. 12 THE &TORMXG OREGOXTAX. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 7. 1921 J-.M Ml! -1 1 1 I i BV HENRY I . FITTOCK. baiWr C. A. 11UKD.IN. B B PIPER, editor. Manager The Oregonian la a member of the Asuo - elated Press Tne Associated Press law - Ciuslvely entitled to -he use for puo.icatlon of all newa dfpaiche credited to it or not otherwise credited in tM paper and also the local new. publi.hed herein. All right. of publicatl .1 of special dl.patches nerein are a.so reserved. subscription Kale Invariably In Advance, I R. V a til Dally. .Sunday included, one year 18.0 Dally, Sunday Included, six month. . . . 4-.i Daily. Sunday Included, three montiy. . -.2, Daily, Sunday Included, one month ... "3 Dally, without Sunday, one year tl.no Dally, without Sunday, six montha .... 8.2a Daily, without Sunday, one month 60 Weekly, one year -fj Sunday, one year 2. Ml (By Carrier.) Dally, 8unday Included, one year $9.00 Dally. Sunday Included, three months. 2.2.. Daily, Sunday included, orfe month ... .73 Dally, without Sunday, one year 7.80 Dally, without Sunday, three months. . Dally, without Sunday, one month 8"' Mow to Hern It Send postoffice money order, express or personal check on your local bank. Stampa. coin or currency are at owner's risk (Jive oostofNce addreaa in ti. i., B . . Footage K 1 1 . l to 16 pagea. 1 cent: 18 to 32 pagea, 2 cents 34 to 48 pagea. 8 MBta; 30 to 64 pagea. 4 cents: 66 to 80 pages. 5 cents 82 to 8 pagea. 6 centa Foreign postage double rate. Eantern Buslnean Office Verree A Conk lln. .loo Madtso avenue. New York: Verree Conklin. Steger building. Chicago; Ver ree & Conklin. Free Press building. In tret. Mich : Verree A Conklin. Selling building. Portland. IBI WAVtm OF PROHIBITION. It must be admitted that prohibi tion is not functioning sasisfactorlly; that violations of the federal law are common, and that much liquor is being manufactured and sold in de fiance of the Volstead act. Yet it also is true, though the attendant circumstances may be neither so ag gravated nor apparent, that other laws are conspicuously violated the white slave act, for Instance. T.aws strive to create a moral condition, and If they are violated by the thoughtless or the rebellious or the criminal the fact of their violation cannot be considered proof that the law Itself Is unworthy and ill-advised. Yet in substance this is the contention of a correspondent who, having no sympathy with th'e liquor traffic, nevertheless asserts that a regulated legal sale is preferable in every way to prohibition. Since he Is so positive of his proof. so certain of the validity of the' charges he makes, The Oregonian would remind him that his first duty as a citizen is to see that these charges, together with their support ing evidence, are brought to the at tention of the proper authorities. He Is assured that the law itself has no intent to protect the offenders, and that the public prosecutors will press each case and probaWy secure con victions. The correspondent inti mates that his own son, a minor, is able to procure liquor. It is perti nent to remind him that, If this is true, there rests upon him a double obligation that of the father as well as the citizen. Fifteen-year-old boys have no business with liquor, moon shine or bonded, and if they procure it more than once there would seem to exist some degree of parental fault Then, too, the opponents of pro hibition continually reiterate their opinion that more people are drink ing than ever before. This is an ap parent generality, .based upon the vaguest personal viewpoint, and like all other generalities. Is to be mis trusted. It Is true that prohibition did create a psychological condition of mischievous rebellion against the law, and that it came to be consid ered "smart" to introduce liquor into social gatherings. But to say that this is true of all such events, or to say that more people are drinking than ever before, is to fly in the face of any number of plainly apparent facts. Quite obviously it is impos sible for illicit liquor sales to attain the volume, or even an appreciable percentage thereof, that was record ed in the days of the open saloon. The correspondent mistakes the public attitude. He perceives, as do other complainants, the surface evi dences of violation which, from the very fact that they are unlawful, oc casion comment and publicity such as drinking bouts and minor crimes never gained In the old days when John Barleycorn ruled. He is not taking into account that vast major ity of the American people which no longer bothers with liquor, and which Is quite content to accept arid ity. The lawful compliance of these is not news, is not spectacular, does not obtrude upon the public atten tion, and therefore is largely unre garded. Yet it is true beyond dispute that in the days of the open saloon nearly every American family, and some with disastrous results, paid toll to liquor.- One need not defend the deadly concoctions of the moonshiner to re fute the empty argument that regu lation would provide "good" liquor. Deadly, villainous, drug-compounded whisky was sold In the cheap saloon, and Sold by the barrel until each slab in the morgue had Its sleeper, and every police court docket was filled with the record of crime. The advent of prohibition was forced by a conviction that liquor could not be regulated, and the difficulties that prohibition now encounters are but renewed proof. But they are not proof, In any sense, that prohibition has failed. They indicate rather that there must be no concessions, no truce. Let those who assail prohibition as a conspicuous failure turn to the proper sources for evidence. Let them inquire of the police. They will be told that crime has dimin ished and that drunken men, while yet no novelty, are far'fewer in num ber. There was a time when the first two days of the police court week were devoted to clearing the docket of such charges and in this connection It should be remembered that the police, during the regime of the saloons, did not arrest a man for merely being drunk. Thut was his unquestioned privilege, his