THE MORNING OREGONIAN, TUESDAY, JULY 4, 1922 l I ESTABUSHED UV HEJiKY L. WTTOC'K J Published by The Oregonian Pub. Co., 135 hixtn street, rortiana, ureson. C A. MOBDEN, B. B. PIPER. Manager. Editor. Ths Oregonian is a member of the As sociated Press. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to th use for publi cation of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of publication, -of special dis patches herein are also reserved. Subscription Rates Invariably in Advance. (By Mall.) Dally, Sunday Included, one year . . . .$8.00 Dally, 8unday included, six months .. 4.25 Daily, Sunday Included, three month! 2.25 Dally, Sunday included, one month. .. -T5 Dally, without Sunday, one year 6.00 Daily, without Sunday, six months . . 3.25 Daily, without Sunday, one month.. .00 Sunday, one year 2.50 (By Carrier.) Daily, Sunday included, one year . . . .$9.00 Daily, Sunday Included, three months 2.25 Dally, Sunday included, one month ... .75 Dally, without Sunday, one year . . .. 7.80 Daily, without Sunday, thresmonths. 1.K5 Dally, without Sunday, one month.. .65 How to Remit Send pcstoffice money order, express or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, ooln or currency are at owner's risk. Give postotfice address In lull, inoluding county and state. Postage Rates 1 to 10 pages, 1 cent; 18 to 82 pages, 3 con to; 84 to 46 pages, 8 cents; 60 to 64 pages, 4 cents; 68 to 80 pages, 6 cents; 82 to 1(0 pages, 6 cents. Foreign postage double rate. Eastern Business Offices Verree & Conklin, 800 Madison avenue. New York; Verree Conklin, Steger building, Chi cago; Verree & Conklin. Free Press build ing, Detroit, Mich.; Verree A Conklin. Monadnock building, San Franolsco. Cai. NEW LIGHT ON THE MERGER PROB LEM. Authoritative announcement that the flret etep of th Southern Pa cific railroad, if the merger of the Central Pacific with It should be sanctioned toy the interstate com merce commission, would be com pletion of the Natron cut-off to Klamath Fulls and thence to con nection with the main line of the Central Pacific, Is welcome assur ance to the people of Oregon. It confirms the opinion that the ten year suspension o construction was due not to any slackening of Inter est In the development of Oregon but to doubt as to the future which arose from the suit to dissolve the merger. The supreme court de cision and the action to be taken by the Interstate commerce commis sion under the transportation act will soon remove that doubt and, if the outcome should be to make the merger lawful, we now know that the fortunes of the Southern Pa cific would be linked more closely with those of Oregon. The strongest motives of self interest exist for the proposed ex tension, aside from the fact that an investment of $11,500,000 will re main idle until further investment necessary to completion has been made. The new line would estab lish a new through route between Oregon and California far superior to the present route over the Sis kiyou mountains. It would be a valuable feeder to the Central Pa cific main line, tapping a rich tim bered, stock and farming country which irrigation will make steadily more productive. It would give the Central Pacific' access by its own tracks to a supply of both fir and pine timber for its own use. It would be the first of a series of branches drawing the traffic of Lake, Malheur and Harney coun ties either to the Central Pacific in Nevada or to the Southern Pacific in Oregon. , These activities of its nearest parallel competitor on the south would, in the natural course of competition, impel the Union Pa cific to branch out in the same ter ritory. That road hag always -regarded eastern Oregon as its own field, to be developed, at its leisure., and it has on several occasions been seized with bursts of energy when its competitors have invaded that field or when independent pro-1 moters nave built lines connecting with It. In defense of its own ter ritory, the Union Pacific would be driven to extend the line across the middle of the state from Crane to Bend, thus fencing in the northeast quarter , of the state, then to con tinue the Deschutes line from Bend into the Klamath country and to extend other branches from that line southward into the area which would then have become competi-, five between it and the Central Pa cific. Though the Union would get the haul east of Ogden for all traf fic which the Central drew from that area, it would seek the entire haul for Its central Oregon and main lines rather than share the haul with the Central. Thus the general result would be. that Ore gon would gain not only a new line to California, but a more ac tively competing transcontinental line and a complete transportation system in eastern Oregon through . the rivalrjTof two great systems. As Oregon has the undeveloped field for which these two systems are competitors, it finds . both of them courting its favor in their contest for and against severance of the Central Pacific from the South ern Pacific system. Each needs all possible public support, for in the end the decision will be given to that one which seems most likely to serve the great states which the rival systems traverse and in which they should expand, and the judg ment of the people of those states will weigh heavily with those in au thority. The supreme court has pro nounced the existing merger of the Central with the Southern Pacific unlawful, as a combination of two competing systems. The transpor tation act directs the interstate commerce commission to adopt a plan for consolidation of railroads into competing systems. Possibly the commission may feel warranted in disregarding the court's decision by adhering to its tentative plan, by wnicn tne southern pacific was to retain the Central, but that is hardly probable unless a practically united public opinion in the vast territory concerned Should raise broad public expediency above re gard for judicial definiQoTi of com petition. Though the" judgment of the commission may be that it is bound by the court's decision, it might report findings that the pub lic interest