THE MORNING OREGONIAN,- THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1020 8 itt0rnmjgi(!)rmttnn ESTABLISHED BV HENRY L. riTTOCK. 1'uMislied by The Oregonian Publishing Co.. 13r, Sixth Street. Portland. Oregon. C A. ilOKPKN, K. B. nl'I'-K. Jlanaccr. kdltor. The Orrsoniua is a member of tho Asso ciated Press. The .Associated Preae Is exclusively entitled o the use for publica tion of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All ricbts of republication of special disrtcnes hernia are ulso reserved. . the Industry to which It is to be ap plied, not according to the quality of the security offered from a banker's viewpoint Then too the cost to in dustry would be lower and could be kept within the narrow margin which present economic conditions permit. In that way Buropean in dustry can be revived, Europe's ex ports can swell and exchange can by degrees recover the balance which will indicate normal flow of trade. Desire for this help and' recogni tion that America alone can give it, are evident in the expression by Vis count Grey of Britain's readiness to receive the United States into the league of nations on our own terms. 6.oo Some of us have hesitated to support 3'jji the proposed reservations In expec- Loo tation that other nations would fol- 6-00 lnw Amoeln'o A-amr,la onri that oil must be rejected lest the league be . ..8.00 4.25 .75 need of the day is not only a scien tist who can discover things, but one who can explain them to the millions who are bound to chafe if they are not let into every secret. Subscription Rates Invariably In Advaace (By Mail.) Dallv. Rnnri.iv Included, one year. ., rally. Sunday Included, six months. . . . lally. Sunday included, three months. Daiiy, Sunday included, one month. . . . Iaily, without Sunday, one year Daily, without Sunday, six months. Daily, without Sunday, one month Weekly, one year. .............. Sunday, one year CBy Carrier.) . , . CO AA rSiE KSSIyineiu'a t launching. It proves to Tnilv Riinrinv included Ana month..... .75 I hn fur nthprarisA. TiirnnA r-ftnliKOQ its usuy. witnout nunoay, one year. ....... i.j, inability to lift Itwlf tin bv its own Dally, without Sunday, three months... I.fl5 I inaouity 10 nil liseu up oy lis own Daily, without Sunday, one mdnth W I strength and that America alone can JIofT to Remit Send postoKlce money gjve the needed help. It offers to ac order. express or personal checa on your I . ..... . , local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are cept thafc help at 0UI terms, and no at owners risit oive postonice "otiier nation essays to name terms, 10 rail, inciuaiin cuuiuj . .t. I ... .,,,,;: Il,,l ,., PM. r,.i li in 16 oacea. 1 cent: I " --"w J8 to panes. 2 cents: 34 to 3S pases. 3 I have nothing adequate to give. "n": i li'7AcZl' n When nations which have spent yoreiin postaEe. double rates. - their strength without stint in a Kantern HusinefUi Of flee Verree Sc Conk- I naiiuo wKlrli wA n-cra flnallv Imnallail ltn. Brunswick bulldins. New York: Verree I ,, . & Conkim. steeer buiidinK. Chicago: Ver- to recognize as our own summon us ree & onkiin. Free Press buiidinr. De-1 to their aid in saving the world from n. J. Bidwell." I another great catastrophe such as has just befallen it, there should be no further hesitation about respond ng to the summons.. "With all its re sources America should go to the rescue as it did three years ago. It should send Its best men in states manship, economics and finance to join those of Europe In the work of rebuilding the economic life which war has destroyed. Nor should the glee displayed by Senator Borah and others of the death battalion at Brit ain's frank appeal through Viscount proving the physical aspects of farm ing. Better roads, rural free delivery, improved schools, telephones, elec tric lights, libraries and community development generally may have lightened labor by comparison with j the day 01 me craaie ana nan, out they have even more greatly height ened agricultural morale. . But farm era have noe. .won these concessions to their comfort and convenience without a good deal of resistance to their efforts on the part of an urban population that talked fluently of the "independent life of the tiller of the soil" but meanwhile begrudged him the wherewithal to make improved conditions possible. There are signs that the city is beginning to under stand better the farmer's problems, and herein lies the prospect for bet ter relations all around. Secretary Meredith, who signal ized his entry into the department of Stars and Starmakers. , By Leone Cans Baer. I FOB THE WORK OF REBUILDING. The familiar cry of Wall street manipulation will not serve to ex plain the continued fall In the rates of foreign exchange. This fall Is a symptom of a world-wide economic disease, which Wall street would not propagate unless it had gone insane. since the leaders of finance who are commonly but carelessly lumped un der the name "Wall street" are most antics of a ghoul who jeers at the cries of a stricken soldier for help Such men speak not for America, but healthy economic condition. Rates of exchange are but the gauge which oniy for an ignoble few. in supply of one country's money in I " another country above or below the amount necessary to balance ac counts, also which measures the sol- BECAI SE HE 13 NOT A DEMOCRAT. The Scio Tribune is the latest vency of -one government by the I apostle of democratic light and lead business standards of other coun- ing t0 announce that it "will be glad tries. Wall street is as powerless to control such matters as it is to con trol the wind and tide. to support Mr. Hoover (for presi dent) no matter which party places The money of Europe sells at a lni in tne running discount in this country because it I The New York World has taken consists of promises to pay a larger the same position of lofty indiffer- amount than Europe can pay, and 1 ence to party, but of paramount in because Europe is not products; terest in Mr. Hoover. The World is enough useful goods to . make its I a democratic journal, which almost promises good. The result is that I alone of all prominent American Europe buys much more than it sells, papers has been able to