THE. MORXIXG OREGOXIAX,' MONDAY, AUGUST. 21, 1922 Published by The Oregonian Pub. Co., 135 Sixth Street, Portland, Oregon. C A. JIORBBX, E. B. PIPER, - Manager. Editor. The Oregonian is a, member of the As sociated Press. The Associated Prese is exclusively entitled to the use for publi cation of all news dispatcher credited to it ox not otherwise credited in this paper and lso the local news published herein. Ail rights of publication of special dis patches herein are aio reserved. Subscription Kate Invariably in Advance. (By Mail.) Daily, Sunday included, one year . -. .$8.00 lai;y. Sunriay incuued. six months . , 4 Paily, Sunday included, three months 2.25 rai!y. Sunday included, one month .. Daily, wit hout SutKray. one year .1... 6.00 JDaily. without Sunday, six months 3.25 Ia41y. without Sunday, one month. .. .60 Sunday, one year 2.50 (By Carrier.) wafly, Sundny included, one year. . . .$9.00 I'silv. 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In laying-, before congress the facts of the coal and railroad strikes and in making recommend ations to deal with those facts President Harding- centered atten tlon without swerving- on the one duty with which he is charged protection of the rights and wel fare of the people and mainte nance of the authority of the gov ernment as a means to that end He was rigidly impartial in his distribution of blame for the pres ent crisis between employers and workmen. He acknowledged the right of employers and employes .alike to adjust their relations, and he, in the same breath, condemned "warfare on unions of labor" and striving of "labor extremists" for "class domination," but he asserted that these rights must be exercised "within the law," and that "the first obligation and the first alle giance of every citizen high or low, is to his government, and to hold that government to be the just and unchallenged sponsor for pub lic welfare and the liberty, secur ity and rights of all its citizens." He expressed his resolution "to use all the powers of government to maintain transportation and sus tain the right of men to work. Those thoughts run through his entire recital of the events of the last few troubled months, and de nial of those principles, at times by one, at other times by the other party, at yet other times by both parties, explains tha failure of his unremitting efforts to. end the strikes by agreement between 'the direct parties. When he made the first overtures for settlement of the coal strike "the dominant groups among the operators were insistent on having district agreements; the dominant mineworkers were de manding a nation-wide settlement." When he brought operators and miners into conference on July 1 "the conference did not develop even a nope. w nen ar. naming proposed arbitration and a com mission of inquiry into the facts. all agreed to the commission, but the miners and a considerable mi nority of the bituminous operators rejected arbitration. When he called on both parties to resume production under government pro tection of their lawful rights "little or no production followed." This was the truth, notwithstand ing a mass of information direct from the source "governors of various states, district leaders, hun dreds of wives of workmen" that operators and miners were eager to resume production. The reason for this contradiction between de sire and action is found in the statement of district leaders that "they the miners were not per mitted" to return to their jobs. This state of affairs led the presi dent to declare the "simple but significant truth" to be that "the country is at the mercy of the Uni ted Mineworkers." We know by what means this ominous condition has -been brought about by the Herrin mas sacre, by pitched battles in which mobs of strikers have attacked working mines, by raidB in which workers have been driven out by insult and contumely heaped on "scabs," who are simply those who exercise "the right of men to work," but wio for so doing are made so cial outcasts, the maiming, even killing, of whom is held not crime, but .a meritorious ac by the ex tremists who control many labor anions. Denial by the railroad strike of the peoeple's right to transporta tion and of "the right of men to work" is an even more flagrant ex hibition of contempt for both gen eral 'and personal rights, for in that case the government has estab lished, an agency to determine just terms of employment, the fairness of which cannot be questioned by unbiased minds, and there is no overproduction, and under-employ-ment such as complicates the coal settlement. The president sweeps aside all the fictions by which the strike is justified when he de scribes it as "a strike against a wage decision made by the rail road labor board," but he distrib utes Warns impartially between ex ecutives and strikers. He arraigns the former for a. parallel offense" when he says that "a number of decisions of this board had been Ignored by the carriers," but he re jects the strikers' theory that three wrongs make a right by saying that "they had a remedy without seek ing to paralyze interstate com merce." After vain attempts at mediation for settlement "out of court" the president proposed re turn to the method provided by law when he, recommended that work be resumed 'under the labor board's decision and that the question of seniority be referred to the board for decision, but again each party Insisted' on a settlement in its own way of the latter question, while the strikers phrased their accept ance of the board's authority in terms which made it a rejection. The net result is that executives and strikers assume the right to seek an agreement in their own way, as though the strike were a private quarrel with which the pub lic had no concern, and the strikers j and their friends carry that as-f sumption to the extreme by beat ing, bombing and killing workers, by inducing trainmen to abandon trains in the desert, tosTnflict heavy loss on fruitgrowers, to threaten immeasurable loss