10. TIIE MORXIXG OREGOXIAX, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1920 EST.4BLI.4HKD BY HEVRY 1 PITTOCK. PuOlirhed by The Oregonlan Publishing Co.. llio Sixth Street. Portland. Oregon. C A. MOrtDKN. E. B. PIPER. Manager. Editor. The Oregonian is a member of the Asso ciated Press. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled tu tile use lor publica tlon of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published hen-in. Ail rights of republication o: special dispatches herein are also reserved. 8 00 3 .60 1.00 5.00 9 00 2.ZS BnbseriuUoa Kate! Invariably in Advance. IBy JlslL) Daily. Sundar tn-!tirTeV one year SS.no Daily. Sunday included, six months ... 4.. Daily. Sunday included, three month .. 2.2 i'ai:y. suraay incua.-, one inoniu .. Daily, without Sunday, one year Daily, without Sunday, six months .. Daliy. without Sunday, one month .. Weekly, one year Sunday, one ye&r . . . (By Carrier.) DMTr, Sur.day inrluded. one year . . . Daily. Sunday included, three months Dniiv KundjiV included, one month Daily, ithout Sunday, one year T.SO Daily, without Sunday, three months .. l.tfi Daily, without Sunday, one month tio How to Keinit Send postoffic money order, express or personal check on your local bank. Stamp, coin or currency are St owner's risk. Give postoffice address In run. including county ana state. Posluse Katm 1 to 16 pages. 1 cent IS to 2 - nazes. ! cents: 34 to 4b oaKes. cents; 30 to t4 pages. 4 cents: 6B to 80 pages. 5 cents; bl to 96 pages. 6 cents. Foreign postage, double rates. Eastern Business Office Verree A Conk Hn. iiruiiswick Duelling. New Yorkp Verree A Conklm. Stegi-r luu(iing. Chicago; er- ree & Conkiin. tree Press building, Uo trolt. Mich. San Francisco representative. K. J. H. dwell. THE WESTS WEALTH RELEASED, If the 66th congress were to ac- ;; complish nothing more, passage of ; the Sinnott hill for lease of coal, oil and other mineral lands would '.'J: make it memorable. This bill ends a Ion? struggle in regard to conser- vation and the rights of the public land states. It ends a ten-year em- bargo on development of the re- L;; sources of those states. It releases a reserve supply of fuel and ferti- lizer at a juncture when the avail able supply has become deficient. The loss to the nation through the tZ arrested development of the west T while the conservation controversy ",Z has rased is incalculable. Demand " for coal has grown, but addition to - the supply through opening of new mines has been blocked. The price V of coal has thus been artificially en- hanced and expansion of industry in ' the west has been checked. An un- r, balanced development of manufac- ; tures in the east and south to the ex- elusion of the west has resulted, causing congestion of traffic on the -- railroads and at the ports of the east. The effects of this evil were l especially felt during the war, when Z the nation needed its full productive -.- power and the full use of all lines of . . transport and of ail ports. Indus- ". trially it was in the position of a man ?t who fights with one arm, mighty " was that arm. Use of oil as fuel on railroads, ships, automobiles, in fac - tories and residences has created a "IT demand exceeding the supply, and Tt has made us partly dependent on turbulent, grasping Mexico. Inten sive cultivation of farms has in- - creased demand for fertilizer at time when the nitrate beds of Chile - approach exhaustion and when the reed of greater agricultural produc '.: tion has become apparent. ' If the terms of lease should prove - attractive, all the deficiencies - question will be made good in a few years. Cheaper fuel either coal oil will stimulate manufacture of ? products of mine, forest and soil Growth of towns in the sparsely - settled country west of the Rocky mountains and growth of trans " Pacific commerce will result, a " leading to more symmetrical de- e velopment of the whole country in duslrially and commercially. r As 52 H per cent of the royalty from leases is to be paid into th ; reclamation fund, irrigation of arid ' land will be hastened, the productive area of the west will be enlarged . population will become denser and ' there will be a wider market for the products of industries consuming the new supply of fuel. The states are to receive 37 H per cent of the roy altics, being thus assured of revenue , in place of taxes a revenue which ; will increase as development pro ; gTesses. This fund may be devoted to construction of highways or to improvement of rural schools or to . reclamation schemes which do no fall within the scope of the govern- ; ment's plans. Some skepticism may exist as to the willingness of investors to de velop and operate mines and oil wells under lease, since they have hitherto operated under outright ownership of the land. The small amount of work done in Alaska un der the coal land leasing law is not encouraging as to results at home. but the Alaska experiment was made in a remote territory, dependent al most entirely on outside markets, when the war had produced a labor famine and before railroads to the mines had been completed. The coal and oil fields of the west have a hungry home market and have railroads close at hand or can be reached by construction of shorl branches. Adoption of the leasing system at the end of many years' discussion should convince mine and oil operators that there is no chance of return to the old policy and that they must reconcile themselves to the new dispensation. They will learn to work under it as has been cone In Australia and other coun tries. Neither party to the conservation controversy has won a complete vie tory. The conservationists have se cured adoption of the leasing system, but not the rich revenue for the fed eral treasury with the prospect of which they won support for th,eir theory In the east and south. The public land states have not secured full sovereignty over the land in question through patents to individ ual owners, but they secure three- eighths of the revenue without restriction- as to its use, more than half of the royalty Is to be expended in their development, and the 10 per cent which goes into the national treasury will about suffice to pay ex penses of administration. We are to have conservation with develop ment, for which the west has con tended throughout, and the solid benefits will accrue to the west. This settlement Is a noteworthy achievement of Representative Sin nott of Oregon, for he brought about the conyiromise between conflicting views and piloted it through confer ence to final enactment. He has earned renewed confidence from his fellow-citizens by constant work and close attention to the interests of the west. concentration of business at one 1 port, which might result from rates based on distance and cost of serv ice.