8 THE MORNING OREGONIAN, SATURDAY, JANUARY 23, 1922 ESTABLISHED BY IIENBT 1 FITTOCK Published by The Orerotilan Publishing Co.. 134 Sixth utreat, Portland. Oregon. C A. HORDES. B. B. PIPER. aianaser. Editor. The Oreronlan Is a member of the Aaao elated PrttMs. The Associated Press la ex clusively entitled to the use for publication of all news diapatchea credited to it or not f'he,rwle credited in this paper and alsi the local news published herein. All rights or publication of special dispatches horein are also reserved. tiubacrtpUon Hater Invariably In Advance (By MalL) Pally. Sunday Included, one year IS 00 iaiiv. KnnH.c ;r "jiy . jr. cuoauy included, six months ... 2.2.1 .75 00 2t .00 1 00 J''Jy. hunday Included, one month tia ly. without Sunday, one year I' y. without Sunday, six months ... "J'J. without Sunday, on month... 2.60 ry Carrier. TIly. Sunday included, one year I 00 Dally. Sunday Included, three months. 2 25 Ially, tundny Included, one month " lal y. without Sunday, one year.... TOO !"! ' without Sunday, three months .. Lrally, without Sunday, one month OA How to RmiIIJI.. r . . I .- mnn.T ?rde,r- expreae or personal check on your om:ik. ntamps. coin or currency are 7 it risK. tiive postorrica aaaress lull. Including- county and state. rwtare Rates I to 111 paces. I cent: IS to 8'J pages, 2 cents; 84 to 4 pages. 8 cents; Bo to 04 pages, 4 cents; 6e to 80 .-.-nor., w cents; n-J to o pages, o cents. Korelgn postage double rat Eastern Business Office Term Tonk- Iln 30O Aladlfton avenue. New York; Verree Conklln. Hteger building, Chicago; Ver-r-e Conklln. Free Press building. De troit, Mich.: Verree A Conklln, Jionadnock building. San Francisco, Cal. THE FARMERS' SANE PHOOORAMME. Any Idea that the acute distress from which American farmers suf fer would drive them to demand re lief through radical, socialist or paternal measures Is extinguished by the course of the national agricul tural conference. The most radical proposal has been that the govern ment guarantee minimum prices, but the conference has gone no farther than to ask for "careful In vestigation." In proposing increased credit and warehousing facilities, wider and better defined rights of co-operation for farmers and in ask ing for information on world pro duction and markets, the conference advances along the line which the republican platform marked out and which congress has been following, though at lower speed than the farmers would like. To "re-establish a fair exchange value for all farm products with that of all other commodities" Is the aim of the ad ministration's policy, both domestic and foreign, and of much pending legislation. Then there is no diversity of pur pose between the . farmers and the Harding administration, Mr. Hard ing holds the welfare of agriculture to be "truly a national Interest and riot to be regarded as primarily the concern of a class or a section or a bloc." He has given proof that the republican party accepts responsi bility for doing whatever should be done within the power of the gov ernment to rescue agriculture from the condition into which It was thrown by deflation. The farmers' bloc in congress did valuable service by forcing to the front as of the first Importance legislation for relief of farmers at a time when the party r leaders were disposed to give prece dence to other pressing legislation. It has succeeded In winning first plate for the measures that it spon sored and In getting the most vital of them adopted as party measures! The power and the rights of agricul ture now being established, the farmers can trust the republican party hereafter to care for their In terest as a national interest, and need no longer rely on a non-parti-sun bloc. Division of legislative bodies into blocs or groups Is occasionally nec essary in order to force attention to an emergency such as that which has confronted the farmers for more than a year, but if continued and multiplied, blocs dissolve parties Into groups upon which no definite responsibility can be fixed and . which obstruct rather than promote legislation. In countries where an adverse vote of the legislature ends the life of a cabinet, they render formation of a government possible only by combining a number of groups and they render it unstable by the opportunity to change the combination. Hence the frequent changes of French and Italian cabi net, and Brland's hurried trips from Washington and Cannes to de feat hostile combinations In Paris. In this country, where an adminis tration holds office for a fixed term, a bloc cannot drive it out but di vision Into blocs might prevent it from carrying out any well con ceived legislative programme. Hav ing led the president and the leaders In congress to recognize the agricul tural Industry's power and its needs as paramount, the farmers' bloc has served Us purpose. If kept in full activity. It could only weaken the dominant -party by dividing It, thus serving the ends of the opposition. Most significant of the broad view which farmers now take of their af fairs are J. M. Anderson's proposal that the I'nited States take part in European adjustments and the rec ommendation by the conference that the government extend aid to Eu rope for economic rehabilitation. The farmers realize that stabilizing of the price of their products and general recovery from their state of pear insolvency cannot be accom plished within the United States alone but Is contingent on the world's economic reconstruction. Their declarations point straight to American participation In the work of the reparation commission and of the Genoa economic conference. They see that they cannot prosper while their customers in Europe are bankrupt, and that restored pros perity In Europe would bring pros perity to them. Slowly, reluctantly the American reople are being driven by the ir resistible logic of facts from the po sition of isolation which they seemed to take in the election of 1920. The stagnation In which we find our selves is being recognized by more and mora of our people as the re action