would be better served by leaving the merger undisturbed but that the law, as defined by the highest court, forbidsjt to act upon its judgment. If the opinion of the communities should coincide with that conclusion, a good case would have been made for an appeal to congress for legislation to that ef feet. Hence the considered and v clearly expressed wish of the Pa cific coast peple is likely in the end to prevail In deciding which way to throw their influence the people of Ore gon will be guided by consideration fdf the" state's interest. Knowing that self-interest guides the policy, of the railroads, thev will aooraise the proralses of the railroads by the standard of the .interests of those who make them. They will find that their own interest coincides more closely with that of oneail road than that of the other, and then will exert themselves to the utmost in favor of their common cause. The question is fraught with such momentous consequences to the whole state that -local and sec tional consideration? should be excluded- ' - WHAT DEFEATED THEM? Mr. Hearst thinks, or professes to think, that it was the senators' vote on the four-power pact that de feated McCumber in North Dakota, He warns Senator Poindexter, through his Seattle ..Poet-Intelligencer, to beware, for the "voice of America" is being heard. Says Hearst: Beverldge in Indiana. Pinchot In Penn sylvania, Brookhart in Iowa these een. atorial candidates opposing Incumbents who voted for the four-pawer pact have all been indorsed by the people in the primaries. The victory of Frazier and the rebuke to McCumber confirm the pop ular sentiment in widely-separated por tions of the country. What an extraordinary jumble of falsehood and ignorance. GIfford Pinchot is the republican candidate for governor of Pennsyl vania, and Senator Pepper, who voted for the four-power pact, was renominated by a very large vote. Senator Rawson of Iowa, who suc ceeded Senator Kenyon by appoint, ment, was not a candidate for nom ination, and the treaties wer in no" sense an issue. If Senator Bever idge ever declared against any on of the treaties, including the four power pact. The Oregonian would like to know the time and place. On the contrary, he has in explicit terms endorsed the Harding admin istration, i But if the four-power pact has defeated anybody who voted for It which it It as not how About Hale of Maine and Kellogg of Min nesota, both renominated by large majorities? If Mr. Poindexter is defeated In Washington, it will not be by his record on the treaties. ' We can think of nothing more likely to help him toward a renomination than misrepresentation of him and of the - treaties by the Post-Intelligencer. - ' Is it forgotten at Seattle that the republican convention at .Chehalis endorsed President Harding and the Washington congressional dele gation for support of his' adminis tration, and particularly com mended the president for making alliances to preserve the world peace? Who speaks for the republican party? Its authorized represent atives or Mr. Hearst, candidate for the democratic nomination for gov ernor of New Tork? A LOGICAL CONSEQUENCE. Another Sunday has come and gone, with the usual aftermath of Monday morning news. "With some friends," says the account of a drowning, "he tried to swim across the river after a picnic din ner on the bank." The victim not only paid the penalty for himself but came near to carrying down with him a volunteer hero who plunged valiantly to . the rescue. Only by the hazard of good fortune was a double tragedy prevented. The incident illustrates the ex treme difficulty with which the commonest rules of safety are dis seminated. Probably there are few schools in which it is not taught to, children that it is unwise, if not positively dangerous, .to attempt violent exercise or to plunge into cold water immediately after eat- ing. It is one bit of general infor mation which we are entitled t-be-Iieve that practically everybody possesses. Yet the weekly toll of river and ocean in various locali ties shows that a great many per sons have the lesson yet to learn. The victims are as commonly adults as youths. The fact, indeed. that there seems to be a slightly de creasing proportion pf youngsters is our only guarantee that this par ticular form of waste of -human life will be diminished. Knowledge of the simple laws of health, which includes the rules of personal safety applicable to cases like the one cited, will eventually be regarded as being as necessary to education as the three R's themselves. THE TRADITIONS OF TODAY. Other nations have received their laws from conquerors; some are indebted for a constitution to the sufferings of their ancestors through revolving centuries: tne people or this country alone have formally and deliberately chosen a gov ernment for themselves, and. with oDen. uniniiuencea consent, bound themselves into a social compact. Samuel Adams. How well the people of America have comported themselves, in coj. f ormance with such a beginning, is attested by the strong love of lib- ' which Mr. Drinkwater has ad ertythat endures today, and that I dressed himself that of creating rrtrmie-Viniif ilia t,iat,.,, tA .A.,MAV,tnt . f m naWh a... ...war. throughout the history of the na tion has manifested itself In cham pionship of the causes- of weaker nations and in the name of .free dom. In his address from which the quotation is taken, delivered some weeks after the declaration of independence, Samuel Adams be spoke the endurance of ideals, and expressed as the "dearest wish" of his soul" the hope (hat "these American states may never cease to be free and independent." He rests content. ; It is well that each succeeding Fourth of July has found Ameri cans in the mood to ponder their dearly won privileges, and to re flect upon the high duty of patriot ism. Both the present and history, and the opinion of the world, give proof that their democracy is splen did and efficient and equal to any test. The experiment of 1776 has evolved a nation whose word in counsel is sought, and whose weight in war is determinative