THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAN, PORTLAND, SEPTEMBER 21, 101D. CENSOR SHU KING IN OF FAR EAST Ai While They Last Allies Let America Know Only What They Choose. "The Rochester" A Genuine Cowhide Bag Walrus Grain Black Only Eighteen-inch, full reinforced, double catchee, spring: lock, steel leather-covered handle, full fabric lined. Special This Week $7.25 NEWS WILL NOT BE BOTTLD "Grapevine Telegraph" Flourishes on Sands of Desert Uncle Sam Hastens to Rescue Americans. 6 LANDS BY WILLIAM T. ELLIS. (Copyright by the New York World. Pub lished by Arrangement.) CONSTANTINOPLE. Aug. 20. One fact affecting all facts, and more mean ingful than any other fact in the near east, is the censorship. News about the censorship really should take prece dence of news concerning any other po litical conditions here. It is the story which explains most other stories. Even after the censorship ' conditions have been described the average American reader will not have grasped the sig nificance of it all. so foreign ia .this censorship Idea to us. Bluntly put, censorship Is an effort to keep from the world all the facts ex cept those which serve some govern ment's policy. Political purposes take precedence of the truth. The censor ship is an Invisible Chinese wall, to keep out or in all news alien to the. ruling interest. Censorship aims to conceal from the whole world what Is done with or by or to a part of the world. All such dangerous ideas as "pitiless publicity" and such radical teachings as "Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free," are completely blue penciled by the censor. His doc trine is that all people may learn only what a few persons think Is good for them to know. All sorts of methods are adopted to keep news shut up within territorial borders. For example, American Ked Cross and r-elief workers In Syria, Palestine and Egypt have been required to sign a pledge that they will send or take out no uncensored news or communications. Even . information concerning strictly American activities and interests must pass through the sieve of old world polities., - Americans may know 'concerning America's in terests In the orient only what our political allies and commercial rivals want them to know. America, Through a Glass, Darkly. Of paramount interest recently In Turkey has been the presence of the American commission upon mandates. Nothing else in all the world has in terested the people of the near east, for the time being, so greatly as this commission. Its story is told in an other article. I mention it in con nection with the censorship only be cause Its objects and limitations have been adroitly presented to the Syrians In a way that suits the purposes of certain powers with Interests In this part of the world. The Americans have had to watch their step at every mile of the road. They stood for some thing that Is popular Just now with everybody In Syria except the foreign interests who do mot want that thing called Americanism to be popular! - Of course, the natives, accustomed to news via censorship and propaganda channels, are wary and suspicious. They have the real Missouri attitude. So Tvhen the local papers announce that the American commission Is purely a personal enterprise of President Wil son, and that It has no authority, and that the treaty of London takes prece dence of all its recommendations, the Syrians merely stick their tongues In their cheeks and slip off to some trusted American friends to ascertain the facts. flf Yon See It In the Eart!" Because on a reads an important statement In a newspaper In the near east is almost prima facie evidence that It either is not so, or else that it is put out for some hidden purpose. Since it bears the stamp of the censorfas ap proval. It is guaranteed "safe," and therefore either innocuous or sinister. Real news, supposedly, is what circu lates from mouth to ear. One curious result of this Is that Im portant news Is often to be heard in the cafes as much as 48 hours before the newspapers carry It; If they publish It at all. Censorship naturally retards publication, in order that all the pos sible bearings of the facts upon gov ernment policies may be weighed care fully. Thus, In Cairo, I learned of the with drawal of the Italians from the peace conference a full day betore It was printed. I took It to the American diplomatic agent for confirmation, and he had not yet heard It, although he corroborated It within a few hours. Yet the American who told me the etory had. heard It from one or nis servants I Often facts never come out. The "first Intimation we had In Cairo of the Greek masacres in Smyrna were the dispatches protesting how well the Greeks had behaved and how pleased the Turks were with them! Any old hand in the orient, possessed of a knowledge of background conditions, could read between the lines of these "communiques" and British, French, Greek and Italian news bulletins, or "communiques" are regularly put out In the hotels, clubs, cafes and other popular centers of cities like Cairo and Constantinople. Dealing in propaganda news Is a regular branch of government activity In the near east. . Censorship Often Beaten. No invention has yet been perfected which will Berve as a news-proof .con tainer. All the bottles ever devised by censorship are sure to