from a far worse) condition in Europe. We can pull ourselves out of the slough by. helping Europe to pull Itself out. The longer we delay this help, the longer shall we delay our own escape from depression. The committee of the I'nited States Chamber of Commerce which in vestigated European conditions ad vised that this nation should unite with the allies In enforcing per formance of the treaty terms by Germany and in bringing about eco nomic recovery of other nations. The body wntch represents the great agricultural Industry now proposes that we take a hand In economic re construction, with which the settle ment with Germany la Inseparably intertwined. Settlement of the al lied debt Is tntlmately connected with both thesQ problems, and our own financial situation compels at tention to it. All roads out of our tangle of perplexities lead to Genoa. OrO THE HIGHWAY. If a great snow, ice and rain storm should visit Portland with its de vastating effects, and should, let us say, envelop the courthouse with an avalanche-like cloak of winter, and block with chilling debris all ave nues of approach, something would be done about it; and it would not be by the easy and dilatory method of letting nature take its course. It would be Intolerable, of course, that public service could under any cir- J cumstances be suspended. The case with the Columbia River highway Is not diffei-erfit in principle, though It is different in degree. Here is' a great artery of traffic, built by the public, dedicated to public use. and necessary to the public convenience and welfare, closed to travel for two entire months, and no vigorous and intel ligent effort has yet been made to open It, though the chairman of the county commission has called a meeting to see what is to be done about it. It may be conceded that the job will be costly and troublesome. It may also be conceded that nature may take a notion to undo, by a new storm, what man shall havi done, though It Is altogether unlikely. But what of that? It cannot be agreed that It Is a summer highway only, nor that any let-'er-go policy should be further pursued. If the public had a duty to build the highway, there is a similar duty to main tain it. The Oregonlan Intends no criti cism upon any body or person in the present situation. It complains of a condition, a state of mind which has apparently seized both officialdom' and the public. It is to be hoped that the meeting next Monday will be attended by the representative of every Interest concerned, that it will be taken for granted that the high way must be opened, and that meas ures will be devised to do it at the earliest practicable time. THE COLLEGES AND ATHLETICS. The discussion of the proper place of lnter-instltutional athletics in cor tege life, which has been provoked by Dr. Lowell's report to the Har vard overseers, has developed the expected difference of opinion as to details, but on the other hand has developed a surprising unanimity as to the desirability of such sports upon the whole. Nor, as those who recall Dr. Lowell's attitude will re member, does the Harvard educator condemn them without qualifica tion. The fire of his criticism is di rected at the abuse rather than the use of healthy games as a means of educational stimulus, and It is im probable that he would abolish them if he could. The question then is whether regulation, by which sports are em ployed chiefly as a means of recrea tion and In which intercollegiate games are but an Incentive to in terest, la feasible to an extent which will preserve the good and eliminate the bad. Football is the chief sub ject of controversy because it is re garded as the most nearly typical of college sports, and because, more than any other branch of sport, it has been subject to abuses, but it Is sig nificant that most college authori ties seem to regard It as capable of being directed to good use. "It would be a great loss to our. higher institutions of learning," says Dean Randall of Brown, "to cut off any of the agencies which bring our un dergraduate bodies In the various Institutions of learning into close re lationships and healthy rivalry." But he is careful to point out that this must be attended by knowledge on the part of the student that he cannot play unless he has main tained his scholastic standard and unless he has answered all the re quirements of the college as to char acter. Thus employed, he finds from experience that intercollegiate sports may even have a positive influence In stimulating high ideals. Ascer tainment of the standing of the stu dent In connection with his qualifi cation as a player is of course a matter of administrative detail. Not even the college heads who frown on intercollegiate games make the ob jection that they cannot be regu lated if the authorities deem regula tion worth while. The scholastic grades made by stu dents who play football and by those who do not play was recently made the subject of research by the class In educational psychology of the Universitiy of South Carolina, With results favoring the former. For the purposes of comparison the law and academic departments of the uni versity were segregated; It was found that the average standing of the team men of the law school was 8,2.7 per cent, while that of non team men was 84.6 per cent; that in the academic department, however, the team men outranked the non team men, 83.6 to 79.5; and that the latter condition held good as to the university as a whole, the relative standing of players and non-players being as 83.1 to 82.1. The reason for the discrepancy as lo law stu dents is not explained, but they rep resented a proportionately small number and this may have been due to , Individual reasons. The figures for the whole group correspond with others announced from time to time by colleges in which football Is a moderate Indulgence. The highest type of regulation that is probably possible In an American institution of education is found at West Point and Annapolis, at which what amounts to military discipline is en forced, and in neither