to farmers after harvest, and to confront many states with the threat of a fuel famine. Though i less successful than the miners, they seek to have the nation at their mercy. In so doing they ignore tfie responsibil ity which, the president says, rests on organizations of employers and workmen alike, and they attempt to destroy that principle, "that all men have . unquestioned rights to lawful pursuits, to work and to live and to choose .their own lawful ways to happiness," which the pres ident pronounces "fundamental to all freedom." The consequence of that denial- if put in practice, is forcibly stated by Jvlr. Harding in these words: " If free men cannot toil according to their own lawful choosing, all our consti tutional guaranties born of democracy are surrendered to mobocracy, and the freedom of a hundred millions is surren dered to the small minority which would have no law. Such is the inevitable conse quence of the theory on which ac tion has been based by those rail road executives and those railroad employes who have flouted the au thority of the government, by those coal operators and by the miners' union leaders who rejected the president's" proposals. That the ory is that the right of each class is superior to that of all the peo ple, upon whom each depends for maintenance of its rights, and that each class may maintain its pre tended rights by its own chosen means, in defiance of the govern ment, though the people perish and those who uphold this destructive theory perish with them. Most out spoken in advancing this new the ory are-the extreme spokesmen of union labor, who openly place alle giance of workmen to their class above allegiance to their govern ment, but no less dangerous are those employers who, though more politic and, therefore, less outspo ken, act on the belief that govern ment exists for their behoof, that they need obey -only when it suits them, and that the right to organ ize does not extend to tVjeir em ployes. The president's address is summons to both elements to stop and oonsider whither they are traveling, it is a summons to con gress to bar their further progress in that direction, and to the peo ple o inspire congress with the courage necessary to wise action, for the way the contending parties have been traveling leads to an archy. LITERACY TEST FOR VOTERS. Under the "new, statute giving force to the constitutional amend ment adopted at the last general election prescribing a literacy test for voters New York election offi cials will have a new task imposed on them. New voters may be re quired to draw at randoa from a box kept for that purpose a slip on which is printed a passage of fifty words from the state consti tution, and read it in a manner in telligible to the election inspector. The voter also may be required, at the option of the board, to write ten of the words in English. An alternative which is open to the voter, provided the electionInspec tor consents, is the presentation of a certificate of literacy, issued by the state department of education under the direction of the state board of regents. The latter is based on an examination said to have been devised with considerable ped agogical skill, with a view to deter mining the candidate's understand- ng, within reasonable bounds, of the American system of govern5 ment and of the general duties of citizen. It goes almost without saying that the latter is the better method of the two. Examinations conducted in the presence of election boards are likely to be perfunctgry at best, and, besides, the law does not re quire more than that the selection from .the constitution shall be read by the candidate in such a manner s that the examining officer shall nderstand him. Nothing is said as to the understanding by the can didate of the matter he is reading. In this respect the test seems as great a . farce as that which used be imposed by some courts on candidates for citizenship. Not as much as might be desired is accom plished by the mere imposition of the task of reading, parrot-fashion. of what to the applicant, after all. may be but a meaningless .jumble f words. Still, a beginning hasbeen made, start on the road toward the uni versal requirement that every voter shall comprehend at least the fun damentals of the American system. One of these fundamentals, which distinguishes ours from some oth ers, is orderly progress, as distin guished from the methods of the anarchist and bomb-thrower, and it includes mutual acceptance of ad- erse verdicts and acquiescence in the will of the majority. The pros pective Yter who does not assent to this principle ought to be re jected, whether'or not he is illiter ate. - AUSTRIA'S PITIFn, PLIGHT. Bankruptcy and seemingly Im pending dissolution of Austria are due, in the first instance, to the blindness of the peace conference to the necessity of putting this sadly shrunken state in a position to stand alone, to the neglect of the powers to recognize the fact that, though the former Hapsburg dominions had been politically di vided, its long existence as a whole made It an economic unit, the parts of .which depended on one another for the means of life. To start this fragment of an empire in life with huge, undefined debt in addition to that of the war and of pre-war days, with a government construct ed for three or four times its popu lation, with fragments of railroads, cut off from its supply of fuel, raw materials and essential products by ostile neighbors, cut' off from the sea also this was the greatest act f folly of which men pretending to be statesmen could be guilty. The paltry excuse is made that the several parts of the old empire already had established their inde pendence, and that great allies had no right to limit their -sovereignty by requiring that they continue commercial intercourse as neigh bors. This is self-determination carried to the verge of insanity. The allies wqn Independence for those stats by destroying the mill tary power of the Hapsburgs. That fact gave them the right to insure that the boon should not be abused. to - the further disorganization of Europe. The Austrian people must, how ever, share the guilt. They have shown no such capacity to cope with and overcome misfortune as characterizes a virile nation. They nave been at the same time spena thrifts and beggars, doing little to help themselves. In contrast with them the Czechs and Slovaks, after three centuries of subjection, have organized a state which has revived industry, balanced its budget, stab ilized its rmrrehcy and finally has maae loans xo-tne nauiirupi neign bor which formerly oppressed it. Austria seems to need most a sort of paternal, benevolent despot who would teach it to live within its diminished means, would make its horde of petty officiate work, would instil manly self-reliance in its peer pie and would teach them how to maintain a democratic government.