THE 3IORXIXG OREGONIAN. THURSDAY, AUGUST 10, 1922 k-TAHIJM:U VV UCXtf JL. fITTOC C A. AlOKLEN, K. B- F1PEK. M4Uiir. Editor. The OrnBl4 la member of tha Aa- aociata.1 i'rasa. Tha Associated lr l ic.uittf.j entitled I tha km for publl tat.va or all news dopatche credited Is It w sat otbrwiM credued in this pa par nd alo the locat newe pubUahed herein ' r.anta r publication of special -patcbea her;a axe ao reaarved. SBbacrtpUaa It a tea Invariably la Advane. - (BrXul.) ra!?y. Sunday Included, one year ....$ Iai;y. undty included, i month . . 2J la. r. Sunday Inc.ude i. three month M I-aLy. Sunday included, one month .. .75 riir. without Sund. on. year 6 OO I-aliy. without Sunday, six monlki .. Daily, ariihout Mutday, one monlk 9 Sunday, on ar By Carrier.) PelTy, andir Included, one year. . . .1 OS I . r. S jnd.y lnrlurt-,1. thrf. months 2. M 1'ewr, Sunday Included, ona month. r'!!jr. without Munday. one year.... 7 Ialiy. wrthout Sunday, three month l.! Jti y. without Sunday, ana month.. . How ta Remit Bend posoffle money rd-r. xprM or personal ehaofc on your local hank, stamp, cola or currency ara at owner a . Otva peeioffiee addreee Is full, including- county and state. Faelaae (alra I to If pacta, cant: 1 to ii pace. 2 cants; St ta 4k pages. 1 cna; SO to 64 paa. 4 eanta; M ! paa-ea, & cant. D2 to paces. can la EaaT Bualnaaa OffUee Verrea foaa.in. I0O M.;.on avenue. New Tork; Vrre at Confcan. Stager bu Id n. Chi racs; Varraa CnnhUn. Fraa l r but.d ln. Datrolt. Mich.; Verr-a at look. In. ilonadixx-k bultdlnc. San Franetac. Cal. BACK TO THE ISSIT. It may be suspected from casual abatements in his column and more of dLscuoaion today, that the glib Mr. Xash la referring to the present railroad strike. It la not some strike taut may yet be called nor some irlke that iiaa rone into history. It is the no -culled shopmen's strike. "Vet in the main the arguments and the charges he presents found no place whatever in the ultimatum is sued to the railroads by B. M. Jewell representing the employes, nor had they place whatsoever in the three issues presented to the employes on the strike ballot. The federated shopcrafts are striking against three things: 1. The reduction of .wages ef ' f ective July 1. 2. Rules and working conditions. 3. Contracting out of shop work by some of the railroads. The first two points were decided tpon by the labor board after an Investigation In which both sides had full hearing; the third has been receded from by practically all the railroads that have engaged in the practice. The labor board which gave the decisions against which the shop crafts are striking, is a board con- t-tttuted h, authority of law. on which employes; employers and the public have equal representation. The labor board has in the past given decisions favorable to the em ployes and unfavorable to the em ployers. Its record for thorough ness and fairness is clear. Yet the side which has in the past benefited from decisions and joyfully ac. cepted them not only rejects Its de rision when unfavorable but, through a presumably accredited mouthpiece, now impugns the in tegrity of the board, and makes be lated countercharges of bad faith against the railroad a charges which mean only. If they mean anything at all. that the employes admit a public-be-damned attitude and justify it on the ground that the employers have been just as bad. rules in effect in the railroad shops. So further proof ought to be ceded, but a It Is wanted there is the evidence accumulated by the rational industrial conference board, made public July SO. This organization announces the com pletion of a survey of wages of 71 per cent of the employes in foun ds rles and machine shops in the United States, constituting In num ber of 2S8.S60 men. and its findings are that the average hourly, earn ings of railroad shopmen are 25 per cent higher than those of their brothers in private employ and their weekly earnings S2 per cent b'g-her. Whereas the men on strike are by their -course violating a decision of -the railroad wage board, they are attempting to justify that course by enumerating violations of other decisions br the railroad Their proposed adjustment of the two offenses is that the railroads shall now violate the wage and rule decisions as the employes have done. We repeat that the railroad beard represents also the public and and that its decisions are as much in behalf of the public as of the railroads. The Oregonlan conceives Itself to be speaking for the public when it says that two wrongs against the public never made a right and that three- wrongs against the public produce an intolerant s.tuation. not perfection. logically that his culinary art re solved the matter of ultimate sur- the dear delusion that feminine youth will smile at him; and yet. vlval into no question at all. But the J despite this personal liberality of Lest it be forgotten that this con troversy with Agitator Nash started over his spurious Lincoln quota tions, he is advised that he need rot trust to memory or to any Fan Francisco newspaper for what Lin coln has said. The public library Is open and its attendants are ac commodating. If he so desires they will pile books higher than his head iu which he may find the public and recorded statements of Abra ham Lincoln printed fully and ac curately. We confidently assert that nowhere In any of these col guile of his messmate bested him. so the ditty runs, and though the larder was almost depleted a "wea sel" hove in sight to the rescue of the lone survivor. It was his sol emn boast thenceforth that he was an entire ship's company. Oh. T am a cook and a captain bold And tha mate of the Nancy brig. And a bo'aum tight and a mldshlpmlte And tha crew of tha captain's gjr. Cannibalism in the South Sea isles, or in dark Uganda, or canni balism as depicted in Gilbert's mirthful ditty, seems very far away and aloof from our civilization. The shuddering teror of the thing it self Is dimmed by distance, both geographical and impersonal. Yet the practice