8 TTTE MORNING OTIEGOXIAN, MONDAY, JANUARY t7, 1021 ESTABLISHED BT ITEXBT I rlTTOCK. Published by The Oreg-onlan Publishing Co., 13S Sixtb Street, Portland, Oregon. C A. MORDEV, E. B. PIPER, Manager. - Editor. The Oregunian la ft member of the Asso- eiated Press. The Associated Kress la ex clusively entitled to the use for publication of all nwa dispatches credited to it or not, otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of publication of special dispatcher herein are also reeerred. Subscription Kates Invariably In Advance. (By Mall.) Tially, Sunday Included, one year I. 00 IRilv, Sunday Included, six months... 4.25 Daily, Sunday included, three months. 2.25 daily, Sunday Included, one month... .75 Daily, without Sunday, one year 6.00 Daily, without Sunday, six months... 8.25 laily, without Sunday, one month. ... .00 Weekly, one year J. 00 Sunday, one year 2.50 (By Carrier.) DatTy. Pnndny Included, one year t 00 i'any, funmy included, three months. 2.25 Paily. Sunday included, one month... .75 Daily, without Sunday, one year.... T.80 i-s.ii v. witnout Sunday, three months. 1.95 Daily, without Sunday, one month.... .63 How to Remit Send postofflce money rder, express or personal check on your wt,i(w. oiamps, coin or currency are at owner's risk. Give postofflce address In lull. Including county and state. Pts,e Kates 1 to 1 pages, 1 cent: 18 . ' " Lt 11 . o- u n pagea, a cents; 60 to 04 pages. 4 cents; 68 to 80 pages 0 cents: to id pages, 6 cents. 'o.-j!gn postage double rare. Eastern Buoineos Offlre Verree A Conk Urtinswick bu.ldlns. New York; Verree " Dunaing. Chicago; Verree vi c,onk'ln" Jf ree fress building. Detroit, Bld'w'elL Molssant did not make diamonds In quantity sufficient to glut the mar ket. Only quantity production would be wonderful, and there Is reason to suppose that If this were achieved diamonds would cease to be worn, as unworthy because cheap. Intrln sically beautiful though the diamond may be, it is well enough known that it Is chiefly prized because of iU rar Ity, and this, it is generally supposed, is artificially maintained by mine owners who know that the business would be destroyed if the gems were wlthia the reach of everyone. BONTS MODERATION, It Is difficult to give an accurate estimate of the cost to Oregron of a soldiers' cash bonus. One would need to know the exact terms of the proposed law, the number of men who saw active duty, the average length of service, and the amount to be paid for each month at war. Some of the details of the Wash ington law may be of interest as of fering light on the cost. The Wash ington law provides for the payment of $15 a month for each month of service. This bonus Is also extended fo bona fide residents of Washington who had active service with the forces of any of the powers associ ated with the United States during the period that the United States was at war, but is subject to deduction of similar compensation paid by such foreign powers. The act does not ex tend to those members of the spruce division who received civilian wages or to any other service men who re ceived extra compensation unless such extra compensation was less than the amount they would be en titled to under the bonus law. In such cases the difference will be paid. The benefits of the act extend to the widow of the man who died in service provided she has not since remarried: or to his motherless chil dren, or if he left no widow or chil dren, then to his surviving parents. if actually dependent upon liim. Conscientious objectors and men dis. honorably discharged are barred. For the payment Of the Washing. ton bonus a bond issue of $11,000,000 is authorized and this bond issue is subject to enlargement without further legislation if not sufficient to pay all claims. The number of active service men supplied by Oregon was about two thirds the number supplied by Washington. A similarly constructed bill would. If the Washington estl mate of total requirements is accu rate, cost this state seven and one third million dollars. If the cash bonus were $25, instead of $15, the cost would exceed $13,000,000, as suming that the other details of the Washington act were copied. If bonus legislation takes any other form than that of loans from certain state funds for the purchase of lands or homes, it must be sub mitted to the people. If a cash bonus law is to go before the people It Is well, before it Is formulated, that some of the conditions now confront lng Oregon be enumerated. Taxes, state and local, are higher than ever before. It will require a squeeze by the existing legislature to get Its appropriations for necessary purposes within constitutional limi tati oris. But while the legislature Is paring down 'needs, the federal gov ernment, in order to pay incurred war costs, is taking out of Oregon yearly in miscellaneous taxes, a sum nearly equal to the amount that the legislature can legally appropriate for one year. The national govern ment has appropriated nearly every conceivable tax resource except those already appropriated by the state. Its taxes extend even to many articles of clothing. They are paid by every body either directly or Indirectly. In the fiscal year 1928 the federal government took out of Oregon in , miscellaneous taxes more than $5,- 500,000 and in addition took in In come and profits taxes, nearly twenty-two millions more. In the old days when the liquor traffic paid great sums to the government and war taxes were unknown, Oregon in no year contributed aa much as $1,000, 000 in internal revenue. While state and local taxes have been going up and up, federal taxes, because of the war, have Increased more than 2700 per cent. It may be argued that we are al ready so deeply involved that a few millions more will not make any difference. But it may also be pointed out that it Is going to re quire conservation to the utmost now to pull out without sacrifice of that progress and development to which the commonwealth aspires. There Is undoubtedly keen sym pathy with the cause of the service men. The argument that the war deprived them of the financial bet terment that those who stayed at home acquired is not to be contra dicted. If there were a possible means of state economy by which they could be compensated for their losses there would be scant few who would deny it to them. But