THE MORXIXG OltEGOXIAX, WEDNESDAY, MAY 11, 1921 ESTABLISHED BY HENRY I. FITTOCK. Published by The Oregonlan Publishing Co, 135 Sixth Street, Portland, Oregon. C A. MORDEN. E. B. PIPER, Manager. Editor. The Oregonlan Is a member of the Asso ciated Press. The Associated Press Is ex clusively entitled to the use (or publication of ail news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. Subscription Bate Invariably in Advance. (By Mail.) IaiJy, Sunday Included, one year J8.00 JJauy. Sunday Included, six months... 4.23 Daily, Sunday Included, three months. 2.25 Daily, Sunday Included, one month... ."5 Daily, without SunriAv. nni vear 6.00 Daily, Without Sunday, six months... 8.25 Dally, without Sunday, one month.... .sO- Weekly, one year 1.00 Sunday, one year 2.50 (By Carrier.) Dally, Sunday Included, one year $9.00 Dally, Sunday Included, three montha 2-25 iauy, Sunday Included, one month io Daily, without Sunday, one year 7.80 Daily, without Sunday, three months. 1-95 Daily, without Sunday, one month 65 Bow to Remit Send - postofflce money order, express or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at owners rjsic t;tv nostomce aaaress in ,xull. Including county and state. Postage Bates I to 16 pages, 1 cent; 18 to 22 pases. 2 cents: 34 to 48 pages, 3 cents; 50 to 64 pages, 4 cents: 66 to 80 pages., 5 cents; 82 to 96 pages. 6 cents. .Foreign postage double rate. Eastern Business Office Verree & Conk Jin. Brunswick building. New York: Verree aV Conklin. Steger building. Chicago; Ver ree c Conklin. Free Press building. De troit, Mich.; Verree & Conklin, Selling puiiding, Portland: San Francisco repre sentative, JR. J. Bidwell. GREED AM) DECENT WAGES. When Samuel Gompers speaks) of Treedy hordes of employers," he teonfeniently overlooks the fact that Treed is a vice common to all men, Employers have their share, but so Jiava the workmen for whom Mr. Gompers professes to speak. The problem is to effect a settlement be tween the two greeds by imposing -the restraints of justice, in order that production may go on and that the nation may prosper. This result ja not promoted by utterances which ascribe to one party to the contro versy a monopoly of a human failing that Is equally prevalent among the jother party. " ' A false conception of the source of sages is betrayed by this remark of Che labor leader: The Industry that cannot afford to pay trend, decent wages to its workers ought aot to exist. Of aourse such an industry ought not to exist, but the decision whether "good, decent wages" shall be paid and what their amount" does not ul timately rest with the owner of the industry, for he does not pay wages out of capital or out of his profits. Wages simply consist of the part of the value of goods that is produced ly labor, for wages are paid by pro duction. Capital and labor each con tribute their share to the value of the goods, and the dispute concerns the division. Ifabor is concede more than its share, the industry will cease to exist because it will be unprofitable. If labor gets less than its just share, it will drift to other occupations or, if that way out fails, will become inefficient and may de stroy both profit and the opportunity to earn "good, decent wages. If Mr. Gompers and his follow rs would act on this fact by striv ing for a plan of adjustment by which capital and labor will each get its just share of what they jointly produce and by then increasing pro duction, they would automatically raise wages, for they would realize that the more they produce the more they earn. When they demand time wages in place of piece wages and on getting them, reduce production under the delusion that they are "putting one over on" their employ ers and are making sure of thei: jobs and of more jobs, they actually reduce their own wages, for they re duce that out of which alone wages are paid. Though wages measured in dollars may not be reduced, their (purchasing power is held down or reduced by the higher overhead cost and the limitation of supply which would result from general adoption f those practices. By starting from the axiom that wages are paid from production labor would learn that the readjust' ment of wage scales is a necessary part of the general economic reor conization that is in progress and that it will be as well off after as it was before the readjustment, pro nided all' concerned do their part 1-abor would then put those employ ers whose greed led them to resist in an indefensible position and would turn public opinion against them. It would be supported by the people in demanding that ail other interests in the line of production come down to the new level and that all obstrua lions to readjustment be removed. The difficulty is that each of these Interests wants the others to come down first, when all should come down together. No good end is served by calling each other greedy. Greed is merely an opprobrious term for that desire for gain which is common to all. If all take that for granted and start talking business on the basis of established economic facts, they will reach an agreement and, industry can go ahead. dustrialy' supremacy, especially in steel manufacture. For this reason Britain led-for many years, but by increasing coal output and by acqui sition of the Lorraine iron mines Germany pushed Britain into second place in Europe and was forging to the front in industry and commerce. As American coal production grew, the United States gained in steel out put until it has now passed both of its European rivals in the race, and has taken the lead in manufactures generally. Now that oil is supplant ing coal, this country still holds the lead with its great petroleum lakes, but it must reach out for more oil lest its development be checked. MOB IAW. The awakening of public opinion in Georgia, due to the sensational disclosures made in the so-called peonage trial, promises to lead to a revolution against mob law, not only in the south but in every other sec tion of the union, and not only with respect to its racial aspects but in every other phase. The peonage regime of temperance. At 80 he wrote a pamphlet detailing the suc cess of his experiment, and at 90 another, when he had recovered a fortune which had been lost