10 TTTE MORNING OREGOXIAX. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 23,' 1921 I I ? ittommjjCDrmtiait KJHTABt.lSHtD BY HENRY L. I'lTTOCK. Publlhed by The Oresonlan Publishing Co.. 135 Sixth tttreet. Portland, Onion. C. A. MORDK.V, B. PIPER, llanaier. Editor. The Oresonlan la a mtmbir of the Asso ciated Pre... Tha Aeeoclated Preaa la e clusivel? entitled to tha ue for publication of all newa dlapatchea credited to It or not oih-rwiae credited In thla paper and a!o tha local nenn publlahad herein. All rle-hta of publication of special dlapatcbaa haraln are aleo reaerred. Subecrlptlon Rates Invariably In Aifaiwa, (Br Mall.) Dally, Sunday Included, ona year I 00 Dally. SunJay included, ell montha ... 4 29 Dally. Hundy included, three month!. . Z.2J Dally, 8unday Included, ona month ... .75 Dally, without Sunday, ona year 00 Dally, without Sunday, al montha .... 129 Dally, without Sunday, ona month 00 Weekly, ona year 100 Sunday, ona year 2.00 (By Carrier.) Dally, Sunday Included, ona year I on Dally, Sunday Included, thraa montha. . 2.21 Dally, Sunday Included, ona month ... .75 Dally, without Sunday, ona year T.0 laily. without Sunday, thraa montha.. IPS Dally, without Sunday, ona month 65 Mow to Remit Sand poatofflca money order, expreaa or personal check on your local bank. Starrtpe, coin or currency are at ownrr'a rlak. Cilva poatofflca addraaa Id full, Including county and atate. Fo-taae Rate 1 to 10 pases. 1 cant: 19 to pHfea. 2 cental 14 to 46 oaa-ea. t cental .".0 to 6 paiea. 4 centa; So to to r'. J centa; J to 90 pages, cent. Forelan po.taae doubla rata. Eastern Himlneee Office Verree A Conk, tin. 300 Madl.on avenue. New Tork; Verree a tonieim. steser bulldln. Chicago; Ver rea at Cnnkiln, Free Praia building. De troit. Mich: Verree Con kiln. Belling bulldlns. Portland: San Francises rapra- aeniauve, K. J. Bldwell A. FLEA FOB BCRRRXDER OX CAJfAL TOLLS. Postponement of action on Sen tor Borah's bill to revive exsmp l tlon of coastwise ships from Panama ' canal tolls ts recommended by the Springfield Republican on the ground that action by congress during- the Washington conference "would probably affect the negotla- tlona and possibly hamper the Amer ican delegates," also that it would be "offensive diplomacy." Of course these are not the only reasons. An other Is that the British Interpreta tion of the Hay-Pauncefote treaty has been Indorsed by Ellhu Root, cne of the American delegates. But the real reasons given are that the middle west objects to toll exemption as discrimination In favor of the Atlantic and Pacific coast and again the Mississippi valley and that "the transcontinental railroads have reason to complain if their maritime competitors are to be espe cially favored by the free use of a canal for the building of which the whole American people were taxed." The cry of discrimination raised in the middle west might have some cauwe If the Mississippi and Missouri rivers had ceased to flow to the gulf or to be navigable. While they re main open, the middle west can ship Its goods to New Orleans and thence by ocean vessels to the Pacific coast, exempt from canal tolls If exemp tion should be revived. . That oppor tunity is as open to them as it Is to the people of the Columbia valley to ship to Portland and hence by ocean vessels to New Orleans. It is too late to call Improvement of waterways, whether In the United States or on the isthmus, out of taxea an injustice to the railroads. That was an established policy when the railroads were built, and the builders knew It. Whether they will ultimately gain or lose by the canal is an open question. They will lose long-haul, transcontinental traffic. but they will gain by the greater density of population on the Pacific coast and by the Increased volume of short-haul traffic which it will develop. If the middle west had enterprise enough to develop and use Its waterways, population along them would become denser and short-haul traffic thence to the back country would yield profit to the railroads. The last state of the rail roads may easily prove better than the first. Mr. Root Is not the only one of the American delegates who may be embarrassed by having opposed toll exemption. Senators Lodge and Un derwood also voted against It In 1911. With the knowledge of Sen ators Root and Lodge the repub lican platform declared for it and they are exposed to embarrassment by the voters if they oppose it. Pres 'dent Harding In his speeches de clared for repeal of the law passed at Mr. Wilson's dictation, and there is good reason to believe he will do his utmost to put his policy In effect. We have better cause to expect that Mr. Root and Mr. Lodge will live up to the latest pledge of their part) and that Mr. Harding will hold them to It than that they will stand by the opinions they held seven years, or that Mr. Harding will forget the pledge he gave a year ago. By all means let the canal con troversy be settled by diplomacy if possible rather than that It should cause discord .at a juncture when friendly co-operatlon between the two nations most concerned is needed. If diplomacy fall, the In terpretation of the treaty should be referred to arbitration by represen tatives of disinterested nations or to the world court that is about to be established. But American 'eights should not be given up as part of a tacit bargain, as they were in 1814. If an impartial tribunal should find sgalnst the American contention, its verdict would promptly be accepted. Until the justice of our claim Is con ceded or until that verdict Is ren dered. It should be maintained. AX ONLY WAY OCT. Wherever Roy Gardner is in hid ing he is reading the newspapers. The man has an itch for print. Then, too, he is awaiting the comment that will arise from his plea to President Harding, wherein he attests his sin cere hunger for reformation and a chance to go straight. If, as has been assumed, he Is reading the news with care it is not improbable that his glance has chanced upon the story of Robert Lukens, another convict, who Is on the way to re habilitation. It may give him food fcr thought. The road called straight is not