TTTE 3IORXTXG OREGOXIAN, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1922 Ij-TABUjOIED BT HENRT l PITTOCK :ubllsried br Ths Ontonian Pob!lhln Co., la S liB blreet. Joriland. ore. .a. C. A. MOIUjEX, e. b. piper. aina ? r. K i - to. The Or.ronlan la K mf mbr of ths Asso :..ied 1'rtss. Th Auc.alrd Press la -tuaiveljr entitled to ttte us fur paol:callon t all neas dispatcaes crruiled to It or not ... fcrwL credilt-d In this pa per ..and also ilie local Dfi pub::bd hereto. A.l nchu . i pubiction cf special d.fcpatches aersin a:a a.io reserved. ubsrrinilaa Kate larartably la Advance (By T'ally. Ponday Included, one year OO 1 ':'". Sunday included, six months ... 4 t., t 'a:ly. tiunday Included, three months . ii---4 I-tu.y, Sunday included. ne nwnlli "1 -a.iy. Without lunaay. one year ....... .! '-liy. without Sunday, sis months ... Ill t.l'y. without frunday. ga mocth... .tw u eeKly. one year I OO uiiiUy. bat year 2.50 By Carrier.) T-"!r. Sirdar Included, one year . -k . . 9 0" Ivai.y. &urdy Included, three months, i-j i a..y, auna-jf inc.ud-d. one moma -' Liiiiy. without Sunday, one year.... 7. ho l'a:.y, without Sunday, three months .. 1.1f lfc;iy. w ithout Sunuay. one month o5 How to Remit Send postoffice money hit. eipreaa or persona, check tm your local baK. fttaxnpa, co.n or currency are tt owner s ris. Oive postoffice address m full. Including; county and state. tar Rates t to 1 pares, t cent: J to J pal's, a cents; 24 to 4S pairs. 3 c-nts: &v to f.4 pis. 4 cents: 61 to 80 Pes. a cents; to PlgtS. CCDl. ' "e.n poalace double rate. Eastern Blnlm Office Verree rank-- in. 4W lad son avenue. iNew York; Verree ai Conlclln. Meier bmldlnr. Chlcaa-o: Ver- r Cooklin. Free press build nr. I- "'. ai.cn ; k erree Conkiln. aionavlnock -u.iuins. hi r rancisco, Liu most sacred obligations If he but . embodies another .phase of the prin-l ports and that war was imminent, chooses to regard these as an In-1 ciple that the federal government I To meet, the necessities of war a cumbrance. It ia a jest of the j should aid In doing- that which the streets, a flaw in the moral percep- states ought to have done but have tions of our country. i neglected to do. Widespread de- The concrete remedy is a tight- j mand for a federal divorce law and ened divorce code everywhere. But no. even such a code, however In exorably administered, will. avail to stamp out the causes of divorce un less it Is aided by a sane and health ful public viewpoint a belief In the institution of marriage, a belief in the home, a belief in country. These are acquired from the crasiie up and not bestowed by statute. Becauf they have fallen into comparative disuse divorce is gaining In America. follow rr tot- bcdget ststzx. Reconstruction of the government would be only half accomplished if it should be confined to re-organ. nation of the bureaus and to adop tion or a budget system. It should extend to the methods by which the budget is handled in congress and to establishment of closer relations be tween executive and legislative branches of the government in con sideration of revenue and tax bills. The budget system cannot be worked effectively unless all appro priation bills originate in a single committee of the house and a single committee of the senate. Their total can then be limited to the si mis recommended by the president through the budget director and to the revenue available to meet them, or it can be raised or lowered by congress with full knowledge that any increase of expenditures must be met by increase of taxation. Until the present congress as sembled, appropriation bills for -each department were prepared by the committee having charge of legislation for that department? The consequence was that each commit tee tried to provide for the needs and desires of its department with out due regard to those of other de partments or to the revenue avail able. A single committee respon sible for all appropriations must cut and trim each one, if necessary, to keep the total within the revenue or must propose new taxes to provide more revenue. The house has made the indicated change by entrusting all appropriation bills to a single committee, but the senate still fol lows the old custom of dividing them among several committees. This may appear to be a detail of legislative procedure that is of small Interest to the public. In fact It di rectly concerns the amount of money in the shape of taxes which the government takes out of the pocket of each citizen. The people have a direct interest In the prac tice of economy by the government that is, expenditure of their money on things which they want their government to do for them. and no more than is necessary to do those things well, (iertain functions of government are indispensable, but all waste should be eliminated from them in order that the burden to the taxpayer may