- On the contrary, the general in terest is served by permitting traffic to follow the line of least resistance that is, of lowest cost. By that rule each port would develop its good points and set them against Its bad points in the search for business. and commerce would flow to the one which could show the least cost of handling when the net result was worked out. Both producer and con sumer profit by using the port which has the lowest cost of transportation, the best port facilities, the best ship ping lines and the most extensive and best mercantile and banking fa cilities. The pretense is made that pro ducers and consumers profit by dis persion of commerce among a num ber of competing ports by parity of -rates and that they would suffer by J clubs will, if they or prudent, keep THE Pl'BLIC HAS A VOICE. By providing for a national board of appeal on railroad labor disputes. on which the public should have equal representation with employers and workers, the conferees on the railroad bill have made a decided improvement on all former plans for labor adjustments. This is the first attempt to recognize the public formally as a party to such disputes. and that fact is fortified by the pro vision that any decision must have the support of at least one represen tative of the public. That is a pro tection against the possibility that the companies and their employes might agree on an advance of wages which the public would have to pay in the shape of higher rates. As strikes would be forbidden prior to decision of an appeal, the risk of their occurring on railroads would be reduced to a minimum. Occasions would be few when decisions of the appeal board would fail to satisfy the employes. If the latter should strike against a decision on which the public's members agreed, public opinion would be likely to support its own agents by resisting demands which they held unjust and which would extract money from the peo ple's pockets. The people then would make the most of other means of transport and would find means of operating the railroads rather than suffer imposition. If the plan of the conferees should prove ineffective in preventing strikes, there would be a strong in- lination to resort to the Kansas plan of industrial courts to prevent strikes by judicial decision on labor questions. The Kansas law . is an assertion of the public right to un interrupted supply of the necessaries of life and to require employers and workmen to accept just awards In place of what they can get by a trial of strength. the fact secret until they have laid in their supplies. A more promising, If not esthetic, movement was that launched some weeks ago in an eastern city by cer- American people ana the allies take of the obligations of league mem bership. Though the United States intervened to save European democ racy from destruction, it did not do tain thrifty Individuals who resolved so until - its own rights had been to make patched clothing a badge of distinction, but somehow it does not seem to have taken the country by storm; or, if it has, we have not heard of it. There is the advantage, of course, that the patch could be come fashionable without skyrocket ing the price of the clothing one has already bought and paid for, and there is nothing shameful, per se. about a patched garment But neither, for that matter, is there any amusement in these times in wear ing one. And we must have our di version in one form or another. Plain prudence is very prosaic, and un likely ever to commend itself to any one in quest of thrills. There is a middle course, how ever, which ought to lead out of the wilderness, and that is a wider prac tice of everyday common sense, not only as to clothing, but in other mat ters. We need neither to stampede to some especial style of cloth nor get into rags, nor go without plain, nourishing food, nor boycott any necessity to bring things back to approximate normal. Careful con sideration, before making any pur chase, of whether the article is ac tually needed will surmount a lot of difficulties. There are a good many frills and furbelows to be dispensed with before taking up new fads that are likely in the end to prove as expensive as the old. THE FATE OP HOG ISLAND. Some consolation for seeing ship yards on the Willamette river junked may be found in the prospect that no better fate seems to await the great plant at Hog island, near Phila delphia, which the government built at a cost of $67,000,000. The ship ping board has bought the site at the cost price of $1,700,000 from the American International corporation, has arranged to cancel contracts for 5S ships and for completion of others before August 1. It has had only one offer to buy the plant, this being from a firm which proposed to junk the equipment and scatter it far and wide. That would be a sad end for what was heralded as the greatest triumph In application of the American sys tem of quantity production to ship building. The site of 927 acres was redeemed from a swamp and was covered with seven piers 1000 feet long and 1000 feet wide, 26 wooden and one concrete warehouses and 83 miles of railroad track. It was to have built 180 ships, among which wore the 58, for which contracts were cancelled. Philadelphia is greatly alarmed at the prospect of losing this great plant, and its chamber of commerce Is trying to engineer a scheme for its purchase by the city, the state of Pennsylvania or some private inter est, to be operated as combination shipbuilding and repair plant and water terminal. The shipping board has promised co-operation in efforts to save the plant