by his grandson. At 100 another pamphlet attested that Carnaro was still as vig orous as ever. The lesson that Mr. Depew derives from the life of Car naro is two-fold that "the greatest life-saver and health-preserver is to be able to cut out whatever disagrees with one, and to limit the quantity of whatever agrees with one," and also that the practice of over-indulgence antedates the, discovery of America by Columbus. Confidence in the present and faith in the future are strengthened by knowledge that calamities have never proved as seri ous as they seemed. ENTER THE GOLDEN JAG. Midas was so intoxicated with de sire for wealth that he craved the golden touch, and straightaway transformed his own little daughter to a statue of precious metal. Cap tain Kidd, intent on pieces-of-eight, ! OCR NEED OF FOREIGN OIL. Imports of oil from Mexico indi cate the reason for the attention that the administration gives to that fluid in its foreign policy. They have in creased from ,15,647,279 in 1917 to 68,277424 in 1920. Though im ports of other commodities Increased also, oil composed S6.2 per cent of the total in 1920 as compared with 1J.9 per cent in 1917. In the first three months of 1921 we imported oil worth 123.467,657 as compared with 810,355,977 in the first quarter of 1920, and the former amount was 62 per cent of. our total imports from Mexico. Consumption of oil in this country and refining for export grow faster than domestic production. To a rapidly Increasing degree we are de pendent on foreign supplies, and pro vision of an adequate supply has be come a duty of the government This situation explains President Hard ing's cultivation of good relations with Colombia and Venezuela. The oil dispute with Mexico remains un settled and if the supply of the two South American republics had fallen Into foreign hands, Mexico could have driven a hard bargain with us. Being in a position to make favor able terms with Colombia and Its neighbor, the president can safely take a more independent stand in dealing with Obregon. The nation with the largest oil re sources will be in a fair way to lead the world In industry and commerce, for oil and its derivatives are the fuel for locomotives, ships, automo biles, aircraft and stationary en gines, coal being outclassed wher ever oil can be obtained without prohibitive transportation cost Be fore the oil age opened, supremacy la cpu proauEuon.carried with, it iv thought nothing whatever of pistol- cases having aroused the better cm- ing all who stood between him and zens of Georgia, the governor called I treasure. Thirty pieces of silver dazzled Judas. And so we are to some extent prepared for the other wise unique hypothesis of a. Chicago jury, which held that a youthful Dank messenger was "intoxicated by bonds." To be fair with the jury it must be said that they disagreed, a stubborn minority of five insisting that the possession in trust of $700 000 worth of liberty bonds wrought upon the messenger like forty-rod whisky. "He was bond drunk when he stole those securities," insisted one juror. "He did not know any more what he was doing than a drunken man knows when he draws off and slugs somebody. The lad was groggy from the bonds. This successful plea for leniency opens up a new avenue of escape for the detected criminal. More and more does error become psycho pathic, and less criminal. We seem not half so much concerned with the punishment' of guilt as with the dis covery of something that will con done it Bond drunkenness, the in toxication of handling wealth, has long been a familiar malady. Those who succumb to it flee, without sense of direction, to Canada or South America, wretched inebriates who know not what they do. But because we were unaware of this quaint affliction, styling it merely embezzlement many a poor wight has been run down and locked in the penitentiary, to sober up from ten to twenty years. a conference at which ways ana means for promoting justice were discussed, and the following signifi cant statement was given out: No falser appeal can be made to south- era chivalry than that mob violence is necessary for the protection of woman hood. It is no protection to anything or anybody. It Jeopardises every right and every security we possess. Governor Dorsey's statement to the public meanwhile shows that out of 135 cases of lynching reported to the state authorities, only two were based on the crime which is usually made the excuse for lynching in the south, and that this is not a new situation because of 145 cases re ported in the same state prior to 1912, only five had this excuse. The facts seem to be, on the governor's own showing, that these were mostly plain cases of mob violence, with which chivalry had nothing to do and that they were threatening to become a public vice when the gov- ernor stepped into the breach. There is no doubt that the plain statement of fact made by this courageous of ficial and the frank admission it contains will do more good than all the propaganda by distant reformer in many years. The evil of lynching is neverthe less not exclusively chargeable against the south. In the thirty-five years for which statistics have been collected, the record shows that there have been 375 lynchings in the states of the north and west Oregon being credited with ten, Washington with fourteen, Idaho with eight and California with thirty. Only six states of the union, five of them in New England, have a clean record. The example set by the Georgia gov ernor has the advantage of calling attention to a great evil while dis- tools on the instant the whistle blows. It is doubtful if these will be disclosed by examinations of the type under discussion. We doubt indeed, whether Mr. Edison himself leans very heavily on them. The man who not only has invented a score of amazing instruments of modern civ ilization but who instantly solved the practical problem of maintaining a nation's supply of phenol when we were suddenly cut off from foreign sources by the war, can hardly have fallen into the error of supposing that the encyclopedia is the best test of character or of intellectual power. arming sectional antagonism, an the lesson ought not to be ignored by other communities. The over