American prerogative, and he was not molested by the police unless Tie slumbered in the street or raised a riot. Despite this fact the arrests for drunkenness, when every drunken offender is promptly Jailed, are few in compari son. Let them confer with the mer chants, and ask regarding collections and sales to discover that men whose credit was not wanted are now rated as desirable credit customers, and that bad bills are no longer the bane of the grocer. Let them Inquire of the butcher to be Informed that Sun day roasts are popular nowadays, and have been since the Saturday pay check was no longer cashed by a jovial bartender. Let them make similar research regarding the in creased number of home owners. And then, in the light of, the evi- dence they have gathered, let them confront the question: Is prohibition a failure? There Is danger in the loose think ,f thse wh wo"ld return- for ' Pll'l CtUIIUIUll, ' 1 I . 1 V J . HI ! the old regime danger that this un- ' representative sentiment may discard I a reform tnat i9 but weIi begun. . , ,, (through the tendency of the public to receive as gospel the specious . . . . , . . , . suiucuuj ui mo . un.rn-i.-. Those who believe in moral better ment can apply their own moral force to no better cause than the furtherance of the prohibition law. it is a reform that. was not lightly nor idly assumed, and it has behind it the pressure of centuries of bitter and costly experience and sadness and human misery. It was not in tended for this generation, mit for the next, and for those that succeed. It deals as yet with human materi als that were accustomed to liquor. It cannot be said to have been tested until a Heesiri,. has na kcpH nnil we k , . , ,., ,,,,i, j omen m iiou ,vU.u i the effect of prohibition upon the i . . j t j . . auuM-miBiu tinci aciuu. xu ucui it now is to align oneself with those evil forces that thrive upon the wreckage of youth and mortal hap piness. The darkest day that ever dawned for this nation would be that which opened the saloons again. A MANDATE. The Multnomah delegation to the legislature permits it to be known that it Is solid for the 1925 exposi tion and practically all the members are in harmony with the proposal for submission of the plan to referen dum of the state. It was to be ex pected. It has been said that the recent 4 to 1 vote in Portland was a mandate upon the Multnomah delegation, every one of whom resides within the city: and The Oregonian thinks such an interpretation of the vote is cor rect. If a' legislator has a duty to regard the instruction of his constituency as worthy of consideration and he has how may he say that the deliber ate verdict of Portland means noth ing to him. We think ho will say nothing of the kindr. What is he asked and expected to do? He is not called on to vote the tax. He is asked to give the people an opportunity to say whether they will tax themselves. Certainly no legislator from Mutnomah can give, or desires to give or find, a reason to stand in the way of his constituents. DANGEROUS BUSINESS. It is only fair to give notice to the lawless and murderous gentry that "sticks-up" citizens and holds up banks that the risks of their nefar ious calling in Portland are great and evidently growing greater. One outlaw is dead, and two others are in jail as a sequel to the audacious ex ploit at the East Side bank yester day. The precious three ran into a bank official with a pistol and the will to use it. The odds of three to one are considerable, but what did superior numbers mean to Assistant Cashier Alt? He was thrice armed with a just cause, a sound nerve, and a proper target. His score Is perfect. The robber and highwayman indus- try has not thriven in Portland lately. Several episodes are fresh In the public mind wherein the jackals of evil have come off badly. It is easy to recall what happened to those bad men on the Riverside road, and to that other misled gang which in vaded the Liberty theater. In sev eral instances timid women have bagged malefactors who had made the mistake of intercepting them, and stealing from them, and the po lice we speak a good word for the police, who have not had the best of luck are on their toes, and ready for action. There are other inci dents highly discouraging to felon lous enterprise; hut these will do. Petty crime is, more profitable here. At least it is safer. But the fellow who ties a cloth over his face and starts out to take what he can at the point of a pistol invites im mediate and deadly reprisal. It is just as well for the sinister fraternity to understand it. SAFETY FIRST. The decision rendered by the su preme court of Minnesota, that an automobile driver ts not entitled to damages If he attempts to cross a street at a corner where he tech nically has the right of way, and falls because another driver who did not have the right of way was ap proaching at a dangerous rate of speed, is in all probability intended as a recognition of the principle that it is the duty of all motorists to co operate to the fullest possible extent in promoting safety in traffic zones. It makes no difference, says the court, that the first driver would have had time to cross in safety if the second driver had been traveling at a lawful rate of speed. The full text of the decision is not available, but it is assumed from the news accounts that the crossing was an open one and that each driver had ample op portunity to see that the other was approaching. The decision Hs not likely to be popular among automobllists, nor is it binding upon the courts of other states. It will seem on cursory ex amination to have placed the burden of damages on a law-abiding motor ist, where, since someone is bound to fose, it ought to rest on the law breaking one. But the majority of the Minnesota court holds that the first driver was also negligent and that by his negligence he forfeited his claim. A single judge renders a minority opinion to the effect that the first driver had the right to ex pect that the second would slow down in obedience to the law, even though he was clearly violating the law when he