find no flaw pays in its depreciated currency and I in the seven years service of Fresi by unloading more of that currency I dent Wilson, at home and abroad. Its on the American market than the I admiration for Mr. Hoover is ex- American market can absorb, Europe I ceeded only by its regard for Mr- causes further depreciation. Thus Wilson. As to the one, .it has never it adds constantly to the momentum I hesitated to show the most intense with which, it slides down the tobog- I partisanship; toward . the other gan to bankruptcy. Inow professes to be' inspired by the If bankruptcy were to come, I most profound sentiments of non- America and Europe would have to I partisanship. get back to the primitive practice oil it may be a coincidence that the barter, exchanging a cargo of this for I great idea of electing Mr. Hoover, cargo of that of equal value. As I Who belongs to no party, to be presi- Europe, outside of Russia, which fori dent has met with real enthusiasm the present is outside the calcula-1 only among papers and politicians tion, does not produce enough of the that support the. democratic admin necessaries of life for its own people, istration. They are strong for non it must produce other commodities partisanship just now. The notion to exchange for enough necessaries of party in public affairs fehocks to make up its shortage. To do this 1 them. It usually does, before an it has abundant labor, but it does I election: they contrive to reconcile not produce the requisite raw ma-1 themselves to the most continuous terials, machinery and tools.' With- and discriminative displays of par- out them its standard of living would (tisanship by any democrat after steadily retrograde toward conditions lan election. They wtll(all be for Mr. of barbarism. It would then con-1 Hoover as a non-partisan until he stantly consume less American prod- takes his oath of office; and then ucts until our exports to the old thev will expect him to forget it, world would approach zero. But I Mr. Hoover would of course stand having grown accustomed through not the slightest chance of the demo centuries of civilization to a stand- cratic nomination -at any other time ard of living equal to ours, Europe than now, when the democratic out- would not willingly endure such a re- look is black aid when there is lapse while America lived in its for- I promise through fcim of a half-vic- mer luxury. As the wealth of Amer- tory. But what a sad commentary ica and the Indies attracted the ad- on the democratic party's low status venturers and buccaneers of the six- before the country it is that it con- teenth and seventeenth centuries, so templates the nomination of a man would tne luxury of America tempt for president who is not a democrat Europe to go forth on plundering ex-(with an appeal for his election be- pediuons to take by force what it I cause he is not a democrat was unable to buy. But America could not remain rich and prosperous in presence of a bankrupt Europe sinking back to barbarism. The prices of our staple products are fixed by the price ob- t-i innH fnr t Ti n narl u-hlph i vrrrtr1 and two-thirds of that part has been there really are three Einstein the coing to Europe. If Europe should ries- we continue to agree with Pro p to hnv thP nri-ps of oi.r An- lessor Einstein himself that there EXPLAINING EINSTEIN. Even after reading Morris Cohen's explanation, in the New Republic, that one reason why we cannot un derstand the Einstein theory is that tire output of staples would fall to a level which would re'duce entire classes to poverty wheat growers, cattle growers, wool growers, fruit growers, cotton growers, lumbermen, metal miners. They could not sell their entire product, and the price of what they did sell would be barely remunerative. Foreign demand for American manufactures would also fall off, prices would fall there, too, and the home market for products of the soil on the one hand and for manufactures on the other hand would shrink. Bankruptcy in Eu rope would be reflected in wide spread depression in America. A world one half of which is rich, prosperous and hard at work while the other half is poor, growing poorer and out of work can no more endure than this republic could en dure half slave, half free. The wealth of the rich half must overflow to fructify and employ the poor half or it will dry up. The value of ac cumulated wealth is derived from the demand for what it can produce by application of human labor of brain and muscle. That demand exists in Europe in incalculable volume. American wealth can, by providing the means to putEurope at work, set that demand in motion, sustain the value of American products and pre vent shrinkage of our wealth. The interests of America and Europe are one; their prosperity is interdepen dent: the one cannot go down with out dragging the other with it. Self interest dictates that America save Europe in order to save America. Salvation of Europe from eco nomic ruin would but be completion of the work which the United States began in 1917. We had concentrated our minds so completely on defeat of autocracy that, when that was ac complished, we thought the job was finished. In fact, on Armistice day we only stopped the work of destruc tion; the work of rebuilding was then to begin. America only came In at the finish of the first half of the task after the allies had borne the burden and heat of the day; it is for us to assume the greater part of the latter half, both as an act of jus tice to the allies and for our own sal vation. The need is too great, too immediate and too general to be met by private agencies alone; it must be met through the combined action of all the governments concerned. Then each demand for credit will be met according to the common need for are not more than a dozen perhaps thirteen men in the world capable of grasping the details of his momen tous discovery. Professor Einstein himself has told us that, as Newton was led by ob serving the fall of an apple to elab orate his ideas about gravity, so he himself was moved to amend them after seeing a workman slip from a roof. The workman testified that he had felt nothing that he would re gard as a force, like