THE SUNDAY OREGOXTAN, PORTLAND, MAY 14, 1922 and prudential reasons, according to j trade practices, was welcomed by the freely: but special information is al- this version, and was reported by I better class of merchants, who real- ' ways aristocratical and hierarchi- USTABLISHED BY HENRY I.. PiTTOCK. i'ublished by The Oregonian Publishing Co 135 Sixth Street. Portland. Oregon. C A. MORDEX, B. B. PIPER. Manager. Editor. The Oregonian is a member of the Asso ' isted Press. The Associated Press is ei--.usively entitled to the use for publication f sJI news dispatches credited to it or not "tbsrwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. Ail rights f publication of special dispatches herein re also reserved. m Fremont secretly, if at all. in view of , ized that it restrained dishonest com- ubscription Kates Invariably In Advance. By Mail.) 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Eastern Business Office Verree & Conk I n, 300 Madison avenue. New Tork; Verree Conklin. steger burning, Chicago; Ver ree & Conklin, Free Press building. De troit. Mich.; Verree & Conklin, Monadnock i.uilding, San Francisco, Cal. iOO DISCOVERY ON THE PACIFIC COAST. Republication in the Sacramento Bee of an item from an early Califor nia newspaper concerning- the first discovery of gold on the Pacific coast is provocative of reflection upon the ommon incapacity of individuals to foresee the far-reaching conse meuces mat may now from appar ently trivial events. The item, con -isting of nine lines of printed mat er, or about sixty words, related the incident with all brevity and without i-omment. It was not the kind of reatment, in all probability, that a -imilar news Item would receive to day, but It is explicable on other grounds than the primitive state of journalism in that period Nothing was more remote from the expectations of the first Americans who came to the Pacific coast than the discovery of gold. Those first to o to California were actuated mainly by the same motives that in duced the pioneer settlement of Ore gon. As a matter of fact, if the Ore gon trail had not been blazed by the northwest pioneers in the early forties, and if immigration into the "rcgon country had not already se: in, Jt is unlikely that California would have been settled at the time and in the manner that it was. The history of the two sections is inex tricably interwoven and this is pecu liarly true of the political aspect of 'he great westward movement. A strong current of patriotism that ran through the Oregon immigration, which occurred at a time when it was clearly understood that settle ment was likely to turn the scale in favor of th'e United States in the northwest boundary controversy, made easier the work of those Cali fornia propagandists who used to intercept Oregon travelers in the Snake river country. One of the arguments effectively employed by these first California real estate iioomers was that the presence of Americans south of the parallel of 42 degrees was necessary to hold that region for the United States, in view of the trouble between this country and Mexico which culmi nated in the Mexican war. It is clearly enough established that James Marshall, widely reputed to have been the discoverer of gold at butter s Fort, upon which the greatest mining excitement in the history of the world was based, was an Oregonian before he was a Cali fornian. He had come to this state m 1844 and had spent the winter of 1844-45 in the Willamette valley. There is better reason for believing, n the light of Iaterresearch. that the real discoverer was Charles Ben nett, whom very early comers to Ore gon will remember as the proprietor of the Bennett house at Salem,, but this in nowise diminishes Oregon's laim to this historical distinction. Bennett was likewise an immigrant of 1S44 to Oregon, he also was em ployed by Captan John A. Sutter at Sutter's Fort, and it was he in all probability who found the first gold nugget and expressed the belief that it was gold. "His eye," says a later annalist, "was the first to behold the dust, he was the first to identify it." But the point of interest in any con troversy over the subject is in this instance that it was the Oregon im migration and the motives underly ing it that produced the man who found gold in California. Part of this interesting history is related on a modest gravestone in a cemetery at Salem, where lies Ben nett, who served his country faith fully though ho reaped no great ma terial reward, and died in 1S55, the victim of a hostile arrow in the In dian wars in the Walla Walla coun try. The story does not rest upon the unsupported testimony of an epi taph, but was attested in a still earlier day and while events were fresh in memory by Stephen Staats, Frank Shaw, John Minto and others. Marshall's title to the designation Oregonian was precisely as good as Bennett's was. so that this state's sentimental association with the dis covery is preserved in either event. Neither Bennett nor Marshall became a bonanza king. Bennett thought so much better of other ways of mak ing a living that he returned to Ore gon late in 1S49. Marshall, his head turned by his apparent good fortune, took to obeying spirit beckonings which somehow never guided him to a real gold mine and died a pen sioner of the state. This discovery from which all mining development on the Pacific coast dates was made in January, 184S. There is credible historical evidence that gold had been found in California even prior to that time the effect it was feared the news might have on adjustment of pend ing issues with Mexico. The flaw in the tale is its want of confirmation in any of Fremont's own correspon dence a fact which does not, how ever, warrant its utter rejection. Because so few of the participants in momentous affairs are able to ob tain the perspective of them nearly every unusual event becomes the subject