10 TIIE MORNING OREGOXIAX, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1921 iftormmj (Drjrmnait ISTAISMbIIF.D ll HENRY. L. P1TTOCK. Pr.bllshii by The Oreg-ontan Publishing Co. 13& a.xlh St-eet, 1'orl.and. urexua. C. A. B'JKBBif, B. B. PIPER, lUuater. m Editor. The O evonian It a member of the Aaao Isted I'rens. Tre Asaociated t'reaa la e cualvely entitled r the u.e for publication tl all n-wa diaptchea credited to It or n;l olhem-tfe crcdlt'il In thla paper and also II. e loci newa punl'ehed hf rem. AH rlifhla 'f publ. cation of aiecml dlapatchea herein hre ttla,, eaerv-u MibscriptJon Kiue Invariably In Adiance. tHy Mall.) l'ally, Sjnday lni.n( d, one year $S 00 Dally. Sui.day Inclr-itd. alx montha ... l-'al'y, Sunday Inclined, three montba.. 2.2. I-Jtlly, Sjnday inr tided, one month.. .73 iJaily. er.t.iout Sn'-day. one year. . . . .V00 I ally, w lnout Sumiay. ix montha . W IMl!y, without Sunday, one month GO ",kly. o..t year 100 Sunday, o.ie year 2.50 .. . B Carrier.) I -ally. Siridar lnni-jil. one vear f.01 Tally. S jnday Ino ui'ed, three montha., 2.123 'aily. fiu'iday l.icl'i-'ed. one month ... ."3 T-ally. without K-mrtpv. one vear 7.80 1 ally. w"hout Sunday, three month,. . l'aiiy, without fii.r.iiav. one month fi Ilnir to ltem'iSTirl poatofflce money order, expreaa or personal check on your locut banK. Stair.j.a, coin or currer.cj are at owner a rink. 'iee poetofflce addrtja In lull, inc'udina- ctr.ty and atate. Foatare Kates ; to ii panel. 1 cent: IS o 32 p .ires, 2 crnts; 84 to 48 pages, o enti: SO to I4 pasea, 4 cent: 6(1 to 80 rae. a rent; SI to 08 pases, cent 1 orelgn poatag-e uouble rate. Kaern Kuaineaa Off lee Verree A Conk )'n. 3oo .Madlaon avenue. New York: Verrea t. Coitki!i.. Stfge- building. Chicago: Ve rts & 'onklin. P'ee Press building. De troit. M.;h.: Varna & Conklln. Belling building. Portland. THE PEOPLE HATE NOT FORGOTTEN. Corrlell Hull signalizes his elec tion aa chairman of the democratic national committee by making: a speech abounding- in confidence of democratic success at the next elec tion and in promises of the great things which his party will do if given the opportunity. Much hard! flood ana great presumption on popular forgetfulness are requisite that this tone be taken by the ppokcsman of a party which was driven from power by a BO per cent plurality only a year ago. When Mr. Hull tells what the democratic party will do for the ex service men and the farmers and to reduce the public debt, he -invites attention to what It neglected to do when it had the power. After-war reconstruction should have begun when congress met in December, 1918; It did not begin in earnest till April, 1921, when a republican congress could work in harmony wllh a republican presidents- His intemperate charge of "criminal malignity and reckless falsehood Against republicans is made in face of the well-proved facts as to delay in war preparation after war was on, and of graft and waste in con. struetion of aircraft, ships and can tonments. Is this what the new chairman had in mind when he swelled with pride over "the glory of the eight years' unparalleled achievement of the national de mocracy"? Tho rresent administration is ac cused of breach of its promises to the people, though its programme Is ample to occupy its full four years sina it has been in office less than ten months. Its record is yet to be made, but it has already given sub stantial relief to both farmers and aiHaniea ex-service men. Has re stricted Immigration, has reduced taxation, has established a budget system, has cut expenditures more than two billion below the total for the fiscal year 1920 and througn the Washington conference has done great things to preserve peace and to reduce armament. If the people were dissatisfied with this record, they would shrink from displacing; its makers for the one reason that the only alternative Is the party which they drove out of office In 1920. THEORY AND ritACTICE. Seated comfortably in an arm chair, with pencil and pad con veniently at hand, almost any man with a smattering of knowledge of the theoretical productivity of the soil may figure out for himself a competence from a piece of land only a fraction the size of the average farm. The formula is simple. One begins with the record, say, of a prize acre of potatoes in Belgium, which before the war was some 1400 bushels, by comparison with an everage of less than 100 bushels in the United States. From this he con cludes that intensive agriculture is the cure for all our ills and pro ceeds to apply the principle to other crops. In almost no time at all he Is able to prove to his own satisfac tion that farming1, "properly con ducted," is the real road to wealth, and that the possibilities of small tracts even city lots fre unlimited. No one except a theoretical chicken raiser can beat the theoretical i tensive agriculturist at calculator? returns. One Is reminded of this well known penchant of a certain class of theorists by the statement of Bol ton Hall, an early advocate of vacant lot gardens as a means of ameliorating- the condition of the poor, that "if the use of small plots of land rear the cities is allowed to the poor there wllbe no unemployable class. Cripples, old women, children and even drunkards can support them selves with their own hands' if they have the use of a little available land." Mr, Hall, who Is by profession a lawyer and by avocation a -well-meaning- philanthropist, is known also as a writer upon the topics near est his heart. He Is the author of "Three Acres and Liberty," pub lished fourteen years ago, and of "A little Land and a Living," issued a year later. Both books were widely read and helped to stimulate the back-to-the-land movement, which about that time was engaging- the attention of many thoughtful and benevolent persons, but which came to naught. The problem of rmemployment, of people who lack food while there is plenty of vacant accessible land, is far