an easy one. Men who desert It do not turn back at any by-path. Yet It can be regained. To many observers 11 seems that Gardner has taken the wrong turning, while Lukens Is near to his goal. Lukens entered Ne braska stats'penltentlary under a life sentence and forthwith declared that he was going out again. So far the records tally, for Gardner went to the federal prison with fifty years of expiation before him, and as'he entered bade his Jailors guard him closely. He, too, was going out. But the methods of exit differed. Lukens worked for his, worked through long days of Imprisonment, and long years, to gain the good opinion of the state and to regain the confi dence of his former fellow citizens. Hi sentence was commuted to ten will am. , leave his prison to take up life aga I Ho confidence begetting has been his '.conduct, so thorough his elf school ' ing, that he will re-enter the world as a trained business man with a place and salary waiting for him. Gardner chose the shorter but more hazardous course of escape. In choosing it he but prolonged Ins penalty.. It Is obvious that the daring of the man, his debonair bearing, however they may excite popular admiration, will have little bearing on a favorable consideration of his plea for parole. The law can rot and the president will not treat with an escaped convict, assure him Immediate consideration, at the pre cise moment when he Is flouting the law. The law is not given to dickering. It cannot promise him special consideration In any event, though he should volunteer to sur render and return. Gardner must win these guerdons as Luk'ens won them. For there Is a way out of jail. WHEXf Making the democratic party bone-dry will be quite a Job. Tet certain unimaginative and unln formed democrats, hopeless of the future, are proposing It. They will not get far with It. Mr. Bryan tried t, and failed. The only result was final and' Irremediable loss of prestige In his own party for the man whom It had thrice nominated for the presidency. It Is not necessary to revive the old accusation, or to ..pass on Its truth, that the democracy la the party of free whisky, to say that It s not, and cannot be, the party of prohibition. When it comes out for prohibition, making of prohibition its cardinal tenet. It will cease to oe the democratic party, just as Bryan left the democracy when he became a prohibitionist. If any democrat, prohibitionist or otherwise, is disposed to disagree with the view that one cannot be both a democrat and a (party) pro hibitionist, let him study the history cf the democratic party. Its cardinal principle,- ingrained In the body of its belief and practice from the first. u that It Is the party of free opinion and Individual liberty. In a state ex ercising the least possible 'authority over the rights and privileges of Its citizens. When did the democratic party as a party come out for the doctrine that the true theory of gov ernment is power for the state and rot liberty for the individual? jazz opposition. The other day In speaking of tbe State Fair and the 125 Exposition, The Oregonlan remarked that "the two are enterprises differing In mag nitude and scope but with compara tive benefits alike." The statement Is disputed by the Salem Capital-Journal. In the first place, we are reminded by the Salem paper that the state furnishes all the money for the state fair. So it does. But thts Is the first time the In triguing argument has been ad vanced that the benefits from a pub lic institution depend Inevitably upon the source of its support. We had never given the matter thought before, but it seems to us that if Salem were paying for the state fair, and conducting as good a fair as the tate fair board now does, and thereby attracting the same variety rf exhibits and as great a public in terest as no doubt it would in such circumstances the benefits would be just as noticeable as they now are. We are also Informed by the Sa lem newspaper that it is not true that "the two are enterprises dif fering In magnitude and scope but with comparative benefits alike," recause one is to be bigger than the other! It ts a difficult argument to follow even when one has the full text before him: There la no eomparieon between the state fair and the propoaed 192& Portland exposition. If the atate fair board aaked for three milliona of dollare from the tax payera to etase an expoeltlon at. fialem In the mldet of hard tlmea and esceeslve tax ation, the Capital-Journal would object Juat aa atrenuoualy aa It doea to the Port land prnpoaal. although the beneflta to Salem might be sreater than the beneflta expected by Portland. It would not be fair to taxpayere and the beneflta reeultlns not worth tbe price. Perhaps the Salem objector Is Just hitting out blindly when It argues that the benefits from a big fair will not, as do those of a small fair, ex tend beyond its situation because it costs more. Perhaps it is trying to be funny. Or perhaps In this Jazz fashion it Is only endeavoring to em phasize its opinion that the benefits will not be worth the tax placed upon the property owners. The Issue in fact Is whether the taxpayers are going to get value re ceived for their money whether the tax money they expend is going to be returned. He who thinks it will not be has a right to his opinion and a right to express It, but the public must doubt the sincerity of any ob jectors who, like the Capital-Jour-ral. Insists that whatever benefits may come from the 1925 exposition will not be shared by the state at large. A BILL TO KILL COMPETITION. Some dairy Interests and manu facturers are attempting to elimin ate from the market filled milk, a compound of skim milk and cocoa nut oil. This compound Is labeled ns what It is, its Ingredients are .'tated and any person who offers It for sale as milk, not as a milk com pound. Is liable to prosecution under the pure food law. There is prac tically no dispute as to Its healthful ness, sensibly used together with other foods. Then legislation against it Is a bald attempt to put a com petitor out of business. Much legislation has been passed to relieve the farmer of the adverse