-! It needs a Leonard Wood. A PARTY WITHOPT LEADERS OR AX ISSITE. ' Desire to discredit the republican party in the eyes of the people Is not the sole motive of democrats in calling attention to the troubles of that party id governing the coun try; a motive equally strong is de sire to turn attention from the in capacity of their own party to do as well. That incapacity is shown by the lack of leaders, organizers and programme that is the subject of comment in Franklin K. Lane's let ters and in Mar Sullivan's corn- I ment thereon. When the democratic party re pels a man like Hoover, on whom it had set its hopes, and is the subject of caustic criticism from a man like Lane, who remained faithful to it till death, there is something rad ically wrong with it. Perhaps that something is the fact that its old issues are obsolete and that in its search for new ones as vote-getters it has adopted what Lane calls slushy sentimentalism, yet has not "men who can concretize feeling into policy." In listing men who might be called to a conference on the future of the party Lane began with a highly respected former col lege president whose age verges on 90 and followed with another. He omitted another man of the same kind who recently retired from the presidency and all but one member of the Wilson cabinet, and the ex ception was the man who disagreed fundamentally with Wilson on the cardinal question of foreign policy on which Wilson appealed to the people. Several of the names that he omitted stand for issues that are dead Bryan forifree silver, anti imperialism and, with Baker and Daniels, for pacifism; McAdoo for government ownership of railroads and we cannot discover any out standing new issue that thet men whom he would include stand for. Democracy stands in the public eye as a party without leaders and without an issue, and as the party that miserably failed in the greatest emergency and the greatest oppor tunity that, any party since the civil war has been called upon to meet. It failed,- too, through claiming all the ability, and through aggran dizing to itself all the responsibil ity and all the credit for possible success in making war- and peace. It failed through an excess of par tisanship which nothing but suc cess could have justified. Its one present sign of wisdom is its effort to turn public attention from that failure. CITIES THAT ARE NO MORE. There is ever a quickening of the thought-currents, a stimulus to fancy, when the reader chances on such stories as that of the ancient city of Colombia, whose ruins have been discovered by scientists a city so long stilled, so long der serted, that neither history ntr tra dition has any record of the people that once bartered in its markets and dwelt in its homes. The mys tery that intrigues us is one with the . magic of Coleridge's dream poem. In Xanadu did Kubla Khan v A stately pleasure-dome decree: Where Alph, the sacred river, ran. Through caverns measureless to man, Down to a sunless sea. Tet in truth we- are not far dis tant in time from an actual Indian civilization, from Arzona and Mex co southward,, that was flourishing when Cortez and Pizarro came, and that" was crumbled stone and heated ash when they departed. So it is that astonishment does, not prop erly follow' the finding in Colombia of ruins that testify to a high de gree of culture, both artistic and mechanical. The Aztecs in Mexico, the Incas in Peru, alike were far from being brute savages and were, indeed, far happier and more prosperous, and more enlightened than most of the peasantry 'of Europe in the time of the con quistadors. Extirpation was the policy that. Inspired by lust for gold, all but exterminated these peoples and debauched the re mainder, leaving in their stead a swarm of pitiful and benighted peons. A civilization even older than that of the Incas had prevailed in Peru, and declined without leaving a clew to the identity of Its creators. High in the Andes are the ruins of a great city, ruins that were there when the Spaniard came, and that the Incas and their people were equally puzzled to account for. The exact location of the ancient; center of a perished culture was the Titicaca plateau, which today would not produce crops sufficient to feed the tens of thousands, per haps millions, who once made their home there. Singularly enough the gigantic ruins of the town do not suffice, it ,is said, to give an ade quate conception of its original vastitude for the reason that much of it was built underground. Its masonry is tremendous and skillfully contrived, the craftsman ship rivaling the best .of today. The vanished artisans had carved and moved great monoliths, some to the weight of 170 tons. Of the megalith ic relics Sir Clements Rob ert Markham, in his book, "The Incas of Peru," said? This, then. Is the mystery. A vast city containing palace, temple. Judgment Jiarl, or whatever fancy may reconstruct among the ruins, with statues, elaborate ly carved stones and many triumphs of the masonic art, was built in a region where corn will not ripen, and which could not possibly support a dense popu lation. It is quite