8 Tirn Mcmxixa oregoxian, moxday, December 19, 1921 JltorniiTjpi 0t($mxxnn i IKTABUSHED Bf HENRY L. PITTOCK. Publlnhsn by The Oregonian Publishing Co, 135 bixIi St. e, Portland, Oreaon. C. A. MORDEX, E. B. PIPER. Manager. Editor. The Oreronlan i a member of the A iso lated t'rusa. To Associated Press is ex- i.ufcively entitled to the use for publication of ail niws dlnpHtcnes credited to it or not ctherwi-4 creuit-l In this paper and also lt:s locii news p-ib.ished herein. All rights of publ'oution of special dispatches hereta re also reserved (ubwcrlption Kate Invariably la Advance, iliy Mall.) rally, Sunday Induced, one year $8.00 I'ally. S'jDday Inu.uued. six months .y . 4.1'5 Paily, Si.iduy lnIuued. thres months.. I'.'JZ : any. MjiUay inc uded, one montn.. -ta i'ylly. vithnut Suay, one year .00 Pally, without Sunday, six months .... S.'.'.l J 'ally, without Sunday, one month 60 Weekly, one year 1.00 nunuay, one year 2.50 (By Carrier.) Tally. Sunday Included, one year $9.00 l'ally, P-jiday Included, three months.. 2.-. really, Sinday included, one month ... .'5 Daily, without Sunday, one year 7. SO i 'ally, wi hout 8u.1a.4y. three months.. 1.05 -ally, without 8'inuay, one month... .65 How o Remit Bend postofffco money order, express or personal check on your cal hnk. Stamps, coin or currency are at owner's risk. O.ve postoffics addresa in full, including co-inty and state. rnstaae Rate 1 to 1" paces. 1 cent: 1 82 p(-, 2 certs; 34 to 48 pages, S cents: 5.) to 64 gaffes. 4 cents: 66 to SO pages, 5 cents; 82 to 96 pagea, 6 cents, i ureign poetage aoubla rate. Eastern Rnalnestt Office Verree A Conk u, .1410 Madison avenue. New York: Verree - Conkliii. Hteger bulldlnir. Chicago; Ver- 'e as :onklln. iree .tress nunaing. ui irolt, Mich.: V'mu c'onklin, selling l Ui.dlng. Portland. THE L,EGISLATCKE'8 DCTT. In a friendly and hopeful spirit JThe Oregonian suggests to the legls- ature which meets In special session I'oday that its duty may be summed I duty largely perfunctory proposed 19 the old. tried, established ay of taxing; general property a system which In its final analysis taxes everyone, blgr and little, prop erty owner or not, however super ficially different It may appear. This formal request, as already said, comes from the ctly of Port land, which by subscription and tax ation, agrees to pay two-thirds of the cost of the exposition. The city of Portland contains one-third of the taxable wealth and one-third of the population of the state. Though small in area In comparison to the area of the state. It Is nevertheless as much a part of the state as any other portion. What would be the answer of the legislature if any other third of Oregon came before it with a four-to-one petition for submission to the electorate of an enterprise In which it had the larger interest but which was still of general state-wide benefit? Has a referendum ever been denied to eastern Oregon on a similar showing? Was not state aid to Irrigation submitted to the people without Impossible conditions or cot lateral issues? Were not the market roads bill and ihe highway bonding amendments, which tax Portland for the primary benefit of the re mainder of the state, submitted to the people and submitted without the complication of distracting de partures from previous methods of taxation? In other Instances when confront ed by a plain desire by one-third, or even a lesser fraction, of the people for opportunity to present a plan of their own making to the voters at large, the legislature has deemed Its There is Columbia river highway by Sydney B. Vincent. The number should cer tainly create an appetite for a tour of God's country among the suffer ing eastern people. THE PASSING OF WOLITIIXE. They were born with a savor of the past, of a day long sped, those stories that Alfred Henry Lewis told of Wolfville. The scent of leather and lathered horses was in them, and the pungency of black powder smoke, and the creak of stage wheels, and lonely star-strewn nights pendent government at Wuchang. Then, we are told: In various other provinces the military commanders are really independent auto crats, rendering lip-service to Pekin but doing as they choose. During the last fifteen monthe there have been four dis tinct wars In the country, each involving not less than 100,000 troop's. In these cam paigns the casualties among the troops are trifling, but the terror inspired in the people and the loss and hardship Imposed on them are ' incalculable. War in China always means indiscriminate looting, and frequently much worae by one side or the other. In addition to war at the above four points there Is in half the provinces a plague of bandits that surpasses any thing in the history of the country. Add the great famine in north China and leaser famines elsewhere, and immense damage of the TIain. Wherefore manv .y .. . at innumerable points, nue mainly ip in four paragraphs: 1. Adoption of & definite pro gramme and completion of it within he week. 2. Consideration of the prepared plan for financing the exposition. without interposition of revolution ary changes In taxation or important dependent issues. 3. Adoption of the report of the no distinction between the present proposal and established' precedent. The Oregonian does not urge sub mission by the legislature of the Portland plan without the dotting of an i or the crossing of a t. It Is even reasonable to suppose that in friendly conference the plan may be modified in some particulars so as to remove some of the objections which pecial highway commission as the I members of the legislature believe -round work, if not the text, of new llghway legislation. 