results of the decline in prices that have fallen on him in larger degree than other members of the commu nity and to give him equal oppor tunity with others. These laws have general public approval. They are the result of Americans' instinctive love of the square deal. The people will not indorse legislation that is evidently designed to drive out of ruslness legitimate competitors with farmers. .That is the purpose "bf the filled milk bill. It Imposes oppres sive taxes on manufacturers of and dealers in filled milk. It would dis criminate against manufacturers of cocoanut oil and canners of milk compounds and in favor of produc ers and canners of whole milk. This bill is not in the Interest of Tood conservation, for it would pre vent the best use of billions of gal lons of skim milk, which is fed to animals or thrown away when it might, by addition of vegetable oil to replace butter fat, be made hu man food. It is questionable" whetier farmers would benefit by years, and within two years ha I Its enactment, for by making a more remunerative market for skim milk 'he manufacture of compounds may enhance the price of whole milk, The chief sufferer by the new in dustry seems to be the canner of condensed milk, for one of the lead ers In that line has complained that, if not checked, the filled-mllk indus try would force him to make milk compounds in self-defense and to make a large addition to his plant against his will. That plea for legis lative interference with the natural law of competition la unique, and constitutes its own refutation. NEVER AGAIN, Varying points of view were cer tain to artse from the muck of the Arbuckle ease. It Is well that these Co not differ In the Important con clusion that tbe tragic expose pre sents a condition which must be ren ovated. The accomplishment of this is entirely the affair of the motion picture Interests, for It were futile to expect that the law, however vigi lant, could remedy the moral defects cf an entire Industry. The law will aid. and sternly, but the salvation of the Industry is with its principals. And however this be accomplished, or whenever it may be achieved, the fact remains that the American pub lic Is done with Arbuckle. Cancel lation everywhere of the photoplays cf the fat comedian Indicate an ap preciation of this fiat within the In dustry Itself. It has been argued by an occa sional disputant that Arbuckle's films are untainted by his act, un smirched by the odium of his private life, and that It is folly to deny our selves the pleasure of wholesome laughter merely because the creator of this mirth has removed himself from tolerance. The Stan wood (Wash.) News supports this conten tion editorially, arguing that we might as well declare a ban on the enjoyment of certain works of liter ature produced by men whose lives have been blemished by their own waywardness as to deny ourselves the merriment of an Arbuckle comic. By way of comparison the News ar raigns Shakespeare, Byron, Burns, Poe, and O. Henry. Such argument Is Idle and pointless, as it is Insulting f Intelligence. No common ground of comparison exists, either in the life records of these men of gerlus. or In the relative value or tneir product to humanity. Does the fact that Poe, an embit tered but Immortal singer and ra conteur, was a drunkard fill hit readers with unutterable lothlng for the great tales he told, the silvern songs he sang? ur the circum- rtance of O. Henry's prison term for a minor offense Influence against the charm and truth of his stories? To a certain point jwe are tolerant of the weakness, the lapses, of others and more than tolerant of the slips of genius. But in tbe laughable buffoonery of Arbuckle there is noth ing of permanence, nothing worth preservation, nothing that will en dure beyond today. He would be the strangest of mortals, the most obtuse to moral reactions, who could today or tomorrow witness the filmed antics of the ex-star without a vast and natural repugnance. His films have ceased to.be funny. They could never be funny again. We do riot laugh when we loath. It may be that the law, outwitted by reluctant witnesses, will never exact from Arbuckle the full meas ure of expiation. It may even hap pen that be will go free, and that hy&terlcal morons will shower him with pitying tears. Stranger things have happened. But for all that the public will know in its heart that he and tils ilk are splotched with eprosy, and will take no joy In him (.gain. The big, fat, good-humored clown of yesterday will remain the tragic, terrible figure that he is to day. Because of this, a dozen years from now, parents will not wish to have their children see him on the screen. It Is lncontestably true that the pictures in which he appears might be viewed without harm. But (Ike a great many other statements of fact, this somehow does not serve to reassure. There are wholesome sources of laughter everywhere. It Is not only the public privilege. but the public duty, to require that those who entertain it shall not be moral outlaws. We demand a no puritanical, smug-faced piety- from these folk who profit by our patron age, we expect inem to oe no more than ordinarily decent. It were well that the Arbuckle case be long re membered, lest we forget. Even now the motion picture producers are taking heed of its lessons. One cf the largest firms has inserted in :t contracts with players a clause requiring "due regard for public conventions." A wisely bethought provision that will tend somewhat to curb the homicidal horseplay of folk who have quaffed too heavily of public favor. ARMAMENT AND THE FAMILY BUDGET Reduction of armaments was shown to concern directly every family In the United State by George W. Norris, governor of the Philadelphia federal reserve bank, in a speech quoting the ratio of gov ernment expenditures to each family of five in the United States, Britain, Italy and France before and after the war. The combined pre-war ex penditures of the four nations for military purposes have more than trebled, their debt charges have increased ninefold, their total ex penditures have increased ninefold. In the United States debt expendi tures have Increased from $1.15 to $41. 