a nation of wide-spread boundaries, of un equalled opportunity, which dwarfs those courageous colonies that were its nucleus. The theory that men and nations thrive upon the laws of liberty has become fact. It has leavened the thought and govern ment of all nations. . There are signs hat the old Fourth is passing celebration by noise and flag waving. Rather dear to memory it is and not unmourned. Yet to forego tumult does not sig nify that the American people are less American than they were a decade ago, or'that the natal day of the nation has less appeal, less sig nificance. The cynic need look no further than the record of the world war to be dissuaded of his cynicism. There is alive today the same motive, the same Inspiration, the identical love of country, that moved Samuel Adams to declare his "gratitude to heaven -for past success, and confidence of it In the future." Patriotism in America is imperishable. We need not be chauvinistic to prove, our love of country. 'Most of us are ready to demonstrate it in another way. However, as no reference to the Fourth would be complete without at least an historical instance of our prowess in war, and more specifi cally the revolutionary war, it is permissible to quote a western poet, Bret Harte, who once wrote some verses about Parson Caldwell "for he loved the Lord God and he hated King George!" The Hessians pressed them close, until it seemed the day was lost. Of powder and pluckthere was plenty, but of wad ding not a scrap. And there it was that the parson entered the page of history. .. Why, Just what he did They were left in the lurch EAr the want of more wadding. They ran to tne cnurcn. Broke the door, stripped the pews, and dashed out in the road With his arms full of hymn-books, and threw down his load At their feet! Then above all the shout ing and shots Rang his voice "Put Watts into 'em! Boys, give 'em Watts!" v FROM OUT OF THE. PAST. The old-timer who gazed on tfce familiar faces of the' old Multorpor club -some eighty in number re produced in The Oregonian last Sunday, must have been stirred by various emotions. Twenty - eight years have passed . since the club was in the first bloom of its health and prosperity; yet about one-half of its active members are dead, and a considerable fraction of the re mainder has sought other fields pf usefulness. One-fourth of them, perhaps, are yet pursuing their va rious employments in Portland. Some of them are still in the public eye; but it is too true that they owe their present prominence to other things than identification with a virile and influential-political club. It was not indeed in 1894 the club that made them what and who they were; but it was the individual Importance of the members that gave to the organization its great prestige. There were United States senators Dolph, Mitchell, McBride, Simon actually, or in the mak ing; there were state , officials, county officials, - mayors, bankers, lawyers, doctors, journalists, busi ness and professional men, repre sentatives of every respectable call ing who considered it proper and necessary to belong to a political clilb and. who sought through it to perform a usefijl service to their party and their country. It is a 'striking and interesting fact that almost every one of these men had an importance all his own; their names were familiar to the entire community; it is not difficult for one wJio knew the Portland of that day to identify most of them now, without recourse to the index, even though in almost every in stance their features were covered with beards or mustaches, now gen erally proscribed. Good - looking men they were, too. We wonder If any group of eighty men now in Portland, assembled in any cause, and photographed together, could make so impressive a showing thirty years hence? , The Multorporists were not poli ticians, with a few exceptions. They were good citizens, to whom politics was a duty and an avocation. They were proud of the organization and supported it for many years. But times change, and nren with them. A Multorpor club would be impos sible, today. The public welfare is the worse for it. PRESENTING LINCOLN TO AMERI CANS. The profound interest which every American feels in Abraham Lincoln may account, curiously though it seems, for the circum stance that it has been left to the Englishman, John Drinkwater, to present a stage interpretation of the great emancipator to the, lat- ter's own countrymen. The Ameri can attempting it is handicapped from the beginning with the very wealth of material at his command; we have not reached the point in the study of Lincoln where details have adjusted themselves with, re spect to relative values; research in the field of Lincolniana still occu pies itself"" rather largely with the collection of new minutiae, and broader appraisal and Interpreta tion wait. Perspective is wanting because of the very closeness of the r attention which this most absorb- Ung of all historical topics invites. It is, too, a subject upon which Americans have been and are keenly sensitive. Resentment at the thought of tampering with a holy Ideal, a sacred tradition, may have restrained more than one other wise competent playwright's hand, It Is a task of extreme delicacy to the reverential atmosphere essen tial to our reception of the per- j sonification of Lincoln as some thing else than the mere mummery of the stage. That the Drinkwater play has succeeded in doing this is a remark-! able triumph in its way. Perhaps his success Is due to a certain ab sence of self-consciousness growing out of the original purpose of the production. His thought was that a British audience would appreciate a broad outline of Lincoln with a good many of the details of his life omitted. But detail should not be confounded with incident, for the latter Is most necessary to the por trayal of character and the artsof the stage implies knowledge of mechanism and craftsmanship. This Mr. Drinkwater undouhtedlv nna- sesses and has employed in hig'h de gree. Writing, as has been said, primarily for a British audience and for that