8 THE 3IORXIXG OREGOXIAN, SATURDAY. AUGUST 26, 1922 F obi in bed by The Oresoaian Pub-. Co.. 133 Sixtn Street, Portland. Oregon. C. A. MOBDEN. IS. B. PIPER. Manager."' Editor. The Oregon ian is a. member of the As sociated Press. The. Associated Pres is exclusively entitled to the uae for publi cation of all news dispatcher credited to It or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of publication of special dis patches herein are aio reserved. Subscription Rates Invariably ia Advance. (By JTail.) Dally. Sunday Included, one year - . . .$8-00 Dally. Sunday Included, six months 4.25 Daily. Sunday included, three months 2.25 Dai:y, Sunday included, one month .. -75 Daily, without Sunday, one year 6.00 Dally, without Sunday, six months .. 3.25 Dailv. wirhnut Kundav. ono month .. -60 Sunday, one year 2.50 (By Carrier.) Dally, Sunday included, one year. . . .$!) 00 Daily, Sunday Included, three months 2.25 Daily. 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Nothing could more forcibly demonstrate the need and wisdom of public inquiry into the many questions upon which the shipping board is required to act than the j volume of information called forth by the hearings which a committee of its members held recently, yet in oniy one particular does the subsidy bill now before congress require such hearings. By coming to Port land the committee discovered the need of the information conveyed in the letter of General Manager Podson of the chamber of com nierce to George K. Chamberlain regarding diversion of ocean traf fic from the Columbia river to - Puget sound by the board's policy as published in The Oregonian Fri day, and that conveyed by the at torneys for the chamber of com merce. port commission and dock commission regarding the effect of section 28 of the Jones law in their letter to Meyer Lissner. The board will be able to decide more wisely and justly in the light of this in formation, openly communicated by representatives of official bodies and complementary to public hear ings, than on that privately con veyed by lobbyists for private in terests and never subjected to the test of public criticism. The way pursued by the committee is the American way of dealing with pub lic affairs; that which was for merly pursued savored more of czarism and its incompetent, op pressive bureaucracy. When the board reads and pon ders over the letter of Attorneys Teal, Moser and La Roche, the im pression which it must have gained from the hearings by its committee as to how denial to foreign vessels of the benefit of import and export railroad rates- would work will surely be deepened. On first im pression it seemed very simple to transfer from foreign to American vessels a large amount of cargo by granting reduced rail rates to ship pers who use American vessels, but the board will learn that the rates in question were established for a very different purpose. Those rates cannot accomplish the new pur . pose to which section 28 aims to divert them, and the attempt so to divert .them would wreck the orig inal purpose1. Import and export rates were made to distribute overseas traffic more evenly among the porta,, the coasts and the railroads leading to them than is possible when our great manufacturing area is in one corner of the country and when distances from that area to the various ports of our three coasts vary greatly. .Their main purpose was to bring to Pacific ports over railroads that have light domestic traffic westbound a large amount of export and Import traffic that would otherwise have gone to At lantic or gulf ports. By making cost of transportation to south At lantic ports for foreign trade the same as that to New York for both foreign and domestic trade, these rates tend to distribute traffic to and from Atlantic ports more evenly. Refusal of the benefit of these rates to foreign ships would fail to increase cargo for American ships, therefore would not attain the pur pose of section 28. It would, how ever, derange the entire rate struc ture and would defeat the purpose for which the rates in question were established. Traffic which would have come to the Pacific coast would go to Atlantic or gulf ports, and foreign ships would take it there; that which would have gone to south Atlantic ports would go to New York to be loaded on foreign ships and to aggravate con gestion at that port. As the law practically requires suspension of section 28 until ade quate service under the American flag exists between American and foreign ports, the board in its anxiety to place the section in effect has put some familiar English words under a severe strain. It has discriminated in favor of Puget sound and San Francisco and against Portland by giving the former porta fast passenger ships and slow freight ships also, while giving Portland no passenger ships and only the same number of freight ships aa it gives to the sound ports. It strains the word ' "adequate" by calling this adequate service. It then suppresses Port land's individual claims as a port entitled to equal service with its competitors by calling this grossly discriminative service adequate for the Pacific coast, thus treating this coast as one traffic area the com merce of which may be concen trated by the board at one or two ports at its arbitrary pleasure. How contrary is this procedure to the American principle of com petition the attorneys show well. The Columbia basin has a right to adequate service from its natural port. Seattle and Portland are rivals for that position, and the attorneys say: Only by giving each adequate facili ties on the same terms can it be deter mined which is the natural port, and the producers get ths best, most effi cient and economical service. Fair com petition would desido the question on its merits. That is all that Portland asks, and the port and city have, ex pended about $18,000,000 in pro- ' ..