more complicated than the little-land-and-a-llving- brethren seem to suppose. The movement to place needy city people on farms, which was at its height a little more than a decade ago, was a failure, not be cause land for the purpose was lack ing, but because the human factor had been ignored. The knowledge of agriculture, which is the product of the farmer's long experience, Is not to be acquired in a season by every tyro, as those who tried it found out. It is p mistake to assume that the land Is the principal part of the farm. The man who works the land is even more significant in the scheme of production. There would not be much harm, perhaps, in fostering the notion that even drunkards" can support them- nelves with their own fcands if al lowed the use of a little available land," if it did not divert attention from ottrtain more important facts, one of which is that success in farming is not so easily won as all that and that every vocation worth while requires study and prepara tion. , If the back-yard garden could abolish unemployment and poverty, the thing would have been done long ago. THE GOVERNOR'S VETOES. It is apparent from the text of' Governor Olcott's veto message that some of the bills disapproved would have passed his scrutiny had they been presented at a regular session. In short, they were not objection able as laws, were perhaps of some value, but were not urgent. The vetoes in those particulars were in line with a policy which, we think has public endorsement. The legis lature when called In special session ousht not to complicate its deliber ations over emergency legislation with consideration of laws that can wait. There was one measure which de served the veto on its merits. It was that bill which validated di vorces obtained in violation of the law fixing the residence require ments of litigants. Divorce deserves to be as open and public as mar riage. It is the spirit of the law that it shall be. He or she who courts secrecy in divorce by suing in a distant county, a county of which neither is a resident, acts against public policy and deserves the consequences. Though without definite informa tion, we think the vetoed bill ex empting bonus money and loans from payment of debts previously contracted by veterans had a better intent than the freeing of soldiers from ordinary and worthy obliga tions. It was doubtless intended to frustrate those who 'are profiteering from immediate needs of veterans by advancing money on bonus claims at heavy discount or unload ing questionable property on them. But intent and effect are two dif- J ferent things. The governor is doubtless right in his opinion that no service man would want a law which relieved him from indebted ness in which he had not been vie tlmlzed. The act was broad enough to include the latter and was likely unconstitutional. But it is a matter of regret that some means could not be found of protecting beneficiaries of the bonus law from money shav ers and unscrupulous land specu lators. chief of engineers. Dredging now consists mainly of doing again the work of cutting away shoals where the same work was done the pre vious year, and there is always a race to get the dredges in operation soon enough to maintain the estab lished depth of thirty feet as the annual freshet falls. As dikes shouts dispense with this repetition of work on a long stretch of the river, dredges would be released not only to regain the full depth in the remainder of the channel but to gain additional depth and width throughout its length. The present depth would be more surely main tained, "and a good beginning could be made in 1922 on the 32-foot channel BOO feet wide which has been submitted to the chief of en gineers for approval. By this plan the annual expendi ture on dredging for maintenance could gradually be reduced to a minimum, which would be a de cided measure of economy, and oc casional delay of vessels would be obviated. The dredging plant could then be concentrated more each year on increase in depth and width; which will be necessary as the vol ume of commerce grows and as larger ships come to the Columbia river. ANOTHER RECIPE FOR KEEPING YOUNG. John H. Patterson, president of a nationally known corporation, was 7 7 years old the other day, and made the anniversary the occasion for sending to his employes a mes sage in the course of which he said: "Keep young by associating with young things. The newspapers are the youngest born every TJay." What Mr. Patterson means, of course, is that Interest in the cur rent affairs of life tends to keep one in touch with the present and the future, which are what we are living In and for, in contrast with the past, which, unless we connect it with the living present, is dead. He would not ignore, we think, the lessons to be derived from that which has gone before, but he realizes the ex tent to which the past is as water gone over the wheel. Only its use ful experiences are to be dwelt on, the rest is to be cast aside. There is plenty to be done both here and now to engage the attention of any man. Youth is the age of optimism be cause youth is little inclined toward introspection a fact of importance to all who would keep young. We still remember the period when' age was regarded as a thing apart, when it wore a uniform, as it were, of sombre hue and comported itself Ith solemn mien, as if the years counted so long as the spirit was young. But men, from having age thrust upon them, as they used to do, have grown to think that a man Is after all no older than he feels, as the old song has it, and that the feeling of decrepitude can be indefi nitely staved off by keeping youth constantly in mind. It is a fact of interest in this con nection that children left to their own devices choose their compan ions, not in accordance with their physical ages but by some process of inner consciousness which unerr- ngly discovers the true compatabili- ties of the mind. As men