to THE MORNING OREGOXIAX, FRIDAY. MAY 6. 1921 ESTABLISHED BY HENRY L. PITTOCK. Published by The Oregonian Publishing Co.. C A. JIORDEN. E. B. PIPER. Alanager. duor - The Oregonian is a member of the Asso ciated Prea. The Associated Press i ex clusively entitled lo the use for publication of ail news di.-patches credited to it or not otherwise credited In this paper and also the local news published herein. Ail rights or publication of special dispatches heiein are also reserved. Subscription Bates Invariably In Advance. ,. (By Mail.) Pally. Sunday Included, one year 8" Dally, Sunday Included, six months... 425 Dally. Sunday included, three months. 2.-3 Daily. Sunday included, one month... "3 Daily, without Sunday, one year "0 Daily, without Sunday, six months... 8.23 Daiiy, without Sunday, one month 6u Weekly, one year i-00 Sunday, one year 2.50 dren cared for wholly is given as 54,600. In one of four areas alone food wis distributed to 561.970 per sons during the, winter and spring and help was given to make them self-sustaining as soon as crops could be planted. Relief has been grad ually withdrawn as fast gs districts showed signs of becoming self-supporting. Charity throughout has been tempered with hard common sense. This work of the Near East Relief and that of otherimilar enterprises which have not yet reported in de tail are a convincing refutation of the statements of gloomy pessimists that Americans are having their souls fattened out of them by their prosperity. It will not be contended that all have gtteji who could af ford to give, or that the limit of self- Dally, without Sunday, three months. 1.M Dally, without Sunday, one month.... .to Hosr to Remit Send postofftce money order, express or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are i owners riSK. uive postomce auuiw full. Including county and state. Postage Rates t to 16 pages. 1 cent: 18 io pages. cents; 04 to to ps. "nts; 30 to 64 pages, 4 cents; 66 to 80 -Pge. 5 cents: 82 to 8 pages. cents. Foreign postage double rate. J Eastern Business Office Verree A Conk lln. Brunswick building. New York: Verree A Conklln. Steger building. Chicago; Ver ree & Conklln, Free Press building. De . trott. Mich.; Verree & Conklln. Selling building. Portland: San Francisco reprs sen la live. R. J. BidwelL (By Carrier.) Dally. Sunday included, one year. ... 2JJ denial has even been approached. Dally. Sunday included.-one month but the showing is a good one, as 11 Dally, without Sunday, one year J-80 is. In all probability it is a better one than we would have made at any other period in our history. Giving is becoming reasonably popular and we are sure that it would be even more so if there . were full realiza tion of the enduring good that has been accomplished, both in the im mediate saving of lives and in equip ping millions to solve their future problems for themselves. THE DEVIL QUOTES SCRIPTURE. Professors in the University of .Berlin have found a new indictment . of America. It is becoming a femi nine nation. For proof the professors, it is told by the correspondent Von Wlegand, point to American news papers. " Women and sex life dominate news In America, ft is declared. Women, sex. divorces, killing of men by women who assert they were wronged, their diaries and the trials, salacious testimony, are chief features of the news columns of American metropolitan newspapers which reach us. One. would think from New York news papers that there are no other problems, certainly no greater problems. In the world today than the relations between men and women relations as old as cre ation itself. So comments one of them. It is not a difficult undertaking to indict a nation or its newspapers on the score of that which appears in the press provided one selects one's own material and discards all that counterbalances the evidence in sup port of whatever one attempts to prove. Out of the mass of mate rial that the' newspaper handles in the course of a few days or weeks, one, by this interesting process, could prove anything under the sun Nor is it a novel practice. Upton Sinclair in the Brass Check sifts out just what he wants and nothing else and convicts the American press of strong capitalistic leanings and other crimes. But the practice is far, far older than the day of Sinclair or the Berlin professor as a prac- tice, but as regards other than newspapers: "Mark you this, Hassamo, quotn .. Antonio, "The devil can cite scrip ture for his purpose." xy coincidence mere appears al most concurrently with the Von Wel gand dispatch, a short survey of newspapers In confers weeKiy. lis . finiiintrj 1lllAW? " Four good typical American newspapers, neither sensational nor staid, are the New lorK sun, tne .New lora urm, me ivaii sas City Star and The Portland Oregonian. We have put a printer's rule on the inches of space these four papers gave, on three -'- consecutive days last week, to the various "-kinds of news. Here Is the daily average, all four papers: Sports and fun 321 ' Women's pages (fashions, cooking, chil dren) 135 Government: Federal, state and city.. 1-5 Business lift Foreiern affairs 104 Crime SO Germany and later between Russia and Poland. When the bolshevists had crushed Denikin, they made a dash for Baku, the metropolis of the Caspian field. In this race the United States and Britain are the chief contestants, for they have ;the greatest merchant marines, navies, railroad systems (if the British empire be taken as a whole) and the greatest industrial systems, but France is a good third. The British are already operating in the United States and, if this country should adopt a policy of exclusion, it would hit them hardest. They have great undeveloped areas in their colonies, have found good prospects in New Guinea and may strike it rich in Africa- Th rare will be long and keen, for the nation with I abundant reserves of oil will be su preme in war and commerce. Music and drama 44 Bis-amv and divorce - 40 Prohibition - Society 1 Labor and wages 10 Newspapers print what the public likes to read. How does your own newspaper balance ? The figures given by Colliers are doubtless a fair average as to quan- title's of the different classes of news furnished day by day. At particular times the figures would vary. .Big amy and divorce," with a Stillman