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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1921)
TIIE MORNING OREGOXIAN, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1921 i t Atlantic and Pacific coasts by the Panama canal. With the shorter rail hauL from tho Pacific coast to ESTABLISHED BT HEXBY U PITTOCK. the gulf by comparison with the Tubllahed by The Oregonlan Publishing- Co. 135 Sixth Street, Portland. Oregon. alanarer. Editor. The Oree-oslan is a member of tho Ann- apatea rrfM. tho Aseociaiea i-re. w r eloslvely entitled to the use for publication of kit nemo dispatches credited to It or not. etherwlsa credited in this paper and also tho local newa published herein. All rights mC publication of apecial diapatchea herein e al.o reserved. Fabserlptlon Katra Invariably In Advance. (Br Mall.) f'elly. Sunday Included, one year tj J aily. Sunday included. six months... 4..J ally. Sunday included, three months. rlaily. Sunday included, ona month... Iiaily. without Sunday, one year J O" T'aiiv. without Hunday. sis montha... S.s J ally, without Sunday, ona month.... -J" Vfeeklv. one vear ' ,M budday, ona year fT4y Carrier.) ralty. nnday included, ona year. . . . .19 X'allv. Sunday Included, three montha. 2 2J Jially. Sunday included, one month... . Dally, without Sunday, ona year T.so 1'iily. without Sunday, three months. l.M j.aiiy, witnout runaav, niw How to Remit Send poatofflca money prder, express or personal check, on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at owner's risk. Give poetoffice address In lull, including county ana state. - Pn.r. RniM f to IS naves. 1 cent: 1 to 22 pages, 2 cents: 24 to paKes, J cents an in Ma trr-m a rents: 60 to 80 Daaea. ( cents: 82 to cases. 6 cents. Foreign TKKiAKe double rat-?. r.f.n nniliMu Office Verree ft Conk lln. Brunswick bulldlnir. Sew York: Verrea aV Conklin. Steger building. Chicago; ver ree a Cnnklln. Free Press building, w troit. Mich.: Verree ft Conklin, 6ellin building, Portland: San Francisco repre- aemtatlve, R. J. Bidwell. 60 transaction, and falls easily a prey to swindlers. It Is easier to lecture an Indian on the advantages of thrift than It Is to make a competent business man out of him. Indians who have accumulated large prop erty have usually been favored by especial circumstances, such as dis covery of oil on their lands, and they are the ezoeption to the rule. It is possible that the Indian contribution to liberty loan funds during tbe war may have created a false impression, WORK FOR MB. BCGHE9. Having accepted President-elect Harding's promised appointment as secretary of state, Charles E. Hughes Jias beore him a greater number of more important tasks than any other vamhor nf the. future cabinet. His labor will be nothing short of stu nendous. made so by the two years delay In deciding the relationship of the I'nited States with the rest of the world and by the complications which that delay has produced. First will come peace with Ger many, bound up with which will be the degree to which this country is o co-operate with the allies in en forcing disarmament and payment of reparation by Germany. Peace with Austria must follow, and will raise the question whether this country shall endorse the allies' veto on union with Germany and to what degree It shall aid the renarjin r.Hnn nf that helpless nation. Separate peace must be made with Hungary, and it will be necessary to decide whether we shall Interiere so Xar with its internal affairs as to forbid restoration of the Hapsburgs, which Herbert Hoover warned the peace conference would be a nre Lrand setting central Europe aflame With war. Simultaneously doubtless will be taken up preliminary negotiations for American membership in an as sociation of nations, either by aban donment of the existing league and cubstitution of a new one or by re vision of the Versailles covenant. An effort will probably be made to com plete an agreement with the prin cipal powers in time for submission to the league assembly next fall. Involved with these matters will fce settlement of the allies' debt to the United States and to one another, with which the part to be played by the United States in economic recon struction of Europe is connected. The United States must decide whether to recognize the soviet gov ernment and what precautions should be taken against its revolu tionary propaganda. Demands from tne lacmc will call for early action on Japan . Immigration, for Mr. Harding inna that if exclusion, is not ar ranged through diplomacy by the federal government, more states will act and will thereby complicate the problem and render action by him imperative. Mexico's call for recognition of T-resident Obregon must be ans wered. The answer will hinge on the agreement that Obregon is will ing to make for compensation for injury done to Americans in the past ten years and for security to lives tnd property of Americans in mexicu In future. A dispute with Britain about ex emption of American ships from Panama canal tolls may be avoided tv diplomacy. Otherwise the prom ised law to that effect may lead cither to arbitration at The Hague or to perhaps the first international lawsuit before the proposed world court. Certain politicians in Haiti and Panto Domingo are pleading for withdrawal of American troops and for restoration of full independence to those so-called republics. It will fall to Mr. Hughes to consider whether they are more capable of self-government than they were six years ago and, if so. what shall be cur future relations with them. AU in all. Mr. Hughes will be a. fairly busy man during the next four years. He has the opportunity to make a brilliant success as a statesman. Hitherto his only failure has been as candidate for president, CO the omens favor success. haul across the continent and with the economy in freight by using the water line and the saving in time on the whole trip, it may prove more economical to use this route than the canal route. Another of those natural routes of traffic to which the merchant ma rine law refers is coming Into use. and the high cost of transportation by omitting consideration for the leads shippers to seek them with greater number who bought na growing diligence. That fact prompts