8 TTTE MORNING OltEGONIAN. TTTESP AY, DECEMBER 28, J 920 . m .- . . - - s :-i ... :m' V"' -.'.1 ESTABLISHED BY HCNBT I. PITTOCR. Published by The Oregonlan Publlshinc Co. 185 Sixth Street. Portland. Oregon. C. A. JJORDEN, B. B. PIPER. Manager. Editor. The Oregonian la a member of the Asso ciated Press. The Associated Press ia M cluslrely entitled to the use far publication of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited in thin paper and also the local news published herein. - All rights of publication of special dlapatcbea harem are also reserved. '-I if-, u -. Subscription Bates Invariably I" Advance. (By Mail.) Tany, Sunday included, one year. ....$8 00 Pally, Sunday included, six months... 4.2. Pally, Sunday included, three months. 3,23 Pally. Sunday included, one month... 75 Pally, without Sunday, one year...... fl.00 Iaily, without Sunday, s.x months.... 8. Tjaliy. wirhauf BiuiiIb, nnm montll .. 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Miuweu. creditors, who claim it aa security ths republicans took control, con- for bonds of the former imperial I gress did little better than provide r .. ETHERIDGE ' AND HIS METHODS, . ' The facts about failure of th , Morris bond-sales firm are only half ' known; but they disclose clearly the ; reasons for Its downfall. The con .'- cera was built around the person M ality of John L. Etheridge- and its '' '; methods were his methods: and his , "I methods had their inspiration In his .-. ! character, or lack of it. - . It is true " ' ; that a. man who has been In prlfeon t' may reform; but it is rarely true ' ! that one who has been several times convicted of crime is, or can be, ' . other than a criminal. He may learn ,! prudence from experience, and he . ' f may acquire a new respectability ' and new confidence through success " i In apparently legitimate operations; i '. 'i bat when the test comes between op- '- portnnity to profit through a ques- . i tionable transaction and the cer- .' ; tainty of failure, or lack of progress, . through, strict probity, there is too . . seldom a doubt as to what will . -happen. It la not necessary to sub- ".."V scribe to the hard doctrine that a , . -i vlawbroaker can. never be other than J i a lawbreaker to know and to de '." , dare that honesty is inherent, and . '. not acquired. ' - It is easy to see. now that It was a colossal bravado which carried i Ktheridg through foar spectacular ' rears of high finance In Portland . . He had a certain unscrupulous dar- ing which seemed somehow to fit in ' with the temper of the times; and he developed a very large business i along comparatively new lines v'j through hi3 talent for reaching the , common ear by rosy offers of sound " i investments in securities guarantee j ing large return He was not a ." , I banker, nor did he run a bank, or ' i pretend to run It: nor was his con- 4 cern a trust company. He did not ". j permit his operations to come at any . 5 time under supervision of the state. Hut he nevertheless set himself up to be a trustee of other people's money a sacred function which should never be committed to pri vate hands without specific provision for instant public accountability. Be ing a private concern and not a bank, nor a trust company, the Eth eridger firm was able to do what it pleased through him until the Inevi table crash came. It was Inevitable because there was an inevitability about the Etheridge character and the Etheridge methods. He used trust funds as his own. High finance ia nothing but low finance. The key to the Etheridge opera tions was the interim certificate. Kecelving a sum of money from an Investor for the purchase of a bond not yet tn hand, he would give a re ceipt guaranteeing delivery when ever such a bond should be received by him. This is a contract obliga tion, and it is in itself a legitimate practice, and is followed by all rep utable bond houses; but it is cap able! of illegitimate and even crim inal perversion, as any other legiti mate practice may he, by irrespon sible concerns. It is quite clear that the Intent of the buyer is not thus to furnish any intermediary or sales agent -with funds for specnlation, or for rorkingr capital, or for diversion tn any particular from the exact pur pose of his Investment viz, to buy a certain, bond, or series of bonds. The duty of the receiver of his clierrFa money is to buy the desired hond, with it: and if it Is not avail able as It may not be through de lays In delivery caused by the print ins; and other necessary details of issue to hold It safe until the spe cific transaction can be made com plete. This is what responsible houses do; it is what Etheridge did not do. He used the money for his own operations, and when the time came, under pressure from many quarters for an accounting, thep was nothing left but failure and flight Obviously, the state should place all corporations and firms dealing as agents for investment moneys under its direct supervision, as are banks and trust companies; and it should particularly define the status of in terim certificates, so that their va lidity and security may be assured, and their holders may not be swindled. The coming legislature has a duty here. So far as Morris Brothers, Inc is concerned, the stable door will thus be locked after the horse is stolen; but it will enable the public hereafter to put a check on any other possible Etheridge. BED AGENT'S DEPORTATION. The order for deportation of Mar tens, the self-styled ambassador from the soviet government of Rus sia to. the United States, will end a chapter which illustrates the ex treme leniency of the labor depart ment with men whose avowed pur pose was to destroy this republic by revolution. Though. Martens, in de fault of diplomatic recognition, posed as head of a commercial mission, his activities consisted in. spreading bol shevist propaganda. He had inti mate relations with revolutionary organizations, disbursing large sums of money which were surreptitiously sent from Russia. Orders from Moscow to cancel aU contracts In this country may be re garded as the kind of bluster with which the soviet covers a defeat. The soviet has little in the way of com modities to export, its railroads are Irt such condition that