of subsequent controversy. The famous Blue Bucket mine of eastern Oregon is one example of this; the date of the first finding of gold in southern Oregon is another. The accepted legend is that James Cluggage and James Pool bore the same relation to gold mining in Ore gon that Bennett and Marshall did to that in California, Cluggage and Pool having panned the first color late in 1851, in the gulcl. where now stands the town of Jacksonville. But a quarter of a century or so ago, when the topic was fresh and also contro versial, a number of highly credible witnesses came forward to testify that for some time prior to the au tumn of 1851 mining operations were being carried on by a man nemed Bills, on Big Bar, on the Rogue river, not far from Perkins' ferry. David Linn, later a pioneer settler in Jacksonville, and Wesley McGanigal set out from Oregon City in October, 1851, on foot for Salem, where they outfitted for the Cali fornia mines. Linn, whose credibil ity was gcod and whose story was confirmed by others, said that he and his fellow travelers came upon Bills some weeks prior to the Jackson ville discovery, and that he had then Lapparently been mining for some time. "Vnother contributor to the history of the period, Lee Laughlin of North Yamhill, laid claim in be half of his party to having found gold in the Rogue river in Septem ber, 1849. This may have been true. Failure to remain and develop the Rogue river placers at that time is plausibly accounted for by the hostility of the Shasta Indians, and also by the glowing reports that had been re ceived from the more distant El Do rado. The rush to California from Oregon, which nearly depopulated this territory, was a veritable stam pede, stopping for nothing, pausing not even to develop by laborious processes the Rogue river sand bars. For word had reached Oregon that gold nuggets in California required no digging, but were lying on the surface, temptingly exposed to glorious southern sun. petition. The object sought by the cal." There is, too, a distinction be tween a man who is rich in general proponents of the "truth in fabrics" 1 information and one who is only a bill, recently pending in congress, is measurably realized by the order of the trade commission now upheld by the high court. The full text of the decision is not yet at hand, but it seems probable that it enunciates a principle widely applicable to other clashes of merchandise, which is that the consumer may wear or eat or otherwise utilize any commodity he chooses to buy, that he has the right to believe that he is getting what the label calls for, and that he need not qualify as an expert in a hundred in dustries in order to protect himself against fraud. Certain trade customs established in the older times will have to be discarded, but the hardships thus wrought will be more than offset by the obvious advantages gained. The contention that "merino" has from time immemorial meant to the trade a mixture of merino and cotton may have been based on fact, but a new and a better precedent is about to be created. The label "wool and cot ton," which will be required hence forth, will mislead no one. To the layman, the opinion of Justice Brandeis that "wool" means "all wool," not part cotton, will seem eminently just and sound. The trade will have less difficulty in adjusting itself to the new condi tions than some of the conservatives suppose. Jo great loss will attend I.OST ART. The grief of British citizens over tne departure of Gainsborough's "Blue Boy" for America, which is in tensified because it is only a re minder that other works of art are going the same way, is not likely to oe moctitiea by reflection upon the experience of France, which onlv two years ago attempted to prevent the. selling of objects of sentimental value by placing a prohibitive exDort duty on them. This French law has just been repealed, largely because it was seen to be a violation of the principle that the private owner of property is not in fact the real owner thereof unless he may dispose of it as he sees fit. In France, as also in England, it has also been realized that it is unfair to tax individuals and at the same time withhold from them the means of obtaining the wherewithal to meet the tax. In both countries the general movement to seek buyers for the contents of private galleries has been the result of heavy financial burdens imposed upon those who formerly were re garded as wealthy but who in fact are having a hard struggle to get along. In England works of art are made exempt from inheritance tax when sold to a public museum or gallery, which, however, only gives those in stitutions an advantage amounting to the sum of the tax over foreign bidders, and this has not in practice operated to restrain the trade. It is pointed out by British observers, too, that creation of a national fund would be more likely to bring higher prices to sellers and greater profits to dealers than to meet the purpose sought, which is to keep works of art at home. For all that is likely to be done about it, it seems probable that American collectors will continue to profit by the financial situation in Europe. That a large proportion of purchases are made for private col lections in the United States does not make it improbable that they will in due time become public property. The recent gift of the priceless Hunt ington collection to a foundation for public enjoyment is only one of many examples of the tendency of Ameri can owners to share their treasures with their fellows. Our government is slower to acquire property of this kind than European governments are, but the spirit which inspires public benefactions is nowhere so general as it is in the United States. HONEST LABELS. In upholding an order of the fed eral trade commission prohibiting. In substance, the practice of labeling a fabric wool when it is composed of wool mixed with