approach the so-called shady side of life. Is it not plausible that the method can with profit be reversed? It is the duty of the elders to themselves to surround themselves, as Mr. Pat terson says, "with young things," hich include young people and current affairs and .all that go to make up the cheerful viewpoint, wWeh is the universal attribute of youth. FIND TIIE VENDOR. The stamping out of the traffic In illicit narcotic drugs, which is be ginning to engage the attention of city and state officials, as well as those who are acting for the federal government in enforcing the Harri son law, may not be entirely com prehended in the discovery and pun ishment of the sellers of those drugs, but more than half of it is. The underground connections which they have established and the ma chinery which has been constructed for the procurement of narcotics, which originate in this country but are chiefly relmported from foreign lands, are far too complicated to be the work of novices, and if they could be destroyed they would not be rebuilt with ease. It Is probable that the conviction of a compara tively small number of men, if it were followed promptly by long terms hi prison, would effect the cleaning up which is so much to be desired. It is certain, however, that not a great deal can be done unless severe sentences are imposed. The drug vendor is by nature a man who does not care much as to the obloquy involved, while to fine him would be only to take a portion of his relatively enormous (ofits for the state and in effect would constitute a license which he could well afford to pay. There is a small measure of ex cuse for the drug peddler who ia himself a victim of the habit, be cause he Is suffering from an af fliction which renders him morally irresponsible, but the leaders of the rings are not as a rule habitues and for them there are no palliating cir cumstances. They deliberately pan dor to depraved tastes, they do not hesitate to create new victims for their own profit, and they are lack ing in the commonest instincts of humanity because they stand in the way of those who would help and cure. A long term In prison at hard labor ought to be imposed on every one caught. PERMANENT CnANNEL IMPROVE MENT. With a total of only $13,000,000 presided in the national budget for all river and harbor improvement, the sum to be expended on any one project will be decidedly limited. Those communities which match government money with their own are likely to get first consideration. As the Port of Portland has for many years done its full part in Improving and maintaining the Wil lamette and Columbia river channel, it will no doubt have consideration, but vigilance on the part of the Oregon delegation will be advisable In order that the full amount justi fied by the needs of the project and of the port's growing commerce may be allotted. At that, care will be needed to insure that the best re sults be obtained with the sum available. , The engineers of both the govern ment and the port seem agreed that this can best be accomplished by constructing dikes at the bars, that the main current may be confined to the channel and may scour it. A good beginning, has been made on this plan at several points, and the port has just completer! a dike at the mouth of the Willamette, while the government has done likewise at Harrington point. The port commis sion has now proposed that the dik ing system De extended the whole distance to St. Helens, offering to do the work at Morgan's bar and to dredge there to a width of 600 feet provided the government will com plete the dikes at Willows and Hen rici bars, the latter work being ac cepted as equivalent to the dredging which the government owes the port under their co-operative agreement. The advantages of such an agree ment are so plain that it is to be hoped that it will have the approval of the district engineer and the NOT ONLY CHINA AND JAPAN'S AFFAIR. Interest in the Washington con ference has been absorbed by the negotiations to reduce navies to the neglect of the negotiations between China and Japan, which are a con ference within the main conference. Though Secretary of State Hughes and A. J. Balfour take part as repre senting nations which are friends of both parties In order to help them in reaching an agreement, this confer ence acts as if it were an- affair of the two oriental nations only. Y-et the questions at issue bear directly on the Root resolutions adopted by ail of the nine powers in the far east conference. Upon the arrangements made between Japan and China we must rely mainly for practical ap plication of the principles laid down In the Root resolutions, for the most serious Infractions of those prin ciples result from the present rela tions between them. While the conference has made great progress toward complete res toration of Shantung to China, Japan refuses to consider annulment or re vision of the treaty of 1915, which, if it were put in full operation, would reduce China to a state of vassalage and would start a process of Japan ese penetration which would before many years establish complete Jap anese domination. China maintains that the treaty is void, having been signed under duress, and that it de ttroys independence and integrity, to which Japan, together with the other powers, is pledged. Japan insists that the treaty is valid and in full force, while indicating readiness at some future time to confer on con cessions from its terms. Sympathy of the other powers is without doubt wholly with China, for their interest lies that way. But Great Britain and France cannot consistently condemn Japan for ex torting the treaty of 1915 from the Celestials. All the territory and con cessions that they had taken from China had been obtained in the same way. The differences were that their worst aggressions had been commit ted many years ago. and had been accepted by China and all other na tions as accomplished facts, and