- v.iiiiii& me cnu"-t an i jii tsvi ia cilities for ships. But, as Mr. Iodson shows, the "board by its discrimination has diverted to Pu get sound 160,000 tons of trans Pacific cargo which would with equal service have come to Port land. It then states'the small pro portion of such traffic passing through Portland as a reason for not providing the service lack .of which has driven away traffic. The board needs the -reminder of the attorneys that under the Jones law "it is the duty of the shipping board and its policy to build up all ports" and that "a reasonable dis tribution of export and import traffic among all the ports is dis tinctly in the public interest." ' ' It does not rest with the shipping board, alone to form a "conclusion as to whether section 28 should e made operative. The board is re quired to certify to' the interstate commerce commission when ade quate service exists under the American flag, but the attorneys say that the commission "has the power to determine the length of time and the terms and conditions under which a suspension of the provisions of the act may become operative." Evidently the juris diction of the two bodies is in tended to be co-ordinate and, in view of the Importance of the sub ject and of the disturbance to the railroad rate structure which would follow operation of the section, the request for an oral hearing by the board and commission jointly should be' granted. THE SHIVERING JOBXSOS. Announcing a Johnson-for-sen- ator meeting at San Francisco, the enlightening and enlightened Chron icle, which has always heretofore opposed him, has this: - Senator Hiram W. Johnson will speak at a great mw meeting at the civic auditorium tonight. It will be a thrill ing meeting. The amazing scheme to scuttle Johnson's candidacy will be re vealed." There will be hot shot for the scuttlers. Best of all. Senator Johnson will be there to tell you the in side story of what venal men are trying to do to California. What venal men are trying to do to California is doubtless to de feat Johnson. Proof that they are venal lies in the fact that they are supporting someone else. It la axiomatic. California will'probably re-nominate and re-elect Senator Johnson. But his supporters are driven to sad extremities in trying to find a reason, except that he is Hiram Johnson and belongs to California and California belongs to him. He has fathered no legislation of con sequence, his alliance with Mr. Hearst is notorious, and he fought the four-power treaty. Seeking to find a concrete argument for John son, Mr. Hearst's "writer Brisbane says: In the east Hiram Johnson has been criticised for the hard fight which lie won to get high protection for Califor nia's product, fruit, almonds, etc But in fighting for California he fought for the whole country, interested in the prosperity of the magnificent Pacific state. In any case, his tariff work surely will not hurt him, with Calif or nians. It will not, indeed. But how hard a fight was it to get high protec tion, for any commodity from soup to nuts, in the highest tariff bill ever known? Nothing was left out, if any senator wanted It pro tected, and paid for it by deliver ing his vote for the completed bill By the old legislative method of trade and barter, a Jiuge majority was ronea up, ana jonnson was in it neck deep, and got out of It what he wanted. If he had fought to keep nuts and fruits out of the bill. he could not have beaten the tariff machine. Johnson will probably be elected, but they have got him badly scared. A great reformer, shaking in his boots and appealing to his record on vhigh protection to save him, is an edifying sight. BOYS' AXD GIRLS' CLCBS. Evidence that boys' and girls' club work Is attaining recognition a . movement which is greatly facilitating agricultural progress is found in the fact that nearly $750,000 in prize money is offered this year to stimulate and to re ward juvenile interest. This amount represents private contributions alone, and is exclusive of the Smith-Lever funds appropriated by the government and matched by many states to further the work. The diversity of sources whence came the prize money speaks con vincingly of the widespread recog nition of real merit. It has been contributed by fair associations. live stock and breed associations, manufacturers, bankers and bank ers' associations, packers, chambers of commerce, farm bureaus, land companies, publishers, boards of agriculture, granges, stockyard companies, county commissioners, school boards, seed firms, railroads, retailers, livestock commission firms, livestock exchanges, direct ors of extension, individuals and by the junior clubs themselves. The awards posted by fair associations total $90,000. Similarly the breed associations' have not failed to recognize the very active value of children's club wc-rk in stock breeding. Three of the large pure-bred cattle associa tions have offered $10,000 each, while other smaller associations have been generous according to their resources. The aggregate of these awards is $48,000. It is not only good business for the present and -for the immediate future, but it tends to stabilize a great industry and lay for it foundations that will long endure. The various county fairs of Minnesota offer prizes ag gregating $28,000, and in Oregon the counties have appropriated from $250 