THE MORNING OREGOXIAX, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 11, 11)20 ESTABLISHED BY HENRY L. WTTOCK. Published by The Oregonian Publishing Co.. 135 Sixth Street. Portland. Oregon. C A. MORDBN. B. B. Manager. Editor. The Oregonian is a member of the Asso ciated Press. The Associated Pr?!, f" clusively entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches credited to 11 or not otherwise credited in this paper na. V the local news published herein. All rignv. of publication of special' dispatches Herein are also reserved. , " Subscription Bates Invariably to Advance. (By Mail.) Daily, Sunday Included, one y ear . . . . . Daily, Sunday Included, six months... Daily, Sunday included, three months. Daily, Sunday included, one montn... - Daily, without Sunday, one year. " Daily, without Sunday, six months.... o- Daily, without Sunday, one month Weekly, one year ........ Sunday, one year -uw (By Carrier.) Daily, Sunday Included, one year. .. . -9 0 Dailv, Sunday included, three months. i. Dailv, Sunday included, one month... Dally, without Sunday, one year...... Daily, without Sunday, three months, l.-jo Dailv, without Sunday, one month w How to Remit Send postofflca money erder, express or personal check on oor local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at owner s risk- aive postofflce address in full, including county and state. I'ootace Rate? 1 to 16 pages, 1 cent: 18 to pages, 2 cents: 34 to 48 pages, 3 cents, 60 to (M pages. 4 cents; 06 to 80 paseB, cents: 82 to 90 pages. 6 cents. Foreign postage double rate.. Ktrrn RiisinexB Office Verree & Conk- lln. Brunswick building. New York; J erree Conklin. Steger building. Chicago; Verree & Conklin, Free Press building, Detroit. Mich. San I"rancisco representative, B. J. Bidwell. . used to the public .injury, its posses- 1 tel 'anywhere in Oregon? It would I tax may not be diminished. It takes I IDE AS FROM THE OREGON PRESS sion by any small ktoup is against public policy as a possible means of oppression. By not complying readily and in full good faith with the order of the court to divest themselves of control of the stockyards, the packers weak en their, position in Opposing the plan to put them under the thumb of a host of government inspectors and agents. - Though the general de sire is to reduce, not to expand, the swollen bureaucracy, federal super vision of corporations is in accord with public opinion, and the people will uphold the government and the courts in exercising control. GOOD TBOM ETttt There will be an individual here find there who will set down the Santa Rosa lynching as another ad dition to the promiscuity of lawless ness with which the country has been afflicted since the European war. There will be others who will look upon the incident with toler ance as a forceful protest against that same "wave of crime" which newspapers and statistical authori ties seem to agree is sweeping Amer ica. We read that human life was never as insecure in America as it is today; that the homicide rate for 1S19 was higher than in any previous year for which records were kept; that 19 20 statistics promise no im provement. 1 It is difficult for the average man to looK upon xne lynciims ui who plainly deserved to be hanged as a type of pure lawlessness, for the average man still possesses within hinl some of the primitive instincts of revenge. Even condonation ex ists in spots, despite what moralists may say, and it largely remains for authorities, pulpit and .press to ex press -the indignation that is to be expected as a matter, of duty. But Uiere are degrees of indigna tion. It mas be doubted that indig nation is sincere which implies sym pathy for such as the Santa Rosa murders and assaulters or women It Is the indisrnity worked upon the law that stintrs the moral sense. It is the realization, also, that there is no safe line at cleavage between the lvnchine that can be condoned and the lynching that can not be. To approve one implies approval of any or all, and lynch law when general makes mockery of justice. It is not recalled that California in recent years has been given to lynch law. Yet it has had its share of murders and other atrocious crimes. Nor is one recourse to lynch law evidence that swift punishment for crime in manner outside the law will become prevalent. A lynching in tho north is commonly a culmi nation of circumstances which may attend upon any state that is usually well ordered in its consideration of lawlessness. It is a throw-back a resort to the elemental, always alarming and sometimes harmful. There have been recently in Call fornia, as there have ,been in every other community, an unusual number of crimes of varying degrees. There is because of them widespread ner vous tension there and elsewhere. At such times there arises a wide spread impression of inadequacy of courts of justice and or the American jury system. Incidents of the law's delays, of escapes from just punish ment, of compromise verdicts, of ex hibits of sentimentality toward cnm lnals and of the dozen and one other frailties of American court proc esses unduly impress the mind and discourage the ordinarily strict sup porter of orderly justice. At such times the primitive man may break through the crust of civ ilization, ignore the processes which wisdom has laid down for his own protection and take the law into his own hands. Some wanton murder, some organized and hideous attack upon women's virtue, is the shatter Ing force. It is easier to explain the lynching phenomenon than to suggest a rem edy for it, except in the broadest terms. An era in which swiftness and certainty of capture, conviction and punishment were the rule would do that which condemnation of lvnching in itself can never do Greater energy by arresting officers is-the least difficult of these to "at tain. The others are hedged about by long established legal rules, tra- ditions and customs, which can be broken down only by virtual revo lution In criminal jurisprudence Practice of criminal law is pretty much of a game, a matching of wits by lawyers for the state and lawyers for the defense. .Professional sue