it cannot transport them to the coast and in dustry Is so demoralized that it can not manufacture enough for its own people. If it should attempt to pay gold for imports, the gold would be subject to attachment by Russia's I government. The present adminis tration of this country has given ite citizens freedom to trade with Rus sia at their own risk, but they would have no diplomatic protection, no treaty rights, no postal or cable ser vice, no banking system. Trade un der such circumstances would be beset with endless difficulty. The same reasons which have guided the present administration will hold with that which is to follow. Probably departure of 'Marteni will be followed by renewed, propa ganda of the third international. We may expect bolshevist agents to come to this country in all manner of dis guises and to circulate red literature id all languages among the foreign born. Congress cannot act 'too promptly in passing the bill suspend ing immigration or in following It with a new law which will effec tively shut out those who aim to de stroy our Institutions. as much money as the departments chose to spend, and, free from con trol, the spenders have run wild. TO . DISCOURAGE CRIME. The judge of a Boston criminal court who says that if he had his way he would sentence every man convicted of robbery to prison for life overstates only slightly one of the seeming needs of the crime situ ation in general. There are a con siderable number of well-meaning. though- sentimental, citizens, who persistently ignore the truth in the proverb concerning the gored ox. Notwithstanding "the crime wave, there are still some left who have not been subjected to the ordeal. A few of the latter are much more deeply interested, apparently, in the welfare of the criminal than in the safety of the law-abiding citizen. But if matters keep on as they are going now, will not every citizen soon have had his turn before the muzzle of the weapon of the burglar or the hold up man? Then what? The good of society is not always nicely balanced against sentiment for the Individual, in the minds of the non-philosophical. The piteous plea of the caught criminal is too apt to outweigh the right of citizens in the mass to enjoy security In their own homes and on the public streets. The popular mind is too often di verted from the main issue by an Irrelevant fancy. The highwayman with .a certain debonair manner is apt to be pictured as a'Robin Hood. the housebreaker who writes Impu dent notes as a wit deserving a pen sion from the state rather than a cat o' nine tails across his back. It is hard to restrain the wish that some of these sentimentalists might be treated with at least a moderate- sized dose of the profound realities. Maybe the Boston judge goes bit too far. There still is something though not everything1 to be said in behalf of leniency for first of- fendera But it would be worth while to try the effect of punish ment that really punishes as a cure for the present epidemic. Certainty of a long term when caught (and practically every criminal is caught sooner or later) ought to be an ef fective deterrent; and it would ui timately in any event reduce the visible supply of lawbreakers. WATCHDOG OVER THE SPENDERS. The programme now is to pass the budget bill at the present session of congress as President Wilson wants it, that is, giving the president power to remove as well as appoint , the controller-general and his assis tant. then to amend it at the extra session of the new congress by trans' ferripg power of removal to congress bv concurrent resolution. Represen tative Good explanied to the house that, unless this plan was followed, the budget system could not be ap plied to expenditures for the year ending June 3, 1923. deferring its operation for two and a half years, A mass of information has been obtained by Mr. Good from Mr. Col- Fins, of the legislative reference li brary, which throws light on the point raised by the president in his veto message. The supreme court has divided federal officials into two classes primary officers, named in the constitution as to be appointed by the president and confirmed by the senate, and inferior officers, hose appointment congress may est in the president alone, in the courts or In the heads of depart ments. Mr. Collins holds that in importance the controller would rank with primary officers and that in regulating his appointment con gress would have to give a technical meaning to the word "inferior." But quotes Mr. Wilson's veto mes sage as showing that the president regards the office as "inferior." He holds that congress may reserve power to remove by concurrent reso lution without the president's ap proval, as It has done without ques tion for a hundred years when deal ing with non-legislative matters. The importance of the point at is sue between Mr. Wilson and con gress is well brought out in Mr. Col lins discussion of it ffora his dis passionate viewpoint Present ma chinery for audit of the expenditure of billions of dollars "fails to give an adequate protection to the taxpayer." Congress is creating an office "un der the direction of a controller general who shall be absolutely in dependent of the executive and at the same time occupy a very close and intimate relationship to congress itself an official who will be able without executive control or execu tive removal to go into the executive departments where the money is be ing spent and to investigate and re port his finding to the congress," which is responsible for all appropri ations of money. He then says: The president has no proper concern either in the appointment or in the re moval of this officer. The fact that he Is appointed: by the president in the budget bill is a concession to the constitutional necessities or the occasion. If congress eould constitutionally appoint such an of ficer he would be so appointed. But as to his removal it is absolutely vital that it should rest with congress If thla officer la to have any great independence to report what he finds. Congress should have the initiative in the removal. The concurrent resolution preceded by notice and hearing before the appropriate committee, as a method of removal appears to be Justifiable