be lessened or 'that the money thus saved may be ex pended for the general good in other ways aid to highway construction, ducation, health, for example. Influences are always at work In congress against this purpose. Com mittees are jealous of power, and cheir members wish to" make a rec ord of achievement, for which they must have power over money. Hence the house committees which have been shorn of much power by being deprived of the Initiative in appro priations are already striving to have it restored. The corresponding committees of the senate have so far prevented all appropriations from being entrusted to a single committee, and may be expected to continue their opposition. We cannot expect the full meas ure of economy that Is necessary in the present condition of national finances unless responsibility for ex penditure and taxation is central ized and fixed In single committees of each hou of congress much as It is fixed in the budget bureau, act ing for the executive branch of the government. That bureau recon ciles with one another and with the revenue" all requests for money from those who are to spend It. The sub ject should be handled In the same manner by congress which must provide the money and must decide whether or to what extent requests must be granted. Congress will be more disposed to take the right course if the people plainly Intimate to their senators and representatives that they expect promises of econ omy made In party platforms to be kept. WILL Til FY DAREt The arms conference has practi cally completed its mighty work and there Is renewed hone and pro pect of peace for a long peridti throughout the world. iow let us see if there is any American senator, or group of Amer. lean senators. Irreconcilable. Incor rigible, megacephalic, or otherwise who will dare to set themselves against the welfare of all the nations by their opposition to ratification of a treaty or treaties which are a prac tical insurance against war among the great powers, through limitation of naval armament, which guaran tee peace in the Pacific!, give the oriental powers their rightful place In the sun. abolish the deadly men ace of the submarine and put the ban of illegality on such lethal weapons as poison gas? PLENTY TO DO. Mr. Baker will stay on the Job as mayor and the people of Portland will as a whole be glad of it. Not that they did not in the main wish him well in his supposed desire to be governor a very commendable am bition and not that they did not think again in the main that the city's loss would be the state's gain Tet there Is a rather general opinion that the state will make no mistake If it shall choose for Its governor any one among several available candi dates and there Is a much less gen eral thought that there is anyone hardy to take the mayor's place. The mayor gives as his reason for staying where he Is that he was called to that position and there is a fair and reasonable expectation and pledge that he will fill out his term. Without finding any fault with him for taking his present duties and re sponsibilities so seriously, or for his belief that he was formally called to a definite service, let it also be ob served that an election to the gov. ernorshlp would have had the aspect of, and would have been In fact, a promotion by the whole peophr to higher service. Why may not a mayor aspire to be governor? Why may not the sovereign people choose him to be their chief executive? Anyway, he has plenty to do as mayor. A mayor's life is Just one troublesome thing after another. Take the little matter of that $900 worth of street-car tickets. It Is discovered suddenly that they have been kicking about in the city hall for two or three years and nobody missed them. The city is rich, of course, and walking Is good and mu nicipal automobiles are plentiful; but they could have been used. They can be used now. But why was there no check on themT Mayor Baker will find out. We are confident of that. While he is at it he might extend his inquiries into a comprehensive survey of all the city's properties to see what else It has that It didn't know It had, or mayhap what it has not that it thought it had. for another law making uniform the conditions under which mar riages may be entered into is the product of weariness over waiting for states to employ the rights about which so much Is being said. The Oklahoma case comes be latedly. The records of many years in which no lynchings were pun ished stand out in public conscious ness. Tet it Vs entirely possible that the states in which these crimes most frequently occur might even now break the force of a federal enactment by proceeding to break up the practice on their own account. THE INrtU".SK IN 1I1VORCKS. A condition of public peril can be Tie wed with satisfaction only when Its power to harm is on the wane and seems