4. Rejection of miscellaneous leg. Nation, and of all legislation not oeclfied in the call unless it be learly demonstrated that it Is both mportant and urgent. It is needless to remind the legisla- ii re that there Is a disposition mong an unfortunately large pro ortlon of the people to refer to the egislatura and to its deliberations In ontemptuous terms. The Oregonian oes not subscribe to this disposition. t is not a captious critic but prefers o analyze oerore it commenas or ebukes. It merely states a fact, hich it deplores, when it says that nany of the people judge the legls iture by its few mistakes and not y Its many achievements. This is one reason why it would ave the legislature avoid a pro- onged session or the enactment of ilscellaneous 1 e g I s 1 a 1 1 o n. Such ourse would be an obvious mistake, n error that would overbalance hatever good was done by other gislation in the minds of those who re prone to Judge harshly. It was n error into wnicn the is:u special ession fell, and from the larger con- equences ot which to us repute it as saved only by numerous guber- Rtorial vetoes. It is because the Oregonian be eves thoroughly in representative overnment, that It desires to see the egislature grow stronger in public ttim ation, and particularly in the stlmation of those of hasty judg lent. It would therefore have it efrain from excursions into matters which it is itself not strongly nterested but which become mag ified as evils when viewed by a con- de table portion of the people. the voters will find In it. It is in opposition to destructive departures and in support of submission of the exposition issue on its own bottom that this is written. Proposed highway legislation has eon heretofore discussed Jn these olumns. In brief, it is apparent om investigation that there are no vallable data upon which may be a Red a statute requiring automobile urrlers to compensate the state for ear of roads. There is a fairly ac- urate guide, however, for laws hich will guard against destruction. here is need for curtailment of the iced of heavy vehicles, for impact, ot deadweight, is the important fac r, within certain wide limits. There need also for better enforcement traffic laws, for regulation by cans of franchises of carriers that se.the highways and need for In ections and reports upon which to und future enactments. Numerous substitutes have been ggested for the prepared plan of nancing the 1925 exposition. Pro visions of friendship for the expo- Ion are general, but there is con- oversy over how the funds needed r Jt shall be raised. The proponents these substitute plans mav be T-rndly and sincere, but the effect, I htever their Intent, of substitution that of a flank attack upon the ex- sition Itself. It is proposed, for one thing, that income tax, detailed and sweep- g in its provisions, shall be consid ed by a legislature which by right ould sit not more than five or six ys, and that this measure shall be tached as a rider to the exposition 11. It is not befitting that a revolu- onary system of taxation have the atus of rider. It is unfair to the rinciple of the income tax Itself that s adoption or rejection be made de- ndent upon public sentiment to- ard a world's fair or any other eaceful enterprise. The federal In- ome tax law, as amended. Is not the oduct of hasty congressional ae on, but of weeks and months of moderation. In which unlimited rvice of experts was available to e national lawmakers. No body of perts anywhere can measure the quirements of a state and equitably pply the ramifications of an income to meet them within the time at the income tax has been under ecific discussion in Oregon. An come tax law, so drawn, and assed in haste, would be exoerl- ental and poKSibly destructive. A ecial committee, appointed by au- orlty of the last legislature, has en working for several months on income tax law. It Is not ready submit it. It will not be ready submit it until the legislature eets if regular session in 1923. is committee has among Its mem- rs several who are sincere ad vo tes of a state Income tax. The mmittee Is united In Its request at the special session do not at- mpt legislation of that character. The formal request of the voters Portland is that the legislature ve the people of the state an op- rtunity to vote on the issue of tax- themselves in a particular way. Xinan.ce the exposition. The way VF.VF CRIMES REQUIRE MORE JUDGES. Congress has discovered that new laws defining new crimes make more work for the courts, which makes more judges necessary. Hence a bill providing for appointment of twenty- two additional district judges who may be assigned from time to time to districts where there is congestion of business. There were on July 1 on the calen dars of all the district courts in the United States 156,000 cases, of which 9700 were civil and 66,000 criminal. Since 1912 criminal business has in creased nearly 800 per cent, due to new laws against narcotics, . espion age, smuggling, auto-theft and es pecially the prohibition law. We should punish these crimes, since we have declared them to be crimes, and we should not grudge the cost of machinery for their punishment. It adds to the cost of government, but after all that Is trifling by comparison with the moral and economic waste caused by drugs and alcohol alone, and the ef fectiveness of law is greatly en hanced by the sureness and prompt ness of punishment. TEAMWORK FOB A I.I. OREGON. Progress of Oregon demands more people to cultivate its soil, mine its minerals, grow live stock, produce lumber and convert all these prod ucts into manufactured shape. The welfare of every part of the state Is advanced by advancement on these lines in any other part, so that the efforts of all the people should be combined, as of one community. In promoting progress in any one of its parts. This is the principle on which the Oregon State Chamber of Com merce acts, and the manner In which it has been applied, with the results, is related in Its annual report. "Influence of the state chamber has been exerted in obtaining federal aid to highway construction and In ducing the state to build certain im portant roads in all parts of the state. Its support has been given to particular Irrigation projects and to legislation by congress for generous federal aid by means of long-term loans. It has co-operated with the Union Pacific railroad in spreading information which would attract set tlers, and with the vocational edu cation board and the Oregon vet erans In settling service men on the land. It has joined other bodies In Oregon and Washington In support of port development and river Im provement. It has assisted in