to $1000 each for the work. - The work of the juvenile clubs is, of course, hand in hand with that of the agricultrual colleges, serving these institutes as a con stant feeder. According to G. L. Noble, secretary of the national committee on boys' and girls' club work, the enterprise is of "utmost importance because a boy or girl adopting a modern - practice has from 40 to 60 years to use it as against 20 years for the average man who adopts a new practice. Boys and girls are more easily in fluenced to take up the modern methods advocated by the agricul tural colleges than are adults. More boys and girls can be reached per agent than can adults. By reaching the boys and girls the adults are influenced at the same time." In other words, through this work, America stands at the outset of a new and infinitely more pros- perous agricultural era In which science will have a hand, and the guess will be eliminated. As for immediate and tangible results it should be remarked that in 1921 the clubs produced over $7,000,000 worth of products, while the actual cost of production, plus the cost of leadership, was but $4,500,000. KELSO'S QUEST FOR A NEW NAME. The Columbia river smelt, on their .way up the Cowlitz, won't know the old town any more, when Kelso changes its" name to Long- view or Long-Bell. Peter W. Craw ford, who took up a donation land claim there quite a long while ago and filed the plat of the townsite in 1884, gave to it the name of his I home town in Scotland and Kelso it has been ever since Mr. Crawford paid this filial tribute to lang syne. It ia a pleasing name for a town, with a bit of music in its syllables. It Is honored by years. Yet, alas, one cannot advocate its reten tion on grounds of uniqueness. There are nine towns of the name in the United States; pre sumably -all alike named for the Scottish market place on the banks of the river Tweed. But for apt ness the Washington Kelso is pe culiarly well named, as both the Tweed and the Cowlitz are salmon rivers, rapid and hill-born. The Scottish Kelso is also far famed for the ruins of a -: great abbey, once the most prosperous in Scotland, which was built in 112S. As for the derivation of the unusual name, it springs from the old Wglah word "calch," or chalk, and the Scottish word "how," or hollow literally "chalk hollow." The sons of Kelso seem to have been loyal to their native town, for in addition to those in America there are several other towns of Kelso scattered about the globe. , When we approach, howeer, a study of town names in which the prefix "long" figures, the several Kelsos pale into numerical insig nificance. There are no fewer than six Longviews in the United States one of the substitute names sug gested and one of these is in the state bf Washington. Of towns in which the word "long" appears, always as a prefix, there are. near to five-score. However, as prob ably will be suggested, the .re naming of their prosperous, and stoon to be more so, city on the Cowlitz is quite properly the con cern of its citizens. THOl"GHTIIE WAS A DEER. The first accident of the. deer hunting season occurred on sched ule, and by Its circumstances again tests the propriety of terming such sylvan misadventures accidental. The sportsman had wounded a buck. At a distance he saw some thing moving along a rock face. It might have been his wounded quarry, it might have been another deer, it migrht have been a doe, a fawn but it chanced to be his hunting companion and the nickle- jacketed bullet entered the body of a human target. Only by a most liberal and forgiving usage may we characterise such an episode as accidental. The truth- of the matter is that each year, duly licensed by a pa ternal state that bids them bear arms, unskilled and unschooled riflemen and tyro hunters invest and infest the forests. No prelim inary attempt is made to ascertain the qualifications of the hunter, his knowledge -of firearms or his de pendability. Youths and men re pair happily to the hills, often, so entirely ignorant of the death deal, ing mechanisms they bear that the rear sight means nothing whatever to them. Though their marksman ship may be of the poorest when game is in sight it is1 never at fault when they mistake some unfortu nate fellow hunter for a deer. These conclusions may seem far fetched, but they are to some ex tent justified by the annual injuries aftd fatalities incident to the season. Some forceful means of impress ing upon license bearers the respon sibilities attached should be taken fct the time of issuance, by brief oral instruction orby printed ' slip, or by the refusal '"of the state, in instances of marked 'unfitness, to issue a license. COMPERS' CRY OF "SLA VERT." Adverse comment of Samuel Gompers, president of the Ameri can Federation of Labor, -on Presi dent Harding's strike speech to congress was to have been expected. He cannot or wijl not see the dis tinction" between suspension of work by one or a few men and by hundreds of thousands of men act ing in concert on the same day, nor the distinction between this action by men engaged in essential public service and those in non essential industries. Mr. Harding distributed censure with fair equal ity between the railroad executives and the strikers, but Mr. Gompers is blind to the fact that the presi dent proposes a 'rule which would work both ways by making --decisions' of the railroad labor board enforceable. He can see only Its effect on the employes' right to strike; he cannot see that it de prives- the railroad executives of the right to refuse to operate at the terms named by the board. This one-sided view Is