8 TTTE MOEXCS'G "OltEGOXTAJf, SATURDAY, JANUARY 22, 1021 ESTABLISHED BT HEXBT U PITTOCK. FubMihcd by The Oreg-onian Publishing Co, 13 Sixth Street. Portland. Oregon. C A. 1IORDEN, E. B. PIPER. - UiDitn. Editor. - The Oreitonian ia a member of the Asso ciated Vreae. The Aociated Preaa l ex clusively entitled to the use for publication of all newa dit.patcb.es credited to it or not. otherwise credited in thla paper and also tne local news published herein. All rights . vl puuucation ox special aispaicnea uwwn are also reserved. suggests the desirability of waging warfare on rats In and out of season. Plague prevention is a business in which good Intentions alone do not count for much. Vigorous action, by communities rather than individuals, is essential to effectiveness. Eobscriptloa Kates Invariably In Advance. By ilall.) Pally. Sunday Included, one year $8.00 'ally, Sundny Included, six months... 4 23 l'sily. Sunday Included, three months. 2.211 daily, Sunday Included, one month... .75 Iaily, without Sunday, one year 6.60. l'ally. without Sunday, six months... S.2 Tally, without Sunday, one month 00 Weekly, one year 1 00 Sunday, one year 2.60 (By Carrier.) pally. Sunday Included, one year 19.00 . i-siiy. nunuay included, three months. i-aily, Sur-day included, one month... .79 paiiy. without Sunday, one year.... T.S0 1'aily. wunuut Sunday, three months. 1.95 aaiiy. without Sunday, one month .tie How ts Remit Send postoffica money order, express or personal check on your oena. oiampa, coin or currency are at ewner's risk. Oive postoffice address In inciuuing county aud state. i-oiage Kales 1 to 16 pages. 1 cent; 18 so -z puuos. i cents; 34 to 4t pages. S cents; oo lu 04 pages. 4 cents; 6tf to 60 pages, D "uu - o pages, e cents, o-r.jn - uuuuw rate. lln, 1-iunswick bu iding. New York; Verree m wimiin, etegrr ouilding, Chicago; Verree fn k Press building, Detroit, Alien. San r'rauusco representative, R. J. J id well t OR A FREE BBIDCE. The Interstate bridge is a profit making institution. The present law requires the profits to be set aside for upkeep and reconstruction. Prior to enactment of the present law the state advanced certain interest on the bridge bonds with the require ment that It should be repaid from the tolls. Itot all of the sum due the state has been refunded. The neces ea ry money has been available but a part of it has been diverted to pay ment of construction costs of the county hospital. Presumably this diversion is hut a loan it will be repaid to the bridge fund from taxes collected this year for county hospital purposes. But a part of the sum diverted was not the county's. It belonged to the state of Oregon. The part that belonged to the county could have been deposited at interest. The funds have been Juggled in behalf of an extravagant hospital undertaking. It is the plaip duty of the legisla ture to make a disposal of the bridge profitst, that will be inelastic. It is needless to create a fund for recon struction purposes if it be assumed that the bridge commission is a com petent body. Bridge engineers are agreed that If a steel bridge is painted at necessary intervals and minor replacements are made from time to time, its life 'cannot be meas . vred in terms of years. It is a per manent structure, provided only it la not required to carry a volume of traffic in excess of that which it was designed to carry. The Burnside bridge is nearing its term of useful ness because it has carried excessive loads. The main trouble with the llorrison bridge is probably neglect. It is the desire of every one that the Interstate bridge be made a free bridge. If tolls are properly con served and properly applied the day of the free bridge will be greatly hastened. Payment out of the bridge tells of salaries to commissioners and district attorney and employment of a special bridge auditor are imposi tions. Possibility of jugglery or di version of the profits ought to be ended. The place for them Is In a special fund invested in municipal, highway, or school district bonds that yield a fair interest, or used to buy up bridge bonds at par or less if that be possible. When this fund is sufficient to retire the bonds the tolls can consistently be abolished. If It is not possible to buy up the bonds the money will be at hand and drawing interest meanwhile to pay - them as they become due. Bridge tolls have no place In modern progress. They are archaic. Commerce with the connected dis tricts cries out against them. Make it a free bridge at the earliest moment. HOW TAXES ROLL TP. The city commission determines the amount of money it will spend and levies its taxes accordingly. The county commission, the school board, the port commission, and all the others do the same thing. The only limitation upon them is the respec tive consciences of the individual members of the various tax-levying and tax-spending bodies, except that the constitution prohibits the levy and expenditure of a greater sum in any year than an Increase of 6 per cent over the previous year, and ex cept also the 8-mill maximum im posed on the city of Portland. The state has a different method. The legislature appropriates and the administrative departments disburse. They must make up their budgets and ask for what they want: and they get what the legislature gives. But In Portland the council and the others ask themselves for public moneys and grant themselves what they see fit to grant within the lim its mentioned. Result: State taxes have grown more slowly in the past decade than the taxes for. the city of Portland, the school district of Portland, or the county of Multnomah. Tet there is a wild outcry from Portland office-holders against any review by any authority over any one of the eighty-odd tax-levying di visions and subdivisions of city and county. The legislature knows what the of fice-holders think. If it has- any doubt about what the people think let it submit to a referendum the Gordon tax-conservation bill. value