whelming phase of mob violence is its effect upon those who perpe trate it. and the disrespect for all order that it breeds. Governor Dor sey's declaration that it "is no pro tection for anything or anybody" is not an overstatement of the case. A PERENNIAL LESSON IN OPTIMISM. Chauncey Depew, who celebrated his 87th birthday the other day, em bodies in his own person the opti mism of a sound philosopher to whom the years have granted a fine perspective. Happy are they wh are able to view life as a whole, as does Mr. Depew, and have not re tained exclusively the impression of calamities which, because they have been exceptional, stand out most vividly in the experiences of men of another type. The past and the present taken together and not sep arately, constitute the groundwork of Mr. Depew's hope for the future, "It is an almost forgotten memory,' he says, "how often the country has gone to the dogs during these thirty years." But he has little patience with those who continue to talk of the growing selfishness of communi ties, of their jealousies, rivalries and competitions which separate them Into hostile groups talk which gives a general idea that good fellowship and unselfish companionship have largely disappeared." Yet no one knows, better than Mr. Depew that generalizations from in complete data are apt to be untrue. By reviewing the history of the com paratlvely recent past he is able to discover that most so-called crises have dissolved Into nothingness. The singular and almost universal craze' for silver money, the threatened col lapse of railway transportation, at tempted legislation which "would have speedily resulted in the United States taking Us place alongside of that of Mexico and China, were but the passing manifestations of an hour. Nothing that occurred in those times, and which then seemed to promise only calamity, gives rise for uneasiness now. The logic of Mr Depew's review lies In his Implica tion that a nation that has success fully weathered the storms of the past can be expected to survive those of the present It will be suspected that In reveal ing his capacity for contemplating without pessimism the events that have ocurred during his long life Mr. Depew has betrayed the secret of his own longevity. Yet it will Interest those who seek the fountain of youth for themselves to know that he has an even more specific recipe. The lesson of Benjamin Franklin's life which Mr. Depew has adopted as ap plicable to his own, was variety of occupation. "It is the most valuable lesson for continuing intellectual and physical vigor and for success in the career which yoiihave selected as our life work. On the other hand, one of the greatest crimes which shorten life is indifference." The two most fatal phrases and the most common are, "What's the use?" and Why should I?" A hungry and needy world "answers both with open op portunities for- service, helpfulness and good fellowship." Mr. Depew makes an interesting distinction between hobbies and fads." He looks over with interest and amusement the fads of the past The Millerites, predicting the speedy end of the world, the blue glass cure, the enthusiasts who walked bare footed in the grass in the belief that they would be cured of all their ills by the morning dew, the craze for eating fish to increase one's brain power these have had their day, though Mr. Depew regards over-indulgence as perhaps the world's be setting sin. But herejie is under no illusion that it is a sin peculiar to the present day. There was, for si mple, the Venetian Carnaro, who at 60, realizing that most of his con- EDISON AND THE COLLEGE MAN. It is reported again that Thomas A. Edison holds a low opinion of college men, based on their inability to answer a lot of miscellaneous questions which prove little or noth ing as to the general Intelligence of the individual to whom they are pro pounded. If It is true that Edison selects his technical employes on the basis of such purely informational examinations as the one which re cently appeared In a news dispatch, the wonder is not so much that the wizard has been disappointed, as that he has obtained any recruits at all. For while it is true that here and there in the list we find a ques tion that seems a fair test of an ap plicant's capacity for observation and his curiosity concerning common phenomena, most of the questions do not meet that fundamental require ment. For example, we suppose that the young man in his twenties Vhose mind does not react to the name of Cleopatra is in some way defective; but we still believe that there is hope for one who does not know that John Napier, baron of Merchiston, Invented logarithms, or for the fel low who cannot bound the state of West Virginia. We had thought in deed, that this latter particularly ab surd conception of the functions of geography had been abandoned some time ago. Much may depend on chance as to the kind of information the young man picks up. No Oregon candi date would fail to score at least a partial credit for his answer to the question, "Where do we get prunes?" but we are not so certain what he would do with "Why is cast iron called pig iron?" How many know that John Howard Payne wrote Home, Sweet Home," that the con dor is an Andean vulture or . that cork comes from Spain? We shall not belittle the man whose encyclo pedic cranium is stored like a well- equipped property room with these strangely assorted odds and ends, but on the other hand we are anxious not to overestimate the value of them. It does not take an Edison to stump a college boy; any bright six-year-old In a half hour could make Edison himself feel like the proverbial thirty cents. "What ingredients are in the beet white paint?" We thought we knew until we read an advertisement the other day that almost convinced ns that this was a matter of personal taste. "Where do we get domestic sardines?" Is It no.t unfair to expect the boy just out of school to know the intimate secrets of the food trade? We should enjoy asking Mr. Edison a question or two though we don't suppose that our present high opinion of his intelligence, in which we yield to no one, would suffer in the least If he should fail to answer them. What Mr. Edison, is the difference