from being dis mantled. It Is doubtful whether the plant could be maintained at its present size for building fabricated ships and be made to pay. The fabricated plan is only suited to building of large numbers of vessels according to standard designs to meet such an emergency as that of the war. There is no demand for such large num bers of identical vessels in normal times, for ships vary according to the trade in which they are engaged and the ports they visit. If the Hog island ways could be adapted to ships of various size, it is doubtful whether all could be kept occupied, and the verhoad charge of so large a plant would be so enormous as to eat up the profits, unless they were abnor mal, or the ways were constantly m ployed. Hog island was built to meet an emergency, which was ex pected to continue at least until the end of 1919. and it would have justi ficd itself if the war had lasted so long. As affairs turned out, its cost should be charged to the war. PROFESSORS IN CORDl'BOY, Members of the "white collar pro fessions" including male high school teachers in a California town who propose to fight the high cost of living by putting on corduroy clothing will succeed in their laud- ble attempt to reduce the cost of living only if they regard corduroy as a symbol, not to be too literally interpreted. As for the cloth itself, it may be, or may become, relatively expensive. Once on a time it was orn by royalty, as the name "corde du roi." by which it was introduced into England, signifies. More recent ly It has connoted an almost inde structible kind of cloth much in favor with parents whose offspring are given to sliding down cellar doors Its. high durability, rather than its royal ancestry, is its more modern recommendation. But the danger is that those pro fessors will make corduroy the fash ion, which being done we may as well dismiss the idea that wearing it ill be a measure of economy. We pay a good deal more for being in the style than we do for units of wearing quality. It is a safe predic tion that this particular kind of fustian will advance as soon as a large demand for it has been cre ated. Cost of producing it may not go up, but nowadays goods not only respond to the law of supply and de mand, but they anticipate it. Those who contemplate joining corduroy EMIGRATION, TO CANADA. Emigration from the United States to Canada, which is described by Canadian editors as a "return movement," and which resulted in the crossing of the border by some 52,000 persons in 1919, is perhaps a manifestation of restlessness rather than a definite outgoing current of population. The proportions that it may assume In the coming season can hardly be forecast this early In the season. But the figures given for last year represent less than a third of the number who crossed the bor der going northward in the last year before the war, and less than half the average in the five years prior to 1915. There is a considerable dis tance to go before emigration from the United States will equal that from Canada to the United States in the ears before the lands of the north ern country were made available. The pot of gold is always at the end of the rainbow. There are rain bow-chasers everywhere, and there are others who, more securely an- ored to their surroundings, see with even clearer vision the opportunities that lie right at hand. Not every adventurer who travels far finds for tune, and it is probably demonstrable that more have achieved the goal of their desires who spent their energies in developing familiar fields. Many have done so, in any event. Not all the pioneering Is done far from the railroad; there are virgin soils of op portunity everywhere. Those who are competent to make a living from the soil and it will be taken for granted that this is th only motive that can be relied on permanently to replenish the man power of the farms need not, in all probability, emigrate to find agricul tural opportunity. In the nature of the free land country, or the cheap land country, there are definite com pensating disadvantages. Relativ inaccessibility to markets is one of the chief of these. The crop pro duced must be exceedingly portable, and comparatively imperishable, and choice is for this reason restricted In the place and time of Abraham Lincoln's boyhood, for illustration, was unprofitable even to raise corn beyond the immediate needs of the farmer and his family, because would have been necessary to cross two states to reach a selling point Existence on the distant prairies may be the wild, free life that it is de picted, but it has its drawbacks, too, About the best that the early pio neers could hope for was that they would be able to create an estate for their children. Those who now are ambitious to become frontiersmen will profit by studying the experi ence of the men and women who made farming the comparatively comfortable business that it now is. Land in Oregon undoubtedly sells for more than It did in the fifties: and it is worth a good deal more. Those who contemplate emigrating, and who are not moved by pure wan derlust, will do we'll to consider all the elements of cost. It is exceed ingly improbable that any industri ous, enterprising and steady-going farmer will find that he needs to leave the United States to find a way to make a living. directly attacked, that fact demon strating that it had a common in terest with the allies in defeat of Germany. The danger having been removed, this nation is not disposed to become a general partner with the allies in preserving European peace by intervening in every Eu ropean quarrel. It prefers to stand aside until another definite occasion for intervention is recognized not only by the president but by con gress. In this course, the United States follows the example of Britain, which has held aloof from conti nental alliances but has often inter vened when its safety was threatened by disturbance of the balance of power. The war has led Britain to abandon its policy of isolation so far as to form a general alliance with France, and it may extend that alliance to Italy, but it seeks to les sen its own obligation by imposing it also on all members of the league. Britain