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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1922)
3- 30UH1 .C A -JACKSON. ....... i . . FtfblfcihM- - I Be ralm. b confident, cbeerfal UK Ho rit kImii u r -Mold fee Um de eato .' rueliahed every weekday . u4 Snd morning , at Tne Apurnal baildinc. Bro4wjr at Xam- ni BTwy roniino. vrcaTu - !Tn,.,w at tlv. mmImHIm at lAVf.lAnd AfMOIL for inMmlxisB threats- the Mite ae eecood rl&XB matter. TLPHalV-Maia T 1 74. JU1. depart aWoti Teethed by this wlwj , kaTlONAL ADTEHTISTNO REPRESENTA TIVE Benjamin Keeor Co- B -. tncfc building. S2S FUUi awraa. Hear Xork; SOO MH-r t-nildlng. Chicago. ' fAClffO COAST REPRESENTATIVE M. ; C Mtrteneoa Co.. Inc.. EMwieer bnildina. ' Ka FYaaHaeo; Till Jwraranoe buildiag. Loe Angelea; eocnrlHea bnflding, Seattle. THE OREGON JOURXAl. reserve the right to rriect advert) Ld- eojr Which ' It dee obJtimabl. It also artfl not print any . copy that ia any way-elmaletee Madias aaat ' ; tt er that caaot readily be reeognjsed aa advertising.' ' " " 1 ' ' ' itawcaiPTios rates . s By Carrier flty and ConDtiy. ' PAILT AN0 BUNDAX I .One weak. . Jvi i.llOe aBonth $ .S3 DAIJUX . dlSUAI . One weak. . j .. .lftjone week ..... .'$ .05 ie month r . J . '.45 - , i BX MAIL, RATES PA TABUS TV ADVANCE THE 0HXG0N- DAILY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, OREGON. i were over' the Custom JIoqm, " - " - - - One jeer .... ..$8.00 Six month . . 4.25 . DAU.T - Without Suadsy) One year ...... gfl.00 S month . . . . S.2S .Three months... 1.T5 One month 60 VBKKXY (Every Wedaeedsy rtp yeer . . . . .41.00 Biz month . . . .80 These rtm mlTv on?Y fn the W,,t , Katea to Eastern paints furnished on appli- ranoa. Make remittance Dv Monev Order. Express Order er Draft. : If your postoffice is no? money-order office. 1- or 2-ent utanrpe will fee secerned. Mate alt remittance pay- awie to i iie journal ruonsnmg Company Portland, Oregon. - Three months. . . $2.25 One month 75 - EUTfDAT Onlr One year (3.00 sir month 1.T5 Tare, -maths... 1.00 WEBRT-T AXD SUNDAY One year $3.50 He haa aot learned the lesaea of life who does net erery day surmount a fear. Emerson. Mri Murkhara answers that It can- j tarnished by neglect. Even th flajr i not JOBSibly make the contact wltni mat trwung from wires across the the sources and objectives of freight streets -were clean and brave as i movement that the railroads , do.' ; I the patriotism? thejr, represent.' But why should . there be a de There were only two other lags! bate os the right of a water trans- that looked as nea-lected as the flag portatioasystemfc to exist? Why on the postorflce s buUding. These i should the head Of a great rail road systern.; b fusing k-ts. far- reaching resources' to demonstrate the failure of a water line? Why should it be the instinct; of rail road executives to handicap water way transportation experiments? Did not; America's war expert ence prove beyond cavil that this nation needs all its transportation resources? Did it ' not show that the waterways, the railways and the highways are interdependent as a national iransponauon sys tem, that aerial ways-are rapidly becoming an important fourth fac tor 1n the scheme of national com munlcation and that the people, to be served completely, must be served by all? ; ' The right of railroads, to own and operate paralleling boat lines has been DEMAND END OF ' - COAL STRIKE The legal attack upon the sys tem of levying minor fines against traffic "Wolaters at the police sta tion does not prove that the sys tem is wrong. The municipal judge should not be burdened with such multitudinous detalL' Of ficer John son has given a very ; capable 'ad ministration. , If his authority is insufficient under " present ; ordt- j Situation's Gravity Prompts Editor to Insist That Officialdom -Busy Itself With the Grave Problem of Getting the Coal 'Moving to Con-. . sumers, and Moving Before the i Grain Calls for the Cars Wln tmfB Want Foreseen With AH Its Incidental Xioss and Suxfsruig. r r -Daily Editorial . Digest- CnaoUdated Press Aaaoeiatioa) The ' Country,- is ; becoming: gravely concerned, over' the continuation of the coal strike. Empty bins, and the seeming inability of officialdom to "get. action" from either side, force marnnrr hii'lc tA war winMrai - vhan nances tne orainances snouia ; be i there was much suffering. There is made broad enough to give him j voiced a concerted . demand by editors. the authority. MERRILY ON ! without regard to their political belief. for the adoption of measures that will send ."the men back to the mines and end the strike before the railroads are congested with crop, movements and the like. After watching with keen interest THE New York stock market has boon nnustiallv fttrrmar for rav. pral wroka It hasJieen so stronr!the fforts of Secretary Hoover to get erai weeKS. it naseen so strongi m ri minimiied. vithout annar. removed! because the rail- thl seasoned investors are unable ent success, the Boston Traveler de- roads used the latter to destroy water competition. On precisely " - V". 1 - ' I Interests, then the sooner the admln- the same just basis they, were.de-1 " " - , tstratioa goes oerore congress witn aei- nled the right to operate through the Panama canal. But, as General Beach, chief of United , States en gineers, says, there is no reason why railroads should waterway extensions . when the latter are clearly and indisputably feeders. There is, further, no rea son why a system Of freight inter change, with Joint j,- rates and through bills , of lading,'- cannot be worked out between waterways and highways. If America is to -have a unified transportation system, . why not unify it? j first It was looked upon as only I mite demands for an extension of.au temDorarv. I thority over the mining and sale of Railroad stocks are, among those n , A for .xr w,l going up. ssteei nas aavancea sev- t6r it acuon.is deferred much longer." t h I eral points recently. They are in-1 The memory of the Pittsburg Leader Is " " . - w , .... .... . . . 