of these insti tutions are games permitted to In terfere with the scholastic achieve ments of the student. Both place a definite restriction on the number of games that may be played off the academy grounds. It being conceded that regulation is possible, the Issue becomes one of the value of athletics as such and of Intercollegiate games as incidental stimuli to athletic activity. It seems to be the fact that competition is a necessary concomitant of all sport, and that emulation between institu tions on the football or other athletic field does not stop there, but extends to other activities. There is no doubt that it Is desirable to cultivate loy alty to the Institution, which Is but a concrete example of loyalty of every other klnri; and neither Is there doubt that the stimulation of gen eral participation in healthful sports Is a good thing. Both the--e results, it is the opinion of college heads, are obtained from Intercollegiate games as they probably could not be pro cured in any other way. It is a question then of taking the easiest and most practical way. . The issue does not as a matter of fact lie between sports and scholar ship, but between sports and some other form of diversion which may conceivably have a less uplifting ef fect. The moral benefits of clean athletics are conceded on every side, which cannot be said of every form of recreation, and It is pretty well understood that the hard-working student must have some play. The so-called "moral equivalent" of which psychologists write must be regarded as a factor in the account. Conceding the value of sports as a whole, it is necessary to concede also the expediency of encouraging those stimuli which accomplish the de sired result at the smallest cost. THE HF.ARSTIAN CRT OF WOE. To the mind of the Seattle Post Intelllgencer there is no peace on earth or good will among men. at least none can ever come out of the Washington conference, and the "good men and women" composing church gatherings which endorse the conference are helping a cause which "is a brazen defiance of the' whole Christian teaching." For to the Hearstifled -vision all treaties are alliances, and all alli ances bring "conflict, slaughter and conquest." This is how he applies his doctrine to the Pacific treaty: The United States agrees to "maintain certain rights for Japan" the right to despoil helpless Rus sia and China, to spoil and oppress, etc., etc. If Russia or China should seek to take back what is stolen, they would commit acts of aggres sion on Japan, and the United States would be obliged to hed American blood in Japan's defense. There is no difference between the Pacific treaty and the triple alliance treaty. They bind nations to fight for one another, and they lead to war. Therefore the purpose of the Wash ington conference Is not to preserve peace; it has been conducted "with an eye toward war." Our neighbor can see nothing in the future but war! war! war! and woe! woe! woe! for It can" see no truth In any man (except Hearst) and no good faith In any nation. The only. safe course Is to read Bris bane's editorials and rally to Hearst, who bears the black flag of despair. If that was to be the fate of the nations, they might as well have let the kaiser take the earth and have saved themselves the trouble of van quishing him. Even Prussian welt macht could hardly be worse than Hearst's abyss of -woe. CIKCUMJiAVIliATINO THE GLOBE. Nellie Bly gave a new air of romance to travel by setting out in 1889 to outdo the fabulous perform ance of , I'hileas Fogg In Jules Verne's "Around the World in Eighty Days." Verne, it will be re membered, had all the advantages of a writer of fiction In that he was able to make conditions to suit himself. Yet the tale caught the fancy of millions and it was upper most In their minds as they followed the fortunes of the young newspaper women confronted by realities which could not be swept away with the stroke of a pen. Her achievement of 72 days, 6 hours and 11 minutes was a triumph of resourcefulness and pluck In its day. . Yet the record has been reduced bv more than half since then. Henrv Frederick cut It to 54 days, 7 hours and 20 minutes in 1903; Andre Jae ger-Schmidt to 39 days, 42 minutes and 38 seconds in 1911, and John H. Mears made it 35 days, 21 hours and 36 minutes in 1913. Verne thought he was describing a 'plausible impos sibility, but his imagination was un equal to the task. His "Around the World in Eighty Days" was written just half a century ago. Scientists already are beginning to discuss seriously the possibility of making the Journey in a single day. It Is no longer prudent to predict that a given thing cannot be done by man. It Is a curious reflection that we are less skeptical as to the prom ised one-day voyage than people were concerning the Verne story in 1872. Scientific credulity knows no bounds. We need only a -not im possible device which will permit an aviator to ascend to a height suffi cient to obtain the advantage of swift air currents to make "around the world in twenty-four hours" almost as easy as rolling off a log. A BATTLE TOR GOVERNMENT REFORM. Much has been done by Budget Director Daw'es to cut out waste in administration of the government and to bring the various bureaus into co-ordination, but the real work of bringing expenditure down to the lowest point consistent with the government's doing its work remains to be done. It consists in complete reconstruction of the governmental machine which has been built up piecemeal and In elimination of the many duplications, overlappings and incongruities which add to expense at the same time that they take from efficiency. A plan of reor ganization will soon be reported by the joint congressional committee and will then be before congress for action. The real struggle for reorganiza tion will then begin. The plan will certainly involve transfer of many bureaus from one department to an other. As heads of departments love power each will want to hold all that he has and to gain all that he can from the others. A highly