between a- manatee and a dugong? Who wrote "Curfew Must Not Ring Tonight?" To what family does the lentil belong? What Is Labrador tea? Bound Jugo-Sla via. What is the state flower of Delaware? And so on. It is of such that our compendiums of handy facts and useful information" are made. Yet such Is the fallibility of human institutions that we have never yet come upon one of those books of ten thousand facts and fancies that contained the answer to a particular question that we wanted answered at a particular time. It is, moreover, to the credit of many colleges that they are aban doning the Gradgrlndlan theory of instruction, as they are also begin- ing to place less emphasis than formerly on the text book as the boundary of knowledge. The main purpose of education is not to stuff the human attic with unrelated facts but to -stimulate initiative and in crease the power or independent thinking. Gladstone's ignorance of the value of Darwin's scientific labor was matched by the naturalist's in capacity for political science. .Yet the Issue of relative intelligence is not solved by either of them. We suppose that Mr. Edison wants to surround himself with young men in whom the fire of enthusiasm burns fiercely, whose curiosity Is un bounded, who can think for them- LIGHT ON FOE'S PERSONALITY. It is inevitable that punsters should greet the discovery of numer ous original manuscripts of Edgar Allan Poe with reference to his first literary success, "A Manuscript Found in a Bottle." For the ery valuable specimens of Poe's script were recently brought to light from a pillow case a novel repository filled with treasure that will be much sought after by collectors. The find was made by an eastern woman, the direct descendant of Henry B. Hirst a New England poet contemporaneous with Poe, but unlike ' him in that fame cast no laurels on his last sleep, Not only did that ancient pillow-case furnish the originals of "Lenore,1 "Annabel Lee," and "Eulalie," but it presented many letters from Poe to Hirst several of which were foreign to the muse and frankly discussed Poe's personal quarrels and tribulations. Whoever remembers Sweet Alice and the sorrow of her lover will quicken to interest 'when it is an nounced that Poe not only held the writer of the song in scorn, but ac tually met him In physical encounter. Thomas Dunn English was the au thor of "Ben Bolt" written Iifl842 and the enmity In which Poe held him was shared by Hirst, with whom English fought a duel. The yellowed pages of Poe's old letters, though they discuss this bond of contempt for English, do not enlighten a curi ous posterity as to the origin of the quarrels. Evident it is that in those days poets were not merely gracile darlings of the drawing room, but defenders of their honor with fists and pistol. And although duelling has quite-vanished from the mode, modern poets proved their mettle in the world war. But the parallel is not exact, as a parallel should be. Who, please inform us, has the har dihood to imagine the male members of Amy Lowell's cult descending to a brawl with some brawny champion of metrical rhyming verse? Of his encounter with English, which ap pears to have given him more grati fication than a publisher's accept ance, Poe wrote to Hirst: I gave E. a flogging which he will re member to the day of his death and, luckily, In the presence of witnesses. He thinks to avenge himself by lies but I shall be a match for him by means of simple truth. We have been taught to regard Poe as a moody genius, given to those excesses which are the perqui sites of the gifted, and in some de gree dogged to his death by the cruelty of an unappreciative world. His letters to Hirst present the com bative phase of his character and would indicate, if we accepted his own appraisal, that Poe was well able to return the buffets of ad versity. BY - PRODUCTS OF THE PRESS Newspaper Mem Fall to Save Wslle Nation Seta Record. Married men save more than single men, says Richard Splllane in the Philadelphia Public Ledger. More bank accounts are opened In June, the month of marriage, than any other time in the year. The American people particularly the working people are doing well In the way of thrift Never were the savings of the people greater than in 1920. The foregoing are facts which were brought out at the national confer ence of savings bank men in Phila delphia. Some of the figures are astounding. For example: The deposits in the 619 mutual, savings institutions aggre gate ,5,535.389,907. It is difficult for the mind to grasp the immensity of amounts when billions are in question. Suppose then you use some illustra tions. That 5H billions almost totals all the currency in circulation in America. It is equal to more than half of the bar and minted gold in the world. It is nearly double the stock of money gold in America. It means about 861.70 per capita 851.70 for every man, woman and child of the 107.668,000 in the United States. New York may be a spendthrift city, yet its savings banks have 31,832,666, 688 on deposit. In the emigrant in dustrial it has the greatest savings institution of the world. If the rest of America did so wen as New York city the savings accounts of the United States would approximate 30 billion dollars. The figures show that 1920 was the banner year for savings banks. The increase over 1919 totaled 8471,760,885. Now, where did this come from? Was the American workman "blowing In his money as generally supposed? Was he squandering his high wages on silk shirts and expensive shoes and; was his wife decking herself out in furs and gew-gaws? May be some were, but assuredly the vast majority were not. Many, very many, of the wage earn ers were pruaenr. Maniiunuuij shows that mechanics bulk large among the depositors; that the foreign-born have a larger proportion of new accounts than the native-born. and that it is getting to be more and more of a custom of parents to open n account for a babe at Its birth and deposit a stipulated sura lor tne youngster each week or each month. In the case of young married couples, the majority of the accounts were in the name of the bride. This is fitting and chivalrous. It may seem queer, but policemen, firemen and newspaper men are at the tail of