cess is too often the driving force in stead of accomplishment of plain justice. We may hope for an ulti mate awakening to the need of re forms, and possibly, indefensibl though lynchings may be as an ap proach toward real justice, lynch ings may 'ultimately do that very thing. Meanwhile, if any good may be expected from evil, let us also hope that persons inclined to cnm lnal wave may learn from Santa Rosa that the public patience is no lmpregnaoie. NOW FOR -FREE RIDES. Before it came-to a more or less complete halt in its rapid advance toward sovietism a year or so ago, Seattle determined to shake loose from the grip of one grasping mo nopoly, the streetcar company, which was charging the public the inconceivable sum of five cents for individual fares, and at the same time to undertake a great service for the common good viz.. buy and op erate the system as a municipal project. If a public utility is a pub lic utility, it is the public business to make it so. That is logic. Anyway, was Seattle logic. Now the city is reaping the fruits of its grand idea. Just the other day the city council raided the sinking fund, created to pay the semi-annuai interest on its 15.000,000 street railway bonds, 375,000 every six months and took out $137,000 to meet the payroll. The employes must be paid, it ap pears, even under the most Utopian conditions. It has also been decided that the carfare shall be 8 1-3 cents. provided one buys three tokens for 5 cents, or ten icents cash if one is not willing to invest a quarter In tokens. Nice arrangement. Seattle paid $15,000,000 (in bonds) for its street railway. A brainy city councilman there has got the notion, and he is agitating it continuously. that the next step for Seattle to take is to give the public free rides. Nice idea,-too. But who, we wonder, will pay for the free rides, since the hated traction trust has sold out to the city? Sold out is the right term. have been, of course, a great service ' in cash profits which have not been realized and may never be realized. It compels a man to. estimate far in advance of payment the tax which will apply to each article he sells, and to play safe by adding an amount which is very likely to prove too large. Every opening Is given the men for whom Mr. Kitchin has antipathy to evade the tax, to make it the means of increasing profits to Oregon if he . had been able to make his bluff good about, the imml- I nent invasion by California Investors of a neighboring state. 'It is said in southern "Oregon, where they are familiar with the de tailed, progress of Crater Lake, or lack of it, that during Director Ma ther's administration not one single constructive policy for the park has been devised or carried out. He be gan by showing irritation and dis satisfaction with conditions, and has contributed nothing but talk to im prove them. The small proposed al lotment for Crater Lake show that he has no present interest in any valuable plan of park Improvement. It will' be well ,to exhibit the ap propriations by the government for national parks during the Mather term (1917 to 1920 inclusive). They are: Tejlowstone JfWS.420 Yosemlte &40.OOU Sequoia 162. S10 General Grant 14.500 Mount Rainier 102.100 Glacier SSO.0OO Rocky Mountain ................. 4O.O0 Crater Lake 64.450 Thus it will be seen that the three California parks have had a grand total of $1, 117, 310 in four years, while the single Oregon park has had $64,450. What Director Mather proposes for the next fiscal year is disclosed by his recommendations, as follows: Yellowstone ... .. . $402.?.O0 Yosemlte ....... 57S.5.17 Sequoia 175.217 General Grant ..................... 10 000 Mount Rainier ................... 214400 Glacier 83.U0fl Rocky Mountain 1S0.OOO Crater Lake 26.400 ' The wide disproportion between Oregon and California is now to be increased, for the total of the one is to be a pitiful $26,400 and of the otnei the comfortable sum of $760,754. The Tregon delegation at Wash ington, it would seem, will find in these proposals, and in the Mather record generally, an opportunity for special activity. Newspaper Comments on Bine Lawi, Politics andMany Other -Thin gra nitic Lawi Inadequate. The Dalles Chronicle. We have no Quarrel with the Lord's Day alliance, but we do say they are wrong. They are trying to make men and women good through legislation. If the hearts of men and women are not changed by the miracle of repent- and to make others finally pay it nda.'t "r.ttln,ly "'L.?.?".' TT V. V. . VJ T. 11, VI IUi WW U b V change. - THE WAR ON TUBERCULOSIS. In the statement that tuberculosis is a controllable disease will be found the measure of importance of the campaign, which recurs with es pecial energy at about -virus - time every year, to obtain funds for its prevention, through education of the public and by providing care fdr in- ipient cases. There is a significant paragraph in the literature of the National Tuberculosis association on the subject. It is: One of the chief benefits derived Is the lowering of the death rate by prompt reatment in the early staees. In the first ear ol Lne demonstration, 41; per cent or ne total nnmoer reported were advanced ases. In the second year, because of the consultation service, the advanced cases reported were reduced to only 19 per cent. The tragedy of the mortality rate from this malady, now seriously prev alent in Europe as an aftermath of the war, and threatening this coun try unless prompt action is taken, is that It is so largely preventable. The number of deaths from tuberculosis annually in the United States is about 50,000, but for every death eight open cases are reported. This means that more than 1,200,000 individ uals 'have the disease. The watch word of the anti-tuberculosis cam paign is prevention. Former Presi dent Taft expressed the thought when he said in a recent statement indorsing the movement: Its ravages In Europe have caused us to view with consternation the stricken coun- ries of the old world shattered in health. Knowledge that a million cases exist In America arouse in us a reeling akin that which we felt when the submarine war was begun against