was first seen. As between the two drivers In question, it will at first appear that the second ought to pay the bill. But a reading between the lines will sug gest the thought that the court has attempted to view the problem In its relation to the public as a whole. Perfect safety on the road depends on two factors, on the equal caution of both parties to a controversy pf this kind. The principle Is often ex pressed in literature of warning is sued by automobile organizations, when they advise drivers against taking chances on what the other fellow may do. The latter may not always Intend to violate the law; he may merely be exercising bad judz- J ment, or his brakes may fail to oper ate at tne critical moment; and there is not much solace In a post mortem. The court recognizes the principle, too, that the first driver has a duty to the public, to pedestrians who may be passing, as well as to him self, and that this is not performed by a foolish insistance on a technical right. Our feeling that the second driver, admittedly at fault, ought not wholly to escape the consequences of his misdeeds is partly satisfied by the court's holding that he is subject to prosecution under the criminal laws. He may be taken up and fined or Jailed, according to the degree of his culpability, for violating the speed ordinance. But before com pensatory damages can be wrung from him, the plaintiff must show that he himself exercised all reason able precaution. Whatever automo- bilists may think of this doctrine, the man afoot is likely to approve it. He would be just as dead, whichever motorist was to blame. The point has also been covered generally by our own state supreme court, in enunciating the general principle that "if the evidence of the plaintiff when fairly judged from the standpoint of a reasonable man shows that he himself was guilty of negligence which contributed to his injury, he cannot recover," and quot ed with approval the opinion of an other court that "if there is any point at which . . . the person injured could have avoided the acci dent and he failed to do so, then his contributory negligence defeats a re covery." But the thought which will be in the mind of most persons con cerned, including the public at large, was tersely expressed in a rhymed epitaph which was one of a series that had a wide circulation a few years ago. It ran: Here lies the body of Thomas Oay, Who died while maintaining his right-of-way. He was rirht. dead right, aa he sped along. But he's Just aa dead aa if he were wrong. FERTILIZING WITH GUNPOWDER. The reluctance of Clarke county farmers to commit themselves to a large cash outlay for picric acid to be used as fertilizer is easily under stood, however strongly the idea of making a peaceful use of a powerful war material may have appealed to them. For the chemistry of ex plosives is highly complex and the science of agriculture is but in the empirical stage. One would like to know, for example, not only that picric acid is in the main a nitro genous cbmpound, and that nitrogen is valuable as an accelerator of plant growth, but also just how the acid is likely to affect a particular crop. Knowing, as most farmers do, how wide is the margin between theory and practice, they ask to be shown first. But the government, it seems, demands its cash in advance, and the deal has been called off. T,he government usually functions inefficiently in affairs of this kind. If a large private enterprise had found itself with an overstock of ma terial for which it desired to create a new market, it would begin by con ducting an advertising campaign backed up by practical demonstra tions in the field. Prospective cus tomers would be instructed in the uses of the product, and at strate gic points a showing would be made as to precisely what it would do. This, in advertising parlance, would be known as creating demand. Once the urge to buy has been stimu lated, the rest is easy enough. The government has missed a funda mental point. It must have "been rendered over-confident by its post war experience in disposing of its commissary stores of corned beef, army shoes and loganberry jam. Now there are not only great stocks of picric acid in the arsenals of the country which cannot be used in the manufacture of beer, as might be done if it were not for a recent amendment of the Volstead law, but there is also an enormous accumu lation of sodium nitrate, another of the raw materials of gunpowder. Ni trate of soda, too, is a valuable fer tilizer, which at a fair price could be used profitably by some millions of farmers, and there are other ex plosives on hand which contain potash in its various salts, also use ful in farming and particularly in the production of fruit. It would be a pity for any of these materials to be wasted. We particularly like the idea of turning swords into plow shares on so extensive and practical a scale. With flammenwerfers cutting through the snow-gorged highways, and pipric acid gunpowder spread over the fields, and with battleship hulks serving as canneries for fish, how contentedly the dove of peace would hover her human brood! But we are a practical people, and not many of us will be satisfied with a pig in a poke. GUARDING THE GATE. Examining at random a list of names of chronic offenders against our criminal laws, one is likely to be impressed again with the importance of a sound immigration policy and its strict enforcement. The prepon derance of aliens of a certain type will not be taken as an indictment of all who live In the country from which these forelgnSrs come, but It is at least a sufficient ground for vigilance. It has not been absolutely demonstrated that a literacy require ment is all that could be desired, but undoubtedly It has done some good. Intelligence tests such as are employed at immigrant depots in ex treme cases have a certain value. Provision for the deportation of those who violate our hospitality is good as far as it goes. All three, however, enforced as loosely as they are, have failed to obtain complete results. The idea that temporary poverty or some other