find ing markets for Oregon products. and has watched over Oregon inter ests In the tariff and railroad rates. It has endorsed the 1925 exposition as a benefit to the whole state. It has co-operated with other state organ izations in many ways. All these activities were inspired by belief that Oregon is one big com munity, not a mere bundle of small, disconnected communities. Its peo ple should pull together as a team, for the parts are too small to ac complish much alone and are apt to nullify one another's efforts by working at cross purposes. United, they can advance irrigation in any part of central, eastern or southern Oregon, farming and fruit-growing In all sections, lumbering in either the west or northwest, mining In Jose phine or Baker county, sheep-growing in the Blue mountains or the Wil lamette valley, cattle-growing on the range of the southeast, and all can promote Improvement of the Colum bia as a waterway and of Portland and other cities as seaports. From this viewpoint the state chamber works and helps to get something done, and frou this view point the 1925 exposition should be considered not as an enterprise of the ctly where it is to be held but as that of the entire state which, with Its products, will be the chief exhibit. readers of fiction will sigh with at least a passing regret to know that a certain Arizona hamlet, listed in the postal guide as Charleston, has ceased to be. For Charleston was the Wolfville. of fiction, and through its streets there once swaggered and swore those westerners who were jthe prototypes of Lewis' characters. Now, it has been said of the Wolfville tales, by many men who never wrote a vivid paragraph, that they were overdrawn and that, raw as real westerners may have been, fact at no time approached fiction. They would have you believe that the old cattleman, whose diversion was reminiscence, romanced to s degree incompatible with the truth If one agrees with these critics he must forsake much that is pleasant and instructive in life and books, and set himself up as a pedant who will not be amused. Yet men who have known the west, men who are in contact with it today, shall continue to find joy in Wolfville, recognizing Its fictional characters as only slightly embellished and its episodes as entirely probable. Indeed, there are nooks in the west of the present where such congenial sages as Sam Knrlght and Doc Peets still shed the light of a rough but serviceable erudition, and maintain the tradi tions, though the bars and faro tables have vanished. In American literature Lewis, though his stories lack the perfec tion of plot that marked those of his predecessor, was heir to- the privilege of Bret Harte. Both wrote of the west, and caught for dullards and dreamers and fireside adven turers its brilliant reflection of humor, chivalry and careless cour age. In a sense that should not be minimized they were the chroniclers of a period that will never be dupli cated, that cannot otherwise be given a place in national history, and that it were grievous to lose. There is no need for them now, or for their like. The authors ot today and tomorrow may busy themselves with sprightly and well-seasoned stories of fashionables, of maidens most sophisticated and casually sinful, of hungry hearts and empty heads, and the tittle-tattle of watering places. Old Sam Knrlght Is not for them, nor Jack Hamlin, nor Faro Nell, nor Melissa, nor Doc Peets. Let the future judge between these vogues in literature. The townsite of Charleston, so ran the news accounts, was sold to a land and cattle company for $342, a sum that, when Wolfville was at Its zenith, would have been regarded as small change. Did not the old cattleman, yarning of Cherokee Hall, assert .that, he had seen $5000 gambled on the turn of a card and lost without the flicker of an eye lash? Unquestionably this was truth, and while it may be deemed im proper to display pride in a practice so reprehensible, so godless andlm provident, there stirs in the reader an answering thrill comparable to the interest that followed the gam bling exploits of the renowned Jack Hamlin. The fact that so tremen dous a wager was made Is, If we analyze our sensations, merely secondary to our vicarious enjoyment of the might-have-been. We, too, have had a hankering for Wolfville. Those who have browsed through histories, buffeted by dates and ancient politics, have learned to hunger for a foot-note for the grudged lines that in anecdote or Incident instantly illumine the page and galvanize the characters. It is granted that these are not historical, and that they are appended on sufferance, yet in them is a very potent magic. They call back the past, until its great ones are known to us in a very human sort of way. Thereafter they dp not bore the reader. He feels the kinship of acquaintance. It is service such as this that Lewis gave in the tiles of Wolfville, or that isret Harte rendered in nis stories of the mining .camps a service both literary and historical. Their places In the libraries of America are permanent and assured. But for them the most graphic phase of our national development would have passed with memory. resulting from the collapse in administration, and we find a picture of woefulnesa that It would be hard to equal. The revenue from various sources Is either mortgaged to cover debts or is much diminished, and the Pekln government "has nothing to live on but odds and ends of revenue" and what it can borrow at usurious rates, but its credit has become so im paired that borrowing Is almost im possible. It has a large floating debt and Is being pressed for payment of this and large overdue American and Japanese loans. A large foreign loan could put the government on its feet If It could es tablish its authority in all parts of China and could stop the waste of Its revenue, but under present condi tions nobody would make a loan without control of its expenditures and over the operation of improve ments, like railroads, from which In terest would have to be earned. That would require subjugation of the rebel governors and a large measure of control over the government through Its finances. That