certain that, in the time of the Incas, the people were abso lutely Ignorant of the origin and history of these edifices. They were to them, as they are to us, mysterious ruins. As for the Peruvians and the Inca culture, so thoroughly and 1 terribly effaced by Spanish con- I auest. the record is very clear. For not. every Spaniard had the blood thirst, and not every Spaniard re garded these native South Ameri cans the inevitable serfs of his race. There were many who labored for them, who strove to record their history and preserve their culture. and who wept when the monstrous cruelty of a countryman caused the murder of the last of the Incas. The affection and " enterprise of these kept the record. The color of the Peruvians was light, several shades lighter than that of their modern descendants, "the forehead high, the nose slightly aquiline, the chin and mouth firm, the whole face majestic, refined and intellec tual." They had a reliable calen dar, a legitimate and efficient gov ernment, a system of accounting and of record keeping, sjulled poets and dramatists, and though a war like people they knew and prac ticed the arts and progress of peace. It is said of them, with, authority, that they had no vice save drunken ness. So lost in antiquity-was the origin of the Peruvian culture that their two chief domesticated animals, the llama and the alpaca, from which they obtained fleeces for their tex tiles and flesh for their tables and sacrificial feasts to the sun, had no wild prototypes. Like our cattle, these had been domesticated long centuries before, surviving the orig inal stock, and from this alone it may be seen that the culture of the Incas was comparable to that of northern Africa before the ascend ancy of the Caucasian race. Such i. people, in brief, were the Peru vian when Spain sought out their erold. and blistered and burned them at the stake, and corrupted their daughters, and slew their kings to the last prince. It is generally believed, as an old tale,, that the taint of human sac rifice attached to this elder culture, j and that, on the whole, the policy of extirpation while cruel was to some extent justified by" such mon strous rites. But in the actual record this does not appear, save as an accusation without founda tion, nor does the concept of the Peruvian character, so accurately preserved, justify the suspicion. Thus while one Spanish historian. Polo de Ondegardo, writing in 1554, declared that he witnessed the sac rifice of 200 boys in tribute to the sun-god, another and a more" com petent historian denied the charge. This was Bias Valera, the mestizo son of a conquistador and a Peru vian court lady, who cited in an cient law against human sacrifice and who interpreted the symbolism of the laws governing religious trilstfte." It is true that the law spoke of "huahuas," or children, and of "yuyacs," or adults, with sacrificial application,, yet these terms were merely symbolized by lambs and by full-grown llamas. Doubtless the finest tribute, and the most sincere, ever paid to the Peruvian people was that oontained in the preamble to the last will and testament of Mancio Serra de Leguisamo, the sole surviving offi cer of the conquistadors, wno penned his penitence in 1589. Ad dressed to King Don Felipe, the preamble pleaded for leniency and justice toward the Peruvian people recited their manifold merits, arid begged both of its author's king and of God forgiveness for the part Mancio had borne in that bitter rule. He wrote They were so free from the committal of. crimes or excesses, as well men as women, that the Indian who had 100,000 pesos worth of gold and silver in his house, left it open merely by placing a stick across the door, as ' a sign that its master was out. The Incas gov erned them in such Avise that through out them (their lands; there was not a thief, nor a vicious man, nor an adult eress, nor was a bad women .admitted among them, nor were there immoral people. , So that when they found we had thieves amongst us, and men who sought to make their daughters commit sin. they despised u?. But now they have come to such a pass, in offense of God, owing to the bad example that we have set them in all things, that these na tives from' doing no evil, have changed into people who now do no good or very little. - After these centuries it is not too late to voice a trust that the last of the conquistadors, his sins heavy upon him but his heart filled with penitence, found that forgiveness he besought of heaven. "With this," he wrote, "I do what I can to dis charge my conscience ... I beseech your 'Majesty to have pity on them, and God to have pity on my soul." The charge that the "church is too effeminate" is as old as time. There probably is nothing in the world, however, to prevent the brethren from taking over some of the burdens that they have been glad enough to leave to" the sisters in the past. . The plan of "all the rides you want for a dollar a week" is to be tried on a California trolley line to save it from suspension. Think what a restaurant could do with that kind of a meal ticket. There is possibility the Russian grain crop will be large enough to feed the Russian people this win ter. Still, the Russians will need to provide a system of distribution to make the crop effective. Four more business agents in Chicago have been found guilty of grafting o stop labor troubles. That makes forty. The old-time walking delegate was a mere tyro. It is safe to say that if commu nication with Mars were established tomorrow the first question some people would want answered would be whether it was dry or wet. With Labor day in two weeks the season is drawing to a close, and the coming, fortnight will be stren uous for those who would catch up onf delayed recreation. If there were to be a hundred Miss -Portlands the number could not do justice to Oregon beauty. It Is just now being impressed on -us that the vacation days are the shortest days of the year. Hollywood must have become jealous