misfortune confers on the victim a license to rob the more fortunate or the more provident is peculiarly alien. It is in direct con trast to personal pride, which dis tinguishes those who have been bred and reared in the atmosphere of in dividualism. We used to hear of people who only redoubled their ef forts to make good when misfortune overtook them, who never admitted defeat, who would not accept alms, who would starve rather than steal. It would be absurd, of course, to contend that these people do not ex ist now, for there is no evidence that the sturdy character of the men and women who peopled the wilderness has not been transmitted in full measure to their descendants. The type that has made America great and particularly the type that has pushed back the frontier until the whole country is safe to live in and ready for the plow is as virile as ever. A seeming decadence is due, not to any attenuation of the original, but to the infusion of a new element for which the original is in no way re sponsible. One who has followed the fortunes of the pioneers of America will have observed that while they did not always find what they want ed, or expected, in a certain locality, they either made the best of what they had or moved on. They wasted little or no time bemoaning their fate, they stole no neighbor's sheep because he was luckier than they, they asked no man to lay the foun dation for them to build on. Periods of industrial depression almost infin itely more disheartening than any that the country has experienced in recent years only left them more de-' termined to solve their own prob lems. At least there was not a crime wave every time someone raised the cry of hard times. It did not occur to anybody that murder, theft, arson and highway robbery were a cure for social ills, or even that in the long run they could possibly benefit tile individual. It was not, In all prob ability, by accident that this was so. It was the American way of looking at things. For a good while the bars were down. A good many desirable immi grants, who have made excellent Americans, came in, and "with them a very considerable number who were not 'desirable, because' they were not alone alien by birth but also alien in their conception of indi vidual responsibility. The great' pre ponderance of this particular type on the blotters of police stations and on the court dockets of the whole country is sufficiently illuminating. Names do not tell the whole story; many pf these aliens Americanize their names, which is about as far in .Americanization as they ever get; but show "by the excuses they make for crime, and by their refusal to adapt themselves to our conditions, and by their defiance of laws that are vastly more benevolent than those of the. countries from which they came that they do not deserve to profit by the sacrifices that were made by better men than they are to make America safe for them to live in. The fact that most of the quotas for the entire immigration year, which does not end until next July, have already been exhausted under the present law Indicates how anx ious the people of other countries are to begin life over again in the United States. This "country Is In a position to pick and choose. No fairer method of selection could be adopted If the thing were humanly possible than one based wholly on merit. The best may well make good citi zens, the worst are not wanted, even as material for the much over-estimated "melting pot." The decreased allowance of immigrants should per mit more thorough examination, much of which might preferably be conducted at the point of sailing. But since every precaution that has yet been devised is fallible, there is also merit in the proposal that th'e period of probation be extended. There is almost no doubt at all that the se verest punishment that could be meted out to the ordinary alien criminal would be to compel him to leave the country for whose laws he exhibits so much contempt. The curious immunity to the effects of strychnine possessed by gallina ceous fowls and birds which Is pointed out in a recent bulletin of the Oregon Agricultural college, will be taken into account in ridding the country of rodent pests. A general reluctance to spread poison in fields infested by field mice and ground squirrels will be measurably over come by knowledge that an adult valley quail has been known to eat enough poisoned bait to kill twelve ordinary squirrels without experi encing discomfort, while chickens have been fed on the poison at an Oregon experiment station without suffering any Injury. It is found here as elsewhere, however, that a little knowledge may be a dangerous thing, and too much ought not to be taken for granted. Turkeys, for ex ample, do not possess the same de gree of immunity, and the same is true of ducks and geese. The infor mation is particularly timely because rodent depredations have been heavy durlng the past season and the best season for a campaign against them is early in the spring. Judging by allegations, in suits for divorce, some women can not get used to seeing their husbands acting familiar with "other women. Some men are gay dogs at best, but they may be harmless. Their wives should know. There should be a near- Christmas or a little Christmas a few days be fore, so the person who does not know what to give can do it with money or order and let the recipient do the selecting. The returns are about all In in the case of looting the Liberty the ater. Much of the money, however, is missing. There was too much for the "chffd of nature" to handle in each case. Nobody is asking to have the trucks put out of business, but on the other hand, the public cannot permit the trucks to put the rail roads out of business. Women who carry purses in out side pockets are liable to lose them. This is one of the misfortunes of the sex. They must envy man his hip pocket. The commission has decided that wages of city employes shall not be reduced, which is satisfying news to employes just before Christmas. Roy Gardner says he was crazy when he held up his last mail train. And that's