of its money, thus acquire ability to buy more and produce more until, if it stops the printing presses, its money may rise to par. That means perfect confidence that the promise of goods will be kept. All the schemes of the war finance corporation, the foreign trade cor poration and the Brussels confer ence to extend credit to Europe in this country are simply schemes to bridge the gap in money values in order to hasten production in coun in April, 1904, to the conclusion of the j NAME GIVES WRONG IMPRESSION ! entente corcr.ale. , He acted for France also in the transactions ten years later which ripened the entente into an alliance for war. He was kept in suspense during the first three days of Au gust, 1914, memorable for the dec larations of war by Germany on Russia and France and by the Ger man invasion of Belgium and Lux emburg. Strong British business in fluence worked for neutrality, and tries which -have tflo much money August 1 Grey told him "the gov but too few goods. . They will also increase production in America by enlarging Europe' capacity to buy in this country. They will pave the road back to normalcy. ernment had not been able to decide upon Intervention." Cambon re-r plied, "I could not and would not tell my government that," and re called all that France had done "to But behind all the learned discus- avoid any appearance of provoca- sions of economics and finance, with tion." He reminded Grey that all their allusions to budgets, war France, in reliance on British naval debts, currency, war waste, repara tions and reconstruction stands the one good old Anxlo-Saxon word work. aid, had concentrated its fjeet in the Mediterranean so as to release the British fleet for concentration in the North sea, "so that if the German fleet sweeps down the channel iand destroys Calais, Boulogne and Cher bourg there can be no resistance." THE HOrSE SHOWS SANITY, By refusing to increase its mem- After tnl3 he Dersnip tne nouse or representatives you tell me that your government can- h r1rlraA fr mimil c a toam n - not decide upon Intervention. How can 1 T send euch a meflnra? It would fill ship as against gratification of state Prance with rage and Indignation. My pride. The house has grown until it has become unwieldy, and has per ceptibly lost Influence lu the govern ment by comparison with the presi- ALREADY FINDING A SPLIT. The democratic yarn about a split In the republican. party was to have been expected, ' though premature. About the only comfort that a party can derive from such a defeat as the democracy has Just experienced is to discover or cause division among the victors, but it should at least wait till the republicans have taken con trol of the government.; There will naturally be difference of opinion in the republican party, for it is impossible that any great party can remain of one mind on every subject unless it has a single track mind. Even the democracy under the masterful leadership of President Wilson split on the canal tolls bill, and so many democratic senators deserted their leader on the league that ratification with reserva tlons came within Aeven votes of winning by a two-thirds majority. The republicans have a great ma jority in both houses and, as a rule, the greater the majority, the more easily it splits. . But President-elect Harding has great qualities as a har monizer and can be trusted to act as a leader, not a driver. Under his guidance there is a better, prospect than usual that substantial unity of the majority will be preserved. There may be some who will refuse to be reconciled, but they are an inevitable Incident of politics which must be endured and. unless they voice some genuine and general public demand, they will be few. Some men straggle from the ranks of every party as from those of an army. r LAG IE PREVENTION. Demand of the public health serv ice on congress for an appropriation of 335,000 to be used In combating spread of bubonic plague to this country is based oo information that health conditions in Europe are pe culiarly menacing as the consequence of breaking down of local authority there. Measures that might reason ably be expected to check an epi demic in its incipiency cannot be re- lied on In regions, particularly in central Europe, in which respect for government is at low ebb. The public health service also believes that foreigners In these countries do not have access to all the facts, and it desires to be fully forearmed. Undoubtedly this plague, which was the "black death" of the middle &C2, 111X3 ISUCCU U1UI3 UCCLC119 111U.11 any other single disease occurring In epidemic form. A noteworthy period was that between 1334 and aooi, wnen it spread irom tjnina through India, Persia, Germany, Italy, France and England. Thirty similar epidemics occurred in the ensuing two centuries. There was a recurrence In 1770 and 1771, in which 86,000 died in Marseilles and 80,000 In Moscow alone, these being rJnly two of many cities that suf fered heavily. Constantinople lost idu.uuu or its population in ioU3, and prontea so utile Dy tne terriDie les- Knn thnr 110.000 rliprl when tha juague revisueu tne cuy in loio, Subsidence in civilized countries, which have been relatively free from the peril for almost a century, has been traced to preventive measures made possible by highly organized government. When two well au thenticated cases entered this coun try at the port of New York In 1899, they were detected in time and fur ther spread was prevented, and similarly in San Francisco in the following year the disease was con fined to the Chinese section, where the forty-two deaths that resulted probably were chiefly due to secrecy maintained by ignorant victims. Strict quarantine . and rat exter mination, however, saved the white population from what might have been a tragic visitation. 