ana a ctoKes case on trial at uie same time, would show a greater number of inches. A present survey of New York newspapers would re veal a greater amount tf space de voted to "prohibition," for a wide spread campaign of law enforcement is under way and is productive of an " unusual quantity of news of a kind the public demands. The newspaper selects its news not wholly on the basis of what the public wants. News is not made by the newspaper. -The newspaper is a dispenser of news. The availability or the non-existence of the various kinds of news on a given day pre vents a uniform feat of balancing. But the plain conclusion from Col liers' is that the German devil is quoting scripture for his purpose. -" "If the stranger in your country,' 'runs' on the professor aforemen tioned, "is to judge by your news papers he can come to no other conclusion than that the chief thought of American men and wom en is about the relations between the sexes and that American edi tors consider that of paramount Im portance In public thought." Yes, indeed, Bassanio. Whatever one desires to believe about us fce nan Tirnvp in a nnantitativa wflv hv amnlnvlnv a rlinninir hiircnn in sorirl him all the supporting material it can find in the press on the subject and nothing else. POLITICAL, INDEED! N It is of course that newspaper which most often lectures others on the evils of hide-bound partisanship which discovers politics in the New berry decision of the United States supreme court. This from the demo cratic Eugene Guard: The supreme court has reversed the con viction of Senator Newberry of Michigan. found guilty by a Jury of bribery and cor ruption in the senatorial elections. How ever, this Is no surprise, since Newberry is very much richer than Henry Albers and the administration "is under greater obligations to him for his help .In organiz ing the . senate to defeat the Versailles peace treaty. To just what administration does the supreme court belong? The jus tices are appointed for life. They are not removable by the president. The supreme court is now the iden tical supreme court which sat dur ing all of Woodrow Wilson's second term. Three of the associate jus tices were appointed by Woodrow Wilson and all three of these Wilson appointees agreed that the Newberry case should be reversed. They were joined by Chief Justice White, who is a democrat, and by every other member. While the court divided on the constitutionality of that por tion of the law which attempts to regulate congressional primaries, the court was unanimous in holding that the case should be reversed. It is also heard from democratic newspapers, big and little, that Attorney-General Daugherty was the arch villain in Albers' case and there are hints that political pres sure gained the confession of error from the department of justice. Yet the brief in the Albers case was read by Solicitor-General Frier son, it was the solicitor-general who expressed the belief that Albers should not have been convicted and it was he who confessed error and submitted to reversal without a, fight. Solicitor-General Frlerson is a southern democrat and is a hold over appointee of the democratic administration. LANDING OF THE PILGRIM BOT. Of course, when the Mayflower sailed she carried among other Items, certain little folk boys and girls who accompanied their parents to the New England snore, and who have been somewhat slighted in his tory. The Pilgrim fathers1 there's the old familiar phrase of the school books but never a word of the Pil grim mothers, or the Pilgrim kiddies. So when we have a thought of the latter, invariably we perceive demure little maidens, as gray as doves, toil Developments of the 1830's, viewed in the perspective of almost a cen tury, warrant the conclusion that if it had not been for the missionary spirit Oregon would not. now be a state in the United States. The gradual modification and subsequent enlargement of the primary mission ary scheme, which began with a movement to carry the gospel to the Indians, developed into a plan to prepare the natives for the inevitable competitive struggle with the new forces of civilization, and at length was transformed into the nucleus of an American state, with American civic, moral and educational 'ideals, is one of the most romantic episodes in statecraft in the history of the world. It is now understood that these missionaries had an early glimpse of the new era for which they had, tnougn perhaps unwittingly, pre pared the way, and their foresight The Listening Post. W hat la Burled Under City T' capacity, in the larger sense, for their historic task. That in every material particular . the missionary scheme failed to accomplish Its first chimerical purpose does not detract from its enormous significance- The beginnings of education, the first practices in democratic government and the foundation of civil order were 'coincident with the early youth of Cyrus Walker, whose privilege it was to have lived to experience lng at mottoed samplers: or studious. . , . h , V ""nonwealtu li.Hs, minintur nt ir 1 than faI1 to the 1' t the vast ma- and practical adaptability attest their4lectric cmPny purchased the hy SAVING A MILLION LIVES. The report of the Near East Relief for the year ended December SI, 19C0, makes an amazing showing for the organized benevolence of Ameri cans. The region in which its work was conducted was one only vaguely known until recently by yousg stu dents of geography. Prior to the war, it is safe to say that the name Anatolia would have awakened no mental image in the mind of the average American. That there was a Georgia in Asia was unknown to most of us. Yet in these countries, and In Turkey, Persia, Syria, Pales tine, Kurdistan, Mesopotamia and the Trans-Caucasus, the American committee has saved in all probabil ity more than a million lives of people who had no means of helping themselves. The cost, according to the report, was a little more than 155,000,000, f f ahmit fnw A-lnh 1 i f r. ...... .J D. v. uwuuv crawl IIIG M JlfcC- lief payments in cash for the year amounted to $39,856,588. Flour worth ,12,800,000, furnished by the jioover reitet administration, was distributed. Medical and other sup plies contributed by the American Red Cross were valued at $2,600,000. JThese were employed