of dining upon the dead is by no means confined to lavage tribes and light fiction. There la cannibalism in Russia, or was quite recently, according to the many unquestionably authentic re ports which have drifted back from that sorrowful land. There are people not unlike ourselves, driven to the nadir of horror by that smirking, boastful, crafty, lneffec tual thing of lupine ferocity which men, for lack of a blacker term, call bolshevism umns will he find that Abraham Lincoln, on the day following his live 58.81 years In Oregon Is vastly IX) NO UTK IX OREGON. Rather an expansive feeling en sues on reading the statistical re port of the census bureau, which rates the people of Oregon as hav ing a longer period of life average than those of any other state save four. It is comforting to reflect that a residence' here connotes at least a few more years of "useful ness, of happiness, at any rate of survival, than a habitat elsewhere. Not even the fact that Kansas is first, with more than a year in excess of the Oregon average, robs us of this natural gratification. There are disadvantages to living in Kansas. We may comfort our selves with the reflection that to Here you have the agitator at his worst evasive as to issues, apolo getic for his followers, abusive of i is opponents, indifferent to the public's Injury, intolerant toward those who support the side of the injured and innocent element of the people. It has been stated in the col umns and it will bear repetition, that tha public has a genuine and vital Interest in the conduct of rail road transportation: that under our system of railroad regulation, the amount the railroads pay out in wages Is one of the most Important cf thos elements that are tranv lated into terms of rates which the shippers shall pay: that the public for these reasons Is definitely con cerned in the question whether the railroads are paying preferential ages to employes. It was in accord with the system ef railroad regulation that the rail road wage board was constituted as it via It was recognized that labor controversies in transporta tion were of as much interest to the lubllc as to the railroads snd the employes. The public was given representation on the board in men who have no financial or other connection with railroads or em ployes. Thla board. In a decision made effective by the votes of all tne representatives of the public, has determined, after full hearing, that there should be rhanges In wages and working rondUlons. The shopcrafts have struck against what is equivalent to the findings of a tepresentative, unprejudiced board of arbitration. Now Mr. Nash talks wildly of tyranny and Caesars and labor tondauf. He informs us that the railroads have violated many orders snd decisions of the railroad board. If these charges against the rail loads be true, we do not deny that the employes are Justified In re senting them; we do not dispute that they have a right to resort to any honorable means to bring the railroads to time. Hut that Is not to say that because one side In rail ixad transportation, (the employ era) has violated board ordere and that without noticeable injury i-- the intermediate party, the pub lic the third party the employes) ta justified in cutting the throats of loth employers and public. The argument that two wrongs make a tight was ever specious, it is re jected by all high-mtnd"d men. It is beneath the dignity of a union spokesman. It serves only, as it is Ir-tended to serve, to cloud the Issue snd prejudice the minds of the un thinking. Mr. Nash challenges us to make a comparison of railroad shop craft waaes with the mages of men simi larly employed and requires that the comparison be general In scope. Why should the union's spokesman ajrk The Oregonian to do that, when cne of the grounds on which his or ganization called the strike was the practice of some railroads of con tracting their work on the outside, where It could be done at lower tost? the strike protest t, gainst this practice imply that tailroad shopmen are less efficient than shopmen In private employ? Nobody has every made such a charge. The contracting system was obviously the outgrowth of prefercatlai wage and working first inauguration, or the next day when the nation was menaced by disunion, and the details of an ex alted and arduous post had not yet come within his grasp, paused In the midst of cabinet making and tremendous affairs of state to de liver an address on a dinky sfxike In New Haven, Connecticut. There are current spurious Lin coln quotations that Mr. Nash has not quoted, and neither he nor the San Francisco paper in which he put." his faith, was the first falsely to apply to present-day industrial controversies detached phraseology from Lincoln's comment on negro slavery. A candidate for president of the United States did that more than twenty years ago.. But Uncoln i not made to say what he did not say by the combined assertions of an agitator, a San Ktanclsco editor and a candidate for president. . AX ADMIRABLE Ql IVOTC Unique in the annals of the road is the conduct of the editor of the Western Baptist, who not only con fetsted his fault following a highway mishap, but actually made volun tary surrender of his driver's license to the state authorities. This singu lar motorist made, on his own inl t ative. the punishment fit the crime. Obviously he Is a sensitive man. who to some degree has mag nified the accident itself and the measure of his own responsibility, but quite as obviously he Is an hon- orahle one. Yet it Is probable that In his zeal to atone, to make amends, he baa deprived the motor irg fraternity of a safe and sane operator. What Is needed Is not the relin quishment of licenses by men who think and feel as he does, but their retention. We have use for drivers who learn their lessons and profit by them, and who are thereafter the exponents and evangelists of sanity on the highwayst Our roads are rife with those blithe fel lows who trust to luck and nerve. with