1 The Idea of the public health service is that an Vunce of preven tion is worth more than a pound of cure in matters of this kind. The method of campaign is well under stood and standardized, but depends for Its efficacy on thoroughness fol lowing prompt detection. The fact that the plague does not usually manifest itself in human beings un til the rodent population has been affected1 for some time gives a pos sibility of warning where health nuthorltlea art vigilant, and it also LESS MONET, MORE GOODS. While the fall in prices, reduction in wages, lull In industry and in crease of unemployment are bewailed by many people, some at least of whom were bewailing the upward trend of things a year and more ago. they may find comfort in the defini tion of this condition by Harvey's Weekly as "a prelude to prosperity." The prosperity that accompanies such high prices and high wages, as we have had resembles the high spirits which in pre-prohibition days accompanied a "jag." It is always followed by a period of depression. and this in turn, if we do not go on another artificial prosperity jag, will be followed by real, healthy pros perity which will last. As everything that goes up must come down, the prices and wages of war-time had to come down, and somebody is sure to be hurt in the fall, which is euphemistically called readjustment. Men who bought dear find themselves forced to sell cheap, and they give ground grudgingly and rebelliously. They are the ones who emit the loudest lamentations, for getting that, if they take into ac count past profits with present losses, they have not done badly in the general result. When they have recovered from the Jar caused by re turn to normalcy, they. will have normal profits and wages. Measur ing these by the prices they pay for what they consume and measuring the amount they save by its pur chasing power, they will probably find, themselves Just as well off in the end as they were in the times of wild exhilaration that are past- One chief cause of the painful ex perience through which we are pass ing is a mistaken idea of what money is. A vague impression prevails that when prices rise, the remedy Is to print more paper money. In fact these pieces of paper that we call money are promises to pay in goods produced. If we increase the amount of money, we should increase pro duction of goods in proportion in or der to keep these promises, other wise confidence In our ability and in tent to keep them diminishes, more money is required to buy a given amount of goods, prices go up and nobody Is better off. Austria has discovered that. The normal value of the krone Is 20'A cents, but Aus tria has manufactured more money while actually producing less goods I until the krone is now worth only cent. The people are swamped with money, but they are starving. Depreciation of European money Is one chief cause of the present de pression. So much of that money is needed to buy a dollar's worth olH American goods that Europe has re duced its purchases, is therefore short of American material to make more goods, our exports fall off, our factories go on short time and, sup ply exceeding demand, prices fall. Europe is then unable to produce more goods wnich would restore the value of its money. The world is caught in another vicious circle created by the disparity between out put of goods and output of money. Fall of prices in tnis country win help us to escape from this circle, for It will narrow the gap between the value of American and European money, thereby making it easier for Europe to buy what .it wants in or der to produce more goods, raise the people would say you have betrayed us. la not possible. On the evening of August S Grey gave him tne assurance tnat tne British fleet would' protect our un dent and senate. Though the taxing guarded northern coast," and Cam- and spending power is reposed In it Don "felt that he was with us at by being subject to its Initiative, its heart," Asquith and Churchill, too. control has diminished, the senate I but he was still tortured with doubt has had free rein In increasing ap- I whether they could "carry with them proprlations and the executive has their colleagues, and could they been unrestrained in expenditure, be- I command the support of the house cause of this loss of influence. of commons?" He said: "It was not It stands to reason that, as the untn Grey spoke in the house of number of members has g.-own, its J commons on the afternoon of Mon power and sense of responsibility fi.y. August 3. that we could have been divided into mailer parts breathe." until a feeling of irresponsibility per- Without doubt the decision which, vades the mass of the memhers, and followed by the Intervention of Italy, each member's efforts turn more to I enabled France to hold Germany at getting something for his own dis- bav ti1 tnB United States turned the trict and state with less regard to scaa was due in large degree Xo the tee interests or tne wnoie nation. work which Cambon had done dur- It being impracticable for a body ine hifl twenty-two years of contln- Those Who Come and Go. Sandy Boulevard Give One tke Idea of Sand, says Writer. PORTLAND, Jan. 21. (To the Edl- "The prices are so high in Alaska tor.) I have read with interest the now that I had to come back to Ore- discussioos recently published setting g0a tor a while until things settle forth In letters from the people their down," said T.