gravity, and the professor began to figure on the ef fect of substituting "difform motion" for the law of gravity. This led to various elaborations which were not clarified for the lay mind by at tempts to explain the fourth dimen sion in its relation to space. Now Mr. Cohen says in effect that people have been trying to understand too much. Professor Einstein has two theories about relativity and one about gravitation. The substance of what he thinks about relativity is that scientific "knowledge" has been taking for granted things that require further investigation, and that it can be made more accurate than even some scientists themselves suppose. But Professor Einstein seems to have known better than others the absorption limit of the human mind. Efforts to explain him only leave the subject more muddled than before, for example, Mr. Cohen says: If you were armed with instruments to hear the home clock ticking;, you would find that as your distance from the house Increased, the intervals between the suc cessive ticks (i. e.. Its seconds) prow longe", so that if you travel with the veloc ity ol sound, the home, clock would seem to slow down to a standstill you would never hear the next tick. That which is true of the clock Is, of course, also true of time Intervals which it measures, so that If yeu moved away from the earth with the velocity of light, everything on It would appear as still as on a painted can vas. On the return journey, however, everything would seem correspondingly speeded up. so that when you reached home you would find the sum of your time account exactly the same as your home clock. - Six months ago, we were puzzled by an expounder who said that in order to understand Einstein it was necessary to know that a hollow ball could be turned wrong side out in the fourth dimension. Now the lay man is bidden to bear in mind that if he were traveling with the velocity of sound he would elude the clock tick. But it still Isn't clear why this should upset all our preconceived notions about structure of the universe, as MAKE IT ACCESSIBLE. The Oregon State Editorial asso ciation last year devised the ambi tious project of taking the National Editorial association in a body to Crater Lake. As the .event turned out, it was a proposal of a certain measure of hazard, for the routs in to the great scenic marvel from the west side were not they never have been in first-rate condition. Besides, it was a rush excursion. The itinerary called for a day from Medford or Ashland, by motor car to the lake, a stay over-night, and an other day for -return. The editors. inured to luxurious travel by Pull man, were nevertheless wearied by narlr-nltnrA hv an address in which ineir long journey rrom me east, anu ne discussed some of the fundamen middle west; and ' the hardships of tal reasons for the high cost of liv iraver over poor roads were not de- ln& indicated a fruitful cause of dis- signed to prejudice them greatly In content when he said that "the favor of Oregon's notions of hospi- farmer asks the laborers in the tailty. But tne Supreme Deauty Ot nfnra tl fnr-tnr-ir and thfi mills, who crater iaite, io say notning or tne are also reai producers along with nearuness ana iioeranty oi Oregon s the farmArs. to make an effort com welcome, more than compensated the parable with his to see that there is juumaui.a ior me women just as little labor expense as pos ana irouDjes or their journey. At .ihiA in Ah nrtir-lA rnmArl nut h least they were gracious enough to their hands, thereby helping the sayso. farmers of America, who in turn will iiut it is a risk which should not hmln thA lahnrers." No one has tiro again be taken with important vis- nosArl fivA-rl.iv week or a slx-hout itors, until conditions are improved. aay for tne farmer, and the latter Bceaoamy, everyooay wno nerves es not ask. them, knowing well himself to the ordeal of visiWng enough tnat the people in the cities crater ine must report mat us at- ivould starve if he insisted on so cur- tractions are an tney are said to De, tailing production; but he does in but the going is bad. It tends to dis- t that while he is 6peedin& up pro courage others. Crater Lake, it the duction, his feiiow producers of es popular mina, is a gem ot crystal sentiais shan do their Dart too. The loveliness down in a hole on an in- implication that city folks need not accessible mountain. It is not quite espect cheaper food until they have correct, perhaps; but it is too near shnwn hv Affm-ts 'Vnmnarahio tn th the truth. I ..,,.,... a - ;.- Crater Lake is a wonderful scenic ha.d nn .mnnnlip. Ahiiitv iU uiD ua..c ii.emvay i - to make a "full and comfortable liv gramme, it is reached by a road of frnrn th. ,arid... iniKtArl nn hv secondary importance. This means vt,.v iiAr f 9i,it that it cannot be completed until the rfor,onr hJ Pacific highway, and some others, the controi of the farmer fcimself, as are out of the way. There is no dis- the new secretary of agriculture has position to have it otherwise; yet it poihted out. In 0the.r words, the in- Is a fact that the people of Oregon 1llntin t ..-nTrt,l t hope that the state highway commis- duce, , not falHy directed to farm sion will give the Crater Lake road ers aIone but to a who labor and the earliest practicable consideration. whA n,.nt (. ln w Tno farmr wnr is beginning to -taste the advantages THE chance FOR A dill boy. of better living has no mind to re- The average boy will derive greater turn to ' his ancient deprivations profit, if not comfort, from study of merely in order that his city neigh the biography of the French states- bors shall obtain more food for less man, Clemenceau, than from. the ex- work. It is a fair proposition that amples of famous men whose youth- the farmer makes through Mr. Mere ful precocity gave them a long run- dith that there shall be mutual ning start in life's race. Clemenceau speeding up of production, a-11 around. has said of his own early life that up to the age of seventeen years he was The world is so unaccustomed to "dull and backward" and had look to the orient for scientffic dis- learned little. His efforts to obtain oovery that there will be two-fold in an education seemed futile. He