reason free from the embarrassing self -consciousness under which Americans have strug gled, Mr. Drinkwater has found hlmsel possessed of a true element of strength. A play written to in terpret a great American ;to the people of' another nation has justi fied itself to the people of this country. It does not, upon reflection, seem strange that it should be so. ' The playwright himself had occasion in discussing the subject to comment upon the by no means singular phe nomenon that mass of detail has the property of obscuring the pic ture as a whole. It would be en tirely conceivable, said Drinkwater then, tha an American might be better qualified than an English man to write a true play of a rep resentative Englishman. Gladstone was the Englishman Drinkwater chose for "the purpose of illustra tion a figure sufficiently impres sive to serve the purpose of a simile, yet not, perhaps, awakening the same sentiments. Yet the point that the playwright made was clear enough, that the citizen of the other' country, if he were a painstaking student and an open-minded and an impressionable one, would be wery likely to see in clear outline, without the obscuring clouds of more or less non-essential details In other fields than the drama the thing is not without precedent; Lord Bryce's appreciation of the spirit of the American, government and the Interpretation of English literature to the Englishrspeaking peoples by the Frenchman Taine are illustrative and. somewhat ob vious facts, "though they do not of fer a precise parallel. The strong est possible indorsement for the Drinkwater'play is that its author has succeeded iji doing what no American playwright has done he has presented a Lincoln, albeit by means of a vehicle that fs episodi cal rather than dramatic in the usual sense of the latter term, who does hot offend the sense of the proprieties in Americans who re gard Lincoln as the embodiment of the attributes which they hold sacred in life. . ' Resistance to depictidn of the martyred president upon the stage is of a piece with the sentiment which long prevailed in opposition to the passion play and which still resents the meddlesome invasion of holy shrines. It -Is a matter of al most infinite moment that the thing has been doe at all; - it may possess an even larger significance in its instructive and inspiring value to other playwrights. For, saying that the Drinitwater produc tion is acceptable to Americans is not granting that the last word has been spoken. We still hope that a play, less exclusively episodical in character and, if possible, even more comprehensive in its interpre tation of the central figure, may yet be written and by an Ameri can. OUR BUSINESS INTEREST IN EUROPE Economic disturbance in Europe affects the rest of the world out of all proportion to Europe's area and population, for reasons which are given in Commerce Reports. In the fiscal year 1913-14 that conti nent took the following percentages of the exports of other countries or continents: United States 63, Can ada 64.5, South America 73, Africa 90, Oceania 77, Middle America (Mexico, Central America and the West Indies) 25. Only Middle America exported more to the Unit edStates than to Europe.- In the same year only 47.3 per cent of our purchases abroad came from Eu rope, and this proportion had been steadily diminishing. It shrank to 14 per cent in 1918 and had reached only 30.5 per cent in 1941. Contrary to a prevailing impres sion that our exports to Europe consist mainly of food and raw ma terials, that continent in 1913-14 took 44 .per cent of our exports of manufactures and in addition much of the commodities classed as food stuffs had been manufactured, which would raise the total to 60 per cent. For the same reason that a mer chant has a selfish interest in the prosperity of his customers, the United States is interested in that of Europe. ' When Europe is left by war in a state of economic semi prostration, and by political quar rels is led to waste money on large armies, these evils react on the United States by reducing purchases from us. Aside fftom all consider ations of idealism democracy or humanity and looking at the mat ter from a purely nercenary view point, the affairs of EurrJpe are our business. The true reason for our policy of non-intervention is nqt that we have no interest in settling Europe'squarrels, but that there is ajnonE our own TeoDl siir-h a rnn. we cannot agree on a policy from a strictly American viewpoint nor can we even adopt an impartial atti tude toward a quarrel between two nations. The only possible approach to unanimity is on non-intervention. If we had been able to agree on active diplomatic intervention with re gam to uerman reparations, or Upper Silesia or Russia or Turkey, there wouldshave been a far earlier revival of commerce, and we should have had far fewer unemployed during the last year. Even the most sedate laughed when, in the old days,, watching the fireworks, the bad boy let off big crackers under or close to a fat per1 son. The joy formed the end of a perfect day. f ' Somewhere there is a hard hearted man who makes his boy work all day" today in the field When that boy is grown his boys will have three days off every fourth. The man who sits in the shade of a porch today, with " whatever breeze is moving to blow on him, is none the less patriotic; he's simply growing old, that s all. i Wherever there is river or lake grown people and children will swim, in hot weather and there will be drownings. This is according to inexorable law. Any semi-oldtlmer .can recall a Fourth when "it was too cold to let off fireworks," or words to that ef fect. Now, perfect weather and m fireworks. Time was when a torrid Fourth led to. consumption of what it is not necessary to state if the mem ory lingers. Just a word of caution to the male picnicker. Do not sit in the custard pie. It spoils the flavor. Sightseeing buses start early and come back late. It is the way to see J'ortland and its environs. Here's luck to Baker today,, and may she spike the Old Oregon Trail to the map. "Why don't Portland celebrate the Fourth?" That's easy. Dan Mc- Allen is dead. Consider the other driver today, His right -to the road is identical. Deaths from moonshine today will outnumber the customary cas ualties, . ., W;.... ; '. .. - The Listening Post. By DeWItt Harry. HE was from the east and said she was bound for Walla-wa. Her fellow passenger, an Oregonian, thought she must mean Walla Walla. However, she insisted that she was to change at La Grande and he knew it must be at Pendleton.