-C. McNamer yesterday views relative to the change of name at the Perkins. Mr. McNamer was of Sandy boulevard to one which is born In Oregon and spent the early more eignificant;' ' part of his life in and near Forest In keeping with the Idea of plant- Grove. In 1897 he caught the gold ing roses along the entire length. I '9ver ' wen' to Alaska. He has .. ... . .. . .. - .. been mininsr there ever since. He J J t v ,7 de trip, back to Oregon, name should be changed to "Rose," f but vesterday was the first time he which will be more appropriate and had been here in ten years. "Gold descriptive. The word "Rose' sug- mining In Alaska now Is not what it gests. something beautiful, while "Sandy" suggests the opposite. The writer will venture to say that the average stranger or visitor n our city, when he first hears of Sandy boulevard will think of it as being a drive leading through a tract of land used to be." he said. "Gold lsn f worth 40 cents on the dollar now, with flour in Alaska $24 a hundred pounds, bacon and ham 90 cents pound and everything else on a pro portionate basis. I have minea on the same creek for the past 20 years. I use an automatic dam, which lets oonsistlnir of Rand and rocks, thereby I tlrrouirh Just as much water as I de sire." Mr. McNamer nas naa me distressine experience of being mourned as dead, when he was really veTy much alive. In 1899 he was in a scow with his brother ana tne mounted police reported that the boat had been caught in an ice Jam. in reality, the scow had Just missed the SI ... Jam and had skirted one ot tne is lands. It was montns Deiore mo brothers got word to their relatives here that they were eafe. Prominent lumbermen of the state arrived in Portland yesterday to Join in entertaining the two parties or of 435 members to gather informa tion and draft bills, this duty is en trusted to committees, and the house merely passes finally on their work, uous service. The alliance was brought about by this man working with others constantly for a single purpose. If France had changed As the committeemen are thus best ambassadors every few years, there informed, other members are "placed wou,j have been breaks in the con at a disadvantage in criticizing its fcnulty of the worit 0f allaying en- woric ana, unless some oi mem iiave mity a n d cultivating friendship, made special study of the subject, thare woum not have been that per- tne cm is lmeiy 10 pass suDsianuany 80nal- regard ana confidence which as tne committee reports it, esje- mn.t vavB heloerl Cambon to re- cially as members are dispose-! to friction, new Quarrels might stand by the party organization, The result is that powers of legisla tion are practically delegated to committees, and the house degener- have arisen, and when the crisis came the two nations might - not have been ready to Join forces, What Cambon achieved, from ates Into a body dominated by a few averting war over Fashoda to con members or tne controlling party, -lirnTriotinn nf th alliance, illus while tha others are little better than ,, K (, ,0 Irnoca in ciphers. Members incline less to Amer.can policy. We have no con- lniorm meoiseives oil ouujotia ui .. ri nnlir-ir wrilr-h wnliM legislation ana to term nrunu y'eBO permit one man to serve unlnter of national policy, and the house rUpteaiy as ambassador to one coun- loses much or us representative try tnrough all tne changes of ad- cnaracter. i ministration that ncc.nr In twenty- bo long as ail tne states are rep- , var w havp no dlnlomatic resentea in me same ratio to tneir corp3 which remains in service with populatlon, it matters little to them out regarfI t0 those changes. Dur whether the total number be large , th f. t VR of tn. when or small; each has its proportionate voice In national legislation. Then loss of members by some states will diminish their weight no more than would retention of the present num. ber in an enlarged house. A large we needed a man- at fans wno knew the ropes, Herrick was re placed by Sharp, and Sharp has since been replaced byWallace. The time may come when we shall need at some great capital a man of part of the power and prestige of the (-.. y,-.,- ,n Bnr Pxriori. senate as compareu m iiio ence in order to carry us through is aue to tne iact mat .nas oniy such a.crisls as that of m4, ninety-six znemDers as asaiii&i. ou essV Ton -n nety-sUth oFtSe power, "Free -eds" means a dozen little . . . I nar-lfAtn thnt U'nllM Cost, thft bllVfir and there is far greater rreeaom or -""" " . , , " .t . mZr.-,r,a. th wo-ir r about 30 cents at a dealer's or at the committees than is possible in fh'tt, the government for nothing, with compliments of ft congressman. Yet the Job costs nearly a quarter-mil lion annually. house. By deciding not to enlarge its membership the house has displayed a return to sanity which forecasts a greater regard for the general as rnmra-rA with the local interest t,.n ,, mnrkerl ita Tirocfierlintrs in Nowadays when UreeK meets the last eight years. Its decision is Greek they talk about nothing but tnr thniu momhfira. like Constantine and Venizelos and, if Representative McArthur, who have they happen to be emigrating to fought against repetition of the cus- America, they have a continuous tm rniinn.-r1 In fnrmpr census vears trans-Atlantic debate. These are of adding members lest some states pleasant days In Greece, lose some. Lenine should not be so hard on j capital now that he and his associ ates have cornered about all of it that remains in Russia. But then we are told that he is an idealist, and idealists are always superior to ma terial considerations. getting the wrong idea. When people all over the country, who have, vis ited Portland, Or., are talking about its attractions, they will very likely Include the wide thoroughfare in question with Its roses. In connection with the trip over the famous scenic Columbia river highway, and just as soon as "Rose boulevard Is men tloned It arouses the thought of broad, beautiful avenue. Of the three names "Rose boule vard," "Roseway" and "Highway boulevard'V rjronosed for the change, I consider the first the most distinc tive artii Koct Tha latter TIB rt of the second name, "Roseway," may signify lumbermen who will be here today. a broad street and again It may mean The two groups are composed of 50 Just a path, an alley, or narrow drive, representatives of the American Wood When "way" is used as part of the Preservers' association and the Ka name of an important avenue there Is tlonal Tie Producers' association and generally another word In tne name about 85 members or tne mountain which sufficiently qualifies the States Lumber Dealers' association. meaninc. The