exempli fied by the following paragraph in Mr. Gompers' statement: He (the president) says now that the decisions- of the raltroad labor board must be made enforceable. No other construction can be placed upon that statement, but that if the railroad labor board or any other similar body renders a decision further reducing wages or im posing repugnant conditions upon the workers they will have to go to work or go to Jail. . With equal truth the substantial part of that paragraph might be paraphrased to read thus No other construction can be placed on that statement but that, if the rail road labor board or any other similar body renders a decision Increasing wages or Imposing repugnant conditions upon the railroad executives, they will have to Work (Operate the roads) under those conditions or go to jail. This denial to railroad employes of the right to strike against an impartial decision on their condi tions of work is said by the labor chief to "impose a Condition of slavery," but the same condition of slavery would be Imposed on their employers. If it should not be imposed, the people would have to pay the railroads any rates that might be made necessary to pay the employes whatever wages' they demanded under pain Of being de prived of transportation. When we consider what that would mean, we realize that the people would then be reduced to slavery under the railroad men. The people might . I then resolve that, if there was to be any condition of slavery, the railroad men should become slaves io them rather than that they should be enslaved by the railroad men. Of course this talk about slavery is "all bunk." Hosts of men make agreements to render personal service extending over a specified period, but they - do not consider themselves slaves. Men make con tracts to build railroads, bridges, buildings, work that occupies months, sometimes years, and have to apply all their mental and phys ical energy to the Job. They may realize before the work is half fin ished that they will lose money, but they are held by heavy bond to complete the job, and they usually go through with it without crying about slavery. No man denies the right of any individual railroad man to quit his Job. The right that is denied is that of all the men employed in any one branch or several branches of railroad service to quif work in agreement for the, purpose of inflicting such loss on the railroads and the public as' will compel grant of their demands, lit the high officials of all the rail roads were to ."lay down on the job" in combination, with a demand that their salaries be doubled, something worse than loss of seniority would happen to them. If all the producers of a certain com modity were to combine for a sus pension of operations in order to raise prices, they would; be prose cuted for conspiracy and. their cries of "slavery" would be greeted with derision. In fact any number of examples might be given to prove the absurdity of Mr. Gom pers' slavery cry. STORY OF , THE BROOM. When witches bestrode brooms and with the black , cat on their shoulders galloped away to plague the early colonists there were no brooms such as we "have today such as are, for instance, made in Portland. For the modern broom is distinctly an American enterprise. and but superficially resambles the bundle of branches tied on a stick which seryed the old witch both as steed and household utensil. While it is generally known that Benja min Franklin founded the Saturday Evening Post, and tampered with electrical experiments, the partially authenticated tradition that he gave us the modern broom 19 not so widely spread. Yet, on the whole, the fame of many a man rests on less. It is said that Franklin found a single seed attached to a curious whisk broom brought to America from the East Indies by a sea cap tain. This he planted and propa gated, the culture of broom corn spreading to such extent that in 1781 Thomas Jefferson listed the product as one of the staples of Virginia. Prior to this the colonial brooms, and those of the old world, had been made of twigs, of splin ters, or of rushes. The Indians of the Atlantic coast developed qujte an industry by the manufacture and sale to the colonists .of splint brooms, which were valued at re tail, in 1762, at sixpense each. But the real pioneer in the broom industry was Levi Dickonson, of Wethersfield, Conn., who planted seed in his garden and eventually cultivated a half acre. With the aid of negro servants he manufac tured a few brooms, which he sold to inquiring strangers who paused to ask of him what curious plant it was he grew in his fields. Mr. Dickonson became in time a ped dler of brooms, driving his nag about the country and demonstrat ing the superiority of the new product. He was chaffed unmerci fully by his townsfolk for embark ing upon such an enterprise, in competition with the Indians. Mr. Dickonson's reply to this, said to have been made in 1801, was the prophecy that the making of brooms from broom corn would some day be One of the - greatest American industries. Beyond the Styx the joke is on his critics. It really Ought to lend attraction to the broom, - and vigor- to its manipulation, to reflect that Ben jamin Franklin sponsored it, . and that Thomas Jefferson teok note of its possibilities. The homeliest of household implements is touched by genuine romance. xne liooa tuver ghost with a halo turned out to be a most ordi nary .tramp, which ruined a most absorbing situation for the psychic Investigators. As for the halo, that's simple enough It was either ectoplasm or cut-plug. Dear little weeds that the council