8 TnU -MORNING-. QREGOXIAX, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1922 jWormnjrjfpitmn ESTABLISHED BY ITENBT L. PITTOCK Published by The Oregonian Pub. Co.. 135 Sixth Street, Portland. Oregon. C. A. MORDEN. B. B. PIPER. Manager, Editor. The Orefronlan fs a member of the As sociated Press. The Associated Press la exclusively entitled to the use for publi cation of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in thi: paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of publication of special dis patches herein are also reserved. Subscription Rates Invariably In Advance. (By Mali.) Dally. Sunday included, one year . ...J8.00 Zaily, Sunday Included, six months .. 4.23 Daily, Sunday Included, three months 2.25 Daily. Sunday included, one month .. -75 Daily, without Sunday, one year 6 00 DaUv. wfthout Kunriav. nix months S.23 Daily, without Sunday, one month ... .60 Sunday one year . 2.80 (By Carrier.) Dally, Sunday included, one year . $9.00 Daily. Sunday Included, three months 2.25 Daily, Sunday included, one month .. .75 Daily, without Sunday, one year . 7.80 Daily, without Sunday, three months 1.95 Daily, without Sunday, one month ... .05 Hdw to Remit Send postofflce money order, express or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at owner's risk. Give postoffice address in full, including county and state. Postage Kates 1 to 16 pages. 1 cent: IS to 32 pages. 2 cents; 84 to 48 pages, 3 cents; 50 to 64 pages. 4 cents; 66 to 80 pages. 5 cents; S2 to 96 pages. 6 cents. Eastern Business Offices Verree 6c Conklin, 300 .Madison avenue. New Tork; Verree & Conklln Steger Building, Chi cago; Verree & Conklin. Free Press build ing, Detroit. Mich.; Verree & Conklin. Monadnock building. San Francisco, Cal. CLEARING AWAY HXUSIONS. As the railroad strike draws to its end, the manner in which it is being ended gives weight to the ob servations made by Ralph M. Easley, chairman of the executive committee of the National Civic Federation, on methods of adjust ing labor disputes. After all that has been done by the railroad labor board in the way of impartial ad judication, by President Harding in mediation, and by Attorney Gen eral Daugherty and the courts in the way of injunctions, the two parties directly concerned are ad- ' justing their differences In confer ence, ality, It will be sustained against any body that challenges them, and any group of either executives or employes will be slow to resist in the light of the experience of the shopmen. PRIDE OR PRINCIPLE? Let those who accuse Candidate Pierce of opportunism In coming out for the compulsory school bill on the day of announcement of Mr. Hall's candidacy reflect a moment on the record. It is very puzzling. Candidate Pierce, it appears from the printed word of the organs that represent the forces behind the school measure, was recently in terviewed on the subject of his position and was what is some times vulgarly called cagey. He is reported to have said that the school bill will be defeated by 100,000 votes and that if he sup ported the bill he would be de feated by 58,000. , He at that time refused to come out openly for the bill. Now what is the inference from Candidate Pierce's present indorse ment of the bill? Is it not a bold de fiance of the 100,000 majority op posed to the measure, and, on his own word, an invitation to defeat by 50,000? Have we not here a brave challenge to political pre ferment, a sort of I'd-rather-be-right-than-be-governor attitude which shall forever make "Pierce" and "Principle" synonymous terms in Oregon? And yet, so capable a calculator as Candidate Pierce may have fig ured that, while he would lose by 50,000 if he came out for the bill, he would lose by 60,000 if he did not. " That's where the puzzie comes in. Pride or principle which was the motivating influence? We give it up. formation that "the marines have ' observers. The mode of thought is ' landed and have the situation well unchanged and unless it is changed in hand," tells a storjs that must . the. danger will survive that, even profoundly claim the interest of the I if the republic should live, Ger hundred thousand or so of people i many would undertake by war to who are seeking asylum at Smyrna, j reverse the verdict of Paris. " Ger while at the ' same time it is not i mans regard Frenchmen, Poles and without concern here on the Pa- ! Czechs as inferior races, and, hold cific coast. To the unfortunate vie- subjection to them of millions of tims of the upheaval in the Near their super-race to be an intoler East it means a breathing spell and i able humiliation. Under a republic life and hope while ways are be- j there is hope that these firmly Ing devised for their return to their i fixed ideas might by degrees be homes. For more distant peoples , eradicated as the truth about the it tells what is being done with i war penetrates and as the prevail funds subscribed, through com- Ing world ideas of the rights and munity chests and other agencies, for Near East relief.. Money so provided appears to have been used in the purchase of the supplies that were rushed from Constantinople to Smyrna, and the satisfaction that Americans must feel in their readiness to help must be worth more to them than it cost in dollars and cents. - relations of nations spread among the young generation of Germans. It is essential to the peace of the world that the Prussian idea of war as a just and profitable means , 'The Listening Post. By DeWItt Harry. by which a nation can extend its j traded direct. BARTER and trade by the most direct method, public market ing, has been known for" countless centuries. The foremost writers of antiquity describe the system in vogue in their day when every city and town had its public square, where the produce of the country and the products of the city artifi cer were displayed for sale. So much wine for so much cloth, a string of beads for a cheese, there were no middlemen then to swell the costs, producer met