present "Sandy boule- The West Coast Lumbermen s asso vard" belna- 80 feet wide is a com- i ciation will entertain in tneir nonor parative broad important artery for with a dinner at the" Portland hotel I travel, and it is Justly entitled to the tonight. Among the Oregon lumber- more significant name "boulevard, men here are A. D. Calkins of liu especially when the roses arranged eene and S. R. Norgren of Clatskanie, for are planted along its border. at the Perkins: C. H. Watzek of "Hiehway boulevard" was advanced Wauna. at the Portland, and C. E. by one writer, who suggested that Hawkins of Newport at the Imperial, both East Broadway ana oanny Bou levard could be Included under the f jwo government boats will soon be name, but. this arrangement wouiu ln operation in Alaskan waters to be confusing. Besides, tnere are hep la tho transporting of timber, other Important Btreets leading out (jeorge H. Cecil, district forester, re through the city toward the Colum- turned to Portland yesterday from a Ma highway. I short trip to Seattle. While there he Being a resident aions m-" inspected these two boats, tne tiia street, I am very much Interested in watha and the Weepoose. They triving it the best name. Moreover, hHV. h..n , Seattle for two months aside from believing that "Rose bou- bein, reDaired and fitted up for for- lavaril" is the best name proposed. It f aarvs. ,r,ri, nv were hrouht would be a compromise name for all j throug.n tne panama canal from the others advocated. Including the TamDa. Fla.. by the navy department present name. .tt-.t " land turned over by the government AN l.NTtitiSi to the forest service. Increased ac tlvity In Alaskan forests is expected . v r-irir tnn Mini anviCE this year. The boats will be taken to i.w., i. ir.t.vn J ,. ,U1 V, . Widow, After Heeding Others' Sug gestions, Decides to Please Herself. PORTLAND, Jan. 21. (To the Ed Itor.) The "Eves" and "Adams" nave had their say, with more or less In- Ketchikan and later one will be sent to Cordova- Crop prospects in our part of the country are best ever, said L. A. Duncan of The Dalles, who is known to hifl friends as a "real booster." Mr. t on, . widow who has "U"01" reports mat tne cnamuer ui passed through all the suffering 0f homme,rce ln Tne Da 1Ies ls mai?s t h n T . I drive for new members and that an the DereaVea. I v.na.lv- nrrtirramma fa haino- nlnnnpH I was elven much advice, some :?'v" , " r . " " ,"f1 " ." ranted me to go to the "old people's Ior " are raising ome" and a'dded the comforting -yJ Pt surance that when one went to an old people's home the average lire was supposed to end in three years! I had no ambition to settle down' In such a way. No indeed! I was asked so often my age that I covenanted with myself to tell it no more forever." Then I was urged to sell my home. As I had no heirs It would be fine to sell. After it was sold then what! I had to hunt ud rooming houses with more over some real plans this year," he says. 'We are planning a large meeting for Thursday." Mr. Duncan is here to at tend the Shrine ceremonials to be held tonight. He says that 40 or 60 Shriners from Wasco county will be here for the occasion, HISTORY SAJVS WAR AXD TROUBLE Morrow Complalpt Suggests Abolish ment of Valley Forge From Annals. PORTLAND. Jan. 21. (To the Edl tor.) The complaint of Morrow county ln regard to the recent Addl son Bennett article has opened up a new line of thought. Applying the objectors' argument to the history of the 13 colonies, ls it not possible that historians have dwelt too strongly upon the hardships of our forefathers? Would It not have been better to depict only the pleasant things, such as the harvesting of the crops (when plentiful), the husking- bees, the Thanksgiving and Yuletlde celebra tions, and so on, and omit the stories of the Indian massacres, the long, severe winters, the drouths and storms and other factors that de veloped their sturdy fiber? Have we not been mistaken in our Impression that their trials and hardships had mucn to do with making them men and women of such splendid char acter? It is truth, you say, that makes history? And the way they meet and overcome their difficulties that shows the stuff of which people are made? Nevertheless, could not the harrowing details be left to the imagination? How much pleasanter reading colo nial history would be were these omitted! Who wants to know about such common things as the swing and ring of the ax in the wilderness, the building- of cabins and stockades, the clearing of land and the primitive planting and harvesting, punctuated by the whizz of the arrow and the report of the flint-lock? Who cares to dwell on the thought of cold, hunger and pestilence? Imagine the av'dlty with which students of his tory would follow the fortunes of Washington's army if the historians had left out those distressing details about his barefoot soldiers at Valley Forge, the crossing of the Delaware amid cakes of ice and all that! By all means let u ohnlich ih... gloomy annals and have a history written that will describe only the bright spots the rich soil, the har insst festivals, the Joy of davs spent in the open in the bright in the deep, cool forests, the eve nings within the rude but comfortable log cabins before a treat rnarino- rir with the big- iron pot sinzinir on the crane. These, after all. an th. ih;.n. that make a country great. What? "I DESCENDANT. Bonos Legislation Not Determined. PORTLAND. Jan. 20. (To th V..U. tor.) Can you tell the farn. loan till legislature will be to ex-servir-o mn who wish to take up homesteads? As i unaerstand It, the bill doesn't cover homesteads, so that leaves a great many of us out When this land was opened we were told to take it, but, when we go to file on it we find we haven't the money, nor can we bor row It. Now I am not looking for charity, all I ask Is a chance. ROBERT ALRED. The bill Is but one of several In prospect. It is not indicated what form of bonus legislation will be given final