in the estab lishment of sixty-three hospitals, 128 clinics, 229 orphanages, and eleven rescue homes. The number of chil- THE WORLD RACE FOR OIL. The note which Minister Phillips sent to the Dutch government in regard to oil concessions in the Dutch East Indies has an Importance far beyond that immediate field. It sets out a policy which the admin istration may pursue regarding oil both .at home and in all foreign countries. The state department ex presses mild resentment that a con cession was granted to a Dutch sub sidiary of the Shell company, to the. exclusion of any American company. It is intimated that, if Americans are to be shut out of foreign oil fields, the United States may exclude foreign interests from its public land and may go even far.tlier a hint that foreign ownership of private American oil land and refineries may be extinguished if the American policy of equal opportunity should be rejected by other nations. Equal opportunity an enlarge ment of the open door principle which John Hay established for China-is the policy for which the Wilson administration declared in Mesopotamia. The Harding admin istration seeks to secure entrance for Americans to the oil field of Co lombia by effecting a reconciliation with that country. Oil is the most important subject of discussion with Mexico. Americans aim to develop the oil fields of Venezuela. No ex clusive rights for this nation are claimed, but watch is kept against monopoly by any other nation, espe cially on the American hemisphere. The justice of the American claim is founded on the fact that this coun try produces four-fifths of the world's oil supply and that its re pources show signs of falling short, largely in consequence of our meet ing the needs of other countries, while our own wants increase with growing use of oil as fuel. While the United States is still the greatest oil producer, it is also the grea'st oil consumer and with a shrinking domestic supply our wants Increase. This is much more than a matter of securing equal opportunity for American investors In search of prof itable investment abroad. Oil has become a necessary of national life for this and other civilized nations. All new warships burn oil. . Return to coal as fuel for thern is out of the qvestion, for a coal-burning fleet would be hopelessly outclassed by an oil-ourning rivai. wii-Duruuig engines and motors are fast sup planting coal burners on merchant ships, and without oil our merchant marine would soon be crippled. Mo tor transport is essential in both war and peace it . saved verdun for France and gasoline is indispensa ble to it until a new fuel is provided in sufficient quantity. Hence all nations are in a race for oil. The race is the keener because the European nations have recently dis covered that oil is a necessary of life and that our extensive develop ment has left them far behind. They have not found appreciable quanti ties in their home territory, therefore they roam the world in search of it and their governments grasp af con trol of companies operating in foreign fields. Thus the British gov erntment owns control of the Anglo Persian, has agreed to divide the Mesopotamian field with France and plans a pipe line from Basra to some port in Palestine. Britain has large interests in Roumania also and dur ing the German invasion wrecked the wells to deprive Germany of the solemn sires, intent on learning the text. And the background is that of 6anctlty. Y'et before we have a gusty sigh for the pious plight of the Pilgrim children, we should turn to the jour nal of William Bradford he who was second governor of Plymouth colony and Edward Wlnslow, to whom the same dignity was given, for an incident which occurred while the Mayflower was prowling along the bleak New England coast in quest of Plymouth rock. Therein they wrote: The fifth day (of December, 1820) we through God's mercy escaped a great danger by the foolishness of a boy, one of Francis Billington's sons, who in his father's absence had got gunpowder and had shot off a piece or two and made squibbs, and there being a fowling piece charged in his father's cabin shot her off in the cabin, there being a little barrel of powder half full scattered in and about the cabin, the fire being within four feet or the bed between the decks, and many flints and iron things about the cabin, and many people about the fire,, and yet, by Ood s mercy, no harm done. Thus the first American boy was spared to land at Plymouth rock, with tough and limber hazel switches growing profusely at hand. And so no more for that day. jority of men. it output. -The Galician field was the prize of battle between Russia and , were sent from the United States, DEATH OF CYRUS H. WALKER. Cyrus H. Walker, who died at Al bany yesterday, was the first male white child born in the Oregon country between the Cascades and the Rocky mountarhs, the fifth boy born In the entire region, and the second born in that region who grew to manhood. The first white boy born west of the Rocky mountains was Jason Lee White, son of the Rev. Mr. and Mrs. Elijah White, the date of whose birth was July 10, 1837. Joseph Beers, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alanson Beers, members of the establishment of Jason Lee, the pioneer missionary enterprise in this country, was- the second male child born here and the first to grow to manhood. The young son of Jason Lee, born June 26, 1838, died soon afterward and his mother's death at about the same time is also a re minder of the sacrifices by which the west was won. Henry Johnson Per kins, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. K. W, Perkins, born November 1, 1838, was the fourth boy, and Cyrus Walker, born on December 7, 1838, the fifth. Cyrus Walker was the eighth white child born in the entire territory and the third of either sex born east of the Cascades. His two predecessors for the latter distinction were Alice Clarissa Whitman, born at the Whitman mission on March 14, 1837 the first white child born in the entire territory who was drowned in infancy, and Eliza Spalding, later Mrs. Eliza Spalding Warren, born November 15, 1837, who died only recently in eastern Washington. The - passing of Cyrus Walker severs another link in the tenuous chain connecting the present era