The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972, May 29, 1922, Page 4, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    4
THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, OREGON.
MONDAY, 1MAY 29 1922.
I AW IVDFPESfDEJfT SEWSPAPKR
C'g. JACKSON. .......... FabHefaer
I Be calm, be coef idear, be ebearfal end do ntt
mam as yow wonM naa them lo nnto yog, j
1 Usid evary Uar and 8utiy outruns at
' ; She Journal buUdiac Broadway , at - XanaUl
etret, I'onjafMl, Unrm.
'tittered "at Uw poatafftce at Fortlaud. Oreoo.
lor tnnwimx through the null as aecc4
tiaaa mtitr. - - i
YtflrHONKj-AUia 717.
Ail iputaui
raaebed by thie mnnber.
TIOSAL ' ADVLI1T18I.W- JREPKKSEV1A
Urtiunin A. Meatnor Co.. Braaewtck
bin Id inc. 229 1'ifth. anu, Kwt York; 10
.fii ,-1.1.- ,. i. .
Vacific xasx kekesevtativk u. c
MoiKnoa Co.. lac, Lubiui boUdlac Baa
1 fraocaeo; Title laamaaee boildiae. Lea Aar
eeie: HcnntMa Panama, eeetue.
XllB VSEUON JOURNAL, raaartae the nebt to
-refcvf artiasn copy which te deesaa obiae
i f uma&le. It alao will not print any copy -that
a any way timi' readies aaatte a that
cannot readily be mntimed aa a d .grtlwn.
srii&CUirT'ON RATES
By Carrie City and Conntry
DAILT AND SUXDAY ,
week...... .11 One month .69
. DAILT " ' I BlKDAX
On
!'
-I .101
One track.
, .0
Ona Benth
.43
B1
14A1UALL KATES PAYABLE TJ ADVANCE
- DAILY AND SC. N DAY
On j year.
.S8.00
Three aeontba. .92.29
Ob month. . . . , .7f
BUN DAT
om
One year fX.OO
Six aaontha..... L.T9
Tore aaootb. . . 1.O0
WKKKLY AfTD :. '.
fcu
aoatha. .... 4.25
DAILY
I Without Sunday)
On4 year...., ..,$8.00
. Sixi Booth. ... . S.SS
"Ihafa Bontba. , , 1.75
Onrf amnth. . . .
WEKKLX
' rP.er WedbevlaTl
SUNDAY
Sun BMOtht. . . .SO
These rate apply inly in' the Weat.
Sate to Eaatars, point fnraiabed on apphra.
tlnn. Make remittance by Money order. Kxprae
Order or Draft. IT your poatoffiee a) not
'Boy-order office. 1- or 2 -cent etamps will ba
'accepted. Make all ramittaacea parable to Te
.Jcnmal Pttblishinc Company, Port U ml, Orecoe.
' do the rery beat 1 know how the Tar
wat I can; aad I jaeea to keep dots ao
wrUl the aad. - If too end 'bnaga at eat:
ait rifbt, what ia aaid agaiaat aae won't
moaat to anythta . U the and brlnta ma
oat wrenc. too tboaafjad aacsU awaariac tbatt
I waa right would make ae dilfareaoa ....
Abraiiam Luicda.
a mistake:
TXfIS reported that six Democratic
Senators are to take up the cudgel
for Mr. Reed tn bis tight to return
to the sertatel ? Jt" . would be a Tnla
, -take.- -
-Mr- Heed his "rendered some abje
puhllc service. &ut his views on
war? and peace atone-are sufficient
reaion.tor hie retirement froci the
senate of the United . State. jt.
: .The present ia crista' In world
t 4lrs, Either (hre Is to be another
vei withUta fat years or there Is
. to te peaca. That -war will come if
nothing- has been learned from the
last war. If it was fought In tvaln.
jJJic reJ has never been permanent
N pease, and never will be, bo loag as
yte nations refuse to; cooperate . to
' 'end war. It will never Jbe eUjalnated
' by he action' of Individual ' powers.
It rpust be by arreement and coop
eraUon,t 'J. ... r4. , ; i ; -"
there is to .be peaca -the costly
waif and navy establishments of
every country, can, be, reduced. Much
of the wealth, that now goes to war
and preparation . for war can. be
saved. The lives of many soldiers
can! be given over to constructive
endeavor Instead of to "the grave.
' Ifj the people of -this country want
- peace. - they will have . to vote for
peadeu They will have to insure ef
fortf toward peace by the men' they
sen 4 .to congress and placet' in. the
executive chair, r That Is their only
reute to peace. .-? ; . - , '
Mr. Heed has been anything but
a peace senator. 'He will have no co
operation with other powers. He will
hav no understandings, no dealings.
He jwants a tremendous navyi . He
wards : a big . arm'y-Tlls record -t in
the j senate baa been ; a - record "of
prenaration for war by this country
rathipr .than .a record in behalf of
peaje. " - - , ' ".'-"
Ifj Missouri -wants more war send
Mr. Reed. If she wants peace send
another man, whether he be a Demo
' crat! or a Republican. , - V
XNTBRWOVjBK POWER
: nnitK president of the Portland
Railway, Light & Power oom
pan ; was elected ' Ticsr president' of
'the bTaUonat Electrio Ught asaocla
(tion,jthe convention of which: In-Atlantic
City ;-, few days ago heard
Herbert Hoover " say. through ' the
medium of the telephonio amplifier:
time- is ripe for a great national
, i program- ot super-power . development.
1 Crowing interconnection of existing
: power systems and their reinforcement
' with .larger centralized production units
wiU rve further to assure stability of
wJg roducUve Beduatrlea. - To electrify
America is not only a great economic
purpose, bat a grat haman parpoee and
one that nxry well enlist the whole of
your j membership. , ; -
Once it was possible ' to project
electric power only a few - miles.
Kowj high tension' current can be
linked to factories 36 0 miles from the
poln of generation. li has become
correspondingly less important to lo
cate ; electric powered industries at
the point of power production. Prox
imity of workers, consuming popula
tion and transportation may be the
locating factors, as they, should be.
Rut ' Herbert IIoo?er predicted a
EtiU more advanced step. He fore
sees the time when the electric power
- : r. jt bt the country will be linked
tl.e lines of the nation's railroads
. re liiked. lie visions s great 3?eser-v.-5r
of power, equalised - by Inflow
"rem many directions and available
T ever power, liffht and beat are
:t i Hoover drram'.nff. Super
. f ' ' ;
power-lines exist fn the East. A
super-power line extends up the Pa
cific . coast - as far , as Rogue river
in Oregon. The . time will come
when - power lines will be as inter
woven as rail . lines and it " will .be
aa easy to concentrate power in any
part . of the; country . where it is
needed as it is -to concentrate rail'
road ' cars where ' the offerings of
freight are great..' - - . J1,- " ; .v .