hoped that American inter vention in the war. would lead this country to share that obligation, but If we are not ready to go so far, it will welcome us as a limited partner in preserving peace. Lord Grey's confidence that asso ciation with other nations in the work of the league would gradually lead the United States to become a full partner is founded on a fore cast of growing American interest in world affairs which is not yet jus tified. A decidedly unfavorable im pression has been made by the secret treaties under which the allies un dertook to parcel out the territories of Austria and Turkey among them selves, in some cases with scant re gard for the wishes of the inhabit ants. The American people are not ready to give a general guaranty for the execution of bargains in which they had no part, and of some of which they disapprove. The league covenant contains a pledge against any more secret treaties, but its ef fect is buried under the bad impres sion of those made during the war. The United States has not been loath to guarantee the independence of other states, but they are in the western hemisphere, in the American sphere of influence. To guarantee territorial conquests made in a Eu ropean war is a very different mat ter. It may be that before the United States will become a full partner in the league." as Lord Grey hopes, it will be necessary to Americanize the European view of international re lations and European diplomacy BY - PRODUCTS OF THIS PRESS Those Who Come and Go. TWO KINDS OP LAW VIOLATORS.' Que rest Exemption Claim Is That of Champion Crnpnhooter. In the records at Washington gath- , He wears several hundred sacks ered by Provost Marshal General of potatoes in the shape of a cheese Crowder-a department during the war ! knife on his coat and a few thousand 0acKs ot trpuas on ms necKue ng A WAT TO BETTER UNDERSTANDING. Aside from removing obstacles to ratification with reservations of the treaty of Versailles, Viscount Grey has rendered a great service to both parties by interpreting the mind of the American people to the mind of the British and other allied peoples. Anxiety for American help in estab lishing and maintaining peace made the allies impatient for ratification of the treaty by this country, and the delay caused by the controversy between president and senate caused irritation in Europe which threat ened serious disturbance of the friendship which the war had made closer. This irritation arose mainly from failure to understand the difference between the American and European constitutions. Fixed terms for presi dent and congress frequently place control of congress in the hands of one party, while the executive. through the president, remains In the hands of the other party. That situation arose from the republican victory in the election of 1918. In the limited monarchies of Britain and Italy and In the French repub lic, a government holds office only so long as it has the support or a majority in parliament. Thus it can negotiate treaties with assurance that they will be ratified. Tne allies as sumed that, when Mr. Wilson ap neared at Paris to act for the Ameri can people, his acts wouia De rati fied as those of Premiers Lloyd George, Clemenceau and Nitti were sure of being ratified. When objec tion was made in the senate to the obligation which he had assumed, many people in Europe were inclined to regard the senate's action as re pudiation. Lord Greys explanation of the powers of the senate will re move this impression and will set the American people right In the eyes of Europe. He has also made clear the Olf- texence between the view which the When Edward E. Brodie a month ago withdrew from a race that he was not in except by the push of zeal ous friends that for the nomination for secretary of state he showed sense of political acumen mat is drawing interest. He has been fol lowed by A. H. Lea, another "favor ably mentioned," who will not for sake his purpose of making each suc cessive state fair the best ever. This controversy about the amount of pure wool in clothes really gets us nowhere. To judge from the an nual report of one big clothing house, which disclosed that it made more than 14 per cent clear profit last year, there is more velvet than wool in the clothes, anyway. Players in the Boston symphony orchestra have taken steps to join the musicians' union, following de nial of their demand for more pay Their idea of the right scale prob ably is about high C. When Portland has a million in habitants and the county outside half as many may be time for con solidation; but boards that duplicate work and expense can as well be joined now as then. Two-thirds of a very dry month have passed, and it will be well to spade the potato patch now, for February Is a time of uncertain characteristics, and the skies may weep any day now. is to be found a claim for exemption from the draft by the "champion ne gro crapshooter" of South Carolina, and perhaps of the world. And it was because of this particular negro's ability to "roll the ivories" that his exemption from army service was de manded. A. L. McCawley, attorney, of Kan sas City, who was one of the 12 na tional inspectors who worked out of General Crowder"s office, tella th Kansas City Post of the claim. It was not the negro who desired exemption on the grounds that he was an "expert crapshooter," but his em ployer, a big lumber company which was working on government con tracts. The president of the lumber company, the general manager and other officials filed affidavits to the effect that the "expert crapshooter was necessary to the conduct of the company's business of filling govern ment contracts. "It appeared," said McCawley, "that the company employed negro labor almost exclusively. The affidavits set forth that without the 'expert crap shooter the company could not main tain its force of negro laborers and loggers. "The theory of the contention was that if this crapshooter on each pay day did not win all the wages of the other negro employes they would quit work to spend their wages. "It was duly set forth that, once the crapshooter was arrested and put to work on the country road gang and that during his absence