bonds and in the nature of their railroad men to study the same sub- capacities for commerce and thrift Ject closely with a view of adjusting never will be able to buy them their rates and through traffic con- The bill pending in congress to nectlons to them. If they should confer citizenship on Indians offers rot they might discover that, while an Inestimable privilege, from the their rate tariffs cave them a net viewpoint of white American cm return of 6 per cent, it was. only on I zens, but it is worth while inquiring paper, as the traffic that was to pro- whether "every Indian born witnin duce it had faded away. are conspiring to swindle Lo, but only a few are enough. Carryin with it the right to dispose of his property as he sees fit, citizenship may be Quite the reverse of a boon to him. the territorial limits of the United States" will be as well served by the mpasnrA an Tin would be bv more a JIAItfi O -wr. I ilnql withdrawal r.T virntortlnn The teachers' tenure law, it is L,c. t,. ,,, , ,,- -wnized ' " brethren. Not all whites, of course, not passed oy tne nouse in a proper manner. As might be expected, this alarm is raised by opponents of the bill. But it appears that the defect, if there is a defect, was the failure to observe a mere rule of the house re- oulrine that a bill shall be printed and placed on the members' desks " capitalist" at least three days before passage. when the air is full of denuncia Let it be emphasized that this Is a tions of capital and capitalism by house rule, not a constitutional re- I those who aver that all things arer quirement The supreme court of I the product of labor alone and who Oregon has held: I whoop it up for some form of social Courts in Oregon will not aoestien the I ism and the dictatorship of the pro enactment of an enrolled legislative bill, hetariat, much interest attaches to a certain whether the records of the legis-1 discussion in the London Times of lative bodies show that the constitutional i the question: What Is a capitalist? n-uuirrineiim nave dui Di-rn luiiuieu; anu i , - , c ; - i- unless It affirmatively appears that the question was asKea oy oir nuu mandatory provisions of the constitution I ert W. Perks, who wrote that a fore have been disregarded the law will be I -. i. . ui.i. sustained. 1111a.11 uii suuic wuin. in vmcii uo wo.a inal capital, acquired by various forms of robbery, is used to accumu late more capital out ot part of the product of labor which it does not earn. This theory is more readily ac cepted because capital is now gath ered in great blocks by corporations, which people see as units. Yet those corporations are themselves proof that that capital is the savings of labor, for their stock Is held in com It is not charged that any manda- lr.terested was "much worried be- tory requirement of the constitution cause his fellow-workmen called h.i..: been disrvrardod. If ronrts tnnk hlnl a damned capitalist, and the judicial knowledge of rules of con- foreman asked: "How much money vt nience and procedure voluntarily ls a ""s nmn 10 De" adopted by house and senate, and Iore "e can oe caiiea sucn a tning.' rnnslrtorert fniihfnl nHhpronrft In Tnat brought to the front H. M. them a condition precedent to the Hyndman. veteran leader of British legal enactment of laws, courts socialists, who swept asiae as un uoiild snerui most of their time worthy of notice the foreman's as- searching behind the records and sumption that capital is the savings manv laws would fail because some cl ,J-oor or- political economists trifline formality had not been ob- defino stored up labor. He said served I lnal a capitalist, economically Th formn. lot . T.nfl Tt is speaKing, is a person who directly or veil to abandon foolish pretense and '"directly employs workers and pays make the best of it. L"m ""E " 'utr to prom. out or tneir laDor. unis turned dis cussion to the question: "What is AX AFFAIR FOR TIIE NATIOX. capital?" General Ian Hamilton said Sound judgment was exercised by Mr. Hyndman's definition of a caDi- the uregon senate in rejecting the tallst "won't quite fit." for. he said: d:h wnicn iorDicis aliens aisquaimea 1 own a farm; I directly employ ex for Citizenship to own or lease land service men there and pay them wages: I in Oregon. The bill was aimed at Bg wn.t ,ort hoDe7V ",um, .- " , the Japanese and was designed to sort of hope as I have of playing a golden prevent their settlement in this state, when in fact questions of immigra tion are solely within federal juris diction. The only plausible excuse for ac- ion by the state would be that a harp and singing amongst the angeis. Then came Arthur H. Balfour with a distinction between capital and other forms of wealth. He said that when capital ls fixed in the form of houses, machinery, tools or anything pressing emergency existed and that hat cannot be consumed, "all that a neglect or refusal of the government man can do is to transfer the use of to act made it advisable for the state r-IS capital to another in exchange tc goad the president into action, tcr consumable goods." The work- hat excuse ls not valid at the pres- I man who called his foreman "a ent time. Japanese are not coming damned capitalist would be aston- n such numbers as to create a men- isnea to De told mat ne, as tne pos- ace. President Jiardlng has given a sesaur ui mo tuuia ui w iia.ua nu ubllc pledge to pursue a policy in the furniture of his house, was also armony with the wishes of the a capitalist." He maintains that ponsors of the bill, and the leaders only by tiie use of capital by labor f congress are pledged to lesrislate can goods be produced which will on immigration at the extra session Fay wages" and he concludes: in accord with that policy. Oregon The worker and the capitalist or the should rely on the new administra- I called wages for the one. profit for the on to live up to those promises, I other, out of the use of capital. and should give it reasonable time to I To the same general effect Sir make good before acting indepen- George S. Gibb defined a capitalist dcntly. as "a person who saves and in con- In the present situation of this na- sideration of interest, either fixed or t'on and of the world at large, it I variable (profit), uses his