those addle-pates who never vill learn that sorrow follows speed and disregard for caution, with those who are a law unto them relves. A convert to senible driv ing, to the meticulous observance of traffic regulations, is too valuable a man to lose. There is something worth while, however. In the straightforward echfession of fault, and the will ingness to embrace punishment Something that is available as a lesson, a homily, when we are In clined to dodge or shirk our own responsibilities. The editor of the Western Baptist has) brought this tiuth home to us In commentary upon motoring accidents. It has served Its purpose. He should now reconsider his resolve, resume the wheel, and preach motoring sanity t the force of good example. SOME MODERN CANNIBALS. While the answer to a recent communication. In the Burroughs rat u re notes, was correct in ascrib ing the abhorrent custom of canni balism to certain tribes of the South S-e.as, It neglected to add that the ghoulish appetite for human flesh is not restricted to the delectable Isles. For .a great many British colonists and officials have strug gled to obliterate the practice In equatorial Africa, yet even at the present we find the London Times in grave discussion respecting the degenerate banquets of natives of Uganda. There, we are told, exist tribes which have such singular economic views that they extend their thrift to the consumption of their dead. "These people." wrote a corre spondent of the Times, referring to the Ba-gishu and Ba-ked! tribes, "have always been noted for their sturdy independence, cannibal habits and lack of clothing. - The population of that region is dense, and food is often scarce. When touring through their district, about fourteen years ago. I was assured that there was not a cemetery in the whole country. The gentle Ba pshu are thorough anti-wasters, and nothing that is edible is lost! I was told, however, that they do not consume their own defunct relatives, but make presents of the 'remains' to friendly and neighbor ing villages. The "compliment" Is tfuly returned, and the period of mournitng Is short." One recalls, upon the perusal of these lines, Gilbert's nautical bal lad of the "Yarn of the 'Nancy BHI.' wherein the sea-faring man lifted his significant ditty. Ship wreck and privation had forced the crew of the Nancy to the dread al ternative, until presently the hero of the lay was left to the company oT the cook, who reasoned quite better than to exist for 59.73 years in Kansas. The relative position of the states with respect to longevity is. how ever, somewhat baffling. It might be concluded casually that a mild and favorable climate is conducive tj survival, yet both Wisconsin and Minnesota, provinces of a very vigorous winter, surpass Oregon In this- respect. On the other hand, certain of the eastern states, as Massachusetts,- New Jersey and New York, which have also the attribute of marked seasonal change, are well toward the foot of the list. If we may hazard a theory It is that, broadly speaking, a varied climate Is best suited to the requirements of the race, and that apparently exceptions to the rule erise from immigration and disre gard for the rules of living. The normal expectancy Is. bio logically considered, roughly five time that of the age of maturity. This rule applies not to man alone, hut to the various species of the lower orders, yet In its application to the race it Is flouted by the hazards of unnatural death. Thus it may be seen that the average lifeline for Oregon, of 68.49 for rialea. and 60.31 for females, is t'espite these hazards well ad vanced toward the maximum un der natural law. We may well conclude that a beneficial climate has much to do with the happy re sult, but we should not lose sight of the fact that a young western elate, still calling to settlers, has attracted and will continue to sum mon the most virile residents of other states. Indeed, there Is apparent proof that such is the case, for California most- widely knofrn and her alded of western states tweirtn in lifetime expectancy, or ten, full places below Oregon. The average life line In our southern sister is shorter by more than three years. Presumably this variation ! largely created by the popularity o? California as a health resort and its appeal to people who seek des perately to lengthen their Imperiled span. The milder, more slothful climate of California may have an Influence that contributes to the effect, but In the main It Is more charitable to conclude that many of Its' adopted residents are Im paired In health when they arrive there and remain so. Fifth In place among her sister states. In the matter of lifetime ex pectancy, Oregon should regard with complacence the statistical fact that four other states surpass her. What Oregonian, native or adopted, would wish to dwell in either Kansas. Wisconsin, Minne sota or Tennessee? morals, stoutly and heatedly deny ing that his wife may subscribe to the same code and comparable yearnings. The picture is recog nizable, in all truth, but Miss Hurst seems to have forgotten that the free and untrammeled female of to t!ay has thrown as many wrenches into conventional mechanism as the saddest roue of them all. Such a debate proceeds aimlessly and arrives nowhere. The only sen sible salvage to be derived from it is Mr. Hergeishelmer's trite obser vation that men think less about women as they grow older. A placid twilight descends upon the sexes, and the turmoil and stress of in stinct are succeeded by contem plative peace. Yet love in this twi light is the most beautiful of life's manifestations, certain poets and philosophers have observed. Then the tiresome debate is at an end, and the Fannies and the Josephs plant marigolds and parsnips and keep a cow. They are quite indis pensable to one another. Miss Hurst seems of the belief that men are, somehow, delinquent in their homage to their wives. She overlooks the millions that are not. But let that pass. Equally she over looks the millions