that their encroachments on Chinese sov ereignty had not been carried so far as those of Japan. By questioning Japan's title they would cast a cloud on their own. Among the five great powers, the United States and Italy have not taken anything from China and are free to insist that all actron the principles to which all have sub scribed, hut Italy has little interest In the matter, so that it is left to the United States alone to champion a nation that cannot help itself. Realizing that they must do some thing to prove their sincerity and to establish a moral claim on-Japan to withdraw its tentacles. Great Britain and France seem to have set a time since which all spoils taken from China must be restored. Seeking a common ground on which Japan could return Shantung and they could make similar restitution, they seem to have fixed the year 1898, for then Germany took Shantung, wnicn Japan took )n the war. Ac cordingly Great Britain offered to give up Wei-Hai-Wei and France to give up Kwangchau-Wan. But Great Britain also took Kowloon in 1898 and wants to hold it as necessary to defense of Hongkong, and Russia took Manchuria, to the southern half of whichJTapan succeeded by defeat ing Russia, and Japan would not give that up, so there are large ex ceptions to 1898 as the time limit. The solid ground on which all the powers can attack the treaty of 1915 is that it requires China to discrim inate in favor of Japan as against any other nation in many matters affecting development, trade and foreign policy; that it secures to Japan strategic points in China from which territory of other powers could be threatened; and that it gives Japan rights to Interfere with the government of China to a degree attempted by no other power, de structive of Chinese independence and tending to make China a huge Japanese province. Foreign spheres of influence weaken Chinese sover eignty, but Japan would include all of China in its sphere and would ex tend its influence into the field of government as distinguished from the commercial and industrial pur poses of the older spheres. Japan's Kuropean allies may fairly condemn the treaty of 1915 on the ground that, while the war prevented them from defending China or even enter ing a protest, Japan took advantage of that fact to adjust to its own profit and to the Injury of its allies matters in which all had a vital in terest. China was bound by the treaty In effect to hand over all Gerrnan rights in Shantung to Japan, to lease no part of that province to any third power, to use Japanese capital in building railroads there and to open Shantung ports to foreign trade, ,'but the Japanese minister must be 'consulted before making a decision." Japan is given a 'ninety-nine-year extension of the leases of Port Arthur, Dalny and the Manchurlan railroads. Japanese subjects may lease or buy land for trade, manu facture or agriculture, may reside. travel and engage in business there, They need observe only such police laws and tax regulations as are ap proved by the Japanese consul, and civil and criminal suits h) which they are defendants are tried by him. Capital to build railroads in eastern inner Mongolia must be sought from Japan before an third power is asked for a loan. Ports in that prov ince are to be opened to foreign trade, but the Japanese minister must be consulted first. Japan Is given a grip on tho great Hanyehp lng iron works which would make them a Japanese enterprise. China Is tied up tight against American or Kuropean influence by this stipula tion: No part of China'a roast, bays, harbors or inlands shall bo ceded or leaked to an other power. The final twenty-one demands in cluded group V, but they were with drawn for further discussion. They originally required that half the Chi nese police should be Japanese, that China should buy half its arms from Japan; but they were toned down. They finally excluded any foreign power from construction of dock yards,' coaling stations, naval bases or other military Installations in Fu kien province, opposite Formosa and fiear the Philippines, and bound China not to use foreign capital for those purposes. China must also "engage numerous Japanese advis ers." permit Japanese subjects to lease or 'purchase land in the in terior for schools or hospitals, and send military officers toJapan to ne gotiate for purchase of arms. They also gave Japan the prior right to finance certain railroads in the Yang-tse valley if no other power Objects, and they bind China not to grant any other power, the right to finance other railroads in that region before Japan comes to an under standing with that power! Undr this treaty Japan has China sewed up tight, and, if other powers should relax their vigilance, might revive the group V demands, add new ones and sew up the helpless nation tighter. The treaty is so sub versive of Chinese independence and so opposed to the open door prin ciple and was imposed on China un der circumstances so discreditable to Japan that it is a matter of the gravest concern to the United States and all the powers represented at Washington. ' Plainly on the defen sive, Japan accepts the principles on which the other powers agree and consents to their application when brought to the point, but yields only grudgingly, inch by' inch. China should not be left to struggle alone; all the powers should back it in the demand that the treaty of 1915 be declared void and be replaced by a new compact in which Japan will be given no advantage over any other nation and China will be free to run its own affairs, with full liberty to choose foreign advisers and use for eign capital of any nationality. BT-FBODICTS OF THE PRESS IimectV Board BUI Ia One-Tenth Na tion's Produce. Insects are costing the people of the United States $1,100,000,000 a year through their Inroads on fruits, grains and vegetables, according to Capper's Weekly. Here's the official list of these ma rauders and the annual board bill of each: jsn.noo.noo 60.ooo.eno 4fl.ooo.ono i.. 20.000.000 20.000,000 12.00 0"0 8.0410 IVW 20.0on.ooo 1O.0O0 000 s.ooo ooo 13.0O0.000 5.000.01(0 IO.OUO.000 by these pestt amounts roundly to one-tenth of the total farm produce of the United States. Oraashoppers Chinch bugs Hessian fliea Corn rootworms ...... Cotton boll weevils.... Cotton boil worms.... Cotton leaf worms.... Apple coddling moths. Grain weevils Potato bui?n Army worms Cabbaa worms ..... San Jose scales The total eaten One Importance of Newfoundland Is its geographical position, relates World's Work. St. Johns, the chief port and capital of the country, is 1000 miles nearer to England than is New York; In fact, it is only 1460 miles from the coast of Ireland, so greatly does the Atlantic shrink off the coast of Newfoundland. That is why this unique country has had the distinction of receiving the first trans-Atlantic wireless mes sage at St. Johns in 1901, and also why the first non-stop trans-At-lantio airplane flight started from the same vicinity. The Cape Race light is the first greeting from America to ships on the northern route from Europe, and it Is the last to flash Godspeed to eastbound vessels. Newfoundland ,is verily the step ping 'stone between America and Europe. Those- Who Come and Go. Tales of Folks at the Hotel. Burroughs Nature Club. Copyright, HoiiKhtOB-XUfJIln Co. More Truth Than Poetry. By James J. Moatsgae, Tank cars for oil are a common sight, but tank cars for milk are something distinctly new. The first installation of this kind was made recently for a large dairy in ritts burg, says Popular Mechanics. Two 2500-gallon steel tanks are mounted on each car. These tanks are of. heavy welded plate steel with a glass lining, and are insulated with cork. Fused Into the metal at extreme heat, tho glass forms a smooth surface, which is easily cleaned and will stand severe usage. Inside each tank Is a motor-driven agitator. Run for five minutes before emptying the tank, it gives uniformity to the con tents. Milk, chilled to a temperature of 38 to 40 degrees, is maintained at that temperature in tho tanks with out further refrigeration. Similar tanks are mounted on wagons and motor trucks for hauling the milk from the railroad to the dairy or col lecting it along country roads. "It is remarkable," said Mr. Grum bler in the Winnipeg Tribune, "how mean some people are. I had with me on a fishing trip two friends who evidently were familiar with my reputation as an angler!" "Yes; yes; we all know your repu tation as an angler!" remarked his friend non-commlttally. "Before starting, one of them made the suggestion," continued Mr. Grum bler, "that the first man to catch a fish should stand treat to the rest." "Well," inquired the friend, "what happened?" "I assented to the plan, and we started. Now, both of those two fel lows had a bite, but were too mean to pull them up!" "Then I suppose you lost?" re marked the friend. "Oh, no!" replied Mr. Grumbler. "I didn't have any bait on my hook!" We guess our British cousins are not altogether Incapable of a quip once in a while, says the Kansas City Star. A want ad in a London daily: "Wanted Ten' thousands loathsome black beetles, by a tenant who agreed to leave premises In the same condi tion in which he found them. You may wrap a hen's feet up In rags till they are as clumsy as drum sticks and still she will scratch.' even though she doesn't get a worm in fortnight. Something here for you and me. Let's keep digging in. Worm Is down there somewhere. We'll get It if we keep digging. Farm Life An Alabama court holds that an anti-betting law passed by the leg- islature is unconstitutional. Prob ably the same court would hold that prohibition ia against public policy The earth's axis is said to have shifted sixty feet, but the man going home late with a list to "wlnd'ard' cannot claim that as a reason. The old-time sign restored of Twenty pounds lor a dollar, gets a groan from the man who has to "pack" home the bargains. Old-style furniture is said to be coming back, though we can't recall that any valuable use has yet been found for beer pumps. . Ellen Terry begs to be excused from accepting a new British honor. She has a higher than can be con ferred by government. The director of a California ob servatory says there is no life on Venus. As nobody is going there, it does not matter. The street railway company in Denver has been granted an 8-cent fare, which makes the fare match the altitude. It's about time for somebody to set the precedent of making a New Year's resolution and actually keep ing it. It would be a wonderful Incoming vessel that did not have something to be confiscated. "Swearing off" need not be Ited to the use of liquor. liin- such titles over Did it ever occur to these alienlst4 to examine one another? The Hearst tentacles have reached across the bay. Governor Illinois. Small . certainly knew The death of Lacey Baker, for many years organist of New York churches, recalls a story told of hia off-hand ways in the New York Post The bishop of Central New York visited his church one Sunday, and Baker, English to the core, addressed him as "My Lord," until the Ameri can (relate expostulated "We don t use here." he explained. "But what shill I call you?" In quired Baker. "Call me anything you like," and the bishop went about the duties of the day. When he met the organist before the evening service he was greeted: "Hello, Central!" What the bishop said In reply Baker never told. The Argentine counterpart of our Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals has protested to the motion-picture houses of Buenos Aires against the showing of films depict ing the bloody progress of the bull fight. These are more popular than are prizefight pictures here, but there is no doubt that they show most har rowingly the torture of bulls and horses. New York Evening Post. A little boy had been carefully coached by his parents to give up his seat to a woman, relates the New York Globe. He was In the subway with his father the other lay when a woman got in, and he promptly of fered his seat. His father took him on his knee. The train stopped again and an other pretty woman entered. Again the boy rose to his feet, and with a polite bow motioned her to the vacant knee. a Statisticians who undertake to tell how much money is "lost" Whenever the country takes a holiday forget that days of healthful recreation and days devoted to consecration to high purpose bring blessings whose eum total cannot be revealed by an add ing machine Boston Transcript.