there Is none. We must borrow must go still deeper into debt to give them cash compensation, and it is a com pensation that the federal govern ment, rather than the state, owes them. Perhaps, even bo, the people will be willing to assume a heavy burden to do that which the government may fail to do. But clearly that which Is asked out of the scant re maining resources of the public must be asked in terms of moderation and common sense if it 13 expected to gain approval. THE MILLIONAIRE TARN. A legend on one of the banners in the soldiers' bonus parade Saturday night caught the eye of the news paper reporter and found Its way into print. It was this: "ftie war made 18,000 millionaires." Here we have one of those elusive. unprovable statements, oft repeated by well-meaning persons as well as by persons not well-meaning. It is akin to the fiction that 2 per cent of the people own 85 per cent of the wealth. An eastern publication has long been on the trail of the "millionaire" statement. Every time it is ottered by a person of seeming sincerity that publication asks him how he found it out, or where he got it. Invariably the, Inquirer is referred to some one else, and by him referred to a third person and so on until the pursuit ends either with denial or with some unreliable publication or at some such source as a parade banner. There is one way of estimating the number of millionaires in the coun try. but it is arbitrary in its assump tions and gives only a rough result It is figured on the Income tax re turns, it being assumed that he whose income is $50,000 or more a year may be called a "millionaire.1 But the figures are disappointing to those who love the sensational. The income tax returns for 1920 dis close fewer than 18,000 of these millionaires." In 1916, before we en tered the war, we had about 20,000 of them. In short, if this method of estimate be accepted, there are not 18,000 millionaires all told in the country, let alone 18,000 war mil lionaires, and, moreover, during and since our engagement In war the number has actually fallen off. lated that It should feed the population tion. For that matter, mapping of ' BY- PnODUCTS OF THIS PRESS aw'not'do iT'aV'h?.?,.? fhn.ilU.d the canal zone and the coast line I aid not do It, and, having tho relieved I Enz-ene Worn... Tell. T.-.v!-.. Tle nersen or the burden of taking care of vi nam were epucnai uucui reuuea her own civil population, she could take ; in their way, though the work was amount OI looa ana use n j.n. r. f A ntin Whether ws went through . V. xxie mgiit lroiu iew iur& to HARDING'S PLEDGE TO THE' WEST. President-elect Harding's assur ance that he is in harmony with the aspirations of the west for reclama tion of arid land Is evidence that the whole country comes within the scope of his statesmanship, and that the embargo on development of the public domain, which has continued for twelve years, will come to an end with his inauguration. His support for the policy of de velopment will be needed, for it still has many enemies, whose power Is measured by their activity, not by their numbers. Although legal ob stacles have been removed by the waterpower and leasing laws, it will depend on administration of those laws whether the country shall have the full benefit of them. The secre taries of the interior, war and agri culture compose the water-power commission, and Mr. Harding's words are an assurance that the men se lected for these offices will be in sympathy with the west, and that a cold shoulder will be turned to the Pinchotites, the scenery enthusiasts, and the parochially selfish eastern congressmen who regard anything that is done for the west as a gift of which their own districts are de prived. Their conception of the west Is a place to- grow sagebrush and scenery instead of men, women, food and clothing. The broader view, which Mr. Harding seems to take, is that the resources of the west should be de veloped for the benefit' not only of the west but of the whole country. It needs the crops that Irrigated land could grow, the minerals of our mountains, and the manufactures that could be produced by our waterpower. It needs the hosts of additional farmers that could live on reclaimed land to restore the balance between urban and rural population and to increase the food supply. From a strictly governmental stand point, the nation needs the revenue that would be produced by all these forms of western development. Whatever is expended would be a good Investment if it were never re paid, but it will be repaid Dy tne men who occupy the land. on her army. that form and that pretext or not, there Is no man who can read that testimony and read It candidly who does not know when he gets through that the purpose was (p bolster op Poland and enable her to carry on her war. Then lest incidentally we should aid the Polish army by releasing for it food which would otherwise have been eaten by civilians, we should, according to Mr. Reed, have let the civilians starve.V and this should have been done in order to preserve neutrality toward a government which we do not recognize and which burns with eagerness to start a red revolution in this country. We en counter again the. old-pro-bolshevist assumption that Poland was the ag gressor, for no better reason than that, after being attacked, it carried the war into the enemy's country. He went on to speak of the bolshe- vist government as "a friendly power,"' and said of the Russians: 'They have established a govern ment that has stood for three years," when the truth is that the bolshevists set up themselves as a government, violently dissolved the assembly which the people had elected to set up a government for them, and killed more than half its members. Pursuing, the same fiction, he said: It Is said that this people, when they rebelled and overthrew their government. got some money out of banks, confiscated Its and that they got some money from Roumanla. Disregarding the facts that the gold was stolen by men who stole control of the government by vlo. lence, Mr. Reed censured the United States for refusing to mint part of this gold which was shipped to this country. He also condemned the government for not opening trade with Russia, though It has left the way open for those, who wish to do so at their own risk, and when title to