us. We must drive it from the tenements, from the factories. as we drove the submarine from the deep. We can best do this by preventive and edu cational measures. I hope that from the platform, the pulpit, the teacher's desk, the staire. ty address and ny rum. the lesson of fresh air and nutritious food anil ot proper care and rest tuberculosis preven tion will be brought home to the people of America. Community responsibility for pre vention or control of communicable diseases is better understood than it was a few years ago, and it is to this sense of brotherhood that the appeal is made. But even selfishness, if en lightened, will find in the facts suf ficient ground to support the move ment. It is only by the broadest possible co-operation that the men ace to individuals can be abated. DECREASING SnCIMS. Conditions that viewed In the mass stimulate suicide are not necessarily tnose or excitement and unrest, as appears from figures compiled by Dr. v TeaericK L. rtofmann and published in the New York Spectator, an in surance journal. Dr. Hofmann, re viewing statistics for twenty years in iuu cities of the United States, finds that the rate of self-destruction is decreasing. Thus, in the four years prior to the war, it was -20 Tier 100,000 of the population; in the four years of war it was 18.2 and in 1919, a year marked by an exceptionally nign nomicide raie, it had declined to 14.2. High mark 21 per 100,000 was reached during 1915, when the na tions of Europe were at war, but we had not yet entered the conflict. The tabulation doSs not furnish suf ficient data to warrant conclusion but it is possible that the total was increased in that year by unsettle- ment of the minds of former citizens of the belligerents, in some of whose countries there is an avesage suicide rate much higher than that of the Lmted States. The totals alone do not illuminate the racial aspect of the question. However, it is shown that as we came nearer to actual participation, as in 1916, a year dis tinguished by growing belief that our affairs were approaching a crisis, the rate fell to 18 per 100,000. In 1917. with the United States actually in the war, the rate was 16.9. By this time, perhaps, a considerable num ber of -potential "suicides had sum marily disposed of themselves, for the figure drops sharply to 14.6 in 1918 and further to 14.2 in 19l9. Only with knowledge of a vastly greater number of factors than ap pear in a tabulated summary can we hope to generalize as to the causes of suicide or the means of preven tion. That it is not due to physical discomfort is indicated by the fact that the rate is three times as high in Los Angeles and San Diego, with supposedly ideal climate, as in cities on the Atlantic coast. The panic" year of 1907 was not char acterized by an increased rate, al though a good many persons suf fered heavy financial losses in that year. The figures sustain none of several theories of suicide cause. We must be content with the showing that it is actually falling off. with additions made each time that it is passed on. Mr. Houston's proposal of a uni form tax, of 20.. per cent on corpor ation profits is' an Improvement, but it is in less degree open to ihe same objections. That tax would still be added to the price, and would be passed on and would be of uncertain amount till a year's business was wound up. Probably the government would get only one dollar out of each two dollars additional that the con sumer paid. We want taxes which go all to the government and impose no additional burden for some cor poration to appropriate. As doing business in corporate form is a priv ilege granted by government, a tax on exercise of that privilege should suffice. As corporation profits go to the " stockholders they should be taxed as part of individual incomes, a special tax being Imposed on un divided profits in order to prevent evasion of personal income tax. Mr. Houston puts his finger on the weak point in the income surtaxes when he says that they cannot be successfully collected. Their effect is not to bring revenue to the treas ury, but to drive capital Into invest ment in exempt securities, of which there is abundance, growing daily. His revised schedule of rates would go high enough by taxing 50 per cent the income over $100,000 that was spent, and it would conduce to pro ductive investment by taxing at 20 per cent income that was saved and invested Either a uniform tax of 1 per cent on gross turn-over of business or a consumption tax at the same rate would yield so much revenue that it could replace all other forms of tax ation, but, unless graduated both as to size and character or purcnases, it would fall with undue weight on people of small means. If made much higher on luxuries than on necessaries, it would bear so heavily on the rich that it might serve as a substitute for the surtax on incomes spent and for the various taxes on specific luxuries which Mr. Houston proposes, The several plans of reform that have been proposed by men who have carefully studied the- subject tend all to the general conclusion that the present income and profits taxes are vicious, fail actually to ta; the rich, put an excessive load on the poor and set the brakes on industrial expansion. They vary greatly in the substitutes they offer. If the pres ent congress were to attempt any change in' the short time at its dis posal, it could only tinker at the job and might make a bad matter worse. Its committees would better spend the time in preparing a well consid ered plan for action by the new con gress. We cannot hope for a new law to take effect before January 1 1922, but "excess profits may shrink so in the meantime that a stoppage measure may be needed to supply necessary revenue There is a man in the county jail alleged to be crazy because he holds the idea that a woman should be al lowed as many husbands as she can list and that man be given like priv ilege as to wives. Ordinary man, who has to siep lively just now, will not agree, while as for the woman with one if all men are alike, ex- cuse her. The soft-drink place that develops Into a "kicte- joint" has no