of wives that 'are unworthy of homage. And such a shoe as she shapes will fit the feet of either. There was once but here Is the story: The husband was a eon of the wilderness. He hunted and fished. He grew corn. It often happened that the corn suffered, and that as he removed his sodden footgear after a long tramp through the wet hills, his wife upbraided him for a Itjsy vagrant. He .made no retort, but bore the tirade smilingly, though his forbearance but added fuel to the Indignant flame. "Twenty years ago, JTm," ob served a friend, "she wouldn't have talked to you like that." No," said the hill man, "you're right. But it most generally hap pens) that .as wimmen gets older trey gets cold and dormant." Stars and Starmakers. By Ltone Cass Baer. WHY THEY WALK OCT. ' In the course of one of his fre quent onslaughts on the federal re serve board Senator Heflin re marked that, whenever discussion of that subject began, several news paper men walked out of the press gallery- of the senate, and that he "was told;" They do -it in order that they may aay if questioned about it. "Why, I waa not In the gallery when that was said: 1 did not haar it and that la why I did not wrlto a story about It." Perhaps Mr. Heflin gave himself that explanation rather than wound his vanity by acknowledging the true one. Washington correspon dents are good judges of news and know when a senator begins to talk whether to expect any. They are familiar with the quality of Mr. Heflin's speeches as news. That is why they walk out. All that mechanical appliance could do to insure safety was in working order on the Missouri Pa cific, but an engineer with thirty seven years' experience without a mark on his record ran past the signal. After all, safety In travel depends on the human element. T71DWARD HORTON, ' a Portland III favorite by reason of his ex cellent work here as leading man with the Baker company, is appear ing in a new production calHed "A Nervous wreck. .The piece waa tried out a week' ago In-Atlantic City and is scheduled for a run in New York. - - . a a William B. Naylor; general press representative of the Sells-Floto cir cus, brings word from a pair of former Baker players, who were greatly ..beloved during their stay here. Bob Conness and Mrs. Conness who played character roles and was known as Helen Strickland. They are soendina the summer in their home near Portland. Me. With them are Mra. Conness' sister, Mabel Strickland, and her husband, George Mark, who Is a well-known the atrical manager. Bob Conness was with an eastern company last season In "The Bat." Another sister of Mrs. Conness, Ethel Strickland, was with Will iam Courtney last year in "Honors Are Even." Ethel's husband, A. J. Edwards, Is a theatrical producer and last year had a stock company in Trenton. N. J. Ethel Strickland played the role of the old fortune teller. Rosalie La Grange. . In the Pacific coast company, on tour in -The Thirteenth Chair." a a a Marjorie Foster Is playing leads with one of the Poll stock theaters in Springfield. Mass. Her husband. Arthur Holman. and her little daughter are In Chicago. Mr. Hol man is directing at the National Stock theater there. a a a Oliver Morosco has added another new play to his already plethoric list for the coming season and the latest one, "The Hurdy Gurdy Man." has gone into rehearsal : prepara tory to a tryout in New Jersey in September. Still another bit of news con cerning the Morosco enterprises has It that Marcus Loew has turned over his vaudeville house at Sacra mento, Cal., to his brother producer and It will be devoted to a Morosco stock company starting September 25. I The San Francisco play bills for the week of September 10 will be dominated by Morosco attractions, with four of the five legitimate the aters of that art center housing his wares. Thompson Buchanan's new play, "The Sporting Thing to Do," will be tried out. at the Mor osco; Bronson and Baldwin will be seen In .a new musical comedy at the Casino; Leo Carillo is to open the new Curran theater with "Mike Angelo," and the Alcazar is to offer "Civilian Clothes." Those Who Come and Go. Tales of Folks at the Hotels. Two Missourlans, brothers, who wrecked their bank at. Moberly by embezzling JiOO.OOO were sent to jail for five and ten-year terms. The incongruity of punishment and offense explains why some bank ers go wrong. THE ETERNAL DEBATE. When, they agree, as they do, that all men are vain, the current debate In McCall's magazine be tween Fannie Hurst 'and Joseph hergeishelmer, respecting the Inti mate thoughts of the opposite sexes. teems at a stroke to lose its con troversial element- There is little left to argue about. For Mr. Her geishelmer is of the opinion that middle-aged men forget their waistlines and yearn for an Indian summer of love and this, mark you, without disloyalty to their wives; and Miss Hurst somewhat cattily observes that the gentleman who has not seen his own ankles for ten years is eagerly intrigued by the silken ones of the comely flap per. Ah, the bad, bad, unregener ate old Adam In us! It is not partisan to advance the conclusion that, all things consld eied, Mr. Hergeishelmer is the more chivalrous of the two. Freely admitting the conscious or subcon scious duplicity of his sex, he offers as the sole defense the truth well known to men that the sentimen tal allure of a lost youth does not In the least destroy the real affec tion in which men hold their wives." They are the sport of cosmic cir cumstance, despite which most of them manage somehow to adhere to the conventions. Indeed, he hints that as the years fall due it is ever the more easy to respect those canonical adages. In his discussion tf women Mr. Hergeishelmer is more than tender ... a true knight. But MUiS Hurst, bless her, she does not spare us. With the lash of a caustic cynicism, well pickled In wit, the sprightly Fannie flays the w orthle.