anything that may be bought from Kussia is open to attack on the ground that it is stolen. These inconsistencies between Mr. Reed and the governing facts of the subjects that he attempts to discuss demonstrate how prejudice has af fected his reasoning power. Like the Athenian who voted against Arlstides because he was tired of hearing that statesman called "the Just," Mr. Reed erupts whenever he hears praise of Mr. Hoover. The reported discovery by a Ger man chemist of a method of making synthetic diamonds is neither new nor. admitting all that may be claimed for it, is it especially prom ising. It has long been possible to produce the chemical diamond in the laboratory, as the Frenchman Mois- san showed when he duplicated on a minute scale the process of nature. ,ac-.s ru:!0ie is toe volcano, out SENATOR REED'S IIOOTERrllOBIA. One effect of the irreconcilability of Senator Reed is that he has be come affected with Hooverphobia, the counterpart of the Hooveritis with which he accuses the admirers of the former food administrator of being afflicted. He had an acute attack of this disease when Senator Hitchcock read to the senate a state ment of Mr. Hoover's disposition of the $100,000,000 European relief fund In order to refute the Missouri- an's' charge that $40,000,000 of the fund was used in maintaining the Polish army in the field against Russia. Mr. Hitchcock read statements by accountants showing the amount ex pended in each country, what kind of food was given and in particular the number of children fed. He showed that the governments inter ested had given obligations to repay over $84,000,000 of the almost $95,- 000,000 expended. Poland received over $51,000,000 of this amount, be cause its need was greatest and it was cut off from other outside sup plies, but all was distributed to the civil population by American army officers, the American Red Cross and the Quaker society. Quite dis tinct from these relief supplies, many thousand tons of surplus army sup plies in France were sold by the army liquidation board to the Polish government. Mr. Reed seems to have confused this transaction with the relief work, and he jumped to the conclusion that Mr. Hoover was diverting funds voted by congress forelief of civilians to aid the Poles In war on the bolshevists. But Mr. Reed found a hole to crawl through. He quoted from Mr. Hoover's testimony before the house ways and means committee a year ago ' statements that Poland was maintaining a front of 1600 miles against the bolshevists with 700,000 men under arms, that its troops were "suffering fearfully ' from In adequate clothing and supplies," that If Poland should collapse from bol shevist invasion, it would be "the most direct menace to the whole civilization of Europe" and that he was "convinced there is a necessity which requires that we Join in sup port." On this testimony Mr. Reed commented: I do not care, when they turned this 1 MORROW COUNTY'S COMPLAINT. The Oregonian recently published an article descriptive of Morrow county in which both the author. Addison Bennett, and The Oregonian attempted to render a service to that county. In this article Mr. Benfiett recalled certain misfortunes that had been suffered by the county but did so plainly to contrast the past with the present and emphasize the enter prise, courage and prosperity of that community. But it is learned from newspapers of Heppner and from a communica tion which is published today that the people of Morrow county are dis pleased . They feel that Mr. Bennett should have left out past history and that he should have emphasized the brighter recent era In another way. uoubtless It could have been done. A Jornallst may go Into any county Ic Oregon and gather only favorable statistics about its farms and its banks and Its towns and its maufac torie3 and In the end he will have an article that is bound to please every body in the county but be read by nobody else. Every Oregon county and almost every western community has been described in what is com monly called boom literature. It speaks only of the bright side, of the beautiful and the pleasing. The people have become suspicious of such articles. They no longer read them. They might as well not be printed. . But a descriptive article that con tains something of history or narra tive, avoids -superlative expressions and tells about the difficulties that are overcome by a community as well as something about its peculiar advantages bears the Impress of sin cerity and it has the added quality of readability. An article such as seems' to have been desired by Mor row county would not have been worth shucks to it. . , The Oregonian is unable to dls. cover in Mr. Bennett's article any- thing in the nature of a "roast," but it does find therein a plainly ex pressed admiration for Morrow county's people, resources and pros perity. The Oregonian regrets that the service attempted and which has been done to the county is not appre ciated. Nome, Alaska, and return, 9000 miles, was noteworthy because it was made by four planes without a motor missing fire and. without a serious accident. Transmission of about 100,000,00 letters by air mail at . ordinary postage rates evoked practically no comment,- so accus tomed have people become to taking truly remarkable feats for granted. Radio communication between sub marine and airplane was established during the year and it was demon strated that telephonic conversation between airplane and ground station Is practicable up to a distance of 300 miles. Also of technical significance was the employment of a new pat tern of-propeller with which a plane can be stopped within seventy-five feet of the spot where 1U wheels first touch the ground. This con cerns the future of aviation because of its bearing on the siza of neces sary local landing fields. The in ventor who can devise a way to make extemporaneous landing safe will do more for aviation than any altitude record breaker. The Manufacturers Aircraft asso ciation thinks that actual perform ances during the year have more than offset decreased production of machines. The real reason in all probability is that greater emphasis nas Deen placed on reliability and less on mere stunting." The in dustry has emerged from the era of sensationalism and there is warrant for the belief of Insiders that