has terest in the announcement that Sir written: ' Jagadis Chandra Bose. described as I found that whatever I misht learn in an "eminent Indian scientist." has tne daytime, at night I forgot it all. To nerfected an instrument hv whirh get over this difficulty. I tied a string to Perreeiea an instrument Dy wnicn a nail in the wall over mv bed and fas- motion can be multiplied by a prin- ,!ned IV1? my h,nd- holding it up in the ciple similar td that by which minute night after night, 1 lay awake pondering objects are magnified through the over what I had studied during the day, microscope. The "crescograph." as it is called, will be valuable as an aid in the pursuit of other sciences, as in S THERE by any. chance an old phonograph record of Jessie Bart- lett Davie singing "Oh, Promise Me' or "Genevieve" tucked away in some American home? win j. uavls of Chicago, son oil . ...,., ... iw, Paul. the famous contralto of a generation Jonn anfl JameB and otherB who ago. is searching for it. His mother walked wlth h(m ln those days when BY-PRODUCTS OK THE TIMES Chalice Discovered at Ant loch Bean Only Truthful Likeness ot Christ. After almost 2000 years of hope and dessire the Christian world may at last behold the featuros of Christ as he actually appeared upon earth, saye the New Era Magazine, official medium of the Presbyterian church was one of the first American singers our religion was born. to mate pnohograph records. They A vv WOI,derfui chalice, made were imperfect and squeaked and durlng ti,a time when most of the auritcnea, out it was the voice or his arosties were yet alive, has lately motner. For years he has treasured been axcBVated in Antioch, Syria, and me. records, They were recently waa. brought from Paris to this side destroyed by fire. of the Atlantic as a loan to os, for we used to sit by the fire at night Ita greater eafety, during the - late and play our old records," said Davis war. it was dug from the soil by to a reporter. "It was almost like some Arabs in the year 1910, and is naving mother with us. Now they are believed to have been in the col gone. They are out of date now" and lapsed treasury of some ancient tne company Has destroyed the master church or basilica which Was de records, but somewhere there may be stroved by earthquake or war long some of my mother's songs for the before any modern language had been Those Who Come and Go. records." born. until it was ineffaceably fixed in my mind, in that way I mastered my tasks. i 1 o n T n r ITamillnn a h n w a marked literary ability at twelve and the study of the life motion of plants, auu jo aiiuiiici ui inuoc auvauues iij made a momentous speech at seven teen, the age at which M.. Clemen ceau confessed that he was finding It almost impossible to learn; George Washington held an important pub lic office at seventeen and was a knowledge that keep the layman busy studying in order to compre hend them. It will not be easy for the average man to understand how the thing is done, even when an at- major at nineteen; Daniel Webster tem,pt i"1(adin ter.cf scle"ct0 explain it to him. It takes a higher education nowadays even to keep up with the news. had finished : college at nineteen; these leaders and others like them are not less deserving of their fame because of their precocity, but their biographies are likely to give the less lne Iat8 1 nomas Prince was "a gifted boy the impression that his regular Yankee." He was thrifty. case is hopeless. The young prodi gies stand out because of an unwar- because that is a New England habit; he was . progressive, as witness his ranted tendency of historians- to put walnut orchard that he set out thirty undue emphasis on natural gifts and years ago as an experiment, which to throw a mantle of misguided is another side of the New England charitv over vouthful inaDtitude. naoit to leave nome and do some James A. Garfield, subsisting on tnmg; ne visitea oacK nome" at bread and milk in order to complete least once a vear and Kept in touch his college course within his means, with the place of his birth; and all is one of many examples of men who the other characteristics of the Yan- overcame extrinsic difficulties to ac- Kee "e nad. in plenty. AH combined comolish the purposes upon which to make him a good citizen of Ore their minds were fixed. The passage son quoted from M. Clemenceau's own account of his early handicaps re- " Senate and house seem in a fair veals another phase of self-mastery way to agree on the railroad -bill, but of which not enough has been siid. will the president agree with them? The biography of a "dull boy" grown His chance of saving the league of to full intellectual stature contains nations for a campaign issue is fad the elements of inspiration for a iiff. and he must have one. Will he vastly greater number than those of try to save the railroad question as hundreds of the so-called geniuses a means of rallying the Plumb plan The heads possess every quality of a. a. Woods has a play by Crane nortrait work and after a careful Wilbur to which he has given the study all must be convinced that they title of "Arabian Nighties." I must be truthful likenesses of the riprsonares thev Were intended to Vesta Tilly, the "Picadilly Johnny," reoresent. Such characteristics as has been caught up in the political they reveal could never have been wninpooi like many other English invented even by the greatest artists, women. rnnld thev have been derived It is a far cry back to the days from models, even In times when the when she first delighted American picturesque was more common than audiences . with her dapper, dandy it is now. Leonardo, in his Last male attire, singing "What a Jolly Supper, found but four different types Fine Chap Is Alie." In hose days to represent 14 men, and the not in- she was Just. Vesta Tilly. Now she' different artist who carved the ivory Lady Walter de Frece, and is putting table of Verona, where the same men all her dash and pep into her hus- I are figured, made use of only three bands electioneering campaign. She different faces in the whole group is taking a month's vacation from the On the main face of the chalice we stage in order to go to Ashton-Under- behold