some other textile, the supreme court of the United States but extends the ethical prin ciple embodied in the pure food and drugs act to other lines of commerce and industry. It is interesting to re call that the effort to enforce a high standard of business morals met its first substantial success within the present generation. Formerly the doctrine of caveat emptor prevailed almost universally. It was assumed to be part of the duty of the buyer to determine whether he was being cheated or not. Nor should it be too readily as sumed that all were dishonest who held to the old practices. In a more primitive state of society than now the discarding of a number of the ancient formulas. The twentieth century consumer is too busily en gaged iu a number of more im portant things to become a critical judge of every kind of merchandise. Moreover the trade itself will benefit in the long run by the reestablished confidence of its customers. There will be no such resistance to the en forcement of the new standards as was encountered in the early days of the reform movement. LOSING A MILLION YEARS. The estimate of the actuary of an engineering organization that the average American workman loses eight days :r. each year on account of illness is another of those impres sive calculations that dazzle us with their enormous aggregates. There are about 42,000,000 wage-earners in the United States, male and female. Eight times 42,000,000 is 336,000,000. Disregarding odd fractions for the sake of convenience, 336,000,000 working days are equal to about a million years. The figures obtain more signifi cance from the fact that at least one-half of all disabling illness is now regarded by excellent authori ties as preventable by methods with which we are now familiar. As to the other half, the doctors have hope for the distant future, but are not inclined to make promises. Half a million years are a very considerable number, however, even when com pared with the probable age of the world and other near-infinitudes. Theoretically, the wealth that might have been created by these workers in the time lost because of sickness would amount to something like a billion dollars. The chief value of the calculation is that it may claim the attention here and there of an individual and convince him of the reasonableness of preventive measures. From the seed thus sown the harvest may be garnered after many seasons. The lesson that most needs learning just now is that sickness is both a per sonal and a community affair, and that its elimination will be brought about both- by individual initiative and social co-operation. A little more than half of the so-called pre ventable illness is due to communi cable diseases, for the inception of which the victim may not be respon sible, but the spread of which is largely inexcusable. We have ad vanced considerably in the theory of epidemiology in the past quarter of a century but in the application of known remedies we still have a long way to go. "well-informed person." The latter fills us with alarm, the former puts us at our c-ase. The absolute de mocracy of interchange of facts, each as futile as all the rest, ought not to be overlooked in the building of the characters of people doomed to live among one another in a so ciety such as ours. There is small reason, however, for supposing that pedagogues will ever succeed in making general informa tion special, as the author seems to fear they will do. To do so would be to destroy its value by giving it a specific value a paradox that the happy possessors of inquiring minds will easily comprehend. The fact seems to be that, notwithstanding the experience of Edison and Maxim, of innumerabl2 makers of question naires, and of others who hold that the acquisition of miscellaneous in formation is a declining art, the natural curiosity of men cannot be restrained. The fault is with the ex aminers and not the examined. The quantity of knowledge which, un classified and unorganized, can be of no possible utility to its possessors and yet is retained by them can be attested by any one who chances to venture into the deep waters of gen eral conversation in a mixed com pany without being sure of his facts. attitude of the federal government and of the other states indicates that experience may have taught its people that there are certain dis advantages in playing a lone hand. exists bargaining was one of the in- under circumstances which curiously I tellectual activities of the people. also connect Oregon and California, j The one-price system in merchandis The immigrant caravan of 1845 to I ing was the forerunner of the new Oregon was met at the junction of I era, obtaining currency with increas iiie trail to California, on Raft river, j ing specialization of education. For a tributary of the Snake, by Call- merly men and women were pre fornia emissaries, who, as has been ! sumed to know more or less about suggested, believed they had a po-1 the goods they bought. Prudent micai ruiion to periorrn. or a number of Oregon-bound settlers who were diverted to the southern route, the two Bonney girls are be- housewives could detect the cotton in "woollen" cloth and the sand in sugar. Now the pressure of other duties and tire multiplication of com lieved by students of history to have -J modities make it impossible that any a bone-fide claim to the first dis-lbut experts in each line shall be im covery. The girls found a number of I mune against sophistication and de nuggets in a creek bed on a tribn- ceit. tary of the Sacramento and the In the long run business is honest, metal was identified as gold by a I for its own protection when not on physician who knew John C. Fre- profoundly moral grounds. The pure mont, then in caniornia. xvews of food law, wnich constituted the en- THE USES OF USELESS INFORMATION. People of the sort whose enjoy ment of a beautiful flower is