diverting political scrimmage, costly to the people, would result unless some powerful influence could prevent. Reorganization would abolish many offices and would transfer others from one bureau or department to another against the wish of the holders. Each congressman would surely receive appeals from a num ber of officeholders to vote against features of the scheme that affected him. Those appeals wonld come from citizens of the congressman's state or district who had given him political support. By allowing them to be sacrificed to a sweeping re form he would lose their support and that of their friends and rela tions. The great majority of his con stituents would probably favor the reorganization scheme, but they would sit quietly at home, relying on him to do his duty, while the small minority whose Jobs were at stake would be vociferous and' clamorous at Washington. He would be in clined to vote to pull out of the schema the teeth which might bite his pets and to trade his vote for those of other members by voting to save their pets. In the end the amount of reorganization that would be effected would not be visible to the naked eye. One force can prevent such a dis aster; that is. an aroused public opinion, speaking with such force and volume that congress will recog nize it as having many more votes than have the men whose jobs are at stake. The people must realize that nothing Is so repugnant to a con gressman as abolition of an office in his district and that, when he is threatened, other congressmen have a fellow-feeling for him. The means by which useless offices have been abolished and great reforms accom plished has been the constant pres sure of public opinion, actively exer cised and growing until it becomes resistless. That pressure must be organized on behalf of government reorganization if it is to be accom plished. Circumstances are now more fa vorable than formerly to those who would stir the people . to declare themselves on reconstruction of the government machine. When all taxes were bidden in the price of liquor, tobacco and imported goods, merely passing Interest was taken in such measures. We now get fre quent reminders, that government costs money and that we pay taxes, for we pay Income tax and must use revenue stamps and pay various di rect imports. Without question re organization of the machine would materially reduce expenses and would restrict the amount of our taxes. A congressman who voted against reform In order to keep a few men In useless jobs would be asked to explain by the many whose pockets were affected, provided they were awakened to their personal In terest In the subject. The battle must be fought this year if anything is to be done and it will be a battle between practically the whole of Washington city and the rest of the country. BRYCE. EXPONENT OF DEMOCRACY. Viscount Bryce did perhaps as much as any other man to forge the chain of mutual understanding be tween the American and British na. tions which has steadily grown stronger under the influence of the war and of the events which fol lowed the war. For this work he was fitted by being himself demo cratic, both in conviction and tem perament. To the philosophical judg ment of the historian he added In stinctive sympathy with democratic Institutions. Hence he could enter Into the spirit of American institu tion? and could write of their fail ures without arousing resentment because he readily bore witness to their excellent qualities. He was so at one with Americans in spirit that they came taregard him almost as one of them and they adopted his great book, "The American Com monwealth," as a school textbook. Already well known in America as a member of Gladirtone's and other liberal cabinets, as an advo cate of Irish home rule and as the author of the greatest work on American democracy, he came to the United States as ambassador under the happiest auspices. He was ambassador not merely to the gov ernment but to the people of the United States, for he went about the country speaking to the people and making his own people, their politi cal ideas and aspirations, known. He was a messenger of peace, friend ship and understanding who put the old political sport of twisting the British lion's tail quite out of fash ion. He was an early cfiampion of a league of nations and he helped to sow the seed which, despite the po litical controversy that revolved around the subject, is now bearing fruit at the Washington conference. The value of Lord Bryce's services to the allies in the war can hardly be overestimated. As chairman of a commission which inquired Into the German barbarities in Belgium, he placed the facts beyond dispute and demolished the German pre tense that their massacres and burn ings were reprisals for similar acts on the part of the Belgians. Against his report, embodying many direct statements of victims amply veri fied, German propaganda could not prevail. He performed similarly signal service by collecting and publishing the hideous truth as to Turkish massacre of Armenians and as to German complicity. He de nounced like savagery perpetrated by Mustapha Kemal's nationalist army on both Greeks and Armenians and called without ceasing for utter extinction of Turkish rule In Europe or over other nations any where. His voice was ever raised in the cause of liberty and humanity. Such men as Bryce, rising to po sitions of power through the votes of their countrymen, are the best proof of the essential democracy of the British people, for they express its spirit. They do not belong to Great Britain alone, for their devo tion to free Institutions everywhere makes them a possession of all free peoples. America especially honors him as one who knew it and loved that which It prizes as a possession held In common with his own country. Stocking up for hard times, prob ably, a burglar the other night, looted an Albina store of a load of canned goods and general groceries, not forgetting all the cigarettes he could grab. He might be called a good provider. The health