1,111 n i. , n , nnn aicative or tne trena or tne markeM -wte. u i tv.. k iti- the "war days the maximum price In Other big industrials. . arrtMmt,nl ,ntn the nation's exreri- And why shouldn't the stocks be j ence. What the price is at the point worth more ? There are to be bigger of production has no relation to the profits for the man with money, ' I6?"??- v agea guing uuwn tii aruunu. Rail wages have declined. There la still the 12-hour day in steel. When wages decline the stock ing days will not need to loek farther for their parallel". Which leads the Chicago Daily News likewise to recall that "the Bland bill for. the creation of a. rart-f Indtna (VtrrimiSHirm tr rletAr- holder gets a bigger share of the I mine the basic conditions of a Just so proflts of all concerns. jlutlon of the, coal problem, and thus . , . , . I directly or Indirectly-lead to an ad- Moreover. there is very strong iuglment of the pressnt controversy-. promise that prices are to be I still Js before congress, and to wori- higher. much higher, with' the "why K is not pushed." The New- rpHE electrocuOon in Portland highest - tariff on .record An ; sight. ' " " 4- Monday of Fireman , Baldwin The Income tax on big incomes has redress as hard coal needs accumulate". was consequent from rubbish In a j been reduced, excess profits taxes It points out that "the hard coal min- basement. '. . ,-r-V : - have been swept away! prices " ad no grievance" but' that the nn. of the mrtBt r,ATvuir In ' hiehae . mr,A 1 Tr. suspension In that industry was due r - . ,Vtt.. . .M j ...ir-iv t "th dealr at th Interna the department goes into- six 'feet I shouldn't stockholders be Optimis-j tional "dtaion to use hard coal to force AN OLD, OLD STORY WEDNESDAY, JUNE (21, 1922. the poblia will benefit In anv manner until the strike actually is settled, sug resting that wbita "Mr. Hoover nur 1 be- able to. convince the coal owners 1 mat it is- better policy for them not to. exact the last pound of flesb. the conference wiU probably turn' it- COMMENT AND NEWS LN BRIEF , - SMALL CHANGE Anybody could be . a humorist If he of skinning." Letters From the People aiaiked hv tH wf4m hM ;l Lm, tuS mast ceotapany th ccntrihutioa. 1 seir Into a diaeuasion of how much the j would write true pen pictures of him Muciiww muancu stauu m ue vayiaeu. , - v . f- . - . . -Anyway, the high cost of living can always, be Justified to Oregon living here is worth ic ' , i When one comic wrltur tries tn tmH 1 CommardestSafie an (Ttu Tmmi, I t or another the ruilkr vhA 9u0-ha pabUeatioa ia this sniriauat ehanld ke Wt. I mitjtt ha V.tn,,'. mu Antimi, ten on only one aide ef the paper, ahooid n I e , . ?0wor. Hth. and , Set Wouldn't life b one errand wt I BArra- If it mrr nn n AiM . mosquitoes ; sunburn: havlnsr to work! EXCORIATES BOOTLEG3ER3 , . . ' ' k , . . .. "cs"-"'a wior iranic . i trouoie, usually has trouble Of his own? Soldiers- Home. Ortinr. Wash-June I I. To the Editor of The Journal The Liverpool has eteadier tone, the mar writer nf ttim arttni .m wSAlket editor diecovara. Ia thle nnth have reatf The Journal up here in the j ot tne f.prohibluon? soldiers home, are all agreed that on j . "Whn Senator Stanfleid arets to most questions, industrial and moral. I conarean." a. man whn th intra k-. you, have stood for alt that was Just I a long time on the way. since his eiec- ana ngntj out i see that like all the! von was neard to. remark yesterday. rest of us you err in Judgment at i.t... dth. bo?5J58rB th.at old J.hr! yet there are mighty few who cannot uur uia-i cauaeo tne awiut qualify in some measure for the accu- tragedy, and other bootleggers, who, satlon. t "without the law and shadow of con- i" ' ' f unw n. .v.- -i Portland is the cantlaf ef th. keerters- before nmhlhif Inn" rle-hr at chanted realm of Roearta for a few judgment. Unless the class of saloon keepers you have known is a very dif ferent class from those the writer has knownand be has known not a few they were of the same calibre of the modern bootlegger with the same ob ject in View to make money, resard less or what happened to those who bought and drank theif liquor. When was a saloonkeeper ever held responsi strictly to business as usual. SIDELIGHTS What with Tom Watson and kin. area sporting memners, it seems odd that the United State wnata doesn't adopt a regular set of .boxing rules. aiuany vemocrai, , . e e . e- . 1 . ' - V ' The farmers are - wearing broad smiles. The rains of this week have been beneficial to the dry lands, and with the warm weather have started a rapid growth that to some extent overcomes the backward growth of the com, taie spring. fctaaer lieraua. . m ' The weary world would like to feel that something good is to come from the conference at The Hague. The news to the effect that correspondents have been barred la not the beet that might emanate from Europe, Pendle ton jast uregonian. - e a ; T With naval base operations about to start, the oil Well promising t6 become a producer, a new hotel project fi nanced, building operations: speeding tap and the Warrenton pottery plant assuming the proportions of a new and profitable industry, things down this way are not so had. Astoria Budget. ' A New York railroad man. turned spiritualist, says that every foot of the looo miles of railroad he has con structed was built according to the advice of spirits. Maybe that accounts tor the two lines ot- railroad tnat were built up the Deschutes a few years ago when there was hardly room for one. jugene Register. MORE OR LESS PERSONAL Random Observations About Town of earth because or rubbish m a basement., A wife is widowed, relatives are bereaved and - friends shocked