- So she went back and brought forth her map and showed him where she was going. It was Wallowa, Just a western pronunciation puz zle. It is about the- same in every case, though the easterner seems to ha-ve more difficulty In mastering the Indian names than the western er does in getting away with the local difficulties in the east. Few newcomers to Portland btlieve their ears when they hear the street-car conductors call Yamhill street. ,On another transcontinental train a tourist asked a resident of the west when they would cross the Yakima river, accenting the "ki." Maps were produced once more and lo, ha meant the Yakima. Many a newcomer to California calls the San Joaquin valley the San Jo whaken. " On Puget sound a few years ago a converted Russian gunboat, almost an extinct species of sldewheeler, was being used for a towboat. Pas sengers on a sound ferry lined the rail and inspected the queer craft through binoculars. Finally one of them Said he had caught the nam "Yo Smit." It was the Yosemite. California, with its many Spanish names, multiplies the difficulties. And the common Christian name for the Mexican is "Jesus." How many northerners know it is pronounced Hasuus? i . One of the most unique reading circles in the city is in a depart ment store, where a miscellaneous display of children's books is tea itured. On a long table in one of the aisles are a number of soiled or marred volumes, books of cartoons. comic pictures, animal books, almost all of the lot being plentifully illus trated with striking pictures so deal to the hearts of children. It's mighty , hard for a youngster to pass them by and if a child once yields to the spell and opens one of them, it's all off. Some of the kids come back day after day and pore over the display. They never buy any, do not intend to, for thay likely have not the money, but they read them. One youngster about 10 years of age repeated his visits for several days until he had finished reading the volume that appealed to him. There : is nothing odd in finding several pairs of feet protruding from under the big table where the children sit out of the way, capti vated by the books. And often when it comes closing time it Is necessary to i herd from one to half a dozen youngsters out of the store and send them home. m The golfer was a big man and held a big position with a local bank. He made a smashing drive his ball rolled far down the course near where two boys, possibly cad dies, were poking about in the brush. As he approached he could not see his ball though the. boys were close by. Adopting the ide that one of the little fellows might have picked the balj up he let out a bellow of rage and started for them, brandishing a club. The boys fled, one one way the other another. - He caught the smaller of the two, shook'' him, roughly accused the tyke of taking his ball and demanded it. .' In vain did the boy protest that ha had not taken it and a close search by the billigerent golfer failed f disclose any golf balls on the boy's person In a final fit the irate sportsman snatched the boy's cap and threw it far out in the river and as It float ed away, with a final shake, he left the boy in tears watching his cap disappear. - And afterward the man told, in a boastful way, how he had disciplined the boyS. Odd Names Gallery. R. TiHery, soldier in the regular army, is' located at Fort Lowgun, 111. - ' - Lotta X, Pence owns a duck lake on Sauvies island. Ann T. Dote' was -arrested in Dead Man's Gulch, Colo., recently for mak ing moonshine. After a test of the awful stuff the officers had to take her. M. T. Kagg lives at Bingen, Wash. likewise M. T. Phelan. Ai E. Mony is in the harness busi ness in Tacoma. His sister, Anne T. Mony, married a man named Bis muth in Minneapolis, who is in th refrigerator business. (Yuh hafta be a chemist to appreciate this.) s Daughter had ben out for the evening, presumably to a moving picture show. 'Her mother heard them come home rather early, but daughter was nearly anhour on the front porch before coming in. ' Th next morning her mother took her to task. ; . "What took you so long on the porch last night?" she asked. "Why, Fred was giving me a golf lesson." 1 . "Nonsense, you can't play golf after dark." "Oh, but you see, mother.-he was showing me how to hold my hands and my mouth so I could play prop erly.'' . Why do women marry? Surely, most men will admit, it's not be cause of the male's charms. At recent dinner party one happy wife volunteered the Information that her interest was first aroused In her husband because he could print so well with a pen. Another time a young bride said she was attracted by her. husband when she heard him cuss a political pest. Yet one other better-half vowed she first noticed her spouse as he called in the office where she was employed because he never wasted any time "was al ways full of business." It does not seem so much the abil ity to etep the latest trot pattern, nor the striking appearance, nor the social graces, though they admitted ly all help. Somehow it seems that the real marriages, the ones that last and in which the partners never think of the divorce mill, result from some substantial liking, an appre ciatlve awakening of a realization of real values,. . Those Who Come and Go. Tales of Folks nt the Hotels. How many ranches hare a bath tub or shower for the hired hands? Very few, according to a group of sheepmen and stockmen who were discussing the subject in the Imperial lobby yesterday. There are some up-to-date ranches, how ever, asserted a stockman, where automatic pumps are installed and I where there