commissioner of Buf falo was able to make "three-year-old" whisky In three minutes, but that should not Inspire the moon shiner. He had everything ready. It may be time for a new "re ligion" developed by that young woman who "talked with God" in London, but it will need a better basis than birth control. The big lumber mill at Bend has begun operating at full capacity with a double shift. That is one finger pointing toward prosperous days that are coming. Before he is elected every candi date wants to lower the taxes, but after he becomes an office-holder his chief concern seems to be to in crease them. It means something when a utility company discharges its war slackers and aliens and replaces them with citizens. When Portland has an earthquake she will be proud to let the world know she Is in the seismic swim. Better get the car ready for a ride tomorrow. The forecaster says "northwesterly winds." SCHOOLGIRL ANSWERS COMMENT Waaatnartoa High Stadeat Writes A rata mm Reveals Identity. PORTLAND. Jan. 27. (To the Edi tor.) The answers to my letter on dancing in the high schools have both amused and Interested roe, especially the idea one has that I am fictitious. I am not; it seems to me that I am as normal and as much alive as any of my friends. That Is why I cannot stand to hear the charges against high school students In general. In my letter I attempted to give my honest opinion of things as I saw them and as many others have seen them. I realize fully that I am not a woman of older years and that many will not credit me with the sense of any older person, in fact that many are willing to think me disre spectful to my elders, but my state ments were honest and sincere and It seems to me that that should be considered. A reader asserts that the reason I have not had any direct knowledge of evil Is possibly because I was not looking for it. This may be true and, I admit, logical people always find evil if they are looking for it- They find good If they look for that. too. There can be and is, most likely, a bit of evil in everything, but be cause some girls blame their down fall on the dance, are we all to be deprived of this pleasure? Why de prive a goodmajorlty of dancing be cause of the misdemeanors of a mi nority? The charges the ministers made have been extremely slander ous; they have reflected on the char acter of every single high school boy and girl. I believe we have a right to protest. The things tbey have brought up before the public are in excusable and they have proved nothing. One day they charged that the dances were not properly chaperoned and the very next day, because the fallacy of this statement was proved, they asserted that a dance that need ed these chaperones was of an evil character. I must say that some cf these statements are most convinc ing! Why don't they back up their statements? They will most likely endeavor to do this by making publio the delinquencies of a1 few, but is that just proof? No, a hundred times no! A short time ago there was a most disgusting story in the newspaper regarding the escapades of a- certain Rev. Mr. Royston. I believe almost every one read It. But did the public Immediately condemn the ministers as a whole because of the crime com mitted by one of their cloth? No, It certainly did not. It would have re vealed a most narrow-minded public if it had. If we can't dance we will want some other form of amusement. Hap piness is the birthright of all al though some seem to think that mis ery Is a stronger builder of character and we acknowledge that birth right. There is as much danger (if any) In going to the theater, to church, or anywhere else so why start on the dances? Those who have ascribed their downfall to the dance are the ones, who most likely would have gone wrong any other place. We young folks, as a whole, have good common sense, although many don't seem to give us credit for anv. These high schools of today are the developers of common sense and high character and it is those who lack these attributes tfho fall to keep the name of the younger generation clean. You mothers and fathers of today. I make an appeal to you. Be broad minded look at the question from all points of view, and then condemn us. If you must. But can't you count in your mind as many reallv good boys and girls as you can bad ones if not many, many more? Remem ber your own. school days. I have never talked to an older man or wo man who has not expressed the wish that he or she were back In school, where they spent the happiest days of their lives and who have advised us to make these the happiest days of our lives. The Oregonlan. If it wishes, may publish the real name of the girl who signed herself "A High School Girl." She is going to Washington High school In the city of Portland, and has tried to be honest and to convey her message to the older gen eration in a thoughtful way. ELAINE BENNETT. WHY SHOII.DXT WOMAN WORK f Aad Why Should Man P for Job That Woman Could Fin as Weill PORTLAND, Jan. 27. (To the Edi tor.) Billy Baxter, writing "m your columns strenuously objects to the employment of women in commercial and professional vocations. A frreat deal has been said on this subject Many seem to think that a married woman or girl with one to support her has no moral right to hold a Job. It seems to me as unjust to expect a girl to give up a Job she wants or likes merely because a man or other girls need it as to expect a rich man to give his entire income to charity. Of course, it Is Just as un reasonable to expect all women to fol low housework as a vocation as to expect all men to do mechanical work. "Billy" complains because doctors and lawyers and the like hire "seme little Flossie" for office girl Instead of a man. To me It is more dissruet ing to see some big six-foot hearty pounding the keys of a typewriter than It is to see women wash win dows in a public building. Personally, I could never pine for a Job- that "some little Flosoie" could do as well as I. It would seem to me more disgraceful for a man to want a Job that a slip of girl