25 per family, military expendi tures from $21.10 to $54.10. all other expenditures from $8.75 to $117.45. a total of $214.80 per family as compared with $88 before the war. Conceding that there la room for economy in general expenditures. Mr. Norris does not see bow tbe services rendered by the government can be cheapened materially. There fore he is "driven Irresistibly to the conclusion that the one place where a large, wise and permanent reduc tion can be made is in our military expenditures," which will cost $787,- 000,000 thts fiscal year. But In so doing we cannot be Indifferent to the fate of Europe, for its govern mental, owe us ten billions and its cltltzens five billions, so we have a otake of fifteen billions in their solvency. They are our principal customers for a very large share of our raw materials and for a consid erable amount of our manufactures, but "thev cannot buv from us In anything like normal quantities" and 'until their buying power Is re- riored we cannot hope to see good business and real prosperity in this country." In order to' help our selves we must help them to help themselves. Our military charges hamper our business, bu the far heavier charges of the other nations hamper it also. None of them can take the risk of disarming while ether nations remain armed, but if all with Japan agree to a radical reduction or not to increase arma ments, "there is light ahead." Here we find the logical connec tion' between taxation and arma ment, between American and foreign armament, between armament in general and prosperity, between the prosperity of this nation and that of other nations, and between prosper ity for all nations and security from war. Our best opportunity to re duce taxes is to reduce armament. We cannot do that unless other na tlons disarm In proportion. They will not unless all do likewise. None will without other security against war. Given that security, all would reduce armament and with it mili tary expenditures. Their govern ments would then become solvent, their people more prosperous and able to buy more and to pay their debts to this country. Much has been said and written of American help to Europe by extending credit to revive Industry there end thus to increase buying power, but economic Instability due to governmental in solvency or depreciated credit stands In the way. Then Europe's recovery must begin with its own effort to re store Its credit by reductng govern t-ient expenditure within income. In larger degree than with us the best opportunity lies In reducing military outlay. At this point America can help most effectively. The ' nations of Europe dare not reduce military forces while many war-fires smol der, ready to burst Into flame. France will not disarm until Ger many is completely d Inarmed or while there Is danger that the mon archists may overturn the republic, unless assured of support from other nations in event of attack.. Germany .tecretly remaina armed in readiness to resist an adverse decision on Si lesia or for civil war between repub licans and monarchists or for a new attack on France. When the war between Greece and Turkey has been fought out. a settlement will be due which may cause the nations to leap at each other's throats. Poland, though bankrupt, dare not disarm in fear of attack by Russia on the east or Germany on the west. National interests are so Interlocked that war no sooner breaks out between two nations than others leap Into the fray with tbe same impulse that leads many present to join in a riot. The United States alone has not only the material and manpower to stop the riot but the moral Influence to prevent it. When the conference meets at Washington, these considerations will Inevitably come up as bearing on armament. It will be found that amicable adjustment of affairs in tbe far east and the Pacific will not afford adequate basis for an agree ment, but that the adjustment must embrace affairs in Europe and the near east. Our delegates will realize that, although the United States has no Interest In disputes that . may cause war In Europe or western Asia, it has a decided interest in peace, therefore in settlement of those and possible future disputes in a manner which shall prevent war. We do not care a nickel for Silesia or Asia Minor, but peace in those regions would help us to cut several dollars from that $214.80 a year that our government costs each family. The people of the Pacific northwest care less about those old-world countries than do those of the At lantic coast, but they care about world peace and prosperity, for these would help them to sell more wheat, wool, fruit, fish, meat, lum ber at better prices to the nations which in a sense wear rags and use rag money In order to pay the cost of great armies and navies. Who has not. adventuring in fic tion, been introduced to the Aztec princess whose lightest glance course through the blood like flame? Not merely beautiful, y'un derstand, but additionally armed with that rare grace which Is a heritage from ancient kings, and all that sort of thing. Inevitably, in. all such stories, she knocks 'em cold. The cavaliers of civilization, inured to ordinary and extraordinary pul chritude, lose their hearts to her without more ado. Recently there was a beauty contest in Mexico. Its participants were Indian girls. For tune and the susceptible judges favored Senorlta Maria Beblna Uribe, whose halftone likeness even now lifts enigmatical eyes from the printed page. And an old dream dies. Tho most beautiful Indian girl ir) Mexico, where Aztec princesses rove three to the square mile, is comely enough but far, very far, from complete cardiac, disturbance. On or off the reservation she would not occasion a romantic riot. Here after we shall stick to fiction. Traffic officers will, in time, be lieve most men are liars. When they catch an offender in fragrant delictu otherwise "boozy" breath be Insists he is sober. Sometimes he It able to convince a judge that he is on appeal. Death of a man from north-end whisky ought to be warning that wood alcohol