consumer and they LEARNING A COSTLY LESSON. -Mr. Jewell, the shopmen's chief tain, surrenders and the railroad But we cannot overlook the strike is officially at an end on fifty, fact that this conference occurs or more railroads. It is to lall prac- after the decision of the labor tical purposes over for the other board had enlisted public opinion railroads of the United States. against the strikers, after 'great loss, inconvenience and disorder had been suffered by the people, thus further crystallizing sentiment against the strikers, and after the The strike has cost the railroads much and the shopmen more. It has cost the public a great deal too; but a great principle has been vindicated. The railroads are a president had called upon congress public utility and the interest of for remedial legislation. Though it the public in them is paramount. may appear that the intervention The .labor board was established to of the government and the influ ence of public opinion were ineffec tive, but for them the strikers might not have been brought to the mood for abandoning the struggle. The whole tenor of Mr. Easley's Labor day address is that the means urged to prevent strikes by adjust controversies between oper ators and employes. Hereafter there will be less disposition to dis pute Its awards. Its authority has been upheld. The public welfare is the gainer. The strikers have been out 'of work for two months and a half. xneir loss in wages is enormous. those not directly involved do not Now they are to be taken back on work. He holds that settlement some of the railroads, at scales of by public tribunals having power wages as fixed by the labor board, to enforce submission is impos- with seniority impaired, with the sible, since it would not be pos- right of men who took their places sible to imprison hundreds of to hold their jobs recognized. ' On thousands of men who disobeyed, other roads they have not been Inquiry and decision by a public taken back at all, and will not be, commission of "high-minded, able as members of the former shop- and impartial citizens," relying on crafts union. They may be. and public sentiment to force acqul- may have been, as individuals! escence, is opposed by workers, for These will work side by side with they are not willing to gamble on the men who took their jobs. the kind of men whom a presi- It is not pleasant to think that dent would appoint, but want a men will so completely misunder- voice in the selection. Nor do stand both their duty and their in- either employers or workmen want terest, and be made to understand a settlement with justice and it at so great a cost tn thm ond equity to all concerned"; "they to the, public. Thev were misled want a little more than justice, just They know now that ,a strike to iuttiumin me rigm to strike against THE MEDDLERS. The well-informed Seattle cor respondent of The Oregonian, in his analysis of the recent primary contests in Washington, makes this interesting disclosure: The anti-Poindexter vote as cast in the republican primaries is not wholly a republican vote; far from it. There ha probably never been an election in the history of the direct primary when invasion by outsiders was more general, open and notorious. The vote in the democratic and farmer-labor pri maries in all parts of the state is so small as to be negligible. Most of the Lamping vote and' much also of the Axtell vote came from outside the republican party. ...... Had none but republicans voted in the republican primary Senator Poindexter ttfould have won his nomination by a very substan tial majority over all his competi tors. We have no idea that anyone worth heeding will dispute the above statement. But, if so, a very strong and convincing circumstance in its support is the light vote in the democratic primary, though there was a live contest or two within that party. More democrats and farmer-labor voters were inter ested in what the republicans were doing, and influencing results there, than in . their own respective parties. A day or two before the election a Seattle paper printed conspicu ously a letter from a lawyer, who was also a candidate for state 'sen ator, offering to furnish bail and defend in court any "progressive" or "independent" arrested for of-. fering his vote at the republican primary. Clearly, we cannot have both party and the direct primary as it is. They are incompatible. One must be abandoned or the other reformed. power and enrich itself shall be dislodged from the German mind. Until Germany is thus re-educated France, Poland and Czechoslovakia, the countries bordering on Ger many which have reclaimed terri tory formerly conquered by Prus sian kings, will remain armed de spite all that may be said about militarism and imperialism. The danger Is at their doors, indeed in their midst, in the shape of a large German element in their popula tion, and their lives as nations are at stake. ' No nation can have greater in fluence than the United States in the conversion of the German peo ple to the ideas which we hold in common with the self-governing nations of Europe. When those na tions try to instil such ideas, sus picion of ulterior motives springing from national interest and from past and present quarrels tends to discredit them in German minds. No such suspicion attaches to Americans. We have no age-long feud, as has France, no claims to' German territory, none that has been taken from Germany, no Ger man population placed by force under alien rule. We, have taken nothing and want nothing that Ger many has. ,We can impress on the German people that in any new world conflict provoked by an at tack by militarism on the freedom of nations, our power will be on the side of freedom. We can at tack militarism at its source. If we destroy it there, armies and jiavies will shrink through sheer useless-ness. Gasoline has liberated the farmer from isolation, and it may liberate Thtfse Who Come and Go. Tales of Folks at the Hotels. When . persons he knows visit Bend, H. J. Overturff proceeds to show them the town and this con sists in escorting them over to the big sawmill plants, which are the backbone of the payroll and pros perity of that inland metropolis. Mr. Overturff has been through the mills so many times that he has developed a line of talk such as professional guides use and the lec ture is all interesting. The main trouble Mr. Overturf has, however, is in getting his visitor to leave the elevated platform from which can be viewed the flying carriages on which the dogger sits while the band saws reduce pine logs to lum ber. The carriage, with Its log. travels back and forth so rapidly Burroughs Nature Club. Copyright. Houghton-Mifflin Co. More Truth Than Poetry. By James J. Moatafna, him from some of his marketing -tnat tne layman becomes faseinat" X) i ,. I. 1. 