could do than for a girl to want a Job a man should do. It seems to me that the man who would work for the wages cf an ordi nary office girl would not be the type of mentality wanted In any of fee. The race of life Is free for all. Let not us men cry to the women, "Walt for me." Women must be the guardian of their own self-respect. If women take more "guff from the boss that Is their funeral, not ours. Jtetrardless of what Is said or done, the world will move on in Its accus tomed groove and employers will al ways hire those who serve them best. In the meantime, hail to the girls. I love "em all. P. A. LINSCOTT. FROG IS HARBI'VGIR OP SPRING Midnight Serenade Tells of Winter That la ow In the Past. PORTLAND. Jan. 27. (To the Edi tor.) Last night about midnight I was sitting in front of the fireplace enjoying a good magazine. I was startled by a queer grating noes which seemed to come from an out side window In a back room. The thought of a burglar or a mis chievous boy with a tick-tack flashed through my mind. "R-r-rh, r-r-rh," the noise sounded again. Quickly and quietly supping into the dark back room I peered cau tiously out of the window, but could see neither burglar nor bad boy. "H-r-rh. r-r-rh. It sounded again. and I had Just decided that it was coming from under the eavea above the window, when all of a audden A froggy, sounded the drowsy voice of a little girl who was sleep- ng In a bed near the window. Then the thought dawned upon me that this little harbinger of spring was giving us a midnight serenade to let us know that spring Is now at hand, READER, Those Who Come and Go. Tales of Folks at the Hotels. John Hammersly, famed through out the Pacific northwest as a woods man and big game hunter, is in Port land as the guest of his brother. Dep uty District Attorney Hammersly. and Mr. and Mrs. Josiah Horton Bee man, who used to live In John's home town. Gold Hill. "I apent last win ter and part of this," said Mr. Ham mersly, "60 miles out from Elk City, Idaho. Greatest game country I ever saw. I and the dogs got 17 cougar up until this spring, and four 'before I left a few days ago. No. Nothing exciting. Just located 'em and treed 'em and killed 'em. That was on the Selway fork of the Clearwater. I use cross-bred dogs, bloodhound and foxhound, and have found them much more reliable than Airedales. Ted, Mutt and Joe three of the best hounds anywhere. There's lots of bear back there, and a few of the big fellows srlssliea. We got any num ber of browns and blacks, but never one of the others, as they're pretty scarce and mighty wise. But the fish ing! I thought I'd seen fishing on the Rogue river, but the sort of flaw ing they have on the Clearwater beats anything I ever tackled. Not tor sixe, mind you, but for average trout. The rivers are alive with "em, and they run from a pound to three or four. The natives call them rainbow, but they're only the cut-throat, such as we have here. There's a big run of Rocky mountain whiteflsh, too. Why did 1 leave? The doctor said I had a cough and ought not jo spend another winter in the timber. So I'm going back to Grants Pass and Gold Hill for a few months." During his visit to Portland, Mr. Hammersly hat made a trip to Newberg, where another brother, Tom. formerly of the detec tive bureau, has a ranch. "Lambing has started around Cecil, in Morrow county," states W. B. Bar ratt, highway commissioner, who ar rived from Hoppner yesterday and is registered at the Imperial. "For weeks the weather has been disagree able moderating in the days and freezing at night until there was ice everywhere. However, when I left home a Chinook had appeared and this should soon clear out the snow and Ice. The winter has not been severe, but has been' prolonged. This has been a life-saver for the hay farmers, for until the cold spell came there had been little demand for hay. Now about 75 per cent of the hay on hand has been disposed of and unless there is another storm in February there will not be more than 5 per cent of the hay to carry over. The demand has, naturally, caused an in crease in the price. Recently 1 bought some hay on Butter creek and there were 511)0 sheep feeding there. A few days ago I was there and 16.000 sheep were feeding." Los- Angeles residents have been suffering from the cold more than the people of Portland, according to Iot Swetland, owner of the Perkins hotel, who arrived from the south and left for the east last night. The houses in Los Angeles are not equipped with heating plants, like those in this section, and they depend on gas for such little beat and cook ing as they require. The sudden drop in temperature caused an equally sudden desire to use gas for heating, with the result that there was not enough gas pressure In many homes to supply enough flame for cooking purposes, to Bay nothing of heating a room. Mr. Swetlund de votes so much time to California of recent years that he is so loyal to Los Angeles that he didn't mention the recent earthquake shocks In that city. For several mornings a patron of the Multnomah found his copy of Tho Oregonlan missing from his door, eo he decided to investigate. Getting up extra early yesterday he found the paper and fastened a fish hook Into it. The other end of the fish line he tied to his wrist and returned to bed. leaving the paper In the hall way. The patron was dozing off to sleep when he felt a tug at his wrist and Jumping out of bed he rushed to the door, opened it and saw an other patron sneaking down the hall with the Btolen newspaper. The fisherman told the petty thief what he thought of him, and recovered his Oregonlan. "I never got more of a thrill catching a 10-pound bass on my line than I did when I felt that tug of the line on my wrist," he ex plained later. Golf balls may have been Invented in Scotland, but the largest plant In the world for the manufacture of those things Is located in the United States at Newark, O., according to William Burke, president of the Burke Golf company. So popular is the game in this country that the dhily output of this one