will get tbe drinker in any surrounding;. Prohibition works, there's no doubt of it, and not in a mysterious way, either. The sinking of the R-( was an ac cident, whether unavoidable re mains to be proved. Those things do not happen at a dock without contributory cause. Some professional beggars admit they make as much as $10 a day, which shows the number of super stitious givers in this city Is not fall ing off. If old Boreas will just get these winds and rain off hia chest today and be a good sport the rest of the week he will suit Oregon. That Wilson foundation 'fund will cot be gathered until the Christmas bills are in and paid. Wise old democrats! Arrange today for an early start tomorrow. Tbe early bird gets tbe worms at Salem. Mary and Doug have sailed for Europe, leaving tbe case to rattle on In Nevada. The man held for driving while intoxicated makes the loudest ap peal. All those eugenlsts in session in New York; cow, bow did they set la? The Listening: Post, By DeW Itt Harry. H. B. GRONDAHU a local prose poet, yields to the spell of the , muse on reading of a $15,000 whisky theft in New Tork. He tells his story, and then, with a delicate touch, con fesses that he is little different from the rest of man. for he Is going, too, by thunder!" The affecting little poem Just crammed with morals follows: "Out on Sixth street George Carrlsso has a rag and paper shop, that ts watched by Pelegrino, who's a good Manhattan wop. There's another watchman, too. De Santls is his name, but he'a thought to be a henchman, who would help the holdup game. "Well, this paper shop of George's Isn't what lt'a aaid to be, for there's now a drunken orgy, and then a wholesale spree. At best It's dread ful risky to have outsiders think that a rag shop harbors whisky for th citixens to drink. "So came a dosen bandit boys with lead pipes in their hands, making Just as little noise as Poland's naval bands. The smell of liquor wafted through the knot boles In the boards; as to their hearts the scent they drew, their pulses beat like Fords.' s "I wonder why this awful stuff completely stifles reason. These fel lows grew extremely rough, which isn't done this season. They seized the watchman by his hair (the one who's square, I mean), and tbe way they done him then and there, I'm glad I never seen. i "They then looked In among tha rags to see what they could see, and they found a million Jags in dosen kegs of old Whisky. So out onto some trucks they rolled a fortune's worth of plunder, and acrambled for the woods. I'm told; I'm going, too, by thunder!" a a Roseburg cannot be so different from most bustling cities, if J. W. Tollman's observations are considered at their face value. Tollman haa pre pared a set of "Roseburg society and fashion notes" and he has s wary eye. ludging from what he writes. The possibilities are that he does not re veal all he sees. Here are some typi cal travesties: "I met a fair one on the street re cently, the last word In 1SJ1 loveli ness, her dress well above two feet, a dainty foot tobogganing from a five inch heel, in training for a toe dancer, I presume. Said dainty feet had two symmetrical supports leading up. The parting glance I gave them they were still going up. On her attire above the waiBt line, I believe they call it lingerie, my searching eyes llngeried. but I thanked my lucky stars I was not the victim to keep it in repair." 'They say . love la blind, if so "the lover' Is missing a whole lot." "When walking the streets now. one scarcely hears the old familiar ex pression 'out. of sight.'" "The ladles must think we are all from Missouri." "The poet speaks of the 'hidden I charms.' Oh well; that was some time ago." "An eminent eastern doctor a few years ago In a lecture stated In his practice he noted thin ladies were more sensitive to cold than plump ones. I cannot help noting how true that is. On our streets the thinner they are, the longer their dresses." Vlaeajarettes. There Is a young girl in Portland who has a spicy manner of comment ing on every-day . happenings. Her comments are in the nature of sharp sarcasm and she coins them seem ingly at will. Here are a few ex amples: When many men get what they want they decide that they don't want it after all. - Never try to take a man from an other girl. ' The ones that fall are seldom worth the trouble. A pretty hat and a smiling face make more friends than a mannish sailor and a frown. People who are forever getting out of bed on the wrong side in the morn ing never get in on tbe right side at night All sturdy oaks are not In the mar ket for clinging vines. It Is as wearing on your disposition i it is on your clothes to have to sit around with nothing to do. Sunday, the day of rest to some people, is the time when the p. w. g. does her week's washing. Irons It, shampoos her hair, manicures her nails and tops a perfect day with a two-bit movie, if she Is lucky in a beau who can afford to take her. e a e According to a local jeweler who sells many engagement rings, the coming of platinum and athletics for women, among many uses, have cre ated a tendency to fit ths ring to the girl's occupation or station In life. No longer la one standard type of ring in use: they are a different as pos sible. It is all according to vocation and recreation. The stenographer or bookkeeper gets one kind, the tennis player a totally different style. Nothing deli cate for the girl athletically Inclined, for if she drives a car, plays golf or tennis the band of finely wrought workmanship will not do. She should choose a heavier, plainer style, ac cording to this expert. If they would wear them only for evening parties dhe delicate might serve the turn, but for all-day use they must be prepared for the atraln. The home girl may have a ring as delicate as she pleases, but occupa tion ahould govern the other choicea. There are so many women in com mercial and even trade lines these days, it waa pointed out, that each ahould consider carefully just how much and how rough wear her ring will receive. a e Front street Is not a beautiful sec tion of the city, but at one time, ao civic history tells us. a natural