1 r,.m npniicts ! 3 .1 i i , i : .n . v. ..a worries. Perishable farm products this year have proved a drug on the market. - Transportation! problems and dealer's commissions sapped the profits to the bone until the pro ducer became desperate. Roadside markets and stalls have partially re moved this difficulty in Oregon, for ed and is willing to forget the rest of the mill plant. Some day a wide awake movie director will use the log carriage as a part of a story and it will supply enough action to satisfy the most exacting fan. Mr, Overturff, who is registered at the Benson, is a member of the leg islature, representing five counties. the city dweller out for a drive willjH ls nw interested in seeing an the public cannot succeed. LIVING WITHOUT FOOD, There have been several in stances of men living without food for good measure, The only real arbitration, he says, is that "whereby each side selects its representatives and, if they cannot agree, they select an umpire or go on and fight it out." This rl.-i.n hrins-s a decision in Qi; out of 100 cases, but works best I for loner Periods than the' men in when outside parties are Mrlndo.l lne Argonaut mine nave been en Advocates of outside arbitration tombe3, but none are now recalled want all questions involved to be that glvB more than a vague hope submitted, but labor men refuse lnal lnese victims or disaster will to arbitrate questions of vital in- be reached in time to save them, terest unless they feel sure of "cap- Cessation of outward signs that turing" the umpire. The weaker any of them are still alive may be eide demands arbitration and the reasonably due to the fact that stronger rejects it. When the tney have been so weakened by unions were weak, they demanded their long fast as to be unable to it, and employers rejected it. Since assert themselves, or that they unions have become strong, they have deliberately adopted a plan reject It when employers propose ot conserving their ebbing forces; it. Among the questions that are but even these hypotheses are but not considered arbitrable is that a tenuous staff on which to lean, of seniority. Tne particular circumstances are In the bituminous coal industry a&ainst the probability that they the question between union and wi" be saved. non-union mines is not arbitrable. Human beings, says a physiolo It involves competition between Erist' can maintain life for eight union and non-union districts in dava without food and drink, and which operators urge the union to lon&er if they are kept warm and ' organize non-union mines in order resting. How much longer must to eliminate cheap competition by depend upon individual factors equalizing cost of production in tnat cannot be estimated. A sup-non-union fields with their own. v7 ,of water wonderfully prolongs Nor can overproduction, which is life and Jt is possible that the Ar the root of the coal dispute, be Snaut victims have not been en arbitrated, and the proposed rem- tirely cut off in this respect. Forty edy, stabilization or reduction in six years ago this year the sur number of operating mines, would vlvors of the frigate Medusa sub open a Pandora's box of troubles - sisted for thirteen days on a raft government restriction of compe-- witnut. food, but with a limited tition, which would lead to price- suPPJy of water, and miners have fixing and to demands fof the same existed -as long as ten days in im protection to other industries. Col- Prfsonment without eating. But in. lective bargaining has not proved stances in actual practice in which a remedy, for it was practiced by tnse periods have been equalled all the forces engaged in the re- are few lf they have occurred at cent strikes. Nor is there any a11- ' i "right" to bargain collectively. The experiences of men like Dr. Workers have a right collectively Tanner and the Italian Succi, who to propose a contract, but em- went xoriy aays without food; of ployers have an equal right to re- Jacques, who fasted for thirty days fuse to accept it. When one party in Edinburgh in 1888, forty-two calls upon the other to bargain col- da"s in London in 1890 and fifty lectively or fight, it attempts die- da's in 1891, prove nothing ap tation, which is not collective bar- Plicable to the present case. These gaining. were scientists or professional fast By what he calls "an attempt to ers who calculated nicely on the clear the atmosphere a little by conservation of bodily energy and removing some of the fustian and fitted their surroundings to the ex sentiment thrown about these ques- Periments they were making, and tions" Mr. Easley does valuable tney were unworrled and always service. His position is neither sustained by knowledge that they pro-labor nor pro-capital. He has could terminate their fasts at will, no illusions that either party is The interned miners on the other unselfish or less prone than the hand must have been almost from other to human frailties, so the tne outset a prey to despair, they highfalutln. altruistic stuff written Probably consumed much physical and spoken on each side by turns energy ia fruitless efforts to-ac-does not influence him. But