savings to becomes us all. In connection with I employ labor on production by pay- affairs of both the state and the na- I ing wages before the product can be tion, to avoid friction and to cultl- realized or enter into consumption.1 vats good witt so rar as ls possible without capital there could be no without injury to our interests. In employment except to the small ex- the present instance this can be done tent that barter could provide, and by trusting to the methods of diplo- even then a worker must have r.iacy and to federal legislation on enough capital to maintain himself which the president-elect will be in until the goods can be finished and accord with congress. There is no exchanged for the necessaries of question that the end sought by tho life." J. B. Sturgis said that "a capi- house bill is to be desired; the only I talist docs not make his profit 'out question Is by what road that end I of but 'with the assistance or the shall be reached. The decision is, I labor of his employes," while "the so far as Oregon is concerned, that I third element of successful produc BY - PRODUCTS OF THE PRESS Snakes Good Monsera, Bat Too Ckam my for Kelshbor'a Llkjnf . Arthur Alley, who is operatln&r a placer prospect on Teepee creek, in northern Humboldt county. Is an an gry man because a neighbor has killed his two snakes, which he kept for mousers instead of a cat. Allev hfln had the snakes tWO Or parativeiy small diocks Dy men ana vears. and they were quite women who have invested their sav- um Cn numerou occasions when ings. , some prospector, rang rider or other It ls doubtless true that much of wayfarer would 8t0p at AUey, camp the capital existing before the pres- h( a meal or My ent era of great Industries and great beea Urrortoed . .... i,- -- o-,, i by the reptiles. ,a r.M One day a range rider, sitting a k e,', w, t -nhha-r. the table. looked past Alley, who ea u , stir,t;nn n . rirawn? opposite him. The rider looked hard, Further, if there is to be wholesale suddenly pulled his gun. Alley confiscation of capital because part ' "UB'- nf It vm stolen, according to our 1 tended to shoot at and at the sami nrevnt rnnrentton of rieht and I time he grabbed for the gun, and as wrong, how is any person to know he etared to explain he reaiiaea now that at 6ome future time some new I near he had come to being snot. definition will not be made the I - The reptiles slept under the bed th ground of a new confiscation? With j greater part of the daytime, but were the Incentive to save withdrawn, so- allowed the liberty of the house, and ciety might gradually revert to the at night they sallied forth In .quest of condition where no part of the mice. Alley says the snakes are not product of labor would be saved I poisonous, and that they are more fronrone day to the next, and a man valuable as mousers than a cat. would rise each morning naked with I The pets strayed over to a neigh nothing tut the air to breathe, the I DOr's recently and, being used to a earth to stand on and water to arms. hou. er.wled In and made them Then men yould have, to begin again 6ejve8 at home. When the owner of cn the principle that security in pos- the n0U3O found them he killed them. session of what a man saves irom He advlsea Aney t0 keep a cat bere one day to the next is essential to mo after. Sacramento Bee. nrst step in progress 01 tinia"uu, which, after all. ls tne underlying Greenwich Village has a new poet. principle of the mucn aenounceu n;l RayTnond G. Carroll in his New system of capitalism. I Y0rk letter. His name is Praxiteles Smith and he has bangs and wears Discovery within a week of thirty- I horn-rlmmed glasses and, gosh, but five cases of typhus on ships arrlv- I he's soulful. He first appeared in the Ing in the port of New Tork empha- I favor of the short-haired circles when sizes the need of inspection of lm- I he wrote his "To a Mad Raindrop," migrants in the ports of embarka- which adorned the menu of the Whis tion, a service which some European tllng Cow. Now it is announced that nations seem either unwilling or un- he is to start a new magazine to be able to perform, but which ought to caue(i -The Great Light!" He will be made a condition precedent to feed starved braina with pedantic permission to enter tne unitea nutriment. States. The menace of typhus is not imaginary, and tne possiouuy 01 unci0 Tom's Cabin" is holding the controlling it by sufficiently arasuc boards at the clunle theater in Sac Those Who Come and Go. precautions was proved by the fact tnat in returning the entire Ameri can expeditionary forces from the in fested districts not a single case was permitted to slip through. Americans cannot say that they were not ramento. Cal., and the company, re cruited from old "Tom Players," In the parlance of the theater, is meet ing with a great reception. This type of show has taken a place along with I""0', rJpeVr tA negro minstrel in lasting draw the Red Cross has repeatedly called " r.I 7 ""i" '"V.- attention to conditions In southern Europe and health officials in the United States have supplemented his tell of the daily street parades when Liza, Simon Legree and the blood hounds make the circuit of the city statement with other facts, also un- streets. disputable. It would be better to suspend immigration altogether than to permit this post-war scourge to gain a foothold In the country. Dave Anderson, ' Petaluma, Cal., chicken rancher, has a trained Aire dale whose performance exceeds the famous exploits of the cleverest sheep docs, savs the San Francisco Bulletin, The legislature is to be com- when Dave discovers one of his mended for having made reasonable eeB- lavers strayine from the home provisions tor tne uregon national place w the road he whistles up his Guard both through an adequate chicken hound. "Dash." and simply support appropriation and the en- .ive, the following order: actment of a new military code that takes the Guard out of the reach of politics. The legislature of 1911 took the service out of politics and the results were shown In the two mo bilizations that have occurred since that time. During the war period the military code was changed to meet home guard contingencies but row that the nation has fallen back upon the National