of high development of the west with the first organized effort of Ameri cans to establish their Institutions in this region. For the Rev. Mr. and Mrs. Elkanah Walker, parents of Cyrus Walker, were members of the only reinforcement sent to Dr. Mar cus Whitman by the American board of commissioners for foreign mis sions, and Mr. Walker's birthplace the Whitman mission, then known as Waiilatpu, is rich in historic memories. The missionary period antedated by some years that of pioneer settlement by homebuilders. but it was Important for its bearing on the latter, movement as well as for other reasons. The Walkers established the branch mission at Tsimlkain, or Chemekane, near the present site 'of Spokane, soon after their arrival and for a number of years were leaders in a futile en deavor to bring the benefits of civilization to the natives of the re gion now comprised In northeastern Washington, northern . Idaho and northwestern Montana. Some of Cyrus" Walker's school days were passed at 'the Vhitman mission, where none who partici pated in its routine could have failed to absorb some of the spirit of sacri fice by which education was made possible in the west. The Walkers were among the last to leave the Spokane district, from which they withdrew after the Whitman massa cre, and the ensuing widespread unrest among the Indians of the en tire inter-mountain region put an end to missionary prospects there. But befween 1838, the year of his birth, and 1848, when the Walkers re moved to the more peaceful Willam ette valley, young Cyrus saw life In an aspect that can hardly be real ized by twentieth century boys. The difficulties of existence were almost incredible. Modern luxuries were unknown. The missionaries, inade quately sustained by those who sent them to their distant posts, fought a long and losing battle, the futility of which only ennobles their mem ories. The third decade of the nineteenth century, which is symbolized by men like Cyrus Walker and women like Eliza . Spalding Warren, was second in chronological order of the chap ters in the story of the wresting of the west from the aborigines, the first being the fur trade period Im mediately preceding it. From the American viewpoint the second is the more significant of the two because the fur trade was largely British in its trend, while all the missionaries TRYING TO ESCAPE WORK. There is, says a recent consular re port, a rush of emigration to the south seas. The exodus, we take it. Wtssumea Importance not as a threat ened depopulation of the United States but as an invasion of a region hardly calculated to support much more than Its present population. For the expectant arrival in the So ciety Islands, or thei.Marquesas or the Tongas soon discovers that it is no Eden for bim, and If he has not pro vided himself w,ith passage home he soon becomes a beach-comber that most unhappy of all parasites. The cause of this invasion, seems. Is a widely circulated report that the natives of Oceanica are able to live without work. It turns out that this is not literally true; al though the average Kanaka is not as busy as a typical American. But if he works rather less than his white brother, so also he is perforce con tent with less. The thought seems to have escaped these seekers of an Idlers' paradise that even If they were able to escape the hurly-burly of modern existence, they would necessarily also abandon the con veniences that go with . it. To be content with a diet of raw fish rather than perform the labor of cooking, to go naked rather than to spin and weave these may embody a new philosophy -of contentment or some thing or other, but to use it seems like an effort to gloss over plain, everyday laziness. -And the lazy man isn't getting much for his pains nowadavs. . There Is no escaping he dictum that we must eat our bread in the sweat of our faces. No sweat, no bread in the south seas or anyrf wliere else. It seems a little strange that in this day and age even a few thousand people could be found so childishly ignorant of this great principle as to set out on a wild- goose chase to the tropic seas. HERE are many strange things burled under the city of Port land. A cross-section of one of the streets would contain an array of pipes, mains, conduits, sewers and wires that would astound the layman, says Carl Shoemaker, ' master fish warden. Many year's ago, when Portland first began to show signs of becom ing a city, a progressive firm in stalled a set of hydraulic pressure mains for elevators. The old elevator in the Labbe building- was the first passenger lift In the city to be so equipped.. With the next progressive epoch came the electric motor, and the draulic system and disconnected it, so that it would be possible to sell elec tric power to the big building own ers. The hydraulic mains, built to w'thstand tremendous pressure by the Morris Hydraulic company, are yet under the business section of the city. This recalls the project that David Campbell had when ,chief of the Port land fire department. The immortal Those Who Come and Go. Tales of Folk at th Hotels. Dave had an eye for the future, wasl n the di8trlct tributary to Bristol suits that may 'be otherwise obtained. endowed with vision and knew that Portland was destined to be a great city. He tried to induce the council to buy the old hydraulic mains and make them a part of the' city's de fense against fires. Campbell wanted the mains extended to the water front with valves there so that the flreboats could couple onto them and reach blazes away from the river, thus Increasing efficiency. Other cities even then had the scneme in "The reindeer industry Is bound to be an important factor in the develop ment of Alaska," said H. E.'' Revell. registered at the Multnomah from Alaska. "The people of Alaska take the raising of reindeer for meat and hides seriously and go about it in a business-like manner, which is bound to be productive of results. I can see no difference between the domes tic reindeer and the caribou, except that the reindeer are tame while the caribou are wild. I saw the first herd of reindeer brought into Alaska by the government for experimental pur poses. Laps were brought into the country to teach the Indians to raise reindeer and the Indians took to it like ducks to water and are now competent to take care of large herds. The reindeer is prolific and easy to manage. -The expense attached to taking care of a very large herd is insignificant. The meat is as fine as any deer meat ana is now being shipped out of Alaska. In time to come a very large portion of the meat supply of the world will be shipped from Alaska, which was once thought INLAND ROUTE IS QUESTIONED Mr. Frlcde Believes Better Local lo Caa Be Had to Bead. PORTLAND, May 6.