destined to return to a minimum or disappear utterly. It Is not so with divorce, which by the statistics of the census bureau shows an inrre:s of 10 per cent in ten years and a total of 510.56$ divorced persons In the I'r.ited States. Here Is a peril to the happiness and effi ciency of America that is growing with the steady malignancy of a cancer. In spite of all that has been said a (ruins, the evil, despite the pitiful proof that divorce is not the road to human contentment, the number of decrees mounts in direct ratio to the loose living of the times. It is apparent that, generally speaking, the divorce laws of Amer ica are t.xr too lax. too Instant In their functioning, too foolishly in clined. Here Is no denial that the institution of divorce is necessary nd that such legal separation, is not sometimes required in simple Justice to either husband, or wife. But divorce as now administered In America is the theme for sardonic laughter and the instrument of whim and caprice. It trifles with the in stitution on which the state Is founded rone other than the home. It lends support to the sophistry that life Is essentially selfish and the Indi vidual privileged to cast away LU 4 ACTION AGAINST LYNCHING. It is perhaps needless to say that a few more incidents such as the prompt sentencing of five lynchers to life jterms in prison, which ac tually came to pass in Oklahoma the other day, would furnish the op ponents of the Dyer bill with the effective ammunition they so much desire. Viewed by Itself, the con viction of these men was a triumph of justice which, if consistently pur sued, would make federal interfer ence unnecessary. Three of the five men sentenced were white, the others were negroes: all were accused of participation In the hanging of a negro packing-house worker at Okla homa City on the night of January 14. They received their sentences within two weeks of the commission of the crime and within one week of their arrest. The presiding judge. moreover. In passing sentence, told the defendants that they were guilty of murder and that their crime war ranted the electric chair. But one swallow does not make a summer and it is the contention of the supporters of the Dyer bill that the slates have 6lept .upon their rights to rely on non-interference by the federal government, and by so doing have forfeited them. The negative vote cast by 119 members of the lower house of congress when the Hyer bill passed that body repre sented the sentiment of those who- oppose, not the punishment of lynch ing but the usurpation of power which they believe should rest solely with the states. In theory, and if practice conformed to precept, no fault could be found with the states' rights principle. But the latter has been reoeatedly found to be unwork able. Not alone with reference to lynching, but also In such matters as the regulation of child labor, which the federal government' has under taken by indirection, it Is being dis covered that the states left to them selves do not always so conduct them selves as to warrant the contention that they can safely be left to their own devices, the evil of interfer ence, if It be an evil, is precipitated by the states upon themselves. It is interesting to recall that in the very beginning of the era of established government In the United States many of our political leaders who had been ardent In support of the states' rights principle changed their views, being moved thereto by doubt as to the capacity of the states to cotijjict certain of their affairs as efficiently as the federal authority would do. The prolonged contest between the two principles and the receding frontier of municipal au thority have been coincident with the failure of states to measure up to the full extent of their respon sibility. If lynchings had uniformly been followed by prompt punishment, as In Oklahoma, there would, of course, have been no demand for a federal antl-lynchlng law, for lynching it self would not have attained the THE BIGHT KIND OF RECEIVERSHIP. - Liquidation of the debts of the C009 Bay Lumber company and preservation intact of the great In dustry established by C. A. Smith go to prove all in one the inherent soundness of Oregon lumber enter prises, the courage and good Judg ment of Judge Wolverton in keeping the business in operation and the good business sense of the receivers in operating and refinancing it. To have scattered this great prop erty among a number of holders bj receivers' sale would have dismem bered a, fine industry and would have been a disaster to all of extreme southwestern Oregon. It would also have destroyed the splendid vision of Mr. Smith when on the eve of re alization. By completing the rail road Into the Port Orford cedar belt and by cutting and marketing a large quantity of valuable timber the re ceivers kept the great business In