botn in iact ana in law. lr there are con stitutional doubts they should be resolved in favor of congress. . The controller is thus to be the watchdog over the people's money, to insure that it is expended by the executive departments as the peo ple's representatives have provided. There has been recent experience of the need of a watchdog. Secre tary of War Baker has expended J76.000.000 more than congress ap propriated for his department, and boldly defends his action. He would not have done it if a controller had been watching him. A great part of the appropriations made at each ses sion is to meet deficiencies, and heads of departments have found it so easy to obtain them under the present administration that the limits fixed by congress have become BUSINESS MEN TO VOTE ON TAXES. The referendum on taxation which has been called by the United Cham ber of Commerce suggests thV rela tive Importance attached by it to the several propositions on which the members are asked to vote. Most significant is the fact that first place is given to repeal of the excess profit tax, and that next in order are placed alternative propositions for substi tutes. These are: further taxes on incomes, excise taxes "on some ar ticles of wide use -hut not of first necessity"; a sales tax either Instead of or in addition to the' last two, either on general turn-over, limited turnover qr retail sales; a moderate but graduated undistributed earnings tax on corporations. ' Important among other proposals are that all future government bonds be taxable and that administration of the in come tax be decentralized. By their vote the chambers of commerce will fairly reflect the opinion of the business men of the whole country. People are recover ing from that mistaken class con sciousness which is cultivated with the malign purpose of dividia the nation and regard the interest of business as apait from and antagon istic to the interest of the work'ng people. They are learning that bad business is bad for everybody. They are learning that the objection of business men to the excess profit tax is not that they pay it, for they pass it on, but that it obstructs business in many ways to the injury of the whole population. Frank recognition that the aim must not be to reduce the amount of taxation but must be to redistribute the load more equitably and in juch manner that it can be carried as easily as possible, like a well ad justed pack on a man's back, is evi dent in the chamber's proposals. Ad mission of business men that direct taxes are unavoidable mark a great change from their attitude during Cleveland's second term, when the income tax was first proposed in peacetime and when they fought it in the courts to a man. They now concede its necessity and conside plans which evince no disposition to dodge it Prominence to proposals for sales tax should at least keep the people alert on questions of taxation and government expenditure and will do much to insure that they get a dollar's worth of government ser. vice for every dollar that they pay. a pensioner in the later years of his life. For Sutter and Marshall, in deed, the gold discovery did turn out a curse. Events which flowed from It de serve a different designation', in all probability. The tide of immigra tion was definitely turned toward ths Pacific coast. Elijah R. Kennedy, in the book in which he tells "how Colonel Baker saved the- Pacific states to the union," remarks that "the men . . who settled in the northwest were the most enter prising of the communities from which they journeyed forth. The ranch men of California were the boldest of the enterprising." Call fornia received from the earlier mi gration to Oregon a valuable con tribution of sturdy stock, combined. with a great number of other ad venturers. The most famous gold rush in all the world's history fur nished a directing motive, but noi the only motive for the p'eopleing of ous appearance and edged away. In BY-PRODUCTS OP THE PRESS Actors Spend Last Bill to Keep Us ' Front In New York. The disbanding of an unusually large number of touring theatrical shows,-due to the fact that business has been poor on the road and that the period just before Christmas is an "off" time, Is leaving many actors high, and; what is worse,, dry in Broadway.' This developed through the inquir ies of the producing firm of Arthur Hammerstein in connection with a player who applied to them for an engagement in one of their . plays which Is about to set out and test he temperature on the road. He paraded into the Hammerstein office so crated up with clothes of the latest musical comedy cut that the office force sus pected he might borrow a nickel car fare on the strength of his prosper- Those Who Come and Go. the coast, and undoubtedly in the end it helped to save the entire western territory to the union. , LEAGUE WILLING TO REORGANIZE. Any doubt that the league of na tions will be in a receptive mood toward any amendments in its cove nant should he removed by the pro- leaving his name he said that all mail and communications for him should be sent to one of the big hotels in Forty-fourth street, and oozed away to clutter up the sidewalks with the other talent. Hugh Grady, general manager for Hammerstein, had occasion to parley with this unrecognized genius and telephoned to the hotel mentioned, where lie learned, incredulously, the ceedings of the assembly at Geneva. Demand of Argentina for immediate actor waan.t , registered there and amendment expressed an opinion wasn't even one of thlobby interior that is shared by other members, and decorators. After the usual argument was doubtless opposed by the great f and exchange of compliments with powers lest amendments at that time I the hotel clerk, Grady became con- a mere form, reducing that body's control over money to a .farce. Until ision from the state. Sutter, too, was LAST Or THE '48ERS. Rodney C. Adams, now eighty-nine years old, who lives at Hemet, Cal., and who is believed to be the last person alive who saw the first gold rained in California, is quoted by an iifterviewer in the Dearborn Inde pendent as saying that when the gold was shown to John A. Sutter, employer of the discoverer, James W. Marshall, Sutter