at the publicity the McCor micks were getting.. Miss Seattle has been chosen- but wait for Miss Portland. Note the feel of hop picking and fair time in the air? This is to be a sort of informal Oregon peach week. The Listening Post. By DeWltt Harry. LORD SHAW, who sits on the bench iri the highest court in Great Britain and who was a recent visitor to Portland, had some inter esting things to say about Scottish juries. The British. judge was com menting on' jury disagreements In this country and said that this fail ure of justice was unknown in Scot land. While not wanting to be placed in the light of criticising the jury system as in vogue" in this country. Lord Shaw said there were unquestionably many ways to re form this method of trial. He does not favor doing away with juries and a resort to the decision of three judges, as has been advocated, for in this method he sees the loss of a great deal of personal liberty. The Scotch jury system was orig inated about a century ago and has worked admirably under all condi tions. Scottish juries are composed of 15 members in criminal cases and of 12 in civil trials, and in each majority vote is sufficient even in capital cases. In civil cases If the fjury of 12 does not agree the judge gives it. three hours and then a ma jority verdict Is sufficient. I practiced before the Scottish bar for 40' years," said this legal leader, "and I never yet heard of a case wherein juries were equally di vided in civil cases. With us m Scotland, if one obstinate man holds out it doesn't count a straw. The majority, is sufficient for justice 'Another thing with us in Great Britain: No reference can be made to what goes on inside the jury booth during or after the trial. In one case recently something v was given out and there, was a frightful uproar about it. Also our system of selecting juries is much simpler. The prospective jurymen are not asked all sorts of questions about their opinions or about the case. There are only three general chal lenges, and the jury is often se lected in five minutes. The jurors are not expected to have a mental blank on matters that all the pub lic knows about." Lord Shaw made his way from poverty to leadership in the British bar. He was a friend and neighbor of Andrew Carnegie in their native Scotland. For many years he was lord advocate of Scotland. - . ' FROM A POET OF THE OLD ' SCHOOL To the Exponents of the Ken, . The words you UBe, to me, are' new and strange, Their weaving comes not easy to my hand. I blame you not at all for seeking change But when the old sods speak I under stand. (And I can only use the tongue I know. You, speaking yours, must know that this is so). i Il's hard to find the things I want to say Not that you're wrong. or play a use- less part: But simply that I cannot see your way Being- born with a love of the old- gods in my heart. (And though, the loves I bear be low or royal To all the things I love I must toe loyal). It is . not that you fail or that success Marks me for surer goal as time goes by: Not that your gods than mine are more or less s Just thafl'vs different stars across my sky. (And I, no matter where or how I fend, Must follow my own stars unto the end). JOSJSfH A.NUHKW UAliAHAD "The Colorado canyon, she is grand sight; Rocky mountains is beautiful, but too big; Niagara falls, she is powerful, but the Columbia highway is wha.t you call scenery a la carte." Thus reads a unique letter of ap preciafion received by Frank Ira White of the chamber of commerce from a young Japanese student he sent Over the highway while the student was on a visit to Portland during a tour of the United States. Mr. White put the tourist on a highway touring car, but at Cascade locks the visitor saw a steamer Portiandrbound passing through the locks and lost no time in paying off his driver and getting aboard. This is in two acts The first act was played about two weeks ago in the savings department of a Port land bank. A yon-ng man bustled up to the wicket and after announcing his mission with a voluminous smile and receiving the congratulations of the teller opened an account as trustee for Donald Blank. The young man reappeared o.n Saturday. He went to the same teller and asked to have a slight change made in the account he had opened a short time -before. He wanted it in the name of Dorothy instead of Donald. - Mayor Hurd of Seaside is contem plating the establishment of a curio factory, to give employment to the population during the winter months. At the present time it is necessary to Import most of the sea-shells and novelties sold there. For five 'months of the year the residents of the little town are busy selling to and caring fpr their guests and for two more in making repairs and getting- ready, which leaves ihem five months of leisure, time that could "be well employed. , CM ON CHARLES GET BUST A YEN. v ' , The pomes that come (rora Charles Olsen s pen Are Jike blossoms sweet from - a - woodland glen. They lighten the burdens of the day, And help you to sleep when you hit . - the hay. BILLBATES. w . . A parson in Klickitat county onoe prefaced his sermon with: "My friends, let us say a few words be fore we begin." This is about equal to the Blngen-on-the-Columbia man who took a short nap before he went to sleep. . Contrasting the lithe, snuggly youngster cuddled close in the em brace of the dance with the stout gray-haired woman, jiggling about on the floor, vainly trying to show class to her convolutions, we nat urally come to the conclusion that one of them is getting a great kick out of it but what pleasure or thrill does the other have? She sleeps beneath the daisies fair, In peace she's resting now; Oh, there's always something doing .When a freight train meets a kow. Those Who Come and Go. Tales of Folks at the Hotels. The popularity of the corset, which waned 'fort a time among American women, is'coming back to normal, declared ,B.' F. Wellington of San Francisco, wholesale dealer in corsets, brassieres and other women's