be- i cause of rubbish in a basement. v tic? Why shouldn't stock manipu- public opinion to shorten the period of istnra ran th hm.rit t ib. idleness in tne sort icoai mausiry. ine r . . .isuna , ...hi.. It t.,.. lino a, ui HWU IUr UISW WHO tt Y .t..mfn1 m.t. gamble in stocks. The way is rap- fort from Washington to end an In- idly being cleared for them ant I tolerable situation is something for Rubbish in the basement was the I there is every Indication of ,nor- THE NEW DIPLOMACY QW what has America done to Europe? Here comes France - over at The Hague conference with an "observer," . "Observers" were a new wrinkle In diplomacy quite recently. Amer ica was the first to send men to Eu rope to say nothing, do nothing, know nothing, but merely to watch. And now France has taken up the custom. ' What If England should: do .the same thing, and Italy, and Belgium; and Germany and Japan ? What If all countries eliminated Official representatives who are permitted to talk and act? What if a table were merely put into a room, secre taries and clerks and stenographers .were properly placed, and then the delegates entered, sat down and : proceeded to sit and observe and be as idumh as mummies? Wouldn't it , ne .; an intelligent conference ? .-Wouldri'- the w.prld be edified by T - its convention ? Wouldn't lnterna- i tlonal affairs , be rapidly put Into f shape? t And wouldn't it be a grand occasion for the delegates them- Helves as they sat and mutely ob- J vuo anuiner, sitting across the table? , A new diplomaoy was promised during the World waK There was promise of a change. The change was to do away with secrecy. It was proposed to eliminate It under a different plan. But, after all, the "observing" plan of diplomacy, if carried out by all nations, would even farther. Nothing would be said at all. ,;The daily mail train over Union Pacific lines now reaches Portland at 7 o'clock in the morning instead of 7:45., Eastern mail thus gets into the first delivery in the busi ness section and it arrives in time for transfer to the Willamette val ley. morning trains. In these ranid days the saving of three-quarters of an hour Is an economy worth while. tinder pile lighted by the match which a small boy tossed aside when hunting for a lost ball and it ended the career of Fireman Bald win. 'Keep no rubbish in the base ment," is a tale a thousand times told. The newspapers publish it oyer and over,- and . the Inspectors of the fire prevention bureau go from door to door and tell it to the people. . But this old, old story goes un heeded in hundreds of basements. The rubbish accumulates, a spark or a match touches-it, and the work of destruction of. property and life gees madly on. - malcy" in Wall street. And the world Jazzes merrily on, which he . watches patience." with growing im- The grave danger to industry of In creasing prices is pointed out by the Aooleton Post-Crescent, which de How is the weather for the Rose J Clares that "cheap coal Is as fiecea Festival to be kept under control waft the weather forecaster thei sary to commerce as low freight rates. It would not materially Improve busi ness to cut traffic charges and at the other side of the mountains in Salt same time raise coal prices." The ef- Lake? THEIR LOST PATIENCE HERE is a news story of yesterday: forts of Herbert Hoover. the Knox- vllle Sentinel is convinced, have failed "to protect the consumers," and it would have been better "to have left the price fixing In the hands of the operatora Hoover's endeavor to get Eastern consumers to buy Alabama Astoria, Or., June 19. Early-Sunday I al 13 indorsed by the St. Paul Dis morning a posse of about 40 Warren-1 P01' which points out that "it will ton citizens, headed hv Ma 1 help the Northwest materially In the and City Marshal Thurston, visit I 'all and winter if the 'New England the Whistle inn And the Flavel tavern I nd Mew York consumers of hard coal both of which are within the limits I may be Induced to-uao something else of Warrentnn Th i. - I In pom nf a - ihitrtaa." Tn"; thi Cfn . .aw -e ' 1 - e.w siwwv W-ijlfg yi V I - T. ' - r may not; be a fireman that rub- prietors of WhisUe inn 4 hour. ilnection the St. Louis Post fDisnatch blsh in the basement will next send wh,ch to c,os place and leave the I mPha8treS '-that 'imere assumption of to the cemetery. It may be your lll.aan? ' tn r!!p0n,iU.rf ? n.iTti " J.I; .v;m t , . ... i i't kuu ma proprietor was in-1 " v"" v cnna. if iSo, -what will your I formed that such amusement would fuel. The government may have a plan thoughts thereafter be? . not be permitted in the future.1 excent-1 that it is keeping under its hat. W"Ith- ing under a license from the eity. l out a plan it may have good luck. But The action was taken as.nart at a. I coal consumers would like to know' campaign to close the road houses of I whether it is discharging its respon Clatsop county following a. seri of I slbility In advance by making sure of estab- ff.tal automobile accidents. Jan uninterrupted supply." This is the usual recourse of , t ... " ,. rt j , , . . 1 i ilHL liio uuuiic limy uwoin paif wo wno set lawslicky" at any moment is the opinion at naught become too high-handed. Kof the Cleveland Plain Dealer and then People are always patient.