remarked: "Yes, that's gold and it will be the curse of ns." Probably this version is as fanciful as the George Washington cherry story invented by Parson Weems, nor is its credibility height ened by interpretation by Adams, who suggests that Sutter alluded to his plans for a big sawmill and flour mill on the American river. There is reason, on the other hand, to suppose that Sutter, far more than Marshall, realized the portent of the find, for he. set out almost at once to develop it. He tried to keep the matter secret, but found this to be impos sible. Then be sought an arrange ment by which he could conserve his own property against the human tidal wave by which it was over, whelmed, and failed in this. Some' what later, no doubt, he began to see that the gold discovery might indeed be a disadvantage: but not until he had impoverished himself by litigation and Marshall had died from the combined effects of vexa tion and dissipation. It will be recalled that Marshall reached California by way of Oregon, where he arrived in 1841, and where he spent the winter of 1844-5. Sutter, often miscalled "General," though Adams accords him the title of "Captain," which he had won in the French army before emigrating to the United States, made the first tests that showed Marshall's nuggets to be true gold and not pyrites or some other deceptively glittering base metal, as Marshall greatly mis doubted. It was on the afternoon of January 24, 1S48, that Marshall first noticed the yellow particles that were to change the current of history of the Pacific coast but it was nob until four days later that he was assured by Sutter that these were what he imagined them to be. Until "that time gold-mining -was a subject as far as possible from the thoughts of the pioneers of the west. Sutter had been a roving adventurer with a taste for industrial development and merchandising. He was a trapper and trader when in about 1838 he ventured as far north as Fort Van couver, in the Oregon country. The colony which he sought to establish on his land grant at the present site of Sacramento was mainly engaged in farming and stockraislng. Mar shall, a millwright from New Jersey, was employed, with a partnership interest, to locate a site and build a sawmill, and he found gold while overseeing the excavation of a tail race for the mill; a Bancroft tells of the rude methods by which- Sutter and Marshall as sured themselves that they were in the actual presence of the precious metal. The acid test alone did not satisfy them. They put $3 in silver in one pan of a small scales that Sutter happened to have and bal anced It with gold dust in the other pan. Both were then immersed in water, when the gold dust went down and the silver went up. With out any delay Sutter proceeded to prospect his ground, but the tragic feature of It all was that neither he nor Marshall gained any substantial advantage from it- Prospectors and miners began to flock in within a few weeks and issues speedily arose between them and the original claim holders regarding their respective rights. Parton says: "Sutter's har vest was never gathered. His oxen, hogs and sheep were stolen by hungry men and devoured. No hands could be procured to run the mills. His lands were squatted on and dug over and he wasted his remaining substance In fruitless litigation to re cover them." For counsel fees ami legal expenses alone in ten years ho expended $125,000. Marshall mean while shouldered his pack and wan dered over the country in response to spirltualistio beckonings, became restive . and . embittered under en croachment on his property, and for some years was dependent on a pen embarrass the league in considering proposals from the United States to be made after Mr. Harding becomes president. Protest from Canada against article X arose from the same sentiment which has led the British dominions to demand a voice in the foreign policy of the British empire, lest they again be called 'on to fight in a situation which they had no part in producing. Desire was apparent that the league, not the mandatory power, draw up man dates. Throughout the session the smaller nations showed a determina tion that all nations, big and little, should be on an equality and that the assembly should be the real source of power, material or moral, that the league possesses. These subjects of controversy spring from the cardinal error of making the league an adjunct of the treaty with Germany. By so doing, in order to gratify President Wilson, the allies made the league an instru ment of the victors for enforcing their terms on Germany and they perverted their invitation to neutrals to join the league into an invitation to aid them in enforcing those terms. In orderthat the league might carry out this purpose, they had to vest virtual control in the council and to insure that they should control the council with five members in nine. In order to square their natural de sire to keep the territory that they had conquered with the pcinciples of the league, they had to invent the mandate, yet to insure that they should distribute mandates as vic tors in the war and should decide what restrictions should be placed on themselves for protection of the people they were to rule and protect, then ask the league for its approval. These inconsistencies between the league that they formed and that which the public opinion of the world desires spring from the linking hatlds at present time, one com vinced the actor only had his mail sent there, and discovered that other troupers, fresh from the road, slipped almost their last five-dollar bill to hotel clerks. In order to appear as if registered at a first-class hostelry and hypnotize the managers into thinking they were first-rate players for that reason. New York Herald. Although it Is a proved fact that the game now designated baseball is of modern and purely American or igin, the use of a ball in ceremonies ant games goes back many centuries. Four thousand years ago, in the twelfth Egyptian dynasty, a Coptic artist sculptured on the temple Bam Hassan human figures throwing and catching balls. A leather-covered ball used in games played on the Nile over forty centuries ago has a place among the many