is precisely what the present nominal rulers at Pekin refuse to consider. In an Interview with Lord Northcliffe President Shu Chichang said that foreign control "would only cause further difficulties and troubles;" that "the Chinese people should be allowed to solve their own Internal problems," which he de described as "a natural step in the evolution of government after the overthrow of the monarchical form." He recalled that "England and America also had long periods of un settled conditions before a stable ad ministration was established." The premier, Chin Hung-peng, said: China wants money, and can offer imule security. We are willing to discuss con trol of expenditures if it does not interfere with China's sovereign rights. Give us the right to fix a tariff like anv other nation ana we shall be able to help our selves. The more we are left alone the Deiter Tor all concerned. W need money to aisoand the troops, and their pay is many months In arrears. China Is abso lutely solvent despite tb present confusion of finance. The powers represented at Wash ington are asked then to deal with a government as supreme in China which faces secession, rebellion and bankrupcty. They are asked to strengthen it financially by restoring tariff autonomy when it wastes its present revenue in paying troops which defy its authority. They are told that it needs money to disband, these troops which would not stay disbanded so long as pay could be extorted. Disbandment could prob ably only be made permament and rebellion suppressed by' a superior army under complete control of the Pekin government. But that gov ernment Is itself controlled by the principal rebel governor and refuses to recognize the facts of the situation facts which the conference must consider in deciding how to help China. Approach of Christmas is always heralded by arrival of the Christmas number of the Seattle Argus with its wealth of beautiful photo-engravings and descriptions of the Pacific northwest. The present number is devoted to the attractions of this section for the tourist by automobile. and H. A. Chadwlck, the editor. proves his breadth of view by includ ing all from the Canadian Rockies and the British Columbia coast to the southern boundary of Oregon In Its scope. While the most prominence is naturally given to scenes on Pueet sound, around Mount Rainier and on the Sunset highway, there are two pages of pictures of Oregon's beau ties and a well, written article pa the THE PROBLEM OF CHINA. The most serious difficulty with which, the Washington conference has to deal will arise when it comes finally to settle, relations with China. Talk about China has slurred over the fact that it has not one govern ment ruling over the whole former empire and capable of being held re sponsible by other nations. The Pe kin correspondent of the London Times says that "in effect there are a dozen different governments in China, some entirely Independent of each other, some recognizing others and having relations of a kind." He gives a map which, as regards its many subdivisions, has a family re semblance to a map of the Balkan peninsula. The recognized government is in Pekin, of which "the machinery works around the capital, but weak ens In the near distance, and far away ceases to pulsate altogether." In the south the Canton government rules over Kwangtung and Kwangsi. In the north Chang Tso-lin rules over Manchuria and a large area in north Chihli, and really controls the PekLn . government, having nom inated several cabinet members. He "has his own foreign office, and rules as an autocrat, pure and simple." Yunnan and Szechuan have "provincial military governments owing allegiance to noboay." Yun nan works more or less with Kwei chow, and Szechuan Is now attack ing westeraf Hupeh. Shensi is ruled by a nominee of Pekin, but a hench man of Wu-Pei-Fu threatens its cap ital with a large army. Wu-Pei-Fu has been appointed inspector-general of Hupeh and Hunan, has an army of 100,000 men, proposes a na tional convention to reconstruct the government and "In effect Is acting independently of Pekln." In fighting against Hunan and western Hupeh ' . . . . . n ............ ..J L lit I - orders of Pekin," but his policy is' That was expectea to result la another lade- j winter. Japan wants a rubber island; so does the United States. But all the Islands have been distributed, and we have promised not to steal any other nation's islands for ten years. Both countries are In the same boat. and will have to buy rubber from other nations. No serious Injury will result unless we go to war and lose control of the sea. For that con tingency some chemical genius should invent a substitute, which will come handy if we have no war. News writers again are flirting with the name of A. D. Charlton in connection with a high railway of fice. Mr. Charlton could have had all that years ago, but prefers to live in Portland. Portland prefers to have him, too. BT PRODUCTS OF THE PRESS Bachelors Tell Why They Doi't Wed Modern GIrL Seven bachelors, each of whom would be considered an excellent "catch" by mothers wjth marriage able daughters, tell why they have lefused to wed the modern girl, in the Delineator. As a whole, they think she would be a failure as a wife. More specifically: No. 1. Age 26, good looking, and earning $8000 a year, says she is "too easy." Hence he will continue In single blessedness. No. 2. Twenty-nine years of age, with a salary of $35,000, thinks the present day young woman Is "looking for a good thing" and doesn't Intend to be "It." No. 3. With an income ot $7500, this bachelor insists the girl of today has no reticence and lives only for a good time. He is 30. No. 4. This one Is 40. with $35,000 year. "They demand too much," 1 asserts, "and possess Intellects below those of average men." No. 5. "They are selfish, superficial and conceited," is the opinion of thi bachelor, who Is an ad-vertlslng'eales man, well able to support a wife. No. 6. This one accuses the flappe and even her older sister, of "In sat! able romanticism," and wails that Lman to meet her demands must pos sess every virtue. No. 7. He Is 80 and has kept from the