consideration. More Truth Than Po'etry. By James J. Montague. WHVf The grasshopper sings through the long summer days. No arduous labor does he; He foolishly follows frivolity's ways In reckless and sensuous glee. He never lays up any chow In his lair On which to subsist when the mead ows are bare. And all the moralists lrudly declare How shortly a corpse he will be. The ant labors hard every day ln the week. He stores, in his hole In the ground, Provisions to feed on when breezes blow bleak, And the wolf and the winter come round. He never sits round with a girl on his knee Or bucks the roulette whe.el or goes on a spree. And all of the moralists freely agree That his methods are proper and sound. You'd think that the grasshopper's fondness for fun And his silly addiction to mirth Vt'ouftl presently banish the son of a gun From his soft little place on the earth; You'd think that the ant who employs all his hours In enhancing his native acquisitive powers Would rest. In old age. In the fairest of bowers As the righteous reward of his worth. Yet grasshoppers swarm from the north every year And feast on the ripening grain; They eat every blade, every leaf. every spear A cain and aeain and again. While the ants have to work or they don't get along Which seems to establish that some thing is wrong. You may know the moral of this little song To me It ls not very plain! s s But You Never Can Tell. Doubtless Sir. Harding would offer cabinet position to a lot of gentlemen If he was sure they would refuse to accept. s As Vsual. The people who re yelllnjr the loudest about hard times are the peo ple who have had to reduce their profits to about 500 per cent. s s Not So Blue Now. The blue law people seem to be running out of their blue vitriol. (Copyright, 1921. by the Bell Syndi cate. Inc.) Forty representatives of the Bank ers' Life company of Des Moines, la. from Pacific coast and eastern states, registered at the Multnomah yester day for the two-day sessions to be weary months of widowhood that 1 1 states, is here" from Des Moine was getting "too old" for this and Among the prominent representativ, various experiences, conrronung nigu held nere George Kuhns, president prices and many inconveniences. f ,h comDany. who ls known as one I had been made to feel in my P th . 9;im in th United es. rr tha Ti r- A m I n o... , ,- r ra a a r t a , I v n a that, une even oarea to say i oaa ... . F Smltn of San Francisco. A lived to be old enougn to aie tne c jn of Chicago. C. L. Brown of brute! v I Seattla and B. Houston and B. Mills No one has to wait on me; I can n r)fif, Majnea. Some of the men walk 50 blocks any day when It is brought their wives with them. The fair. I Orec-on aerencv has charce of the ar- NOW "me for hOU-Se hunting. I I mncrompnts of tho nrocrramma and snail Duy a comionaoie numo large BUILDER OS" THE ALLIANCE. Retirement of Paul Cambon as French ambassador to London ends a diplomatic career that is remark able for the long term of service at one post and for the influence which Cambon exercised on Anglo-Freuch relations during the mtat momen tous period of their recent joint his tory. While French cabinets rose The OregOnian by error yesterday credited to Senator Bell authorship of the bill to relieve circuit judges of and 'fell every few months, Cambon the duty of reading to all grand juries the text of the statutes on libel and prize-fighting. The author is Senator Ellis. A news item says that Seattle has revived boxing. After all, that seems le only way left to settle the con troversy over what's to be done with her celebrated municipal car lines. A dispatch says the kaiser is thinking of going to South America to live. He has his geography mixed. Guatemala is the only coun try that has no extradition treaty. remained at his post for twenty-two jears. His mission began in 1898, when the two nations were on the vprirn of war. and it ends when thev have foueht anl won as allies and The home that is acquired by con when they are bound together by stant savings is held by the fortunate f.es of mutual Interest and comrade- possessor as an asset- A nome ac shiD which seem destined to last in- quired by a J'lift" ls not so cherished. definitely. That which comes easy often goes The work of Cambon had a de- j that way. cisive . influence- on the history of war, for he was one of the group of if Armour & Co. continue to make statesmen which adjusted all dis- I such 'poor showings as they did in putes, arranged the entente, brought l 1920, it 'will become necessary for Britain and Ruscia together and saw Herbert Hoover to start a drive for the fruits of their work when France their relief, lest our beef barons and Britain fought eside by side starve. through more than four years of as terrible war as the world has seen, His mission began when relations were at the worst, for Captain Marchand's expedition had camped at Fashoda in the Egyptian Soudan and his interview with Kitchener had barely averted armed conflict. At that inauspicious stage Cambon began his efforts to draw th? two nations together. A writer for the London Times quotes him as having said that in the spring of 1899 after Pnmhnn nnrl T.orrl Salisbury hail arm need a settlement of the The scouring plant to be estab Fashoda affair and the whole north lished by the big wool warehouse Afrir-an nnostion. ho RiiEre-esterl that concern means a lot to tne Dusiness. there were several other matters The eastern Oregon grower has long which might be settled in an equally been paying ireignt on (un friendly spirit." Salisbury objected that French governments were too An Alabama man was kicked on shortlived and said: "No, we must the jaw by a mule without appre wait a bit." A few months later the ciable effect except to break the Boer war broke out and the French mule's hind leg. He ought to take people were seized with a pro-Boer I on Jack Dempsey next. frenzy, which would have seemed to render war certain on the slightest A Wisconsin