more than doubled by knowing the name of it, whose delight in beholding a stately building is enhanced by a knowledge of the orders of architec ture, and to whom a landscape brings longings for acquaintance with long-forgotten historical events will find a fellow t,o their liking in Robert M. Gay, who writes whim sically in the current Atlantic on "Useless Information." Mr. Gay re minds them that "there are already signs that we are beginning to per ceive that the uses of information are more mysterious than we have realized." It is not by accident that the mental processes of human be ings are disorganized and disorderly, or that all well-appointed heads carry about with them a quantity of odds and ends, picked up without thought or conscious intention dur ing the journey of life. He would foster this "hunger of the mind, which we call curiosity," and which "like hunger of the body, is instinc tive." Special or useful information, he points out, we acquire because we think we ought to, but general or useless information we collect be cause it is pleasant to do so. "Hence it is that a man's general informa tion is the true key to his personal ity." It may be that this was what Thomas A. Edison had in mind when he formulated the rece: t:v cele brated questionnaire which drew the fire of critics who could detect in it no key to the usefulness of the man under examination. For we are re minded that we live in an age of over-specialization, that the danger we run is that intellectual curiosity shall be abated rather than men shall know too little about particular things, and that greatness is com monly achieved by getting out of a rut. Miscellaneous information may well be regarded as a mark of hu RHODE ISLAND TRIE TO TRADITION. Rhode Island's belated decision to pass a law providing a method of co-operation with the federal gov ernment in enforcing the eighteenth amendment to the constitution of the United States is a reminder that little Rhody has long had a tradition of non-conformancy to live up to. Usually it has at length fallen into line with the rest of the country but always it has taken its time in doing so. .Never. lacking in essential patriotism, though insisting on being patriotic in its own way, it has a curious record for consistent ob stinacy. Rhode Island always hangs back. It has not yet ratified the prohibition amendment, although there is precedent for supposing that it will do so in the course ,of time, after the demands of Rhode Island tradition have been duly appeased. Last of the thirteen colonies to ratify the original federal constitu tion after having refused to send delegates to the constitutional con vention, it found itself in a peculiar and anomalous situation at the very beginning of the existence of our national government. But even before that its people had mani fested the same recalcitrancy that has characterized their attitude in more recent years.. The first gov ernment of Providence was a pure democracy, "ignoring any power in the body politic to interfere with those matters which alone concern man and his maker." This spirit but echoed the feeling growing out of the religious controversies with which the period was rife, and it took time to convince the settlers that pure democracy in its practical workings might be very close to anarchy. Each of its separate set tlements was independent at first. When it was determined by some of them to obtain a patent from the British crown, and this was done, the towns at first, from jealousy and exaggerated Ideas of their individual importance, declined to enter into the compact. Both jealousy and over-emphasis upon the rights of independent communities existed for a long time. When the union of settlements was formed, which was accomplished only under fear of internal revolution and of the active hostility of Massachusetts, this feel ing was transmuted into jealousy of other colonies and of other states. Rhode Island has been in conflict with its neighbors to some extent almost ever since. It was at outs with the rest of New England over the King Philip war, it wrangled interminably w-ith Massachusetts and Connecticut over boundary matters. It was long shut out from, the united colonies of New England. Its pri vateers did effective service during the war of the revolution, in which, however, it united with the other colonies for defense. After the peace had been won, it resisted every effort to enlarge the powers of congress. Rhode island, still tne champion of extreme individualism, stoutly maintained its right to levy import duties on its own account and to circulate its own paper money. When the federal constitution was submitted to the states, the Rhode Island town meetings refused to ratify it, many attempts to call a convention to consider it failed, and U was not until discriminatory action had been threatened by the federal government that it consented to the instrument. But this consent was not given until May 29, 1790, almost two years after ratification by the required nine or more states had been formally celebrated at Phila delphia, on July 4, 1788. The slight satisfaction of joining in the ratification ceremonies in 1788 was denied to the minority of Rhode Islanders who were in favor of joining the union. The people of Providence had prepared to cele brate the occasion when a thousand men, some armed, led by a justice of the supreme court, rode into town from the surrounding plantations ar.i compelled the citizens to desist. Ratifying the constitution, though under coercion, as has been said, in 1790, the state then declined to frame a constitution of its own but continued to operate under its charter from the crown until 1842, and then framed a new instrument only as the result of threatened re bellion growing out of the archaic provisions for representation in the charter which the state had out grown. It held fast to a