-(To the Edl tor.) The Oregonian' Sunday sec tion showing the definite location of the Inland route 'to California Is ex ceedingly interesting to one who has gone over th proposed road. I believe the people of the state of Oregon are heartily In favor of the development of our road systems, and have undoubted confidence in the In tegrity of our state Yiighway com mission. Nevertheless, with the vol ume of work they have set out to supervise, divisions of opinion will arise as to whether they have given enough consideration always to 'di rect as to the best route or the economical outlays that may be saved. I have before me the sketch of the planned road from The Dalles to Madras. It traverses a contour of country very expensive for road building, and this statement is sus tained by the estimate of $1,600,000 for construction, of which Waaco county proposes bonding itself for JS.00,000. After this enormous expen diture the greatest claim that can be made for this road is the probable saving of two hours' automobile time an unproductive waste. The reindeer between Bend and The Dallew. thrive on a kind of moss which ft I If we expend these large sums with forages for itself. I believe the big an eye only for tourist travel our seat of the reindeer industry win be outlays are disproportionate to re More Truth Than Poetry. Br James J. Moslsiit, Bay. which seems to be a naturally While the road is to be built osten adapted country for raising the ani- sibly for tourist travel, we should not mals. When the peaple get it out of lose sight of its local importance and their heads.tbat Alalka is essentially the convenience and interest of local not an agricultural country hut a residents. I do not wish to be under mineral country primarily, with rein- stood as saylna- DeoDle alonar the deer and fishing industries and some present road are not entitled to good timber, then Alaska win torce aneaa roads, but 1 do declare they can have -with far more rapid strides than she good roads with a much less expen- has heretofore made." I diture than 1, 600.000. Then if we wish to have a road that can serve I used to be somewhat suspicious the tourist for the best interest of of a etate senator or a representative the state, as well as a greater num i i i 1.1 . . , j . ... '.-J v j .-t r,r u.i that a mpmher I ' iinai. resiucnuj, auuin. iu roau operation, and now most oi tne ois ." ,.. ,i. already completed from The Dalles seaports have high, pressure systems "'" ' -" '' "'. via Biggs and Sherman county to designed so that the boats can be " f"r . -.i-..Ti -.W.V.h Shaniko and Madras. We are informed by a local con temporary that Lieutenant-Commander John A. Beckwith met dis aster in a recent spelling match when he insisted on spelling "pogey, either a salt-water fish or fishing boat, in a manner that did not con tent Patrick Kneeland, arbiter of the contest. The naval officer, whose sea lore ought to count for some thing, insisted on "pogie." He was ruled out as having failed on the word. Whether Mr. Kneeland's ver sion of the word is that of the printed account we have not been informed. But the fact is that three standard dictionaries insist on spell ing it "pogy," and one admits that it may be spelled pogie at the pleasure of the user. It would appear that a grave injustice has been done the commander, not only as a sea going salt, but as an accomplished lexicographer. , Dr. Crafts adds to the hilarity of the nation in his own way- by the effort to regulate this patch of the universe. Meanwhile people will go on, living and dying, occasionally detaining the stork for a brief visit. some being good and some very bad and the rest just middlin . Multnomah commissioners find they can dispense with the services of half -a dozen janitors around the courthouse, retaining quite a number to do the work. This is commend able economy, but "tough" on the half dozen janitors. A Nisqually Indian says Mount Rainier should be called Mount Ta coma because the latter is an Indian word meaning, "water, my dear." In that case Rainier must mean "more water yet, my dear," so why change? coupled in. Here was a system made ' : . woula be a gooi thing i"' road at this time Is a splendid to order, but for some, unexplained "man ana woman, Oregon J" " "'thlri. ot ? reason Portland did not purchase the tTgo J Salem for 40 day.nd see " o 'Tattolt would Vole ""bet" ln at hat time. Doubtless it is ' how the legislature works." said T. T. ?pf " "ou ld. Pr0 a "A1! are uacijr n too late now they rotted away. . , Women admire the clean-appearing man. he who is well groomed. Two young women last week escorted a boy, about 6- years of age, to the bar- Rennett. renresen tat Ive of Coos coun ty, registered at the Imperial. "I found the members of the legislature high-minded men, with a sincere wish to accomplish good for the state. Few, if any. had a selfish motive. They were industrious, hard-working, serl- ous men of unquestioned iniesruy and they were of a high order of in- ber shon in the Northwestern Bank ' tellie-ence. I would be perfectly will building. In the shop at the same ' lng to be tried with the legislature as time was a, little girl, about the same age as the boy, waiting for her daddy, The grown-up women watched with interest the skillful barbers as they slipped their keen razors over the lathered faces, and threw many ap preciative glances at the handsome males as they left the chairs, fresh and clean. The young man got his turn, stepped into the' chair for his haircut, and the young lady, not to be outdone by the older ones of her sex present, kept cfoBe watch on the transformation. When the job was completed she did not try to restrain her admiration and the boy was fully aware of ner glances mi au changed from the covert to the open The youngsters exchanged smiles, and he left tne