we complish their own release, and cannot quite agree that decisions conditions in the mine, as to the or a public tribunal are as ineffec- supply or oxygen, which is a power tive as he seems to believe. The ful rejuvenator, have been ad railroad labor board is an innova- niittedly not the best There is the tion, and the shopmen's strike has added fact that they had made no been a test of its efficacy in bring- especial preparations for the un ing about acceptance of its decision forseen ordeal, as formal fasters by enlisting public opinion in its have always done, support. Though the efforts of None of the ideal conditions of both the board itself and the pres- tne laboratory are reproduced in Ident have rather obscured this is- tne deep levels of the Argonaut, sue, the outcome has sustained the Only an unaccountable vitality will board, and has done much to es- account for their survival, lf any tablish the rule that the public is of them shall be taken out alive a third party to railroad labor dis- either that or some lucky circum putes and that the casting vote of stance of which their rescuers are the public's representatives on the nt now aware. board must prevail. Whether this rule shall be maintained or broken down depends on the board. So long as its conclusions satisfy the public of its wisdom and imparti- The statement in the news that "in the meantime Americans are feeding the refugees," which is even as eloquent as the added in- THE QUESTION ABOUT GERMANY. In the background of all the conferences on German reparations and Russian reconstruction, and of the divisions of opinion that they engender, looms the question: Will Germany finally settle 'down as' a republic or return to monarchy and militarism? If the former, the re organisation of Europe into states that was effected at Paris will -Become permanent, the habit of set tling disputes by conference or. ar bitration, not by war, will grow, and armies and navies will gradu ally be reduced, just as the Ameri can frontiersman's rifle was neg lected when danger of Indian raids passed. If the latter, Europe will remain armed, or will re-arm with the fearful weapons which the world war brought into use, and the burden of this preparedness added to that left by the war will crush the continent down to a lower stage of civilization. The reparation controversy is but a symptom of the doubt as to how time will answer this question. If Germany should in earnest reform its finances under allied control and should in good faith make pay. ments on account of a total repara- tion claim reduced by agreement among the allies, this action would have a significance far surpassing that of the money that changed hands and of the effect on -com merce. It 'would signify that the influence of the monarchists, who deny that Germany was beaten and who declare that the debt shall not be paid, is gone and that the party which wants no more of monarchy, admits defeat and is ready to meet obligations has become supreme. As Raymond Recouly, foreign edi tor of the Paris Figaro, writes in the Philadelphia Ledger, "the po litical situation in Germany can be summed up as an unstable equilib rium" between these two forces. The continuance in power of the parties of the left and center, the solid support that is given the re public by the workmen, the traders, the clerks and many of the peas ants, indicate that the republic has a solid basis. Opposed to it are the junkers, the high government of ficials, the big capitalists, the dis charged officers, who know no oc cupation but war and are ready for any adventure, and university pro fessors and students. The anger aroused by the assassination of Erzberger and Rathenau, the tear ing down of imperial flags, pic tures and coats of arms, the greater use of the republican flag, the great public demonstration in favor of the republic in Berlin the laws for safety of the republic, all are signs of growing strength for the republic. On the other side, hidden stores of arms, camouflaged mili tary organizations, use of the im perial flag on ships, ovations to Hindenburg and Ludendorff and Bavarian princes, and economic penetration of Russia show that a well .organized minority is deter mined to restore monarchy at the first opportunity.. Behind the opposing purposes of the two parties - is the German mentality, of which Marshal Foch said tn a farewell interview with M. Recouly: ANTI-CLIMAX. An unidentified body in a name less grave gi-es added testimony to the profitlessness of crime. ' It may never be known wno the young burglar was whose life was cut short by a wary officer's-bullet, but so far as appearances' count it is safe to venture that he began life as an average youth, of ordinary intelligence, 'and with as many op portunities as his companions had, Information is lacking as to the temptations that beset him and the minor disadvantages under which he labored, but It Is likely that these were no more numerous and no greater than those that millions of young men have been subjected to and have overcome. The plea that one must tread the path of immorality because the road of righteousness is overcrowded is the least valid of all excuses in the United States. Even the sorry glory of distinc tion in his chosen career, mistaken though such a conception of glory may have been, is denied him. With not even a sorrowing mother to claim his body, to weep over it and to find extenuation as only a mother can do for the pitiful weak. nesses of the poor flesh, the young man who had a world of light be fore him but chose the darkness instead comes to the most tragic of all anti-climaxes an unmourned burial in a potter's field. Perhaps it is well that some one has been saved the sorrow that knowledge would have brought, but it is not such an ending as any normal young man would have chosen for himself. The most piti ful aspect of it, though, is that it will not even serve as a warning to others of- his kind. Youth In cer tain