jail has been sold pretext. t t I after thirty years of use. This looks ut, when that war was at its nke an act of unwarranted optimism, worst ln 1900, Lansdowne succeeded judging from Wisconsin's record of Salisbury, ana wmDon suggested I the past few years. tne BUDjects on wnicn ce woum line an agreement and summed them up in a letter. Next day he sat next to King Edward at dinner and the king said: . Lansdowne has shown na your letter. It is excellent, you must so on. 1 have toid ths prlnes of wales about It You must discuss It also with him. After dinner the prince, now King George, said: "What a good thing it would be if we couM have a general agreement." Cambon said to the interviewer: entertainment- Charles H. Demorest, concert or ganist, who ls touring the northwest and playing with symphony orches tras, will arrive in Portland this morning. Mr. Demorest will be solo ist with the Portland symphony or needs to be lonely when one has a chestra tomorrow afternoon at the cultivated mind and forgets oneself, public auditorium. He is considered by adding to the joy or comfort of one of the best oreanists In the United otners. States. He has a larg followms in vve get out 01 me just, about wnat California we put into it. enough for myself and an occasional friend. I will paddle my own canoe and ask the advice of no one. Listen- ng too much to others came near being my undoing. I can paint, sing or read for the entertainment of friends. No one ONE WIDOW WHO KNOWS. Remarkable Arrest by Police, PORTLAND, Jan. 21. (To the Ed itor.) We have Just discovered the police department in a new role. In one of our daily newspapers there appears an article under the caption, "Police Catch Forger Former Prison Inmate Smiles When Taken to Jail.' The article dweljs In length on the capture ol Dr. Frank Wood, ex-con- vict and graduate physician. Fol- "There will be no more fights be tween the commercial and sportsmen's interests if the new game code passes, said A. E. Burghuuff, state game warden, yesterday on his 'return from Salem. "We want to put a stop to the prevalent idea that the men tion of the 'state fish and game com mission' should bring with it the idea of contention, Mrs. Ethel Irish, national president of the Ladies of the Grand Army of Only Residents Are Eligible. ROC KA W AY, Or., Jan. 20. (To the Editor.) Please advise me if I'm en titled to the bonus given by the state of Washington, havinsr enlisted in So. attle in 1317? My home being in South aa- EX-SOLDIER. The Washington law grants bonuses only to men who were bonafide resi dents of the state at the time of en listment Perhaps yeu come under the South Dakota bonus law. Write to the secretary of state, Pierre, S. D. Committee of 100. CORVALLIS, Or., Jan. 20. (To the Editor.) How did the 'committee of 100" on the Irish question originate and who are the officials of that committee? a. F. It was conceived and called to gether by The Nation, a New York magazine, published by Oswald Gar riso'n Villard. Press dispatches have not given the names of officers chosen by the committee. In Other Days. Charles fc. Hughes' Church. PORTLAND, Jan. 21. (To the Edi tor.) Kindly state the religious faith of Charles E. Hughes, former candi date for president of the United States.' SUBSCRIBER. Baptist. Twenty-Five Years Ago. From The Oregonlan of Jan. 22, 1SO0. Washington There seems to be slight doubt that congress will grant the Pacific Cable company a franchise to lay a cable from the Pacific coast to the Hawaiian islands and Japan. The county court has sent a circu lar letters to attorneys asking their opinion of the suggestion of abolish ing one of the two Justices' courts of the city. R. C. Stevens, general western pas senger agent of the Great Northern, arrived in the city yesterday with the report that all of his company's lines are now clear of snow. The school board, it is g-enerally understood, will probably reduce the pay of all city school teachers at Its meeting tomorrow. In accordance with the expressed desire of the board to retrench. Fifty Years Abo. From The Orntfonlan of Jan. 22, 1871. News has been received In Port land that Congressman Smith has In troduced a bill to Improve the Colum bia river from Celilo to the mouth of the Snake river. . There Is a great number of Idle men in the city, due to the fact that the railroad recently discharged many of its employes. Republicans of the coast have formed a combination to force Sen ator Williams of Oregon into the rahtnet. lowing along the nicely pffraser para- the Republic, arrived ln Portland last graphs we note: "When sleuths told the landlady they were there to arrest her rumor. the proprietress objected. It's the first time In the history of the police department that we have known of that branch of the mimici- pal government lending their efforts to arresting rumors. If they can successfully arrest a rumor, why can't they arrest a shadow ? I O'HALLORAN. Lawyer's Advice Reeded. PORTLAND, Jan. 21. (To the Ed itor.) A rents a ranch, paying a big rental. A's wife puts JuOO into ranch, also does a man's work on ranch. At end of year prices have dropped till crop will not pay expenses unless all equipment ls turned back, as A had bought this at the time ranch was rented. Owner now claims all crop, all out standing money and small amount A has ln bank. Also orders A off two months before time ls np. Can A's wife claim her $500, also wages, and to whom shall she go for advice? M. C. FRANCIS. You need a lawyer's advice. The Oregonian cannot undertake to pass on the terms and fulfillment of a contract. Secretary Wilson stands by Assis tant Secretary Post in his deporta tion policy. - He could not do other wise and keep his assistant in the place. Origin of Opera Carmen, PORTLAND, Jan. 21. (To the Edi tor.) Was the opera "Carmen" taken from, or suggested by, some book? If so what one? A READER. The opera ls founded on a story by Prosper Merimee, French author. archaeologist, historian and literary The boxing match caught 'em, I critic. The story was first published Thus begaa the conversations which led I after all, . 