park existed there and the Indians camped among great trees on a soft natural carpet spread as only Oregon can do it. Now it is a region of cobblestones and commission houses, where raw hides and crates of chickens vie for place with, sacks of cabbages and boxes of fruit. The sidewalks are cluttered with refuse, the street jammed with trucks. Yet amid all this clamor and bustle, where thousands come daily in their mission of feeding a great city, grow ing from a crevice In the much-traveled sidewalk and defying disaster, tiiere is a beautiful spray of maiden hair fern. Those Who Come and Go. ( Tales af Falk at the Hotel "Speaking ef trout," began J. A. Eastes. former mayor of Bend, reg istered at he Imperial, "the greatest place in the world is Diamond lake. I caught the record fiah this year. It was a rainbow which was exactly 2tt feet in length. I went out with a couple of ither people and the three of us. In a short while, caught sbout 24 and every rainbow was more than two feet long." As evidence of the truth Mr. Eaatea fished a num ber of snapshots from his pocket, one of which showed the record nsn do Ing held beside a baby, and tbe rain bow was larger than the inrant. air. Eastes is enthusiastic over the Cen tury drive, which starts and ends at Bend. "There are six beautiful lake on the drive," he explained. 'Los' lake. Sparks lake. Devil's lake. Elk lake. Big Lava lake and Little Lava lake. The road has been made by the government and Is a great at traction for tourists. In a few years it will be one of the established tour ist side-trips in Oregon. Mr. Eastes Is the man who has started to change the ntmaMf Lost lake to Bend lake. "There are three Tost lakes' in the Cascades," said he, "and this makes It confusing when person refers to lost lake.' ao I want to appro priate one of them and call it Bend lake." "Three revenue officers have been killed in tbe railroad depot at Nash ville.. Tenn.. for selling the hand bags of strangers to search them for liquor. Down our way men resent officers' grabbing their grip or suitcase- to look for liquor when the officers have no warrant," said v. J Kuhn of Nashville, who was a visitor in Portland yesterday. "Before pro hibition there were only a few alius in the eastern part of Tennessee, and now the stills sre everywhere and there are amateur chemists working night ad day." This -statement was made at a meeting by our former col lector of internal revenue. "U was near Nashville that the government had lta largest powder plant during the war, and while operations there have been curtailed, business In Nashville Is moving along very well, with the cotton and. other factories In operation." "The last concrete on the Oswego section of the Pacific highway was laid Saturday and about the end of October this last section will be thrown open," stated W. D. Clarke, division engineer of the highway de partment. "This is one of the highest tv-pe of pavement In the state. It is 18 feet wide and is seven inches thick snd reinforced. On the Mount Hood loop the contractor who has the job of surfacing between Sandy and Cherryvllle is on the work. We ex pect to have a one-way track rocked this yesr between these points so that the road can be used all winter. Be tween Gearhart and Seaside the oave- uient wilt be finished with a couple of weeks of good weather. Mr. Clarke, accompanied by N. J. Drew, chief of the paving Inspection divi sion, passed through Portland yester day on the way to Clatsop county. W. G. Talt. banker at Medford. Is at the Hotel Portland.. One of the big gest moves for the development of the southern part of the state came into being a few days ago when- Med ford. Grants Pass, Ashland and Klam ath Falls formed a consolidated cham ber of commerce. One of the purposes of the organisation la to develop the string of attractions In that part of the state so that tourists caa be In duced to remain longer In southern Oregon. By the coalition- of the sev eral towns through the new chamber of commerce It is expected that much can be accomplished Industrially and otherwise for the district. It was from the McGllvray quarry at Redmond. Cal., that the granite for the Multnomah courthouse was taken. A. B. McGllvray. one of the five brothers who own the quarry, has ben at the Imperial with his wife. The McGllvray boys were taught the stone business from quarry to masonry. They have contracts for building In San Francisco. The build ing strike Interfered with one con tract, so the five brothers proceeded to go on the Job and do the work themselves. This they did. and they finished the contract within the speci fied time. Dangling from the watch chain of B. E. Brodle of Oregon City, as he tramped Portland pavements yester day, was a small white elephant, carved out of bone, or perhaps it was Ivory. Anyway. the watcl charm possesses a certain signif icance. Inasmuch as Mr. Brodie has been recommended for appointment as United States minister to Siam, the land of the sacred white elephant. The Oregon senators said, while here recently, that they have pretty strong hopes of landing the Job for the Ore gon City newspaper man. Orr1 the Coqullle river, three miles east of Bandon. which makes It al most on the Pacific ocean. Is Prosper. It has a couple of canneries and a sawmill. E. E. Foss, who is man ager of the sawmill and has a gen eral merchandise store. Is at the Hotel Portland. Also, when at home, Mr. Foss Is the postmaster. He says that while there Isn't much doing in the lumber industry at present, the sawmill Is still operating. Off of the ranges of Harney coun-J ty, which la still a genuine cattle country, comes Pat Donegan, buck aroo, if you please. Mr. Donegan, who is registered st the Imperla'. Is ths brother of James J. Donegan. who made the fight "for babies againat biroV' in the Malheur lake campaign. Brother Jimmy waa re cently recommended for appointment to the land office at Burns. According to W. F. Tullle. regis tered at the Hotel Portland from Seattle, the people in bla town are beginning to find their old optlmietii spirit reviving, and several manu facturers are looking forward to goed business