the procession of savers In these banks. The explanation as to policemen and firemen is that they have their pension and disability funds. There is no explanation as to newsDaner men. They seem to be hopeless. Those Who Come and Go. Talea of Folk at the Hotels. "I can die anywhere, but what J want is to find a place where I can live. That is what I told my family one evening in Kansas, in 1891. and the next morning I had packed up and left I arrived in Oregon a liv ing skeleton, and since then I have weighed 261 pounds." So said W. H. Burghardt -of Salem, registered at the Perkins.1 "I arrived at Oregon City and met George C. Brownell. whom I knew back home, and he in duced me to remain. I was in. busi ness In Oregon City for nine years, and then I moved to Salem. When I came to Oregon I had a cough that sounded like a four-year-old steer bellowing In a 40-acre lot, but after the rains came, a few weeks after, ward, my cough left me and I began to take on fleeh." Mr. Burghardt, who is now 82 years old, was actively engaged in mining up to half a dozen years ago. He gays one of the finest gold and silver mines In the state is on Gold Creek, in Marlon county One of his last mining operations was in buying the Oriole, in Jose phine county, in which he Invested one dollar to bind the bargain with the owner, and later he sold his quarter interest for 88.000. which he admits was a good return on the In vestment. The Oriole, insists Mr. Burkhardt Is a great mining property. General business conditions In Dal las, Or., are good, according to R- G. Baldree. registered at the Multno mah. "Lumber mills are running giving employment to many." sail Mr. Baldree. "Prune raising is a big Industry with us, but prune raisers are not overly optimistio over the price prospects for their crops this summer. . However, with all prices down it will not be necessary to ob tain the high prices formerly given in order to break even. Berries look good. Grain Is In excellent condition. Many goats are raised near Dallas and they do exceedingly well. With industries varied, the residents of Dal las have not been partlculadly hard hit by price declines and most all are looking forward to prosperity." "If I were to choose a place to live In which had the best all-around cli mate in the world, that place would be Salt Lake City." said A. W. Smith, representing a large creditors asso ciation. "We have the four seasons, which I thing makes and city more healthy. In the summer we have no great heat and in the winter no se vere cold. Our citizens are as a mass a fine cut lot. Portland is. In my estimation, destined to have the greatest development of any city, commercially, on the Paslfic coast. The Rose City is a conservative bosl ness center and has few booms or bad depressions which follow boom cities." Mr. Smith is registered at the Multnomah. The marine strike is not getting anywhere except in spots. Branches In the Gulf ports sign up; so does a China liner at San Francisco. Riot ing and other disorder prevail a Atlantic ports. Government will be asked to interfere and probably a salt-water Adamson will be found In the house, though there is no elec tion issue at. stake. Meanwhile Alaska will get relief from hunger by voluntary act of engineers here. Secretary of the Navy Denby' says the statement that United States marines committed atrocities in Haiti is "all rot." Very likely it is. But it would prove his case much more satisfactorily to have the pre vious navy investigations supple mented by a real investigation by congress. Commissioner Pier thinks it would add dignity to Portland's "free" auto park to charge tourists 60 cents for the privilege of using It. Most vis iting motorists would prefer less dig nity and red tape and a little more of the hospitality they get in other cities. The hew commissioner for Indian affairs wants to bar the ancient tribal dances of the Chippewa In dians as being "immoral." Will he give them a clean bill of morality if they substitute the bunny hug and the moonlight jazz? " General March and all the rest of them are trying vigorously to "pass the buck" for responsibility In Bergdoll's escape. A general can do that but If a mere buck private tried It, what an awful mess he'd bring about his ears! A woman arrested yesterday for speeding did, according to the officer, skid sixty yards before she stopped. Sixty yards is almost a block. She is some skidder. The Bergdolls obtained $105,000 In gold from the United States treasury in 1919 and the rest of the people used paper money. The trail is get ting slimy. A compromise settlement of the fishermen's strike shows good feel ing on both sides. Good sense can settle any labor trouble. The first circus is a spring tonic. Every child who "goes" is In better health for It. So Is the old fellow who takes the child. A small tin cup will be best to hold the half-dollars taken from users of the auto park. Most of the radicals really are lunatics, faultily classed as cured after the first term. temporaries were dying young as a esult et their excesses, resolved PS a selves, and who wiU ot drop, tieir John McNamara is one of the few men who do not want their pictures "in the paper." A "Tom" show in town Indicates In strongest terms a return to "normalcy." The boy with the movie habit could sit out two circus shows easily. One-way traffic on First will show the efficacy of the plan. Yesterday's weather proved the rule of "liain before 7," Mill creek, roaring down the steep slopes of the San Bernardino moun tains, in California, gains what might be called a well-earned living for it aelf bv eenerating electric power, irri eating thousands of arid acres, even suDDlyine water for a fish hatchery. The hatchery is new, and' the com mercial purpose for which it has bee established is oddly novel. It breeds trout for fishermen to catch from artificial pools. They come from near and far for the pleasure of angling, and for the fish they take with rod and reel they pay 50 cents apiece. It is angling de luxe. One may go on an ordinary fishing excursion and get hardly a bite; but here results are virtually guaranteed. The pools are within three hours' easy ride by motor from Los Angeles. The arriving fisherman does not even