the passenger-carrying period has been brought perceptibly nearer because or this. Like the automobile, the flying machine ceases to be regarded as an expensive' toy as it broadens the field of its utility. Those Who Come and Go. , . -I District Attorney Erlckson of Clat- Mra. V. B, McDougle of Eugene, Or., ' . . ... ,. f. sop county arrived In the city too sends a newspaper clipping from her laU for the annual meeting of the old home, Laclede, IU, of a little girl district attorneya of the state, but in who ' was a schoolmate when both A YEAR'S PROGRESS IN AVIATION. The annals of the past year In aviation constitute further amazing proof that the world is not standing still. When Americans have not been busy establishing new records they have been discovering novel ways of adapting the new science to the material wants of men. The day may come when mere speed and altitude will cease to count, but never, perhaps, when there will not be new fields of operation. For illustration, one day last July a com mercial airplane company carried a ton of grapefruit from Miami, Fla In sixteen hours, a feat that sug gests unlimited possibilities in the way of finding new markets for exo tic produce. Two months later a California fisheries concern em ployed airplanes to locate schools of fish, and reported larger catches In less time and at less cost than had been obtained by previous meth ods. The gain here Is obvious. By eliminating the factor of chance from fishing" it may be that cost of an important food product will be reduced to consumers. The latter, mindful of past experience, will not be excessively hopeful, but the pros pect nevertheless is pleasing. It Is estimated that operation of a few aircraft lent to the forestry service by the army saved approxi mately $35,000,000 worth of standing timber from destruction by fire. About a thousand incipient fires were reported and it is not hard to believe that the air patrol experi ment fully Justified Itself. It will hardly be denied that these accomplishments were worth while, though theyr thrill us less than the feat, for instance, of Major Schroe der, who last February reached an altitude of 33,000 feet and barely escaped death after having lost consciousness in the highly rarified atmosphere of the upper levels, but recovered in time to land safely. But Donald Hudson, who flew an American-built plane across the Andes at an elevation of 30,000 feet, received less attention than was deserved by a feat that again showed the prac food over to Folaod, whither they ilpu- j tlcal value of the airplane in esplora- SHirriNO MEN SEEK PORTLAND. Coming of Axel Johnson, the great Swedish ship-owner, to Portland with an offer to run his vessels to this port if a minimum amount of car;o is supplied for each voyage Is significant of the change that has come in Portland's standing as a port within a few years. Only a short period has passed since theVall or Portland for shjps brought the reply that we had not enough cargo to Induce them to come here. The presence of cargo has now been proved, and ship-owners come from distant countries, asking for their share. By such incidents Portland's standing as a port is established. The Johnson line will cive Port land merchants direct connection with ports of northern Europe, es pecially Scandinavia, enabling them to deal at first hand with merchants of that region instead ef through At lantic coast agents and importers. who have no particular Interest in pushing Pacific coast products. This is an opportuniity to introduce Ore gon goods in markets where they are little known, and to prevent them from being disguised as products of other states. This and the other northern Europe lines will carry the name or Oregon grain, wool, fruit and other products to people who have not known them or have known them' under other names, and will make them advertise themselves. A reminder was given that we can not have permanent shipping lines unless we provide cargoes both ways. when Mr. Johnson inquired about markets for products of the coun tries at the other end of the line. Sweden produces steel, machinery, fish, hard bread, matches and other commodities, while Norway, Den mark and Holland have like goods and others for export. Upon our readiness to buy such things will ultimately depend our opportunity to sell our products directly to the countries that export them. This fundamental condition of for eign trade requires that our tariff policy be adjusted to it. As our in dustries need foreign markets in order to keep In full operation, Port land should join ofher industrial and commercial centers in urging on con gress a compromise between the policy of protection to American in dustry and the policy of opening American markets to foreign prod ucts which will permit .other na tions to sell to us. Unless they do. they cannot buy from us anything that they can buy elsewhere, and the shipping business cannot prosper on the scale that we desire. - were In the grammar grades. The tale of the making of a happy Christ mas follows: When Santa Claus chartered Illi nois Central crack passenger train No. 1, southward bound, which came to an abrupt stop apparently In the middle of a cornrield with only a lonely bouse in view, a precedent was eet by Illinois Central officials and employes, ana there came to lignt a Christmas story of truth, but as strange as fiction, and for that rea son the period of time must start back to 18 years ago. One cold night 18 years ago, a man and woman traveling in a covered wagon stopped at the home of John Sp.