factory is 1250 clubs. "We are often asked." said Mr. Burke at the Multnomah, "what makes the golf ball lively. This is due to the fact that over a solid rubber core is wound, partly by hand, and partly by machinery, 12,000 feet of stretched rubber tape; an out side shell of rubber and gutta-percha is placed over the ball ot rubber, and it is then vulcanized." Good prices paid for wool at the recent sale in Portland did much to make the citizens of Boise. Idaho, and surrounding country feel that better times are on the way, in the opinion of Ira E. High of Boise, who Is registered at the Multnomah. "Boise has weathered the financial strain that has been holding its grip on the country," said he, "and with the loans made by the government to the banks and the stockmen, the prospects for better times, in 1922 are very good." The greatest birthday party ever pulled off in Salem was staged re cently by Hal Patton. former state senator of Marlon county. Mr. Pat ton got together an army of old timers and they had a celebration and programme which Is without a par allel in that district- It was some thing like a reunion of pioneers, only more so, if you get the idea. Mr. Patton. while in Portland yesterday, ran across several Salemltes who re newed their congratulations on the big celebration. E. C. Hurlbert, secretary and treas urer of the National Lumber company, is registered at the Multnomah. He is co-operating with Charles Collard, president of the company, In arrang ing details for the opening of a re tall lumber yard In Los Angeles. Mr. Hurlbert Is a resident of the south ern California town and says that business there Is splendid. The com pany owns a large tract of timber and a mill In Oregon and will supply its own Los Angeles yard. The critical time for the stockmen Is about over, in the Judgment of C. J. Brown, vice-president of the First National bank of Weiser. Idaho, reg istered at the Multnomah. A notice able change has taken place among the stockmen and there Is less of the feeling of depression that has existed. From three sources money has been coming Into that section from the government and the good ef fect of this la already being felt. Whatever pessimists may think of general conditions, 8am Koser, sec retary of state. Is firm In the belief that 1922 will see a great Increase in motor vehicle registrations over the number In 1921. As compared with the same time last year, there are mora machines registered now than then. Burroughs Nature Club. Conyrutht, Hoog-htoa-Mlf flla Co. Can You Answer These QuestionaT 1. Do fish have eyelids? 1. How do oysters stick to their support? I. What can I feed a pet owl? Answers In tomorrow's nature note Answer to Previous Questions, 1. Why do some birds have bristles at their mouths? Probably as an aid to catching fine Insect prey. The wbipvoorwlll has them, and to some extent the night hawk. The redstart, a warbler, also has bristles. All these birds eat tiny insects, which are more readily en meshed where the bill is reinforced with this fringe. I. What Is a whale, a fish or an animal? It is an aquatic mammal, of the order Cete. to which belong also dol phins and porpoises. It brings forth living young. Has the back limbs so undeveloped they do not show ex ternally, and front limbs turned Into paddles. They are gregarious, swim ming in schools. 3. Who discovered how to hatch eggs in an Incubator? We don't know. Records show the Egyptians and Chinese knew this trick thousands of years ago. The Egyptians used bake ovens. Prob ably this gave the Idea to a French man, Reamur, who began experiment ing early In the 18th century. He tried waste heat from ovens, and also beds of decomposing manure, prac tically the snakes' methodk Later an Englishman tried a wire sieve filled with cotton, held over a charcoal fire It took 3 weeks of oonstant watching to hatch out the chicks! LIBRARY FOR WHOLE PENINSULA Co-operation of Three Communities and Central Location Are Suggested. PORTLAND, Jan. 27. (To the Ed itor.) The Portsmouth faction and the University park faction should co ordinate and co-operafe with the Pen insula people In presenting to the library board a strong coherent plan for a library that would bring about a building In a central location that would be a community center where many attendant would be present every day with the facilities that exist at St. Johns, at Piedmont and Walnut park, at Alberta, at Mount Scott, at South Portland. There should be an assembly hall as well. Instead of being a community or civic asset the library at Peninsula and at University park are make shifts, being open only three days a week. Why not get the triangular piece of property belonging to the city at Lomhsrd and Woolsey .streets. Just opposite the Columbia park, which is approximately midway between the Peninsula and Portsmouth schools and unite as a Peninsula community to have such a library as a combined population of about 10,000 people should have. The Peninsula district comprises about 5!00 people and the Portsmouth and University park district about 4500 people. J. 11. F. Mall Trips In Early Days. BEAVERTON, Or., Jan. 26. (To the Editor.) I should like to correct the statements in The Oregonlan about mail carried between The Dalles and Portland before railroad times. It was carried weekly at least, If not oftener, In packs on men's backs. Henry Wilmer usually had tfe contract, with other helpers. The coming of the mail carriers always was considered quite Important by we children, as they always spent one of the nights at our house; their packs would form a great heap in the corner of our sitting room when thrown from the shoulders of the almost exhausted men. One of them had his feet frozen badly and staid for many weeks in my father's home. It seems only fair that it should be known what efforts were put forth to take the mail from place to placo. as the roads were very rough and almost 'mpassable in places, even In the summer time. MRS. F. O T A YTATt Was Roy Gardner Haunted by an Evil Spirit? Now that he is behind bars