marriage altar because "there 1 something a little ridiculous about any woman." Many employers believe that workman can vivify the routine of hi lab6r by visualizing the complete con trlbutlon to civilization made possibl by his seemingly unimportant task. To illustrate the spirit which they ar trying to develop E. K. Hall, vice' president of the American Telephon & Telegraph company, recently told the Ajcademy of Political Science th story of the third stone cutter i story old, but timely Just at present Three stone cutters were working on a stone. A stranger asked the first what he was doing. "I'm working for $7.50 a day," h replied. "And you?" the stranger-asked the second. "I'm cutting this stone," growled the laborer. When the question was put to th third stone cutter, he answered, "I'm building a cathedral." New York Evening Post. It used to be that a beard was a senatorial badge says the New York Sun. Not whiskers, but beards were worn by the senators, beards tha covered their neckties or the lack o them, beards that had to be tucked into collars, If any. when the wearers ate soup, beards that were braided and tucked into shirt! bosoms. But that day has passed and so have the beards. That this is the day of youth arid the clean shaven legis lator is attested by the fact that only four senators wear even whiskers Besides Senator Lodge, there is Sen ator Nelson of Minnesota with his close cropped sailor's whiskers and Senator Ladd of North Dakota, who wears a scant gray patch of whiskers Senator Ransdell of Louisiana, with a bunch of paint brush whiskers, wears the whiskers for the democratic side Those Who Come and Go. Tales of Folks at the Hotels. Another Portland woman on the trail of a burglar and getting a piece of his coattalls as a clew makes us think once more that it might be well to turn over to the women the job of suppressing the wave of crime. A junior state official, married in the afternoon, was arrested for speeding later in the day at Wood burn. Traffic officers should exempt honeymooners. Br.ndits must be asleep at the switch. A cargo of 31,000 cases of Scotch whisky is passing through Portland In bond to Canada but it's the other Portland. However, if it comes to it. the United States can very easily check French naval ambitions by declining to lend the money to build those ad ditional ships. have the third greatest navy in the world, she may run headlong into the world s greatest surprise. Down in Florida they tar and feather men who sell liquor to boys. Florida s ethics are not so over whelmingly bad. mug ueorge ana wire annpar to be glad the daughter is to be mar ried. Royalty does have Its trials. When the forecaster just now savs proDamy ram or snow," that's what will happen, most likely. The parrot fish, found in the east ern Mediterranean, chews Its cud like a cow says the Scientific American In other words, it cuts off its food in relatively large bits, stores it away until it has time for the business of thorough chewing, and then reduces it to a fine pulp. Curiously enough, the ancients called this fish a ruminant, but their tales of It had been taken with man; grains of salt, until recently, by mod ern naturalists. As far back as the fourth century H. C, Aristotle asserted that the par rot fish, is to be classed among ru minant animals. This Btory was repeated by the Roman writer on natural history, Pliny. It passed as a fable, like so many other ancient statements of fact since verified. In a neighbor's house not long since little Georgie for the first time saw a face vibrator. At home, shortly aft erward, the youngster said: "Mrs. Umson's face must get awful dirty, moither." "Why do you think that?" the mother asked. "Because," replied Georgie, "while I was there I saw her trying to fix It up with a vacuum cleaner." New l'ork Globe. Until this year musical tmd other plays were built around the charms or derelictions of women says a New Tork news letter. But this season mere man has his fling. Walking along Forty-second street I saw the following electric signs: "What Do Men Want?" "Nature's Nobleman." "The Man's Name," "The Grand Duke," "The Wandering Jew," "Daddy Goes A-Hunting," "The Sheik," "A Prince There Was" and "Peter Ibbet son." More than a sixth of the people " a"?f V011" t0 h.er deraand .to I lose their lives because of lack of sufficient street lighting, according to a report made by Earl A. Anderson ar.d O. F. Hess to the Illuminating Engineering society. It is estimated that $1,000,000,000 in money each year is lost on ac count of all street accidents, and that nearly half of this is due to lack of light. According to the census re ports, the total expenditure for street lighting In the United States is not in excess of $50,000,000. Three to ten times as much light as is fur nished on most city streets Is an en tirely feasible proposition and would largely reduce the present accidents, these investigators declare. "We are looking forward to , the time when our section of the country becomes a part of Oregon instead of a part of Idaho." said Sam Mother head of Burns yesterday at the Im perial. He had Just returned from Pendleton where he attended the ir rigation congress. "As we are now situated we cannot trade with Tort land. All of our merchants and farm ers go to either Boise or Nampa. If the road from Crane to Bend is ever completed so that we may have rail connections we will become a part of Oregon. We are now busy with our irrigation projects. Not long ago $3, 200,000 worth of bonds for the de velopment of the Harney valley proj ect were voted. The people are soon to vote on the bonds for the Blitzen V'alicy and Silver Creek projects. These three projects when developed will upen up 160. 