- Near-Happlnras Held Possible, Thomas Jefferson. Perfect happiness, I believe, wasl never intended by the Deity to be the lot of one of his creatures in this world, but that he has very much put in our power the nearness of our ap proaches to it. Is what I have stead fastly believed. To fight for one's country and re turn borne wounded, only to find that food is so scarce that one-eighth of a pound of brown bread "had to do for two days, horse meat was a lux ury and sugar a rare commodity, was the experience" of John Youshkoff, one of the musicians with the Russian Opera company at the Multnomah. The forests of the great northwest and the stacks of firewood in front of homes in Portland look good to these natives of Russia, where fire wood had to be carefully kept hidden for emergencies and in many homes where fires were needed someone had to go out arid steal wood. Not only did the bolsbiviki take away the property from the Russians, but. as Mr. Youshkoff was leaving the the ater one night four of them stopped him and took his overcoat. From Russia Mr. Youshkoff escaned to Cnina, thence went to Japan, where he lived two years, studying the customs, the language and the ashions. While many of the customs of the Japanese are pleasing, there are others which shock the sensibilities of the white race. After the Javanese husband has finished his meal, observed Mr. Youshkoff. the wife will eat if there I Is anything left. Mr. Y'oushkoff says that a Japanese wife would not do for him, as the women spend too much time around charcoal firea trying to keep warm. Although having been In America only two weeks, the Russian musician can make himself understood fairly well. After being pals for many years on the Chicago & Northwestern railroad and with a record of continuous em ployment on one road for half a cen tury, W. A. Merkelee and II. G. Ebblts are touring the northwest together and have stopped over in Portland to visit M. M. Clancy, conductor on the O.-W. R. & N. railroad. For 21 j ears .air. .werkeiee operated the same train, traveling over 4500 miles a month, while Engineer F.bbits ran opposite him for 22 years. One of the peculiar accidents in railroading hap pened to Engineer Merkelee while driving an engine on fast schedule. As they passed a freight train going In the opposite direction, the brake on one of the freight cars broke and flew up through the cab window, striking Merkelee on the arm and fracturing the bone. Mr. Merkelee states that he has one more year to his credit than his pal, having been In continuous service for 51 years. After having carried millions of peo ple back and forth from Chicago, they feel that they are entitled to a long rest. As time is no longer an object with them, they will spend several weeks in v California; The veterau railroaders are at the Multnomah When P. J. Stadelnian. mayor of The Dalles, writes his autobiography one of the thrillins- chapters will cover tne nig Chinese war which occurred in The Dalles a few months ago, dur ing which the chief of police was shot. The town was filled with tong- men, an memhers of the one outfit nu setting an idea that they were about to be attacked by a white man engagea ty a rival tong, they cut loose with revolvers and rifles when watchman accosted onn of their looKouts. The mayor h mself rook an active part in ciuellinir the disturb ance. Just before the shooting started a special officer was showing his shootin' iron to another officer and, patting the revolver affectionately, said: "When iretsy speaks, something happens." Just then the Chinese opened a fusillade and the owner of Betsy disappeared in the gloom. R. F. Pauler, of the storm belt of Umatilla county, is in the city. Mr. Pauler is from the town of Umatilla, which has been projected into unex pected prominence through the con troversy over the talked-of Wallula cut-off The cut-off would leave the Columbia river highway at Umatilla and run along the river to the Wash ington state line. This cut-off played a part out of all proportion to its importance- In the special session of the legislature WJth respect to the 1925 exposition legislation. Brighton. Or., is somewhat quiet this winter and the main topic there is he prospect of building a highway which will.connect the sawmill town with the beach resorts to the south. A start has been made and some sluicing hag been done, but the road Is a long ways from being anywhere near finished. E. Hosteland of Bright on is among the arrivals at the Hotel Oregon. Qeorge Wilbur ia in town from Hood River to attend the state exec utive committee meeting of the Amer ican Legion. Before going to war Mr. Wilbur was a member of the leg islature from Hood River and Wasco counties. There is some talk of his being In the primaries as a candidate for the legislature in May. L. S. Hill, former owner of the Brown Lumber company, at Cottage Grove, and now part of Hill : Mor ton, wholesale lumber brokers of San Francisco, is in Portland. .Mr. Hill was injured In an automobile acci dent in California several months ago and is still navigating on crutches. Taking rough sawed lumber and remanufacturing it In transit, is what Fred Wallace, sawmill man of Eugene, is doing. He isiow considering the practicability of buying slabs and turning them into broom sticks. Mr. Walters is developing quite an in dustry In remanufacturing. A. R. Brashear of Rogue River Is registered at the Hotel Oregon. One of the most beautiful of the concrete bridges on the Pacific highway spans the Rogue near that town. W. "E. Schimpff, formerly a mem ber of the legislature from Clatsop county, but now more interested in cranberries than politics, is at tho Multnomah. Lawrence T. Harris and George H. Burnett, members of the Oregon su preme court, are registered at the Imperial. Coat of t ommunltr Chest. HOOD RIVER. Or.. Dec. 28. (To the Editor.) 