need to bring tackle with him. Rod. line and suitable flies are furnished. If desired, by the management. The angler pays for nothing except the fish he actually catches. When tired of the sport he hands his trout over to an attendant to be cleaned getting a receipt for them. He turns In the receipt at the office, and a box containing the fish is handed to him. A payment of half a dollar apiece squares his obligation. Minneapolis Tribune. W. E. D. Stokes appears to have es tablished a key-trying vogue, of which a brown-stone house at 244 West Seventieth street is the victim. says the Philadelphia Public Ledger. That was the dwelling In which Jo senti Bowie EI well, horseman and whist expert, was murdered nearly a year ago. Related the policeman on the corner: "The first to come whom I caught I took to the police atatron. Then the sergeant said for me to lay off. So I now question them to sat isfy myself that they are not thieves, and then turn" them loose. It came out in the Stokes divorce case that certain keys found in the wife's rooms had been taken and tried In the Elwell door. That started it. Since then there has been no let up. Every husband who suspected that his wife knew the racing man has either sent someone or come himself to test some keys in the lock of the house where Elwell lived. Oh, the worrying and watching a husband has to do In New York. It Is something terrible." The Hawaiian long-distance record for marriage proposals in the shortest space of time is held by Miss Mae E. Burt, a Rochester, N. Y, girl, who. with Mrs. G. C. Saeger, also of Roches ter, has been wintering at Honolulu. She arrived In San Francisco on the China Mail steamer Nanking. Facts and figures regarding the New York girl's impetuous wooers were adduced by Miss Burt's fellow passengers, who pronounced her the most popular of the girls aboard the ship. So many pretty girls were aboard the Nanking that the vessel was termed the "Beauty Ship of the Pacific" by the. score of newspaper men boarding the liner here at quarantine. Pressed for verification of the re port that she .had hung up a cham pionship pennant as a heart-breaker, Miss Burt said: I think there were 82 proposals in all, but the right on was not among them. You might add that the ardent 32 ranged through the scale of rank and color. However, there was noth ing remarkable in my experience, for I know of several girls who I think had as many, but hardly In eo short a 8Dac of time. I guess the tropical lnoonlight was to blame." , A couple of days ago W. T. Simons, who arrived yesterday at the Ben son, received some very pleasant news. Mr. Simons is one of a group of men who have been grubstaking mining deal. A piece of property which they have been teasing along for some time suddenly developed into a real mine, and Mr. Simons has already refused a cash offer of many thou sand dollars for his Interest Mr. Simons, who Is accompanied to Port land by his wife, is cashier of the First National bank at Kellogg, Idaho. This town is the headquar ters of the famous Bunker Hill-Sul livan mine, which was discovered by a mule. To look over the proposed Mount Hood loop location In Clackamas county, W. D. Clarke and Charles Wanzer left yesterday morning for Zigzag. Messrs. Clarke and Warner are division eng'neers of the state highway department. The proposed loop has been in Mr. Warner1! dis trict, but this work will now be trans ferred to Mr. Clarke, Mr. Wanzer to take up the market road problems. At the meeting of the state highway commission the latter part of the month the plan is to invite bids for work on a section of the loop road. Mr. Clarke Is registered at the Hotel Oregon. Rigged out like an admiral, at least to the eye of a landlubber, is John C. "Lane. Before the war John Lane was one of Portland's best soapbox orators and he orated in political campaigns to his own satisfaction and to the disgust of the candidates he was opposing. With the war Mr. Lane "signed on," for he was an old seadog, and now he is skipper of a government boat which is placed at the disposal of congressional com mittees when they go to Puget sound Mr. Lane he ranks somewhere be tween a . rear-admiral and a chief boatswain is in town for a few hours. Registered at the Seward is Robert G. Woodside, commander-in-chief of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, Cap tain Woodside Is making a tour of the principal cities of the United States in the Interests of the organ ization. The captain served in the Philippines, the Boxer rebellion and during the world war held a com mission as captain in Company M, 38th infantry, 3d division. Captain Woodside was severely wounded dur ing the Meuse-Argonne offensive and was awarded the distinguished serv ice medal for his work during this offensive. WHEN HARDEN WAS .MILITARIST Writing im 114 Qalte Different Froaa Today Appeals. PORTLAND, May 10. (To the Edi tor.) There are few. If any, Ameri cans who will take stock in Maxi milian Harden's solution of Ger many's way of dealing with her repa ration problem. They clearly can see In his correspondence to the American press tnat Ms sole intention is to raise. If possiole, a scruple in American mlnde, whether Germany would be able. In event of further invasion by the allies, to make any sort of reparation to them at all. Mr. Harden adroitly explains that such move would render Germany bankrupt and unbalance the finances of the entire world. There are men yet alive who remember Germany's audacious way of collecting repara tions from France in 1871. Germany then did not withdraw her last troops from Paris until the last penny of 81.000.000,000 had been collected. Did that unbalance the financial affairs of the world? Would it do so now, with the case reversed? Would not .the financial affairs of any nation be more disturbed by the non-payment of some huge debt owed it than by full payment of the same? Mr. Harden assumes,' possibly, that what he had to say following the German Invasion of Belgium and northern France has been forgotten by the American people. Here is his opinion (German) of conquered terri tory in 1914, and how Germany should deal with it: Now we know what the war Is for. It It to hoist the storm flsg of ths empire on the