Christ as a "man, clad in toga. Lyne, where Sir Walter de Frece has enthroned, almost, as in a scene of been nominated coalition candidate. apotheosis. Above his head is the ree star nf Rothlohem in a band of Franklyn Underwood is general rosettes, which mav themselves rep- manager for Oliver Morosco. Mr. Un- reSent years. Below this band and derwood used to be a Baker .leading star descends the holy spirit in the man. his wife, Frances Slosson, is no shape of a dove, as It did at the bap longer known as Miss Slosson, but as 1 tism in the Kiver Jordan. The right Frances Underwood. She played leads hand of Christ points to a plate with here with him and later, ln Spokane, seven loaves, two fishes and a head they headed a company for one sea- of wheat. Below him the eagle of son. Mr. Underwood's offices are in the Roman empire partakes of the New York, but he is in Chicago just blessings of the Christian religion now making plans to establish a symbolized by the basket, full of Morosco theater in that city for pro- spiritual as well as bodily food, as ducing purposes. administered by Peter and Paul. e e ' Peter sits to the right of Christ, ac Gertrude Hoffman has a notice run- cording to the Greek custom, and his ning in several theatrical and motion face recalls the well-known tradition picture publications warning exhibi- of his appearance. Those, nearest tors against us'ing her name in con- Christ in the upper row are the two nection with a feature film entitled nearest relatives of Christ on earth, A Perfect Model." . James the less and his brother Jude. Miss Hofman says she is not ap- In the group of the evangelists, pearing in any picture, has never id- I Mark is recognised by his peculiar peared in person in connection with face and body and Luke is readily any film and that her name has been revealed as a Greek. , Matthew is used by George W. Stockton of Co- properly characterized as a man of lumbus, O., and by other theaters business and John through the youth without her consent. I ful sweetness of his face. The two remaining figures on the chalice are Gertrude Elliott (Lady Forbes Rob- Andrew, the brother of Peter (by far ertson) is'to appear in a new play j the oldest member of the group on in London called Peggy Primrose." the front face of tne cnaiicej, ana It is an American comedy. Godfrey the outside .member of the reverse Tearle will be her leading man. I srouv can be no one else than James, the brother of John, the youngest on inauae eaiy, who was married to th ohalice and the earliest to die w..u vi auu last weeK, is appear- The. datA nf the chalire is now lng in a new play under her new nroven bevnod doubt in various ways ijapa-m-iaw management, it is called by its art. decorations, form and The Fool's Game." Crane Wilbur nroDortions all reeoznizable in other wrute It. I -hiAfta nf Ilia flret fAnrurv A D hilt not found ln later ones, with the ex- inurston Hull, once a Baker player, cention of the chairs. The latter-are. s enaing nis engagement in "Civilian however, also common on first cen Clothes" this week under Morosco, tury objects as well as on others of and transferring himself Into the much older date. An important proof management of Gerald F. Bacon. of the date of the chalice is also found niiiiA Rn-k. i - in the Greek symmetry, lately dis --" -- j j.rv . . 1 1 B u new act ing version of "The School for Scan dal," prepared for her revival of Sheridan's comedy in the spring. Miss Burke has the prompt books used by Sir Beerbohmn Tree and Augustine peopieSi lB looked upon as pure an- covered by Hambidge. Census-taking and the gathering of statistics in' infinite variety, regarded as a commendable habit by western Daly, but she is anxious to have an noyance in most parts of the orient. of the world. ners to the democratic standard? WHAT THB FARMER WANTS. If Clemenceau thinks that' by go- ... , . . . ing to Egypt he will have a nice, Four things are required of a good L,af tlma ., ,.H 1 farmer, according to an inscription wU, be diSappointed. Egypt -has a on the programme of last month's Ko1 ttot , t . bad attack of self-determination and does not stand still long enough for Lord Milner's commission to vacci- farm and home convention- of the Kentucky College of "Agriculture, re ported in the Louisville Courier-1 nate m journal, inese are aoiuty to inane ..11 ...... v ....... 1. 1 .. I,..: , , . . ., - ,, 1 France and the allies must get the the land," "to rear a family carefully rlmo , . , .. . e" . - , Germans wanted for high crimes community," and "to leave the farm more productive than when he took if The achievements of farmers' sons and daughters in every walk of life. and particularly in the cities, give sufficient testimony to the solid foundation of character built by par- some way. Were the situations re versed Germany would easily get all the Frenchmen, and Belgians she de sired, not to mention a few "Eng-Iishers." When the workingman wins the 44-hour week, he thinks he has put ents on the farms of the country, and . . .T ' ."uuu" j,- r .k. fa - t,, tells him he will find the difference IUO - 1 , 1 . 1. V . Lite ...VI L V. .111. V.. 1 , 1 1 1 niunity is pretty generally conceded, although not always rewarded ac cording to its deserts- But there are signs of improvement in this respect. added to the price of his next "new suit. The same old vicious circle. Hungary has had more kinds of government since the revolution than J ....!