detests -blow away, sow away, you've time to spare maybe to- morrow they'll make some arrests but blow away, sow away, why should you care? News of the rediscovery of the Island of Tagawa will not start any appreciable exodus of would-be victims of polyandry. The enchant ment of distance-can be discounted by facts. Ninety-five girl strikers employed in a powder-puff factory insisted on kissing the mediator who set tled the strike. ".What, not one grateful one in the entire ninety five? Germany dragged Austria Into the war and the dragging was not hard to do.. Suppose that Germany were required to feed Austria this winter when the famine starts. The rescue of the shipwrecked mariners from a. south sea isle was a most misfortunate affair. No body ever really asked them if they wished to be rescued. , Ex-Vice-President Marshall is one of the few satisfied men In the land. No more office-holding for him. The extremely low rate is likely to swamp Seaside. One gets a bit of the ocean at small cost. The forecaster makes It ".fair and warm." He could not use the com parative term and be fair. - An "easy firing" clause in civil service regulations seems hot con ducive to civility. Every "old boat" In town will be tuned np today for tomorrow's trip. Sweet summer hadn't gone away. Gosh, no 1 WHY SCHOOL SITE IS OPPOSED Objectors - Believe Another Wonld Serve Public Better. PORTLAND, Aug. 24. (To the Editor.) In the report of the meet-, ing of the school board appearing in The Oregonian, Mr. Woodward is re ported to have said: , A mysterious group of obstructionists are attempting to hamper the members of the school board in their plans by blocking the vacation of certain streets to be used in the new Holladay school and playground site. They are , trying to prevent us from putting up a school In the four-block area we have chosen by opposing the vacation of the streets. Judge Munly is one of the leaders of this movement. Many of the obstructionists Jive at least a mile from the proposed site. The idea of Judge Munly and his con ferees is not born of any real idea to protect traffic; it is the work of ob structionists or worse. As the ine responsible for the circulation of the petition renion strating against the vacation Clackamas and East Eighth streets, I wish to clear up the mystery eur rounding the matter, that no blame be laid upon a mythical "mysteri ous srroup of obstructionists or worse." The petitioners are property own ers living upon the streets named and adjacent thereto, whose inter ests are injuriously affected by th proposed vacation; home owners of character, reputation and responsi bility and not a "mysterious group of obstructionists or worse." That a i body of property and home-owning citizens acting in con formity with established custom and law by circulating a petition to be presented to the duly constituted authority having jurisdiction ove the subject matter should be de nounced as a "mysterious group of obstructionists or worse" i gratuitious insult and affront which if it came from any other than Mr, Woodward, would be resented. The statement that Judge Munly is one of the leaders of this move ment is untrue. Judge Munly has participated to the extent of signing the petition, which he has the legal and moral rieht to do and, further, to be leader of the movement without atiolosrv to or permission of Mr, Woodward. 1 A "mysterious group of obstruc tionists or worse." What could be worse than to be an obstructionist and oppose the chimerical plans of a school director? All of which has nothing to d with the merits of the -ca.se. The signers of these petitions are residents of East Eighth street and Clackamas street, about 100 in hum ber up to date and all living with in a half mile of the property af fected. These are the "mysterious ob structionists or worse," as Mr. Woodward would have you believe, Despite the hard names applied to them, these citizens are acting with in their rights. They are offering this protest in the public interest. The -public is interested in select ing a centrally located site for the new Holladay school. It is interesting in not selecting a site which is fast becoming industrial and .business district. from which children and families are moving away. The population now west of Sixth Seventh and Eighth streets in this district is largely a shifting Topu lation. If a new school is built on th grounds contemplated by the board it will soon be in the situation of the Stephens school and the Shaver and the Thompson schools, which have vacant rooms. Even Buckman school is now" on the border line. of a business and industrial district. The petitioners recommend a more centrally located site, near Holla day park, not a thousand feet away from the site recommended by the school district. East, west and south of the park are a dozen vacant lots where a joint school and nark plan could be worked out. Such action would be in accord with the programme recently adopted by the Bchool board in other district The two blocks now owned, by the district and the other three blocks which they propose to acquire could doubtless be exchanged on favorable terms for property ad Jolnintr the park. With some co-operation or tne city, such park plan might be en larged and made more attractive. It would certainly work serious local and general inconvenience to traffic to close these streets Clacka mas street is a cross-town thor ouehfare from the river to the city boundary. East Eighth street is one of the important north and south thoroughfares through the citv. The area to be closed oil bath streets is on the threshold