the first evidence he has shown of being in his right mind. Next to being a professional pugil ist, being a member of the school board seems tp be the most exciting profession. Judge Wolverton sent a booze prince to jail yesterday and the buds will be swelling before he is out. San Francisco seems determined to hang onto Fatty Arbuckle as a permanent drawing card. Are you putting the little seals on letters and packages? That is what they are made for. If the big stores were twice as large the buying crowds would be twice the size. Wonder whether the new Irish stat-i will Include the New York po lice force? Wiritry weather, yes; but this Is a winter month. The shamrock now can grow on Irish ground. BY - PRODUCTS OF THE! PRESS. Creasy Finds Flea Noteworthy Cali fornia Product. Will Creasy, actor and I sketch writer, blossoms forth In the Oakland i Enquirer with a humorous arraign- ment of California conditions as fol lows: 1 You wake in the morning to the music of a Connecticut alarm clock You button your Boston garters Into your Paris socks, your Baltimore sus penders onto your Duluth overalls) put on your Lynn shoes, and your Danbury hat, and you are up for the day. You alt down to your Grand Rapids table and eat your Hawaiian pine apple, your Quaker oats and your Aunt Jemima flapjacks swimming in New Orleans molasaes. Then you go out and put your Con cerd, N. H., harness onto your Mis souri mule, hitch it to a Moline, III., plow and plow up a couple of acres of land covered with Ohio mortgages. At noon you live on Cincinnati ham, cooked in Chicago lard, on a Detroit hstove, burning Wyoming coal. And then as the twilight falls you fill up your Pride of Detroit with Mexican gasoline and dash out to the beach, and while sitting in a Greek restaurant, smoking a Boston-made cigar, you watch a New York girl dance th Memphis shimmy to the music of a. New Orleans Jazz band. And then you go home, eat a Mexi can tamale. smoke a Turkish cigar ette, read a chapter of a Bible printed in London, England, say a prayer written in Jerusalem, put on your China silk pajamas, crawl in between your Fall River sheets and fight all night with fleas the only home grown product on your whole darned ranch. Carpenters sometimes use a piece of chalked string for marking off a straight line; but the Chinese car penter prefers his string greased, says an exchange. He makes a small wooden reel and mounts It on the large end of a cow's horn. He fits wooden plugs into both ends of the horn. Then he runs a cord through holes In the plugs and winds it on the reel. Finally, he pourg black grease into the horn through a hole In the top. Now when he wants to mark a straight line on a board he pulls the desired length of cord through the grease In the horn, stretches the line taut upon the board and with thumb and forefinger snaps the cord. The heavy black line of grease that results not only guides him as he saws the board but per haps also makes sawing it easier. Ode to Dad. T. H. McCracken in Los Angeles Times. Life's a better place, it seems, When you, dad, fill my dreams. Though there's many a man that's good, You are better! Your rules for me were strict, And frequently you licked Me Just to teach the code right To the letter. But it's made me more like you. And when the game is through, The books will show, you bet, that I'm your debtor! In his book "Little Journeys to the Homes of Great Philosophers," Elbert Hubbard recalls a device of Herbert Spencer's for securing his thoughts against interruption when living in a boarding house. The great philosopher, he says, devised a pair of ear-muffs; which fitted on his head with a spring. If the conver- satlon took f. turn no interest, he woul In which he had Id excuse himself to his nearest neighbor and put on his ear-muffs. The plan worked so well that he carried them with him wherever he went, and occasionally at lectures or concerts, when he would grow more interested in his thoughts than in the performance, he would adjust his patents. Brooklyn Eagle. "A citizen of a nearby town died recently and everybody wondered why It was that just bankers were the pallbearers," says the Norcatur (Kan.) Dispatch. But on due investi gation, the Dispatch has discovered the bankers carried him all through life, and they thought they might as well complete the job. Capper's Weekly. Two pungent thoughts from far-off India: MOney will buy a dog, but only love will make him wag his tall. Different women are kissed In dif ferent way's. Some let It happen; others help It to happen. Boston Transcript. More than 1.000,000 marriages will be the record of 1921 In the United StateB. establishing a new high mark, according to Indications in reports re ceived by government bureaus. The number may go as high as 1,500,000 by December 31. New York Herald. The controller of the currency, re porting condition of all the national banke of the United States as of June 30, 1921, gives out the following big figures: Banks retorting 8.154 Capital stock $1,278,880,000 Surplus 1.026.25B.00O Undivided profits 40155. 0OO Circulation 704.147.0O0 Depoalta IS. 142.331. 000 Bills payable 602. 503. 000 Re-discounts 87S. 344.000 Total resources 19.638.446.000 Kansas Banker. An English dancer says that sleep ing outdoors makes one beautiful. Dorothy Dlx in Memphis Commercial Appeal. At last we are able to account for the charming appearance of the aver age hobo. Arkansas Thomas Cat "A woman who shuts her eyes with horror every time she swats a fly, killed her engine four times yester day and said damn before she finally got the blamed thing going." Fair bury, Neb., Journal. Voltaire' Get-Rleh-Qulck Scheme. Youth's Companion. The famous French satirical writer, Voltaire, was worth 9500,000 at 40 years old. But he did not earn his money from books. He made most of it by lending money to needy noble men. . , He would lend an heir to an estate a large sum on condition that the heir should pay him 10 per cent In terest on the amount as long as both of them lived. The heir would be neither required nor allowed to pay off the principal; and the agreement