furnishings, who is in Portland on business. "Manufactur ers and dealers, wholesale and retail- didn't fear a minute that cor sets were 'going out' for good; they knew the tide would turn and women would come back to them," he said. Mr. Wellington declares that he can remember when a simi lar corsetless fad swept the country about 15 years ago, and women of all builds insisted they were inde pendent of suoh impedimenta. "Some women can get along without them all the time; some of them can part of the time, but most of them, none of the time," Mr. Wellington said in resume. He did admit that the. style of corsets has changed for the better and that women who used to wear a "21" Wave now taken to buying a "28." This is due, he said, to the new style corset, which is built on long, straight lines, and noes, not pinch in . at the hips, "Women do not pride themselves on being small about the waist, as they once did," he said. "The fad that called for a diminutive waist encouraged lacing and was injuri ous to the health of women. We corset dealers are glad that women have graaduated from that notion Business In San Francisco is not yet back to normal. Our overhead is still enormous. Where we paid $60 a month before the war to our packers we are' paying $150." While in Portland Mr. Wellington is at tly: cw Perkins, Tho selling value of diamonds has increased about 25 per cent in the last three months and dealers in this jewel are hoping for a still greater increase, said Herman A. Rolshoven of the firm F. Rolshoven & Co., jewelers and diamond dealers of Detroit, who "with his wife was registered yesterday at the Multno mah hotel. Tho firm whch Mr. Rolshoven represents was estab lished by his father in 1855 and Mr. Rolshoven has been in the business about 25 years.' Mr. Rolshoven has seen many fluctuations in the dia mond business in the past few years and declares that the blue-white American-cut stone, which sold at $100 a carat 25 years ago, now brings from $600 to $700. "An Amer ican-cut Diamond is now considered the world over the finest specimen of workmanship," said Mr. Rol shoven. He explained this by the fact that an .American . cutter . does not spare the stone to turn out a perfectly cut diamond, while Euro ptan cutters consider that the larger they leav the stone the more valuable it is. Ranchers and cattlemen of east ern Oregon are very optimistic con cerning the outcome of the year, in the opinion of Tom Boylen Jr., of Pendleton, who with his wife, Eu Ffffinfi Rnvlpn and Ted TCav HrovA intn Portland yesterday and put up at the imperial. Mr. Boylen is an. ex tensive wheat rancher of Pendleton and both ha and his father are known all over the state for their extensive interest This year is a fairly good one for the eastern part of the state In pite of the lack of rain, he said, some sections showing less shortage than, others. The re cent rains practically extinguished the forest fires, which have been fewer and less disastrous than or dinarily arid cattle are- still able to find good, green pasturage on the higher ranges, Mr. Boylen- stated. The party came to. Portland for a pleasure trip and plans to remain for several days. "George T. Collins, state president of the Elks, spent yesterday in Portland conferring with the gen eral committee of that fraternity. He registered at the Multnomah. Mr. Collins is also one of the direct ors of the Crarer Lake National Park company. Crater lake is be coming more popular every year, Mr. Collins stated, and southeastern Oregon is rapidly becoming a mecca for tourists. All of southern Oregon is experiencing an increase in tour ist visitors, which Mr. Collins con siders due to the greater attraction of Oregon's national park. "I be lieve in Crater lake and the national park," said Mr. Collins, "and I am looking forward to greater things when more people realize what it is we have here." Mrs. J. Q. A. Daniels and son, J. Q. A. Daniels, Jr., of 4 62. Mont gomery drive, Portland, have ar rived in New York after spending the summer in Eugene, say dis patches received here by friends at the Portland hotel. Mrs. Daniels and her son were passengers on the White Star liner Adriatic on their return. Mrs. Daniels will remain in the east to visit with friends in Buffalo and Albion, New York but her son will come west at once to enter Oregon Medical college. Mr. and Mrs. L.. C. Harrison and family, from Cincinnati, who are traveling through the United States on a tour of the national parks, have arrived in Portland and are at the Multnomah hotel. Mr. Har rison is a banker and financier of Cincinnati. The group made a trip up the Columbia river highway yesterday ahd declared the roads to be among the best they had encoun tered during their travels. .. From Portland the visitors will go to Rainer National park. Dr. William H. Dale, a Eugene physician, is spending a few days in Pqrtland and is at the Multno mah. Dr. Dale is well-known throughout Oregon and until recent ly practiced at Harrisburg, where he had charge of a hospital. The Harrisburg hospital is recognized as one of the best small town hospitals in the state and many people from larger places go there because of the advantages It affords as a place for recuperation, due to the absence of noise and bustle. The run of fish will have to In crease to a large degree within a short time if the Oregon pack is to reach normal this year, agree F. D. Small, of Tillamook, and F. Kleven husen, of AltoonvWash. Both men are registered at the Oregon and conferred on matters of business when they met here. Mr. Kleven husen is' an extensive dealer in fish at Altoona and Mr. Small is inter ested in canning and packing fish both at Tillamook and in San Fran cisco. E. O. McCoy, of The Dalles, and George Crosfield, of 1 Wasco, 1 both business men of theVr respective towns, were in Portland yesterday and were registered at the Multno mah hotel. They are enroute by automobile for Seaside where Mr. McCoy maintains a summer home. Mr. McCoy is vice-president of the First National Tbank of The Dalles and MV. Crosfield is a dealer in gen eral merchandise in Wasco. Another fire chief is in Portland in the person of J. C. Loucks, of Indianapolis, Ind., who with his wife is visiting here for a few days be fore going home. Mr. and Mrs. Loucks have just come up from California where they attended the convention of. fire chiefs in San Francisco. i Burroughs Nature Club. Copyright. Houghton-Mifflin Co. Can You Answer These Questions f j 1. Why Is horseradish called by j that name? , 2. Why do birds eat gravel, and why doesn't It hurt their insides? 