standing n this community that the most vio lent twisting of the law can sustain. The campaign of Acting-Mayor Bige- low to put it out of business will be watched with hope. riTTLNG THEMSELVES IX WRONG. Lfforts are to be renewed at this esession of congress for passage of the KLenyon-Anderson bill to estab lish a most drastic system of regu lation for the packing and livestock industry. In order to remove the abuses which exist in that industry, " it would add greatly to the vast bu reaucracy that already exists and of which the people have plainly indi cated their desire to be relieved. But there is an equal determina tion on the part of the people that their meat supply shall not be in the hands of a monopoly. They are properly apprehensive, when they find the stockyards, packing houses, livestock market papers, refrigerator cars and wholesale meat business in the hands of a small group of men who seem to act in close concert. When these men are,ordered by the .court to submit a plan by which the stockyards shall become independent of .them and when they submit a plan that would continue their con trol, they add to public distrust of their intentions. Though their great paw ex may not actually have been XECLKCT OI' CRATER LAKE. Crater Lake park is a beautiful jewel . in the setting of America's playgrounds. It is one of a scattered company of distinctive natural won ders which the United States, in its great concern for the welfare of its people, has reserved for their bene fit, a permanent resource of pleasure and recreation. It is visited annual ly by thousands of travelers, despite the fact that it is remote from cen ters of population and that it must be approached over difficult roads. The government has committed it self to a policy of road construction within the park area, and has invited the state to build to its boundaries improved highways, on the express understanding that development at Crater Lake would constitute an available asset of beauty and con venience well worth while. The state and the several southern Ore gon counties have done, and are do ing, their share of the necessary work: but what is the government doing? A Washington dispatch to The Ore gonian December 6 gave a list of ap propriations recommended to con gress by Stephen T. Mather, direc tor of the national -park service, to taling $2,473,594, of which there is assigned to Crater Lake the meager sum of $26,400. Yet there is listed for the three California parks the generous aggregate of $760,754. Mr. Mather is from California. That for tunate state' will not suffer at his hands. It might appear ungracious to in timate that the director of the na tional park service has a warped view of his duty to look upon the na tional parks from the standpoint of the whole public, ' and not with the eyes of a loyal Californian, except for the fact that he has disclosed heretofore a severely critical attitude toward Crater Lake. It will be re called that he complained bitterly about the hotel accommodations there, and threatened to eject the proprietor, Mr. Parkhurst, In two weeks. He had no authority to put him out or to confiscate his property, and it was not done. It may be re membered also that, several years ago. Director Mather informed the Portland Chamber of Commerce that if it did not furnish $200,000 to handle concessions at Crater Lake, he would get it from San Francisco. He did not get it. What reason should any one in Portland have for objection to an investment of $200, 000 or ay other sum in a tourist ho- WAYS TO REFORM TAXATION'. The best possible recommendation of Secretary Houston's suggested tax reforms is Representative Kitchin's condemnation of them. In the state ment from Mr. Kitchin that Mr. Houston's plans would "relieve the corporate interests and millionaires' of taxes and place them "upon the backs of the people" we hear the voice of the typical Bourbon, of one who has learned nothing from the practical working of the pernicious law of which he was. the chief framer. The high prices that the people now pay are produced by the passing on to the consumer of pyra mided taxes which Mr. Kitchin still insists are paid by corporate inter ests and millionaires, notwithstand ing a mountain of evidence that he is wrong. About the only good resulting from the tax law which Mr. Kitchin had the principal part in drawing is that it has forced the people to think about taxes and governmental econ omy, and to study the effect of taxes especially with a view of learning who ultimately pays them. They have learned at great cost that the man from whom the government collects the money is rarely the man who ultimately pays the tax; that he collects it with a profit on. its amount from the man to Tthom he sells his goods, and that this opera tion is repeated until the goods reach the consumer. They have also learned that when a rich man is not only the jjrst but the final payer of a tax the people often lose byTiaving 1 that money taken by the government and spent, when otherwise it would be Invested in increasing production, enlarging the supply of goods and consequently lowering their cost to the consumer. -The people thus learn what shallow twaddle Mr. Kitchin talks and how unfit he is to lead in legislation. He may be qualified for city councilman of Scotland Neck, but he is not competent' to make laws for a nation. The people voted the republican party into power be cause they want to get rid of the Kitchins. The excess profits tax combines more vices than almost any other that could be devised. It makes the government dependent, for a large part offits revenue, on excess profits, which ere made only under the ab normal conditions of war, but shrink to little or nothing when normal con ditions return. It drives the manu facturer and merchant to add still more excess profits to prices in order that their net profit after paying the Inconsistent California. McMlnnville Telephone-Register. California first encouraged Japan ese immigration, even shoving Amer icans aside to do so. Now, there is threat -of a war between the United States and Japan. If California wishes to be