1 in 1817, , . 'British dominate marine," says a headline, isut no one nas yet dared to Intimate that they dominate the marines. When Grandchild Shares In Property. WEST SPRINGFIELD, Or., Jan. 21. (To the Editor.) To 6ettle a legal discussion, supposing a woman dies, leaving a husband and little child. Later the parents of the woman die. Does the child or husband receive what would be the mother's share in 1 ..t.fn n- H , iia 1 all trn to her ssters and' brothers. ifaviSg a".e"t.h V?0 the child and husband out T sklw. D p. FulVer- ton, N. Wigton, and C. E. Fleager, The child of the deceased child of They are at the Portland. an intestate Inherits by jlg-ht of rep- night. Her home is ln Fon du Lac, Wis. She ls touring the United States and visiting all the local chapters. An informal reception will be given in her honor tonight at the Imperial hotel. Miss Rhoda Carmichael, one of the national secretaries of the Young Women's Christian association, is here for a few days. She is ln charge of the division of work known as 'special gifts." She is meeting girls it the association headquarters and discussing problems with them. , Fritz Zimmerman of New York, Swiss yodeler. tenor and folk einger, who will appear in concert at tho auditorium Sunday night, arrived at the Multnomah yesterday. He is ac companied by his wife, Marcella Grandvoll. They will sing under the auspices of the Swiss Singing club of this city. R. D. Brown of Seattle is one of the Washington state lumbermen here for today's assemblage in honor of eastern guests. He is at the Port land. Another Washington lumber man here is A R. Lundeen of Mount j Solo, AVash. He has brought his wife with him and they are at the Seward. Hazel Hicks has cotae to Portland for the week-end from Oregon Agri cultural college. She distinguished herself here as a fancy diver and swimmer for the Multnomah Amateur Athletic club. She is one of the ac complished women athletes who have brought fame to Portland. She is at the Multnomah. Six men are here from Eugene to ressntation together with the other children of the intestate. The hus band of the deceased child inherits nothing. Jtfrs. Charles Umbach of Lakeview, worthy grand matron of the Order of the Eastern Star, is in Portland for the week-end to attend tonight's Eastern Star meeting.. Battle of Terktowa, LA GRANDE, Or., Jan. 20. (To the Editor.) 1. Please advise where the battle of Yorktown was fought. 2. Also the population of the city of Portland, Or. A SUBSCRIBER. 1. At Yorktown, Va, 70 miles southeast of Richmond. 2. According to- 1920 census, 258. 2S. ,., 1 Agates A World Industry That Thrives in Portland No stone of the many that men prize, though others are far more costly over the j'ewelry counter, possesses the colorful variation of the ag-ate or lends itself to such diversity of treatment for orna mentation. In the Sunday issue, with several illustrations of his theme, De Witt Harry chats of the agates of Oregon, of their quest, of their infinite variety, and of the skilled craftsmen who cut and polish the whimsical, fay-like beauty of the stones until each char acteristic for all are different stands luminously forth. A good story, well told. Splitting Rainbow Colors to Cure Disease Whatever your pet ailment may be the chances are nay, the certainty is say scientists maleficent vibrations brought it into being, and that the correspond ing vibration of certain colors, when applied in color-therapy, will effect or hasten a cure. We know but little of color, the strange manifestation of light on substance, and in this new treatment science is grouping toward an understanding of the mighty principles that lie hidden in the spectrum. Told in the Sunday magazine, by Joseph W. Appelgate. Secretary Meredith Tells Some Miracle Stories He who touches dross and transmutes it to wealth is the modern wizard and, like the alchemists of old, he reads the amazing riddle in a laboratory. In the Sunday issue the secretary of agriculture holds interesting discussion with an interviewer, wherein he sets forth some few of the tricks of white magic that Uncle Sam has summoned to swell the farm returns. Corncobs become a product worth $17 per pound, and the motors of tomorrow will hum with fuel energy derived from straw. A great deal of self-sacrifice goes into this unheralded work for the common cause and appreciation will follow the reading of this epecial Sunday feature. The Short Story Series In tomorrow's big issue the Sunday editor presents the first of a series of hitherto unpublished short stories, by widely known American writers. This one is "Mary Is Here," by Fanny Heaslip Lea a narrative of love and psychic experiment and it will hold you from the opening paragraph to the last line. Hereafter the Sunday issue will continue this special magazine feature one of the most attractive ever presented. The Woman's Cabinet a New Phase in Government For the Sunday magazine section, filled with superior features, Mayme Ober Peak has written an article regarding the notable group of women who are in federal service at the national capital and whose con structive effort has quickened many a somnolent department since their sex assumed place in the councils of America. What Would Henry Ward Beecher nave Said? All know the pious fame of Henry Ward Beecher, farffous ecclesiastical figure of the civil war period but none has paused to speculate on what manner of spiritual bequest he left to his descendants. There is his charming granddaughter, for example, Margaret Beecher, a con firmed tomboy, who shoots, swims and plays baseball and who wishes mercy on us! to become a motion picture 6tar. What would the late Doctor Beecher have said to this! Read tne story in the Sunday magazine. All the News of All the AVorld THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN "A Nickel and a Nod."