3. Are there any wild horses "left in this country? Answers in tomorrow s nature notes. Ansiwers to Previous Questions. 1. Does it do any harm to col lect birds' eggs? Yes, decidedly so, if any appre ciable number of eggs are taken, as this reduces the bird population dan gerously. An historic lessoh on this danger is the conspicuous crop fail ure of 1861, in France, where about 100,000,000 bird-eggs were estimated as eaten yearly. A government com mission declared the losses In crops were a direct result of the activities of insects that worked unchecked by the normal preying of birds. 2. Is the apricot a cross between a peach'and a plum? , Not botanically; but many persons get this wrong idea because the fla vorand character of the- apricot seem to ' combine features of both fruits. It belongs to the same fam ily. Amygdalaceae, plume, peaches, almonds and apricots being different genera of one family. The Chinese knew the cultivated apricot long, be fore the Christian era. 3. I would like to know what a worm is found recently when cut t'ng sod. About two inches long, half an inch diameter, white, with light brown head, and some tufts of hair on its back. Evidently a "white grub," the lar val stage of some beetle, which of course we can hardly identify with- UU. t BCUIieil. 1 UIB Hluu UCVCIUI8 in tho ground, sometimes requiring two years oeiore coming out a per fect beetle. As a grub it is harmful to grass lands, feeding on roots. So far as is known, no chemical treat ment of the sftl will oust them and at the same time do no damage to the soil for vegetation. TWO -VIEWS OF PROHIBITION V Trick Suspected lu "Wine and Beer" Cry Warning Seen in "Iodine." PORTLAND, Aug 20. (To the Editor.) I have carefully studied prohibition since we voted for it in Iowa in 1882. . I have supported it chiefly because it will take politics out- of the grog-shops, where the lowest element of society are bought and sold like sawlogs. There are many of us in Portland today who remember how the political boss would distribute the purchase money on election day. v ( There 'are many men, yes. and women, too, that do not like the present prohibition law. They hold the law is too rigid. Many believe that mild drinks should be allowed, such as contain only a few per .cent alcohol. All these people demand wine and beer. Now it is my conviction that there is a mighty black nigger in that woodpile. They mean beer and wine, and if they can't get both they will take beer. Wine is linked up with beer to fool the careless. This propaganda comes mostly from breweries. We don't want beer, we do not need it, for it will open up the same political situation where breweries control too much politics. But wine can be made by any farm er, or person who has an acre of ground. There would be no monop oly of the wine business. Let those who desire to restore wine drop the beer. The wine drinker needs no beer. It is only an artful trick of the beer-merf to agitate for wine and beer. - , ERNEST BARTON. PORTLAND, Aug."' 20. (To the, Editor.) I have just finished read ing your editorial on -"My Brother's Barkeeper," in which you remark that the most Extraordinary phe nomenon of the vote in the Literary Digest is the attitude of Oregon on prohibition. I returned from the east only a short time ago and it therefore doesn't appear extraordi nary to me. The part that does seem extraordinary is that the editor of The Oregonian is as far out of touch with the people as our present congress is. In your editorial of the following day, in reference to Iodine in whis ky,, it seems to me that you answer yourself of the previous" day. The drinking of the vile stuff We have been compelled, to partake of, for lack of money to buy better, is not making prohibitionists of us, but making the drysisee the necessity of moderating the law to allow lighter beverages. This is the only way to fight the large army of men getting rich breaking the laws sell ing iodined whisky, etc. Something will have to be done, and that quickly, or the constitution and general health of the people will absolutely ruin the coming gen eration. For you will admit that thinking men, business men and the day laborer need a stimulant occa sionally, and regardless of the law, they all take it. but of Inferior grades. W. J. BISHOP. SIMPLE PLAN TO SAVE LIVES Cedur Planks, Conveniently Placed, Suggested by Recent Experience. VANCOUVER, Wash., Aug. 19. (To the Editor.) The Oregonian tells .of two more lives lost in the surf at -Seaside. Two years ago I was at Newport, Or. A good swim mer was carried out far beyond the surf and, the tide having turned to ebb, he was unable to return to shore. Two men with a three-Inch fir board, one foot wide and nine feet long, went to the swimmer's assistance after he had repeatedly called for help. He was greatly exhausted, having been in the water nearly an hour. He had swallowed much water, but was soon resusci tated. One of the rescuers explained why they could return, while the swimmer without tne ooara couia not. He said that the swimmer's body down in the water was car ried out by the undertow, while with proper manipulation the force of the ' waves striking the boara would tend to force It shoreward. Thus, even after the tide was on the ebb, these men swimming with the aid of the plank were able to Bave a drowning man. The writer believes that many lives might be saved if the plan were adopted by beach resorts of having cedar boards with hand holes sawed in them placed on posts along the beach where they could be easily reached, in emergency. The fact that the waves bring a board ashore even on a receding tide would appear to make it a more efficient rescue agent man others. OBSERVER. Temperature of Ice. WHEELER, Or., Aug.