1. In sending the New Year Oregonian as a gift to eastern friends do you put a slip on It marked "Compliments of Mr. ?" 2. Who was head of the last community chest drive in Portland? 3. What compensation was paid the head managers and solicitors for handling same? READER. 1. Papers carrying the label indi cated cannot go by pound rate but must have stamp on them. The label is therefore not provided by this office. 2. Mayor Baker. 3. The mayor and board of direc tors in charge of the drive received no compensation, rne nead solicitor was paid $500 a month for a short time. The entire organization ex pense, including this salary, amounted to but 15059.41. At the present time the chest has an organization similar to any business with a paid manager. Hugh Herdman, and conducts an office. The expense of conducting this organization, .including the cost of collections and bookkeeping, amounted to nine-tenths of one per cent of the total collections of about $600,000 for the first ten months of operation, or about $510 a month. Can You f Answer These Questional THE END OF TIIE VEAIU 1. Do slate-colored Juncoes have a In other days, when other yeara Juvenal plumage, and if so, what Is it like? 2. How are salmon kippered? 3. Can you Identify a caterpillar one Inch long, with a green band about the body, with brown spots, cir cled with white; three white spots on head, two hairy uprights on head and tail, six hairy brushes on sides, seems to cling to Uaf with yellow sucking footpads? Answers in tomorrow's Nature Notes. s Answers to Previous Questions. 1. Does the alligator use a nest? Yes, the female selects a sunny spot near the "hole" where she lives, gen erally. If she lives in a ver wet swamp, she may have to travel a little to find a good place for the nest. The latter is a mass, sometimes rounded and sometimes conical, of grass and rank vegetation of tho locality. It is gathered rather slowly, and by the time the'eggs are laid, is settled to gether in a damp, decaying mass. The eegs are buried within the mound. 2. Is there any way to exterminate chub from a river without destroying the other fishes? Getting rid of any one species where several live, is almost Impossible, as poison bait that would kill one would probably kill any that nibbled. We have heard of trapping, using traps that would admit only fish of the size intended to kill, but do not know that this Is practicable. Possibly ex tensive use of a weir or net. from which Intended victims were taken, and other sorts allowed to csrnpe, might reduce the objectionable fishes, a a 3. To whom can T appeal for pro tection of dove? Aren't they abso lutely harmless? This conies from Mississippi. Farm ess' bulletin 1138. with game laws for 1920. gives doves. as protected by law except for an open season be tween October 16 and January 31. If the wild bird Is meant, report unlaw ful killing to the game warden. If domestic, that Is 'a personal matter to be arranged with neighbors as cir cumstances allow. Wild dove are valuable as weed seed eaters, and take only a small percentage of cultivated grain. WILSON'S FIIKM)S S ATISKI1.I) They Are Willing; to Leave Ills ne to Verdlel of Mankind. rORVAf.r.IS. Or., Pec 29. (To the Editor.) I noticed in The Oreaoninn a letter from Mr. Watkins of Marsh- field regarding the Tumulty letters. Permit me to say that ahusc Is no argument and is unbecoming to a gen tleman, so I am not permitted to in dulge. If you covet honor you will not get it by serving an unworthy cause. If you covet distinction you will get it only by serving mankind. You will never attain either by using scurri lous language about snrh world-renowned men as Woodrow Wilson. AH friends of Mr. Wilson are satisfied t' leave his case to the verdict of mankind. It is gratifying to observe that the present administration, after de nouncing some of the great reforms which Mr. Wilson so earnestly advo cated, should have such a great change of heart and expend so much energy to bring them to a successful consummation. All good men have had their tra ducers. even to Christ, who was sent to bring peace on earth, good will among men. He was betrayed, persecuted and crucified. Woodrow Wilson dedlrated his life's work to the same cause and met the same fate. J. II ALEXANDER. Society of Colonial Dames. SALEM. Or.. Dec. 29. (To the Edi tor.) Please tell me if the "Society of Colonial Dames" is exclusively a national order or Is it s-ubdlvidcd into local societies, as the Daughters of the American Revolution? Please give the address of 'the national Society of Colonial Dames. "SOUTHEKX." Up to the present there has been no branch of the Colonial Dames In Oregon, but Mrs. J. R. Montgomery of 825 Hawthorne avenue, Portland, has Just been appointed state organ izer and head of the Colonial Panns of Oregon and she Is planning to proceed at once to found a chapter here. If you will communicate with l)tr she will be glad to give you all the Information you may wish. Were drawing to a close. We Joined tho general. Joyous cheers That on the midnight rose. "A year has sor.e; that makes a score We've left behind." we said. Eut what of that'.' There's plenty more Ahead. "There's life to live and sights to see And fortunes to be made; Bring on the years that are to re. And let the old ones fade! We'll look on newer, brighter scenes. And. while youth has its fling. Why wonder what the future means To bring? A host of days has come and gone, Like soldiers in review. And still the same parade moves on A little taster, too. The years of our allotted .span Jn turn go swinging past, Eaeh yeur a triflo briefer than The last. And now the shouting leaves us cold. And we forbear to cheer; We're not so eager ss of old To greet the glad New Year. The years that held our hopes of yora Have paused a while and fled, And there are nut as many more Ahead ! a The Kxplnnntlon. Tho concressman who Introduced a hill banning beauty contests is prob ably afraid that his official duties will be interrupted by the nece.