of the city, close to the two large bridges, the railroad bridge and the Broad way bridge. A check on the traffic going over the area in question will disclose the volume. It is espe cia.llv heavy morninsrs and evenings. It is the duty of citizens general ly to look Into the proposed street vacations in view of the public in terests involved. A' study of the situation will repay every citizen who is interested in , school matters and in questions affecting the pub lie Convenience. DANIEL KERN. BILLINGS NOT DOWN OR OUT People Encouraged By One of Bi(f -Best Crops Ever Grown. BILLINGS, Mont., Aug. 22. (To the Editor.) Our attention has been invited to some clippings from your paper, in the tourist park section, wherein you quote some families from Billings in stating that they have left Billings for good oh ac count of "the slump" here. We are of course loyal to the old town and regret very much to see such articles in print, for the reason that we know the persons quoted and the true conditions here, where we have one of the greatest crops we have ever grown. Montana has been hard hit In the past, as other places have, and the writer traveled from Denver to Sheridan last week with a gentle man who lives in Seattle and who is a booster for that good city, and he stated that you have had a very dry season all along the coast this year. These conditions cannot be pre vented in any locality, but It is ab solutely unfair to capitalize the mis fortunes of any locality. Montana is not down and out and will never be so long as men and women are able to work. AUSTIN NORTH, President North Real Estate Invest. ment Company. Ashland Entry in Cucumber Derby. ASHLAND, Or., Aug. 24. -(To the Editor.)! note an item from Al bany, Or., in The Oregonian men tioning a cucumber weighing one pound and seven Ounces and measur ing eight and three-quarters inches in circumference byjtine and a Quar ter from tip to tip. Therefore I feel moved to give the following figures ef one of three large ones grown in my kitchen gar den this season. Its Weight is two pounds and a quarter and measured 11 inches in circumference by 11 1 laches from Up to tip. . j Those Who Come and Go. Tales of Folks at the Hotels. -Conditions in the oil country of Oklahoma are not what they might be from the viewpoint of the pro-ducer-and the man who is dependent on the operations for his livelihood, according to J. S. Griffin of Tulsa, who, with his wife, is at the Ben son. Operators some time ago met and decided to close down opera tions for such a peYiod as i neces sary to prevent a decrease in the prices of crude oil. This naturally threw a large number of persons out of employment. In the late fall of 1920 oil prices started to drop from war levels that had prevailed and many small operators were forced out of business. The companies are seeking to keep prices up. Tulsa is 1 one town where the ppearance of a. mans snuca o i his nuuncia uuoa not indicate his station. He may be clad in the roughest of garments and have a week's growth of whis kers, while his financial statement will show that he is owner of an oil well that i-s paying him royalties of J10O0 a day. In times of booms high prices make no difference with oil men. It is "come easy, go easy with them and they spend liberally. Citizens of New Orleans are pre paring for the biff national conven tion of 'the American Legion, which is to be held in their city in October, according to Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Saunders, who are at the Imperial. Like those of St. Louis, Minneapolis, Cleveland and Kansas City, where previous conventions have been held, the doors of New Orleans will be thrown wide open to the thousands of legionnaires who will flock there from all parts of the country. Ho tels have already reserved all of their rooms for the visitors and preparations are being made for rooms in private homes. Also ar rangements are being made for the sidetracking of special trains so that the delegates who are without hotel accommodations can make their headquarters on the cars. In addition to the leaders of the legion there will be a number of military leaders and dignitaries from Europe who will participate in the conven tion as guests of honor. Business conditions In Racine, Wis., are much better now than they have been in a long time, according to 'John Jorgenson, who is at the Portland hotel. Racine is the home of a large number of manufacturing plants, among which.are the J. I. Case Plow Works, J. I. Case Thresh ing Machine- company, Hamilton Beach company, Moline Manufactur ing company, Racine Manufacturing company, Hartmann Trunk company, Mitchell- Motor Car company and Ajax Tire company. Three years ago the reconstruction period had its effect on many of these plants and thousands of men were made idle. Since that time there have been readjustments and business is now on the uphill grade. Among those registered at the Im perial hotel yesterday were Mr. and Mrs. Walter R. Welch of Oklahoma City, who have been touring the northwest and have stopped over in Portland for a short visit. Okla homa during the summer months is an exceedingly hot place to live in. There are few resorts where the va cationists may go to spend a few days that will relieve them from the cares of business and the heat of a country that in many places is prac ically barren of trees. As a conse quence most of the natives of the state journey to other climes to en joy a vacation. It was with the idea of seeing the country and gaining a vacation that Mr. and Mrs. Welch came to the northwest. A'period of 38 years, during which