archaeological specimens in the British museum. It has a sewed cover and is in a remarkable state of preservation. The game of ball was prized by the Greeks as giving grace and elasticity to the human figure, and they erected statue to one Aristonicus for his proficiency In it. Ancient medical practitioners were wont to prescribe a course of hall playing where the modern doctor would order a diet of pills. The Chinese have played ball In va rious ways from times of remote an tiquity. For centuries games of ball have been known and played in Japan. Ethiopian and East Indian tra ditions refer to games with balls played many centuries ago. Kansas City Star. A chew from another man's plug ii responsible for a case of smallpox which has been lodged in the pest houate. The city has two cases on its of the covenant with the treaty. The tragedy of it all is that, by making the league a weapon to dis cipline Germany, the allies sacrificed much of their own power that might have been used for that purpose more effectually, and they weakened the league for performance of its proper work. By provoking contro versy on the subject in the United States, they deprived themselves of the aid of this country in enforcing the treaty and thus encouraged Ger many to obstruct enforcement. They frittered away the power that they might have used to protect Poland to settle the Fiume affair, to crush Mustapha Kemal and make an early ing in oil the tram on weanesaay, and the other having been isolated yesterday. One of these cases came from Man itoba on the train. He took a bite from a plug of tobacco which he bor rowed from another man in the prov ince to the east. After he had taken a chew he was told by his associate that he had been released from quar antine two- days previously. Reglna, Sask., Leader. Charles LaBar has struck oil on his land." When a group of ,25 men strolled about the LaBar farm, near Piper. peace with Turkey, to save Armenia ! t j,-,-; ,i.irvnvir,o. h in hold bolshevism in check. They also chilled the ardor with which the American people were ready two years ago to assist in adjusting the tangled affairs of the old world. Haste in forming the league before the legacies of the war had been ad ministered, and the attempt to make it the administrator, gained nothing the grounds it gave rise to the fore going rumor. Investigation dispelled the rumor and developed the fact that the eroup Tf men were students in a gopher poisoning demonstration conducted by Professor P. L. DePuy of the Kansas State Agricultural college. Technique of the course embraces for either the allies or the league and I the.study of various systems of holes lost mucn. ior Dotn. The situation thus created for Mr, Harding is far more favorable to success of his announced plans than the mortified defenders of the league as Mr. Wilson made it are willing to admit. The" absolute need of this country's aid as the big, disinterested friend of all nations has been proved, The soundness of some American criticisms has been conceded. ' This nation may prove the arbiter be tween the small nations, which pro test against absolute domination, and the great powers, upon which the league must rely chiefly for moral influence and, in the last re sort, for material force. Mr. Hard- and tunnels gophers make; how the rodents steal the roots of farm prod ucts end carry them away for winter use, and how susceptible the little animals are to partaking of saccha rine. When the student knows the gopher system of tunnels and mounds he is taught how to treat oats with strychnine and saccharine and place the poison in underground runways where the rodents will get it. Kan sas City Star. A recent ruling of the postofflce de partment is that children do not come within the classification of harmless wild animals, which do not require ing may well prove to be the master food or shelter while in transit and. builder of a leauge which will at- therefore, they may not be shipped tempt less but will accomplish far I parcel post more than that which was prema- I This will sad news to such par- turely born at Versailles. . eats as desired to paste a few stamps on the brows of their angels and send A man is held in Vancouver. B. C. them by mail to grandma or grandpa on the charge of retaining $82,000 in vacation time or other troublesome advanced by Chicago saloon men to period of the year. buy Christmas liquor in the province I There may be dispute as to whether and the aid of the law is invoked to the department is correct technically, take him back to the vengeance of but from the point of expediencey the tentative lawbreakers. "Law" is there can be no question. Considering a queer mess. I now long It takes w, Burleson to transport' first-class mall, a schoolboy If that debonair burglar will heed sent fourth class, which Is parcel a suggestion and quit right now, he post, might be grown up and almost will stop burgling while the stopping forgetful of home and mother by the is good. Otherwise, it's the dead time the postman got receipt for him wagon for him early some morning, delivered in a distant, city. Richard Spillane, in the Philadelphia Public Due to proximity, dwellers in cer tain sections of Clackamas county believe in annexation to Multnomah. The same may be said of parts of Washington county. A man quits smoking New Year's to please his wife and resumes three days later to please himself. The job showed much bluff, fi nesse and lots of front, and was well done for a job of the kind. The S o'clock burglar evidently consults Dun's and Bradstreet's. Really, nobody knows, his neigh bor Unless he's of long standing. Three days left before the annual swear-off. Burn 'em.1 ..',.. One bond broker Is nor a sample of all.- ; ' - - " ' -"Whoa,OIe!