Guard as its main reliance in case of a national emer- 'Go get 'em. Dash.1 A streak of brown up the road or Into the adjacent field and "Dash" has the stray down with one Paw on It, while he obtains a safe but secure jaw hold on its two wings. Then he trots back Into the chicken yard with the fowl and deposits It, unharmed. In its pen. "Dash" Ms also an egg hound. If one of Anderson's chickens lay an gency. the service must be raised to eeg under the barn or in some other the highest possible standards. From out-of-the-way place. "Dash", smells a state point of view, the National out the white sphere, scoops it up Guard is to be regarded, too, as a carefully in his moutn ana runs wim payroll Industry which yields in pay- I it to his master. the federal road Is better. GIVING THE rNDIAN HIS RIGHTS. Tuberculosis is increasing among the Indians. It may be that aban donment of tho tepee is largely re tion is management. "Common sense" contends that "a workman's capital is his health" and that when he joins a sick benefit society which has a reserve fund he becomes interested in capital. If he r i.i- it to ...(.r --ii insures his life in a company with auunaiuio iui 1111.7. i, to iiciij ti 1 known that the properly constructed sound assets, he at once becomes a 10. u iivfi.nii-oiiv nearlv iriAnl. It capitalist ; also when he joins a is not a mere affair of poles covered building and loan society. Another ..UK V!r, hB nrnvision fnr rlr. writer noiua lllttt mo icmi Luynai- culation of fresh air that is superior lst PPes to "everybody who has to that of a good many modern 3aved and who use,s h,ls savings; dwelling houses and it obviates both t0 the owner of a factory and drafts. When Lo was persuaded to Jo' the widow or workman who has m ". into a modern house he did bought a war saving certificate." mli . iijuuiiiqu iciuincu lu charge again by saying that savings not thereby prolong his life, al though in other respects modern hy giene has done something for him. He is now protected against epl demies, like those which exterml nated some of the early tribes on the came from profit realized and added to the capital already invest ed," and that such capital "was ac cumulated In the first instance from THE Mff TRAFFIC ROCTE. Diversion of trans-Pacific traffic destined for the Atlantic coast from the all-rail route via Chicago to the rall-and-water route via New Orleans or Galveston is a development irom the liberation of ships from railroad control and from the recent advance lr. railroad rates. In the days when tulf shipping lines were few and were subsidiary to railroads, some kind of agreement would have pre vented them from joining the west ern railroads in making rates wnicn would divert traffic from the cen tral and eastern lines. There are row plenty of ships, they are free from railroad control and they make rates which get the traffic, while railroads are not free to change rates without justifying their action o the Interstate Commerce commis eion. Adoption of the new route has yrobably been encouraged by the jiolicy of the eastern railroads in re fusing to reduce import and export rates for their part of the transcon tinental hauL As this traffic passes through two zones, the eastern roads must take as a basis 35 per cent ad vance on the rates existing prior to August 26, but if the haul is entirely within the eastern zone the basis ls 40 per cent advance on the old rates. On goods carried by the rail-and-gulf route they get the entire haul be tween the Atlantic coast and points i,i the eastern zone. The loss of traffic falls on the roads between Tiilling3 and Kansas City in the west and the interior terminals of the eastern roads. There is an opening also for com petition of the rail-and-gulf route with steamers running between Uie Pacific coast, and by discontinuing P' conquest, conveyance, usury the use of the death-dealing "sweat- "a... c w. house" he may have gained as much Profit or surplus value now being as he lost when he gave up the tepee, au,BU- t"a" V " a " but this result might have been ac- t0 the worman but from complished as well without forcing abor-power advanced to the capi- lim m.tr.iv t rlv on his oWn talist, the product being placed at - , 1 the latter's disposal on credit." He Economic independence is the white man's dream, not, however, valued as highly or understood in the same sense by the Indian. When disposed of the argument that every person who saves is a capitalist by srying that "a wage-earner has far less chance of becoming a capitalist the early fur traders appeared in the ' , ? ' Mandan villages a little before the time of Lewis and Clark's sojourn there, they found the tribesmen too prosperous after their own manner to be beguiled with otters ot tract Owing to the immensely larger scale upon which capitalist enterprises are now conducted and that, even if a workman could save $10 a week it would take him fifty years to save roll disbursements from the govern ment among the various communi ties having Guard units a total yearly sum aggregating two dollars for every dollar that the state is re quired to expend. Utilization of the lignite coal of Oregon and Washington in the manu facture of high-grade briquettes is now contemplated by the Centralia Briquetting company, according to its representative R. F. Brown, well known mining man of the coast, who registered yesterday at the Seward. The company now has its Centralia plant operating for trial purposes and expects to have machinery installed for commercial manufacture by April 1. As soon as the Centralia plant is in operation tbe company expects to begin work at Marshfield on a plant to utilize coal from the lignite mines located there. A patented chemical binder Is utilized In the manufacture of the briquettes in place of the as phalt or tar binder commonly used. The formula utilizes a large quantity of sulphite waste from paper mills ana is largely confined to waste prod ucts, according to Mr. Brown. Plans for Marshfield include the erection of a plant that will utilize the product of several mines In that region. Ocean transportation opens an extensive market for the Oregon plant, and, ac cording to present plans, the output will be handled almost entirely by water