consistent,- let her discharge her Japanese help and the idle Japs would discourage residents of Japan from emigrating to America. Califor nlans give preference to Jap employes and at the same time howl at the Japanese menace. They don't want more Japs, but hang on to those t'tey have as servants like grim death. Sam HufihrK, Pessimist Heppner Herald. Sam Hughes, who sells groceries as a vocation, and gives away good old democratic doctrine as. a matter ox principle, advises the lie raid that the new word, normalcy, recently coined by Senator Harding, means a return to good old republican hard times that will make most all of us weep bitter tears. "Sixty-ceut wool and 12.80 wheat may not appear again for some considerable time." said Mr. Hughes, as he fumbled around among a lot of papers on his file, which was labeled "Bills Collectable." How Indians Conserred Forests. Blue Mountain Eagle. Now 1r the RfHRfin for fores fires. If the forest service would go Into the timber at this season and scatter fire It would consume the undergrowth and thus protect the forests from the fire menace in the dry season. But of course, this Idea la not In the book and would not be approved. But when we remember that the Indians grew these -wonderful forests and that they scattered fire until there was no such thing as underbry.su., the fire plan recommends itself. Talking; Turkey. Gresham Outlook. The Oregonian thinks the great American bird should have a better name than turkey, which is too sug gestive of a nation in Europe. He might be called kingbird (or qucen- lilrd), but that would hardly do In America. Highbird would be quite appropriate at present. We vote for joyblrd. There can be devout thanks giving with chicken or roast pork, but the Joybird makes the feast replete. Timely Wall. Condon Globe-Times. It appears that a man Is never done with hia return. The collector rna jucept and check it over, and tike the money, but then there may be another fellow along In a few days with a different view on how the matter should be handled, and he takes another crack at the taxpayer, And so on, apparently Indefinitely, Some of the boys are going to have hard time borrowing the moey that is claimed for income tax. Mr. Harding;, Attend. Lebanon Criterion. Without intentionally usurping th rights of any other cabinet maker in Oregon, the Criterion suggests that Oregon endorse Judge Wallace Mc Camant as a member of Presiden Harding's official family. He has th necessary qualifications, which, cou pled with the ability to do the righ thing at the right time, would mak I him an invaluable advisor to the nex president. Those Who Come and Go. Promiscuous osculation received a setback a colored people's church in the other Kansas City when an elder threw a lamp at the preacher about to embrace the elder's wife. Privileges and rights seem to con flict everywhere. As eacn person moved she was given a candy kiss by the hostess, wrapped in pink paper," we glean from a current news item. We ven ture the remark that the hostess must have been in the pink of con dition. With .two boxing affairs scheduled for New Year's day and no back down in sight, the boxing commis sioners might put on the gloves themselves for solution. The change would be spectacular and refreshing. Thirty Moros were killed by Phil ippine constabulary the other day In a battle growing out of the Moros' efforts to resist education. Their education in grammar progressed only to the future tense. There have been stormy days worse than yesterday, but one forgets them in the pleasant weather that follows. Fortunately this is not the week before Christmas. We d be greatly obliged to the weather forecaster if he would vary these storm warnings with a few warnings that fair weather is com ing. Tbe Bottle tn Baker. Baker Demoorat. There is hardly one of us who has not the capacity for enthusian. Th trouble is that we do not cultivate it. Don't be , a bump on a log. Tr j little enthusiasm. Develop It and you will not only be more and more of a success in your niche, you will not only be a joy to all the people around you. but y cm will be totally surprised with yourself and also everlastlr gly pleased with yourBelf. Reatlna- Time of tbe Firmer, Amity Standard. This is the time of the year when the frost is on the pumpkin and tbe fodder is stpposcd to be in the shock. It is sure a great feeling for the larmer, especially, to have his apples picked, taters all dug, wood hauled and work caught up, he sure can feel like a king in his own realm. -Albany Business Healthy. Albany Democrat. " Business in the Willamette valley. where warranted at alL, and where conducted efficiently, is almost bound to thrive. The remarkable numbei of successful retailers In Albany attists to the healthy business soil of the community. Seismoa-raphlc and Climatolog-ical. Eugene Register. A miniature earthquake was re ported in Portland a few days ago. and now comes news of a toy cyclone near Beaverton. The weather man can't produce any thrillers alone that line in Oregon, bo he might as well quit trying. ".Miller's Hoes Are Fat." Dallas Observer. It is a noticeable fact that it is the road leading from Dallas to Indepen dence that is getting most of the gravel. The fact that the Judge's car makes almost daily trips over this road has nothing to do with this. Improving on tbe Old Man. m Scio Tribune. Tho old-fashioned man who used to have a spare room in his ho now has a son who Is content if he has a spare tire for his flivver. About 45 wer cent of the wheat in Umatilla county is still unsold, but the growers are hoping for better prices," says Tom Thompson ot ren- dleton, where he is a wheat man and In the banking business as well. Growers wish they had sold when wheat was quoted at $2.60," continued Mr. Thompson, "and some of them id, but not everyone had a chance a sell at that figure. The millers and the exporters who bought at 2.40 have lost monev and many of the mills still have this high-priced wheat on their hands. In view ot hanged conditions, there will have to be some readjustments In the wheatgrowlng belt. These readjust ments will be In the