shop with the two women, turning at the door to throw one last rogui&u look at his fair charmer. All three girls apparently had a good time. Six. 16 and Zb are not so far apart, after all. proposed to be located over Tygh valley and practically paralleling the proposed road. The Sherman county read has sufficient merit to have re ceived the state highway commission ers' promise to accept the present road through Sherman county and make a highway of it. Why build two roads of such Importance par alleling each other 20 miles apart, wtth probably at the most two hours' longer drive by automobile? What traveler In search of the charms of the state will complain of a driveway TIIKRK ARE rKOI'I.K ASD PKOrLK. There was a certain manager Whose shows were mostly glrla. And. girls who were hut little more Than brown and iroidrn He brought the show to old New York Ana. simple truth to tell. Though criilea panned It out of hand It really did uulte well. For though the somewhat human race e ao not like to knock. It's really true that quite a few Are fond of shows that shock. There wag another manager Who chuckled when he got A play that had a very bad Or wholly vicious niot. He brought (he show to old New Tork, Ana tnougn ioiks more or less Were scandalised, as he surmised. It made a big success. We hate to paste the human race Which we belong to. but. There's quite a lot who like a plot That'i very largely smut. Another manager put on ' A play of elmp'.e life. The sort of show to which you'd go And take your kids and wife. And now there're crowds around th door Who clamor and entreat. And think they've struck a run of luck If they can get a seat. For though some members of our race Are low and base and mean. There's more you know, who like a I snow That's absolutely clean. s Aay Rate Tkcy Make Tbesaaelvra. The railroads are willing to accept I Business at any rate. s Frartlrally Notalna. Hotel prices In the big cilies havs dropped so far that the average clerk can buy a dinner for himself and wife lor less than two weeks' wage. ' Obsolete. since tne booze raiders went to I work the express-Ion, "You can search me!" has disappeared from our lan-1 guage. Copyright. 11)21, by the Bell Syndicate, inc.i Burroughs Nature Club. a Jury, for they would give me a fair and Impartial hearing. The legisla ture, mav make some mistakes in : , ..... v. .. . te ihftsa mistakes a?e not Jntenonai, hut are due to th. " '"Jo " thta rout. InvolvW. only liability of human nature to err. tw hours longer time? 1 "11. k.,no. m.mher of the le-gr-T Th8n- 'rm standpoint to . ih T r-annot Interest the traveler let us give him .1 J", .""-" " the best we can, and what could be more advantageous to spread the 1 eerreo - gVrnTrevine""! nevef dmflnd th? south and having seen the mar- ? 5..1V.i...tj oii m,r motor velous mountain scenery to be such a name." observed J. n.. wnson of Prineville at the Imperial. Then up stepped an overseas veteran with an axDlanatlon. "In France," said the former servioe men, "there was little jerkwater road near Bordeaux, which had a most peculiar looking locomotive, with a low, short body and a very long eUick, with a bulge on top. The Yanks calu?d the outfit the galloping goose because tne It's the season for engagement ringa, say the clerks in Portland jew elry stores. Hundreds of prospective husbands have been examining soli taires in the last week. One type, ac cording tc dealers, is the chap who is not so sure the girl win accept him. He buys a diamona to ctincn the affair. Sometimes the men bring their prospective brides to the store, and often this produces an awkwara situ ation, as the women then are per mitted to make their own selections. Aa there are many grades of dia monds, the selection is difficult. The more usual engagement diamond is ahnnf seven-eighths of a karat in size. Pricea range from 75 to 14000, and platinum is the most popular setting. The diamonds are cut in all sorts r,r n-haoes sauares. diamonds, ovais and other designs but one veteran tradesman declared that the old fashioned round stone will never grow unpopular. Engagement rings. clerks said, are seldom exchanged. Next month will be wedding-ring month. The modern vogue is to nave the engagement and wedding ring match in color and engraving. In this trade the old styles are yet hold ing their own. the plain gold band being used the most. A novelty in wedding: rings is to nave, tnem in pairs, one given to the bride and one to the groom. Of late years women have held that man should have some ign to show that he is taken. How- ever, tne ooudio rmi proved very popular. The chief of the blue law reform ers, now in Portland, says in effect that everythirrg that gives pleasure must be censored. That ought to bar him automatically from applying the censorship. James W. Staten, described as "an all-round crook." has four years In the federal penitentiary to think, it over. He ought to get all-round the subject in that , length of time. Now comes another theatrical star and has her bow legs broken "to surprise my husband." Her husband may surprise her, too, when he hears about it. A former stool pigeon is being held on a charge of attempted bur glary. The profession of stool-pigeon ing trains a man for all kinds of crime. It's one thing to design a 26-man airplane and another one to ride in it on its first cruise. Does that Port land Inventor volunteer for the test? Thirty-five hundred war depart ment clerks vcill be out of jobs In July. That's the time when the cherries need to be picked. . "Bond Intoxication" Is the v new term to let down easy one who steals securities. Jail Is the best cure. - What, those Poles seem to need is a good -telephone company to dig a lot of holes and. put Uieia in, . Disgust with the modern tendency of women to overdecorate themselves called forth a pertinent remark by an observant old gentleman recently, who said: "We used to think we could tell chorus girls by their devotion to nalnt and powder, and we can yet distinguish the stage woman from the home type, but in an inverse ratio of paint, for it is the stage girl who uses the least nowadays. - This brings us to speak out about the ushers at the Orpheura. It is difficult to recall any one group of girls in Portland who make a more wholesome appearance. ranK