are - electric light systems and high pressure water systems. These are ranches where the hands do not jump in the jitney Saturday night and go to town. One of the men in the lobby sserted that In Sherman county- there are only three bathtubs for the help. "I had a bunch of Mexi cans working for me last year," said one stockman, "and every night they took a sponge bath and wore clean - nightgowns. That was un usual. Chinese, too, are very clean." have a shower on my ranch for the men," explained another, "and all last season only one man used it and he was a jfoung chap who took a bath a couple of times a week. Sheep ranches may be a little short on baths," defended a veteran wool grower, "but the camps have every thing that can be found in a gro cery. The herders-are moving from place to place and, of course, you can't provide baths for them. They can take one when they come to a stream." While not mucn import ance was attached to baths by sev eral of the group, all agreed that men have to be well fed to get work out of them ana it was admitted that baths increase efficiency. No Bartlett pears will be shipped from Medf orj this year, as they have ail been placed under contract to canneries, according to J. B. Cary of Medford, at the Hotel Oregon. The - canneries will receive what would amount to about 500 cars. Other pears, those destined for the market, will approximate about 1000 cars and there will be between 300 and 600 cars of apples. The fruit crop is reporter! by Mr. Cary as from fair to good. When Mr. Cary left home it was hotter than in Portland, according to Medford thermometers, but he 'nslsts that he feels the heat more in Portland than in the Rogue River valley, explain ing that the heat around Medford is drier. Driving a nifty looking 'roadster. Frank C. Hesse is at the Multnomah from Astoria. Sunday he faced the heat and drove to the Columbia gorge hotel. Just as he got there one tire blew out and after he had adjusted the spare that also blew up. It was too hot 103 in the shade to lose one's temper, so the Astorta attorney telephoned to a garage at Hood River to come and fix him up. About 76 per cenfof the cars which Mr. Hesse passed or met on the highway between Portland and the gorge bore Washington li censes and 'about 5 per cent carried California licenses. While there was heavy traffic on the highway, Ore gon cars were comparatively scarce. V. E. Fora of Marshfield arrived at t'he Perkins yesterday from Coos bay, where the breezes are cooling. Saturday will be quite a day in Marshfield. A group of officials, in cluding the members of the state highway commission, will mobilize at that point and motor down the coast through Curry county to Crescent City, Cai., to attend meeting of road boosters next Mon day. The object of the meeting is to have California and Oregon peo ple develop the highway along the coast. The Oregon section is called the Roosevelt highway and when cunrpieiea it wui oe an au-wmxeT road,' avoiding the snows of the Siskiyous. ' Saturday among the arrivals at the Perking were J. A. Richardson ol Tillamook and C. Stafford of. the same place. Yesterday they walked up to the desk and informed George I. Thompson, the dean of clerks, that they wished to give up the rooms they occupied Saturday and Sunday and that they wanted, in stead', one room. Mr. Thompson in quired why, and then Mr. Richard son re-reglstered thus: J. A. Rich ardson and wife. The thermometer at the railroad station at Pasco Sjtood at 120 de grees above zero," reported Alex Power, a banker of Lebanon, Or., who Is registered with Mrs. Power at the Hotel Oregon. "The heat was terrific and it wouldn't have been any trouble to fry an egg on the station piatform." Mr.; and Mrs. Power, who are returning to Linn county from a trip to . Spokane, Wash., are thankful that Lebanon hasn't a temperature like Pasco and way points. Charles A. Brand, orchardist of Douglas county, is at the Hotel Port land. Mr. Brand is here to attend a meeting of the state tax investiga tion committee, which was In structed by the 1921 legislature to make its report in November of this year. Mr. Brand is' of the opinion that an orchardist in Oregon gets more out of life than some others, even though the' returns are not great. Wheat farmers who happened to be In Portland yesterday expressed concern over the grain outlook as a consequence of the hot blast now sweeping the Pacific coast. The wheat is In the "dough" stage and the heat will prevent the grains from growing large and, naturally, will result in a lighter yield. The berry growers are also complaining at the absence of rain. H. M. Seethoff of the Central Ore gon Milling company of Metolius, Or., is with Mrs. Seethoff at the Im perial. Metolius is one of the baby towns of Oregon, having been set tled a dozen years ago. It isn't circus time in town, yet Messrs. Beaver, Otter, Fox, Wolf, Lyon and Batt are registered at the Multnomah. Mrs. Wiezel, however, has checked out. - Nesmlth Ankeny, a banker of Walla Walla, Wash., and Levi An keny Jr. are arrivals at the Hotel Oregon from the wheat belt. Ralph G. Bardwell of the Bardwell Fruit company of Medford is at the Hotel Portland with hia" wife. N. Bangs, mayor and everything else at Timber,- Or., is at the Hotel Portland for the holiday. L. J. Miller, a merchant of Grass Valley, Or., is among the arrivals at the Perkins. Wages of Farm Laborers. GOLD BEACH, Or., July 1. To the Editor: If a man comes to a ranch and thore are no arrang-ements made for him to pay -board- and he stops there for several months and does a littlo work at times, can he collect wages in Oregon? G. E. M. Farm wages are a matter of agreement. In the absence of agree ment the laborer would be entitled not to an arbitrary sum, hut to rea sonable compensation , for the amount of work that h performed.' In this case that compensation might or m'ght not be in excess of a reasonable charge for the board furnished by the farmer. ORIGIX OF REPUBLICAN PARTY j Interesting Details of Inception Found In Old Memoranda. VANCOUVER, Wash., July 1 (To the Editor.) The