from the lumber camp the negro laborers had money and began leaving their work until the efficiency of the organiza tion was cut to 60 per cent. "Officials of the company, hearing of another touted crapshooter in the neighborhood, employed him, staked him to a 'roll' and instructed him to 'clean up.' Instead, the new crap shooter lost his stakes and was fired by the company. The company offi cials then went to the'eounty authori ties, paid their expert crapshooter's fine and gave him his job back. With his return and his ability with the 'bones,' the camp soon had its full quota of negro laborers back at work all of them broke. "The district board reluctantly dis allowed the claim for exemption, and it came up 'to General Crowder's of fice for final disposition. Naturally it was disallowed by the provost marshal's office, but it was scheduled as the queerest of all exemption claims which came to Washington for ac tion." Kansas City Post. his neckti uratively speaking, for the ornaments are diamonds paid for by potatoes. He is Ceorge L. Burtt ox ban Francisco and is a partner of George Shima, the Japanese potato king of California. Mr. Burtt. with Mr. Shima, has bought 15,000 acres of sagebrush land at Red mond. Or, and intends turning the desert into a spud garden. "We will spend about $500,000 getting water on the land and clearing it." said Mr. Burtt at the Imperial yesterday on his arrival from Redmond. "We do not intend colonizing Japanese laborers on the acreage, for we havn't enough labor in California to spare. Wre may send a dozen foremen who understand growing spuds, but there will be ro colony nor anything like that. I'm a native son of California, but I never saw in California nor any other place such good soil as we have bought near Redmond. All it needs is to be cleared and watered and we'll attend to that And, by the way, S. T. Mustard of Redmond is the champion potato grower of America. That's a fact. His spuds attracted me to Redmond." "About 300,000 acres of agricultural land in the Oregon & California iand grant in the Rosebure land office aistrict, win be opened for entry with in a rew weeks," says W. H. Canon of the Roseburg land office, who was at tne Imperial yesterday. "Service men will have a 60-day preferential right. This means that after the land is opened the service men will have a couple of months to file before the civilians get a chance at it. This rule win apply, for the next two years on anything opened for entry. Aside from service men. the only persons having prererrea claim are the settlers who have been on the land since prior to December, 1913, and have made improvements." Mr. Canon is an ar dent democrat and once was a candi date for national committeeman in a hotly-contested election. "The first crop of the Warm Snrintcs irrigation project will be fathered this year," states Georee Huntinsrton Curry, boss of the Malheur Enterprise, wno was In FSrtland yesterday. "The farmers are getting readv and the big project will soon be a realitv. Tho sheepmen up our way are doing well. out tne cattlemen are not. The stock men who have been winter-feeding have been losing money and a good many wno were feeding this last win ter will sell early next fall and let someone else do the feedinsr. The sheepmen can afford to feed, but the cattlemen cannot. Malheur county, on the whole, is doing splendidly." Mr. Curry is an his way to Eugene to attena tne conference of newspaper men. The postmaster at Renton, Wash-. has been made a knight by the king of Italy. That's nothing. Our own postmaster at Portland was turned into the night by the postmaster- general. The bolshevik! are reported to have shot a horse because It was con sidered to be of bourgeois lineage. To be safe in Russia even a horse should have long ears and a bray. The allies have decided to let the sultan stay in Constantinople, but have taken his army away from him. This is more likely to be a relief to the sultan than a cause for sorrow. democratic headquarters for the northwest will be located in Spokane, but Oregon headquarters remain un der Dr. Morrow's hat, to which the really faithful are commended. If local politics are beginning to warm np in a temperature of 42 maximum, what will they be when the sun brings out 80 or so in a few months? Every way It is considered, hon esty is the best policy. Perhaps it grinds at times, but there is comfort in the peace it brings, here and here after. In reappointing Simon Benson on the state highway commission. Gov ernor Olcott did what was expected, and the right thing. The wild creatures in the zoos of central Europe were among the first to suffer when the allied blockade enhanced the price of food. Through out Germany and Austria at Ham burg, where Hagenbeck, the famous dealer, maintained his animal empo rium; at Berlbi, Munich, Dresden, Cologne, Hanover, Leipzig. Stuttgart, Dusseldorf, Frankfort, at Vienna and Budapest the zoos were rapidly an nihilated with the twofold purpose of saving what the animals might eat and of placing on the market all imported meats and game that human stomachs could endure. And the Britons, though not compelled to dine upon this high-priced fare, were forced to sacrifice the health or life of many zoological specimens by feeding them on inappropriate diet The reptiles could no longer get fresh eggs. Tropical birds could only peck at disappointing substitutes for oranges and bananas. Even the sea lions perished because the fish on which their race was reared had been transformed into horseflesh dipped in oil. - An of the parks and municipal zoos in the united States, William Hornaday tells the New York Evening Post, "have suffered, too, be cause during the last three years very few foreign animals have been brought to this country. In the early part of the war a certain number of animals were imported. Later the im ports fell to almost nothing owing to the lack of shipping facilities and the fact that many former collectors had joined the armies. The chief need in America is for the foreign hoofed animals, especially the African ante lopes, the wild goats, wild sheep and deer from Asia. The high eost of sport In Kansas is thus told about by the White