transportation. Future plans. according to Mr. Brown, Include the perfecting of a process to remove byproducts of the lignite coal in the manufacture of carbonized briquettes suitable for use in smelter purposes. This angle- of the industry will have direct bearing on the exploitation of the iron deposits of Columbia county and other commercial deposits ot iron in Oregon and Washington, according to Mr. Brown. "The present business degression which has caused merchants prac tically to cease buying in quantities in almost every line has developed a golden opportunity for Oregon and wasnington manufacturers if the will grasp it now," declared Emili Marx of Seattle, veteran traveling man or Oregon and Washington yes terday. The peculiar conditions which have practically brought about th severing of business connections of years standing between northwest merchants and eastern manufacturers presents an inviting opening for local manufacturers to introduce thei goods. Trade connections once es tablished are practically oermanen Mr. Marx says, so long as the prod ucts are of standard quality and at tractive price. Although merchant are buying in limited Quantities now. the local manufacturers can secure their share of the trade if they will go after It, Mr. Marx declares. The local manufacturer that will put hi goods on the shelves of merchants in uregon and Washinirton now an build up a demand among consumers Dy judicious advertising will fin when normal times return that h has an established trade in the two states of untold value to him. Mr. Marx at present Is handling surnlu army contract lines among the jobber and wholesalers throughout the north west. He has covered the Oregon erritory wun one line or another to he past 30 years or more. He came o Portland last week to attend the funeral of his brother. Daniel Marx formerly of Marx and Joruensen. a resident of Portland for the past 45 years. . air. Marx Is a native of Alsace. During his stay in the city ue is registered at the Oregon. "The Grants Pass district has ex perienced the best mining: season in years, and everyone is expecting to maice a good cleanup, said Dr. W. II fianagan, well-known Physician ot tnai city, yesterday. Other lines. aside from the lumber industry, have iiKewise been active, according to Dr. lanagan. iteal estate, especially ranch property, has been in demand. nd much selling and trading- has een taKlnc Place duriner thn naat few months. New people have been arriving to locate in the district and Dusiness conditions in (reneral have shown a hopeful trend. Dr. Flanagan minus. -ruit prospects for the ra ng year are good in practically every ne so rar as crops are concerned if prices ana market conditions adlnst themselves by the time the season is H. C. I,. VERSUS SYBIL THE COAT Old Hi Wins Oat In Animated Contest for Supremacy. PORTLAND, Feb. 20. (To the Edi tor.) My neighbor has a milk goat. He bought her with the avowed pur pose of butting the H. C. of L. Into the fnhadowy past, figuratively speak ing of course. But the goat has not landed yet and old HI Is romping around there something awful. I have been watching the fight as a biased referee, hoping that H. C. of L. thing was going to get properly siammea so I could do likewise with another goat. And if I did I wanted to get used to a goats cunning ways and try if possible to love one. Folks say I am an affectionate man but my love for a goat has not dethroned my rea son. I am still cool and calculating and I calculate I don't want a goat. Tbe trouble with a goat is they don't ponder enough on the milk business. Now a cow ls different. I have seeu a cow stand and think by the hour, her noble sweep of brow puckered in thought, her eyes nearly closed In extreme concentration and her Jawa slowly but surely working on the milk business. Now a goat spends all her time looking for human sympathy and companionship. There's the rub, a goat Is too mushy. I like being loved as well as anyone. I can assimilate great gobs of love, but I like some let up in its application. One does not want it following one about in the shape of a g More Truth Than Poetry. By James J. Montague. much early garden work on hand. The man who plants peas on Wash ington's birthday and potatoes on St. Patrick's day usually has some thing good to eat ahead of his neigh bors who do not. the programme. He said: "When in New Tork there is nothing that stirs the emotions like the unexpected ap- A tour of the outskirts shows Prance of a favorite son The cur- tain naa gono up wnu ou--j v,- vin Coolldge, vice-President-elect, en. tered the lower right-hand box. His clean-cut look and friendly nod thrilled a number of Massachusetts men in the front of the orchestra. They became quite agitated. So much Pittsburg women have formed a so that one of them accidentally un- plstol club for defense acainst bur- corked a flask carried on the hip. glars. Of course, if one of them Instantly the atmosphere became, sur happened to hit her husband by mis- charged with a dark-brown 100-proof take any jury would hold that it served him right for coming home I "It was agonizing to sit there in so late. I the knowledge of the waste. Leon Errol. who wa3 singing and dancing, An Ohio Judge has had "ankle I c-nt one whiff and he quit his lines. .-.intno" V. . . J 1 . ln enn4. . J I .... . . . , - . ;ii mm;? uuui in iiunt ui iua July I jjg walked to tne edge oi nio iuui b6x in his courtroom for the protec- jeht9 and. searching the first rows tion of wouien voters. Judging from wUh hlg eye3i liftea an angry finger Arnold Pope of Boston tells of a recent amusing Incident at the mu sical show "Sally" which was not on' at hand. Building In Grants Pass, In common with other places through out the state, has not yet assumed the proportions that conditions warrant. ur. lanagan is registered at the Im periai. current styles the suggestion cer tainly didn't come from the women jurors, and remarked: "One or you cnaps down there ought to get 20 years, It brought down the front of th hnnsA. even 'our Cal' Joining In the a HLiiiiyiii& contractor was canea I laughter " to testify in a recent graft invest!