ended only when Voltaire died. Vol taire picked only younger men and because of his tubercular appearance ( had no difficulty in getting clients. It Is said that when a prospective bor rower hesitated the satirist could cough In a way that always closed the deal. The scheme was very suc cessful for Voltaire. Those Who Come and Go. Talea of Folks at the Hotel. "Long Creek, In the heart or the cattle country. Is the only Interior town that I know of which Is show- ing signs of progress, for the town ia getting now sidewalks and there is some building going on," observed A. T. Meier, who had to drive over I 100 miles in sleet and rain before he I could get to a railroad. Although In a cow country, Mr. Meier does not wear a cowboy hat and boots, so he does not looK the Dart. A man has to have a No. C foot to look good in boots and Mr. Meier has a No. 9. so after wearing a pair for a short time he discarded them. For a time Mr. Meier was In the mercantile business at Long Creek, a town with a hotel, a couple of large general stores, a good drugstore and several "pas times." Ranchers used to bring in a long list of things wanted and say: "Fill this and I'll write you a check' Now the ranchers study the cata loguea and have stuff sent by parcel post from Portland. It Is not uncom mon for ranchers to have a ton of salt sent to them by parcel post, a few pounds at a time, ftie salt arriving for about a year. Money shortage Is responsible for the change In the methods of doing business at Long Creek, Grant county. Mr. Meier de clares that the finest bunchgrass in the state is in the Long Creek coun try. Despite It being a range, there are many automobiles In use, for the hurricane deck of a cayuse was dis carded as soon as possible for a cush ioned seat. Gasoline In Long Creek is around 60 and 60 cents a gallon, the high cost being due to the cost of transportation. Speaking of'conditlons in southern Idaho, E. R. Robertson of Nampa states that business shows some im provement. The fact that cream eries and condenserles have been running has been of material assist ance to the farmer, as there was an overupply of hay In that section of the country, and in feeding it to the cattle and selling cream they were able to get results. "I believe, says Mr. Robertson, "the future welfare of that country depends upon diver sified farming. This year the farmer who planted early potatoes and then lettuce made good returns. A year or two ago a farmer started planting lettuce at the suggestion of some of the farm experts of the Oregon Short Line and today there are' more than 1000 acres devoted to that product, which is shipped all over the United States, and the demand is constantly Increasing. So great an amount of this product was shipped out of Nampa under refrigeration this year that Ice was shipped in from as far as HouBton, Tex., to ice the cars. As ;he farmers are taking up diver sified farming, the larger tracts are being cut up into smaller farms." Mr. Robertson, who is registered at the Multnomah. Is with the Independ ent Lumber company of Nampa and Is in Portland looking over the lum ber situation. "I never saw people so crazy about swimming as at Hayden Lake, Idaho." declared Dan J. Moore, who returned to Portland yesterday, Mr. Moore be ing proprietor of the big resort at the lake. "When I was at Seaside Ithought people liked swimming, but they were not a marker to enthusi asm for this sport at the lake. The water, by the way, Is 500 feet deep in spots. I dropped "a line 300 feet and didn't touch bottom. Golf Is be coming popular. A year ago by a strenuous campaign a golf club was organized with 30 members. Thin year there are 100 members, and the membership will be even greater next year. We have an 18-hole course. In addition to the hotel there are cabins and there are also some very fine summer homes, built by wealthy Spo kane people, one of these homes cost ing 950.000." "They're getting quite excited over the cattle situation," said B. H. Cam eron of Harney county at the Impe rial. "Yearling steers which were selling at 925 are now 930 and fat cows which were 930 are now 940. There isn't much stuff being sold be cause everyone is holding, expecting things to get Jjetter. You can buy cattle In the yards in North Portland and ship the stock to Harney county as cheap as you can buy the stuff there. The average cattleman, like the sheepman, is in debt, and fig ures that the only way he can get out Is by the natural increase of his herd and flock." Winter weather is mild in Harney and the stock hasn't come down from the mountains yet. The recent snow- storm which swept the northern part of Oregon did not bother Burns. Greatest harvest of clams In years is reported at Warrenton. where S G. Wilson Is registered from at the Perkins. It was thought some time ago that the clams had about been exterminated, but this year they returned more plentiful than ever, and the canneries are still mincing them and packing them. The habits of the clams are not very well known. No one has been able to' track them to their lair and make a 'study of them, which is why there Is no ex planation offered aa to the unex pected profusion of the bivalves this year downClatsop county way. "Historians of Wallowa county do not agree on many things," Mild J. L. Maxwell, stockman of Wallowa. Or. "The white historians hold different views as to where Chief Joseph is buried, but the Indians, who ought to know, have their own Ideas on the subject. The history of Wallowa county should be written on the in formation furnished by the Indians." It is claimed that there Is no more beautiful spot In Oregon than Wal lowa lake. Mr. Maxwell Is at the Imperial. Ernest J. Hunter, registered at the Multnomah. Is a representative of the Hotel Red Book, which Is the hotel men's directory. Speaking of his an rual Journey across the continent. Mr. Hunter says that he finds business tetter on the Pacific coast than else where. At present the middle west seems to be harder hit in a business way than any other section. On the whole, there Is a more optimistic feeling than for a long