editorial, "A Pioneer; Republican," in this morn ing's Oregonian, irresistibly sets my thoughts in what old Dr. Jones of Wilmington, O., forty years ago was wont to call a "reminlstic vein." In the autumn of 1879, while as sisting in the preparation of an exhaustive history of Kalamazoo county, Michigan, I became ac quainted, at Schoolcraft, with Dr Nathan M. Thomas, the "first physi cian to locate in that county, coming from his native town of Mountj Pleasant, O., In June, 1830. When Ij met him lie was almost 77 years, old, and still quite vigorous. He was an ardent believer in the plan of Ben jamin Lundy to carry the anti-slavery question to the ballot box and not depend on moral suasion alone to free the country from the curse of slavery. From 1840, when he favored the organization of the lib erty party and voted for its ticket at the presidential election, he was prominently identified with the movement to crush out the evil, and was one of the prime movers in the formation of the republican party in Michigan. He attended the free-soil or free democratic convention held at Jackson February 22, 1854, a m-ass convention at Kalamazoo June 21 following, and the great mass con vention at Jackson July 6, 1854, when the republican party in Michi gan flung its banner to the breeze. Dr. Thomas, in response to inquiries by the Detroit Post and Tribune re garding the recollections of surviv ors of those .early movements, wrote a letter to that paper June 27, 1879, and when. I met him furnished me with a copy of the same, -from which allow me to quote; . . The old anti-slavery men, previous to the origin of the republican party, had felt the , necessity of a com- Olneu extort against slavery and the ag gresslons of the slave power of the coun try, ana had been acting politically against that Institution for years. In ao- ; cordance with established usage, the free democracy, as the representation of their principles, met in convention at Jackson on the 22d of February, adopted resolutions, and In nominating the state ticket the candidates were selected with a view of reconciling the feelings of the various shades of anti-slavery men and placing a strong ticket in the field. With that idea in view, Kinsley S. Bingham was nominated for governor. A strong desire was manifested by a few leading anti-slavery whlgs lor a union of the free-soil and whig parties on a state ticket . . . But the time for its con summation had not yet arrived, nor was it foreseen that so great an aggression upon the rights of the free states as the repeal of the Missouri compromise was so near in the future as the end of May of that year. The catastrophe occurred when I was on my way to visit friends in New England. ... I was in Boston to witness the first opening in Faneull hall of the .great fugitive slave case. . . . . The slave power was supreme to the Canada line. A few days passed, and a war vessel was in the port of Bos ton, and. under orders from the govern ment of the United States, took Anthony Burns and returned him to slavery, from which he had just escaped. A few days later a line from a friend reached me in Vermont, urging my re turn home; as a state free-soil conven tion had been called during my absence. On my return 1 attended that conven tion, which was held at Kalamazoo to meet the emergency that has Just been I sprung upon the country, and aroused the public mind to a greater .extent than any event that had transpired since the memorable struggle against the admis sion of Missouri as a Blave state, and led to the call of the mass state conven tion to be held at Jackson on the 6th of July. Under these circumstances the free democracy determined to meet at the time appointed in the mass conven tion at Jackson, and unite in a new organisation, providing a platform was adopted embracing their ' principles. A committee of sixteen was appointed for the purpose of carrying out the will of the Kalamazoo convention. They met in Jackson, and, upon a platform being adopted that met the approval of the committee, the nominations previously made were withdrawn, and the free dem ocratic party of this statewas dissolved ; and absorbed in the new organization under the name of the republican party, ! as adopted by the convention. When the , organization was completed and the state officers nominated the convention closed with a feeling pervading the mass that a great work had been accomplished. Michigan was undoubtedly the first state to organize under the name republican ... . but the republican party was not. of course, fully organized as a na tional party previous to the holding of the national convention at x-nuaaeipnia, In 185. " It is proper to state that Kala mazoo county, in the election of 1866, cast 2803 votes for John C. Fremont for president, and 1620 for James Buchanan. My father, Samuel W. Durant, a native of Vermont, who came to Illinois in 1845, was first a whig. At its inception he became connect ed with the "know nothing" or "American" party, but never attend ed more than one meeting. He voted with the republican party when it was formed, and remained a con sistent member )intil his death. He backed his belief by a service of three years with Sherman during the civil war. He was always a great admirer of General Fremont, but had never seen him until the noted pathfinder visited Chicago and the east more than thirty years after his defeat for the presidency. On that occasion. In my father's com pany, I had the pleasure of a chat and a hearty handshake with the general, an, experience I can never forget. I was born in Kane county, Illi nois. May 21, 1854, and somehow imbibed the breath of republicanism, from which I have never since been free, nor do I ever expect to be. In rriy native county a call for a re publican county convention, was cir culated August 4, 1854, and the gath ering was held at Geneva on the 19th of that month. A congres sional convention was held Septem ber 20, and the entire ticket, from congressman down, was elected ex cept sheriff. Kane county was then in the congressional district with Cook, and the congressman elected was J. K. Woodworth of, Chicago. LaSalle county was close after its neighbor Kane to take up the banr ner in Illinois, holding Its conven tion August 30, 1854. PLINY A. DURANT. Nebraska Senators, 1880-1S90. SPRINGFIELD. Or., July 2. To the Editor): 1. Who were the sen ators from Nebraska from 1880 to 1890? 