0C0 acres of wonder ful land for development and the country around Burns will become the garden spot of the state. There is not a man in our district who would not prefer to trade with the merchants of Portland if such a thing were pos sible, but as conditions exist now our enly outlet is bjt way of Ontario and our nearest market is Boise." Mr. Motherhead Is going to spend a few days in Salem where he will take in the special session of the legislature.. "I have no bills to propose but I went to look on and see what the boys are going tVdo," he said. Rupert Wanless, ambulance driving hero of the world war. was at the Multnomah hotel yesterday enroute to La Grande. Wanless was a meinher of the 363d ambulance company of the 91st division during the war. He was decorated for bravery. When his di vision was fighting in Flanders Wan less was busy hauling wounded men from the front. One day he lost his way and ran almost into the German lines. As he was preparing to turn around he saw several Americans merge from a dilapidated dwelling and motion to him. He turned hack his machine and drove towards their hiding place. Frenchmen who were in the vicinity motioned frantically for him to withdraw as they had never seen an ambulance so close to the front. Wanless kept on. stopped his machine behind an embankment and rescued several wounded men from the buildings despite the lact that his pathway from the machine to the spot was swept with machine-gun fire. Several holes were shot in the ambulance but Wanless escaped un hurt and won a coveted decoration, the French de Guerre, and a citation for his bravery. Lettuce end celery growing are be coming great industries around Nampa. Idaho, according to K. It. Dewey who is at the Multnomah for a few days before leavlnsr for Cali fornia where he will eend the winter. is n stooq conaition riKni now and lettuce and celery have helped make It so." he said vesterdav. We shipped 200 cars of It-ttuce out of Nampa this season. This netted our growers more than $80,000. Many of our farmers are now specializing on celery and they hope to make Nampa the celery center of the west. Other parts of Idaho have had bank failures and business conditions have been bad but Nampa has not suffered." Mr. Dewey was formerly one of the owners of the Dewey. Palace hotel in Nampa. J. R. Lynch of Los Angeles, who Is t the Multnomah, claims that a negro mammy in the south is respon sible for his success in business. He has added a new thought to the laundry business. One day he was walking by a'stream in one of the southern states when ho noticed en old negro woman busily enKSEed washing clothes. She had several pili s of clothing placed In rows along the stream bank. Lynch asked her why she separated the clothes into piles and she declared that they belonged to different families. Lynch started thinking and started a laundry In which the washings of families were kept separate. The people of the Coos bay country are not in favor of any legislative measures that will cause them to pay taxes for the 1925 exposition, aocord- ng to Thomas T. Bennett of Marali- field who was here yesterday en route o halem to attend the special session The bill as framed would make us pay $90,000 in taxes for the fair." he said yesterday at the Imperial. "After we had paid that amount of money we would Just be started. We would be called upon to spend $100,000 or more to build a building at the fair advertise the Coos bay country, i We have a small county and cannot afford any more taxes than those we now have." "What's the matter with these rail road companies"? inquired a guest of the Multnomah yesterday of one of he clerks, as he held a railroad ticket in his hand. "Here they have it tamped '1 A. M December, 1921," and with that 'on it how do I know what train to take?" The clerk looked at he ticket. "Why that's O. K.," he said. "Your ticket reads '1 A. M., De- ember 19, '21.'" The guest was sat isfied. When It comes to names that are hort Miss Clara Ek. at the Oregon, as anyone on the register defeated. Miss Ek Is from Rhineiander. Wlscon- in, and with Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Cartwrieht of Lancaster, Wisconsin, s touring the Pacific coast. W. A. Johnston of the Dalles who as rocently elected one of the dele gates from Al Kader temple of the Shrine 'to the imperial conclave, was In Portland yesterday and was at the mperial. ROADS ENTITLED TO ROAD MONEY Writer Opposes Joseph Pisa for Re Imborslna; Fair Taxpayers. FOREST GROVE, Or., Dec. 17. (To The Editor.) I have been reading considerable favorable comment re garding Senator Joseph's plan to finance the exposition by depleting the revenues derived from the gaso line tax for the year 1925. It is claimed that if the excess of taxes received by the state for the year 1925 over what would be received in 1924 were turned into the general fund of the state, instead of into the highway funds, the taxpayer would be benefited thereby. Will some one explain to me In what way the farmer would be re paid for the 1-mill tax proposed to be levied from now on to the exposition year upon his property, which he had paid and which had been turned over to the state? Senator Joseph claims there will be 1.000.000 more cars brought into Oregon during 1925 with I the exposition than without it. Grant ing that this estimate is right, then it means that there will be much more travel on our highways, that much more wear, that much more de struction of the roads. Yet he would take away from the highway funds all the benefits to the roads by re ducing the attending added revenue needed for repairs of the roads. If the exposition brings more peo ple to the state to travel our roads, as It undoubtedly will, thereby con suming more gasoline, and increasing our road tax funds, why should not the roads of the state receive the benefit? If this exposition will bring $2,000,000 more Into the road funds by additional consumption of gasoline In what way can the farmers be more largely benefited than by expending that sum in betterment of the roads? I am of the opinion that the manner of securing funds for. financing the exposition proposed by Senator Jo seph will not meet with the approval of the farmer. I doubt if the farmer will like remaining stuck in the mud any better than he will enjoy Increas ing his already heavy burden of taxes. 1 hope you will not consider me an opponent of the exposition. I have property In Portland and favor hold ing the exposition. I had the pleas ure of drafting the gasoline tax law of 1919. also the bond measures of 1919 and 1920 for building our high ways, and I am a good roads enthu siast. 