property qualification for suffrage until 188S and did not permit election by plurality until 1893, before which time election of state officials was A BARD WHO SANG LN TUNE. The mysterious quality in the songs of Stephen Collins Foster that have made them endure when better music has been forgotten is recalled by discussion of Kentucky's claim upon this bard. It is true that he wrote "My Old Kentucky Home." which, with "Suwannee River," con stitutes his best claim to fame, but it is now believed that he never saw Kentucky, although one of his bio graphers thinks that he may have spent a few days there on his wed ding trip. Yet Kentucky does well in honoring him. He has not had his equal in his particular field, and no other composer of folk songs, in which the spirit of a period has been embodied, has a better claim to fame. Foster wrote 17 0 songs, of which four survive. In addition to the two mentioned, "Massa's in the Cold, Cold Ground" and "Old Black Joe" are still remembered and occasion ally sung. The wonder about him, as one of his sympathetic biograph ers has conceded, is that anyone could write so poorly as he did and yet touch the popular chord so un erringly. He had practically no con structive capacity; his songs were all on the same level; he neither varied nor developed his themes. He knew little or nothing of harmony, and yet the very limitation of his powers De came virtues. "My Old Kentucky Home" and "Suwannee River" were marvels of simplicity and directness of utterance which no amount of eru dition and sophistication could have surpassed in potency. The success of Foster is an illustration of the futil ity of hoping to formulate a rule for catching and holding the popular fancy. Trained musicians have failed no less completely than the army of ambitious songwriters who, taking their cue from Foster's work, have thought that want of knowl edge was helpful to genius. But somehow they did not possess the divine fire and they, too, failed. The inability of this American bard, who was born in Pittsburg, diad in New York and wrote south ern songs all his life, although he never in all probability saw the south, to adjust himself to his en vironment was not peculiar to him; it seems to have been a common fail ing of composers of the past, al though it is less true of those of to day. His family regarded musical talent as a weakness and discouraged it. He had an unnappy aomestic life, was intemperate and improvi dent, did not support his family and died in poverty. Most of his songs were written in a room in a cheap lodging house or in a saloon in the lower east side in New York. For most of them he received sums of less than $25. His greatest suc cess netted him about $1500, only a fraction of the sum yielded by some of the popular music of more recent days, but a million copies of it were sold and it is still selling. For many of the years of his short life he lived on the bounty of admirers, who gave him clothing, which he pawned for drink. This was the bard to whom Thack eray alluded when he said that a vagabond with a corked face and a banjo had moistened his spectacles more than thousands of tragedy queens dying on the stage to ap propriate blank verse would have been able to do. The celebrity of Stephen Collins Foster, for a reason which still defies critical analysis, must be conceded in any estimate of American popular songs. We advise the paragraphers to make the most of the proposal to arm the policewomen wTiile the sub ject is fruitful. By the time women have been on the police force as long as men have been chances are they will be able to shoot as straight. The summer training camp season furnishes just the right leavening of militarism to remind us that the smaller our standing army is the greater the desirability that the private citizen should keep himself fit. The Listening Post. By DeWItt Harry. I'HIMARY SV5TKM I l .VDER FIRE Mothers' Day. Br Graet i Halt. Several Newspapers Discuss rlsd- vantastes and Sunnest Remedies. Woodburn Independent. The direct nrimarv system would pOOKS! What comrades they are. , be thrown into th(. di,card with as , Som y their blossom. In J How comforting they have been mtle delay as possible If it were not An n'eel. .mils oa" lip .till to most of us: How they have served ; that the people fear a reaction to the warm and glad. to while away the time: What long : boss-ridden days of old. If we can Th whits insignia ail hsarta nndsr- a elass- irteresting journeys have we taken! return to a convention method with-1 by their aid, all the while comfortably out the pernicious presence of a polit ensconced in our own firesides: Books ical dictator, there would be no hes- have made all of us better. Books have made it possible for us to per fect ourselves in our chosen work. itation on the part of a great vol ume of ired and disgusted voters, and numerous candidates, too, In di- Books have ever been friends, and recting that such be done teachers. If we but know where to It would be folly and inconsistent look, or search long enough, books to hold both party convention and will solve nearly any difficulty. I direct primary. One only should be Libraries have a fascination for I seriously considered, and in order to most nersons who regard books in the 'save taxpayers and ward off a grow- manity, as the author regards it since to know one thing with final : f.-equently thrown into the legisla thoroughness is an attribute of the ture. It had two state capitals until brute, -.vhile to know eve.