- cation in New York and seventeen Mrs. J. R. Forbes, the well-know pr.ragraphers to date have been im- woman traveler, who lately returned pressed by the fact that he did so , England after wandering for sev without first going back for his erai months from Moscow to Syria, tools. that kings and cabbages "are iden tical and made of the same sub stance." Despite this assurance, we'll lay our bets on the superior brain power of the cabbage. beaver skins. They had all v25-000 for they wanted and saw no reason why they should go trapping at the be- A reply came from Mr. Balfour to the effect that industry is controlled, r -onr mastera. This rpnrp. nul w" sented the height of economic inde- a"d "d"ced " fu" pendence. and no Indian so situated Jhe ' .,, .' i... .ifT, result of saving By saying: imnin ltf, .h- In- If the product of every days work were uaicuiLv mnnu.,.. i eonaumed and none 01 it aavea or turnea dian, to be self-sustaining according into capital, man would start each day . .v,itA nmn'q dpfinition mimf naked, with nothing; but the air to breathe. to the white mans aetinition, must the eartn t0 atan4 upon and water to toil methodically, and lay something drink. by for the proverbial rainy day, and Tt could hardly be said that a accumulate property that a few gen- capitalist is "a pirate or a thief," for erations ago would only have fur- "every workingman is nowadays a nished a motive for a potlatch. capitalist." A point that friends of the Indians Next "an old working man" seek to emphasize is that in their showed that by saving $10 a week efforts to impose new conditions on for fifty years at compound interest their former wards the whites may a man would accumulate $100,000, not have taken sufficient account of desires of the Indians themselves. Safeguards have been withdrawn without compensating substitutes. The-average Indian has not yet fully absorbed the commercial spirit of the white man; he ls apt to be pru dent only in small matters of trade and wholly incapable in larger af fairs. It is contended that he is mostly no match for a crafty and greedy white man 1a buaiuiess not $25,000, and he said: "I know, for I have -tried it." He had been working for fifty-five years, and he added: Such success as I have achieved has not been accomplished .by working the smallest possible number of hours nor by producing the smallest possible value la the hours I work. Discussions such as this are need ed for socialists have had too much of , their own way. Their case is founded on the asscrtioA that oris- . , - ' tells a story of her discovery of a tribe of women who live under- An osteopathic expert declares g-round. They are to be found in th eaves of the Tripoli mountains ana come up, says Mrs. Forbes, only once in the course of their lives. That Is when they marry and change their abode for that of their husband. Be- in? continually in their underground caves, a remarkable change takes nlaee in their appearance. They be come very white In the face, and their eyes become dark and brilliant. As they grow older they are seizea witn Luther Burbank's latest achieve- Psion fr dyel"f Ahe'r h"r With ment Is beardless barley.. The world Benna- ln ln" ay"" " may now live in hope of some day are almo51 D""u' "'JJ ,lB seeing a whiskerless bolshevik. ger aooui as mougn uu ence or drinic. uneir nouses wo &yo Marion growers, who live in the oious enough for them to Keep an center of the small-fruit industry, their livestock underground. Includ have set the season's price a little ing Ueir camels. London Opinion. nign uul witinu reason The lunatic who shot Patrolman Nolan has gone back where he be longs and a decent idea of the mean ing of "safety first" requires that he re kept there. The most popular system of boule vards that can be devised will give everybody a front lot. Otherwise It cannot be popular. Tom T. Bennett, who Is In the leg islature at Salem, has an opportunity to do something of infinite value for Coos county, eays the Bandon West ern World. He can undo a bit of unintentional harm brought about by his grandfather, the late Lord Ben- do Corvains: X couTs Tin boiling 1 'Jl something in the pottery is more to the point. Lord Bennett had visions of trans planting from his native town, Ban don, Ireland, a bit of scenery that DisnatrhPS sav that Caruso to a snouia DB a constant remiiiuer 01 mc dish of oatmeal with evident relish. land of h's youth' eo he brought from He must be a very sick man indeed. Old Erin the evergreen Irish fune and planted around bis home place T.lovd Georee's man won in a nar- overlooking the sea, a hedge. Only llamoitary election in Wales, natur- too well did his plans succeed. The UfUJJD utba D111VO uiaa.l tu, U-L the Irish fune. So adaptable to the Members defend the Oregon sys- I propagation of this plant was the tern' knowing they never could be local soil that it has spread and elected otherwise. If all the prunes were not cleaned up, do not stop eating them. A long, long winter will coma to as. end March ix t spread until now it has become a serious menace. It is only right and proper that those suffering from the handiwork of that beloved old gentleman, whose heritage thty now enjoy, should look to his grandson Xot relief, Reorganization of the work of the Archaeological Institute of America throughout the northwest ls the ob ject of Professor Louis F. Anderson of Walla Walla, who arrived in Port land with Mrs. Anderson Saturday. Mr. Anderson is vice-president of Whitman college and Professor of Greek. He is secretary of the Archaeological society there and has recently been elected district secre tary of the national organisation. Mr. Anderson will assist In the reorgani zation of the Portland Archaeoloirleal society while here. He is also ar ranging for lectures to be held here by leading men of the country. Dr. Charles Peabody, director of the Pea body museum. Harvard university, will appear before the local society on March 9. Professor Joseph Clarke Hoppin. formerly of Bryn Mawr col lege, will lecture here on March 18. Mr. Anderson will visit Seattle. Van couver and .Victoria, B. C, Tacoma and Spokane In the Interests of the Institute before returning to Walla Walla. Mr. and Mrs. Anderson are at the Benson. J. A. Talbot of Fan Francisco and W. B. Simpson of Chicago spent Sat urday and Sunday in Portland on a tour of