- Th I "supplies will be laid In irrespective Warrenton people were patient to fr cou 7 i8Ure, ana ii i V . ... enl loJto prevent prices-from mounting to tne limit. But a time came when! .t- i t .ff.. UifUmnt nf th patience ceased to be a virtue. I strike. Restricted supplies, empty coal The recurring afitomohil .pi. I bns and the approach of winter are OLD H. C. L. RISING A PORTLAND tailoring aiishment writes as follows to The Journal: At a time when. we are dding every thing In our power to reduce the cost of clothing, congress, through the Fordney bill, proposes to add an ad ditional 22 per cent ad valorem, plus 4 cents per pound duty,, to the cost of imported woolens. This increase in auty win not only affect the price One result Of the civil war 1a China IS to prevent J. C. Black of Portland, ble for murder committed by someone who has been In the Orient for some who bought liquor and got drunk time, from returning for a whUeitlle away from bis premises? Not one tn a has forwarded his trunk key to Harry trousana was ever held responsible. I Hamilton or the imperial notei staii Now, with all the knowledge we have I and .instructed him "to take his suits gained about that devil that no man I out and see if the moths are bothering has ever been able to tame or control I them." "I expected to be back , in until tne people decided that the only I June, be writes, "but am delayed od way to get rid of It was to kUl it and I account of the Chinese war. Will not from which, after years of battle, the I get back till August. Am wondering nation was delivered yet we find! about the weather In Oregon. It i many email ones hatched from that I hotter than hades In China. Spawn of the bottomless nit. VV are I - ' . told this is a nation roverned hv iw ; I Dr. E. H. Smith and family of Lake- put-what kind of law? .If it Is true, I view are in Portland to take Jiv the we have lot of people who dont I Rose festival. They motored all the know It : or, if .they do, they oav no I way and .found the road in good con ttention to it. SO we miirht as well I dition. comparatively sneaking. In ad- have no law. . " . -. , I dition to prescribing for the Lake coun on uecoration day people go out and I ty sick. Smith is county judge, orate and euloo-tzA th man hn rii I - to uphold the laws, and finish up by I Jonn U. Hmitn or wesi i nenaitm was buying a bottle of moonshine from I among those paying homage to Queen some outlawish bootlegger and then go Rosaria on her arrival Tuesday. In around saying the country is going to I cidentally be is doing a little publicity the -devil on account of nrohihlttnn J work for a picnic on the summit of Great timber, that, to build republics Bald peak next Sunday, to which he IS or. .we read of some mighty mean I inviting the world. men In history Judas IscarloL iwho I betrayed our Lord for 30 pieces of 'sil- I Among the many visitors from, points vr. and Rndirt' amnid mniA I In the state outside of: Multnomah his country for gold. The fellows who I county to participate in the festivities deal in moonshine belong to their class ; I or Rose week is uus Newbury or Meo- y they are worse tthey will sell for a J ford. drinlr- of u.-ilaV, XX7H&n it mamm T 1 ' a nation of lawbreakers and criminals I Kotrt w- Kum- editor rtne Mail running at large and all kinds of lnD"B ol xaeaiora. is recoromftms rascality at A premium, trials at law impressions of the Rose Festival deco- a joke, this country holds the medal. 4 "wv"- . . . yW t- an i. aeceni tmng we nave The name of C, Llroy Towers of 1";."-,; , J.,, " . r.r,.. I no5burg adorns a leading hotel's reg- money to run the government : and yet we are not so far removed from bar- Among out of town visitors is NT L oarism out uiat some want to go back Bunce of Marshfleld.. to mat way again. Stephen Van Scoyoc of Imported, but of domestic wnni.n. nnt t Kkip. ... 1 inconsistent with reasonable prlcea WHY NOT UNIFY? A MOST significant-debate Is in Progress between railroad and waterway, representatives in 'the fissts82ppi valley. : . " Its most recent -spokesmen are i; EL : Markham. 1 president" of the Illinois Central .s:steoi.-.and. James E.' Smith,, president of the Missis sippi Valley, association. As- a means of relieving the traffic overweight on the railroads during the war the government brought a barge line into existence. .The service jis being continued. There is claimed for it the largest substantial success that has at tended waterway operation to "a generation. This success is meas ured in both patronage and profits. tit. has been the height of-rafl-rfcad endeavor to show that the profit are fictitious, that they are based en operating cost alone with oyt reference to capital investment, and. that the government-provided channel 'constitutes no r Just con paHsori : with ; the : railway system expensively traiir with private capl- - - -' yf .- t "'i .' - Mr. Smith aya that fax & yea the .barge line .saved shippers the sum of 1601,005 and pUed up a surplus of :flJ9.000.T;ir. Markliam con tends .that ; in the same year- the barge line suffered a-, deficit of $190,000. Mr; Srhith .avers that1 the Hvar transportation system is mak-r lng profits for all the people and as well.' History proves that with ; " "7" Z "8"'.cu were Indorsing, this position the New York increase in the tariff ia. i' .Cl ias'- scanaaiizing tne locality. A World recalls that the transporting and gi iui posse oi citizens neaued by I osmouung companies are not parties the legauy constituted authorities lu .Z . 8 "T t T . . . . and .j,ey -win take for coal what It put an end to the revels, and. it will bring; in the past they have not Is hoped, the killings. , been above pocketing that proportion On a larger scale speed maniacs ot 016 profits which conscientious mln may at any time bring on drastic ,00! action against their recklessness, the mine mouth, which Interests the it was a series of accidents arid" public" While waiting for a settle- the attending notoriety that brought J IPnt th Isew Trk.:Pst believes that forth the Warrenton posse, and a whT Us molt needed "haVe. simlliar list of killings by speed for it ought easily to be kept within maniacs could at any time bring bounds." The Brooklyn I Eagle also on legislation that would b n urests that "aotual consumption Is so mfKi -w- I fr in excess of production that un .w....w.. "e care- f pleasant effects cann6t long.be de- rui orivera included. I layed If