narrow channel that opens and locks the road Into ths ocean. We shall remain In Belgian Netherlands, to which we shall add the thin strip of coast up to the rear -iia. r rum t aiais to Antwerp. Flanders, Llmburg. Brabant, to behind the lines of the Krench forts Prussian. The southern triangle with Alsace-I,nrralne and Luxemburg. We need land for our inuustries, a road Into the ocean. Never was there a war more Just. It shall. It must. It will conquer new provinces for the majesty of the noble German spirit. Maximilian Harden In Zukunft, Decem ber. 1914. (Copied from National Geographic Magazine June number, 1918. Page 865.) Mr. Harden was a German mili tarist in 1914. but does not now be lieve in military - force. He writes today: "Not for love of Germany, bu for the sake of European peace, le an well-meaning men prevent thl new step of the allies the establish ment of military and economic for- eign rule over the industrial district of the lower Rhine and Ruhr." There is a noticeable difference be tween his bold and defiant exorra sions or the early war days and th begging, deceptive ones of today, T.ne American people cannot be mis led by such talk. We shall stand with England and France In the col lection from Germany of every dollar sne owes. W..C. More Truth Than Poetry. By Jarnee J. Montague. Hotel clerks are still trying to fig- out what was the matter with a young woman who appeared on the scene yesterday. She went to one hotel, engaged a room, occupied it for few minutes and then went down to the desk and informed the clerk that she would have to leave town at once. A similar performance was staged at a second hotel and again at third hotel, fossibly she went to one or two more. The young woman registered rrom Los Angeles. Andy Rood of Heppner Is watching the wheat market while at the Im perial. When wheat was at the ton notch last year Mr. Rood failed to sell and now that wheat went to the bottom and is slowly climbing he Is receiving all manner of advice from the sages of the lobby and the advice principally Is recommending that he hold on for a while longer. That Is what Mr. Rood Intends doing. .... as tne circus wasn't enina- to Kainier, dt. Schmidt had to come to Portland to look It over. Of course the doctor wasn't interested partic- lariy in coming to Portland to see circus, but his 6-year-old boy was very anxious to see the menagerie no tne ciowns ana tne trained horses everything, to the indulgent doctor just naa to Dring the boy to the show. They were at the Imperial yesterday. There is to be a tunnel driven through Elk rock between Portland and Oswego, George W. Bosche. chief engineer for the Southern Pacific system, has arrived in the city to arrange for the tunnel. A group of telephone officials are registered at the Hotel Portland from New York. They are Bancroft Gherardl, E. 8. Wilson, R. H. Burchen and F. R. Estabrook. From San Fran cisco comes J. C. Nowell. Thomas B. Kay was in town yester day to buy wool for his woolen mill plant at Salem. He casually observed that "Salem is the best town in the state." 8. O. Correll. of "Baker. U. S. A" as he registered at the Imperial is a lawyer and an official of the stock men's association. OUTSIDE ADVICE MAY BU KEKDEU Unprejudiced Srleetloa of Exposition Site ThonRfet Neceaaery. PORTLAND, May 9. (To the Ed Itor.) The many diverse views sofa propounded for the 1926 exposition site are largely sectional, and with all due respect to their proponent savor largely of personal and selfish Interests. I am of the belief that this Is the one opportunity in the past and fu ture history of Portland that it wil be necessary to call men outside of Portland and without any private In terests to subserve to make such selection. If It Is to be an ideal and practica location, as also a permanent park site that will come Into the zone of a one-fare location although I think this of small importance and at the same time combine the possibilities of the minimum of expense and con ciliation of Vancouver co-operation and practical use for all time, I will suggest a site that I have not yet seen mentioned. In bulletin No. 7 of the city plan ning commission I find the reference to the Burson tract and Mocks bot tom, "with Its wonderful view of the Willamette river without question one or the finest views in the world Here is a crescent frontage of nearly one mile overlooking the WII lamette river which can be seen from all steamers coming to Portland and from five transcontinental railroads traversing the Willamette river. Its possibilities of Importance are greater than any site so far advo cated, and access thereto can be made lit from five to 20 minutes from the center of Portland. It Is a irltc In the preparation of which not a dollar would be wasted and would add large investment to Portland and Oregon. The exposition board has a "big job ahead." and it must have the co operation of ail of the city of Port land and the state of Oregon, and also our sister city of Vancouver and the state of Washington. It is my hope that the selection will redound to th beet Interests of the present and future of Portland and Oregon end also our sinter city of Vancouver and the state of Wash ington. J. H. F. AHhl for Everyone Rnt Nrnspiser. TORTLAND, May 9 (To the Edi tor.)- From an editorial In The Ore gonlan May 4, two false Impressions may be gained by the public It Is Indicated that unfairness may have been dealt to the "Old Salt." Lieutenant-Commander John A. Beck wlth. and that the writer Is unac quainted with the correct spelling of the word "pogy." 1 hasten to lay the correct fact he fore you. The spelling of the word "pogy" did not come up during the spelling match. The word given to Lieutenant Beckwlth was "menhaden" and It was explained to him that it was the polite society word for pogy. The spelling "pogey," as appearing in a recent Issue of one of your con temporaries, is an invention, pure and simple, on Its part. P. H. KNE ELAND. Signs Highways. MONROE, Or., May 9. (To th Edl. tor.) There Is a law,.! there not, prohibiting these ugly advertising signs being tacked on the fences along the Pacific highway io wnom should one make complaint? Th highway near Monroe Is certainly plastered up with these offensive signs. R. C, No advertising signs can be posted on the right of way of th state high' ways, a the state highway commie, slon will not give cohsent. There no law en th subject. Signs can be placed on private property along th state roads. If th local communities have Insufficient pride to prohibit this defacing of the countryside. Whe Paper ta Gift. PORTLAND. May 10, (To the Edi tor.)