City Register; The coyote ronndnp ended rather distressingly for a number of hunters Saturday. Elwood Pitcher got shot in the face, James Haun of the Parker- ville neighborhood was standing with the muzzle of hie shotgun resting on his foot when he accidentally pulled the trigger, blowing the middle toe off and ripping his shoe to pieces. Lloyd Ball jumped out of the car in the road directly in front of "Shorty" Hembrows little racer. Lloyd was knocked down and run over. Fortu nately hie injuries were not as se vere as feared at first, tia was able to attend school Monday. The front of George Carson's new car was riddled with shot and he raced back to town before the water all leaked out of his radiatoT. Several hunters were hit with shot that failed to pene trate the flesh, but which left black and bine marks. At the roundup only rabbits were in the ring, the one coyote escaping the circle. When A. S. Johnson goes after wa ter he sticks with the hole until he gets it. Mr. Johnson, who came to Portland yesterday, operates a couple of well-drill outfits in Sherman coun ty. Up there the water-hunters have to bore from 200 to 600 feet to get what they want. It costs $5 a foot to bore for water, so that the farmer who contracts with Mr. Johnson hopes that the water will soon be reached. Mr. Johnson brought in water last week on one ranch at 22S feet and just before that he got water on an other place at 425. There is plenty of water in Sherman county, but it is a long way from the surface. "Beer is 70 cents a quart at Tijuana, Mexico, and, people cannot go from San Diego to Tijuana, 17 miles, fast enough," declares Alvin E. Baer, who arrived yesterday at the Multnomah., "The bars in the Mexican town are doing a great business and there is always a crowd trying to get close enough to the brass rail to shout an 1 order. It is impossible to bring any of the refreshments across the line into the United States, however, ex cept that which is already consumed." 'Ten years in the tropics is not worth the money they pay you to stay Professional Bootlrirser Coatrastesl W Its Maker of Wise (or Osi l ie. PORTLAND. Feb. 19. (To the Edi tor.) In view of the fact that a con stant succession of arrests for viola tions of the prohbition law have bean chronicled in your paper for the past few weeks, I am writing you with the view of throwing some light on the manner In which the "dry" law Is enforced in Portland. There are In our city two kinds of violators of the prohibition law the professional bootleggers, many of whom operate In groups and whose sole object is to make money by the illicit sale of alcoholic some of which are adulterated to a degree that endangers health, and a second class, consisting of residents who manufacture in their own homes beer and wine in insignificant quan tities and solely for home consump tion. In the latter case, the wine or beer is neither sold nor given away. Instead of making a distinction be tween the above two classes, the police have of late been giving the sume sort of treatment to the harmless home producer that they visit on the hard ened bootlegger. Summary arrest, po lice court hearing and fine have been meted out to the former with the same severity and regularity that has been observed in the case of the boot leggers. The effect of this policy on the two classes of offenders is, how ever, widely dissimilar. With the professional bootlegger, the matter of arrest and fine Is some thing that he expects to encounter and be is always prepared to meet it Consequently the punishment which he thus receives has not the deterrent effect which the law seeks to accom plish. As soon as he is permitted to leave the court room, the bootlegger starts his nefarious practices over again, a little more circumspectly, perhaps, but nevertheless with all bis former greed and activity. Here Is a typical case of this kind: Three months ago the police seized locally about 1500 gallons of wine and liquors owned by a group of boot leggers. Just a few days ago the police seized, in the very same place, 1000 gallons of alcoholic beverages manufactured and owned by the self same bootleggers. How different" is the case of, say, an Industrious workingman, the father ot family, who prepares In his own home, and for his own personal use only, a few gallons of wine that form for him one, and perhaps not the least, of the few pleasures of life fo him, especially when a habit acquired in early youth. For such a man an his family an arrest, with the acconi panying arraignment and publicity, 1: disgrace that is hard to get ove I know personally of instances where the humiliation attendant upon sue experiences has resulted in loss of health. I am not seeking to condone viola tions of the law where there is crim inal intent. But I do say.emphatlca ly that a distinction should be mad in the treatment accorded bootleggeri on the one hand and old citizens an heads of families on the other. Th way In which the law is enforced at present has lead many to conclude that the police are being misled Into making arrests, in some cases, by In formants who have anything but dl interested motives in spying on the!' neighbors. A. LIMA. ... . , . r- i I more i ruth lu.n foetry, I I I By Jss.es J. Mositasr . . . j PCTTIXG I'EP IXTO TIIKU, They're modernizing Gilbert'! plays to brighten them a bit -And make them sparkle, so to speak. with 1S20 wlu They find, they say, it much lmprovea his late Victorian chalf To put a little rough stuff tn, which always gets a launn; And doubtless when they play the bard, as now and then they do. They II try to bring him up to dale and gag his dramas, too. For Instance, when th Jealous Moor fair Deademona -j-naL beverages, '"""" vumray renet ne'll say. "I King Lear at Mistress GonerU will shake his frosty locks. And, winking at the audience, smirk. iiaij use a tox ; While Richard will corns charging In, cast down his broken sword. Lift up his hands to heaven and shout, "My kingdom for a Kordi" "This Denmark." Hamlet will observe, "is more than I can brook It thinks that I am dippy yet It fall for Dr. Cook. Ophelia, I'm not mad at you, although, of course. I'm mad; Horatio, brlnir the ouija board, I want to talk