way or laDor and cost of operation. Last year when seeding time arrived It was al most impossible to get men to work, and when they were found they wanted $6 or 7 a day and board. and anyone who buys foodstuffs knows what board means. Then there is the tractor proposition. At irst It was cheaper to run a tractor than to use stock, for more work could be done and quicker. Later, for a couple of years. . the costs of using tractor or stock were about equal. Then, as the tractors became worn out and- parts had to be bought, and the price of gasoline advanced, the traccor operation became more costly than using tock. Many trac tor farmers would like to go ba:k to tbe use of horses, but they haven t any stock, because they sold me horses when they bought the ma chinery." Here's a schema which a Seattle man explained to me for beating the war tax and the increased cost of traveling In the -United States," said H. H. Corey of the Oregon Public Service commission yesterday. "I met this chap on a- train. He said that he went over to Vancouver, B. C and bought a round trip ticket through Seattle. Portland, San Francisco, Los Angeles, around by way of the south. to Chicago and New York, and back again. He paid for the ticket in Canadian money. The saving he ef fected by going to British Columbia to purchase the transportation was $80. He traveled every mile of bis Journey In the United States. If that scheme becomes generally known in Seattle, a large number of people in tending to make an extensive trip will ride over to Vancouver and buy their tickets." Mr. Corey arrived yes terday from Tillamook Head, where he was looking over a logging road property. At Seaside the storm was so severe, declared the commissioner, that several large waves went over the seawall. The wind was blowing hard and there was a heavy rain and in this pleasant storm, Mr. Corey walked 12 miles. A patron of one of the hotels almost lost his temper yesteiday. This is how It happened: The visitor stepped out of a store with an umbrella in hand and wearing a stiff hat. A capful of wind lifted hia hat from his head and in reaching to save the hat, he tilted the umbrella and the wind took it out of his hand and sent it sailing into the street, following the hat, which was trolling merrily along. Then the umbrella got on the car track In time to have a street car run over it and at the same time an automobile crushed the hat to death. Damage, $25; total loss. Another puff of wind tore a large light globe from the roof of the Benson and hurled It to the pavement. Halfway in the air, however, the globe broke, shattering the way glass balls used to do when Dr. Carver, sharpshooter, used to blaze away at them in W. W. Cole's circus, in the 80s. "No. the concrete road between Coquilie a ritd Marshfield isn't finished" yet. said C. S. McCulroch, as he reg istered at the Imperial. "The rains have interfered so frequently that little progress could be made and only a comparatively small part of the road was constructed this year." This cement road has been ia course of construction for two years and will probably not be completed before next ummer at the present rate. the ritrinal contractors had to throw up the job and the state highway com mission's forces have had to take it over. John Burroughs' Nature Notes. More Truth Than Poetry. By Jmra J. Hutiroe, Can Yon Answer Tbese Questions! 1. Is a nest in a hole safer than one in the open? 2. Of what are limestone rock and chalk formed? Z. Do animals respect property rights? Answers in tomorrow's nature notes. Answers to I'revfous Questions s 1. Where do quail and partridge nest? Both the quail and the partridge, In settled countries, are very likely to nest along roads and paths, away from thick jungles and tangles that would afford cover to thetr enemies. It is their eggs and their newly hatched young that they are so licitous about. Their wings afford security to themselves. 2. How does Hawaiian vegetation compare with ours? The vegetation In Hawaii is all novel, but It has that barbaric rank ness of all tropical woods, with noth ing or the sylvan sweetness and sim plicity of our home woods. There are no fine,, towering trees, but low, gnarled, and tortuous ones, which, with .their - hanging- vines, like the broken ropes of a ship's ringing, and their parasitic srrowths, present a riotous, disheveled appearance. 3. Do woodchucks spend much time under ground? I know of no other hibernating- ani mal than the woodchuck that retires from the light of day so early in the season. His active life stretches from the vernal equinox to the autumnal equinox, and that is about all. Half the year he is -under ground, and at least half of each summer day. (Rights reserved by Hougliton Mif flin company.) Anything that helps make brighter the declining years is worthyl That is why there- is another tag day be ginning early this stormy morning. Anyone who has seen motorcycle riders traveling at a pretty fast rate is not surprised to read of one being hurt in a collision. Along with the bottle of Milwau kee beer preserved In a museum should be exhibited an old-time five- cent cigar. Be it said to the credit of the legal profession that San Francisco attor neys refused to defend the gangsters. The Knockout In Coos. ' Powers- Patriot. Try getting an old time kick by chewing up about a cubic inch of gar lie? Not only will it give you a kick but u your friends with whom you i com in contact tnd you'll -have to resort to cloves before calling on your besgiri about a quart of them. Turkey Dream, Gold Hill News. All indications point to 30-cent tur key before the first of the year, when the price or 4o cents that was offered this week will look like a fortune. 