time. W. R. Clark, who ha. 3 a garage In Prairie City, Grant county, on the John Day highway, is registered at the Imperial. So much work has been performed on this highway that it is now possible to drive from Prairie City to Arlington, on the Columbia river highway, although the section between Condon and Arling ton is anything but a picnic, as it has not been Improved. F W. Yarrelman. member of the city council of Reedsport. ia at the Multnomah. J. R. Browne, who is elso a councilman and In addition is secretary of the port of Umpqua commission, is with his fellow towns man. J. K. Hough. G H. Barmore and Y. Osterloh. connected with a prom inent automobile tire company, are at the Benson. They are here to hold a conference. C. C. Hall of the United States forest service, with headquarters at Eugene, is among the arrivals at the Imperial. T. B. Johnson of La Grande, a stock buyer In the Grand Ronde val ley, checked' out for home yesterday. Burroughs Nature Club. Copyright, Houahton-Mlf f lin ( o. I Can Yon Answer These Questions f ' 1 I Ken rn IIva all ftvftr? 2. Do fishes look after theii young? 3. Has the wild turkey, Mcleagr's gallopavo silvestrls, ever been known In the western provinces of Canada'.' If not. what is the bird called "wild turkey" claimed to "have been seen in huge flocks in Saskatchewan in re cent years? Answers in tomorrow's Mature Notes. Answers to Previous Questions. 1. Do any birds ever attack worm's nest in trees'.' Yes. cuckoos do. both black and yellow-billed varieties. They are rare In their fondness for hairy and spiny caterpillars, which most birds avoid, and eat so many that often their stomaciis become coated with balrs. A cuckoo has been known to take Its stand next a caterpillar web and eut from three to four dozen caterpillars a meal. 2. How often must old alligators be fed? Captive specimens in zoos are usually fed about three days apart. They take fowl, large tisues and hunks of raw beef. Their feeding normally depends on temperature, and in the well-equipped tank the water Is kept tepid, as near as pos sible to the natural temperature of the alligator's native bayou. s m 3. How often should plants be watered'.' According to their needs, and the condition of the atmosphere. Plants absorb moisture by their tiniest root hairs, and it Is better to keep them constantly and moderately at work than to let them shrink from dry ness, and then suddenly dilate with quantities of moisture. The porous common flower pot dries out very rapidly and dries the root with it. A pot sunk in dirt in a larger recep tacle will do better, but one stood in a jardiniere, with a layer of air and darkness, will usually mold. - s 4. Is there a species of wild duck about the size of a teal, bright red or blood red in color, with bill of dark color? Also one about same size ca nary yellow, with a little gray on the buck and breast? The red one is the clanamon teal, Querquedula cyanoptera, presumably, whose color is more chestnut or ru fous il. ,m "blood" red. In certain lights It might look very bright. We can get no Identification for the yel low one, beyond the suggestion it might be a freak. 6. Is the badger a harmful ani mal? Not in the sense of being ferocious; but it makes trouble Incidentally sometimes, when In the search of food prairie dogs, ground squirrels and similar pests It tears open the holes of these beasts and uninten tionally provides a pitfall for the mounted cattleman. Its food habit is valuable, and the badger should be protected as a check on rodents. 6. What are the little lizards that live fn our caves and other damp places? Do they hatch from eggs lke frogs and toads? If found In damp places, probably not lizards, but salamanders. Lizards are mostly hatched from eggs, like snakes, but a few bring forth live young. They have scaly skins and live in dry places. Salamanders are amphibians, like frogs, breathing both air and water. Common in llmo stone caves of the south. Some fre quent beds of brooks, or live near cold springs. Beautlfuly colored yel low, rose, copper, some with black bands. Hatch like frogs. VIOLATIONS DBGstADal UUY LAW Because Enforeenient Lags Writer Would Legullae Intoxirunts. PORTLAND, Dec. 6. (To the Edi tor.) 1 want to say a few more words re the functlonings of prohibi tion. Mr. C. E. Smith, also The Ore gonian, intimate that I have taken a Harrow view of the question. Maybe so, but If either one had a 15-year-old son who can get all the moonshine that he wants at any time your com placency would be somewhat dis rupted. How is a law functioning when cer tain churches are allowed all the wine that they care to order and retail It to their members for 96 per gallon? It is port wine and can be had by anyone who will pay 910 per gallon all 'you want. This is known among the trade as "church wine." A bootlegger Is usually a for eigner, ignorant and dirty, and as the penalty Is the same whether he sells to a minor or adult he does not hesi tate to peddle his vile concoctlonB to anyone with the price. Now I am using the word bootlegger In refer ring to the one who distills. The agents are drawn from all classes. Here is part of a headline from a Philadelphia paper of last week: "Booze Scandals Get Worse Daily; Crooked Agents. Teachers. Business Men and Even Clergy Are Being In volved; Penn Professor Held; Rabbi Kails to Show Up at Hearing and More Warrants Will Be Issued; Seise Huge Store of Booze. Which Was -Released on Religious Permits." There may not be as much liquor Bold in Portland as before prohibi tion, but there are more people drink ing. Anyone giving a party is sup posed to have some booze to put pep in the participants. I know of dozens of people who never had a drop In the house until Uncle Sam said they couldn't have It, and Immediately a thirst was created. Anyone who has ever studied psychology will under stand the reason. Bootleggers and fanatics believe In the Volstead law, one as a matter of business and the other as a mat ter of principle, but no one but a dyed-ln-the-wool optimist can be lieve that It will be a success until the world ib dry and until that time comes we will have the rotten poison peddled by all and sundry, and more people killed from the effects than ever were in the wet days. You can dam up a stream, but un less you have a spillway something will happen. Government supervision would eliminate bootlegging and would also mean that you would get real whisky or wines or beer. I don't say good whisky, for I do not think there is such an "animal." Prohibition laws have corrupted every class of people. There Is some thing pernicious abo'ut "easy money," and it never does anyone one partlcU of good. a. j.Jons. Wife Tnmes Her Husband. Kansas City Star. u .. .