NO
eVTOU would . deny the non-union
-" men representation on th
committee." says R. Littler, reply-i
ing on this page to a" Journal edi
torial headed "Settle the Strike."
- No. The Journal would do exactly
what the state 'conciliation board,
after hearing the evidence on both
sides, advised. ' " " 'I'
i The proposal by the board was a
committee of four, called a neutral
bureau, for the hiring of cargo gangs,
two employerav"and two union long
shoremen. The state board thought
that would give non-union, men rep
resentation and The Journal thinks
so too. .. Wouldn't the two. unionized
employers represent the j non-union
men in the right to work? Wouldn't
the two longshoremen represent the
non-union men on issues .of 'wages
and working conditions 7 i- '
. Any fear that nob-union .men would
not be fully represented by the two
employers is dispelled by the reading
of any recent public statement by the
Employers union. All of these state
ments voice the sentiment that the
"non-union man shall have the right
to work and that "every man who
wants to, - shall be . protected in h is
right to work." For the time the
most gallant champion that non
union workers ever had in i their, right
to" work is : the., Waterfront , Em
ployers' union. 1 - -
'The whole effort by the unionised
employers' strike committee has been
to divert attention, from the main is
sue to extraneous Issues. I The. real
issue is the strike committee's drive
to destroy the longshoremen's union
in order to strengthen their own al
ready,; powerful employers union.
The main issue is' the Insistence of
the employers committee that there
be a closed shop for employers .and
an open shop for longshoremen.
Theirs is an astounding doctrine.'
Bound : together - themselves by a
hard-boiled and aggressive unionized
organisation, they are -before the
great bar of public opinion refusing
arbitration, refusing the conciliation,
board's proposals for a neutral hall,
refusing everything proposed for set
tlement of the strike, all' because' of
their announced determination to
put the unionized longshoremen out
of business. . ' -
Their solicitude for non-union men
is sham and humbug.
. If once the longshoremen's organ
ization is broken down, the last de
fense of workers, union or non-union,
on the Portland waterfront will be
gone. With that defense! gone, the
present very .vocal Interest.;, of the
employers strike committee in the
welfare of non-union workers .will,
vanish like the mists of the morn
ing, and everybody knows It
The whole purpose Of this uncom
promising committee in seeking to
destroy the longshoremen's organ
ization Is to get waterfront workers,
union and non-unicjn alike.-at - their
mercy. . -v?" '.j
.That is why all this talk about the
welfare , ot the non-union , man is a
false Issue, raised to befuddle the
public It is a course with which the
reasonable and' many high-minded
employers In this town, j including
many in the Waterfront Employers
union, are probably dissatisfied,
.WORDS OF THE FALLEN ,
r V- , J . i r -.
Kr ONE: of the burial plots that
.Will be dedicated incident to Port
land's . observance of - Memorial day
tomorrow there have been laid the
bodies 'of 73 soldiers brought back
from France, a . , '..'
; - -Not far- from -. them- are sleeping
thev dead of . the Civil .war " and of
the Spanish-American- war.. ' Those
who wore the blue, and the gray,
those who' wore', the vollve ', drab; .and
khaki are 'gathered "back into the
enfolding arms of a common Toother.
When the first Memorial, day was
observed On May "SO, 1868, -John" A.
Logan, then ' commander in chief .of
the Grand. Army of the Republic,
Issued general instructions which
readt' - : ? - '1 r " rf "-S
If ether eyes grow . dull . aad other
hands slack and other hearts ; cold ia
the solemn trust, ours shall keep it well
as.lonr as the light aad warmth ef life
remain to us - :. j- - v,; "
Let us - then at the . time : appointed
gather around their sacred Temains and
garland the passionless mounds above
them with the choicest flowers of spring
tune. Let us raise above them the dear
old flag they saved from dishonor.-Let
us In the solemn presence renew our
pledges to aid and assist those whom
they have left among us a sacred charge
upon the 4 Nation's gratitude - the
soldier's and sailor's widow aad orphan.
.The words were written without
foreknowledge or ' thought -' of the
later wars that would. lay their hon
ored dead beside the last, remains
of the heroes of civil strife. They
were written, doubtless, without ex
pectation of that softening and weld
ing, of hearts that haf e come with
time through common - emergency
and have rejoined North and South.
But Commander - Logan's c thought
applies with broadened meaning and
force.. . ? :
.Honor,, tears and flowers must be
carried to the mounds" where sleep
the dead of. America's - wars. But
care, dictated by gratitude and love,
and. n.n handicapped by greed or nar
row vision, must follow those whom
war has left helpless. . Those who
stand, but feebly would be the first
objects, of the solicitude of those
who have fallen.' . - ..." - v.:
A New Jersey boy fell", head first
Into a post bole and died from suffo
cation. Ar. other New Jersey bey-ran
in between the walls of a garage and
the adjoining building while playing
with .other, children, and became
wedged in so" tightly that firemen
had to cut a hole In the garage wall
to release- him. - A ' 1 J-year-old Ore
gon hero jumped into a pool to save
a 6-year-old playmate 'from drown3
Ing and was himself drowned. Boy
life is so hedged about with mishaps
that the wonder is that so many of
them become men. 2
' FROM A RACE TRACK ;
' : '." ' .' "' .. i 'iifi: S VL;'
PHARLES CASH was . formerly1 a
v. familiar figure at the big race
tracks . of the country; t ? He was
known as one of; the, plungers J of
his time. He made his living: gam
bling on races. t -i
For years fortune smiled on him.
He : made, at times, huge- sums on
horses." Sometimes he"rl.. He was
a good "spender of the money he
won. ; When he lost there was little
left to spend." ' -
There was always excitement over
the presence of Charles Cash at the
races.' Hut presence meant big bets,
big money. He was among the most
prominent at the tracks.
Later, there was less flurry when
he; was about.. 5 His bets were not so
large. He had 'not been bo for
tunate. Still later, .he was lost in
the crowds- his big betting days
over. He was merely a , hanger-on.
A few days- ago he walked . Into
an Eastern barber shop; for-a shave.