-w masculine hide. She charges the middle-aged male with ogling and with an incurable van ity, and marvels that he has not the good sense sometime to consult his mirror. She depicts for us a most objectionable masculine .hypocrite. rotund and bold, forever nursing Now comes the report that Dr. Sun Yat Sen, the principal Chinese revolutionary leader. Is suffering from mental trouble. The evi dence seems incontrovertible. He wouldn't pose a battle scene for the movies. The money of the wealthy Amerl can is his to buy anything lawful but purchase of a small island in the Bahamas, whereon he may drink aplenty, contemplates break- :ng a moral law at J east. Residents of Washington, D. C, are shown by the census to live longer than those of any other city in the I. nited States. Once a job seeker gets on the federal payroll he simply won't die. People in Kansas, "where It never rains," have the longest ex pectations of life, and people in Oregon, where it seldom rains, ctowd the Kansans for the longevi cal honors. Rain Is not due to the circus nor the Gresham fair hoodoo, but to "a low pressure moving down from British Columbia." Oh, those Ca nucks! The kaiser is said to be. thinking of going into moving pictures. Well, that will be safer for him, we should think, than vaudeville, with eggs at summer prices. Oregon, says the federal prohi bition commissioner here, is the dryest, state in the union. Sure it la there hasn t been a. real shower since along In May. Evan Burrows Fontaine, who Is suing "Sonny" Whitney, is to be featured in a new musical comedy called,: appropriately enough, "Be Careful, Dearie." The play is now in rehearsal In San Francisco. f a a a Down In her own bailiwick, Los Angeles, Texas Guinan, vaudeville motion picture and musical comedy actress, jumped from a stage arres Into the real thing. As she stepped from a downtown theater, where she was playing an act called "Spitfire," she was met by policemen who placed her under arrest on the charge of the larceny of an automobile. Just a few min utes previously she had submitted to a make-believe detention In the playlet. ' When the excitement blew over and Miss Guinan had finally been released on her own cognizance. It developed that B. F. Tatum. a Holly wood money lender, accuses her of being somewhat careless about the manner in which she handled mortgaged automobile. He charges that In 1920 she bought a car on money borrowed from him and that to secure the debt she had given him a straight mortgage of 1575. The complaint further alleges that Miss Guinan traded the encum bered car for a new one and sent the latter east by freight without either paying off the mortgage or notifying Tatum. We should think New York city would Intervene in the Irish-situation on the ground that, it endan gers the source of raw materia! for her police force. Nowhere else could such a week be programmed for the Buyers. Two days of circus and a county faiiare no mean attractions thrown in. , . While discussing this French pro posal to cancel her debt to America It might be pertinent to suggest that France cancel her huge army. No, the millennium Is not near, though the gas company has knocked off another nickel. It la just a good business proposition. The funeral directors of the state are in session here again. Due to Colonel John Flnley, these gentle men now are "morticians.' The price qf shoes has dropped, but we haven't noticed any great tendency to substitute w-alking for gasoline. The discovery of Osier was for tunate. He might have made It a million In time. That champion crawfish eater at New Orleans has wonderful inter nal "economy." Julian Eltinge was operated on a week ago in Buffalo for appendi citis. ' Eltinae made the trip from his home In California to Buffalo to have a physician who Is a personal friend perform the operation. a Lady Forbes Robertson (Gertrude Elliot) has sailed from England to fulfill her engagement with the South African Theater trust, taking a full west end London company with her, . a ' a Edith Day Is heading the cast of "Orange Blossoms." Edith has been mixed up In a scandal and a couple of divorce suits, her husband's and that of the wife of the "other man' in England. It isn't all straightened out yet, but it's an ill wind that blows no actress good and people who never heard of Edith Day know all about her now. "Orange Blos soms" is founded on "La Passerelle, by Mme. Fred de Gresac and F. da Croisset, the first named of' whom has also contributed the book for the new work to the lyrics of B. G. de Sylva and the score of Victor Herbert. . Oliver Morosco takes occasion to deny through the medium of the dramatic departments of the press that he has ever contemplated the presentation of Roscoe Arbuckle In one of his new plays, although such a report has emanated from Cali fornia. " Mr. Morosco. asserts he was ap proached by a representative of the late film comedian with a view to starring the latter In a comedy, but the producer says that was as far as matters got. , "Dancers are born, not made," declares Gilda Gray, and she uses her statement as a text, for declin ing an offer she has just received to teach dancing ' to the summer classes at' Columbia. a a " Marie Curtis la In New York. She has spent three years on the coast, one as second woman with , the Al cazar stock here. She spent last season - In Los Angeles with the Majestic stock. , fHERB has Been enough adven- X ture, excitement and romance in the sea career of Captain John O'Brien to provide a scenario writer with sufficient material to turn out thrillers for several years. Captain O'Brien is at the Hotel Oregon while here planning an Alaska enterprise. He plans shipping a cargo of mining machinery to Nome. It was In 1877 that the bark Edward James had a fire in her hold and Captain O'Brien and Joe' Day went down to extin guish it. The two men were over come by fumes and were rescued more dead than alive. Shortly afterward Mr. Day decided his life's calling was the police business and so he joined the Portland police department and has been on the job ever since. A particularly spectacular