2. Is ex-Senator J. K. Kelly of Oregon still living? . GEORGE BARNES. 1. A. S. Paddock, whose term ex pired in 1881, was succeeded by Charles H. Van Wyck. Paddock was re-electedr to succeed Van Wyck. Thomas W. Ferry, whose term ex pired in 1883, was succeeded by Charles F. Manderson, who was re elected In 1894. 2. Judge J. K. Kelly died Septem ber 15, 1903. Congress and, Kl Klnx Klan. , WESTON, Or., July 2. To the Edi tor: Please let me know if the pres ent congress has ever had an act for suppressing the Ku Klux Klan pre sented to it. If so, by whom? C. F. BULFINCH. We do not know of any. ' School Teachers fn Alaska. EUGENE, Or., July 2. (To the Editor.) With whom should I com municate regarding positions in the Alaskan schools ? A SUBSCRIBER. Write to superintendent of public instruction, Juneau, Alaska. More Truth Than Poetry By James J. Montague. ONE HUNDRED AND FORTY-SIX YEARS OLD. He doesn't go 'round with a chip on his shoulder. . Hunting excuses to fight any. more; He's 'getting a little bit wiser and older; Fond of his comfort, and weary of war. He Isn't as boastful he isn't so breezy. Nor half so convinced that he cannot be wrong. He's got in the habit of taking things easy Fof old Uncle Samuel Is getting alqng. , The pastime of setting the eagle to screaming ' Is almost forgotten; he takes more delight In sitting around In the twilight and dreaming, -Somehow assured that the world H is all right, He isn't so quickly aroused to re sentment. Nor nearly so eager to reach for his gun; The thing that he hankers for most is contentment And time to reflect on "the things he has done. He knows he has wealth, and an envied position Enough for an old man to ask for, forsooth. What need then for nursing the restless ambition That stirred irt his breast in ths days of his- youth? What need, as he muses,' withself satisfaction On the place he has filled upon history's page For the old boyish craving for tur moil and action? Far better the leisure of restful old age! He is getting along, for he dwells on the glory He fought for and won in the brave days of old, He lives upon dreams, goin back through the story That, somehow, he fancies Is already told. And yet. If the war clouds should gather above him If ever his country by foes is beset, He'll 'rouse from his dreaming the old man, God love him! Will suddenly find there is fight in him yet! VnlienltUtul Place. Let us hope Ireland's new consti tution is a rugged one, otherwise it will never survive in that climate. If He Doesn't Behave. United States judges are given life terms on the bench and it begins to look as if the same blessing was soon to 'be bestowed on Mr. Babe Ruth. Goinsr nnd Coming. Between tractors and detractors Henry Ford is kept pretty busy. (Copyiighl, 1022, by Bell Syndicate, Inc.) Burroughs Nature Club. Copyright, Houghton-Mifflin Co. Can Yon Answer These QuestlonsT U Are all diving birds web footed ? 2. Is there a book that gives a good description of southern flow ers? 3. Is there anything that will keep mosquitoes from biting? Answers in ' tomorrow's nature notes. Answers to Previous Questions. 1. What can I feed a baby squir. rel? Begin with warm milk given through a medicine dropper, and soon substitute a doll's nursing bot tle. Crumbs of graham cracker can be offered before long, and when teeth begin to show, ground nuts. Increase the nut diet with age, giv ing uncracked nuts when the squir rel is full grown, to keep its teeth healthy. 2. What makes the crimson and Perkins rambler roses blight with a white mold? The blight is a parasitic fungus distributed through the air we can speak only theoretically about treat ment, not knowing conditions of the special bushes in question. Pow dered sulphur, liberally dusted on, and puffed to reach the under sides of the leaves, is a simple treatment used by rose growers. Possibly the soil needs a little air-slacked lime it should be well mixed in with the earth, and. not put in in pockets near the roofs. 3. I am starting the chicken business, and am much bothered by hawks, which kill off my chicks. Am situated in hill country, iwith many cedars in neighboring woods in which the hawks hide. I can't shoot them as they are too wary. What shall I do? Some hawks are valuable and should not be shot; our correspond ent does not say 'what variety is harrying his flock probably acclpi ter, very troublesome. As preven tive, place shiny articles like old bottles, tin cans, etc., all around chicken yard the hawks view such objects with suspicion. A colony of purple martins in the neighbor hood would help, as they chase hawks. To shoot, build a blind of brush or something of the sort and leave it on view for several days. Then shoot from it very early in the morning. For detailed advice better send to United States depart ment of agriculture for A. K. Fish er'B "Hawks and Owls of the United States." Iri Other Days. Twenty-five Years Ago. From The Oregonian of July 4. 1R97. Pittsburg. The coal market is de moralized by the threatened strike I of union miners, called for today. The four-day' celebration, of the natal day of the country will reach its climax here, today. San Francisco. Early delegates to the Christian Endeavor convention have arrived here. Chicago. A terrific heat wave has struck this city. Fifty Years Ago. From The Oregonian of July 4. 1872. New York. Nearly 200 cases of sunstroke were reported yesterday, with 60 deaths. Kingston. President Sagit of Hayti has issued a proclamation de nouncing as an outrage the action of the German warships in enforc ing the demands of German mer chants. New York. Bonds of the Market Street Railway company of San Francisco, totaling $23,000, were stolen yesterday. The annual message of Mayor Wasserman was read to the council last night.