leak. How they leak is one of the romances of the orient. Every correspondent who . has not passed his word not to doso feels free to beat the censor, for the news paper man Is a servant of light, and the censor is a servant of darkness, and light cannot be subject to darkness. The impassive-faced Indian or Egyp tian servant behind the chair of the British officer is believed to be "per fectly safe," yet how else did the news of that important conversation get so quickly to Moslem headquarters. A common trick Is for the servants to profess to know ho English what ever, and since the oriental finds It easy to mask his face' with blankness all sorts of state and military secrets find their way quickly to the quarters where they will be best appreciated. TVhlle an expensive staff of censors and. intelligence officers Is searching Mailed to any address at this price. Satisfaction guaranteed. S. & H. Stamps with all Leather purchases. Wooelard, Clarke & Co. Wood-Lark Bldg.. Alder at West Park SEES the malls and the persons of passen-, gers an Ignorant and deferential native perhaps a charcoal burner, returning ' to the mountains of Mount Sinai with his camel or donkey is slipping across the border unheeded. What can a camel driver know of politics? Well, what he knows .is quickly communi cated to wiser men than himself, per haps with documents. I have had incontrovertible proof that news, essential news, high political news, seeps out of every country in the east, carried by humble traders or pil grims or servants.' ' Even the veiled woman may have concealed beneath her voluminous raiment a paper more dangerous than dynamite. The route is easy and open between, say, the ; pasha in Egypt, his servant, a native j in Constantinople. Grapevine Telegraph on the Desert. Also the desert ways are open. AI- i geria and Tunisia and "Morocco and Tri poli are all accessible to the Arabs who thread the apparently pathless wastes or sand. One may hear more news within & week in Syria or Constantinople concerning what the French and Italians are doing in North Africa .than he will read in. the press of the world in a year. This is the supreme nullification of the censorship. The east gets the news which it believes by channels that were old a thousand years before the art of printing was invented. It is not what is published in the subsidized newspapers of the orient that shapes rublic opinion east of the Adrlatio and the Mediterranean, but what is said in the bazaars, the cafes, the khans and by caravan campflres. As I have watched Arabs colloguing half a night around a little blaze of camel-thorn, on a acsciri. far from human habitation, I nave jwondered what they found in their barren life to talk about. But if there was a stranger, among them I 3 -t 1 . 1 . 1 ' . . . , . . T luuim Liieir Knuwiauge 01 political con ditions increased and their surmises quickened! That is the way trie east forms its opiniors. Every oriental, especially in the Levant, has a elear-cut conviction concerning the relative merits and qualities of the great powers and their nationals. Even the educated west has no such jablt of sweeping generaliza tion. Ask the nsxt American you meet what he thinks of the English, the French, the Italians, the Greeks, the Germans, and he will probably answer concerning at least half the list, "Oh. I danno." or, "I never thought about it." Yet your donkey boy or carriage driver in Cairo or Jerusalem or Da mascus or Aleppo or Constantinople can give you shrewd appraisal of every one of these nationalities. And that opinion, which runs so close to the ground. Is what makes history. Uncle Sam to the Rune, It is common report that political censorship is so intimately related to the commercial Interests of the cen soring power that valuable business information is communicated to the nationals of the government in con trol. In Constantinople It is openly declared that a fair and equal oppor tunity at the trade of the near east is not given to all the a'.lies. So serious is the disability under which American business men out here feel themselves laboring at the hands of the allied censorship that the Amer ican government now permits them to make their communications with the homeland through the channels of the American embassy. Presumably em bassy messages are safe from prying eyes. This is an extraordinary privi lege, but Admiral Bristol and Consul General Ravndal, the American com missioners, are real patriots, of the sort who do not hesitate to cut red tape in behalf of their countrymen. At a certain port In the eastern hemisphere I was told by an Ameri can this Incident of "friendly" cen sorship: He had been In confiden tial communication with Washington concerning a certain Important com mercial concession for the American government. . Recently the expected message came from the state depart ment, in ono of its simpler codes, in structing the consul to secure the con cession in question. That official message. In code, was five days on the way although cable conditions were such that it should have arrived within a few hours and during this interval representatives of the friend ly power which controls the censor ship sought to secure the concession in question for themselves! Only the ardent enthusiasm of the native popu lation for America kept that deal from