-ouse and his wife near Laclede, 111. That night a child was born to the visitors. Mr. and Mrs. Sprouse, childless, convinced the couple that the child should be given a better home than they were able to provide with their covered wagon. During the ensuing 12 years the Sprouses, proud of their ward and she equally fond of her home, gave the girl all within theii power, and she devel oped into a sweet little country miss. But a few days after her 12th birthday anniversary she was strick en with infantile paralysis. Coinci dent with this illness reverses same upon the Sprouses, and their lot was difficult. For six years the girl has never moved from a cot. Trainmen whisk ing by the Sprouse farm house on their freight and passenger trains frequently noted a small hand waving at them from a window of the farm house. And they waved back. With in a few months there was not one Illinois Central train that did not produce a waving hand as it dashed by the window. This waving became a fixed habit, and trainmen, through friends, in vestigated and found out it was the stricken girl. Even at night, with the aid of a match, th girl has sig naled all the regular trains. Then Christmas drew near. From her cot the girl composed pretty poems and made gayly decorated Christmas cards, which are of such a nature that it is almost Impossible to distinguish the difference between them and the manufactured ones. And Christmas came, and as No. 1 whistled for yie t .1 of Laclede, the invalid prepared to wave her hand as usual, but old No. 1, which daily for six years had passed the Sprouse home, leaving a. roar, a cloud of dust and smoke and steam In Its wake, came to a halt directly opposite the invalid's window. A delegation of Illinois Central em ployes jumped from the baggage car. Then Santa Claus unloaded his con signment to the farm house. A big, bright, comfortable wheeled chair; a warm, woolly and beautiful bathrobe; a big Indian blanket with all its gay colors; a wonderful pair of house slippers and a purse with cash rolled out of the car, and No. 1 departed as the delegation of train men conveyed to the little invalid the greatest Christmas of her life, of the lives of her foster parents and of the lives of .the trainmen. And then came No. 2 northbound passenger train And it stopped and there was another delegation. HARD KNOCKS ARE BEST FORGOT Morrow County Displeased By Addl Son Bennett's Reminiscences. HEPPNER, Jan. 11. (ToVthe Edit or.) If your correspondent, Mr. Addi son Bennett, had had it in for Hepp ner and Morrow county, had he de- ample time to keep an Important en- j sig-ned to show them up in their worst gagement at the Portland hotel, in possible light, he could not have suc fact, the district attorney's presence . ceeded more admirably than he did in In the city was so necessary to me , his write-up In The Sunday Orego welfare of one or Astoria's residents that he made the trip by automobile, arriving late Saturday night. For without the legal papers District At toroey Erickson had in his posses sion a wedding ceremony scheduled nian, January 9. In that article he went back over 40 years of the coun ty's history and elaborated with a vengeance on all its misfortunes, en gaging in a regular orgy of calamities Five hens from the Oregon agri cultural college have the remarkable record of 144 eggs in December, one laying an egg a day. This Is partly result of breeding and much of it due to care, which term includes feeding. I Including -engineering, medicine and Hens on the farm, from which the agriculture. As for the college stu- Take it from the librarians assem bled in Chicago from all parts of the country, the modern girl is e low brow. She is strong for knee frocks; she's admittedly. p:etty and wears tortoise shell campus windshields, but when It comes to literature, any thing deeper than . the lightest of fluffy stuff, she is not there. "Oh, look!" she says to the patient librarian. I've got to read some books.- It's for my English. I've emi-finals. Look! Have you got The Four Horsemen of the Erysipe las,' by that Spanish .caveman? And want a book of poetry, too some thing kind of jazzy, see?' War books, immensely popular a year ago, are now gathering cobwebs on the library shelves, while the reading public Is devouring works on spiritualism, occultism and new thought. The demand for fiction shows a marked decline. The hundreds of thousands of returned war veterans demand books on vocational training, bulk of the nation's product comes. are not'expected to "come within a mile of this record, for there hens are "just chickens." Tet the farm hen can be made to lay as many as twenty dozen In the year and be the best money producer on the place. College bulletins tell how to do it and they are free for the asking. Voliva must be recruiting for Zion with his "Guide to Hell." The idea of punishing every sinner with an overdose of his own sin is novel, to say the least. Immuring smokers in a cloud of smoke might effect a weak lunger and "purifying" a drinker with surroundings of unlim ited "booze" will nauseate the hard est proposition; but there Mr. Voliva must stop. Anything further along the line of sin will start a stampede on "the worst way to go to Zion City." Perhaps the cost of living declined 5.6 per cent in the late months of the year; figures seem to show that re sult; but the housewife needs more than tabulated statistics to be con vinced. It's the money hat she has left over that counts. Marriage fees at Vancouver are the bone of contention and the min isters, who think they should per form all the ceremonies, .re not happy to see a county pfficial get the most. Why not have a gentlemen's agreement to pool the fees and divide? " That foolish man, out of work and feeling himself a burden on his fam ily, who essayed to depart by the gas route, simply added another bill that must be paid. The Oregon flagpole at San Fran cisco bothers aviators, but they know what they can do. The pole is there to stay. One of the. women's clubs at the university is planning a. campaign against the use of slang. Hop to it, ladies, - ,. - . dents, the librarians say they read little outside their prescribed course and the newspapers, with- an. occa sional magazine article someone else has recommended. To have a husband left you by a woman friend as a deathbed legacy is a proceeding with as ddubtful an out come as vaccination. In the case of Mrs. Llllle Fowler Ferris of San Francisco It took. The man In the case, Orren Fowler Sheafer, was "wlllln"," like Barkis, so the wedding bells will ring out soon. " The late Mrs. Sheafer and Mrs. Fer ris shared a lifelong friendship. Dur ing Mrs. Shearer's Illness a year ago she enjoyed the continual presence and devoted care of her best friend. With the realization that her life was ebbing away came remembrance of the old proverb: "Dost thou love thy friend, then give him that which thou dost value most." And of her possessions Mrs. Sheafer prized her husband most, so the bequest was made. Mindful of the dying wish, .the hus band and friend sought each other during the last months and the ro mance which ensued will culminate at the home of James Geary, the bride's uncle. "I feel very proud of that gift of love," said Mrs. Ferris, referring to her coming marriage, "for both- Mr. Sheafer and I feel we are fulfilling the dying wish of one we both loved." San Francisco Examiner. . The Texas goat-roping title changed hands at San Angelo when Louis Jones, Tom Green county stockman, defeated Allen Helder of G.