-ythaig is 1900, the legislature meeting in the mark of a god, the obvious infer- ! Newport in April to canvass the vote ence being that a smattering which i and adjourning to meet in Provi is neither the one nor the other is dence in January for the transaction a human occupancy of neutral of business. ground. "No human specialist." the A state that was satisfied for more writer observes, "has ever achieved than half a century with a colonial the singleness of purpose of a bee or charter granted by a British king a beaver." Either a bee or a beaver and that steadfastly set Its face would be dull company in a crowd. It is on the score of its availability in polite conversation that Mr. Gay makes his strongest point for general information. "When the facts ex- against every attempted change might have been expected to be out of tune with so Important an inno vation as the eighteenth amendment. Whether it ever shall ratify that .anged are all useless, one is as ; amendment is not a matter of conse- good as another, there is no silly j quence, but its action in passing tha find was suppressed for patriotic j terms wedge to official regulation of talk of shop, and talk circulates j legislative act in harmony with the Rhode Island having decided to enforce the Volstead law, it may De necessary for Its inhabitants to take a short walk occasionally in order to get outside of the state for a drink. Peggy Joyce is not to be exploited in the motion pictures. Just why she needs an addition to her emolu ments from the rich husband indus try is not altogether clear. The reputed discovery by a Har vard professor that alcohol is a cure for botulism ought not, however, to make spoiled provisions any more popular than heretofore. The candidates have less than a week left in which to persuade the voters that they will not only reduce taxes but leave a surplus for distri bution among the people. Trade follows the flag always provided, of course, that there are ships and crews to follow the flag and that vessels are able to get car goes aboard. A graduate shoplifter who can "lift" 200 dresses before detection is a woman with a future. Many- women dread their past; this one is different. What has become of the Nick Carter and Diamond Dick stories and that other delightful contraband literature of our youth? proper light, who have some realiza tion of their importance. It is inter esting just to browse among; the shelves and look at the serrated rows of these friends, all ready to instruct or amuse. And books, we all have our favorites, have hidden stories for those who will search them out. Take the Immortal Samuel Pick wick! Certain passages will stand out in this book with startling clar ity to those who have read it. We all have our favorite chapters. But what portion is the most liked of this book? Go Into the library and take any book and lay it, back down, as if to open the pages. Let it do as it will, it will open at some place of itself The chances are that the page thus exposed will be that most frequently referred to, the page that nearly opens from habit. Now with this test it would seem that the most popular bit of the life history of the Hon. Samuel Pickwick Esq., M. P. C P. P. P. C. was the episode of the trial of Bardell vs. Pickwick, where the famous romance of Goswell street was aired for the public benefit. Make the test with other book., almost any of them will yield results, some with greater alacrity than oth ers. In the "Four Horsemen" the chapter wherein the story of the bat tle at Desnoyers' chateau is described, when the Germans are driven from the grove by the French onslaught, seems to be preferred and reread. "Treasure Island's" best liked mo ment is the tense incident of the battle for the blockhouse, when Long John Silver led his mutineers to the attack. In one of Frank R. Stock ton's books a simple little story about the unsuccessful effort of a man to match a piece of red calico takes the palm, by this system of judging. Some books will be found to test out better than others, but few will fail. It is a most excellent rule. If you want to know what sort of a book you have just try it out. The chances are excellent that you'll find the crisis of the story with little effort. Rather a husky young fellow was having dinner with his best girl in a confectionery store. The young wom an might have put in the day at a movie or browsing about the library, but the male portion of the sketch evidently did some fairly hard physi cal work, might have been a solici tor or one who has a strenuous day. The menu card held an assortment of lunches, dainty and delicate. He ordered the most promising; it was boiled salmon and coffee. The girl got a salad. He completed his meal, as served, In about three mouthfula and ordered another of the same. He was through with the second install ment before the girl had eaten the last bit of her lettuce and looked the card over and sent out for a bowl of chili con came and a sandwich. While the girl was eating an ice he topped this selection off with two cups of coffee, a piece of pie and some French pastry, and as he paid the check was complaining of hunger and predicted that they would have to eat another meal "after the show." ing army of Incompetents seeking of fice, let us get rid of the direct prl ary. This can be accomplished by re adopttng the former caucus and con vention plan, having one general election in November, and permitting the names of other candidates upon the ballot sheet who des're to file as Independent, independent-repub lican. Independent-democrat, prohi bitionist, socialist, progressive or any other title than those named by con ventions held prior to the election. This would be a check upon conven tions and would guard the poople from the machinations of one or more bosses who might otherwise become too powerful. As between the sofa and the au tomobile cushions, the latter are des tined to see the most wear in the next few months. It Is almost a safe wager that those who are talking war in France are not survivors of sieges like that of Verdun. The candidates are "making it hot" for one another, which is a lot more than the weather man seems able to do. The politician who broadcasts his speeches by radiophone also has the