- . L . ,,, . . . t "U'"'u'l,u" '"corporate more The seeker after facts In the east of the original play. F. Ziegfeld Jr. neeas Uct and patience to get his in has commissioned Percy Anderson to ,rmI1,!nn. ramnl r his dif- design the costumes for Miss Burke's ficulties is Iound h, tna letter which production and Joseph Urban will be the Boston Transcript recalls, written responsible for the stage settings. hv . Turkish official In resoon.se to nn Kntrlish srholar'n oupstinnnairp. Thuriow Bergen is appearing in ,, la ouoted bv Sir A. Lavard in his support of Otis Skinner in his new ..NlneVelr and Babyjon." play, "Pletro." Jules Eskert Good- The tninit vou ask of me Is both diffl- man collaborated with Mrs. Otis Skin-I cult and useless. Although I have passed ner in "writing the play". La Grande, a" a!y.a!s in thls place- 1 ,hartve, n,elthr Or., people remember Mrs. Skinner as number of the inhabitants; and as to Maude Durban some 20 years ago. what one person leads on his mules and anotner stows away in tne ooitom ot nis shin, that is no business of mine. But. Gaby Deslys is recuperating from a I above all, as to the previous history o( relanue t fTirintmai lust n she clly- om,, "10" amount, ui relapse at t-nnstmas, just as sne dirt and confusion- tlmt the inIldeis may was mending after an almost fatal have eaten before the comma- of the sword illness. The doctors in Paris have f' I?lam; It were unprofitable for us to ordered her to the south of France. iamb: seek not after the things which con cern thee not. Thou earnest with us and Bryan Foy, oldest son of Eddie, will '"V'r'h.re fTS wWm not return to the show game. He equal unto the-belief in God! He created was in the navy during the war and the world, and shall we liken ourselves . ... . - unto him In seeking to penetrate into the now he has become the head of a mv..erie. f his creation. Shall we uv: firm; Bryan Foy & Co., stock brokers, "Behold this star splnneth round that . aet an nil Star, II1U 11113 ULI1CT SlUI Willi IB 1 1 BOCL11 in ino" . .t.w " and cometh ln so many years! Let it ko Once npon a time Crook county was pretty big, but chunks were chipped off it here and there to make other counties until finally it was confined to Its present borders. The tough fea ture was that as territory was pried loose, the debt was left with Crook county, and the population is so small and the assessed valuation Is so small that Crook county will never be ablo to rafse enough money to get out of debt unless something happens. There is a way of salvation to Crook county, and it rests with one of the measures which will be submitted to the eleo torate of the state at the special elec tion in May. This measure !. the re sult of a trip which County Judge Wallace made to Salem during the special session of the legislature. Curry county, which Is about In the same fix as Crook, will also benefit If the measure is adopted by the peo ple. Judge, Wallace came to Portland yesterday wlth his wife on county business. lie wants aid for roads. "The benefits of good roads re ap parent to anyone," declares L. M. Gra ham 6t Forest Grove, at the Multno mah. "Since the new cement high way has been built at Hillsboro and on toward Forest Grove, land Is being cleared which never before was touched nor any attempt made to make it productive. What is going on along thnt road is being duplicated on every other good road that has been or is being constructed. air. Graham is one of a delegation from Washington county which arrived last night to confer with the highway commission. The delegation wants the commission to order under con tract the road from Forest Grove to Gaston, a distance of six miles. In the delegation was the county court, J. A. Thornburg, president of the For est Grove bank; A. E. Scott, editor of the News-Times, and W. H. Hollis, president of the Commercial club, f E. V. Carter, banker of Ashland, who likes to hunt and fish. Is at the Imperial. Mr. Carter is the chairman of the newly-created state board of fish and game commissioners. He is the man who presides over the meet ings, but doesn't vote unless the game commissioners and the fish commis sioners fail to agree, and then Mr. Carter steps in. He hasn't had to do that yet, but the chairmanship is de signed especially as thS place for a mediator or arbitrator between the two sets of commisisoners when they are at loggerheads. Mr. Carter comes from Jackson county, w.here the Rogue river fish fight Is ever being stirred up, and where the commercial fishermen at the mouth of the Rogue and the sportsmen along the upper reaches have never been able to tol erate each other. When it cornea to sheep, XI. J. Fln- iayson of Antelope knows more about those animals than most men. H' has been managing flocks around Antelope since the days when a sheepherder considered himself well paid to receive 30 a month and "found." Now a sheepherder Is fed on the fat of the land. Including t lie best brands of canned goods, und drag" down his little old $100 a month. which is about 9.50 clear velvet. If a sheepherder undertook to duplicate in a cafeteria his meal on the ratme it would set hlin back about the price that the pound sterling reached yesterday. More Truth Than Poetry. By Janes J. Mnntarae. AS WK EAT, KAT. KT. Chorus for a mimical comedy nf today. The candlrs glow, the Jaxsrr Jasi, The trombones blare and loom; Behind our chairs. In glnvterlns pairs. The waiters stand and doom. And there we'll alt, as the moments flit. Peliglufnlly tete-a-tete. ' And a eonir we'll sing, as our knives w swing And we Joyfully matrtlrete. We will eat, rat. eat, From the caviar cans pay Till we've made a wreck Ut the pottt l'cveoue And finished the small cafe. There are books In salads and aer mons in sauce And poems ln fish and meat. And we'll feast our souls on the bil lowy rolls As we eat, eat. eat! The lad who follows the useful plrnsj. The sailor who sweeps the main. Can grab their share of a bill of fur When the same Is rude and plain. But they lack the art fur the a la carte, For they run to benns and prw-k. And they'd soon drop out of an eatlnjr bout Like the dinners In old New Tock. So we'll ent. eat. eat. Through' tho oysters and soup and f It-ti. With a glad surprise In our shining eyes When the chef springs a brand-new dish. The hermit may say he prefers re pray And starve In a dim retreat. Rut we ask the Kates To refill our plates As we eat, eat, eat! e e What Dora lie Mean, -"ould'l"f After hurling a D. S. C. twek In the teeth of J. Daniels, Admiral Kims blandly tells the senate that he ac cepted decorations from the foreign countries because he couldn't refuse them. see BmlsrsH !ceael4iea. At the present rate for work per hour, no working man can afford to own a car that will make loss than U) miles an hour on the way to the Job. see A Pussier. Life still holds mnny mysteries, chief among them being what the dickens the Dutch want to keep the kaiser for? (Copyright. lff'-'O, hv