-.rden City, Glasscock county, by roping and ty ing 20 goats in 256 seconds. He won a purse of $1000. Helder's time was 259 seconds. s Helder captured one eoat In 9 1-5 seconds, but did not equal the record of 6 seconds flat claimed for Jones, and declared to be the southwestern record. uouaton i-osi. , j at high noon yesterday at the Port- and disasters, overlooking compara- land would have been postponed. The i ' " 6 yua-iinca. n ... ia.iiea to aaveruse any ox our uiaw backs, it was certainly done through accident and not through design. The business men of Heppner, th farmers and stockmen of Morrow county, are sore at this roast, when they had expected a boost frour our old neighbor Bennett, were this ar tide of his to go unrefuted the natu ral effect would be to drive every in tending settler the opposite direction from Morrow county, for Instead o heralding to the world through the columns of The Oregonian that Mor row county Is made of the best fed, the best dressed and the most wealthy people of any semirural county in the northwest, Mr. Bennett wonders how In hades we can hang on so long without starving to death. He inti mates that we ehould give up the struggle arid all move out. This ot course we cannot consider at present. Mr. Bennett went out at the same time the Title Guarantee & Tru6t company went out in 1905-6, and here are his own words: "I made fine progress until along in the winter of 1905-6 when the Trust company (to which he was attached at Irrigon, on the Columbia river) went to smash and the entire project went to smash." Now he might have gotten the impression that the Irrigon pro ject was Morrow county; but ha is wrong. It was just one little corner or It, Tes, Morrow county has suffered a few years of short crop; not a bit worse, however, than has every other section of the state of Oregon. Likd the ent're United States, money mat ters are temporarily tied up here, but no one is suffering, no one is "panic ky," and so far as we have made In quiry, everybody Is intending to keep his shirt on. regardless of calamity howlers. Heppner had a couple of fires whlnh destroyed a regular nest of old fire traps, all frame buildings except one, the Palace hotel, and as usual these places are bein? filled with concrete and brick buildings and substantial frame residences. It is a bigger and better town than ever before, and more money changes hands here than in any town of its size in the United States. Seventeen years ago two mammoth clouds, which were seen from all over eastern Oregon, happened to meet near Heppner and burst, drowning 200 of our peope and destroying a lot of property. It never happened before nor since, and the same thln is liable to happen to Pendleton, Baker, La Grande or any of the other towns sit uated in eastern Oregon's fertile val leys. Heppner people do not appre ciate this occurrence bein? constantly draped before the . orld's attention. Here are the facts?- and I defy con tradiction: Morrow county has enough actual wealth to give every man, woman and child within her borders $3017. Some per capita! Her assesed valuation, much below the actual, is $13,864,571. Morrow county produces annually 2.000.000 pounds of wool, 1. old). 000 bushels of grain (being the third grain county oi Oregon ) hundreds of thousands of tons of hay: she owns 250,000 head of heep, 10.000 head of beef cattle, numerous herds of dairy cows and hogs, 9000 head of work horses and mules; a vast empire of merchantable timber, great, stock ranches and fruit orchards. We have four banks in the county, one bank alone last year having on deposit $1,464,510.34. Mr. Bennett be moans that these deposits have shrunk more than half since that time, but didn't say why. Here it is: 100 per cent of the wool, 50 per cent of the wheat and 75 per cent of the mutton sheep, cattle and hay are st!!l being "held by the producer. To sell these products "even at a great sacri fice would again flood our banks with money. We have had no poor house for many years and don't need one. No one is being financially smashed and will not be. E. M. SHUTT. More Truth Than Poetry. By James J. Montague. paper Mr. Erickson brought was a marriage license for himself and Miss Helma Hukari, Astorias leading mil liner. Other Astoria people present for the. ceremony included Miss E. Billey, N. A. Jeldness and relatives of the bridegroom. England's present shipbuilding pro gramme which leads the world In construction of new vessels is not planned as a means of outdistancing the United States but to put England back where she was before the war, according to J. W. Lorry of Liverpool, England, member of the British ship ping board who is stopping at the Multnomah. Mr. Lorry is on a tour of the shipbuilding centers of the United States. From here he will proceed to San Francisco and later to New Orleans and home. The war not only destroyed British shipping but curtailed production to an extent that places her years behind in her con struction programme, Mr. Lorry says. Hop raisers have seen more ups and downs than horse racers in the his tory of the industry in the Willamette valley, with the one difference alwas considered that the hop man works for his money whether he gets It or not. But the element of uncertainty that places1 the hop man's fortunes year in year out at the threshold of Dame Chance has a strange fascina tion for the veteran In the game and even the 18th amendment has not yet brought the plow to many yards. R. H. Wood of Dayton, Or., now regis tered at the Oregon, is one of the veteran growers whose faith in the industry has been rewarded during the past two seasons. The "talkative burglar" recently much In the minds of Portland people has nothing in common with a "talka tive barber" 'unless It be the common trait of conversing while he works. Many McMinnville people have lis tened to interesting discussions and dissertations