Ihe strike continues, and united States, the domestic vnnUn manufacturers have Increased their prices 10 a potnt just enough under the foreign to shut out comnetition o large scale. ' . ' As a proof that this added dutv i 'uu tne American Wnn an manufacturers for the past 18 months vb mrivea nnaer the present emer gency tariff of 35 per cent ad valorem and 45 cents per pound weight duty when all other Industries of th. omm. try were hard nreai1. T1 if It becomes a law, will make all hope - " tnio uuyviuie ot. realization; and while we would endeavor to absorb some part of the increase, the greater twii wwi oe a cnarge on the ultimate consumer. This Is .testimony from the trade. The consumer will have to pay. a . m . Aireaay in ere is announcement from-Washington that the cost of living . Is rising again. Those who have been reading In The Journal the series of articles exposing the proposed tariff bill. wm appreciate the statement' of this Portland tailoring firm as to what effect the new duties will nave in increasing the price of clothing. The principal benefi claries will he the big New England woolen, manufacturers, a number of. -whom, with other long-pursed gentry, were present at a recent meeting fa Washington, where money was raised by - Chairman Adams for the congressional' cam paign fund. , The big interests buy the tariff schedules and. the consumers pay the bilL - -'v-.i . f ''' FLAGS INT ; TATTERS TIT ANY beautiful flags appeared in Portland yesterday at the opening of the festival. But the flag on the general postoffice building was a tattered wisp . of fcmutty fabric. So many of the stripes had been ripped away that it looked as it the 15 original col onies had been reduced to four or I nve. - So dark was the field"" of blue In which are placed the stars symbolic of the states of the re public that the symbolism was of nis-ht dark and cloudy In which the luminaries of heaven had been obscured by storm. j -: iThe flag which floated from the starr above the Union station bright. . and beauUfull i' and wa it does not appear that any compromise is in sight. This being so, the New There is always a limit to for- beamnr. Tha worm m - - - " ui u. rn.iv,... v.i : .v. - People permit the lawless to go J scheme will prevent . a repetition of about so far, and then find a way I the 1910-20 gouging, and "Mr. Hoover's to stop the follies. . I Pan noias out nope ror tne puouc s purse, isut aoes it contriDute mate Hall v to the settlement of th atrik Aiconoi to replace gasoline as which brings danger to the public's motor fuel." Better be- earafnl 1 purser Evn rlivreion Af "The need of the hour is to end the - diversion oC supply mlht -trf,-. the Buffalo Express la con send the wh0j bootleggers' union vinced, poinUng out that "the admin out on strike. istration, so far, has taken no ener- ' getlc action- In that direction. The itWy mrrr, mnr . , 1 individual mlnera and the public are M"Au Jlosine heavilv. Those who arc Buf fering the least, and will suffer the TORTLAND, like a thrifty nier-1Mt the operators and the strike A chant, offers samples only tol1?ars Tor " that reason' the Settle- ..0i .v,w I nvent of the strike should not be left , , " ""-w me 1 entirely to them." In this same con- Rose Festival. -v loction th Minneanolia Trihnn won- The festival center on South narV 1 ders whether the strike has not been tallowed too much time to adjust itself. "ici c.j, 1 . . , . .v., : Of . V..4 ,4-J . I Mr Ullll(l - ' bt come to such a pass that th cov. bordered streets in many parts of I eminent will feel obliged to intervene the city. ' ' I in some way as the 'next friend of Tt. n cn. - ,l tne millions who are dependent on coal rlVr.V " 1 " for the conduct of their business or .umuwm (nii w mswea 1 the comfort of their homes." . Amine- bloom; drawn from a thousand t that this time already is at hand the flower gardens each capable of In-1 KaUmaxoo Gazette believes that "the spiring the exclamations that Toice fa j'?"? delight. . . ,.x I ly and it should not tx Mrmitiats in the sportsmen's affd tourists' I continue indefinitely." And. there should show, also -at the Armory, there is I ! " ' waltiB!r .J1 a reminder of the unfettered out- pT" nSZTZXa doors where the sky ia the 'ceiling, lot dollars daily by the continuation of giant trees . are the Pillars r that I the tie -on, and while its worst effects seem to support Ita "vast dome and ?!!f!!5f, .'V10 Jrentr tbH , V , . . . , " ... wm acuta mania was the water system Is onrepressed J snow fMea. It wt for for .n ind-n-r- oy nyarants. I as vital as the coal industry to be run It is often said that the-: festival I aadf haphazard-clrcumstancea? U with lt multi-colored, multi-form J 1 Suggestion; of forcing arbitration attractions :deserves full " time at. I have been made,. bat the JerWv Jonr. tendance by any visitor who would I "l Relieves that 1f the mine owners take full advantage of its opporiu-fe punnc tnat jhe verdict will be accepted. nities for pleasure. But after the festival is over. to see that which t;-CDrsets is worth, a tsaxamtr V Arbitration cannot be used - merely mm a grab, bag for one side er the other to try out Its luck.. And the Minna. i spoils. Star is distinctly skeptical that BARLOW ROAD MEMORIAL A Pioneer Makes a Suggestion of What He Deems anpproprlate Site. ; not June xs. to the Editor of The Journal- I; see in your paper of recent dAe that the Oregon Pioneer's at their -! annual convention fa Portland decided to erect a; memorial on -the Barlow read .ear? Government Camni so J concluded to write of a discovery i . made in June, .1869. I was with a party, which included "Uncle Jo xoung of Youngs prairie, rs Clackamas county, an 1S45 pioneer, opening the Barlow road ror travel. . We were camped at the western base of Sum mit hill, where I found a grave of the then "lang syne" bo much so. that' the poles that inclosed it were so rotten S. Sherman of Walla Walla, Wash., is. visiting in Portland. fi - - ' One of many out Of 'town visitors Is A R. Killinsworth of Yakima, .Wash. J, Harold Beytien of Eugene Is an out 'of town visitor. f- -' Ms.