advantage of freedom from heckling. Communistic Russia is willing to make a capitalistic deal for oil, pro vided the price is high enough. To judge by the dandelion crop, who would guess that it was winter until only a few days ago? The woods about the city and the trees within are full of house-hunters. Nearly every front yard or hedge has Its pair of searchers, for desirable apartments are in demand by thou sands of bird families. Some of the earliest on the scene have their homes well under way. The feathered citi zens hardly seem able to wait for th trees to get their leaves fully spread. They even begin their nests on the bare branches. Sparrows like humans, but they do not like man-made homes. Not many species of birds will build their nests in bird-houses. Sparrows don't care to occupy homes already built, but they do like to build on sheltered porches or under the eaves, and a mighty nuisance do they prove to be at. times. Most of the real friendly birds like to be within a few hundred feet of human homes, as hawks do not usually venture that close to man kind. But most of them have learned to be wary of cats while residents of the city. In any event It's nesting time and the many trees of the city are filled with chattering, courting bird couples, for those who have not yet chosen their mates are becoming desperate and courtships are rapid. There are a number of birds who have not ar rived in their summer home, but the majority of those who wed and raise their families in Portland are on the ground and mighty busy. "Curiosity Killed the Cat" in Cot tage Grove, according to the Senti nel. Let's allow the editor to tell his own story: A feline on the L,. .',. Green place be came intensely interested in the opera tions of men who were placing dynamite for the blasting of stumps. Fifty blasts were set off almost simultaneously, much to the consternation of pusty, who broke all speed records in getting within the protecting walls of the barn, where a few minutes later she was found dead. Tho screams emitted by the cat as she raced away from the scene of the explosions In dicated that she was mad with fright. It Is thought she was scared to death rather than injured by the concussion. A local department store is show ing a choice selection of novel wom en's hose, under the caption, "Why Roll Your Own?" The hose are fitted with a neatly finished top with an elastic center, having all the appear ance, so an expert assured the writer, of the cleverest hand-work. An able assistant writes that a rumor has been started to the effect that Luther Burbank has succeeded in crossing' the oyster plant with the milk weed, which leads Btlbates to i remark that the harvest likely will be oyster .tews. System Losine Popularity. Ontario Argus. Gradually more 1. apparently i realization in Oregon that the pri mary system is not the panacea that its champions thought it would be and that Is is a useless expense to the state. The notable thing about the change of sentiment is that It ia coming, not from the politicians, but from many people who have hitherto taken but slight interest In politics, but who are realizing that the pres ent rise in the cost of government has come largely because of the de sire of the self-nominated, primary selected officeholder to pander to every ism and clique which wanted to. dip into the, public treasury. Per haps it is right to say that It is not the fault of the primary idea or basic principle that has caused the trouble of which the Eugene Guard and the SalerrTJournal complain, but the abuse of the principle a. It 1. applied in practice; but this abuse is so easily accomplished that It nulifies the good which the primary was do signed to obtain. That it appear, is the contention of the val ey papers which once were the arder.t support ers of the primary idea. Albany Democrat. The "Oregon system" has some good features, especially in the op portunity it offer, every ambitious citizen to run for office. An example may be had in the case of a candi date for the legislature In Marion county who ha. turned his family over to the Associated Charities of Salem for support while he devote, his time to the more important work of campaigning. Making Oregon n Soviet. Albany Herald. Mr. U'Ren bob. up again with hi. plan to "sovietize" the state. He will ask the people of Oregon to abolish the party method of electing legis lators and to substitute therefor a system that shall elect them accord ing to their occupation in life. Each part and parcel of the body politic 1. to be a political group all by Itself. We will have the farmer group, the farm-hand group, the merchant group. the lawyer group, the editors' group. the printers' group and the chamber maid group, and so on all down the list. Really, we don't understand Just how this is going to work out. In Russia there was a party of the sol diers and sailor., another party of the tradesmen, etc. .and there the experience was that legislation do scended to the point where there was a , continual warfare between the various groups for law that would work to the advantage of each one It was the bloc system raised to the nth degree. Mr. U'Ren would also abolish the state senate and do away with the governor, electing in place of the two houses one lower house, which will have the power to pass laws and elect a governor to its own liking. Of course, under such a sys tem the governor would not bo the equal of the legislature, but its tool. Of all the hair-brained, foolish, dan gerous schemes, this one is the pre mier. It will make self-interest rather than reason the deciding fac tor in legislation. And the pity of it will be that there will be plenty of boobs who will favor it. stand. And render homage silently and sad; Beside new mound, aome head. e- bending low, While dumb lip. frame strange prayers they used to know. In countlasa home, a .plrlt has paased through