1 doesn't pay to hold onto produce too long. ' Luna's Joy or DiMsrust. Silverton Tribune. Even the moon gets full . when H sees what's going on in the good old U. S. A. these days. "Blessed are the peace makers" somehow doesn't seem to apply to framers of peace treaties. Very likely there are no gangsters in Portland, but if there be, nonerwill show his head Just now. It begins to look as if the allies would have to do without their Christmas Turkey. The observing- man knows why the manufacturers make such- elegant hosiery. More "weather" today. Any Old Price for Wheat. Wasco News-Enterprise. The expectation of $3 wheat has long ago gone Into the discard and price of 1.0 would be welcomed by many. rom present indications even that price is an iridescent dream. One-Half of One Per Cent. Joseph Herald. '"What we need In this country 1 something that will Induce us to mak the best of what we nave. Burleson's Hide. - Dufnr Dispatch. If leathe were as tough as Burle son's hide, one pair of shoes would lat a lifetime. I.OXC AN ADMIRER OP RECORD Writer DeXends ConR-resslonal Publi cation From Flippant Comment. CENTRAL POINT, Or., Dec. 10. (To the Editor.) As a long-time reader of The Oregonian, and one who has come to regard It as being easily the leading newspaper of the great norinwesr, wnose edntonal utterances as a general rule, evince erudition and scnoiarsnip excelled by none, I feel Impelled to voice a protest against the rather flippant manner in which you treat that mighty palladium of userui lniormation. the much con temned and seeminirlv little under stood Congressional Record, when you, in order to point a moral, refer to it in the language generally em ployed Dy tne Illy Informed and un thinking as. among other things de rogatory being a publication which noooay reaas wno can escape the oraeai. Now, T have been a constant reader or tne congressional Record for manv hmany years and, for one who would KeeD fullv ahrpat nf ntrr.nt aff.i.. I have come to regard it as beina- the peer of the combined publications of the country. True, it contains much which is of no Interest to the great majority of the people, but all of its contents are of vital interest to some body. To be properly enjoyed it must be read discriminatingly, and when so perused it proves to be a veritable mine of not only valuable but highly interesting information. In it, from time to time, is to be found the very cream of ancient and modern litera ture, from the Lord's prayer to ex tracts from the rhymes of Mother Goose, as well as an exact record of the official words and acts of our na tional legislators. complete, un abridged, undistorted and uncensored by the pencil of partisan newswriters and editors. Refuse to read it if you will, con sign it unopened to the wastebasket if you must, but as you value your reputation tor irutn and fairness do not mangn tne one American publica tion the contents of which Is at all times like unto Caesar's wife above suspicion. H. H. LAMPMAN. Paint and Enamel Remover. PORTLAND, Dec. 9. (To the Edi tor.) Kindly tell me what wilt re- THEY I.EAJCV ttllCKLY. Th new winner of the Nobel prize was, for some years a tramp In America. A gentleman called at my kitchen door To apply for a modest loan, The sketchiest kind of a coat he wore And his voice was a mumbling moan. And he said as my scowl grew stern and black. While I looked at his bleary eyes, "I ain't de bum wot I looks like. Jack, I am out fer de Nobel prize." Another man with a mildewed face, And arrayed in a fashion strange. Accosted me In a public place And desired a piece of change. He .explained, when he read In my mocking eyes. That I didn't approve his looks: 'I am .studyin" up fer de Nobel prixe An needs de cusn fer books." A portly man with a halting gait. And in somebody else s coat. Stepped at my house One day to state l hat he wanted a five casa nnt.. And he s'aid, I kin see you has sot me wrong So I'm roln' to put tou wise. You'll be glad that you helped dis guy along When he. cops de Nobel prise. And the self-same day. a battered wreclc. Whom I met by the merest ehanc. Threw his greasy arms around my neck And asked for a small advance. And he cried, in a thin, falsetto whine. Dis ain't no touch, you know. De Nobel prize is as good as mine An 1 11 split when I wins It. Bo." Sbe Sees What Slue Lost. Every time Spain looks over at Cuba nowadays she gets madder and madder at the United States for tak ing that gold mine away from her. -A 1 Tovrh Lock. The football hero is compelled re luctantly to put his glory In moth balls till next fall. Simply Ignores Htm. It would appear that Mr. Wilson is no more disposed to take Mr. Bryan's advice now that he was when Mr. Bryan v.as in the cabinet CopyriBht. Wlo. by the Bell Syndicate. Inc. In Other Days. i Twenty-five Years Aaro. From The Oregonian of December 11. Washington After a hard fight be tween St. Louis and San Francisco the former won the national repub lican convention of next year on the fifth ballot. Direct from Europe the Western Packing compary, engaged in the business of slaughtering horses for meat has, learned' that there will be very little demand for the product over there. The Boys andi Girls' Aid society is taking steps toward erection of a building on the land donated for the purpose by Mrs. Rachael Hawthorne. The time in which applications for saloon licenses for next year were to be received expired yesterday. There are 14S applications oa file. Washington Bonus Law. PORTLAND, Dec. 9. .(To the Edi tor) With further reference to the article in the Oregonian December 8, regarding the Washington state bonus, the meaning of your answer is not exactly clear to me. Would a man enlisted in the navy, who received the regular navy pay for the raiing held, and who received the regular navy rate for commuta tion and quarters while serving ashore be entitled to the bonus? Or does your answer refer only to those enlisted men who received greater pay than the regular service Pay. such as the spruce division men? - ED PERRY. The answer was in the exact words move old paint or enamel and rust ' ne law- As we understand It, the from iron. K. A. Sixes Is a dot on the map In Curry ounty and in its time the election returns from Sixes had an important nfluence on the state. Sixes is named rom Sixes river, which flows into the Pacific ocean about a mile or less north of Cape Blanco. Chauncey Zumwalt of Sixes was at the Imperial yesterday with W. J. Sweet of Ban- on. Near Zumwalt s home Is one oi the largest barns in the state and it looks to be as