- and MrsiNr iL Reed of Bums are snendipg a few'dafs m Pdrtfand. Herfry McCall of Prinevllle son-in- law of Thomas Lawson of Boston and Bon Of Ex -Governor AI oCall fit Mama chusetts, is Portland to attend the Rose Festival. He Is accompanied by Mrs. McCall. According to advices from the East, the senior McCall is talked of as a candidate in the com Ing Massachusetts primary 4or United States senator in opposition to Henry Cabot Lodge. ; "Look out for Prinevllle 4n the' Rose. Festival parade next Friday," warns Cap Fuller, directing head Of the Crook county Irrigators. Cap came on ahead to get ready the Irrigators float, which Is being built in Portland, principally out of sagebrush and Juniper, berries. The. design of It is being'' carefully guarded, - e. Otto Metschan aaid James Keeney left Tuesday morning early for a tour of the Yosemite valley in Keeney's automobile. Mrs. Metschan and Mrs. Keeney accompanied them. They will be gone 21 days. John Hays, who has returned from his Buttef Creek ranch, reports that a cloudburst south of. Heppner a few days ago drowned 4 8Q sheep. - . ' Webster Holmes, one of the also-rans for governor In the recent primaries; Is transacting legal business In Port land. . . . - r -. ' '- " -W. R. Taylor arid C. W. Lasaen of Pendleton are sojourning in Portland for a brief flme.i -f -H. S. Wilson of Klamath Falls Is giving Portland and the Rose Festi val the once over. ' L. B. Jordan knd Spencer R. Collins of Eugene are among out of town visit ors. : tL'J. Hendricks of the Salem States- man Is among out Of town visitors. Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Jones of Salem are among Rose Festival visitors. A. . S." Stockley of Baker Is trans- actmr bueines in Portland; h. The Oregon Country- KetUeest Bappeaiasi ta Brief Varai tot tae - Ihass Header. . . ' vCl OBSEJtVATIOla AND IMPRESSIONS " " ' Ji 'V a" " 1 ' ' . " - By Fred Lockley -M Oregon .--r' ', :r . The cltv council f'DtMii v. . posted street improvement notlca TJlcJiStl for ,1"op than five miles of cement sidewalks. , SSSl1 1Phth grade - ef the common schools of Umatilla county to it J3-TT. .J2Z bv Passed the examinations tot graduaUoru St-t ""onal forest has been sow oy th government to the Pacific SWngle company at il.50 per thousand n--fnl?e tr',B from Portland ar i,J?tg at snn recently at:4S at Dj ver and killed a three- pmnt buck deer 10 miles east of a inTn?oJi'ilyfllWo cmnt factories ar5rfih f?en ',rt- nd work o Hff ?P new three-story dormitory fx-"'S. campus of the girls'. college of ihoJEun1 BibI university. The buUdlng will cost J8770. ' nliy. and; n of Justice John L. rld.0.,h8 tate supreme court, com pleted his examinations at Harvard lawTschool last week and will take the state examination at Salem July li. nithn-. fw aiys mttr their ar rival m Astorlaa few days ago. J. K. their automobiles searched and 14 toundk"0 aIlese1 Canadian , whiskey The navy transport Capella, has ar VZfm .S101.' 'th 200 tons of steel t ?k L."16 traks K be constructed by the government in connection with navarsuuon 6nt Rt th Tongu Pollt inf0 hUi1!nbr to.,b manufactured Into handles as well as to take care ' of the overflow business of the Eugene plant the Eugene HAndle company has purchased a sawmill at Peoria In Li" county and has already taken over the plant. WASHINGTON Dennis McClung, prominent Spokane attorney, has not rn An i... 18. and friends fear that be has met witn some accident. R. C Snyder of Seattle has been ap pointed chief deputy grain inspector for the State Of Washine-ton with headquarters at Seattle. The executlv pnmmitt bureau rfas derided to open a public market In Walla Walla imiii a ihu in PorUand and Ebgene. Granger school district In Yakima county wUl not get its nw high school building, the voters having turned down a bond Issue for $15,000 Crushed between miite rant In ta back of her fathAr' mm. Seattle, 8-year-old Klsie Chetkovich re ceived internal injuries that -may re sult in her death. S. S. Shea, for 45 vears a tlrrnh operator and for more than 30 years manager of the Postal Telegraph-oom-pany at Bellineham, died suddenly in that city Wednesday. Mourning the death of hia wlf wKm he lost a vear nsrn Stanhen r farmer, committed suicide on her grave at Betlingham Wednesday bV ehooLing himself in the face with a rifle. At a sneclal election in n.iyinnj Tuesday the proposition to reduce the corporate limits of the city carried by onmii majority, A porUOn Ot the northwest section will be eliminated. The department of public works an- . nounces that Bellingham streetcar fares cannot be lowered and may be increased if the city forces the de partment to hold, a hearlna- on the rates. Believed to ha v hn flnnlvt th Northwest for the last two years with counterfeit monew Joseph O. Midela waa arrested at xaeoma recently while tryinsr to naaa a. 1100 bill .it tli Po. pie's Store. . Dominick Constantlne. aaid tn h th man who escaped -from a train near Sandpoint, Idaho, leaving behind a satchel containing $80,000 worth of narcotics, is In the custody of federal officers at Spokane. In this article Mr. Lockley completes the story of H. K. K. Whitney and hia work ae orsamzer and director of boys enomses, in which ia axemcllfied the theorr of keeDin- as to be easily crushed in my hands. hoy right -in preference to letting him right. The poles were six inches in diameter. The description is as follows : The road, from the base of Summit hill to Its summit has a northeasterly trend. There is a small creek at the base of the hill running in a southerly course. From the east bank to the foot of the hill is a level space. The grave Is on that level, on the south side of the road, about 30 or 40 feet from the road. A short distance up the hill on the north side of the road a fine spring of very cold water gushes from the" solid rock. H E. K. Whitney believes in boys. and boys believe in him. He is the or ganizer and director of the Whitney boys' chorus He was trained for life work In the ministry. When talked to htm recently he said: My first pastorate was In Maine, and, by the by, I became acquainted wit&v'Fatber Endeavor' Clark, who was a Congregational minister In Portland Mafie, and who was just starting the work or the Christian Endeavor so- Why might not the pioneers place I clety" I held pastorates in Vermont their memorial on or near that grave? 