operation and intact and raised money to pay deferred claims, at the same time employing 1200 men who would otherwise have been thrown Into Idleness In a time of severe de pression. Thus the merit of Mr. Smith's conception was proved, the inherent soundness of a great Ore gon lumber enterprise was estab lished and Coos bay was saved from an acute Industrial crisis. In too many Instances receiver ships have been Instruments of divi sion and destruction. The story of the Coos bay company gives an ex ample of a receivership which pre served and improved A great prop erty. Credit is due alike to the court, the receivers, the owners and the reorganizerS. GOOD MEDICINE FOR EUROPE. By passing the bill for funding of allied debts to the United States the senate has taken a great stride to ward American help In economic re construction of Europe. The com mission created by the bill will have power .to fund for a period up to twenty-five years debts which are now represented by demand notes to fix interest payments in proportion to the rate which is paid on liberty bonds, to defer payment of Interest by nations which are not yet able to begin making it and to adjust pay ments of both interest and principal to each nation's ability to pay. Thus each debtor nation will know how much It must pay and when it must begin payment and will feel morally compelled to set its finances in order that it may meet this obligation. That adjustment will exercise a most powerful Influence toward res toration of normal economic con ditions. It will drive the several governments to cut down expenses and to increase revenue In order that they may have the means of pay ment. They will then stop issuing paper money to meet deficits and their money will acquire a stable value, though far below Its par value. In cutting expenses attention should first be turned to cost of armament and armies are likely to be reduced. The commission will doubtless regulate the degree of leniency shown by the use that each debtor nation makes of Its revenue and will be able to force partial dis armament by putting the screws on those which are overarmed. A com bination of severity with the wasters and leniency with the helpless and unfortunate will do much "to bring the old world back to sanity. Several of the distressed nations have already done much to put their affairs in order. Czecho-Slovakia has almost balanced Its budget for this year and will meet the deficit by raising a loan, thus avoiding further depreciation of its currency by print ing of paper money. The Polish diet has just Imposed new taxes suffi cient to balance the budget for this year and, a further deficit having accrued during the two months oc cupied In debate, has added more taxes to meet it. Even bankrupt Austria has abolished Its bread sub sidy, trimmed down its civil service and imposed new taxes. Germany, the worst offender in the wildcat money craze, has levied new taKes to an immense sum, though It re mains to be seen whether the new crop of millionaires can be com pelled to pay and whether the tax collector can keep pace with the ipenders. Much can be accomplished toward revival of trade by the debt commis sion. By In effect dictating to each debtor nation a policy "which will give its currency a stable value the commission can stimulate both buy ing and selling, for both parties to a bargain will feel more secure against loss arising from changes in the rates of exchange while a trans action is being completed. Men will feel safe In buying material, manu facturing goods and contracting for delivery months ahead, for they will feel sure that the money in which they are to be paid would not depre ciate between the date of the" con tract and delivery of the goods. ' In short, the debt settlement will tend to restore confidence, .lack of which is the fundamental cause .of trade depression on both sides of the At lantic ocean. great fleet was built and within a few years the people found them selves in possession of a potential merchant marine second in tonnage only to that" of Great Britain. That fleet, combined with the. les sons of the war, inspired the people with a desir.e to maintain it as a mer. chant marine and with a disposition to approve government aid to that end. There was a decided rever sion of public opinion to support of the subsidy Idea. But to the public mind the new policy was not to hand over the fleet to the few big con panics that - survived and that had joined foreign lines and transconti nental railroads in concentrating our shipping business at a fe"w large ports. The people on and adjacent to the seaboard visualized a number of American lines operating from all ports, many of them in active com petition with one another, and de veloping those ports to a capacity to handle all the foreign commerce that was naturally tributary to them. The