1 am not willing that a dollar of our road money should be diverted from Its sacred purpose. You need no better proof of good roads bene fiting the state than to travel along our paved highways and see the im provements going on. Let us have the exposition, hut let us find some better way of financ ing it than by robbing our highway funds. I would suggest, if It Is the sincere desire of those who favor the plan of Senator Joseph to lessen the burden on the taxpayer by appropriating the profits of the road funds to the pay ment of the exposition tax, that they study the possibilities of an income tax as a means of raising tho neces sary funds. I am quite sure that would bo a greater blessing to the farmer than to tso the gasoline tax. There can bo no greater or more lasting benefit come to our state than a betterment of our road system as a result of the exposition. When the effects of the exposition on Portland have been long forgotten we can still point to better roads as a lasting re ward for our present efforts. LOYAL M. GRAHAM. More Truth Than Poetry. By Jaanes J. Hostssnc. PLAYING SAFE. We've written verses for release. And marked "em, "Run in full!" The day that Ireland makes her peace With merry Mr. BulL But every time we were about To swim them In the puiblic'a ken. Hostilities have broken out Again. Though years ago those lines were minted We thought we'd never get 'em printed. It cheered us up when Mr. George And Mr. Griffith, wreathed in smiles. In conference began to forge The links of love between the Isles. We told ourselves, "It's almost done; The clouds of bitterness disperse; The chances are we soon will run That verse." morning we were But while next napping. Good gracious! strapping! How they started They met again these statesmen did And. from the cable news that night. It seemed that they had clapped the lid Upon the then prevailing fight. We muttered softly, "Hip hurray! They're both conciliatory chape; We'll print that ode next Saturday, Perhaps!" A hopeful notion, but we dropped it; A lively row in, Dublin stopped it. They've now agreed, so they aver. So everybody's satisfied No more disturbance will occur And Joy is spreading far and wide. Tha dove of peace speeds o'er the foam Glad hands extend from Isle to Isle, And yet we think we'll hold that pome A while! t'errul. A little scrapping now and then Lifts taxes oft hard working men. Ineffectual. Mr. Brishane says that Shelley was a splendid advertiser, but we don't notice any particularly active demand for skylarks. Roth Worthless. Germany's marks do her about as much good as her Marx did. (Copyright. by the Bell Syndicate,. Inc ) CONTROL OF SPEED JS COMING Burroughs Nature Club. Copyright. IIonahton-Mlf flla Co. Can ou Answer These Quretlonaf 1. Does a centipede really have a hundred legs? . 2. How can I prepare skunk hides to avoid rank smell? 3. How do sea gulls arrange at the breeding season about following ves sels for food ? Answers in tomorrow's Nature Notes. Hood River will have good apples next year. The mercury has been down to 6 below already. Anybody who would buy a claim that had been "salted" with kero sene is easily deluded. The unsettled question Is on which day to eat the Christmas dinner. Last week for the Christmas shop ping. Make a whirlwind finish. The quake at was not extensive. Guam necessarily Where are all the calendar men this year? enough snow for the One often hears of a rose diamond, says the Kansas City Star. The stone is not different In kind from any other diamond, the -name "rose dia mond" having relation only to the form or cutting of the stone. A rose diamond is one that has a flat bot tom and only the upper half of the stone being cut into facets, or little faces, and polished. The diamond called a brilliant Is so called not because of Its brilliancy. A brilliant is the technical or trade name for a diamond that is com pletely cut and polished. The task of tabulating army slang for the Imperial 'ft'ar museum will take some months, says Punch. A L. C. Falkenhagen of Grants Tass Is In Portland to attend the convention of the Marshall-Wells sales force which will be held in the Multnomah hotel during the week. C. J. Harrison, a -lumberman of White Salmon, Wash., is in Portland In connection with business Interests and is at the Oregon. Dr. C. D. Donahue, one of the lead ing dentists of Euirene. spent the week end in Portland and stopped at the Multnomah. A. H. Brown, who Is engaged in the lumber business in Chehalis. Wash., spent the week end in Portland and was registered at the Oregon. H. F. and E. D. Bothwell. brothers of Maupin. Oregon, ere registered at the Oregon and they are both well. E. D. Miles of Salem, who is engaged in the retail lumber business is at the Multnomah. Charles R. Peterson, stockman from Crane, Oregon, is at the Imperial. Automatic Register or Gear Control Inevitable If Gait Continues. PORTLAND. Dec. 17. (To the Edi tor.) At last the speeding motorist is to be curbed in a very practical way. Congressman Jones of New Jersey is preparing a bill which will make It compulsory to equip every automobile with a speed recorder, such as the Maihak instrument, which records the speed for each minute the car is run, making it possible for any observer to look at his watch, take the license number and then assume the position of the complainant. These Instruments are now used In mr.ny parts of Europe and at some places In the United States in locomo tive practice and in fact are very simple in construction, the clock be ing wound once In eight days from the battery or ignition line, the speed curve registering on a card provided with space for each day in the year, the whole device being encased in a steel box which is sealed by the license bureau when license is Issued. The Maihak recorder or one similar could be applied at a cost of about $16 That Is about the sort of a news item we may expect to sec in the year 1929: the writer has driven automo biles in New York, Chicago and many other large cities of the United States ar.d Canada, but for Insane driving. Portland, or rather the drivers of Portland, take the