- Ledger. Between 3000 and 4000. deer are within a radius of four or five miles of the Campbell place, on Salt creek in the McCloud river basin, east of Antler. This ia according to Charles Smith and Boy Gregory, who ware driving cattle in that region. It is nothing unusual, they say. to see bands of 150 and 200 deer. The like of It was never known before, according to Smith and Greg ory, who have lived along the Mc Cloud river all their lives. ' Indians say that when so many deer ,flock together low down out of the mountains,!! is a sure sign of a hard winter. Sacramento Bee. - . Uncle Sam's money-makers in the San Francisco mint are working six teen hours a day trying to keep abreast of the demand for silver coinage, which seems to be preferred everywhere now to paper money. This preference, it is said. Is particularly noticeable in Philadelphia and San Francisco. ,. . - An old-time Thespian is Thomas L. Caverly, who stopped at the Multno mah on his way to Los Angeles, and attended-the Christmas tree festivi ties staged by E. V. Hauser. "Forty years ago," said Mr. Caverly, "I played with Lester Wallack on Broad way, and Mrs. Gilbert, the grand old lady of the stage, was In her prime. Richard Mansfield was a ham actor and unrecognised. In the company at Wallack's was the elder Drew, father of John. McKee Rankin, was in the cast. Later I was with Fanny Daven port In "Ingomar,' when Melbourne McDowell was her husband and prom inent on the stage. He Is now In pic tures. The motion pictures have been a great blessing to the theatrical profession. Before the movies came actors worked only part of the year and were 'at liberty' during the sum mer months, so that when the time for rehearsals arrived they had to draw advances on their salaries. In the circumstances It was difficult for a member of the theatrical profession to save enough to provide for old age unless particularly thrifty. Fortu nately I saved1 enough to buy a small farm In New York state,- which I still own. I am how going to Los Angeles to play 'old men' In the films." "One of the heavy storms-'' this season picked up the floating can nery near the mouth of Rogue river and left It high and -dry, on the Island." said Colonel B. K. Lawson of Wedderburn, who is at the Benson with Mrs. Lawson. "Aside from this, there has been little damage by the storms." Colcfnel Lawson' says that the commercial fishing industry at the mouth of Rogue river has been very successful the past year, because Of the exceptionally large run of fish. The money paid out for salmon by the company with which he is con nected ran far into six figures. . The colonel says that he hopes the con troversy over fiehinp; in this stream will be ended, as there is now a compromise pending in which the commercial interests have surrend ered the right to use set-nets and seines and have given up the month in which they get their best fish. One of the measures in which T. B. Kay will take a great interest dur ing the coming session of the legis lature will be the revised workmen's compensation bill. Mr. Kay is a member of the committee of fifteen which has been laboring with the measure for several months past. The report will be completed in time to submit to the legislature and when it is finally drafted It will con tain the views of representatives of labor, the employers and the general public. Mr. Kay is registered at the imperial. . George Flagg, .who runs one of I the best papers in Oregon, is in town from Condon. He has the Globe- Times. Once upon a time Condon had two papers, the Globe and the Times. They were always carrying on a feud and represented different factions. Along came Mr. Flagg. bought both papers, consolidated them and is giving his readers newsy publication. And frequently Mr. Flagg lifts the interviews in "Those Who Come and Go" column to show the people at home what their townspeople have to say when they get to Portland. James C. Cunningham, president of the Union Trust company of Walla Walla. Wash., arrived at the Hotel Portland yesterday. Mr. Cunningham came here for the purpose of looking after the interests of some of his company's clients, who had dealings with Morris Bros., Inc. Mr. Cunning ham was present when the receiver was appointed lata yi-sterday after noon, and will return home today. George H. Mansfield of Medford Is at the Imperial. Mr. Mansfield is engaged in doing educational -work among the farmers and as a side line he is very much interested in the fish of the Rogue river. Last sum mer he camped a couple of wei ks at the. mouth of the stream, and now thinks that the anglers and "the com merclal interests should get togeth er on a compromise. All of the old-timers in and around Spokane, particularly those who were interested In the mining business, know Jake Goetz. owner of the Coeur d'Alene hotel In Spokane. Mr. Goets is in town looking around, and is registered at the Hotel Portland He Is one of the oldest hotel men in Eastern Washington. Conditions In Vancouver, B. C, are very satisfactory these days, reports Charles C. Campbell of that place. who is among the arrivals at the Multnomah. There are elaborate plans for development of the harbor and there is a good demand for real estate in the select residence district. PRODUCT BETTER THAN PRAISE Results Are What Ceist In Determ ining School Efficiency. PORTLAND. Dec. 27. (To the Edi tor.) Debates on the teachers' tenure law wax warm as the curtain ia about to rise at Salem. The Sunday article of Mr. Green, bearing official stamp as a composite utterance of the teach ers, asserts: First A denial that permanency of tenure will deprive a teacher of In centive and ambition. But, continues a proviso, there must be adequate and competent professional supervision. Aye, there's the rub. Second That teaching Is a public service in which efforts and result! are given th community. Third The success of the law Is Its chief defense. , Fourth A lay board cannot be ex pected to be sufficiently competent to pass on professional services of teachers, followed by a service halo bestowed upon our lay trial board. This is rather bewildering. The writer holds no brief for teachers or school board. His ambition Is to be an advocate for the unfortunate "kid," whose voice is not heard directly or by proxy. Early In 1920 the writer began a work long planned and stole time from business to look Into our school Bystem. His observations were placed in an article entitled, "The Human Product of Our Schools." It is constructive and might aid In solv ing some present troubles. Its view point is that of a humble taxpayer and citizen seeking light as a "lay-, man." It Is sincerely believed that where a teacher should retire