again, the spectacular bandit and jail-breaker asserts that for years he has been dominated by evil "controls" from beyond the border, and that these have counseled and urped him to his deeds. "Spirits made me a bandit," calmly con tends the penitent Roy, thereby enlistinff himself in the faith that is espoused by Conan Doyle, Sir Oliver Lodpre and other eminent believ ers in the material afterworld. In the Sunday issue, with illustra tions, is the narrative of this latest sensationalism of the Gardner, character, which seems many phased and always capable of evolving the unexpected. Last Stronghold of Slavery. With tomorrow's issue of-the big Sunday paper begins a tremendous serial of fact, written by Mary Symons, and exposing the existence of chattel slavery in the harems of Turkey. By bribery arid intrigue this daring writer gained entrance to many harems and brought thence such stories as stir us to hatred of an old evil an evil that lingers in backward and degenerate Turkey. Chapter by chapter this serial will lay bare the infamy of a custom that civilization should abolish. Follow it from the first. Pig in the Poke. Here's another exceptional short story, one of the many that the Sunday editor procured for original publication in The Oregonian. Written by Ethel Storm, it treats of the troubles of Angelina, who took everybody's woe for her own and then, calamity of calamities, was wedded to a man who had no troubles at all! One imagines that a gifted storyteller, with such a situation, could contrive pleasure and laughter and interest for any reader. And this Miss Storm has done most adroitly. Page 7, magazine section. World Owes Health to Oregon. When we think of the vast store of drugs and remedies that equip a pharmacist's shop, we uncon sciously yield tribute to far lands as the source of this mysterious supply. DeWitt Harry, with a flair for advancing the hidden com monplace, tells in the Sunday issue the story of Oregon's medicinal contributions, the authentic account of an industry that seeks its materials in the forests of our own state, where nature grows rem edies on her own account. Illustrated. Spanish Spark That Started Beauty War-The English are con fident, as a people, that no other land attains such feminine beauty, such classic perfection of maidenhood, as their own. Dancing into London came the mysterious senorita from Seville, to be acclaimed by many "the world's most beautiful woman." Why are Britain's prettiest daughters thus thrust aside? The English want to know, and so it is that a beauty war is on because of Trim's dark eyes, red lips and smoothly rounded cheeks. Illustrated, in the Sunday magazine. Indian Boy Who Became Senate Leader. Oliver Optic himself, when feeling entirely in the mood, could have dreamed no dream quite as remarkable as this story of fact the rise of Charles Curtis, a national ward on an Indian reservation, to eminence in the upper house of congress. William4 Atherton DuPu whose interviews with American statesmen have appeared for some months in the Sunday Issue, writes most interestingly of Senator Curtis. Illustrated. All the News of AH the World ' THE SUNDAY OREGONIAN Just Five Cents More Truth Than Poetry. By James J. Mli. PLA1 I.U SAFE. W have what wa require. And with it we make shift; We ask not nor desire A million-dollar gift. A fortune so colossal Might lead us far astray With Idleness and wassail To waste our Ufa away. And yet, should soma on hand us This large amount of cash We'd take it, understand us, And take It like a flash. We trust that you'll belleva us Whm firmly we declare That It would sorely grieve us To be a millionaire. The simple truth ws utter When we aver that health Plus clothes and bread and butter Are more to us than wealth. Yet avidly we'd seise on The wealth that we disdain, For a sufficient reason Which wo shall now explain. For, if we stood up proudly Our features hard and cold And ululated loudly "Take back your tainted gold! We are as fate has made us. We're poor, but quite content. And nothing can persuade us To take a single cent!" If all attempts to budge us Proved futile and In vain, A Jury would adjudge us Quite hopelessly insane! Ills One Chance. There seems to bo nothing left for De Valera but to come over here and sign on as an understudy for Tom V atson. s Prudent. Bill Haywood apparently does not Intend .to come home to serva out that sentence until It ha expired. There'll Soon He a Senatorial! Rlectlon. We wonder If Mr. Bryan has ac quired a logal residence in Florida ' - . (fopyrlitht by iie Pell Syndlrate, ine t In Other Days. Twenty-five Years Ago. From Ths Oregonlan cf January 28, 189?. Salem John Mitchell Is making a last-ditch fight. The belief Is prev alent' that he is defeated. One of Mitchell's leaders today endeavored to "have a conference with Jonathan Bourne. Floating Ice has blockaded Cascade Locks so they cannot be operated. Reports are that they will be la operation in a short time. Among those who are being men tioned for school director are W. P. Fenton, R. r. Inman, J. D. Lee and George H. Hill. Judge McDevItt yesterday fined a wife-beater $10 in the jualice court. Way to Wheatland. PORTLAND. Jan. 27. (To the Edi tor.) I would like to know whera Wheatland Is and how to get there. A READER, Wheatland Is on the weBt side of the Willamette river about 13 miles below Salem. It can be reached by for-hlre cars from Dayton, McMinn vlllo or Amity, which are on ths Southern Pacific electric or by for hlre cars from Salem. It Is about two miles off the main McMlnnvlllo Salem highway, lying due east of Hopewell. List of Went Coast Ships. DEER ISLAND. Or., Jan. 28. (To the Editor.) Could you tell me where it would be possible to secure a list" of all the vessels registered from tha west coat ports? A list of vessals owned on the United States Taclflc coast Is pub lished yearly by the Firemen's Fund Insurance company and a copy may be obtained free of charge from any marine agency or at the home office of the company. The Portland offlc is in the Board "f Traile building. 1