palm. Does the average driver know that a lawful maximum could be placed on the gear ratio on third or high speed? In the Hotel Sherman lobby. Chicago, several years ago a mnn was heard .to say he would bet $50,000 that not one present would live to see liquor pro hibition. Moral Don't monkey with public sentiment. II. T. S. Pooling; of Ronuaco. TORTIAND. Dec. 17. (To the Edi tor.) Under the interpretations and rulings of the world war veterans' state aid commission veterans are not allowed 'to pool their borrowing rights, the security offered by each applicant to be separate from that offered by any other, and must be on a farm or residence. Many men are not attracted by farm or even rural life and single men generally do not care for a resi dence. If this fund could be loaned out to veterans acting alone or to a pool of several and for the purpose of pur chasing or erecting buildings for busi ness purposes, more veterans would be helped and business all along the line would gain. This would require more legislation, bui would it not be well to "help the boys" in a way that would be a real help and not spoil a good man by making a poor farmer? C. G. THAYER. Ananrri to Previous Questions. 1. Is there any book telling Incu bation periods for all the common birds? We do not know of one with tables A good many ornithologies give incu bation period'for at least part of the blrtl. Nuttall being helpful this way. Occasional papers In ornithological magazines like The Auk and Condor supply some data. It is a good ides fls one comes across bits of Informa tion, to Jot It down, thus gradually building up a list, with reference to authority. 2. Please tell me how many poison snakes we have in tho southern part of tho U. S., and give names they are cc-nimonly known by. We cannot give a detailed report on every poison snake ever found In the south, but can name as dangerous and well established kinds, the ground and diamond-back rattlers, the water moccasin or cotton-mouth, coral snake and king snake. 3. How can I free my English Ivy from scale insects? We have answered this before, but an so many readers have ivy for a window plant, we repeat: Wash with soap suds frequently, eponging the leaves upper and under and stems thoroughly ; or, better still, use kero sene emulsion, a strong soap suds with about a teaspoonful of kerosene to a quart of euds. Wash the stems. Repeat until the scale Insect no long er hatches. If you can In summer catch a ladybug and induce It to stay on your ivy, it will clean up the plant beautifully by eating the Insects. In Other Days. I'ne of "Shall" and "Will." PORTLAND, Dec. 17. (To the Edi tor.) Which of the following sen tences is correct? I shall (or will) work a month for you for $60. I shall (or will) sell you' my suit for 15. I shall not (or will not) be . re sponsible for any debts contracted by my wife. W. E. TRAVIS. 620 Second street, city. Price Paid for Cr.lna. "DALLAS. Or.. Dec. 17. (To the Edi tor.) Would like to know the value t a 10 gold piece of 1852. On, one aide It has 13 stars, a lady's head an- the letters W. M. & Co. on the lady's crown; also the date 18S2. On the other side has an eagla and the let ters S. M. V.; also says "California gold. Ten D." This coin does net frave U. S. A on it. A SUBSCRIBER. The Oregonian 'cannot quote market prices on old coins. Subscribers de siring address of a coin dealer should enclose stamped envelope for reply by mail. Twenty-five Years Aao. From The Oregonian of December 1H, lRfia. Tlfis was the special Cascade Locks edition which contained the first col ored supplement ever printed in an Oregon paper. Washington. The senate commit tee on foreign relations favor Cuban Independence, It was announced after a meeting today. Oregon City. Burglars made a clean sweep In robbing the postofflce here last night, breaking open the safe and taking $2800 in cash and stamps. The burelars who have been dor mant in Portland in the last two weeks have again come forth and resumed operations on a larger scale. The first Oregon road convention adjourned yesterday after adopting a plan to prepare a bi.'l for the im provement of country roads. Employment of Vulcanlxers. FOREST GROVE, Or.. Dec. 17. (To the Editor.) After a person learns tire .repairing or vulcanizing for a trade, does he have to own his own tire repair shop to do vulcanizing or can he find places where be can do vulcanizing for someone else? The person does not want to own Y.lr. own business and wants to do vul canizing for someone else, and wants to know if vulcanlzers are hired the same as some other kinds of work. JOHN B. In the first person "shall" denotes simple futurity; "will" implies will- good plan would be to knock some i lngness, consent, promise or determi-' ex-sergeant-major's beer over and I nation. In the examples given "will"! Vulcanizing is a trade at which get tha .whole Issue at one sitting-. lis the correct word la each instance. ! men are often employed in Ultra. Fifty Yearn Ako. From The Oresronlan of December 10. 1S7I. The Northern Pacific Railroad com pany has been obliged to pay con siderable sums for the right of way at places on the Cowlitz. One of the towns on Pusret sound that Is struggling for terminal hon ors has been referred to as "Olympla, alias Brown's wharf." Notwithstanding the extremely cold weathor last niirht the Oro Flno thea ter was crowded to witness the first performance of Purdy & Vincent's minstrels. Teople of north Idaho are laboring for the reformation of the territorial lipes whereby that section is to be dissevered from south Idaho. DONALD. Wash., Dec. 1. (To the Editor.) Please tell me whether or not "superior" can be compared. Is It dramatically Incorrect to say the following: 1 A sergeant Is superior to the private. 2 A lieutenant Is more superior than the sergeant. 3 The general is the most superior of all the men to the private. MILDRED S WALLING. In the sense here used "superior" has no positive degree and Is an ad jective not subject to the grammati cal comparison expressed In the sen tences. Its eia-t meaning Is hiicher in rank. You would not say: "In rank a lieutenant H more higher than ,lie aergeant,"