circumstances obstinately re fuses to profit by the experience of others and learns only by its own. A college professor announces that the supposition that light trav els 186,500 miles per second is an over-estimate. Several million per sons with electric light meters in their homes will dispute him on the spot. "China to float loan," says a headline. We have a suspicion that after floating awhile it will become a sinking fund. Young men who can foxtrot all night become highly indignant if asked to dogtrot over to the corner grocery on an errand. Harry Orchard has an applica tion before the Idaho pardoning board; yet the lamented Steunen berg is still dead. When Rudyard Kipling cooled off ho found he didn't mean it. ProbaHy . he'd just paid his in come tax. Love's young dream breaks out in the spring time, but the -halcyon, days of September put the cinch on it. stop and pay good prices for the best farm stuffs and this saves the cost of transportation and the sev eral middlemen's fees and both pro ducer and consumer are benefited. Some far-visioned farmers see re lief in this auto selling system. It is a simple plan, and seems to have vast possibilities. Farmers who have been in the game for several years have managed to develop a profitable clientele who call at fre quent intervals and replenish their city stocks of perishable produce. Markets, barometers and skirts rise and fall. Few venture to pre dict with success in which direction the trend is to be from day to day. Just a few months ago the bull movement began in skirts, viewed with skepticism by many males. Feyir qualified observers, especially after hearing the repeated vows of independence from American wom en, expected the skirts to drop. But the tendency seems to be "down with skirts," down, down to the ankles, as far as they can be dropped. Some have .come down with a rush, quite a few linger un decided half way between the knee and the dirt, others have not yet felt the movement. The result ls that there is no standard length these days. The skirt situation might be described as chaotic. However, last night one -was ob served on the "main drag," trailing in good old style In the dust. One of those clinging models that gave more than a hint of the form b neath. It must have proved of great assistance to the street sweepers, One thing this exhibit proved that men's necks did not turn altogethe for the sake of looking over the shapely caf. More men's eyes fol lowed the, novel sight than followed the usual high one that came right behind. It seems to be variety that is wanted and as many women dress to attract attention this long skirt seemed to be but the percursor of many more of the same length. II the style manages to stay, and now this column ventures to predict its success, it should be a boon for the burlesque shows, for there will be the only chance to view the human form divine. ' - Frugality, as practiced by th Scots, is unquestionably a national characteristic, so -when a reputed Scotchman walks into a jewelry store and, without quibbling, selects S2100 worth of merchandise and then, not showing any sign of ner vousness or trepidation, calmly writes out a check for the amounts- why something is wrong or Scotch nature Is throwing out the excep tion that proves the rule. Just as described was a recent occurrence In a local snop. rue manager became cautious when clerk Informed him of the sale and held up delivery until some altera tions could be made. On visiting the bank it was found that the sup posed Scotchman had no account. But the man came in the next day after his purchases, only to find himself in the clutches of the police. Sure he was crazy he's' in the asy lum now. Doubtless some regularity in di vorce ring designs will, be worked out in time. Under present unset tied matrimonial conditions a great deal of confusion comes from mis apprehension of a woman's real status. Few divorcees are averse to the wearing of a distinguishing label. Some move the wedding ring to the right hand very good, the idea is there but when they remove it altogether." and thus fare forth under false colors, as it were, some thing should be done. Jewelers in the east have designed the "ring of disunion." ' On this ring a cupid's arrow, broken in half, ls the distinctvie emblem. Now all that needs to be worked out is a cere mony of exchange of "divorce rings" after the final degree is issued. The time has come to invoke ths old appeal, "God save the mark," for apparently nothing else can do it. During- the last fifty years, vtn sines 1870, Prussia has succeeded in complete ly Prussianizing Germany, Instilling into her her methods, her moral and material organization, her own mentality and con ception of lite. That conception consist ed in thip: That there is no better in vestment for a country than the keeping up of a powerful army: for the powerful army will certainly win victories, and Germany knows how to make victory pay. The whole question is whether she will go back to her former leaders, or whether she has cast them off forever. Will she look for new ones? If so, it will take her some time, for rulers are not i-iade in a day." Hatred of France 'and thirst for revenge are still the dominant pas sions among junkers and workmen alike, according to several recent People who are picking the site for the 1925 fair seem to forget the first move in making a rabbit pie. With great prune and apple crops to handle, how can Oregon growers do much in politics? It is a victory as well for the men who would not be stampeded and stayed with the jobs. The trading stamp concerns might give away soviet rubles for a change and profit. Those were not Dr. McElveen's real friends who Induced him to flirt with politics. Brumfield's widow will get soml Of the insurance, anyhow. It was not her fault. Dave Lightner, local world trav eler, must think there's no placa like home. Nowhere can the Elks go in 1924 but come here. Remember 1912? Oregon is getting to be quite