skyscrapers, automobiles, electric signs, etc., have come into existence have made a great change in Port land. This Is the idea of C. L. Gage, city passenger agent for the Chi cago, Burlington & Quincy railroad of San Francisco, who is at the Multnomah hotel. Mr. Gage visited Portland 38 years ago and made his second visit yesterday. "I have been planning each year to come here, but something has always hap pened to prevent it," he said yes terday. "This year I made up my mind to tome and see the town that has been talked so much about iti recent years and here I am. I hardly recognised Portland as the same city. . This proposition you call prohi bitlon is a mighty peculiar thing,' declared Wright C. Pierce of "Van couver, B. C, when staying here for a few minutes yesterday while en route by automobile back to his home after a visit in San Francisco. "It has meant money to Canada. I am told that more than luu.oou Americans have registered at the Vancouver hotels as residents in order that they may have permits to purchase liquor. When you get down here, where do you find pro hibition? Since I have been on my trip I have visited hotels where bell boys make no hesitancy in asking you if you care for a bottle. Pe culiar thing, prohibition." Lelf S. Finseth, grand chancellor of the Knights of Pythias of Ore gon, who makes his home in Dallas, where he is engaged with his father in the mercantile business, was at the Imperial hotel yesterday. He has been making a tour of eastern Oregon, where he visited a number of lodges of his organization. Since he accepted the position of grand chancellor several months ago Mr. Finseth has been active most of his ime in behalf of the lodge. He pends most of his time out over the state. Speed cops of Washington county have Jlttle to do nowadays, accord ing to Thomas H. Tongue, attorney of Hillsboro. The reason for the in activity, which is oausing sorrow for the enemies of the speeding mo- orlsts, is found in the fact that the highway is being repaired in so many places that the automobiles ave to drive slowly of necessity. Mr. Tongue, who formerly was state chairman of the republican comtYiit- tee, was in the city on legal busi ness. John P. Gray and W. G. Van Feet of Coeur a'Alene, Idaho, were at the Portland hotel yesterday. Mr. Gray is one of the leading republicans f northern Idaho. In the last presi dential campaign he was a delegate to the republican national conven tion held in Chicago and helped nominate President Harding. Judge J. W. Knowles of La Grande, accompanied by Mrs. Knowles, ar lved here yesterday and put up at the Imperial. "I came here to es cape the heat," declared the jurist as be wiped the perspiration from his brow, "but it teems to have fol lowed me here." Judge Knowles Is one of the best-known citizens of eastern Oregon. - He will remain here a few days. SOMETIMES. Sometimes I softly cry at night, Sometimes I sing by day, For if I couldn't cry or sing, I'd surely waste away. It's like the sunshine after rain, When comes a quiet peace, If I could ever silent be, I'd never find release. HELEN CRAWFORD, More Truth Than Poetry. By Janet J. Montague. THE BOV. He doesn't know what flowers spring Beside the leafy lane: The modest violet is a thing He views with mild disdain, A primrose by the river's brim He tramps beneath his heel Its fragile loveliness to him Has not the least appeal. But sitting on the pasture bars, And swinging idle feet, He'll spot the make of all the cars That pass along the street. He does not heed the robin's note Or seek to find its raest. No useful time Would- he devote To such a childish quest He doesn't think what wondrous words ' ' ' They chirp from tree to tree The little things are only birds As far as he can see. But it will set his eyes a-dance To hear a motor whizz, And he will tell you at & glance Exactly what it is. The barefoot boy, with cheeks of tan Of Mr. Whittier's lays When six or eight years old began To study nature's ways. He knew the songsters overhead And spent his leisure hours Among the fields with eager tread Collecting fragrant flowers. But if he were alive today He'd loll upon the bars, His shining eyes fixed far away To spot the motor cars. A Magnificent Service. It appears to be the present object of congress to make the world safe for the sheep. Protected. By the time the boys get the bonus they won't be able to waste their money on any youthful follies. Hope. , In Ireland, the first 700 years of warfare were the hardest. Burroughs Nature Club. Copyright, HooRkton-MlffHm C- Can Ton Answer These ftueatlonsf 1. Is the Baltimore oriole found In the west? 2. At what season do bears mate? S. I have trouble with a. fruit conserve kept in a stone crock in the pantry. Swarms of tiny flies hover over It. Can I get rid of them? Answers In tomorrow's nature notes. Answers to Previous Questions. 1. Are wild birds' eggs good to eat? Many are, unfortunately for the birds. Sea-birds' eggs, as those of gulls, murres, herons and duck's have been so marketed that the birds were driven from famous breeding grounds. It is on record that in 1854 the San Francisco mar ket consumed more than 600,000 murre's ggs. This is but one item in the wild-bird egg industry. Ad ditional details can be looked up in the 1899 Yearbook of - the United States department of agriculture. 