The open door, within a crumbling hell. Upon a grassy slope beneath the blue A tired one at last I. resting well; But she has taken with her to that sleep The .oul of that earth-home .he used to keep Dear folded hand untroubled, quel breast. White drooping lid. on dim and weary eyes We would not roue you from your peaceful rest. Nor startle you to being, with our cries i But when today we walk life', empty hall., A gray, enfolding .hadow o'er u fall. We make no moan henlde your empty chair, We touch each day the thing, you loved of old. Glad In our heart, you have no pala to bear. That all your .ong. have s.lver notes, and gold; White bloom, shall we wear throughout the year., And pin them on, each time, through falling teara BLOSSOMS. A flood of downy whiteness .hook the breeze And scattered smeh an I nee nee through the tree., That nature lo.t its breath aad .topped to sip. With silent eagerness and moistened lip. The sweet opiate of a summer- blos soms. What evil could disturb their ehaat composure? Perchance a traveling butterfly dis closure. Made with .ugge.tlve caressing of wing. Since he had been denied th right to lng. Lest, added to hi. gay and gaudy llghtnese, Hi. silver .ong might rob th flower, of brightness. Or was it that a Jealou. el ud. low lying, Thought to bedim their lu.tsr, and e sighing. The hypocrlt let fall a tear or two. A. If to .how their prld and her virtue, That all this frightened fluttering and ewaylng Was made in hope of deadly storm allaying? So they their virgin .weetne. wan ton toed. The while each new appearing cau.e was lost; When suddenly I saw one tortured petal Drop twisting to the earth and lightly settle Discordant whirring, through the stillness stirred And flashing red, there .ipped a hum ming bird. And her and there with many an amorous nipping. With fickle heart, bright coat, and gallant dipping. He proudly shattered every perfect flower, And, tiring, left them for a fresher bower. So. flowers, like dovrs, were scattered underfoot. And faintly sought In vain to take new root. KATHIv YN EAST HA XI No Wild Changes Wanted. La Grande Observer. If the newspapers, and there are very few of them left, which are throwing fits over any criticism of the present direct primary law which has brought about a social democ racy in Oregon and caused public expense to not only jump to high peaks, but also has depreciated the quality of men for office, would only be calm for a second and cease having hysteria they might understand that there is no disposition to return to grafting politicians who controlled conventions, but there is a de.ire to take the best out of the old conven tion system and combine it with the best the direct primary has to offer. This means the holding of a conven tion, according to the Observer's view point, for the purpose of writing a party platform and to make recom mendations tc the people of candi dates. Tt would help clarify the hazy atmosphere, such as we now have politically, but it would not prevent anyone running for office who saw fi. There are no wild change, wanted' that we can see, but there i. a desire to better canditlon. and cut down public expense. Why should anyone refuee to indorse such an improvement? Religion of Governor Olcott. CORVALLIS. Or., May 12. (To the Editor.) Kindly state Governor Ol cott's religion in The Oregonian. MAURICE KLIFTS So far as we know Governor Olcott does not actively affiliate with any denomination. His parents were Methodists; hi. wife is an Epi.co palian. Heard In the nr Future. Life. Mother: Children, here's a quarter. Go down to the saloon and get your ice cream, cone and soda water. And on your way back stop In the drug tore and bring your father noma SI-RING TRAIL'. Over the hill, and from far away Springtime is calling, "Come forth and play!" Cares are as nothing, the morn : the year , -Gil. ten. with gladness, for beauty Is here; E'en in these arid, gray, sage-covered spaces Spring sparkles forth from a number of place.. Over the hill by the great rock, piled high Dim runs a wagon road toward the far sky; Strange lovely blossoms grow by the way. Medley of colors 'neath sagebrush so gray. Hidden and sheltered in strong, gen tle clasp Ne'er they escape from it. motherly grasp; Jackrabblts scamper aero., tne dim road, Perchance It goes past a deserted abode. Oh, great Is the mystery, great I. the thrill Of the old wagon road that runs over the hill! There', the prosaic path that was worn by the cows. Which, in springtime, great scope for discovery allows. Through the grea.ewood flat, on down by the river We could explore it forever and ever! Cries -cross paths made by the rabbit and other. Of his assortment of strange wild folk brother. Beckon u. on with promising toll. Pa.t ant-hill, high and deep badger holes; What joy it Is, after old winter' chill. To wander again on the trails of the hill! MARGARET HUMPHREY, Vale. Or. TO YOU. An armful of dewey red. red roses, Mental rosea, that a quits true Their lovely petal, ne'er shall fade. From out my heart to you. Theae dewey red, reo ro.e. With their leave, of magic greens; Bloomed In my heart's garden fair. In seasons of my golden dream. Tese dewey red, red roses Grew In human warmtn ana oil. And on each lovely petal lip I've softly prea.ed a awet. sweet kl.s. 5o, accept them, please, dear friend. Whoever you in life', garden be. An armful of dewey red, red ro.e. Straight from my heart to the. MARCELLE REBKR TABLES Tl'RN'KII. I kept a hazel switch above the door When he wa. but a little lad. And u.ed It lightly or referred to It Sometime when he wa. bad. But all too loon h grew quite tall. Th us.le.. .witch wa. thrown away; Forgotten incident of boyhood' trial Until in Jet the other day He put a switch above the door to' me, (My laughing boy. so big. an kind And .aid, "See mother, I'm the big- ge.t now. Table are turncu, you'll have to mind." JANET IE ltAKTl.V