above the hum of elec tric clippers. Whether it be sport or politics, current news or reminiscence of the past there is always room for argument, but Cecil B. Parker is noted first as an artist in his trade and even those who do not agree with his opinions ara never loath to spend a half hour in his chair. Mr. and Mrs. Parker registered yesterday at the Seward. Few men In Oregon qualified for diplomatic positions are subordinat ing their qualifications to thefr regu lar business in the days remaining before March 4. I'et the man with highest claim as the best qualified diplomat in Oregon, judging at least from the position he now occupies, seems undisturbed by political aspira tions. Perhaps if the millage bill had failed last spring conditions would have been otherwise. The man in mind is J. H. Akerman, president of Monmouth Normal school, who rules over an inst'tution where women predominate on a. ratio of about 40 to 1. He registered over the week end at the Imperial. Interest of hotel people centers In the opening of the Hotel Ambassador, Los Angeles, Cal., scheduled for Jan uary IS. The Ambassador Is the coast link of a chain of luxurious hostel ries scattered throughout the United States. Portland people now on their way south for the ceremony Include Eric V. Hauser, manager of the Mult nomah hotel; -Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Fields, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Will iams and Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Cobb. Country newspaper editors are al ways genial, at least when separated from their office duties, and S. B. Sanderson bears that reputation in his own prosperous community of Milton and Freewater. Mr. Sanderson is oi tne old type of newspaper man with printer's ink running in the family blood, for he is carrying on the work of his father in publishing me rreewater rimes. Mr. Sanderson spent tne week-end at the Oregon THE LOAFI'lU I always hall a holiday With paens of thanksgiving. And seek sincerely to dibplay My eager joy of living. I l"ave my tasks with leaping heart; I loaf with pleased placidity, Evading duty is on art I practice with avidity. In fact the only thing I shirk Is work. When any one suggests I need Some rest and recreation, I rise and instantly proceed To take 'em with elation. When, any sort ot sport's awintr, I hasten blithely through it; I love to do most anything Unless I've got to do it. There's nothing that my soul can Irk Save work. For years excepting when asleep Consistenly I've sought to Discover ways and means to keep From doing what I ought to. And yet I'm spent with weariness, There isn't any doubt of it. It's harder work than work, I guess. In trying to get out of it. In fact the effort work to shirk. Is work. Btnke a Shift It looks as if an outgo tax would raise more revenue the confing year. Always Something;. No sooner does Mexico get quiet than Cuba begins to kick up. And a Bumper One, With one born every minute there'll be a new crop by the time Mr. Ponzl gets out of Jail. (Copyright by the P.ell Syndicate, Inc.) In Othter Days. Twenty-five Yrnrs Ako. From The Oregonian of January 17, lSWl. ashingto.i.Tlie national demo cratic committee today decided that v.ia utiuuLiftuc national convention will be hold at Chicago July 7. Four cities had bid for the convention and 29 ballots were necessary before a decision was reached. Indian war veterans of Oregon will receive the moneys due them If an appropriation bill, presented the Fen ate by Senator Mitchell of Oregon, is passed. City councllmen are still endeavor ing to cut down their former esti mate of city expenses for the coming year. Suggestions have been made that the council lower the mayor's salary. No holdups or robberies were re ported yesterday. Members of the O. A. C. athletic teams can realize why Jlmmv Rich ardson is one of the most popular as well as most successful athletic managers. For Jimmy bids for the good will of his teams just as strongly as ne aoes ior tnat or the public. When registered at the Multnomah hotel this week end for the basket ball game, with Multnomah club his team was treated to seats for "The Bird of Paradise." Friends of A. W. Stone, official of the Hood River Apple Growers' asso ciation, are sometimes unkind enough to impeacn nts motives for week-end visits to Portland by referring to his fondness for golf. But Mr. Stone cannot see where ostensible trips to visit relatives aren't carried out to the letter even if he does .devote his Sunday afternoons to golf. He is registered at the Portland. Regular army captains are even scarcer in Portland now than during the daye of the spruce division, but the Portland hotel register was well supplied with army men yesterday. Captains B. B. Btitler, A. C. Young and A. Gluckman, all regular army Fifty Tears Ago, From The Orcfonian of January 17, 1S71. Paris The cily is terror-stricken as the result of a heavy bombard ment which lias continued for several lays. Women and children while in the streets are being killed by pro jectiles. French guns are paid to be formid able. The new weapons have been r. unted on gunboats and carry a shell slightly more than five miles. ''Colonel C. It. Larrabee arrived from California on the last steamer and brought with, him some excellent amples of beet sugar, lie bxlieves that Oregon beets thouKl produce a laite amount of saccharine. A party of Northern Pacific rail road engineers are at St. Helens, on the Oregon side, looking apparently for a route up tho river. ANNUAL ATTRACTS PRESS NOTES OREGON MIST LIKE BENEDICTION After Sojourn In Dry Climnte Writer Enjoys Home Winter. PORTLAND. Jan. 16. (To the Ed! tor.) May I say a word in defense o my loved Portland rains? The las two winters before this I passed In a city on the south Atlantic coast where It seldom rained and the sun usually shone, where the little pick aninnies ranaabout the streets in one dirt incrusted garment and sucked a perpetual orange. The orange skin ultimately joined the" banana peeling, the peanut shell, the bits of cotton the droppings f mules and ail the Here the mass became saturated with tobacco juice and the sputum of dis ease, and, finally, under the action of sun and wind and the tramp of feet, pulverized into dust. Then tame the strong Atlantic wind and swept the cobbles like a broom, throwing