the northwest, in which they are visiting business connections. Mr. Talbot is president of the Southwest ern Shipbuilding company, Schaw- Batcher Pipe works and the Western Pipe A Steel company. He ls also a prominent ban Francisco clubman. Mr. Simpson Is president of A. M. Castle & Co. of Chicago and A. M. Castle & Co. of Washington. He Is a member of the Chicago Athletic club. Both men were greatly Impressed with the Columbia highway scenery. They left yesterday for San Francisco. yellow eyed goat with a bleatln of furtive feeling to have a goat mtk ing playful demonstrations directly the rear. I don't care how well di posed a goat may be or what exce lent family connections a goat ma have, that Inherent curse is apt to crop out when you least expect it. can Imagine a tempting surface in jumping range as tantalizing to goat as moonshine to the semi-re formed drunkard. My neighbor says that privacy on his place ls nil since Sybil has com to live with them. He said he wa taking a bath one day and goin through antics reminicent of his boy hood days In the old swimming hoi Playful antics that would straight way put him In the catagory of th feeble minded if he had been see by other eyes. But he knew he wa alone. He said he was just trying to see if he could still put his heel o the back of his neck (He weighs 240 and is short) when a whiskered fac appeared at the window. Of course he did not know for a moment It wa only Sybil with a toe hold on th downspout but he said the shock an the attempt to seek cover were very genuine and very disconcerting. He said his wife was putting th finishing touches on a custard pi one day, crimping the edge with a hairpin or whatever they crimp th edges with, when she saw a pair of yellow eyes surmounted by horn glaring at ber. His salanic majesty himself would have been gratified by the result. My neighbor says when a woman is thoroughly frightened, sh screams, the gum is swallowed, squirm squirms up her spine and he hands fly in the air. All this is done simultaneously. All this was success fully accomplished In this case, leav ing the pie wholly abandoned In mid air. A custard pie left to Its own devices In mid air is a fearful thing. My neighbor says that when he came to the rescue his wife was also a fear ful thing. He said a bath, a shampoo and complete change of clothing re moved all that droppy and jaundiced appearance, while three weeks in quiet nook at $75 per w eek completely restored her poise. WILLIAM VAN GROOS, George O. Knowlea of Cottage Grove, senior member of the hard ware firm of Knowles & Graver of that city, spent the week-end In Port land. Mr. Knowles is active In civic affairs In his home town and has had a prominent part In development projects there. He was instrumental In securing a cannery for Cottapro Grove a few years ago and is an of ficer and stockholder in the concern. C. T. Barr of Astoria, former secre tary of the Chamber of Commerce there, is registered at the Imperial. Mr. B.irr recently accepted the posi tion of secretary with the Pendleton chamber of commirce. He expects to move to Pendleton with his family In a few days. Business conditions in Hfllsboro are promising, despite the present general condition of trade everywhere, ac cording to M. D. Well of the Well department store yesterday. Mr. Weil is registered at the Oregon on a week-end buying trln. R. A. Booth of Eugene, chairman of the state highway commission. pent the week end in Portland. Mr. Booth ls accompanied by Mrs. Booth. They are registered at the Imperial. Flllai K of Tax Return. PORTLAND, Feb. 20. (To the Edi- or.) I inherited a house worth $1600 from which I receive $120 a year in rent. My salary is $1600 a year. I have had three dependents. I am a ingle man. Do I have to make an in come tax return? A SUBSCRIBER. , 'pu are required to. make a return. JIASTKIl I'LlMBKnS DOUBT STORY Hut They M ill KxprI Member If Job Profiteering la Proved. PORTLAND, Feb. 19 (To the Edi tor.) Several weeks ago a letter was published In Tne Oregonlan signed A. Hint, in which the writer stated n substance that a charge was made by a local plumber of a sum in ex cess of $200 for moving a sink from one part of a certain dwelling to another, ,th4 reasonable value of which was $10, and that upon ob ection to the bill the owner was subjected to a threat of a lien against his $3000 residence; that a prominent attorney of the city was consulted who Informed the owner he had little recourse but to pay the bill. The Portland Master Plumbers' as- ociatton seriously questions the ruth of the story and submits this etter for publication with the hope that whoever wrote the letter will give to this association his name and address. The Portland Master Plumb ers' association can deal only with Its wn members, but they embrace prac tically all the master plumbers of his city, and if any member has been ullty of conduct which may even approximate that of which "A. Hint" harges, this association will see that redress is made to the person who as been unfairly dealt with, and the ullty member kicked out of our as- ociatlon. The statement that any person en gaged in business, or otherwise, would make a charge of over $200 for services or wares which were of o greater value than $10 and that prominent or any other kind of a awyer would advise the debtor that he had better pay the claim Is so palpably false that little thought pos- luiy was given to the statement, but that does not abate our desire to learn who "A. Hint" is and see that the public gets the truth concerning the matter, be it ravorabie or unfa vorable to this association or other wise. PORTLAND MASTER PLUMBERS' ASSOCIATION. Room 201 Worcester BIdg., City. TUB HABTVHS. With private and personal business Our statesmen are always en grossed; They don't give a cuss for the pomp and tbe fuse That go with a cabinet post. They haven't the money; they haven't the time. They cry, with a heart-breaking -sob, And then, with a sacrifice, high and sublime. They gallantly go on the Job. Take Jones, who receives al a lawyer Ten thousand or so for a case; Just look what ho d lose If he did not refuse To serve In a cabinet place! Against all such honors he firmly 1 set And sternly refuses to swerve. But take it from us, and get down a good bet. That Jones If he's asked to will serve. And Brown though his friends have Insisted That no one can possibly be So thoroughly fit in an arm-chair to sit And help Mr. Harding as he, Declares) that he cannot afford to accept- In fact he declines In advance And yet for a fortnight he hardly has slept For fear that he'll not get the chance. In praise of American statesmen There always ls this to be cald. They don't want to shine In the atatesmancraft line; They'd rather live private Instead. But while they will tell all the world how they hate To loll in a cabinet chair. Though the cost be as great as they frequently state When the call comes along, they re there. IVot the Only Invalid. Turkey may be the lck man of Europe, but we notice that the 2S5. 