirit, hardly anybody is yet bold enough to talk out loud about repealing our law outright; but demands for Its radical modification are loud and frequent and apparently stronger. One model for a revised law, fre quently cited. Is the present pri mary law of Iowa. Under that law, a candidate must receive 35 per cent of the vote cast by his party , to make his nomination binding. Otherwise a convention must be called. Such a provision would have made a convention necessary to decide the republican gubernatorial nomina tion this year. . In answer to an editorial in the Portland Journal ih praise of the present law. The Oregonian. several days ago, had a slashing editorial in which a number of specific in stances of abuses fostered by the law wers pointed out