because of age or temperamental unfitness, but has the backing of the sob brigade, no "supervislon'V will tackle the Job and the lay trial board will fall. Paeans of praise, because our schools appear to be better than others, are not con vincing that their product Is stan dard. Efforts may have been made and yet results be below par. Tax payers are liberal, but when they pay for public service they want real, not apparent results. The writer con cluded that something is wrong with our school system, and based It large ly upon a decided failure In grade arithmetic. Limited space allowed communications precludes details of facts to support this statement. ROBERT C. WRIGHT. More Truth Than Poetry. By Jesses J. Meatagne. When J. J. Carr arrived In Portland and registered at the Benson, he went out to look around and found that there was considerable slashing of prices among local furniture dealers. This was of interest to Mr. Carr. for at La Grande he Is in the furniture business. , F. S. Bramwell, vice-president of the state chamber of commerce, is at the Hotel Oregon.. At home, Mr. Bramwell is in the hardware busi ness. He is the father of the newly appointed state superintendent of banks. The Bramwells are residents of Grants Pass. Geqrge H. Russell, one of the best- known men In central Oregon, is at the Benson. Mr. Russell is the owner of a big ranch In Crook county and used to have a fondness for raising mules and he was in the mule busi ness on Puget sound for a time. C. P. A. Lonergan of Pendleton where he has an Ice plant, a laundry, Is engaged in the contracting busi ness and has several other Irons in the fire, arrived at the Hotel Port land yesterday. Boyd Mendenhall, manager for Hal- ton's department store In Tillamook, Is at the Hotel Oregon resting up after the pre-Chtistmas rush of shop ping in the cheese metropolis. K. Nakashlma, a business man of Japan, registered at the Benson yes terday. Mr. Nakashlma is looking over the Industrial field in the United States. F. H. Anderson of Boise, Idaho, Is an arrival at the Multnomah. He is the Idaho representative of a big vtL per manufacturing concern. f. Boardman, Or., had a great - time Christmas, so after It was over M. B. Sighs left and registered yesterday at the Multnomah. Guy Lafolette, newspaper publisher of Prineville, is on one of his frequent trips to the rose city and Is at the Hotel Portland. . W1IV WOME.V AGES MORE! QUICKLY Care They Give te Childrra Would Make Nervous Wrecks of Men. SIXPROVG. Wash.. Dec. 26. (To the Editor.) I have rend with a great aeai or interest the "Widowers complaint that women show their ace younger than men. I don't believe they do unless there are chlldrem Then how could It be otherwise? It is the mother who has the constant care of them day and night, sick or well, she must be with them alwHvo. Unless she is like the "Grandmother" thinks more of looking young and gay than she does of her children. I knew of a case where the mother had "grippe" and there were three or four little children, all with bad colds. Consequently they cried and fussed a great deal. Bo the father poor man, that he should be so abuxedl went every day to a sheep camp and spent the day to get away from the noise. It was too much for his nerv ous system. He might age under the strain. As for his wife oh, well, that was what he married her fo, to take care of the children. You may say this la an extrem case, but the fact still remains that it is the woman who has to be with the children at all times. It couldn't be different. sln-e man has to work to provide the living for them all But If the thing were turned around and the woman went forth and made the living and the man stayed home with the children all the time, "Wid ower" would then find men looked older than women according to their age. for fear you are not convinced that men shirk in their part of the care of their children. I will repeat a part of "a conversation I heard, bet-ween two men. One was a father and hi cniiaren were ciimuing over him as children will when the father Is home. He asked the other, who wan a bachelor, "What would you do It you had a bunch of kids to climb over you every time you came in the house? T would get out and away from them part of the time. Just as others do, i suppose. I wonder If "Widower" ever did that? In all probability he went to the extreme, since he Is well pre served. A.N OH.-iKKVEK. Torr.H i-icK. Seme ef the eeMersi refuse t psemH mule students to attend dances unless their amudinss ars acct-pisble. Farewell to the lure of the daace For many a lovely co-ed; Farewell to the rythmlo romance Now utterly faded and fled: For th faculty aolds that an under grad'a marks Mean mora than the light tripping lasses, , And he cannot go out open any more lark a Unless ha keeps up with his olasses. The damsels are low In their minds. When they think of a prom er a ball. For they've rot to go e ut with th srlnds. Or they can't go to parties at all. And a grind, though, of course, ha la likely to be ' Of a praiseworthy, studious habit. Has a terrible draw-back, and that is -that he Can't dance any mora than a rabbit. The youths who are graceful and sum. And dreams of delight on the floor. Are always remarkably dim In their grasp of collegiate lore. And therefore the girls have com puted the chance As Just about one In a million. That any. young student who knows how to dance Can ever attend a cotillion. Alas, for the lovely co-ed. 8he wears a disconsolate frown And thinks aha hud better be dead Or bark in her little old town Where the bovs keot the baaa up till ong a'ter two. And nobody ever Inquired How much mathematics of physics they knew As long aa their feet were Insairea. e e WklrM Lord Bryce aays the world la at the brink of an abyss, and Mr. Harding is advising It to step out. ess Ose (laving. Even In boom times a president elect never has to use the help wanted columns in order to fill hla cabinet. s The Days of Denoerary, Until the Constantine incident, wa never knew that men were elected to the purplti. (Cnpyrlaui. 