000 bottles of champagne that were exported from France last year were sent to America for medicinal pur poses. s A (tarrr Lapse. A Louisiana sheriff forirot to hanr a man on the day he was sentenced to die. and the man. curiously enough, neglected to mention the matter. a a A Really C hristian Nation. England is wlliinar to fomlv. hee debtors if Uncle Sam will forgive her debts. 'npyrlnht. by th. Bell Syndicate. Tne ) John Burroughs' Nature Notes. Can Yon Aaavt er These Questions r 1. Is there any scientific collection of disease germsT t. What weather slirn mav foretell the character of a cominir winter storm ? 3. Can quail be raised like domes tic fowl? Answers In tomorrow's nature notes. e Answers to Previous Questions. 1. Is the humming bird of any use? Because of Its fredinir habits, thn humming bird 1 not only ornamental. but serviceable In a practical way. In hunting among the blossoms for nec- ar and tiny Insects for It nweila both kinds of food the hummer checks a good many gnals, little npiders, etc., and at the same time carries pollen rom Ilower to flower, in this wav bri-glng about cross fertilization just as Dues do. a 2. Will a chipmunk experiment with new kinds of food? My chipmunk knows several foods at sight, but peach pits, hickory nuls, dried sweet corn, he at first passed by, and peanuts I could not tempt him to touch at all. He was at first mlifferent to rice, but finding It oothvome, began to stuff bis pockets with it. Amid the rice I scatlereo puffed wheat. This he repeatedly hipped Into, but finding it iinsuh- stantiul. he quickly dropped It. Ill Iso stripped choke cherries of their kins and pulp and filled his pockets with the pits. 3. How can a beaver move a log rom the place where It is cut to the ite of a dam? Tho beaver's Instinct for engineer- ng is nowhere better shown titan In Is methods of moving trees from their natural Bites to any appointed pot. If the tree stands near water it s cut to fall into the pond, stream or anal. Small floating trees can easily be guided butt foremost over their route: larger ones are often stripped t their branches; and the latter only towed to the dam. But If the tree ust travel part way over land, it Is smembrrea ana tne iruiiK cut mm sections 'that can bo pushed toward he nearest water route. In Other Day. IXCIDKXT NOT I.V GOOD TASTE Japanese Would Scratch Oat Part of Play at Local Theater. PORTLAND. Feb. 19. (To the Edl tor.) I was one of visitors to the Lyric last night and glad to say that 1 enjoyed the play wonderfully. However. I call your attention to the fact that the following article which I would like to scratch out en tirely from the writing or play In future, as long as these two nations are a good friendship. "We declared the war with Japan" was announced by a telegram in their play as a part of the aots. I, of course, realize that it is only the play. but such descriptions should not be performed, and at same time, do not at all welcomed by at least such Portlanders as Messrs. Wheelwright and Callan, and the Governor Olcott as well, for they are the atmost lovers and respect the liberty, the Justice, and the world-peace Moreover espe cially "Greater Portland" business with Japan. Submitting these for your Informa tion, as I consider The Oregonlan is always standing still at the justice. Sincerely trusting that such a slm pie article will, however. Interest you to Insert on your paper so that the public enable to take notice of what one of the aliens nations said about it. A NIPPONESE. Right to Own Property. VADER, Wash., Feb. 19. (To the Editor.) (1) Can a man with a dis honorable discharge from the United State army be a legal prcperty holder In this country? (2) Can he be de ported If born in America? (3) Which Is correct. Tijuana or Tla Juana, Mexioo? JOHN MARTIN. 1. " Yes. 2. No. 3. The common spelling is Tla Juana, , Twenty-Five tears Aao. From The Oresonlan of Feb. lxi Washington The bill requesting Spain to recognize Cuban Independ ence came before the senate today for definite and final action and an early vote is expected. Aoheville. N. C The condition of Bill Nye shows no appreciable chance and the great humorist appears to bt sinking rapidly. Portland's movement to regain the Alaska trade, lost through the more energetic efforts of the I'ugct sound cities, ls attracting much attention In Seattle. Undeterred by the fate ccoriled Coxey, Debs will accept the populist nomination for governor of Indiana, according to a political announcement yesterday. Flfiy Yeara Aao. From The Orcionian of r'eb. SI. ISTI. Several new buildings are in proc ess of construction at Corvaills and tbe town ls growing rapidly. Oregon stands highest among states for the yield of wheat per acre and California is second, according to a recent report of the department of agriculture. The average yield in Oregon is given as 19. t bushels. The Willamette river has been ris ing for the last few days and has flooded the wharves. Bnalneas Address hy Mall. UNION, Or., Feb. 19. (To the Ed itor.) Please advise me through the columns of The Oregonlan of a firm where I could procure supplies and machinery for the manufacture of vinegar. 20 TEARS A SUBSCRIBER. . Subscribers desiring business ad dresses should enclose self-addressed stamped envelope for reply by mail. Seaaloa of Congress. PORTLAND, Feb. 19. (To the Ed itor.) Will you kindly tell me what the number of the present session of congress Is? GEO. H. UAMEUiS. Sixty-sixth. i