the dust high in the air, coating tree and shrub, whirling it about the faces of pedestrians and forcing it into their breath and pores. When it did rain. It was a torren tial downpour that drenched you if you crossed the street, if not in its downward course, when it rebounded from every' object It struck. When I have returned to Portland, the uni versale moisture has been in danger men detailed for Instruction .t nor-I of being augmented by tears of vallis, were registered over the thankfulness to see the . asphalt week end. Mrs. Minnie P. Burnett of Baker, pioneer resident of the state and of the eastern Oregon city, spent the week end at the Imperial. Mrs. Burnett is on her way to spend the remainder of the winter with rela tives in California. George L Burtt, head of a well known San Francisco produce house, deals extensively in Oregon products. He is registered at the Imperial while on a business trip to Portland. Chief Justice Charles A. Johns of the Oregon supreme court was regis tered at the Oregon during a week end visit in Portland. gleaming wet and clean, and every stone and leaf shining from its daily bath. Every breath or rain-washed air was a delight, and the mist fell like a benediction on the city whose mortality rate is among the lowest in the country. E. C. S. Not One of Bonns States. PORTLAND, Jan. 16. (To the Edi tor.) I have been Informed that the state of California has awarded her ex-soldiers a bonus. Has this passed Into effect and are there any restric tions? To whom would one apply for the bonus. INTERESTED READER. California is not included in the list of bonus states recently prepared by Adjutant-General White Origin of Electrical Ohm. London Globe. The ohm, the nit of measurement In electricity, gets its name from George Simon Ohm of Germany (born 1787, died 1854), who gave much of his life to a study of galvanic cur rents, and by means of mathematical tests and experiments was able to es tablish the law that forms the basis for the mattiematica theory of elec-tr:::'.y. No Weed To Get Drenched. PORTLAND, Jan. 16. (To the Edi tor.) May I be allowed' to reason with our homesick friend who finds the weather of Oregon rather trying? I think he must be either very young and suffering from a recent re jection from the lady of his choice, or else very old and suffering from the rheumatism. I wonder which! I was born in New York and still- have a shivering memory of long, cold rains In the fall, followed by driving snow storms, deep snow-banks and below zero weather. I think eur friend must be very careless to be "drenched through and through." Perhaps he was so to strengthen his case against the Oregon climate. My husband has walked to and from his business for eleven years and has never yet been drenched. AUNT MAY. Newspapers of Norllivtmt Prnle Spe cial Number of The Oresonlan. Dufur Dispatch. For many years past the residents of the Pacific northwest have looked for the annual arrival of the New Year's edition of The oregonian and have depended on It to give an index of the progress of the state during the preceding year. And it has come to be a matter of course that each succeeding number is larger and bet ter than any of Its predecessors. The number issued lat Saturday was up to all expectations and bet ter. To us here in Oregon the matter contained in the Issue does not create so much surprise or interest as it does to one not acquainted with prog ress and conditions that actually exist. But to the stranger the paper is a revelation. The succeeding editions of The Ore gonian Annual are doing more to at tract attention to the Pacific north west and its possibilities than any other one agency. Story Told In Pictures. liillsboro Independent. As usual, tho New Year's edition of The Oregonian left nothing to bo de sired and completely represented Port land and Oregon at the end of 1920. Wisely the policy of telling the story pictorially was continued, the text being only a condensation of matter which a decade or two ago would have run Into dreary columns of sta tistics which, while valuable, were seldom read. Typographically the edition Is beyond criticism, and the, pages of artistically arranged illus trations tell the stcr- far more ef fectively than possible by the printed word. City's Backing: Disclosed. Woodburn Independent. The Oregonian's New Year's edi tion is devoted principally to the city of Portland, but gives the prospective homeseeker a fair idea of what is backing the metropolis of the state. Pictorially and artistically It is very attractive and in a sense more en lightening to certain readers than long, descriptive articles. However, the most important industries of Ore gon are covered and the eastern aa well as the home reader finds this issue of a great paper one of a most interesting una Instructive character. Great Iloonter for Htnte. Lease Provisions Control. PORTLAND, Jan. 16. (To the Edi tor.) Can a renter make his resi dence some other place and leave the house on the farm vacant before his lease is up, or leave some of his rela tives on the place? Can't I force him by law to stay on the place until his lease Is up or leave altogether? , A. SUBSCRIBER. You can oust him if he falls to comply with the terms of the lease, nc. ::hcrwite. Roseburg News-Review. The New Year's edition of the Portland Oregonian arrived here to day. The publication is very com plete and contains many photo illus trations of Oregon life. The annuat edition of the Oregonian is regarded s one of the foremost boosters of he state each year and the wide cir culation of the paper covers nearly every section of the country. Several nteresting articles pertaining to Douglas county appear In the latest annual. Great Advertisement for Slate. Portland Advocate. The New Year's Oregonian was one of the best advertisements the state has ever received. Portland In particu lar. The illustrations are very fine and the stories of Oregon's wonderful resources, opportunities and prosper ity are told li. most attractive and convincing language. Two Had the N'erve. Pendleton Tribune. The Morning Oregonian and Eugene Guard were about the only two Ore gon dailies with nerve enough to put out a New Year's edition In face of prohibtlve news print prices. Anyway, the deed's done, and the editions were good. Both papers deserve congratu-