chapter in the captain's career was when the Umatilla went on the rocks near Cape Flattery. It was Captain O'Brien who leaped Into the breakers and took a line ashore himself. In Alaskan waters the captain Jumped into the sea and rescued his son. who was perishing. Captain O'Brien is 72 years young; vigorous and hard as nails, due to the active seafaring life which has been his. He is well known to the old-timers of Portland and he is related by jnarriage to several of the early-day families. "The so-called 'orphan road" be tween Crescent City, Cal., and the Oregon state line near Brookings, is vto be adopted and cared for by the California highway department." announced Charles Purcell of the bureau or public roads, who re turned to Portland yesterday. "This is the road that inspired resolutions and speeches at the big road meet ing at Crescent City in July, when Governor Olcott and the Oregon highway commission was there. When Thomas MacDonald, chief of the bureau of public roads, was in California, a few days ago he had the 'orphan road' settled and the California officials promised that they would make it part of their system. When this is done that section will be a part of the Red wood highway and will connect at tne Oregon line, near Chetco river with the Roosevelt highway." M. S. Johnson, mayor of the once live mining town of Gold Hill, is at the Imperial. Gold Hill, which was rather sleepy until the Pacific high way was graded and paved through the town, is now perking- up. In the old days the "morning's morning" was an Institution in its several-sa loons. Any man was entitled to get a drink of whisky free In the morn ing if he called while the bartender was cleaning up and had not donned his apron. While the drink, in the circumstances, was free, a charge was promptly made if the morning visitor asked for a chaser of water. A man arrived at the Multnomah yesterday from the east with the object of buying piles at least 100 feet In length. He will require a great number. The piling is In tended for a big wharf in New York harbor. The southern forests can not produce piling as long as needed for this work so the agent waa dis patched to Oregon for the required material. If the piling is located, the next step will be to find cargo space, for the piling is too long to be sent across the continent by rail and the freight charge would be too expensive. Chocolate amounting to 1,250,000 pounds was shipped west last month. It required a solid train of 31 cars, each loaded to capacity with the confection. This is the first time that a trainload of chocolate has ever been sent to the west. All of the stuff was distributed between Cincinnati and Portland, one con cern alone in this city buying $8,000 worth. . C. S. Woodford, who is vice- president of the company, shipping the chocolate, is an arrival at the Multnomah from New England. Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Cooper of Alsea, Or., are among the visitors for buyers' week and they are at the Hotel Oregon. The Alsea road, for improvement of. which Benton county voted bonds, is now on the way to development with the state and the forest department co-operating. A contract for the mountain section of the Alsea road has been advertised by the state highway commission for the next meeting of that body. Gilpin Lovering of- Sisters is at the Hotel Portland. The McKenzie pass route from the Willamette val ley across the Cascades to Sisters Is now closed to traffic. The gov ernment road department Is cutting a roadbed through the lava field near the pass and there is enough other road work in progress so that rather than permit it to be in terfered with by traffic, the road was ordered closed for the year a few days ago. LINCOLN'S ITSiDYING ADDRESS, Review of Evidence as to Time Consumed In Preparation. EUGENE, Or., Aug. 8. (To the Editor.) In a recent editorial you use the following language: Mr. Lincoln wrote the Gettysburg speech in half an hour or less and re proached himself for it inadequacy. Yet it. is deathless. In the last number of the Liter ary Digest, reaching here about the same time, Mr. Cole, a former sen ator from California, an acquaint ance of Mr. Lincoln and present when the address was made, has this to say: V It is another mistake, often made, that Mr. Lincoln wrote out the Gettys burg address on- the train -before he pot there. He never wrote that speech. He didn't know he was to be a speaker that, day. Mr. Everett- was announced as the man that was to be the principal figure on that occasion, and the president t went there as a listener. He waa called upon and spoke from the bottom of his heart and not from any notes. 'Then there is the little book by Mary Ramond Shipmaa Andrews, "The Perfect Tribute," in which she describes with great particularity Mr. Lincoln on the train for Gettys burg ana unprepared for the ad dress of the morrow. He sees a piece of brown wrapping paper on the car floor, calls for it, and then, with "the untidy stump of a pen cil," writes the immortal docu ment. She gives him a little more time than you, for she says "he la bored as the hours flew."