-19. (To the Editor.) A claims that Ice cannot eet below 3'2 degrees Fahrenheit. B says that it can if the surround ing temperature is below 32 de grees, wnicn is rignir s JUHN UAKittETT. B is right. More Truth Than Poetry. lljr Jamei J. Montnsrue. The Fable of the Katydid. When robin, thrush and oriole Were singing in the trets. And music to delight the soul Was borne on every breeze. The katydid made not a sound. . Though stirred by young ambi tion. 4 Because he knew that all around Was too much competition. The song birds sang the summer through. But still he sat there, dumb. For in his canny heart h knew His chance had not yet come. He toiled, as every insect should. Upon his own affairs. For though his voice was pretty good. It could not match with theirs. But when the birds had stilled their notes And to the South took wing In order to conserve their throats For still another spring. He chirped a little roundelay At first by dead of night And presently, both night and day. He sang with all his might. And as his betters all had fled To find another spring, T"he folks that listened to him said- "How nicely he can sing:" MORAL: you a wondering world would If i thrill With what you sing or say, It's always best to wait until The great are gone away! They'll Learn Bettrr There. Next time we have a plague of pacifists we'll send them to Ireland. Bigger BiiMlneaa. It looks as if we'd soon be buy'ng i - - - " v. v. w .. I our coal, also, of the bootleggerB. Hint for Tourlnts. If you expect to do In Rome as do the Romans, you'd better take a sti letto along, with you. In Other Days. Fifty Yeara Ago. Prom The Oregonian, August 2t, 1R72. London. A dispatch from Dublin states that there has been no cessa tion in the rioting in Belfast. The city is practically under martial law. New York. Mace and O'Baldwin, the prize fighters, left here last night for some unknown place. .The referees have not left yet. It is thought that the .fight will come off in a few days on the Canadian side of Niagara falls. The Mount Hood party which left this city last Thursday returned last , night. They were unable to reach the summit on account of a snow storm. There are now confined in th county jail 31 persons, 12 United States and 19 state prisoners. At no trme in the past has there been such aVnumber. Twenty-five Yeara Ago. From The Oregonian, August 21. 1RST. Clliicago. Wheat scored a sensa tional advance in all the markets of the world today, September sell ing freely here at 96 cents. St. Johns, N. F. A message from Turnavick states that Lieutenant Peary's expedition has touched there and sailed on its way to Greenland. All on board are re ported well. R. F. Tappendorf, proprietor of the Garfield hotel, faces a charge In Justice McDevitt'a court. He Is accused of dumping water on James Sheridan, the small but pugnacious umbrella mender. The Madison bridge now has a regular repair shop at Its east end, where any break in the structure can be repaired at once. Piffle About Primary Law. WARRENTON, Or., Aug. 19.(To tho Editor.) Permit me to present a strong (possibly rank) argument in favor of the direct primary sys tem in comparison with Its preiie cefcsor. It will first be necessary for me to admit the correctness of tho statement made by the Polk County Observer that "under the old system there would have been no such increase" of taxation. Does it not then follow, "as the night the day," that the thing nonexistent then, dependent upon the Increase in taxes, would be nonexistent now? ' In those "good old days" when the beneficent bosses held undisputed control, resulting on the nomination of a Furnish and the election of a Chamberlain, there was no great state highway, and as that greatest of all our assets has been one of the principal causes of our increased taxation Is it not on a parallel with the Observer's logic to say that un der the old pystem It never would have been built? Are. we "getting anywhere" by this sort of piffle, and would it not be better to drop it and try to unite on such amendments to tho present law as would seem just and possible of attainment? E. H. FLAGJ. Location of Colnnihlu. PORTLAND. Aug. 20. (To the Editor.) Please publish where Co lombia Is where the buried city hss been feujjd: If I ever knew I have forgotten and find the younger peo ple don't know. I have hunted tho maps of Mexico and South America and find it not. MRS. A. P. Colombia Is in the extreme north western corner of South America and is the only South American country bordering on both oceans. It has an area of about 500,000 square miles, or a little more than five times that of Oregon. It has existed as a nation since 1819 and will be . found on any worth while map of South America. Rainfall in September, 1020. PORTLAND, Aug. 20. (To the Editor.) Please Inform us through your columns about the rainfall of September, 1920. State date of first rain of the month and number of days during month that rain fell. SUBSCRIBER. The first rainfall recorded by the weather bureau in September, 1920 was a "trace" on the Sth of the month; the first measurable amount was '.20 of an Inch on the 9th. Rain fall In measurable amount was re corded for 14 days during the month. Soldiers' Bonua in Texan. HOOD RIVER. Or., Aug. 19. (To the Editor.) Kindly advise me whether the state of Texas Is allow ing a soldiers' bonus, and if go, the lines along which to proceed for securing same, such as application blanks, etc. The American Legion and local newspapers here have no information in their files regarding that state. JAMEa' A. WADE. Address Secretary of State, Aus tin, Texas, and ask for "bonus appli cation blanks if. they are available.