to dad." And when he gazes at th ghost, in anger he will cry: "I can t have spirits in the house th country has son dry!" When Portia sits to hear th cos of Shylock's ancient crude. The aged money king will rise and say. "Good morning. Judge!" And when she says his pound of flesh Is held a bit too high. "It Isn't half so high as beef," old Shylock will reply. And thus, with merry quip and Jest, up to date and clever. They'll give old Shakespeare's plsva such pep that they'll ndur for ever. I"rT tar It. What w need most of all la a shortage of shortages. Natural Faeiiak. Maybe Mars is niaklnir a bid on th contents of our bonded warehouses. However Ike now (.'nines Out. Well, anyway, the navv did a mM Job, didn't It? "LUMBERJACKS" KNJOV RUADIVG 3las;aslnes Appreciated In Out-of-the- way Places Fnr from News Stands. PORTLAND, Feb. 19. (To the Kdi tor.) Answering Mr. Hudson of Drain regarding lumberjacks being able to buy bonds, and therefore not in class to accept free magazine service, I think Mr. Hudson must be lacking in knowledge of conditions in the average logging camp. When one stops to think that these logging camps are usually a good many miles from news stands and the usual camp commissary does not nan die magazines, perhaps it is not alto gether so "queer" that these lumber- there," is the verdict of W. Everson, . Jacks are willing and glad to take "Buildings cost billions, " remarks headline. After pricing a few bungalow plans, we somehow get the same impression. The Dalles has so much money and business that another bank i needed. Pretty good recommenda tion for a city. The moonshiner who married the chief witness against him may live to allude to love as all moonshine. The movies have nothing on the latest sensations in married life, as revealed by testimony. The robbers will have to go back to the Monmouth bank for the money they overlooked. After all, ifs reasonable enough to call the man who "kites" checks a "high Oyer." ' For a spring tonic, try the smelts that are getting plenty. Boys ot the United States make the best wireless telegraph operators In the world. In no other country besides does the average boy know so much about wireless or take so keen an in terest in it. Before the war the United States contained 175,000 wireless sta tions, large and small, scattered throughout every section of the land. The most of these were amateur wire less stations built and operated en tirely by boys. No country in. Europe nas anything like as many stations. During the war it became necessary for the government to close most of these wireless stations and regulate the others very rigidly to prevent any enemy nsing them for hist own ends. Now that the war is happily over the government hae removed these re strictions and any American boy Is free once more to equip and operate a station of his own. The interest in wireless telegraphy is reviving by leaps and bounds and in a short time we will see more wireless stations in operation than ever before. Boys ! Life for February. who arrived from Shanghai, Chin yesterday and registered at the Ben son. "It is no place for a white man and a white man should stay in the tropics only a short time." Mr. Ever son is in America on business and also to have himself tinkered with by doc tors. His long sojourn in China un dermined his constitution. Dan Kirby of McMinnville, owner of one of the finest farms in that lo cality, was in Portland yesterday. Mr. Kirby lives in a township which has an association and the purpose of the association is to keep the town ship up to snuff. Among other things the association has done is to that every building within its limits is neatly painted and the farms made snappy In appearance. When E. Shinkal found ther were no rooms vacant at the Benson and that he would have to wait until night before securing accommoda tions he showed his judgment and appreciation of putting idle time to good account by chartering a ma chine and making the Columbia high way trip. Mr. Shlnkai la a Japanese commercial representative who has been located at New York. The cost accounting system in printing offices will be explained by R. W. Sawyer to the newspaper men at Eugene. Mr. Sawyer, who is the chief of one of the Bend newspapers, is at the Hotel Portland with Mrs. Sawyer. He is a Harvard graduate, too. but after satisfying himself that he didn't care particularly for the law business, he slipped over to Bend and became a newspaper proprietor. "Gold production in our district has dropped from $3,000,000 In 1914 to leas than $400,000 in 1919," explained Her man Hers of Goldfield. who la 'reg istered at the Multnomah. The price of silver is such that this metal is attracting the attention of the min ing fraternity more than the yellow stuff. Incidentally, the boom days of Goldfield have departed. "The port haj been the making of Astoria," asserted" a. v in gate at tne Hotel Oregon. "The port has, provided th warehouses and transportation facilities and having this equipment ati demonstrating that It is capable of doing things. Astoria has received a rate. Astoria would never have got ten anywhere but for the establish ment of the port" The fashionable set of Castle Rock, Wash., will soon be wearing hats im ported from Portland. Mrs. E. L. Drew, milliner of Castle Rock, was at the Perkins yesterday while placing order for a new line of Easter crea tions. J. A. Harding of Ean Claire, who registered at the Benson, is reported as the prospective manager of the new hotel that Keller & Boyd will have in that city. Keller & Boyd are the owners of the Benson. A. C. Dutton, head of the Dutton Lumber company, with offices In Portland, arrived at the Benson yes terday from bis home in Springfield, Mass. Suffering with a bad eye, F. E. Brosius of Prineville came to Port land yesterday to have some treat ment at the hands of a specialist. He is at the Perkins. this reading matter placed at their disposal. Also I think if Mr. Hudson had ever worked in any of these log ging camps, day after day, he would realize that these same lumberjacks (regardless of wages) are human enough to enjoy a magazine, no mat ter whether it be given to them or bought with the wages they