He questioned his .barber as to
whether . or -'not he "played the
ponies. f The barber answered . that
sometimes he did. j .: 1 1
As Cash left the shop he turned
to the barber and offered this ad
vice: ."Take my tip and leave the
horses alone. I lost my" wife, : my
home, and ..a, fortune trying to beat
them."" " v
A,, few minutesj, later women
shrieked as a body hurled itself be
neath a subway . train across the
street. '; It was carried out and identi
fied by a barber as that of Charles
Cash.
He lived by chance, and he lost
his wife, his home, his fortune, and
his life. , f
.THE HULLABALOO
TFTHT. all, this hullabaloo about the
' " recall? .
- The recall is denounced as a sys
tem. The recall of (he public service
commissioners is cited as proof that
the state is going to smash. Errors
in some counties in which a commissioner-
.was recalled and . then
given - a plurality are, made merry
over and pointed to as a fault of the
retail system. . I . - ' '
- Nothing -serious has 1 happened.
The moonbeams still shine on Ore
gon at. bight when 'the" summer
clouds permit, and the earth still re
volves on its axis. ... '
It is recited that two inexperi
enced men are elected to the com
mission. . That has been done before
in Oregon". . Every official ever elect
ed In America . was' originally inex
perienced. Every commissioner : ever
elected in Oregon was Originally In
experienced and. had to learn, : There
is still .an experienced member on
the commission. The commissioners
elect will ...be sobered l and steadied
when .they --face their responsibili
ties, as are all newly-elects.
' . It was The Journal's view that, in
stead cf the recall, the courts should
have '-been applied to' in the tele
phone controversy. But the people
demanded, the recall. And they, re
called the commissioner's-by an over
whelming vote. And why shouldn't
they ? Whose right is it to j order
them not to? .Isn't this country still
a democracy? ; v -l
. It is natural for the public utilities
to raise a fuss over this first state
wide ' use of the recalL An eight
cent fare, high gas rates, huge tele
phone rates, with everybody else de
flated, were a nice thing for them.
Life was a long, sweet dream of divi
denda .i-s.'j.vjif r H iK.kV i
.,Why shouldn't - the utilities howl
against the recall?:: Why shouldn't
they - paint the situation . as calami
tous and the: recall as a monstros
ity 7 . Why not seize upon the present
disturbed atmosphere in ' everything
to slip a knife under the fifth rib of
the 'recall and also of the direct
primary?' v''- k - " ' V '
That -is exactly what it Ja ! pro
grammed to do in Oregon. Ton will
see what you will see.
IMPROVEMENT
TRONT street, leading to the west
A : r side - municipal , terminals, i pos
sessed holes so : neep ' that . trucks
were said to settle down nearly to
their axles! f
- East -. Eighty-second r street. be
tween Division street and the Colum
bia river highway, became hazardous
to springs, axles . and tires because
of its acutely raveled macadam-. -
A spot in the river highway near
Milwaukie became a virtual obstruc
tion to traffic . H
: The - Journal called attention' Jon
separate occasions to the costly con
dition of the thoroughfares ' men
tioned. Improvement has tolTowed
swiftly and effectively. The public
and : this newspaper appreciate such
ready , response. - -
In similar fashion attention - was
called by The Journal to the or
phaned appearance of the - roses
planted along the; parkings of Sandy
boulevard as part of "The Roseway
plan of clvlo cluba .The txraage
ment since made by an Ad club
committee for twice " a month cul
tivation of the roses, with the first
results of cultivation as the evidence
of sincerity., is similarly appreci
ated, ' 1 ' . , t . .'..
"Most mediocre bunch ot senators
and congressmen in congress for a
generation. says th.e Wall Street
Journal. Never mind. The "buIrar
of the machine" is ia rrcrre.-j end
November is cociir.s .... (
U pinchots ;
; r I VICTORY
It Indicates Revival of Pregressivism,
in the Opinion Generally of Amer
ica's Editors, Though There Are
Standpatters la the Pebate
t. Many a Warning GreeU the
s Old Guard's Kara "
T1 "- Daily Editorial Digest" "
- " (CanaVhdated Preaa AaweUtioa)
The result of the recent primary elec
tions in Pennsylvania has been of deep
interest tO the country at large. .The
newspaper, comment generally. -Is gov
erned; by the political views of the
writers,. but there-is a general agree
ment that the result shows that the so-
caued progressive spirit once again is
very much alivo in . the United State
Republican papers insist for the most
part that , there was no rebuke to the
national administration in the downfall
of the "old guard machine, but inde
pendent ! and Democratic editors argue
otherwise.
r v
.When all is said, .however,! the Boston
Post (Ind. Dm itaxliiM. . :
fectly apparent that the Plnchot victory
xjuuny m une. wiui me Beverldge
Victory 'in Indiana only a few weeks
8 CO. in tha.t It la aiifi.., ,
discontent with the career of the present
""'b'w ana i nat a. new and more
progressive spirit is surety taking pos
session Of thai Renrthl tr-an n-. n n,.-
. ... .
statea . : It will . not need many more
overturns of this , sort to - convince the
country and congress that being 'organi
sation, and In ia no safeguard against
defeat for nomination. The fact that
uw , strongest organization candidates
lost : their own districts was -most Sig
nificant, the Philadelphia Public Ledger
(lnd Rep.) . believes, , indicaUng that
"the Plnchot. nomination sounds a new
and brighter era in Pennsylvania and in
national Republicanism. It is due large
ly to- the women that the control of the
party organization has ' been wrested
from, the hands that have fouled It."
While there was "a great deal of -the
personal element and triumph In the
Pinchot victory, the Washington Star
(Ind.) suggests that the primary result
waa not an anti-Republican perform
anace.T and that while "a Plnchot ma
chine, may .not rise on, the ruins of the
will ihave to be . asserted in some vigorv
oua aim pricuci way. . ,- ;
Because the "stay - at" home .vote In
Philadelphia was Urge. the Philadel
phia! 1: Inquirer (Rep.) r declares that
"while the bosses have lost out In their
main; right they were yet able to prove
that they still controlled a majority of
the Republicans of the city." This fact,
it asserts, is discouraging to all earnest
friends of" good government The
Plnchot victory ; also shows, that rthe
rank: and iw.of the Republican party
is . not pleased with the Conduct of af
fairs, the New. York Evening Post (Ind)
Is convinced, sunrestinev that "from, the
triumph, of 'Beverldge and Pinchot the
leaders may. learn the wisdom .o looking
forward -rather than backward.'' In ad
dition the Pennsylvania result, theKnox
villei; Sentinel - (Ind. Dem.) points t out.