1fi?0. bv Fl! Syndicate. Ine John Burroughs' Nnture Note. WIFE EM1M.OVF.IM NO IIOMIi LfFH Mother of Married Woman Worker Would Have Han Krected. PORTLAND, Pec. 27. (To the Edi tor.) I have been reading of the number of men and women out of em. ployment in Portland and call to mind the drive one of oirr neighbor cities is making agalntft the employment of married women who have husbands working and earning enough to sup port thorn nicely. Why can't we do the same here? We know there are any number of positions held by such married women that could be filled by deserving un employed. The efficiency of a mar ried woman la not sa good as that of an unmarried one, because they say, Well, if my employer doean t like the way I do, he can get someone else: I don't have to work." I feel I am In a position to speak of this, because I have a married daugh ter working. Her husband earns a good salary. She works only for the unnecessary luxuries the money will buy. My son-in-law. like all loving husbands, objects to his wife's work ing and being closeted all day In an office with another man. He is afraid It is going to lead to the divorce court, like many other cases. She ia not a good companion because she tired and Irritable at night. There is no home life and there are no bablea. I state our case as only an example of many others Just the same. Lt'a force the married women to quit work, have happier homes, more babies, fewer davorccs, less crime for the lack of work and have more posi tlons open for the unemployed. READER. Can lou Answer Tfcear Qeratleaf 1. Are there different varieties of the wild field strawberry? 2. How dots the drumming of the woodpecker vary In sound? S. What ia the "sweat bee"? Answers In tomorrow's nature nctca. e s e Answers to Previous Quest Inn, 1. Do birds of different species flock together In winter? In severe weather, when the snow Ilea deep on the ground. I frequently see a loose, heterogenous troop of birds pass my door, engaged In the common search for food. Theao birds are probably not drawn togeiher, even thua loosely, by any sorlal In Ktinrta, but by a common want; all are hungry, and the activity of one sfeciea attracts and .draws after it unother and another. s S Do animals ever eat dirt lu win ter? Humboldt aaya wolves eat earth, especially clay, during winter, and I'liny makes a similar observation. In Greenland the dog cuts seaweed when Lther food falls. In tropical countries, during tho tropical winter, maty sav age trlliea eat clay. It distends their ntomarhs, and in a measure atltlea tlu craving of hunger. s e 3. Doea a man's housa reflect hla character? Every man's houe la In soma sort an effigy of himself. It Is not the snalla and shell-fish alone that ex crete their tenements, hut mnn as well. When you Kcrlously build a Niune, you make public proclamation of your taste and manners, or your want of these. (Rights reserved by Houghton, .Mif fllYt Co.) In Other Days. Twenty-five Veara Age. Krem The Orrgnnlan, iHCMnber l.'. Jsi. Chicago, Dec. 27 I no Deny or Harry Hayward, recently encrutrd at Minneapolis for the murder of I'eth- rine Glng, arrlvrd In Chicago today for cremation. The aei'ond annual meeting- of the Xorthwestern Ornlt holitglcal associa tion waa held yexterday in thla city. The robust growth of republicanism In Kentucky, says the I'ts Moines Leader, la Indicated by the fact that Governor-elect Bradley has alrcadv Dunn applications on file for .the 21 offices at hia disposal. Ouida. the authoress, wears what, at ail events, looka like a reddish wig. John M. Dorph, a wheat rancher of Umatilla county. Is 'among the Ben- rson arrivals, registered from Pendle ton. Bert Newberger, connecfed with t. large department store at Baker, is an arrival at the Benson. O. L. Evenson, In the logging In dustry at Clatskanle, Or"rs at the Benson while here on business. C. I. Barr, secretary of the cham ber of commerce of Astoria, is at the Benson, , . : .. Pllcrrtra Half Dollar. NEWPORT. Or., Dee. 26. (To the Editor.) Please tell me where and at what- price the Pilgrim and the Mayflower half dollars can be ob tained. SUBSCRIBER. Portland banks obtained their Sup plies of Pilgrim half dollars by pur- chase, at l each plus express charges, from National banks In Boston. The coins were minted by the government tor the Pilgrim Me morial commission-, and the charga of $1 covers 60 cents for coin value and 60 cents to be used by the commis sion In erecting a memorial. Tht Portland supply .was quickly ex hausted. Whether any - can be ob tained now can be ascertained by writing to the Pilgrim Memorial com mission, Boston, Mais. ' Value of Liberty Bends. WHEELER, Or Dec 26. (To the Editor.) Do liberty bondi depreciate in value? D. L, MORGAN. Market prices of 'the aevera'l Issues of liberty bonds are quoted dally on the financial page of The Oregonlan. If you sell liberty bonds now to some other Investor you will receive less than par.. If you hold them until they mature the government will pay you full face value for them. i Till: M'.W VKAK AMI THK Ol.ll. While the new year's dawn Is bring ing Sounds of greeting full of cheer, I can hear the precepts ringing Of the old departing year. Aa we glean from hours of learning Lessins needful to retain. Thus unto the old year turning We may count Its lexsons, gain; And applying them In klndnesa From experience tried andrue Wa may free from error's blindness As we Journey on anew. Thus each year will mark progression, Onward, upward, souls have trod. Learning slowly through transgres sion. Laws immutable of God. Janette Martin. Meaning ef Shadow Boxing. ALBANY. Or.. Dec. 26 (To the Ed itor:) In speaking about a pugilists training for a match, they sometimes speak of them doing ahadow boxing. What is meant by shadow boxing? J. B. It Is a conditioning or wannlng-as exercise in which the boxer combats an imaginary roe, singing into me atr and shifting about to bring all muscles into play. Way a Multnomah Couatyf Portland. Deo. 27. (To the Editor.) Referring to the county hoapltal controversy, what Is the use of a county of Multnomah anyhow? If It had been dispensed with long ago. there would nave neen no con troversy and poialbly no spilled milk. JN. U. Prohibition Plunk, PORTLAND, Dee, 27. (To the Edi tor.) Pleaae advise what the last democratic platform rontalned re garding prohibition or the wet nu tion. A HEADLR. Th subject was ignored. i 1