a country for nuts, and wherever nuts exist or grow in any quantity there are certain to be squirrels. The nut raisers find it difficult to cope with their nimble little enemies and the most effective method of putting an end to their peculations is the rifle. Somehow every large nut ranch teems to act as a magnet for squir rels and it's getting to be a great sport, - this squirrel - hunting. One recent Sunday a oity party were in vited out to one of these ranches for a squirrel hunt. ' They found that it took a mighty fine shot to bag the little fellows. Just to prove that heredity doesn't always take we'll instance the case of the pigeon-toed mother and her straight-legged daughter, as seen on Sixth street one recent afternoon. It was easy to spot them for mother and daughter, but their resemblance did not extend to legs. Lots of chil dren fail to inherit the blemishes or oddities of their parents and no human ever was or will be perfect The business man sat on the stool in front of the soda fountain. "Give me a soda without flavor," was the order. "Without, flavor," mused the young exquisite behind the marble bar as he smoothed the varnish on his long hair. "Did you say without flavor?" "Yes, withoui chocolate flavor." "Oh, we haven't any chocolate fla vor. You'll have to do without va nilla," - - , eastern Oregon man elected speaker of the house. It was the opinion of C. B. McCol lough, bridge engineer for the high way department, that the structure across the Lewis and Clark river was rotten, but a Clatsop county of ficer thought it was pretty good Mr. McCollough proceeded to .dem onstrate and the county officer hur riedly walked off the bridge to the shore end. Anyway, the demonstra tion was sufficient and a new bridge will be made, with state and county co-operating. The bridge de partment of the highway comix is sion has a mass of work under way at present, there being bridges, large and small, under contract on all the main state roads. Many of these contracts were let so late in the season that the bridges will not bo tinished before next summer, The largest undertaking is the bridge near Myrtle- creek, on the Pacific highway, which will be the most beautiful in design of any in Oregon. W. G. Talt, in the banking busi ness at Medford, is registered at the Hotel Portland. The fruit growers in the Rogue River valley have had a pretty prosperous season, all things considered, and a good crop and fair prices have their effects on the community. Medford is now benefiting from the Crater lake travel, although there is more than one way of reaching the scenic wonder. For years Medford has been fighting to have a good high way built to the lake and Jackson county has spent a fortune in help ing construct the road. While there is much yet to be done and the contractors are working stead ily, the highway this season has been better than ever and the use of water wagons has helped ma terially in laying the dust and mak ing the trip more enjoyable. When the road is surfaced the water wagon, can be discarded. Notwithstanding that the rainbow trout fishing is very good now in the McKenzie, H. G. Hayes has jour neyed from McKenzie Bridge to Portland. The McKenzie ls one of the best fishing streams in America, but how much longer this condition will obtain when the highway is completed is a problem. One thing that Henry Ford did when he in vented his flivver was to spoil good ilsmng. The highway is now closed as construction is under way in the summit section, where the govern ment people are blasting a roadway through the field of black, forbid ding lava, which used to cut auto mobile tires at a ruinous speed. The Mc.Kenzie is a regular river in size, but has the swift water of a moun tain stream and the proper way to fish it is to use a boat. There is one town, at least, in the United States, which has its own name. That is Walla Walla, Wash. A letter can be addressed to that town, without adding "Washington," and it will go unerringly to its destination. There are several Port lands and plenty of Salems and the like, but Walla Walla stands alone. That is because the first settlers were sensible enough to use the Indian name. C. R. Patten of Walla Walla is among the arrivals at the Imperial. Many people imagine that wheat is the only thing grown in that section, but Walla Walla is diversified. For instance, there were 700 carloads or onions ready to be shipped to market this year when the railroad strike came along. Imagine how much hash could be seasoned with 700 car loads of onions. C. S. Hudson, president of the First National bank of Bend,- is at the Benson with Mrs. Hudson. One of the enterprises which Mr. Hud- son aided in developing was the manufacture of wood for leadpen cils; that is, using the Juniper trees for this purpose. Until the Juniper was discovered to be good material for leadpencils the trees were looked on with reproach, save the variety which grows a berry used in the manufacture of gin. Around Bend there are many large Junipers, large in circumference but having a stunted appearance. These more bulky trees are being logged for the pencil factory. Can Yon Answer These Questions f 1. What is the best honey plant? . 2. What sort of creature ls the sea-anemone? S. We have a wren box in an apple tree in our yard, and recently I saw a small bird near It. I thought it was a wren, but it sang more soft and pleasing, like a canary, and this morning there were two of them going over the tree, fluttering almost like hummingbirds, inspect ing every place a bud or blossom shows. They go upside down, peck ing as though they were picking off 4 Dugs. ADout coior or wren, put dirty white underneath. Answers in tomorrow's nature notes. Answers to Previous Questions. 