"will shake the G. O. P. structure in the
nation from -turret to foundation stone,
and set up such a rattling of .the dry
bones, of the. party as never before .was
known in an off-year campaign. And
the - New .Tork Evening World- (Dem.)
contends that "if it is possible to break
the machine in Indiana and In -Pennsylvania,;
it: is possible to do so any
Where." Which indicates ' to the. Balti
more Sun (Ind. Dem.) that "there must
be something strange and far reaching'
going on when Pennsylvania 'grows
puritanical and turns her back on the
orthodox .church."
' The fact that there was no opposition
to the Harding administration indicated
in arty way by Pinchot and his follow
ers' ta the - pre-primary campaign . con
vlaeed the Springfield Republican (Ind.)
that "what focused this discontent in
Pennsylvania was the rare opportunity
to smash. the -old machine and begin a
new - era In 'Pennsylvania, politics. -, Mr.
Plnchot. aar governor of -Pennsylvania;
assuming that such will be his destiny,
will sharply challenge the attention of
the country .and easily be one of the
most salient public figures of the day."
The result also shewed that "the day
of hand-picked candidates is past, the
Pittsburg 1 Leader (Prog. Rep.) points
out, adding that "the result is purifica
tion and revivification of the Republican
Party. The rebuke administered means
that there will be little or no contest at
the general election." The nomination
of Pinchot, "is a -matter of great grati
fication to the friends of good govern
ment everywhere, the Savannah Press
(Dera.) believes, r "This is without re
gard 7 to political alignment G if ford
Plnchot : represents the best element of
his party and of his people. This is the
next thing to a Democratic -victory. The
whole ; nation -bas occasion to rejoice in
his triumph.
Wbde6 many lessons can be drawn"
from .the result, - the Cincinnati Times
StartRep.) : characterises as "far
fetched and absurd" suggestions that It
in any way is a rebuke to the adminis
tration and a crushing blow to-regular
Republicanism, bat the -Syracuse Herald
(Ind. ) is convinced that the voters of
Pennsylvania -supported plnchot as "an
other warning to the men in control at
Washington that they " 'must1 apply the
brakes' ouiekly' .-and resolutely If they
would avert party disaster next fan."
There also 1 Is significance. the Adrian
(Mich.)-Daily-Telegram (Ind.) suggests,
in the fact that Senator Pepper has
been oufepoken in opposition to the sol
diers' 'bonus, and - his opponents taking
advantage of that fact, made a vigorous
appeal to the soldier vota It is plain
that the bonus issue as a political issue
has been overestimated.' -
l.-'i-fif-j m e a - ".-'.''.
) Taking sharp exception , to the general
apparent belief that the nomination of
Pinchot means : election, the Buffalo
Times (Dem.) recalls that the "situation
as it stands today brings graphically to
mind the fact that within the memory
of millions now living, and by no means
old men at ' that. 1 Pennsylvania went
Dernocratia. electing Robert E. Pattison
for governor. The Democratic - oppor
tunity now la - unquestionable, and re
markably like the Democratic opportun
ity then. . 1 . , ' - . .
. 1 i - i
The silent vote must be taken into con
sideration by the politicians this year, the
Tj rising State Journal (Ind.) feels cer
tain, pointing out that "people are doing
a whole lot 1 of quiet, conservative, pro
gressive thinking, and voting their eon- :
elusions. It is a mighty wholesome situa
tion and we ' believe, th tendency is
bound to Show acceleration as this com
monly called off-year election goes on."
Characterizing the result as "almost a
miracle In politics,' the Nashville Ban
ner (Ind.) ia . convinced that Plnchot
"now is the foremost maa politically in
his state." while the Lincoln Stat Jour
nal (Ind. Rep.) declares that "the news
from Indiana and Pennsylvania, two of
the most notoriously boss-ridden of all
the statea cannot be ignored on Capitol
hilL It must be heeded at the. White
House. ' It means as much a repudiation
of the conduct of affairs at Washington
as tie election meant In the fail of 1320."
It a'.so is noteworthy, the Colsmbus DU
ratch (Ini) recalls, "that both the Pin
chot asi t:.-. jutjr -naoag-rs are g:vtng
the women of Pennsylvania a large part
of the credit for he result," ..
'"Leadership of the Rooseveltian sort is
the great need of the nation today," tie
Boston : Transcript (Ind.) -. sums - up.
"Where the organization refuses to offer
that kind - of . leadership the rank ana
file of the electorate can, and frequently
do. find it for themselves." .
.Letters From the Pebple
I Commumcattaoa erat ta The Joarsal for pab
Keattca in thw daparuaent abould be wnttea a
t-nly one aide of the paper, ahonid act exceed
800 word ia tonrta. and taaat be avned by tba
vnter. whoa nail addreaa za roll mast aeoem
laay the eojUotloo. J j..-
;ask3 -WHArs the ' cssr. .
Opponent of Daylight Saving Also Asks
. .. Other Questions About It
Portland, May ' 25. To , the Editor of
The Journal I think a comprehensive
objection to .the so-called daylight sav
ing, plan Is. "What's the use?" During
the war the reason . for the system was
to enable the war-gardener to have an
extra hour in the evening for bis garden.
Then be had to go to bed an hour ear
lier because he had .to get up an hour
earlier. A perfectly good hour, of nice,
cool daylight could have been obtained
just as well by the use of an alarm
clock. It isn't $ o'clock in the evening
until the sun bas passed the meridian
six hours. . Our conscious mind : knows
it every time we think of the time, and
our sub-conscious - mind ' knows it ' when
we are not thinking of it Not only all
our lives has ' this - been so, but ever
since , time began, and will be until the
earth ceases its revolutions around the
sun.- ; Let us get up an hour earlier if
we want to, or go to bed an hour ear
lier If we want to, but we can never. kid
ourselves- into thinking it is 7 o'clock in
the morning when we know it is only s.
And . then, in - the fan, do -,we have to
change our calculations all ever again?
- I am told that since New York has
moved the docks ahead or back, which
ever it is the Portland 'banks don't get
the clearing house reports until nearly
tune : to start out to the - golf links.