-..in,.. li iii handeH him .1 ji.i. ... - - sealed letter which he was not to read until he reached hie oince. wun lore bodlngs of trouble he tore open the envelope. "I am obliged." the mlsclve began, "to tell you something that may give you paiii, but there Is no help for it. I....- tin. nnr week I have felt it must come to this, but I have waited until the last extremity ana can remain silent no longer." Cold perspiration stood in thick drops on his brow as he turned the page, prepared Tor tne worst. "Our coal is all gone," he read on. Dl.,1. order ft ton tn be sent this afternoon. I thought you might for get for the seventh time and therefore write you this letter." But he didn't forget that time. More Truth Than Poetry. By James J. Montague. ALMOST Itl AVERAfJB MAN. At' ten he arrives at the office. Reads the papers with gasps of alarm. And says he don't know why those dubs are so slow In getting the world to disarm. He runs through his mail a few min tues. , Calls a friend or two up on the phone, And remarks that perhaps we could deal with the Japs If England would let us alone. He languidly presses the buzzer That summons the managing clerk. Whom he tellH that he's sore on this talk of more war; What is needed,' he adds, Is more work. He goes to his lunch at twelve-thirty. And over a porterhouse steak He stoutly contends to a couple of friends That this conference thing Is a fake. He says that all statesmen are bone heads; They do nothing according to plan; They are creatures of schemos and delusions and dreams; What they need on that Job Is a man. He takes two friends to the office To skim through the afternoon news. And till four they discuss how they'd settle the muss ' If thoy could trade places with Hughes. To the boys at the club, in the eve ning, He curses the folly of France; He says she's sfrald to promote the world's trade By giving the Germans a chance. If he were the other two powers. He'd make tho frog army disband; Then, with industry freed from op pression and greed. The thing would be solved out of hand. "We'll always have war," he an nounces, "Till hatreds have all been forgot ten." Thon he goes home to bed with a pain in his head, And wonders why business la rotten. a It Isn't. If the pen were really mightier than the sword a good many Wash ington correspondents would be asked to scrap their typewriters. Getting: Searee. Owing to the shortage of kings, Princess Mary had to marry an or dinary noble,man. Keeping the Iare. Now Venice is to admit motor ve hicles. She was determined that she wouldn't let Nantucket get ahead of her. (Copyright by tua Bell Syndicate. Inc.) A Little While Alone. By Grace E. Hnll. What would we ever do. In brain and soul endeavor, If we had never a little while alone? A little while, when others are away, To give our real selves chance to think and pray; To dream, to vision and create at will. Let inner voices speak that are so still. When we must faco the world and play a part, Keeping our glow-thoughts hidden in the heart. What would we ever be. or think or fashion. If we had never time In secret pas- slon To live the visions of our better thought, From which the treasure-things of life are brought? To moid, as does the sculptor, deft and sure. Our Ideals Infb forms that may en dure? To look sometimes, through rain of cleansing tears, And see new purpose In the empty years? We vie with others in the scheduled race, Run well the course, perhaps, and plaudits gain. Keeping a smile of courage on the face, But In the secret hour we face the pain, . Count o'er the heartaches that we never told As misers guard the secret of their gold Fight our own battles that we never own; Ah. yes. Indeed, we need a little while alone! In Other Days. Twenty-five Yenrs Ago. From The Oresonlan of December 7. 18! Chicago. John D.' Rockefeller Is seeking to outdo Andrew Carnegie as an Iron king, and his plans are already matured and ready to be car ried out aiming at that end. Justice McDevitt Is endeavoring to learn how much the reputation of Oiarles W. Kimball as a musician has been damaged by being dismiss1'" as choirmaster of the Centenary Wil bur Methodist church. The first boU of worsted goods ever made west of- the Mississippi river and placed on the market for ale was turned out at the Salem woolen mills last week. "SI Perkins" last night opened to a very good house at the Park the ater. It Is a play of the down-on-the-farm kind, with a skeleton plot. Fifty Years Ago. From The Orezonlan of December 7. 1871 Mr. Helple. one of the board of trustees of East Portland, stabbed a man named Taylor in the leg yester day. , The board of police commissioners have allowed a bill of 9243 for board ing prisoners during November.' New York Tweed and his fellow thieves have atoien aa much aa 32.000 laboring men could earn In a life time at 91600 a year. OHSt I HITV. Dim. shadowy griels and dark ob scurity. And cloudy isorrows. stlll to spend their rain In mists, that rise as doubts to come again With dull despair, and anguish yet to be. Yet patience! Through the darkness I can see That tempests have not spent their strength in vain; And calm reveais at last another plain Of mighty truth spread toward In finity. In patience I will wait for him who sees Both calm and tempest work their secret good; Who holds within his hand the mys tic keys Of blessing only dimly understood; Content to leave the darkness of my day To him who Is both Light, and Truth, and Way! MARY ALETHEA WOODWARD. t I