1. Is it true that a hummingbird lays only two eggs, and that one of these is always a male and the other a female? The rule for hummers is two white elliptical eggs, most ornithologists making no exception to this. Bailey's Handbook of Birds of Western United States cites the common rufus hummer of California as "unu ally two eggs." We cannot advise on the division of sexes in eggs. Mr. Burroughs states in Wake Robin and in-Pepacton that males are nu merically predominant as a provi sion of nature to offset the greater exposures of male birds to foes, ow ing to song and color. 2. Do alligators do any good? To some extent, yes. if they pro tect levees, dykes, etc., from the burrowing creatures on which alli gators are likely to feed. Some localities in Louisiana protect alli gators because they eat muskTats. 3. What is a dingo? It is a wild dog, native in Aus tralia, about 6 feet long and 2 feet tall. It may be yellow, reddish, or even black In coat, with lighter fur on the belly and Inside of legs. Head suggests a fox. This animal puzzles Btudents to account for its presence in Australia, as it has no relatives there or nearby. The sup position is that ages ago Australia was connected by a tongue of land or "antarctic continent" with South America, and that a representation of the dog tribe strayed to that part of the world and established the breed in what became Australia. LEGALITY OF PLAN IS DOUBTED A. H. Gardner and A. Stein of Sumpter, Or., are arrivals at the Hotel Oregon. Sumpter was onoe a lively mining town but has been somewhat quiet of recent year, and the population is less than in the boom times. The smelter is the main asset of Sumpter. A brand new married couple ar rived at the Multnomah yesterday from Boise,. Idaho. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Brace were married a few hours before the train left for Port land and Mrs. Brace. was formerly Miss McGirr, 'daughter of H. J. Mc Girr of Boise. - , Haley Kiske, president of the Metropolitan Life Insurance com pany, arrived at the Benson yester day from New York, accompanied by his daughters and a number of company officials. John Williams, attorney of Eu gene and former adjutant-general of the Oregon national tuara, was In the city yesterday on business. N. G. Wallace, judge of Crook county, Is at the Imperial and had an interview with the highway commissioners.. W. T. Thomas, stationed at Point Wilson for the United States light house service, is registered at the Perkins. Walter S. Wells, automobile dealer of Coos Bay, is registered at the Hotel Oregon. F. E. Studebaker, railroad repre sentative at Bend, is registered at the Hotel Oregon. I. Trotsky is registered at the Imperial, not from Russia, but from Seattle. Efficacy of Dyer BUI ns Prevent Ire of Lynchlnnr Questioned PORTLAND, Sept. 14. (To the Editor.) I have read The Oregonian editorial, entitled "Prevention of Lynching," and while I agree with you that lynching Is a thorn in the side of our progress, I very much disagree with you as to the efficacy and the constitutionality of the so called Dyer anti-ly nching bill. Before the passage of the 14th amendment you will agree that no such attempt as the Dyer bill apparently makes would have been possible. That amendment (XIV) prohibited the states from passing any law depriving citizens of life. liberty and property without due process of law. It acted solely as a check upon the states and none others. But what does the Dyer bill do? It provides among others that when a man is lynched in a county, a sub division of a state, the state shall be penalized to the extent of 110,000. And for what? Because some of its law officers have been derelict in their duty to the state. How then can this act of the sheriff in sur rendering the prisoner to the mob who is intent on lynching, be made the act of the state? And if you can't make it the act of the state, your Dyer bill must fail because the 14th amendment only gives con gress the authority to Interfere when the state has deprived anyone of life, liberty or property without due process of law. In the first place no state consti tution can contain any provision re pugnant to the federal constitution or any of Its amendments. Further, every state officer (as I understand it) takes another to uphold, support and defend the constitution of his state. If, however, through fear, malice or otherwise any officer la false to his oath of office and per mits a lynching, surely he ls not acting within the scope of his au thority and when acting outside of his authority his deeds cannot be held those of the state. Hence, the state cannot be pun ished under the 14th amendment for something It has not been a party to and as such able constitutional lawyers in the senate as Senator Borah of Idaho and Walsh of Mon tana have insisted, the bill in its present form is unconstitutional. E. RUSSEL KELLY. OX TUB WIIOXG TACK. We never were strong for the up lift; Our brow must be dreadfully low; We do not care much for the Ibsen esque touch In a dull psychological show. We would rather be thrilied to the marrow By plays that are charmingly rough Than to try to make out what a drama's about That is packed full of Freudian stuff. And therefore we read with imall pleasure The news that our friend Mr. Hays Has set his young heart on improv ing the art Of producing the cinema plays. He is placing a ban upon shooting; The vamp ls held under restraint. And the villain must act with po liteness and tact And look on the screen like a saint. Ths cowboys that used to foregather And shoot up the Cactus House bar; The gambler who dealt with a run on his belt And chewed a gold-banded cigar; The black-hearted Mexican bandit, Who murdered whoever hs could. Must all be effaced, that they may be replaced By folk who are noble and good. If we see Mr. Hays we will tell him That the old-fashioned plays were all right. The shows where a lot of ths actors got shot Were drawing big crowds svery night. He will-, not do a thing to reform them, - If he'll take a most excellent tip. Or endeavor to start any outcry for art. But Just give them a llttla moreS ip! Ask Any Central Girl. Ths greatest need Just at present Is an lreless telephone. Plea In Extenuation. -his much may be said for ths bootlegger: he is never as bad a his liquor. In Other Days. Fifty Years A so. From The Oregonian. 