Never having had much dealings with
banks.. I oon t realise just how import
ant that : ia but -1 euspect there - would
be no : concerted objection on the part
Lof the populace if the 1 banks were to
stay open as late as 4 o'clock In the
afternoon. If such a thing Is found to
be necessary. " . .- j
The one question of train schedules 'in
New. -'Tork has caused more confusion
than. any. ' benefits - from thet "daylight
saving."- : If you wanted : to take a train
from New Tork to Podunk you first bad
to -ascertain .whether the trains that go
there on the particular line you wanted
.to take had agreed to run. on New Tork
time or were still using sun time.' Then
it you were to keep . an appointment in
Podunk at. t o'clock the next afternoon
you had to find out somehow if the town
council recognized Greenwich time or
had local; option. And if, you found it
was goingto be necessary-to change at
Punkin Center at "IX o'clock well, you
might : not get there till ' the day after
tomorrow, and if you did - you would
have Just r as much trouble getting back
again, if Portland', adopts this arbi
trary system ot time computation, what
will the railroads do in regard to -their
leaving and arriving times,: and where
shall we have -to set our: watches back,
or forward, between here and j. Garden
Home? .
If our commission could adopt , this
change ox time as permanent and um
versal I suppose we would - all get' used
to it after a while, but since they can t,
rwhafs the use?" , C.-V. Luther..,
1 . S -
l NON-UNION MEN "NOT
' 1 . REPRESENTED
Portland. May 2.-ToMthe Editor of
The Journal The writer lis a constant
reader of your paper and sees much to
admire, about it as an up-to-the-minute
newspaper. However, I cannot resist the
temptation to. take, issue: with you la
your rcnt, editorials regarding v the
wrafArfAnttfrrllrn ? C ' li - ' .'
i In. your, issue of May 25 you took 'the
stand (if I can read English correctly)
that the non-union men were not. enti
tled to a place on the hall committee
because of the fact that the advantage
would be all with the employers," By
this reasoning, then, you would deny the
non-union r men representation on tie
committee,, although .the 1 percentage is
abtfufiu pefcest non-union una aoout
10 vper cent organized, and these figures
prevail .throughout 'the United' Statea
Why would you deny the non-union men
a right, to have a voice ; in the same
proportion as the union men? Do-you
not thina they are as good citlaena as
the union men. that they, are as anx
ious to make an honest living for
their families? Would you make mem
bership in a union the test of citizenship,
uprightness and loyalty,, when all rec
ords point to the contrary? Possibly,
like l the average . newspaper - of 'today.
your real belief are quite, the contrary.
but you have not the- moral courage to
say so -ta print : ! - 1-r s, -s
i The mayor of this city 1 is taking the
only stand he. can take in this matter,
that : of ' giving police protection to men
who want to work at a wage that they
consider satisfactory. The fact that this
protection - is costing, as r you state, a
thousand dollars a day, is beside the
question and is not even open for argu
ment: 'If the mayor ef this-city failed
to give' - these men protection, be should
be publicly condemned. a
Tou as a newspaper should be giving
the mayor 'your undivided support when
you know he is doing what is right and
just.' regardless of cost. :' Amerjcaff citi
zenship has never been designated 'by
a dollar, sign.. Thousands - of dollars
have been spent by , the government at
times to protect a single American cttt
sen in a foreign land. Can we do less
for working men who are citizens trying
to earn an honest living in this country?
. , - , , - . R- G. Littler.
T. W. C :.Aj X PATING INVESTMENT
From ' the If edford Mail-Trihana
;, "The greatest danger' facing our girl
hood," said Jane Addams a few .years
ago. "Is too much idleness or too little.
The girl with too much v tune on her
hands and the girl with too much work
and no : play, represent - mora I risks of
danger-to any community. - Wholesome
work and wholesome recreation, both In
reasonable ; amounts, . can h do - more to
save our young girls from mischief than
any amount. of moralizlng.7 "::
We dont know a better recommenda
tion fori the Medf ord T. W. C A than
those words of one of America's great
est public women, -i, - t : -
The local organization is one 01 tne
best and one of the liveliest in the stata
There is nothing sahctimonlous or tire
some about it Girls gather at the
T. W. C A. becaoe there Is always
something to do there that Is worth
whlle, something to "hear : worth hear
ing, and above all because they have a
good time. .' . : fJ s
In ;this age of hysteria and unrest, of
frivolity and flappers, there is no greater
need in : any community than an or-
c-anized center where excessive feminine
vitality can be directed Into wholesome
and constructive channels. .air the
moral trouble in the world,, particularly
among the young, ia not due to innate
viciousnesaE but to: misdirected -energy.
The W. C A. utilises this energy
as a moral gain. : Instead of a moral
loea. - It is a splendid work. No avo
Urity deserves more wholehearted pub
lic support 1
AN INDEX ' "
From the Corai!3a Geaeea-Tlmea
"Thpthp.r nr not tne use of automobiles
as brought about an unnecessary waste
of good money, the automobile sales are
generally conceded to be a fair index
of the state of the public finance. All
the reccras sr.ow tiiat sales have ia-cre-Lsed
enormously this year. One
COMMENT AND
- - SMALL CHANGS
On such days as this, dear friends,
we're strong as horse radish for this
daylight saving business. - - -
;,vv-v.- f :'"-,-y- :s.-"W,r't H-''??--It
"our taxes were as high as the total
of our gasoline bills what an epidemic
of uproar there would be. J v -
- It's "a wonderful midnight lunch that
doesn't bring a, least one bad dream
before the break of day. '
V"..i"r 'V-;: .; a. . -C;-"lI:'i;,;-,';,iX j
T An. wji. t a K A J . - I. ,f.
w,u&u.v aiuva auvautuTf can . U-iv av
natural death, anyhow, so long as the
.... mm m wa.cgivu H u. .- i. -
" The crab who saldhe Portland team
couldn't play baseball will now step for
ward for his toegue-lashlng. i .
-The gander that submits to riding on
the hood of a flivver and honks at pass
ing strangers thus proves itself a goose.
1 In .the usual order -of 'things we are
about - to have open season on sweet
girl graduates, blushing brides and other
fair flowers. -
J-. Just when- the Beavers get going in
proper. . style Judge Landis heaps the
crimes of the age upon them, which is
the way things , sometimes; go in this
sad, world. , - - -1 .
With our. luck running true to form
we ought at least to get a - nibble in
one of those lakes where "trout are
so easy to - catch , that ' it fails to-be
real sport,! as -reported : in . Sunday's
paper, . . , , v. - . 1
; MORE OR LESS PERSONAL :i
Random Observations About Town
When Colonel Frank P. 1 Light - left
Lakeview for Willamette valley points
he carried with him three large posters
advertising tbe Lakeview Roundupnext
to the Pendleton show, he asserts. He
calculated on placing one of the posters
at Bend, . one at Eugene and one at
Portland. He succeeded in leaving one
at Bend and one at Portland, but when
he reached Eugene he discovered be had,
through an oversight, forgotten to bring
bis. poster, having left It behind at Port
land. Aa a result. Eugene; is to have
no poster, but Portland is to get two.