The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) Woodcraft. By (.race l' Hall. Two residents of Bandon, K. D. Webb and M. W. Treadgold. are reg istered at the Imperial while in town on business. Bandon at present Is de sirous of having a hotter road than the "Seven levih" to travel between that town and Marslif u-ld. and if tun proposed new bond Issue goes through there will be not only a good road between Bandon and Marsh-field. but also between Bandon and t'o qullle.' Bandon is the main niarko for the overland travel ln Curry coun ty to the- south. Mrs. K. W. TwlJia of Mecca is an ar rival at the Imperial. During the cold spell of Inst December Mecca had the distinction of being the cold est place in Oregon. The thermome ter dropped so low In Mecca that no one likes to mention the degrees no low zero which were registered there But the law of compensation always works, for In summer Mecca Ls ho enougti ior anyone. company. He from whose hand It came will guide and direct it." ..inon.nnf - .i,,i J my other European country, and "ability to make a full and comfort- j?,"""?8 l mp'fte e circn t by able living" from the land. There is, too, more general adoption of .agri cultural practices that avoid soil-depletion, and these will be further ex tended by provisions for education in agriculture and by encouragement of electing a king. Its cure of bolshe- vism was sudden and complete. The expression "hard liquor" must have been coined with prohibition in mind, and the man who must have a individual ownership rather than ?.rink wiH rind U harder than ever as good deal has been accomplished in some time ago it waa predicted that this direction in thd past two decades tie Eiasteia. theory would do, A I not exclusively in tno way or 1m- tenancy, such as is aimed at through tlme goes on farm loan laws. . Farmers have succeeded some- In spite Of Representative Blan- what better in the past in rearing ton' tJhe 'abor conciliators are Well .mcri fumiiiM than in "mnkino- ,,ii named. They conciliate labor, though and comfortable living from the tney may not conciliate capital. land." The lives of our pioneers in ' ' " " agriculture have been largely lives 11 aijitors snouia succeed in locat of sacrifice to the coming generation. lng f,sh under water, there will be It was long a truism that the most a no escape ior tne nsn except to hire farmer who established his home in camouflage.. painters. the new country could hope to do was to leave his children a good home. The latter, less minded to repeat his experience, recruited the ranks of city workers and left the farms to get along as best they could. Increasing tenancy, more than any other single cause, has been responsible for in creasing poverty of the soil.- The back-to-thc-land movement has wisely given place- to the stay- on-the-land movement, a much more effective way, all things considered. of getting results in agriculture. A xaKing no siock. ui iuo umucny The Parisian paper LAvenlr an- thlrteen," Theda Bara is going to nounces that all subscribers will be make- her debut on the dramatic allowed to purchase ten pounds of speaking stage on February 13 at Far SUgar at cost price, and since sugar Rockaway. The piece is called The is about the scarcest commodity at Blue Flame." . Might know any play present in Paris, it is likely that the Theda Bara had anything to do with I proprietors are doing , well. Papers would have a warm title. . I have resorted to all sorts of curious devices in order to increase their cir In San Jose the big elephants here cuIatlon. At one time the Paris Petit recently oh Pantages circuit almost Blue then in low water, was nur- caused a panic at the theater, when chasea Dy Henri Deutsch, who an- the stage floor broke under tne com- nnunced that he would give away bined weight of the four huge pachy derms. "The Spring -Maid" is being con densed for vaudeville presentation, e Mabel Jones of the Greenwich Vil- 100,000 copies a day, so and so many to members of various professions, 2000 to dressmakers,. 1000 to butch ers, 500 to dentists and so on. Editors in less 'civilized lands have been known to announce that they will in The 65-cent haicput and the 35 cent shave having arrived, we begin to see certain advantages la. bolshe vism, after all. Kxchahge is a wrong name for the European money market. It's de veloping more into a game of give away. The pound sterling appears to be suffering rrom a severe case of lost weight. ' , irll!, hn-r.hin--ed th Mabel to ' Buuscriynoiw in eciianSe ior vH,i and the Jones to JaunaV and food or other necessities. , hrfiadnast. Greenland has a newspaper pub lished at -God-Haabt, called the Kalo David Belasco'B production of "The rikmik. It is a monthly periodical Son-Daughter," by George Scarbor- printed in the Eskimo language. The ough and David Belasco, Is to find its subscription is one seal for a year, way to the grand opera stage. The two eider ducks for three Tnonths, opera is to be written by Giaccomo I while single copies cost a dabchick Puccini. This will be the second work apiece, the latter being a small edible that has passed through Belasco's seabird. hands to reach the grand opera stage via the Puccini route. Gatti-Casazza has forwarded a script of the play to the Italian composer with a request that he-adapt the- work for the Met ropolitan. t Arthur Hopkins will shortly place a dramatization of Mary Roberts Rhine hart's stories, "Bab," Into rehearsal tir spring production. Edward Childs Carpenter made the adaptation. ' The play "The Woman in Room 13," recently at the Baker has been sold by its owner, ' A. H. Woods, to the Goldwyn firm for a picture version Lieutenant Spiker has a vastly ac- with Pauline Frederick in the lead commodating brother. ' ing role. . Tou can't believe everything you find in a catalogue, always. As an instance, at a recent book sale in London, where the leading American collector was represented by his best informed agent, there came up for the bidding a 16th century anthology with the pretty ttle, "Paradice of Dainty Deuises," about wmch the cat alogue said: Apparently only one other complete copy known, that, in the British museum." There was keen bidding, but the American