large as, or larger, than the municipal auditorium in Pqrtlaiid. J. H. Blodel of the Blodel-Donovan Lumber company of Seattle Is regis tered at the Benson. He is here to at- erra the confererkce of lumber export ers. The lumbermen alt Know tnat he market is bad, so they are assem bling in Portland in the hope that someone of them may show himself a prophet and give them a straight tip on what to do ana now to ao it lu save the situation. Mrs. L. R. Had ley of Lamonta, Or.. is at the Imperial. Her husband was for years with the B. 6z o. T. company n Portland, but sold out and became rancher in the Deschutes country. The Hadleys had a fine wheat crop this year, and they have it yet. They paid big wages for help in the harvest field and at present quotations on the grain there isn't a very attractive margin of prorit. Among the lumbermen at the Ben son who are here to attend the con ference of exporters of Douglas fir are W. M. Dalcom of Seattle, Nell Cooney of Cosmopolis. Thorpe Bab- cock of Aberdeen, W. S. Cram ot Raymond, A. S, Payne of Hpquiam and A. W. Middleton ot Aberdeen. Their total lumber busmeS Is enor- ous, when there is a selling market. J. T. Nevins of Bay City is at the Perkins. He Is in the timber business. Tributary" to Tillamook bay, where Bay City is located, Is situated, there are billions of feet of the finest tim ber In America and some day it la ex pected .o all be shlpred by water. Tom -Brown, former representative at Marion county, drove to Portland yesterday and admitted that the auto mobile ride was not a pleasant one with the storm raging. E. K. Piaseckl of Dallas, who was recently the democratic candidate of Polk county for district attorney, is in town on business and is aUthe Im perial. Captain J. P. Ubil o the steamer West Apaum is docked at the Perkins. The West Apaum is In the trans-Pacific service and will soon clear from Portland for the orient. "' W. J. Conrad and family are at the Benson from Coos Bay. Mr. Conrad is an attorney and specializes in tim ber on the side and has put across some goo.d deals in the past year. Alex Gilbert Jr., a well-known resi dent of Seaside, who lived there when the shell road was the only pavement in the place, is registered at the Hotel Oregon. T. W. Robinson, a timberman of Forest Grove, who used to be located at Olney, is at the Perkins for a few days. - Joseph Blethen of Seattle, connected with the Times newspaper there, was 'at the Multnomah yesterday. AAswer At any paint house may be secured preparations for the re "rival of paint and enamrl. exception from benefits of the act re lates to those such as spruce division men who received compensation greater than the regular service pay rind rnmnt!taion. George Ade Back Again With Modern Fables Know Ade? Of course you do and his "Sultan of Sulu" and th "College Widow." Bub most of all you know him for his "Modern Fables," and now he is releasing them for publication again, revised and brought strictly up to date. You cannot afford to miss these fables. Ade has come back funnier than ever and a host of admirers will follow his humor as it appears each week in The Sunday Ore gonian, beginning tomorrow. Days of Rambling Horse Car Those were the good old days, indeed but they had their drawbacks. The genie of electricity had not been harnessed, and the old gray mare was relietl upon for rapid transport throughout the city. The horse cars symbols of the first serious attempt to solve the traffic problems of lusty young town. De Witt Harry, in a special illustrated Sunday article, brings them back to us through the reminiscences of men who drove them more than two decades ago. The Man With the Marrying Jag The wedding altar lured him as bright lights summon the moth. He couldn't stay single. Nor, for that matTer, could he stay double or triple he was the man with the marrying jag Ensign Aldrich, with his heart on his sleeve and a world of pretty girls to choose. Retribution over took him, of course, but the story of the ensign's araours is an ineffaceable page in the "jazz" period' a horrible example of the tendency to live gaily, come what may. Told in the Sunday issue, with pictures. Here's a New Profession American trade abroad, in ports where the Stars and Stripes has just begun to drift back at the mast head Of great ships, is the field that will call, and Is calling, for thousands of young men and women to advance the outposts of national commerce. The possibilities, scarcely touched at present, are vast and fraught with certain preferment for those who will take up the task. Rene Bache, special correspondent to The Sun day Oregonian, chats of the broadened and uncrowded field in an illuminating article of tomorrow' issue. Read it. Men Who Have Served as Presidential Secretaries When one accepts the post of secretary to the president he becomes a sort of super-shock absorber, and' duties deluge him. Yet there is no official position which lends to the individual a closer knowledge of national affairs, or that more speedily fits him for important place in the service 'of the government. In the Sunday magazine section there is an article which chronicles the careers of ex-secretaries. Theirs was the highway to the cabinet, in certain instances, and always their future pointed toward advancement. Beating Sarita Claus at His Own Trade Toys are what the heart . puts into them, neither more nor less. And if it gives abundantly of inspiration, then you deck the Christmas tree with something more than a gift. Certain American parents discovered this truth in their own homes, through the delight of their own children, and the American toy industry rests upon the principle thus proved. A timely toy story in the Sunday mazagine section, with pictures of craftsmen at work, narrates the story of the toy industry. Talks With T. R- This serial of an American hero, from the diaries of his friend, John J. Leary Jr., is one to pick up at any time, con fident that trenchant, humorous, thoughtful Americanisms will spring fromthe printed page. It is Roosevelt himself, epeaking across the great divide. ALL THE NEWS OF ALL THE WORLD , THE -SUNDAY OREGONIAN