Every man, woman and child in Lake
view, says Colonel Light belongs to tbe
Roundup association,- which is . not a
profit-making association. It only-expects
to make expenses.' '" j
- . ' . 1 ., : ... :i ;rv "
John : McGillvray of Tyga - Is among
out-of-town -visitora . ! '
. -i - . . ... .. i'. .- x
AJ F. GUlisr of Pendleton IS visiting in
Portland. . ; '
.---f-". :''.':-,:' ' .' '-;:4"y .-''.::.:?"';-''
A. Bodmer of 'Baker ' Is among , most
recent arrivala v f -.- -
H. & Murphy of Marshfield is regis
tered at the Imperial. - - .
J G. Clark of Marshfield is in Port
land on a business visit
Bert G. Bates'of Roseburg Is in Port
land transacting business. ! .
OBSERVATIONS AND IMPRESSIONS
OF: THE JOURNAL MAN -; - .
By Fred
- A tbnlbnc adventure, aa incident of - tb
bthmiae paasaxe to Oreson in the early daya,
H iaeorperaied in Uii aketrh. " wiueh . relatea to
one ef tha pioaaer families beat kuuen in PotV
laaa BMtnry. a later tastaimeot will eompleu
fbm BarraUve. : . .. t . j , , ,.-'.'
a Professor J. A Sell wood is1 one of the
pioneer teachers of Salem. He lives on
Front street not far from Marion Square.
When I visited him recently he and his
brother Tom of Milwaukie, who was
spending the day with him, told . me of
theliv early days In Oregon: : - ;
"I was born February 13V 1843," said
Mr. Sellwood. , I was christened Joseph
Anthony Sellwood. My father, James
Richard William Sellwood, was a shoe
maker. - His brother was an Episcopalian
minister and eventually got my father a
Job as a missionary to the poor writes In
the South. While doing this', work my
father' studied for the ministry- and- hs,
came an Episcopal iaa 1 minister and so
aerveo, .for mora than ' 40 years. aiy
mother, whose maiden name was Eliza
beth Dow, was born at Penzance,-Eng
landv'v ilr father was also: born in . Eng
land, v-There . were five children of u.
My - eldest . brother,' John W , was born
in 1839. James R. N my next brother.
was born in 1Mb I was born in. 1543.
My brother. T. A R. Sellwood. Tom, as
we call him, was born in 1844,. while my
sister, Elizabeth - D. ' H, Sellwood, - was
born In 184a. - . -
, "My uncle.- John Sellwood moved to
South Carolina - After he had been there
he asked father to come there and work
with him as missionary to the . poor
whites. In 1856 Uncle John wrote . that
Bishop Scott of Portland had issued a
call for missionaries to come to Oregon,
Uncle John, and my father noticed that
the mes of the South' were drilling and
that there was a' very -bitter feeling
asrainst the North. 1 As they were North
erners things- wre not altogether pleas
ant in South Carolina for them, so Uncle
John wrote to Bishop Scott asking blra
if he could use him and my ' father In
Oregon. :.My father's parishioners' - In
South Carolina . were"- very ; loyal to the
church., I know of no better proof . of
their - loyalty than v the "fact that - they
took upon themselves the support -of my
father as ' a : minister to, Oregon' and
agreed to pay him.' $800 a year for 10
years," until, he could get established - in
Oregon. ? In-jspite of the fact)' that'tiie
Civil -war was peon . raging, they - frept
up the payments promptly and ent be
promised $800 each year for 10 yeara
1
"We left South Carolina in the spring
of 1856, going to Boyd's Landing From
there we went to Charleston and thence
to New Tork city.- At New j York we
took a boat to Aspinwall, onj the Isth
mus -of Panama The railroad had Just
been completed across the Isthmus. We
reached Panama, about suppe? time "on
April 15,' 18i6. -The Golden j Age, "the
steamer on .which, we were I going to
San Francisco, . was not to leave . until
about . 10 o'clock that night, when . tbe
tide was -at the fulL -Most of the pas
sengers decided to put In the four hours
before the steamer's sailing taking in the
scenes" in Panama. ' About 50 or 69 of
us stayed at the depot. . One of the pas
sengers at the depot had a dispute with
a native about the. price of a melon. A
quarrel ensued and blows wtre ex
changed. , A few moments later the na
tives came up. looking for trouble. I
was only 13 years' old but the events of
that night ace just as plain as if they
bad happened last week. I heard a pistol
shot and then X heard someone cry. The
natives are attacking ua. One of the
passengers - shut the big door of - the
depot and barred It A few moments
later the native troops - were - called to
quell the riot. : They shot over the heads
of tbe crowd outside, the bullets splinter
ing the boards all arsund usj One of
the passengers caDed out, 'Lie on the
floor, or we shall all be killed V We
beard the bugle sound, and several more
volleys crashed Into the bodlding jusi
above our ; heada The natives rushed
around to the other side of the depot,
where the tickets were sold, and came
in from that end. . . j ;
"Uncle John opened the big door and
maker of a high priced car states that
their sales for this year are 25 per cent
above - any previous similar period in
the car's history. Another ore reports
more sales in April than --any - oiner
month in its existence. Tv r-irv 'ac
turer c? a well known ir ..: - rrioed
NEWS IN BRIEF
: SIDELIGHTS - i, .
'- The - wireless telephone ! is becoming
very popular but who bas ever heard
of wireless poUtics? Banks Herald. ;
Everybody should have a living wage,
but a lot of folks aren't satisfied unless
they have a fltwering wage, Condon
Globe-Times. ; .. i 1 , a.j .
The weather bureau frequently refers
to it aa a "mean" temperature. Laymen
use adjectives of a little higher horse
power. -Sherman County Observer. ,
- Every once in - a while ; we are - told
how much, we spend on amusements by
some reform gang, that spends aU it
can to keep us from having any amuse
mn ts. Uaines Record.
r t.- ;r- .- ;n : S'l
Now comes the Sanity 4! League of
America for: beer and light win. Old
J. Barleycorn may be dead but he seems
to have seme ' relatives who are stiil
alive. Amity Standard. .
Our fire department has just 'received
a number of new ladders and other fire
fighting apparatus, and old Demon Fire
will now have to get a pretty good start
before -he can hope to escape from a
watery grave when our boys get after
him. Jacksonville Post, h h
Comes the word that the Adam and
Eve- who recently entered the - -Maine
woods are finding their conquest of the
Lwho' live out. west in a real civilised
country couio nave toia inem as rnucn
before they ever started. Pendleton East
Oregonian.