earn. Having lived in and close to some of these logging camps, I can truth fully say these men and their families are glad to get reading matter. I have yet to find any one that through false pride will refuse amagazlne or book, regardless of Its newness or oldness. I think Mr. Anderson's plan 1b a long step toward a remedy of condi tions one is apt to find tn places where there is no reading matter. Instead of persons condemning It. if one is really looking to better condi tions for mankind, he will "boost" whenever opportunity offers, and not "knock." ONE WHO HAS SEEN LOGGING CAMPS. KEFLECTIOKS ON F.INSTIOlN IDKA What a Crooked Thins; (he Tawllae of Gravity Must Be. VANCOUVER. Wash, Feb. 1. (To the Editor.) Verily Dr. Einstein has awakened the sleepers and they are now asking. "Where are we at?" One Is confronted by a sphinx which he here attempts to outline. On the equator the periphery of tlie earth revolve nt an approximate speed of 1000 miles an hour. There, imagln a gun, elevated (laid) to an ahsolut perpendicular, discharging a projec tile into space. Let the time occupied the ascent and descent of the pro jectile be exactly one hour. Now during this hour the gun has been borne away practically 1100 miles from its original point or line of fire. Its lay has been changed by some 25 degrees. It is not pointing in the same direction as when fired, ye n falling the projectile will return to the gun. Now when we confound this already complex problem by consider. Ing the tremendous speed of th earth In Its annual oblique swing around the sun it Is baffling to attempt to see the form of the figure which this imaginary projectile must de scribe in order to overtake the fugl tive gun from which it was dis charged. In thinking this, forget atmosphere and its trends and currents and think only of th flight of the projectll through space, and I feel sure tha you will like the writer, agree with Einstein, and wlthont doubt you will say: If spac Is an actuality, then the towline of gravity must be crooked as a dog's hind leg." A BOMBARDIER. A Fantasy. By Urarc K. Hall. On nlitht 1 strolled by th heaving sea. When the waves were washing high, And the walls of th rock-bound basin Were splashed with the (horning foam; Th artists had spilled rti4r Palette On the hem of the western sky. And the tides spread their snowy ruffles On the sands, as'thsy hurried bom. Ther was whimper and sob in th voices That ram from the surging hrine, And cries that my soul re-echoed With a throb that waa cold and bleak; There was pathos and ghostly whisper. And often a smothered sigh. A the wav brought its spirit message In tones that th sea-folk apeak. Then I pictured th floor of th ocean Gone dry as a sun-warped board. Where the years have been storing treasure Deep down In th green raose) caves; And where lost souls sleep nnwak- Ing Rich pelf In ths sea-gods' hoard While only the curllnir coral btands guard by their open graves. Are there elves that carry th sorrow Of th world to the ocean's rim. And bury them In the night-time, Deep under th restless blue? O, I funcy the sleepers protest At the tales of our grief snd sin. And their voices moan In th break ers If wo of the land but knew! In Other Day. W. R- Mathems of Vancouver, B. C, j senting a steel products company. What Epidemics Fee Oa. PORTLAND, Feb. 18. (To the Edi tor.) I heartily Indorse Mrs. L. E. B.'i letter in The Oregonian, February 16, and her opinion as to why we.have epidemics. When Dr. Evans visited our city some time ago he plainly told th peo ple of Portland that they had a "dirty city." What has been done to clean It up? Let those who know answer. We will continue to have epidemics as long as people are allowed to keep chickens, rabbits, goats, etc.. In back yards, in the heart of the city. Of what use is it to keep clean premises when adjoining neighbors keep a chicken yard which is nothing but a filthy garbage dump that not only "smells to heaven" but Is a fly and disease breeding affliction of the worst type? MRS. C. L. W. Twesr.fhe l'eara Ago. From Ths Oresnnlas of February 20, ISM. Salem. Again the minority in the legislature switched votes, this tlm from Williams to Iowell, and the vote tood: Li.ilph 40. Lowell liar 10, others scattering or absent. Managers of th Portland Free kin dergarten met yesterday and aoccpt- d th resignation of Mrs. Dudley as principal of th kindergarten on Sixteenth street. Th constant lncrsns in tb num ber of pupils attending the puhlio schools has necessitated th building of addition to several of the build ings. Including the Chspmsn, Wood lawn and Wllliams-avenu struc tures. A sudden boom In the realty market looks as If It were her to stay, on irm reporting salos Kgrcgllu- 100,000 for Uat week. Repairs to the Willamette Steam Mill and Lumbering plant, neci-aHtial- d by the flood and fire, hav been completed, and sawing was resumud yesterday. k; ok urnixtj. With the lengthening of th days, comrs the sun's more ardent rays. When the meadowlarks and robins start to sing. When the pussy willows gay, nod and pass the time of day. Tour safe In saying "These ar signs of spring." It la at this time of yenr, that a young man's thoughts. I fear Very often lighLly turu to thoughts of love. And bis lmpuls Is to rosm, or to write a soft spring porm. While the grieving skin woep ceaselessly above. When your ever loving spouse, starts to clean the bloomln' house Then you almost starv, and cannot find a thing. It's the old spring cleaning fever. Just be patient It will leave her. For It Is just another sign of spring. Rhubarb! Onions! How you v miner d 'em, they r a tonlo for your system. When the kids hunt out their mar bles and Hi kite. Don't b worried 'cause you'r laxy. and your thoughts ars sort hazy. Drink sassafras you'll soon b feeling bright. When you find yourself a wishing for a restful day of fishing. And your appetite for work begins to poll. When the balmy southern breeta makes you think of It. V. li.'a. Why that's about th surest sign of alL R. E. CRE. Location of flwarthmore tolleae, KALAMA. Wash.. Fob Editor.) Please Inform m dress of Swarthmor coils RALPH HARPOLE, Swarthmore college Is at Swarth- mora, Fa. IK. (To thn ic of the ad- are.