- No book could be more unreliable than hers. She calls it "The Perfect Tribute" because, at the conclusion of the address, as she says: - There was no sound from the silent vast assembly. Not a hand was lifted in applause. . . . There was no sound of approval, of recognition from the au dience; only a long sigh ran like a rip ple on he ocean through rank after rank. This is all very pretty, but the address was taken down in short hand by an official of the Asso ciated Press, seated on the plat form, and in reporting it for pub-r lication he notes that the short address was interrupted during de livery by applause five times, and that at the end it received "long continued applause." So much for "the perfect tribute," the tribute of silence. When the private secretaries of Mr. Lincoln, John G. Nicolay and John Hay, wrote their monumental life of Mr. Lincoln they did not overlook the composition of this remarkable address. The facts re garding it, over the signature of Mr. Nicolay; may be found In the Century Magazine of February, 1S94. The article includes the sten ographer's report of the address, with the notations of applause, and was published 14 years before Mrs. Andrews made her discovery of "the perfect tribute." Now, he facts about the address, briefly summarized, are: The dedicatory services i at . Gettysburg were set for November 19, 1863. On November 2 Judge Wills of Gettys burg wrote Mr. Lincoln, saying, among other, things: , I am authorized by the governors of the different states to invite -you to be present and to pa-rticipate in these cere monies, which will doubtless be very im posing and solemnly impressive. It is the .desire that after cthe oration, you, as chief executive of the nation, for mally set aDart the ground to thair sa cred use by a few appropriate remarks. More Truth Than Poetry. By James J. Hontagoe. Mr. Nicolay notes that Mr. Lin coln "had a little more than two weeks in which to prepare' the re marks he might Intend to make." Can anyone who has studied Mr. Lincoln's life and noted his habit of careful preparation doubt that he properly and seasonably pre pared himself to fulfil his part on this "very imposing" and "'solemnly impressive" occasion? Of his prep aration Mr. Nicolay says: He probably followed his usual habit In such matters, using great deliberation in arranging his thoughts and molding his phrases mentally, waiting to reduce them to writing until they had taken satisfactory form. That Mr. Lincoln did follow that course as to this address is shown probable by a statement by Noah Brook in his book, "Abraham Lincoln." Mr. Brook was 'a corre spondent of the New York Tribune and had a considerable personal ac quaintance with Mr. Lincoln. Brook says: A few days before the ceremony M Everett sent the president a copy of his address, printed on one sheet of a Bos ton newspaper. It was very long. Mr. Lincoln looked it over with grea.t gravity and said: "It was very kind in Mr. Ever- tt to send me this that I might not go over the same ground he has. There is no danger that I shall. My speech is all blocked out. It is very short." POETRY FOR THE PEOPLE. It ain't the cloe's that makes the man. It's the pluck an' brains and study; V The barefoot b6y with cheeks of tan Is good as anybody. It ain't the chap with, endless means That gits the prizes, sonny; The honest guy with soiled blue jeans May make the biggest money. He may an' that sounds strange, beouz The fact is that he seldom does. It ain't the creases In his pants Nor fancy linen collars That gives the lad with sense a chance , To harness all the dollars. It's what he's got inside his head Not what he eats for dinner An" what he's seen an' did and read That makes a man a winner. An' ylt, we reely must admit That togs does help a little bit. It ain't the way you part your hair. Or grease an' shine an' slick it. That makes folks know that you are there To draw the lucky ticket. Red flowered vests don't git no cash. Pink shirts don't draw no prizes, Sou'ii see the gents that makes a splash . Has got big hatband sizes. Still, after all Is said and done, Good stylish cloe's don't hurt ye none. If tailors made a man succeed. Or rise to ranks above 'em You soon would find that thero would need To be a lot more of 'em. A man's all right ghat's clean In side, And ikeeps at work all hours, No matter if his ties ain't dyed The color of spring flowers. Tet, somehow, style does help a guy Who Just is starting to git by. a Descriptive. The old-fashioned expression, "a man of parts," applies rather neatly to Henry Ford. a a See Russia for Proof. An autocrat in Europe is a bol shevik who has got a government job. a Nearer ana Nearer. The chances of peace in Europe ere much , brighter now that The Hagueconference has been aban doned. (Copyright. 1022. by Bell Syndicate. Inj. Burroughs Nature Club. Copyright. Houghton-Mifflin Co. Can Yon Answer These Questions f 1. If birds are driven out from a nesting site, do they ever come back ? 2. Is it dangerous to handle dead rats? ' 3. How old should trees in a . wood lot be allowed to grow? Answers in tomorrow's Nature Notes. "Three thousand lambs were shipped out of Heppner Tuesday," says J. J. Kelly, sheepman of Mor row county, who arrived at the Im perial yesterday. "There is a steady movement of lambs out of Hepp ner every day, but Tuesday s ship ment was especially heavy. The lambs are being sent to the east ern market and the' growers are receiving a pretty fair price." Emil Mohr. mine host of the Med- ford hotel, arrived at the Multno malt yesterday. With his family he is maKing a tour and now- Is a good time, for the heat in Medford is uncomfortable. For weeks Med ford has experienced hot weather and despite the temperature there Is scarcely a palm beach suit to be seen on the streets. Joe R. Thompson, ,. who is a mer chant as well as a member of the city council of Burns, Harney county, is one of the buying army now in Portland. The principal topic in Burns for the past few weeks is the prospect of railroad develop ment and tfle expectations that something will come out of the Cen tral Pacific situation. George W. Hyatt of Enterprise, formerly representative of Union and Wallowa counties in the legislature, arrived in Portland yesterday to attend a meeting of the State Mer chants' association. 