eecured the treasure for 680. . After the auctioneer ., hammer had fallen John Burns was heard to exclaim vln a stage whisper: - "Well, I've sot two at home." Salt Lake City's commissioners, are well represented at the Henson. The commissioners registered yesterday were C. I). Stillman.'J. P. Dunn. W. B, Hughes and George U. Bywater. Mr. Hughes, on his arrival, received wire that his brother had died sud denly and took the first train tor the east. F. T. Francis, who operates a gen eral merchandise store at Yacolt Wash., is visiting local wholesulcrs and is at the Multnomah. Yacolt Is a mill town and has been enjoying nrosDerity for several years, past Most of the out-of-town business is transacted with Portland. T. R. Pollock, one of the settlers of Tidewater, is at the Imperial. Tide water is a dot on the map in lienton county and is situated on the road to Waldport, not far from the salmon hatchery maintained by the slate C. B. McCullough of the bridge de partment of the highway department is at the Imperial, lie nas oeen ncs Ignated as one of the men to go to Washington to urge a liberal road appropriation from congress. There being a session of the state highway commission today, C i Miller of Redmond arrived in town last night to make his cuntomury appearance before the road men. Jay Upton, who intends being a can didate for the state senate from Crook and several other counties, bus arrived at the Benton from rrlnc villc. One of the best-known ranchers in the Yamhill section is T. D. Kuy kendall. who arrived at the Perkins yesterduy to see the siu,hts. Al F. Coats, owner of extensive timber interests in Oregon, Is an ar rival at the Multnomah on ono of his periodical trips to Portland. W. T. McDonald, livestock Inspector ot the province of British Columbia, is at the Multnomah from Victoria, B. C. BringiiTfc a shipment to Portland. W. H. LeCham, a stockman of the Bend country, is at the Perkins. J. C. Flora, a timber man from the lumber town of Kerry, or., in at tne Multnomah for a couple of days. Among' the Hood Ulver arrivals at the Multnomah Is M. esunuay, an orcnardist from the valley. C. A. Dore of Chicago, conected with Swift & Co., is at the Imperial with Mrs. Dore. Citv Councilman A. H. Harris of Tillamook Is at the Imperial. No Lat-e raetltriea l.inira in irrrsnisi. PORTLAND. Feb. 4 (To the Kiil- tor.) Will o kindly tell me through the columns of your paper If there are any lace factories In-Oregon and. if so, where? Hl'BSCIUBKIl. ln the woods where the wild flo ers are Bleeping, Awaiting the urge of the prln. There are workers whose dclt hands are keeping The shuttles on wee looms a-swinr, As they weave from the ehailows and sunbeams In patterns cast down through the leaves Most wonilcrful lace that no rival can trace. Anil they hang It to bleach en the trees. There are torchon designs most ar tistic. Ami Valenrlennes) dainty and nrat: Filet that Is priceless thnuch mystic A network of figures complete; There Is but a short length for your viewing. As though It were gathered In hnsie. Into clusters to dry In the wind blow ing by. Though each sample Is fashioned with taste. These forest folks ever are working In the heart of the woodland serene, No artist his duly Is shirking. He gives a skilled touch tn enah scene ; The lace that the weavers rJI'loil, Anil drapu on tho oak trees to bleach, He paints a pale gray, then hurtles away To hang a gold leaf out of reach! In Other Day. No lace factories arc listed li the new directory ot Oregon manufac tures or in any olhor Oregon directories. T-renly-l-'le era Ao.. From The Oreuonlnn or February S. I"HV Tomorrow Is the dale set fur the Joint nssi-inblase "f the Northwest Fruitgrowers' Voclal Ion ami th State Horticultural society, to he held In the Chamber of Commerce hall. Eleven ballots lor 1'nitcii Slalui senator have been taki n at Sal' i and on the last the vote stood: Dolpli S.r, Hare 10. Williams . Wcalherforil 7, absent 16, with the remainder scattered. People who have an Incmc ou which to pay taxes over J-tnnO will he Interested to know that all the necessary blanks fur the returns hav.i been received by Collector I'.lai-kmait and must be filed before .March 1. William Hume, the well-known pioneer cantn-rymun, arrived hero yesterday from a month's pleasurii trip to ciati Francisco. Fifty lrarn -t. Krom Ths f)ree-niilan nf February ' Is'" Albany. N. Y. The canul hoard re port the complcllon of the Oswego and Champlain canals, accorHIng to estimate. $:i,in,iiiio. of which tho k'.rie retiirires ll'.fiOO.Onn, the work to be completed in three years. The agricultural Ktmlcnts' list at the Corvallls college Is now full ZJ students In all. Multnomah county will pay a stale tax this year of nearly Sjii.uun. Marion county pays I19.11H. Fully 5000 liusht is nf win at. morn than :ioilll sacks of flour ami jonn boxes of apples were received by the boats of the People's Tra ttspnrlat ion company rrom the upper IHamettv yesterday. Amendment tn l lt nf Porta. LEBANON". Or.. Feb. 3 I To the Kd- tor.) In The Oreuonlnn. umli-r "Hy- Produete of the Times" appears n list if 1.1 "best" American p'ets seleileil ty the New York Glohn. or by a puh isher and. printed In Ihnl paper Without stopping to iirnrrel over I he J selected, let me slale that 1 believe some Important omissions have been made In compiling these names. What shall we say of Kdwln MarkhamT lis three volumes of puhliNhcii verse ontala some of the most notable re cent American poetry. In this list must alKO be Included C. I-:. S. Woo-i. whose "Poet In the Desert" must be Included In considering our beet lit orary work. Then there Is Ezra F'out.il, author of "Lustra." We can hardly omit that. It seems to me. ROBERT H. DOWN. Outlet for Urala-asr. HEAVEKTON, Or.. Feb. J. (To the Editor) A Is tllit'U .his land snrl the water naturally drains serosa H"s fa ml. Can B pre. ent A from din ging a ditch deep enough to drain the, water from the tiling, which Is down three ferl? Sl'HSCIH IfElt. A Is entitled to a natural outlet for drainage vvaiw, "Tom his lnnd,- but would be responsible for actual dam age done In entering on ICk lattn a construe! ilia or nialnlalnliiii continue, tiou of his uraiuuiiu cysuin.