1 and at Winona, Minn. ; Ha warden "Uncle" Joe Young said that when hoi raws; Cripple Creex. Colo., and Plains crossed' there In September, 1845, the I Mont, and wherever else I thought I grave looked to be a year or more oidVi could be most useful. At Plains The grave Is less than three miles from J turned my parsonage Into a boys club- the proposed site at Government Camp. 1 house. At Hawarden I fitted the base- I am three times a pioneer. . I ment of the parsonage up as a gym' M. Epperson, ' I for my boys. I resigned, at Winona to I o on Vi lsiriir nlAlfArni . trot th SINGLE TAX AND "EQUITAX". neIt tf0 year. 1 w1dely aiid Vancouver, Wash., June 18. To the talked on the boy problem. I had met Editor of The Journal. "Death and judge Llndsey at the beginning of his taxes we cannot escape so goes an work and he bad made a profound im aoage or my native neatn. when 1 presslon on me. Itwas my talk with single tax s scienuueaiiy anaiyzea him that led me to believe prevention and carefully scrutinized it, chameleon- I was preferable to reformation or re like, changes into equltax. The most rlemntinn of hova. Tn othr ae-ord , , . J . ri , K 0 , , , save them before they need the am claim that it would lessen the legltl- I bulanc ' mate cost of national, state, county or municipal governing, bot they- do claim, and warrantedly, that It would equalise tax burdens throughout the nation. Next, "non-taxable improvements" Is "At Winona I introduceaLantlphonal singing, using four choruses. As a matter of fact. It was a shrewd scheme on my part to make all the church members come to church. If they were ICllk Ul j.i . . . . . - a (liradaT llln.iat lAirip KTMKIna- """'B wi..ci..s ui wwuiu vwiua. iuu but value can be taxed, and only fali .lnterst people anywhera by glv- through improvement can any maimer I nr lnem .eomeining to 00. i organ- of value accrue. Tner la no vahi ' chorus m .tho rear of the to unimproved land. "Latent value" isJchur5h . boys' chorus on the right but a socialisTs vocalization. The!1 sla ot tfl church and a male latent vanue of unimnravad ian . I chorus .tin unison) on the other side. on a par with that of the . "gem of I .while the general chorus .was on the purest ray serene"- now-resting in "the 1 Piatrorm. 1 sortea out . my congre dark unfathomed caves" of the Pacific. gat ion' and used all of them In some Here is the law and the' gospel 1 of j way In these choruses. This made economics: Only through "work time (Improvement) can any form of weaitn ne oeveiopea; hence all taxes must be levied against "work time" improvement. In brief, the toiler who sweats to improve is the . sweater who toils to pay taxes. Economist. SWISSs WATCH REPAIRING, 1 Albany, June 1. To the Editor ot The Journal Please publish through your paper the name of the Jewelry store that repairs Swiss watches. 1 - - ' $J. . Mra.S. B."A . If the inntiirT win mm! V.. ak.n addraes to The Jooraal ah will be pat ia the y m oojeiaias a atormauoa saaireo. RECOMMENDS A BRIDGE SITE I Jpertlaad, June 15.--TO the EdUor of fTne Journal -As The Journal has al ways been impartial in aU matters tor the .public I wish to eay a word in regard, to the bridge In the south part of the city, which la in the air at pres ent. - In my -opinion there' Is no place better for a bridge than on Mead street, as was contemplated a few ear- o and think it would be the cheapest place to put one, and more conveni ent for all traffic to the east aide for both ears and automobiles, and out ef the congestion, and yet suffieienO- close to the center of the city that the Seuweod and Woodstock and Brooklyn cars .couM save 0 minutes in time to , the city and ll ether traffic the same or more. As at one time this. more room in -the church, as-well as insuring the attendance of my church members. It was not long before our church was not able to; accommodate the people wh came., ... "I had a peculiar experience at Arabs, Colo.', a litUe village of less than 100 people In the dry-farming dis trict. Alueic is a great harmoniser. There were 12 small communities In this drr-f arming district. I went to each one -of them and organized a chorus, v-- From each of these various choruses Z picked out 100 of the best singers. We gave an ojd folks con cert at ArabaV Every paper in the dis trict put in a special supplement ad vertising It and giving s Hat of the singers.. This was not paid for ad vertising but was community coopera tion. The papers all gave us edi torials. The result was that we brought ther people out into the -desert to us. Governor John -Shafroth. later In the United States senate, came from Den ver to be Our guest. The president of the Rock Island came with hia private ear, accompanied .by many prominent cltlsens of Denver. We had more than 100 singers on the platform, which ex- ceeaea tne population - of the town. .t-eopie drove m from all over that wnoie country, in spite of the fact that IDAHO Forty-eight men have signed an en listment roll for the formation of a cavalry troop of the Idaho National Guard in Nampa. Idaho's state fair for 1922 will be backed by the Progressive Business club of Boise. O. P. Hendershot has been retained as secretary. Work of harvesting the alfalfa and c ana tnat, nignt one or the worst I ciover crop is under way in Canyon blizzards of the winter. The hall jn j county. Farmers are paying SS a wrucn we sang seated about 400. There I ",u"ul "u w neP- wasn't a spare-seat. After fh m. . The Lnlversity of Idaho expects at cert they served a banonet TtSia lat,i least 250 more students this fall than until 2 a. m. There was no no-hlT fjr.,5efr J"'"t""n 1 bc aj u. liuuain K u. uuiem. and the Institution is fac- in th el ,t--""""rBU58" Houriy service on the Boise Vallev fnl ir Vv" ..r. ""r .wa? ".Traction company's lines between . - w. uiui iv vi!