!- I am a subscriber to an eve ning paper nd for nearly two week I received two paper Instead of one. At the end of the first week I notified headquarters of the mistake, but I continued to receive two paper until notified them a second time. Will I have to pay for both papers? ' 2. Would I have to pay for both paper if I had not notified them of their error? J. E. S. (1) No. 2 No. A nwpapr eni without order Is a gift In th eye of th law, whether accepted or not AS GOOD AS THS SOIL. A Yale professor contends that Tals Is falling off in athletics becaass the Impov erished soil of Connecticut raises Inferior vegelablea Silas Jones of Mlddlcbury Didn't fertilize hi soil; Silas wasn't ever very Keen for any form of toll. All th spuds he lug last autumn Turned up kind o' gaunt and pals. But a wholesale grocer bought 'em For the football squad at Vale. Weren't like real potatoes should b; Didn't look nor taste th same; Weak and watery a could be; That why Princeton won the garnet Henry Smith, just out of Groton, Thought old way were good nough. Henry didn't seem to rottoa To the scientific stuff. Sickly looking were hi squashes. Like a child that' nourished wrong. But the young New Haven froshes Bought and at 'em, right along. This mistake In dietetic They adhered to as a rule Till their rank in frosh athletic Was a theme of ridiuul. Jasper Hosklns of East Haddara Wasn't smart by any means; Knew about as much as Adam Of tbe way to raise airing beans. Crops were never alternated. Thin and droopy wer th vines. And th beans weren't saturated With the needful vltamlnrs. Notwithstanding, Jasper sold 'em In New Haven, for the crew; That' why Yale could never hold'em When th routers tuld 'am tul A Sapersnaa. Rfng Lardner assprts that rrfsidmt Harding always counts his strokes on th golf course, which Is a bigger boost than even his campaign man ager ever gave him. Prwfasmel Mr firry. We don't see many clothing manu facturers' ads In the Dearborn Inde pendent. Taat ll Do It Fast (.ah. Apparently the only way to reduce navies I to have another war. (Copyright. li2l. by Bell Kyndlrate. Tne ) Burroughs Nature Club. Copyright, Heugktoa-Mlff Ha te. fa a Voa Answer Tkeae derations r 1. Docs the cottontail rabbit turn white In winter? 2. Which mate Is the active part ner of a bird pair? 3. What harm do cat and dog dn, what disease do thry carry, and how can it be treated? - Answer in tomorrow' Nature Notes. A jit era to Prevloaa Qneatloaa. 1. Doe tbe male oriole enter th nest? It Is the exception for the male bird to enter the nest or take part In build ing It. but the male oriole visits the half-finished structure of his mate, looks it over, tug at the strings now and then as If to try them, and, I suppose, has his own "opinion about the work, but 1 have never seen him actually lend a band or bring a string or a hair. 2. Can anything be done to rid a cottage situated In a spruce grove of wasps? If these wasps or hornets are ac tually in tho cottage or flying near the entrance and disputing right of way with human tenants, thry csn hn ousted In several was. Try a sulphur candle If thry have nested In a gable. Cracks must be scalrd to keep the fumes In. Nests outside can be lo cated and burned at night applying a torch. If the situation Is not too dangerous. Ground-dwelling kinds can have blsulphldo of carbon poured in. It Is explosive and dangerous Old tin cans with half an Inch of cane molasses at the bottom can be burled to their tops and will catch some. Hornet re useful as fly catchers, and should be protected unless actual ly annoying human neighbors. 3. Do mosqultors cause malaria? Tes, In a sense, though tho actual disease is a poison in the blond caused by the presence of parasites that feed on the red blood cells, and reproduce rapidly In the blood. Tho mosquito' part is carrying these par asites on Its brak, after biting an In fected person. In Other Days. Tneaty-flve Year Age, From The Oregonlan of May II, IM The battleship Oregon reached Fan Francisco on her trial trip, which proved the boat to be the peer or fighting ships when she made a trial average of 11.34 knots an hour against the previous record of II. li knots, held by the Massachusetts. Subscriptions are being asked In he upper Rogue river valley to help Improve the highway rrom the sum mit of the Cascades to Craier lake The new Kalrfiela. Wash.. che factory has started operations. Citizens of Cottage Grove hav started work on tbe Bohemia road. which will tap the gold mining dis- rlct adjacent to that city. Fifty Years Ago, Fmn The Oregonlan of May II. 1x51. Within tho last three days 724 pas sengers arrived In Portland by boat. A new business enterprise I slated for Portland with th application to the city council for billboard accom modation for a new advertising con cern. With the Installation of a steam engine for power the state peniten tiary expect to make 2 Ovo.OoO brick this season. Copies of Sr Law. OAKLAND, Or.. May 9. (To the Editor.) How can person familiar Iza oneself with the following law, effective May th. without employing an attorney? H. B. 74. pertaining to took run ning at larg In Douglas eounly. H. K. 141, relating to line fences. H. B. S57, providing for eompulsorv dipping of goat for eradication of lice. H. A SSI. providing for th fnrm' t!on of weed control districts. Touri truly, E. C. MOORE. At least two of thesa law have had preliminary publication In pamphlet form. Apply to secretary of Stat. Salem, Or. Iriah Toiim Hon as COTTAGE GROVE, Or., May 9. (To th Editor.) I. Pleast tell me If ther Is auch a language a th Irian language. t. Doe Colorado pay a bonus to ex- service men? A READIER. (1) Tea It I omtlms referred to a Caelle and again a th Ert tongue. It ha largely fallen Into disuse. (2) Colorado has had a bonus bill under consideration, but we nav no information on It present status.