-oiiy of continually taking part in them. Highly Profitable. California has made a remarkable silt'cewR of the public ownership and sale of sunshine. llnrdlr Original. General I.udendnrf says in hi new hook that Germany niacle many mis takes. Germany !,- reminded of that every time an indemnity installment comes due. (Copyright by the Hell Syndicate, Inc.) I.oaxea In Foreign Kxrhnnne. PORTLAND, Dec. "0. (To ti,e Edi tor.) I'micr date of December 2ti tho following psragraph appeared, edi torially, in Tho Oregonian: An American In 11110 tried to i.onrl VJ.'.O throimh liN hunk to a brother In l-olar1. hut the brother rnulii n-'t be found, anil two jiS'-s latrr be nVmandod hh monev bark. Theiis.ii It had at one tlin grown tu U.l.MI 1'oliMi itiarki. ll tlnallv Miranlt to 1. Accepting this statement nt Its face value, the (mention I would nsk la "What became of the differeneo be tween the original SlTiO sent to Toland and tho ?1 2 returned to hlni two yeara later, and who received it? W. A. CODDINGTON'. Without going into the complica tions of foreign exchango it may be said that in effect tlin American, through his bank, purchased $2r0 worth of Polish marks at their then exchange rnto or market value. In two years their value depreciated so that when the American resold his marks for American dollars they brought only 12. It would have beet, a similar transaction If he had ex pended $2T.O to buy sugar, or shoes, or oul in Poland for delivery to a brother. If the brother could not be found and ufter two years the Ameri can decided to convert Ills sugar thoes or coal into money and mean while those commodities bnd greatly depreciated in value In Poland, he would receive back less than ho paid. Probably as definitely as U ran be stated the person who originally dis posed of the commodity is tho one who made he difference between pur chase and selling price, for be un loaded before the market declined. When t onaelenee la Absent. Answers, London. Iilrkv and Charlie were told by i the lr mother not to play at the back of the school building, where there 'was a swollun stream and plenty of mud. When they returned home at nearly 5 o'clock that evening their shoes were covered w'th mud. Thin mother said: "Charlie, I do not know how your conscience let you go to tho stream after promising nuther that you would not go." Charlie answered: "I expect my conscience wasn't working Just right today, mother.' Part That Clubwomen Play in International Politics Through the General Federation of Women's Clubs the dominance of man in moulding the' great policies of this nation is at un end. In the Sunday issue, narrated by William Atherton Du Tuy, appears on interview with Mrs. Thomas G. Winter, president of tho federa tion anl one of the four feminine advisers to the American delega tion on limitation of armament. Mrs. Winter therein discusses the work recently done in national and international fields by "organized women who can be depended upon to promote all movements looking toward the betterment of life." Illustrated. The "400's" Most Unusual Problem This is the veracious story of "Aurora's Daughter," the J10,000,000 bachelor beauty, who is fighting for social recognition, inspired by the romance of a father who found inTher mother the counterpart of a painting he adored. Told by Betty Van Benthuysen, in the Sunday issue, this latest development in New York's social circles possesses all the charm and interest and drama of fiction but is a page from life. With illustrations, the magazine section, page 2. 'Marking Time Down the Ages Whence came our calendars? Who first computed the year, so that we may subdivide time and appraise it and regulate our lives by its exactions? All this is answered, and more, in a well-told Sunday story by Corrine Rock well Swain, who traces our system of time (recording from the ancient clay almanac to the elaborate and ornate calendars of today. Sich articles as this persuade us that often we know little about the conveniences of the present, or the evolutionary toil that created them. The magazine section. Reading Sign One of the pleasantest ways to spend a half hour is with a sprightly short story, told by such a master raconteur as Kenneth B. Clarke. You'll discover "Reading Sign," his latest short story, ii: the Sunday magazine and follow it to the last word. One of the series of hitherto unpublished narratives by widely-known American authors, appearing weekly in The Sunday Oregonian. Mystery of Our Missing Girls In this installment of her alarm ing and interest-compelling serial, Mrs. Grace Ilumiston, noted New York lawyer and social worker, directs attention to the tens of thousands of missing girls who never return to whom the escapade of running- away from home bnng3 ruin and sorrow, and often death. Mrs. Humiston presents a grave national problem, and offers the first constructive criticism of those faults which create it. With illustrations. Among Us Mortals The inimitable Hill is always new, though his sketches from life are scanned by many thousands of eager enthusiasts each week. The reason is not far to seek. , His field is inexhaustible, for he draws from the rich theme of human nature. In tomorrow's issue turn to his delightful drawings of matinee girls at the movies to meet some friends of ours. All the News of All the World THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN Just Five Cents , )