-uiul to ran 1 iiemn ni vni.. TCMw.Mn 1 .u itiuui iu nieir nomes ; soitjaiaweu went into eiiect June 16J J .lnc lune lr?m z a. m. unUl Civil service examinations will be " " i i community singing and j neld in Boise in August to select three having a social aet-acauainted. e-er-to- I candidates eligible for fh iKtmaitr. gether meeting. It was one ot the "'" Th t1 of p. M.'Xavis expiree most enjoyable enterUInmenta that " sepiemper. ever took place in the dry-farming' dis trict. -. r rom Araba I went ta rvinni xoea. - xms, as you know, is a min lng town. Saloons and evil resort aootmaea. There was certainiv a hov Glen Avers, aged 14. a farm bov r- sldinar near McDermotL cantnr d John O. Aeosta. a Filipino charged with burglary-t and held him at the pomk of a gun until the arrival of officers To satisfy a Judgment aaainat Wil liam G. McAdoo. former director en- eral .of -.railroads, the Oregon Short Twenty Years Ago From The Journal of June 21, 1902. ,'em Her; I believed it was up to Line depot at Natspa and the ground me to belp SOlve the boy Problem, so T I on which it stands ha hn ordrd organizea a cnortis of 100 boys. When ii by me United States supreme 1 lett, two years later, a lito lad of court. 14 or 15 yeara and on of mv ht BinserB, wno naa been one of the tough guys' before he Joined the chorus, came to me and said, "Mr. Whitney, aniuuy sorry VOU ar eroinir I vo -n7 t - 1 t knewI La Center, WashTracy end Mer- ..jr 10 auy nil. tne escaped convicts, were seen w 1 . Ar?a"I'j tne whole town near here at noon today. Sheriff Marsh , - l" . me, ior wnen 1 ana posse have gone in pursuit left they 'closed the schools and Jt I ..- e m - 1 x - seemea tne whole town was down to As the result of the explosion ef a , f !n see me off. The mayor barrel of alcohol In the Pacific Coast ircmueu t me rareweu service in mv 1 tsiscuit company s ouiidins this morn. church and he was one of the moat S. James Griffin is supposed to be urgent In-wanting me to stay. I had I fatally injured, while Alexander Brill aeciaed. however, to do missionary and lee Rossiter are badly burned. work: SO I wont to Montuno tn nn.nh I and work at two small frontier towns I . WashingtonUnder an amendment to flams and Paradia - i unary civil oiii sv.uuu nas oeea ... j appropriated for Immediate use on the "From there I . went to Snokan. Portland postoffice building and $10,000 mere 1 organized my first laree hov I ' -o. Aknania tlf. V -eore . m . . .1 -..-va-uo. TV d uaU lUJtt UUV 111 1L. ftnu I CLc-ttlm. nK- ti?aaKlna.l. - a. mA X a -it j . , . . I - . tt miiiuwii iUl CSV, 7ZZ 1 7? . ?y " fl . y naa nres continue. The Enumclaw fire w i v.-iiy not to anena renears- is under control b&t the remainder of aia, I took 83 of my boys to the Buckley Is still threatened. Scores of Panama-Pacific exposition. If you lives are reported lost in lonely timber ic- uunii mere you uouDtiesa nearn 1 rimna. them" sing In Spokane I had started. I In February, 1J15, with two boys. Just I Business men on Grand avenue from a year later, to the defy, I had -1052 j East Morrison to East Clay street are ia tne cnoruav Boys love -action. There I UV n, arms Decausa 01 tne tardy work was something 1 doing all the time. 1 i of the property owners hKeplanklng im.a my iwys singing at I. At. A. I .r . bannttta f wnM .lr ih.m I- - - , trips. We .would give entertainments. " J8 t" that th.?, Hood Rjv?r There was alwas something for them rt" wUl mount to look- fnnc,il r mnA a v I v ivm.m. w. w. .w u f m.- r uit 111 interested. . . . e e The thirtieth annual ' convention of the supreme lodge A. O. V. W.. closed I started here with three , boys-l 1881 n,-ht twoweeks' session. Ten sites' ire offered for the Lewis t came .to Portland' In December. J5ZO. Frank Smith. , Richard - AverUl and David Richards, ell of whom about 12 nVt"J2Zr,J years old. Last June-1 gave a concert I -, at The Auditorium, id which I had! Complaint Is made by residents ia over. 700" boys taking part- I have or-1 the vicinlt- of East Seventh anri vm ganized choruses in 30 towns In Ore-1 Ash streets that a man named-man. gon. In each town I appoint a local I field has staked a vicious cww on' a' onrectcri w au wear the same uni-1 vacant lot . form blue trousers,, white shirt and a red tie. You get the meaning of It do you not 7 red, white and bine." bridge lost by only S00 votes t think it would now carry. It would have car- riedat-- that -time if there had " not been so many knockers for-reasons best known to themselves. But that class, is always, knocking where there Is anything up tor the benefit of the The srogram for the Rose Show this afternoon was opened with a - grand . parade. . - - . - M. E. Freeman Is usdeH arrest for public ? T think it will b well far' those if k J - 1 th nuttter -to riding a bicycle on the sidewalk, consider the cost and the most con-1 e , . venient- piace ior the benefit of the I Lane county farmers complain that public. 'As for myself 1 ha,n boost (their grain is heading short The ground Xor a bridge anywhere la the city where j is baked, retarding the growth of the (uupt tuwcu. a 4 : a .axpayer. j straw. '.1 1 '