within a very short time. Jason C. Moore of Summer lake is among the arrivals at the Hotel Ore gon. Mr. Moore's efforts to develop the lake by extracting salts from It consumed a considerable part of a session of the legislature. Herman Offenbacher Is at the Hotel Oregon from Applegate. on the Apple gate river, Jackson county. In the Siskiyou mountains. - The past sum mer there have been an uncommon number of prospectors sampling the hills. W. R. Holmes, cashier of the Wal lows National' bank, at Enterprise, Is registered at the Hotel Portland. J. J. Cunningham, a Walla Walla banker. is registered at the same place. R. 8. Dixon, a stockman of Fort Klamath, Or.. Is at the Imperial. This is In the Wood river country and is considered one of the finest spots in Oregon for tha cattle business. A J. Lennon of Seattle Is at the Hotel Portland. Mr. Lennon recently aold out his interest in the Portland atore bearing hia name. W. H. Lee. 'registered at the Mult nomah, has completed the paving con tract for the city of Dallas. Polk county. Burton Oney, ranger of the 'orest service office at Laplne, is at the Imperial. Burroughs Nature Club. Coprrla-ht, Hoashtoa-Mlf flla C. Caa Yea Aimer These Qaratlnnaf 1. Is the peacock's "fan" really a tall? 2. Will skunks kill snakes? 1. How many fish hatcheries are there in the United States? Answers in tomorrow's Nature Notes. a a e Aaawrra ta Previous Questions f 1. Do elephants use their tusks to fight with? Yes. In the wild state the tusks are useful In food-getting. Elephants eat certain roots which they grub out with their forefeet and break ud with the tusks. They are also fond of some kinds of bark and can rip anil loosen it with the tusks. a e 2. Why does frost hurt trees and plants more than freezing weather? Because In winter the sap has run down to storage in the roots, leaving branches practically dry. But In spring when sap is rising, it fills the shoots and unfolding leaves with moisture, which i freezes in a frost, forming minute'lce crystals within the plant tissues. Sometlmra a frost ed plant can be saved by slow thaw ing, which allows the Imprisoned water to go back slowly Into the cells, from which the process of freezing had withdrawn It. e S. What makes metallic colora in some birds' feathers? The "metallic" effect is due not so much to pigment as to the structure of the feathers. These have minute rldgea that catch and reflect light something as a prism does, and pro duce on the eye a bright gleam that is different from the actual color of the pigment. RED FLAG IMPROPERLY PLACED Antoiat Complains of Inadequate Warning on Highway HI1L McMINNVILLE, Or.. Sept. 26 (To the Editor.) There are many things to correct along the paved highways of the state of Oregon and many ways of correcting them Recently I was motoring between Dundee and West Dayton and the driver, a lad of 18, and who has never had an accident or been censured for reckless driving, hit the hill and the cut at the north end of what la called the "McNary Hill." that Is, th hill where Mrs. McNary met her untimely death. The cut at this point Is perhaps It feet deep and the hill Is not a very abrupt one and the fill of the canyon ts a good grade and can safely be traveled at 20 miles an hour. I be lieve that most autolsta make thla at 15 to 20 miles. We started at about this gait and, half way down the cut we saw a red flag which was not visible until we were within perhapa 60 feet of a number of teama scraping dirt across the pavement. A watchman waa about the same distance or less from the teams and when we hit the hill and had great difficulty in stopping be fore crashing Into a team broadsides, we were met by a volley of oaths from the men as a corrective measure. Fortunately, our driver waa level headed enough so that he saw a clear passage and made It without a scratch, but as far ss we could hear them the men who were solicitous for our safety were engaged in cursing that particular driver. Had a tragedy occurred there, the fault would have been on the man In charge of the algnallng for his short slghtedness In not allowing the trav eling public to be warned In time so that a driver has a chance for his and his passengers' safety. Other complaints of this same situ ation have come to my notice and it Is flagrant. J. I. KNIGHT. HOUSING PROBLEM IS DIFKICI'LI Writer Sees Need for More Flats Rentlna at Moderate Trice. PORTLAND. Sept. 27. (To the Edi tor ) It would seem appropriate to some few of us at least If the hous ing situation in Portland were more fully discussed In the papers. From' time to time opposition to flats and apartments has sprung up. at a time when almost any desir able kind of building should be en couraged. No city can expect to grow without flats and apartment houses. People coming from the east and mlddJe west must have temporary quarters, in which Portland Is woe fully lacking. Portland real estate men go east, get a superficial know ledge of housing conditions, then come home and congratulate them selves that the housing condition here is good. I wonder if any one of them ever tried to find suitable living quarters on an average salary. Bungalowa In Rose City or any other desirable district rent for 153 to $60 per month. Cost of heating, garbage, water, etc. brings this to about $75 per month. A man's In come per month should be 6300 to enable him to live comfortably un der these circumstances, as the amount spent for rent should not exceed one-fourth of his Income. How many men coming to Portland have this Income? A three or four-room apartment averages about the same cost per month, and the solution would seem to be more up-to-date flats. What difference does It make to the neighborhood If a flat Is built, providing It comes up to specifica tion of restrictions? Who can pre vent Irving-ton or other suburban residents from renting housekeeping rooms, and what Is the difference be tween a residence renting house keeping rooms snd a flat? MRS. HOEBER. THE WIND IX A DC'STY STREET. It whirls, And swirls A -down the dustry street. It sweeps. And leaps. . Each plodding aoul to greet. A hush, A rush. It sneaks up