O. W. Offield of Merrill Is combining
a business and pleasure visit to Port
land. ' ' . IV
' C H. Gibbons, A. H. Cohn and C. R.
Brown of Maupla are -transacting busi
ness in Portland." 1. :.-ii-
. Mr. and Mra J. E. Honk of Berry dale
are visiting in- Portland, n -.
f'T-,-".-'- i " :K.;.a',r.t ".r'HVi1 ''' ::
1 Guests from Central Point are M. M.
Kindle. Floyd Ross and Lowell Grimm.
- v 5 , . . ts-L ......'-':.-.
Mr and Mra S., A. Barnes of Weston
are guests of the Imperial. .'
Among out-of-town i visitors is ' A. V.
Cook of Nyssa. -
-.:' i ' ' ''.- it. - .! ;v;-
Mr. and Mra M. A. Ross of Pendle
ton were among week-end arrivals. '
i': v !'--: e -f - '".K.5 vf-'iry
J. O. Bettls of Eugene in transacting
business in Portland. -.-"'I-
f. v ,-Si:..,:t'":;15-' '
Fort Hubbard ot Medf ord Is transact
ing business In Portland, n
':. '-:;- - - - .It-ts...:,
F. A. Holmes of CorvaUis is a recent
arrival. tfV" : -flf.' .-rl t".fci -
Dr. I J. T. Walls is In Portland from
his home at Powers,: in Coos county.
Bill Hart of Oregon City Is registered
at' the .Imperial. .. ..mi ..... v....
Lockley
told Tom and tr A in tnm wrth Vilry, ba
we , could escape. A native hit Tom on
the head and knocked him -unconscious,
then attacked my uncle. . They broke
his nose, wounded htn in .both bands
and shot, him through - the i body, the
bullet going within half an inch of his
heart i I decided that this was no place
for a minister's son., so I hurried back
Into the building. .The natives were--s til!
Buuuuiis m patBuigers 111 tne- ounaing.
T van: T- r M- T Via4 1..t mm
and I saw -the. natives .killing the pas
sengers up near the ticket office, j They
auiu n 01 our party. !
; . . , - '1'- - "
"One of the Spaniards said, "Follow
me. ..I went with him: to where some
other passengers were. They made us
kneel in a circle while the soldiers came
up and pointed their aruns at -us and
were going to shoot us. One of the
men, who seemed to have" .'authority,
finally persuaded them' not to shoot us.
and we were taken, to thei governor's
house. While we were there they brought
in a passenger ail covered with blood.
He looked as if he had been kUled. As
a matter of fact, he had been rolled
around where the others had been killed
and wounded and did not have a scratch
on Mm. - However, he was nearly scared
to death. . A Spaniard saw my brother
xom lying in the street after the crowd
had moved om; He took - him to his
house. 1 The Spaniard's wife washed the
blood pff Tom. and gave him a eood
supper land put him to bed.il The next
morning his host took him to the Amer
ican hotel.- : - 1
"Meanwhile I bad rejoined the familv.
My father and. mother were feeling very
unhappy. They were told that Uncle
John and Thomas were both : killed.
Father j went to where, tbe IT dead, pas
sengers were lying- in the depot to see
If be could Identify - Uncle John. ' He
couldn't find him. Someone told father
there were - some wounded passengers
lying in anotner part 1 tne depot. He
went there to look them over J but could
not find him there. Finally Uncle John,
who -Was lying , desperately 1 1 wounded.
called to him and father had: him taken
to a hotet- Meanwhile a passenger said
mere was a: lost boy at the American
hotel who might be his son ,1 1 so father
went there, and sure enough it was Tom.
"We waited . there .five weeks and
clsco. Uncle John was not yet able to
trevet so he waited ? for a-few weeks
more before coming. The Panama gov
ernment paid my uncle 81 0,000 as dam
ageavv. lie . invested the money in .820
acres ear-Portland, for which he paid
112 an acre. - This farm is. bow- called
Sellwood. - He also bought another farm,
on which Oak Grove Is now located. He
also bought some land In "Yamhill county
and several city block in Portland..' k.
while being rhot was rather unpleasant
at tne time, it proved tne nucleus of his
fortune. - . -
' "We came from San Francisco on , the
steamer Columbia. From Portland we
came up to Salem, arriving here June
17, -155. My father De-?ame the first
rector of St , Paula church, I ; remember
very,: distinctly ; our trip from Oregon
City to: Salem. - We were aboard : the
steamer i Onward. Our boat; pulled two
flatboate up to the mouth of tha Yam
hill river. Lieutenant Sheridan was in
charge of a large. number of Indians on
tbe flatboats, who were being , taken to
the Grand Ronde 'reservation. , This
was -Just after the Rogue River-war In
l$53. . . -
"Father rented a little cabin near
Lincoln s Wade's brick, store in North
Salem. . The night we moved in wa rud
denly heard a, terrific racket jusf. out
side. We were terrorized. We thought
the Indians had come to kill us. . We
had seen the Indians on .the flatbcats
the preceding day and we had ' eeen the
massacre ' at Panama but it turned out
that this was only, a .party of young
men ana ooys giving a charivari t a
newly married couple : so we -decided
our scalps were safe for awhile
ear says April was their best month In
14 years and two others give out the
information that their sales so far this
year and their orders to be filled before
June 1 ar greater than all of their
lAt year's business. C'ir.on, I'rosrperity,
C::: -, -1 '.
The Oregon Country
NaiUut Hsppvnins. ia End Foraa tor tbe
' " - - u' B-aadst-. r .
OREGON '
i Forty-two Students " of Baker " high
.uwi were pre&entea witn diplomas of
graduation . at commencement, exercises
.Thursday. . - .
The Independence school board has
to put a course in agriculture in
high. school-under the terms of the
, mith-Hughes act. ,' - ' .
: - Measures providing for a S25.O00 sewer
bond issue and for the purchase of addi
tional fire fighting equipment were lost
at the special Salem city election.