8'Pt"mher IS. 171. Bellalre. O. Public schools hers were forced to close today on ac count of the heat. Brussels Charlotte, empress of Mexico, s so danKi-roiiNly ill thnt her death is feared at any moment. All the timbers of the water lowr of the East Portland Water com pany are at last on the ground, ths structure having at last been torn down. Bishop (Chaplain) McCabs will deliver his magnificent lecture to night on the "Hright Side of Life la Libby Prison." NOTHING TO DO WITH POLITICS Mr. Pierce's Boast of RellKious In. herltance Is Out of Place. PORTLAND, Aug. 14. (To the Editor.) Were I a humorist afte the fashion of Irvin S. Cobb, I sure would find delight In taking a fling at such Innuendoes as Mr. Pierce is guilty of In his political statement anent his gubernatorial aspirations, He flirts with the teachings of the good book, which admonishes us to love one another, and in the same breath boasts of his ancestral re Iigious lineage, making It plain that all his forebears were Protestants for over 300 years by affinity and consanguinity. I can't comprehend what Mr. Pierce is trying to illustrate. If it Is braggadocio of religious inherl tance bearing the hallmark of three centuries, what a caper a Catholic can cut with his Roman Catholicism a religious belief boasting of an tiquity aeons before the Pierce re liglous escutcheon was placed on the family mantle. v What a pity that Christian people like Mr. Pierce must trot out the family Biblical record to standardize as it were, his religious belief, Men seeking high political favor should be actuated and permeated with the finest sentimentalities for their fellow man, and the channels which God created for nobler pur poses should never be sullied with a drop of bitterness in the mad scram ble for political preferment. He ls neither Catholic nor Prot estant in the true sense who harbors any ideals akin to religious anlmos ity. D. W. LANE. , Fmlt Picking Time. PORTLAND, Sept. 14. (To the Editor. Kindly tell me when the apple picking begins and what Is the closest place to Portland where they hire pickers. Also please state when the prune crop ls ready. A. READER. Picking of the winter apple crop at Hood River will begin October 1. Early apples are being picked now In all sections. Prune picking has started In the western Oregon coun ties. Watch classified advertising columns under "Help Wanted male or female." DRY OFFICER!) NOT IIH.IIT TVPB Man Killers Are Needed to io After MoonNhlners ami lluotlrBgrers. BURNS, Or., S.'Pt. 13. (To the Kd Itor.) A lot of fine Innocent men have been killed recently by whisky makers and sellers ami the poor families are now dependent on the public. If an officer goes after a moonshiner to arrest him hs must expect to kill him or get killed. Are such men appointed? A prohibition officer must be a man killer or he should remain nt home. Man killing ls a science and while such men are scarce, enough of them can be found to meet all re quirements. One good gun man can arrest any bunch of bootleggers alone. In ths first place this sort of fellow doesn't go into a town and parade as you find officers doing tnd.iy, Every body in a small town knows when a prohibition officer Is In town, whether state or federal. One of the officers Just killed was the, sams way. The right kind of a man killer, as an officer, ls a quiet man that drops Into a town and Kets In with the "gang and is posted In every possible way. Sending out these ex-service men or any other man except a "man- killer" ls a crime. I have known the real man-klj!r for years. Have seen his work and how he proves his superiority over the ordinary gunman. It Is not ths dead shot that Is always the victor, but the quiet, blue-eyed little fellow that works out the plans alone and depends on no one else after getting the necessary Information. Nearly all the real man-killers I havs been acquainted with weighed not to ex ceed 125 pounds, never drank a drop and were as gentle and kind as a woman. It is hoped that all these so-called officers resign before tlioy are all killed. READER FOR FORTY YEARS. Cowardice and Confession. UNIVERSITY PARK. Sept. 14. (To the Editor.) The depriving by Dr. Brumfield of his life Is a sad commentary upon man's wllllntrne to take upon himself a right which belongs to others. What rlKht had Dr. Brumfield to hang himself? .So ciety through government alnna had authority to hang the condemned criminal. With the solemnity of ths sacrament and free from all vlndlc- tlveness the citizens of Oregon could have relieved Dr. Brumfield of ths, deed he dishonestly performed. By the way, why should a man not guilty of crime, but. perhaps, dis couraged and ashamed of failure, or through loss of friends, or property. commit suicide? To rush Into tlia unseen before God calls Is usurping the divine prerogative. T'sually It la an act of downright cowardice. The act of Dr. Brumfield con fesses the crime of which hs was accused and for which he was fairly tried. The public waited a long time for Justice to have Its way. English men are proud that their law against murder Is executed with speed. B. J. HOA DLEY. Ilooks About White House. ECHO, Or., Sept. 13. (To the Edt. tor.) 1. A few years aito The Ore gonian published favorlts poems. Is here any way one could get these in one collection at this time? 2. Is there a history of the tenants of the "White House"? If so, what name does it go by? 3. Where could I get "Thirty-six Years in the White House," by Thomas H. Pendel, doorkeeper? CONSTANT READER. 1. There ls none. 2. "Memories of the White House," by Colonel William Henry Crook, covers the period from Lincoln to Roosevelt, Inclusive. 3. Any book dealer should be glad to. get any published book for you. lf he does not already have it in stock. You may be able to borrow this book from the state library, Salem, Or. A A