from behind. It whirls you round. And I'll be bound. It leaves you nearly blind. It flirts With skirts. And fair ones are perplexed To know. By Joe. ' Just what it will do next. Askance. You glance. Your mouth wide open, too; When, biff! a gust Swats you with dust And gritty rock to chew. O dust. We must Pasa down this street, you know. Why creep And leap Upon us as we go? Bam! biff! A whiff Of gravel, grit and hay Enda your nice speech. And with a screecht You double-quick swav. EVERETT EARLE STANARD. More Truth Than Poetry. t)y Janaes J. Maatagae. Pt'ZZLRI). (Mulal Hafld. before it "Ins tn war, launches a rhymed curae on hia ene mlea. thereby In many raaea licking them belore a ehot la fired. I When Mulal liafid goea to war No rlflee blase their fiery breath, No bombing aquadrona swiet. befjre To scare the enemy to drain. His guns are parked In tr.etr earns. He needs them not to voioc It's w ra t h ; Nor does he need a firce rt.it-ruKO To sweep an army from his path. Not he; he writes a rhvminij cutse Upon the hated focm;i's head And when the latler reails -.he verse Invariably It knocks him d,ad. I We wonder often what he writes This talented Moroccan bard. What form of verse It Is that smites A well-armed enemy ao hard. What rhymes are these that men but rt'ad When they are taken from the mall A single time, and then proceed To shudder and turn deadly pale? If verse contains the power to lay The instruments of war on shelves. We think perhaps that we some day May be a general ourselves. And yet. although we've put our heart In curses wrought with cunning rhyme, And tolled upon this noble art Of late In all our leisure time. We cannot somehow catch the knack; The folka to whom we aend the atuff . Are prone too often to come back And when they do, to get too rough. The thing has worried us a bit. It's put a dent in our conceit. Try as we will, we must admit That Mr. Hafld has us beat! a a Merely a Suaaeatlnn. The best way to restrict Immigra tion would be to ship all newly landed Europeans direct to Mingo county. West Virginia. a e a Guess This Yourself. Toung John D. haa gone to China, but we don't know whether It's to or ganise an oil trust or a Sunday school, e There's a Reason. Americans can freely travel In Ger many now and Grover Bergdoll has departed for Switzerland. (Copyright by the Bell Syndicate, lne.) A keen blade makes an open wound. And crimson stains are bright, And laws are made for bladw and blood, To keep man's conduct right; But what of those m ho stab and slay A human aoul and go away? An open wound Is red and raw Andi everyone may aee. And thos who uae a knife, the law Will punish lawfully; But those who only stab the heart May strike in safety and depart. A keen blade makes an open wound. A cruel wound and red. And every man will cry that law Upon Its course be sped; But soulr are murdered everywhere, And men out smile and call it fair. A keen Made strikes and It Is done, And all the world may know. But through the years a poison gnaws. With deadly pain and slow; But laws snd men heed but the blads. Or ragged holes by bullets made. In Other Days. Tweaty-flve Wars Ago. Prom The Oreconian of Heptember 2R. IfltMl The new paator of the Congrega tional church, the Rev. Arthur W. Ackerman, has temporarily taken up quarters at the Hill hotel. There has been considerable talk of late about the Inad vlmblllty of using alatea In public schoola on ac count of children spitting on them to clean them and thereby transmit ting microbe among the pupils. The handsome mulberry tree which has been growing for many years at the corner of Third and Pine streets haa been cut down to make room for Improvementa Fifty Years Ago. From The Oreconian of September 29, 1R?1. Newport, H. I. A Bonaparte, grand nephew of Napoleon I, married Car oline Leroy Edgar, a granddaughter of Daniel Webster,,, and the event was scarcely noticed here, a few days ago. Grand Duke Alex . of Russia has engaged himself to a German prin cess, Mary Elizabeth of Prussia. Excavations were started yesterday morning for the construction of a building with a frontage on First street on Captain Ankeny's property. It has been learned that Barney Tralnor is going to run a free ferry of skiffs from the foot of Stark street or thla side of the river to the foot of J street on the other side. x Written Contract for Masra'alne. PORTLAND, Sept. 27. (To the Edi tor.) Several weeks ago an agent came to my door with a dictionary, saying It was a premium with two years and four months' subscription 1 1 a magazine. Taking his word for the truth I subscribed. A few days later the dictionary waa delivered and I paid 81. thinking it applied on the magazine, but in a few days another collector came,, asking for a pay ment on the mag-azin. I refused to pay him. saying I had paid several months In advance, but he said no; that that applied on the dictionary. He showed me the contract, saying the "combination price" was 87 ($1 for the dictionary and 6 cents a copy for the magazine ) I received no copy of the contract. Can they compel me to pay more than IS. 50 a year subscription price, or 16 for the two years and four months? MRS. R. The written contract controls 't you signed It. If It Is one of tbe better magazines for which you sub scribed, probably If you will write to the publishers that you misunder stood the terms of the contract, de sire to cancel It and return the dic tionary, they will relieve you of your obligations. Aatl-rrohlbltlon Prophecy Recalled. PORTLAND. Sept. 87. (To the Edi tor.) A few years ago many busi ness concerns In Portland had on tafeir walls the picture of a street showing deep mud holes, team stalled, wagons broken down, grasses and weeds growing In profusion and the buildings In a dilapidated con dition. The title of the picture waa "Washinarton StTeet After Portlant Goes Dry." ' Today Washington street Is a gran-1 monument to Industry and Inventive genius. Its splendid condition and appearance are a lie to the prophecy of the pessimistic picture. On the other hand, hats eff to th man who said "prohibition does not prohibit." WILLIAM BUTTON. Justice. By Grace E. Hall.