aic- Qettigan and The Scout talked about them in the foyer before the show the other evening, and Frank be trayed the apparent they do not paint. "None of my girls use rouge, 1 am certain, and they never present that daubed' appearance. Of course every girl has to powder her nose, and we have no shiny ones here, but that is all. If they look nice It is because they are naturally so," And no one could blame him for his pride In them. Diplomacy and tact are attributes of great men, and there must be some of tnat breed in Portland if the following Is any criterion. The story Is told by E. E. Penn of the Canadian Pacific. He was walking down Washington street and not an Inten tional eavesdropper. A couple were ahead of him. The woman spoke: Hubby, did you notice that woman we Just passed?" Do I ever notice another woman?" responded hubby, with an oblique glance at his better half. Penn would like to get that man on his staff. "Til bet he could produce results: he's an artist," was the trib ute of an appreciative soul. . .. THE SCOUT. I switched in the spring time to the almost boundless fields of green, and a little later the golden harvest a harvest thereafter to be exported to the markets ot the world? And after completing this wonderful view of a section producing such a volume, of valuable products, as charming a view as one can imagine can be had by dropping down to the Columbia and purring along the highway with the - , , . I .UUl Ui 1 1 t O UL UUI laitlUUO V.U1UI1IU1H locomotive gave the mpression of a r,ver companlonB. . thlnk lf not goose." "There may nave oeen aome t00 ,ate ,hu lrnportant matter ghould such suggestion about the ocomotive be revlewed, and the ot Wac0 In Franc." replied Mr. Wilson, "but , K.j i. j our equipment doesn't look anything to be foIlowed by a better road and lino a ion.. .. .. petter route for the state of Oregon Copyright. IIoaghtoa-Mlfflla Co. Wilson was considering an offer to and tourists in general. sell some real estate he has In the I city. For more than 80 years Leon M. Brown has been a resident of Harney county. He is now cashier of the Harney County National bank and ar rived at the Imperial yesterday from Spokane, having been looking at some land he owns In the Nez Perce coun try. "We have plenty of rain and plenty of grass, but no market for the products of the county," ex plained Mr. Brown. "In this respect Harney county has a great deal of company, but- everything will work out all right." "It was a draw," commented George McKay, cattleman, as he limped into the Perkins and asked for his room key. Mr. McKay was cross ing the street when a motorcycle ran into him and sent the retired cow man to the pavement. The rider of the gasoline demon, however, cata- paulted through the air and 'was sprawled over the landscape. LEO FR1EDE. MORE LORE FROM 8 AKEOLOGIST Forest Grove Authority Tells of Rat tler Which Acted as JVurse Maid. FOREST GROVE, May 4. (To the Editor.) I wondsr lf any of your many readers, and there are many, remember Q. K. Philander Doesticks. P. B., and his companion, Samuel P. Burnham, D. P. , Sam became a civil war veteran through a call from President Lin coln for 75,000 volunteers. While on duty In Washington, D. C, I became acquainted with Sam who was fa mous for story telling, most of his stories being true. We enjoyed Sam very much. Snakes were his long lilt. Sam says: "Home on a vacation from school I witnessed a fight be tween a five-foot blue racer and a rattler. I was not able to determine the length of the rattler. The blue racer won the fight.. The ground Can Yun Assurer These Questional! 1. How did birds begin to flv? 2. Is the Balm of Ciilead (l'opulinl carwioans Alt.) a natlvo of Canada? 8. How long do butterflies live? Answers in tomorrow's nature note. I Asuwers to Previous Questions. 1. What do you know about trac ing rats? They seem to be peculiar t j I the mining districts of Montana and I ( mlng. llils is the mountain rat. called I also Pack rat from us habit of carry ing off any portable articles, edible or I otherwise. It can lay claws on. Itsl scientific name cornea from Latin I worst' meaning ashy, mountain, thief. I It is-also common in Colorado mining I district. The "trade" name come I irom an alleged habit this rat has of I leaving "some articles It has already I stolen, when tnklng off somethlngl nsw, or iraaing- iiu mens. 2. What general bodily character istic have ground warblers, In con trast to tree-warblers? , The ground warblers all h on I notable feature very beautiful lega l as white, and delicate as if they had I always worn silk stockings and satlnl suppers. High tree Warblers havol dark brown or black legs and morel brilliant plumage, but they have lessl iniislcul ability. I 8. What can you tell me about! vanilla.' Vanilla extract, used as a flavor. log, and also In perfumery, la taken! from the pod or seed case of an orchldl whose native home is Mexico. The Plant is grown for commerce In Flor ida and the near-tropics. It is a tai: climbing herb whlcn grows by air roots clinging to trsea. The leave.nl are thick, and the llly-ilke blossom yellow. The fruit, a long, slender pod 16-80 cm. long, ripens la two years. The actual essence taken from the pod Is vanillin. This can also be extracted from sugar-beet root, and I an artificial product resembltnar It! can be made from oil of cloves, and! from pine wood. Used medicinally. vanilla has a mildly stimulant effcuil like valerian. In Other Days. thev foue-ht over was ahnut 20 feet it "would; cost more to nave tne gouare and was swent nerfectlv clean contending iactions ana tneir wit-Every moment of the engagement nesses Journey to Coos Bay than It was fast and furloue. The blue racer would be to have the Judge come gained the advantage at the start bv irom -Coos Bay to Portland, so the f seizing the rattler by the neck (jlose cvuuumibai plan wna w rou. rfuini o Coke, circuit Judge, is is Portland to hear a case in equity, thereby saving the travel and other expenses of the litigants. James J. Donegan, than whom against. the jaws and never relaxing his hold until the rattler ceased fighting. While viewing the remains of the rattler I cut off 21 rattles and a button and counted six little snakes not over ten inches long which came out of the brush. I killed five and there is