2. Do green and black teas come from different plants? No, tea is the leaves of -a shrub, thea sinensis, of very ancient cul tivation in China. Mentioned in Chinese literature 2700 B. C. Bot anists suppose- it originally grew wild in mountainous parts of China. Now cultivated in China, Japan, Assam, Ceylon and Brazil. The black or green colors are purely a matter of treatment of the plucked product 3. Do garden moles gnaw root vegetables, bulbs, etc? Probably not, as they are flesh- eaters. Some students claim wholly carniverous; but stomach analysis shows a trifle of vegetable food. Earthworms- are the principal diet, with some ground-burrowing insect larvae. It is true roots around which mole tunnels run do show damage from gnawing at times but it is thought the gnawing comes from small rodents which run through the convenient tunnels. Of course exposing roots hurts the plants. In Other Days. Fifty Years Ago. From The Oregonian of August 25. 1872. Leavenworth. A large excursion party from here celebrated the completion of the Leavenworth & Denver railroad 56 miles past the city of Halton. Denver. Denver has one saloon to every seven inhabitants. New York.- The alarming reports which most of the continental jour nals have recently circulated in re gard to the impending meeting of the three emperors at Berlin have at last caused the official organ of Bismarck to break its silence and declare that the meeting of Alex ander of Russia, William of Ger many, and Francis Joseph of Aus tria will be a guarantee of peace for Europe. New York. The constitution of West Virginia has been defeated by the black vote, because 01 the word "white" therein as a qualifi cation .for office. Twenty-five Tears Ago. From The Oregonian of August 26, 18D7. Bombay.-r-The latest dispatches received from the Indian-Afghan frontier state that the government is in grave- danger. The Ameer of Afghanistan, however, swears : fi delity to the English. The hearing of the steel bridge matter was continued in the county court yesterday. The question is whether the county court will pro vide means for the operation and maintenance of the steel bridge. St. Louis. The first convention of the American party, which an nounces as its object the restora tion of the spirit and sentiment ot the original federal constitution, met oday wfth delegates present from nine states and one territory Washington. The gold reserve today was $143,278,538. Married After Divorce in Moirtana. - PORTLAND, Aug. 20. (To the Editor.) Will a woman who was divorced in Montana on June 4 and married in Oregon on October 26 following be legally married? READER. y The Montana divorce law forbid the marriage of the innocent party within two years, and of the guilty party within three years, of the 4tate of the decree. Piscatorial Postgraduates Vancouver Columbian. "Drouth dry weather, did you say?" asked a Kansas resident who overheard a Vancouver man talk of the recent lack of rain. "Say broth er, this isn't a drouth. Some years back east wo have summers So dry the baby fish tret six months old be fore they itarn, to wim."- Picture of Miss Portland ' in Color A full page picture of Miss Virginia Edwards, Portland's prize-winning beauty, will ap pear in tomorrow's issue of The Oregonian. Developing New Timber Country H. W. Lyman, automobile editor, tells of an automobile trip made through the new timber country surrounding Vernonia. Lumber Industry Is Reviewed A staff writer for The Ore gonian has written an article for tomorrow's issue in which the story of the development of the Pacific Spruce Corpor ation at Toledo is related. IN THE MAGAZINE Kisses Are Costing More Elizabeth Shields, feature writer warns of the costs courts have levied, and crimes that have been committed over kissing. Royalty Would Star on Screen A feature article relates the attempts of real lords and duchesses- to play parts in the movies. Out of the Golden Pack Another romantic story wrtt ten by Ida M. Evans will ap pear as a feature that will please. Is Asia Mother of Continents? Scientist tells of the discov ery of birthplace from which reptiles and mammals spread over the globe. ' You Are Well if You Think You Are This is the opinion of Emil Goue, who preaches auto sug gestion as a cure for ills. m News of the World in Pictures Camera men catch views of men, women and scenes that are of interest to all. Sketches of People You Know - "Better. Late Than Never" is the title which artist W. E. Hill gives to his Sunday's human interest sketches. Hunters of Antiques Warned Fake art industry continues to dupe Americans yearly to the tune of millions of dol lars. Writer warns hunters to consult experts. Don't Miss The Oregonian's Comics See Andy Gump, Min and Little Chester. . Also keep track of Polly and Her Pals and Gasoline Alley. These features have no equal. You Would Dress in Style See the Sunday feature deal ing with the latest autumn plans for women's wearing apparel, and Madam Richet's "Problems in Dressmaking." Lilian Tingle's Advice on Cooking Inquiries of housewives who are faced with culinary prob lems are answered. Caravan Trip in Word and Picture Illustrated article by The Oregonian correspondent tells of the 1325 exposition boost er's trip through the state. . Food for Radio Fans Each Sunday a special 6ec-' tion of The OTegonian is devoted exclusively to the achievements of radio. Don't miss reading it if you are a fan. Oregonian's Sporting apartment Complete Read the box scores of the big league teams, follow golf, boxing and other sports as they are featured in the Sun day sport section. What the War Veterans Are Doing Don't fail to read The Ore gonian's Citizen Veteran sec tion each Sunday a it appears. Of Interest to All Married Persons Is the Sunday feature deal ing with the problems in married life of "Helen and Warren." THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN "A Nickel and a Nod"