going through, to the serious discom fiture of our country. The incident illustrates the perils of censorship; no nation can be trusted with the un limited power and confidential knowl edge which the censor possesses. Cer tainly the institution Is not in har mony with the spirit of democracy and fair play. 0 Important v y Diamond Purchasing j Ireland Loses Tourist Traffic. DUBLIN", Aug. 29. There are nu merous protests in the Irish press against the abandonment of Queens town as a port of call ror great Amer ican liners. In future only the small vessels are to call there, and it is pointed out that this meanrthat the profitable tourist traffic from America will be taken direct to England. Aerial Mall Service to Congo Plan. ANTWERP, Aug. 20. An aerial pos tal service between LeopoldviUe and Stanleyville In the Congo will be In operation within the next three months, if the plans of the Belgian government are carried out. A steamer has Just left Antwerp taking aviators, hangars and 15 planes which will be used in the service. 1 The guiding rule is purity of color, .brilliancy and per fection; but very few know how to select without expert advice. That's .why it is best to come to my store, where you are sure to get only the bet ter grade of diamonds and prices are absolutely lowest. Your money back if you find any article different than represented. My Special $50 and $100 Diamond Rings Have No Equal T r . t TManAnd Tlalev I n Omm. 834 Washington St Op p. Owl Drmc Ce. DANCE Today COLUMBIA BEACH EVFRY ii'sday'apterxoox . a o ktem.vo. Buttertleld -Will Sing With Cotillion Orchestra. Bin Pavilion. Fine Floor, Rood Order. Care at h'ltth and Wasalaa-ten. CUSTOM SHI R T S Jacobs Shirt Co. RALEIGH BLDC 327 Washington St, Cor. 6th ESTABLISHED 1888 Tl I cf" J er yJfl rom e Philippine Islands a beautiful line of art baskets. J L XVCCC CC LA These Baskets are made by the school children of these islands for which they are paid by the U. S. government and sold In the United States and the profits used to further advance this instruction in the islands. It is impossible to describe these exquisite baskets and do them justice. They are made of the natural rushes, combined in their natural colors. They outrival the baskets made by the Indians in our southwestern states and "Mexico, whose work has been proclaimed the height of art in basket weaving. The work turned out by these Filipino children is surprisingly sturdy, and the designs intricate. To appreciate them you must see them. Do not neglect to come in and see this work whether you come to buy or come for an education. The surprising part of these baskets is the moderate price for such high grade work. A Little Gallery of Art Goods is the name we have given to a little room on our second floor. . In here you will find the popular Easel Frames in several finishes and many styles, Book Ends of all kinds, Framed Mottoes and Framed Parchments, and a few select framed pictures. Visit this little room for gift suggestions or when you wish to add something choice to your home. Ingersoll Watches We have just put in a stock of Ingersoll watches in all this fac tory's varied styles. Watches from $2 to $9 All watches guaranteed. Photo Phil In Oar Kodak Department "" First floor will be glad to coach you in your fall picture taking. Let him tell you what he knows about light and other condi tions of this time of the year. 8x10 black and white en largements front your nega tives, 254 each. Flashlights AND Batteries Kodaks and Kodak Supplies, Safety Razors, Ever Sharp Pencils, Fountain Pens of all makes, all in this department at our Third Street Entrance on the main floor. ggj o J 5 The J. K. Gill Go, Booksellers Stationers Off ice Outfitters Third and Alder Sts. Eight Honrs Constitute a Legal Day's Work Consequently Our Store Closes at 6 P. M. Saturdays We do this in deference to our employes, who give to us efficient and loyal service, and we are happy in return to give them shorter hours, that they may have more time for recreation and pleasure. We ask our patrons and friends to bear in mind this early-closing hour and do your shopping before 6 P. M. Saturdays. MODERN EFFICIENCY is APPLIED to EVERY DEPARTMENT of THIS BUSINESS. Our profit-sharing, cash-selling policy is a real money-saver to the man who buys his clothes here. COMPARE GRAY'S COMPARE GRAY'S COMPARE GRAY'S $30 $40 $50 Suits and Overcoats with those sold by other stores for $35 and $40 Suits and Overcoats with those sold by other stores for $45 and $50 Suits and Overcoats with those sold by other stores for $55 and $60 GRAY'S VALUES WILL TELL M. GRAY 366 WASHINGTON AT WEST PARK .jit ff""" Wr2l4 . T&ezh fxY sl vvvbeL No fire tier gathered big ger crowds than those who hare waited to get In and see "Doug" in this bijr 8 reel masterpiece. And so we have broken every reg ulation of our usual pol icy and hare made ar rangements to hold it orer. We suggest that you come as soon as pos sible because other cities are begging for the films and we do not know how much longer we will be al lowed to keep them. CECI L TEAGUE in Wurlitrer Concert Today at 1:30. PROGRAMME Military Polonaise. Chopin Dancing Doll Poldini Raymond Overture Thomas Songs of Italy Arranged by Cecil Teague American Patrol .... Meacham K I much longer we will be al- I ; l) ' - It American Patrol rrx