The Inland Construction . company of
Portland has been awarded tbe contract
jot building Pendleton's r.ew septic tank,
the bid being 6,-SL Bonds were voted
last falL '
f Plans for the new Eugene hospital are
completed and work is expected to be
gin within a short time. The. building
$100 000 PmeBt wUl 8t Approximately
Both the gas arid the showing of crude
oil are becoming more -pronounced in
the Lower Columbia Oil & Gas com
Pny welt The driU is now at a depth
Of 8723 feet,' ,
In a raw conducted by Sheriff Orr and
deputies, moonshine liquor was found in
jtwo places Qf business in Independence
The proerprs were arrested and fines
of S25 an ISO imposed.- j
! Active operations on the Lone Pine
V1. ? ?" For8t creek, west of Jackson
yule, have commenced. A rock crusher
pf -150-tons capacity is being installed
jto prepare the ore for the milt "
hBoth sawmills at Bend are running to
rull capacity, shipping departments are
taxed to the limit and 800 carloads are
expected to be sent out this month.
Oregon fir Is being shipped from Ku
gene to be used in building a big saw
mill in the mountains east of Fresno it
being claimed that, California Umber is
not sufficiently strong tor mill construc
tion. 1 - .
I An ordinance forbidding' the use of
masks in public place except upon per
mission f the mayor following a peti
tion filed 24 hours before such demon
stration, - has been unanimously passed
by the Pendleton city council. . -.
I WhUe only one or two packing plants
n the Washington shore of the Colum
bia are' taking troll-caught fish, the
t rollers, who are doing fairly well at
the present time, are said to be hav
ing no trouble in - disposing - of their
eatchea
i , WASHINGTON ,
With a falllna nff rf mnr hn
1,000,000 passengers, street railway lines
in Spokane showed a deficit In April
exceeding $20,000. '
Out of ; 60,000 persona in Spokane
county who are between 21 and CO
years of age, it is said that only about
24.000 have paid their poll tax.
I While trying to Jam a bullet which
did not fit his gun. Walter Bradbury,
at 18-year-old Yakima boy, discharged
the weapon, the bullet piercing bis right
lung, .i , t-
J The American, an evening newspaper,
has -made its appearance at Belling
ham. Its publisher is L. H. Darwin, for
10 years state fish commissioner . of
Washington.
I A special election has been called in
Toledo. June 27, to vote on the purchase
of the town's water system, on which
a 60 day option at $7000 was recently
taken i by the council.
! Andrew Carvilll, 55, living alone near
Hartline, ,was found dead in bed by a
neighbor Wednesday morning, appear
ances ' indicaUng that his death was
caused from a tick bite. 1 , .
: ! Improvements made In the Superior
Portland - Cement . company's plant t
Concrete within the last year at a cost
of $300,000 enable that factory to han
dle 6000 barrels of finished cement daily.
! Although, she had risked her life
hundreds of times in making balloon
ascensions in various parts of the world,
Mra Leona Dare, aged 67. is dead at
Spokane, following , a breakdown in
health.
iA-shoplifter, supposed to be a circus
follower, walked into the Kmnorium de
partment store at Yakima and walked
out with a case of women's shoes, con
taining 12 : pairs, aaid ta be worth
nearly, $100. - j .
- Seattle realtors and property 1 owners
have launched a statewide tax limit
league, the purpose of which is to ftet
at law : passed by the next legislature
setting a limit ot taxation on real prop
erty at, u mills. ' -.- i --Mra
Mabel Marko met her deat ft Fri
day morning in the Northern - I'arffic
railway ' tunnel at the outskirts of T.--coma.
A- coroner's Jury found that she
had taken poison and then . leaped in
front of the train..
Two thugs attacked F. J. Smith." night
watchman for the Northern Pacific at
Yakrma, a few nights ago, and knocked
him unconscious. When he recovered
he found the holdups had made a clean
sweep, even taking his 'shirt. t
V IDAHO
Andrew Cb'ristensen has resiimed his.
position as statd senator from Bonner
county to become postmaster of Laclede,
the town in which h Uvea
- More than 6000 members of the ant-lered-tribe
are expected in -Boise Juno
14i and 15 during the state 'Elks' con
vention. . ,
- One ', thousand dollars has been ap
propriated by the Htate Federation 'of
women's clubs for the University of
Idaho loan fund as a memorial , to the
iate.As.ra a. i'eray. ;
tota Beta . Ensilon, . organised recently
asi an engineering fratemity-at the Uni
versity of Idaho, was installed Tuesday
night by - Stanley A. Smith of North
Dakota Agricultural college.
. J. O. Haggler, former Methodist Epis
copal minister, was found guilty in fed
eral court at Coeur d'Alene of ; trans-.'-pprting'
Mra ; Georgia Prather -f rom
Coeur-d'Alene to Fortland for immoral,
purposes. .!:-;:-- -- . .......
Pittsburg capitalists are baok ef a
number of oil drilling outfits sent- into
the eastern part ot Bonneville connty,
where 100.000 acres of land have been
obtained for wells, with excellent pros
pects of striking oil, , , . -..
The total capital and surptos of the
170 banks in the state of Idaho des
ignated as state depositories is more
than 111,000.000. according to a statement '
issued by B. E. Hyatt, director of the
state bureau of public accounts, j, , .;
: Miles Cannon, state commissioner of
agriculture, has Issued a bulletin show
ing that the biological ftrrvey has cost
tbe state of Idaho 1.2,000 in the last 16 .
months for the killing of 2076 predatory '
animals, or about $15 per animal. '
Twenty Years Ago
From The- Journal of May 29, 1902,
.Engineers - surveying, the . Columbia
Southern from Shaniko to Bend have
progressed 20 miles south of Shaniko.
' , ar . .
The honor of raising the first sweet i
pea of the season is claimed by OUo
Dekum, No. 703 Everett street -
. ,. ...i " -- , .
-The Worlr nf nnttino- fn n.ar Ksnfa
under the Morrison street bridge. Is -
vows iwucu 9lm rapiuiy a poSBloie.
The - Western Lumber - comnanw ha
been notified that the fir plank ex-
ntoitea py them at the Charleston ex
hibition , has been .. awarded the gold
medal. '.-.
i " - . , e - .
Apparently the mill strike Is as far
from settlement as ever. A ioint ,d-
cision of the circuit court judges today
enjoins tne sirikers from placarding
material and congregating around mill.
The board " of " count v commissioner
ba; raised the wage of the employes .
of the Alblna free ferry $10 per month
eacb. . . - -
Conductor Thomas Monahan of fft
Johns has received a letter' from Mra
Monaaan at Hood River. She report th
family in good health. - :
. . .....,..,.-:.
Justice C. E. Wolverton was In the
city from Salem on business yesterday.'
i - - , ...
River boat business is better at present
than It tm been for fv?ra! . nnntm
?t in to-:: ; I f : ' ; ..- .