no. better known resident captured one and carried it home and in tne iu.uiw square mueg or Harney learned that I had now In my pos- county, arrived in Portland yester- session the only living rattle snak day from Burns. Mr. Donegan is an i captivity In the state of New York, aspirant for appointment . in the ''That rattler lived to be about two United States land office at Burns feet long- and like a clown in the and the supposition is that he has I circus wag always on the Job. He mo msiuH u-a.es on mo joo. never acknowledged a master except lng once. That was when father The name of Captain John Groat, I crushed his head with a crow bar. navigator of Tillamook bay and vi-1 When onlv 10 or 12 inches lone- he vinlty, is entered on the Multnomah would coil and stick'up three-quart-register. At one time the captain was era of an inch of tall and shake It part owner in a lot of the land which vigorously but no music always is uw ocooiuo Acovih. nucu i"c i qu te reaay lor a rignt. captain anu mo auswinitii uuugm me une ot your correspondents says land it was the Idea to turn it Into a that the rattlesnake gives the little cranberry marsn. i ones protection by swallowing them. Oh. fit. T AltnnnSA hA fan ttim. n mi tr--.j . v . . 1 " . . . xne case wi namiuuim o. uue rum an s-TetiSA for mind nr . (hnsa tt u National bank of Roseburg is the mo- -ne Into th. hrush M.w t .,,r.. tive for a large number of people t00i that Jt mKht have bee'n a male along tne umpqua Deing in ronnna snake who wag enjoying an outing Twenty-Five Year Ago. From Ths Oregonlsn of Mar . 19 Cutworms are reported to be doln considerable damage to crop Id Shtr- man county. Seattle has contracted lor the feed ing or city prisoner at 1 cent a meal A Clatskanle man Is building a new sawmni at Chinook to have a capacity ui ovuv icei oaiiy. The city council has taken ction to rename certain streets which are now duplicated. , these days. The case Is on trial in the federal court. Walter Reed of Reeds port, A. N. Orcutt of Roseburg and a score of others are here on the case. 'C. A. "Beehive" Smith of Astoria is registered at the Benson. Mr. Smith doesn't say so, but traveling salesmen are authority for the Statement that the way he orders big bills of goods is a substantial testimonial to the progressivenesa of the city by the tea. Dexter Rice, former member of the legislature from Douglas county. Is in town on business. Rice hill, which was formerly a bad spot on the Pacific highway, was named after his family. There is a f irst-clasa "blacktop" pave ment on thlt; section of the highway now. C L. Ireland, newspaper man of Moro, Sherman county, is registered at the Perkins. Mr. Ireland is one of the Oregon newspaper men who Is not seeking an appointment in the diplomatic service. O. P. Coshow, former member of the state senate and one of the lead ing democrats of southern Oregon, Is in the city on legal business from Roseburg. W. L. Campbell, who has been men tioned a a candidate for appointment as United States marshal for Oregon, is at the Hotel Portland, registered from Tillamook. if. N. Blagen of Hoqulam, where he is interested in the lumber Indus try, is an arrival at the Benson. with those little, ones, all the same nurse. W. J. R. BEACH. CHICKENS ARE EXASPERATING Poet-Gardener Tired of Job of ' Scare Crow for Neighbor's Flock. PORTLAND. May 5. fTo the Edi tor.) At 6 o'clock each blessed morn across a vacant J t. comes Hansen' chickens in a flock to frisk my garden spot. And heralded by noisome note they reach the hallowed patch, and then they sacrellglously begin to dig and scratch. There's one old hen par ticularly that's mottled green and pink, with tail of brief finality and one eye on the blink, to right and left (the prudish thing), she coyly twists her head, and survey (retro spectively) my cherished lettuce bed. The rooster is a specimen one doesn't often see, possessing such peculiar traits of restless energy; with toe nails of extended lengths ha digs down to bed rock, the while exerSeratingly encourages the flock Assembling on my lot each day they tirelessly combine, to ravage every thing in sight that I've considered mine: they specialize on cauliflower In sprouted corn seeds, too. They're on th Job from early morn and stick to it like glue. Tis quite exasperating sure It fills my heart with woe, to be compelled oft to enact the role of a scarecrow: and standing sternly in Hhelr midst, throw stones and shout: "Shoo! Shoo!" And hear that same retretng form so-oo-a oo-a oooo! ORR O. SMITH. I Fifty Tear Ago. From Th Oregonian ot Mar . 1871, Elklns brothers are erecting a large now nuurini mill at iDnon. A society composed of men whe served in the war against the rebel lion has been formed at Olympla. A company Is being formed to bulli! a plank road from East Portland t the bank of the Columbia acros fron. Vancouver. Orlsrha of Fauat. HILLSBORO, Or., May 4 (Ta th Editor.) Please tell me who Is (orj was) tne autnor Of "raust." Is It a play or an opera? A say is a play by Shakespeare. B say It an opera by a German composer. B. Published legends concerning P jonann faust first appeared In 15k He was said to have lived near Wle mar, Germany. Romance, poem plays, a ballet and an opera hav grown out of these legends. Th mom noted Is the tragedy of John Wolf gang von Goethe, a German. Goethe "Faust" was adapted Into an Enrlls play by W. G. Wills, a British dram atlst, land was produced by Henry Irving and by losser actor. Th opera, which Is also founded Ooethe's Faust, was composed by Charles Francois Gounod, a French man. Preceding Goethe, some o the Fauat tradition were dramat lzed by Christopher Marlows, Engllsl poet and dramatist. After varlou development Marlowe's work flnall became a puppet play and is ami In existence. "Faust" 1 also th name of a symphony by Liszt, Hungarlar. composer. Berlioz, French compor composed a cantata, "The Damnation of Faust." Soldier Cllvra an Asiwer American Legion Aveekly. A mud-epsttered doughboy slouched Ints th I hut where an entertain ment m in progres and alumpec Into a front seat A firm, kindly and efficient offlrl approached him BHying, "Sorry, buddy but the entire front section It re served for officer." Wearily the youth rose. "All right," ha drawled, "but the on I just got back from n ain't.'' s