'Considering everything, says Mr. Hyatt, things in Wallowa county are fair. - C. C. Childs, once upon a time in the hotel business and proprietor of the Grand hotel at Boise, Idaho, Is In Portland as a buyer. Mr. Childs is now conducting a mercan tile establishment at Rexburg, Idaho. He is at the Multnomah. S. M. McClure Is in town from Nampa, Idaho. He was formerly secretary of the National Wool growers' association and was con nected with the Cunningham ranch in Umatilla county at one time; i McKinley Kane of Prineville, who was talked of as a possible candi date in the primaries for the legis lature, is registered at the Benson. L. J. Falk of the Falk Mercantile comoany of Boise, Idaho, Is at the Multnomah and his family has pro ceeded on to the beach. John O. Bozarth, one of the owners of "Bay City, Or., 45 . miles due west of Portland is registered at the Hotel Oregon. The Nicolay article devotes con siderable space to showing that Mr. Lincoln did no writing on the train. He clinches this conclusion by giving in fac simile the orig inal draft of the address, the drift that Mr- Lincoln had on the speaker's stand at Gettysburg. It consists of two sheets of paper, the first a piece of White House sta tionery, on which are written 19 lines of the address in ink; the sec ond a piece of blue-gray legal cap on which the remaining nine lines are written, in pencil. Mr. Nicolay Is positive that the first sheet was written In Washington and car ried to Gettysburg by Mr. Lincoln. He is equally positive that the sec end sheet was written In the room that Mr. Lincoln occupied in Judge Wills' house in Gettysburg and on the morning of November 19. Mr. Nicolay visited Mr. Lincoln and saw him in his room engaged in writing or revising the last nine lines of the address. fie gives the time which Mr. Lincoln devoted to this work as ''about one hour." Whether this ending of nine lines had been writ ten in Washington and the work at Gettysburg was a mere revision of it, or whether this ending was first written at Gettysburg, Mr. Nicolay does hot pretend to say. It will be noticed that the first, the ink written sheet, ends in the middle of a sentence, that the last three words of this part sentence have been changed In penfcil and that the second sheet, wholly in pencil, lits on to the first sheet. There is no other change on either sheet. It seems reasonable to me to sup pose that the entire address had been written in Washington and that the work at Gettysburg was mere revision of the ending. It will be evident, I think, to anyone who" will read Mr. Nicolay's account, that the ' Gettysburg address was not the hasty, for-tnate,, inspira tional effort it is usually repre sented to be, but the careful and studied work of one who very well exemplified Buffon's . definition that 'genius is patience." S. D. .ALLEN. Answers to Previous Questions. 1. What is the difference be tween a starling and a grackle? Are starlings pests? The starling belongs to family Sturnidae, is an imported bird from Europe, about & inches long. Has metallic-iridescent plumage; easily identified by long ivory-color or pale yellow bill. Fights native de sirable birds and drives them out. Undesirable. Grackles are natives. 12 to 13 inches, metallic irides cent plumage, family Icteridae, re lated to corn-birds, orioles, bobo links, meadowlarks, red-winged blackbirds. Useful in feeding habit. a 2. Does the common "wild aster Sive honey? Yes, nectar, that is. (Bees make l-.oney by an internal process which converts nectar into honey.) The yellow center of this type of flow er which is said to have nearly 150 species in North America is formed of tubular flowers in which nectar is stored. Various Insects visit this flower honey bees, bum b!bees, wasps, butterflies and even fliea. The honey made from aster nectar is not a high grade, how ever, and is commonly sold to bak ers or candy makers instead of be ing boxed or bottled for table use. a a 3. Are there any parasitic fishes? Only one true parasite, the hag i'ish, Myxine eptatreus. It is worm shaped, and has a round mouth with strong hooked teeth. It works its way into the muscles of fishes with tnt tearing the ekin, and gradually eats out the muscle, not touching the skin or internal organs. Fish that are being thus slowly eaten alive, live for some time as mere hulks of a normal fish. In Other Days. Jefferson Review. What will the citizens of this state get out of any of the proposed state wide tax-raising measures on the ballot at the coming election? Instead of adopting new measures. every state, public official and citi zen should work for "less need of revenue" and more value for the dollar expended, rather than for more ways to tax the public in order to raise larger and larger sums. , Unless the bill is more important and necessity urgent, never was the time better to vote "no" on every experimental and tax-raising piece of legislation. . Twenty-five Years Aso. From The Oregonian, August 10, 18ft". St. Petersburg. Today the em peror and empress of Germany pro ceeded to Kranso-Heli, the great military camp, where they were received by the czar and czarina. Chicago. Ex-King Milan of Ser bia, overwhelmed with debt in Pa ris and narassa Deyona all Dear- mg by his innumerable "creditors, has left that city and established himself in Vienna. Confidence of miners In south ern Oregon is shown by a recent transaction in which the mine known as the Denver City ledge, 35 miles from Grants Pass, was sold for 128,000. John Sharkey has sold and re ceived orders for 1000 pack- saddles since the Klondike gold rush began. Fifty Years Ago. From Tne Oregonian, August 10, 1872. San Diego. The Tuscon Arizonian says the Apaches continue to mur der our people the same as before promising to keep the peace. Seattle. The territorial university will open on the first Monday of September with Professor E. K. Hill and his wife In charge. The spire of the new Trinity church at "the corner of Oak and Sixth streets was raised and bolted into place yesterday morning, and the whole structure will be finished in a few weeks. - A very destructive fire visited Springville Thursday night, burn ing three large warehouses, a store and two wharves. All the property, valued at $16,000, belonged to Com stock & Co. Poll Tax In Washington, ORETOWN, Or., Aug. 8. (To the Editor.) A used to live in the state of Washington and still has real estate in said state. But A is now a resident of Oregon and has been for the last two years. Can the state of Washington collect poll tax from A? CONSTANT READER. The answer Is no. a