opinion of the interior popula tion, while turned in favor of main taining an American merchant ma rine as essential to war emergencies and as an instrument of foreign com merce, was less decidedly favorable. It can still be ripened into an active force favorable to the new policy or may again be turned against It. In order that the cause of the merchant marine may hold the favor that it has won In the middle states and may convert that favor into positive force acting on congress, it is essential that a scheme be put forward which will attract the peo ple. Any plan to hand over the ships to a few great corporations which would' concentrate ocean traffic at a few ports having- the strongest business pull would arouse the opposition of the interior and of those seaboard states which would be consigned to neglect. It would be regarded as an attempt to capitalize for selfish ends the general senti ment in favor of an American mer Chant marine. It would not awaken the direct interest in. the subject that exists between each seaport and its tributary back country. . Any scheme of public support must distribute the merchant marine among all the ports of the country in proportion to the potential traffic that they can draw, each from its own field, unhampered by restrictive rates on railroads or by discrimina tive contracts between railroads and shipping lines. It must bring home to the people of every port the Idea that ships are the means of develop ing the advantages of their natural location and to the people of that port's back country the idea that ships are the means of delivering their products to customers abroad. in fact are merely extensions over sea of the railroads which deliver their gopds at the seaboard. Then the Inland farmer, miner and manu facturer will turn his eyes to the sea and will get the smell of salt watel into his nostrils. These are the talking points" by which the mer chant marine can be "sold" to the American people. Stars and Starmakers. By Leoae Casa Ban. Those Who Come and Go. Tales of Folks at the Hotels. . The man who uses "want ads" td inveigle yoflng women and girls is a scound-rel, generally too smooth to be caught; but when one is uncov ered he should get his deserts on some charge that will stick. Mail airplays are expected to . en circle the world In seventeen days. Somebody please page Mr. Burleson and ask him to pose for a picture to be entitled, "When a Feller Needs a Friend." Katie Putnam, star in many plays years ago, among them Jules Bckert Goodman's play "Mother, and who has been in retirement on her farm near Benton Harbor, Mich., is organ izing a vaudeville act for an early appearance. Wlllard Mack's latest wife, his fourth, is Beatrice Stone, called Bebe by her friends. She isthe divorced wife of J. A. Stone, a stock broker of Salt Lake, and has two children. Mr. Mack has known her for many-years. They first became acquainted when Mr. Mack and his, company appeared I firing." Mr. Linn, newly-elected presi- ln salt LsKe in wnat is now ine I dent of the State Fair association, is Wilkes theater. Mrs. Stone, then a on his way to Spokane where the young girl, was a member of the temperature is 10 degrees below zero 1 Tn- nrrnnri eh onn fawann a ie nn company, playing juvenile part!. I "r 7 I . r ,i. uuuiucuuj i""- otuiio PPi conferenen tha DrmrrammB for all r.h several times with Mr. Mack. Out- fairs on the circuit are mapped "but side oi ner appearance in Salt Lake and approved. Mrs. Stone nlaved the Pa.nta.ees time last year, serving as accompanist for , Returning from a conference of tax Olga Steck. former Salt Lake vocalist. .a at..,.a .tt Portland vaataerlov nn iii. .. V. m a .it n.i... " ' " "- "..to. """ Hoseburs-. Mr. Brand, as a mem- of "before the war" days. Is vice- Ker of the Orea-on tax investiiration president and art director of the commission, was one of a committee Players' Assembly, the latest co- of four who had a -two-day session oneratlve ore-anizatton to be lncor- with the Investigators of Washington, -mr. hrauo, wno 28 an apple grcnaruisi, bany, N. T. that t h a nri.)., hnnlneaa fn Orp.srOTl The members have already placed j s not a gold mine; that 90 per cent their first play in rehearsal, although I of the orchards planted neVer become Its title and the names of the cast self-supporting, but that the life of have not yet been disclosed, but it I an orchardist has compensations other is presumed the company will be lnf n ,I-na.ncalL . wn-c " ' ma? lL drawn largely from the founders, .' ,.", ,v,,e among wnom are numoerea neien nends more on the man than on any Lowell, Galina Kopernak. Mabel Fren I thing else and he advocates quality, year, Winifred Harris, Clarke Silver- I saying that a few cents extra nail. Frank Doane, Brandon Hurst, I every box make a world of difference Arthur Hohl. Mario Majeroni and in the revenue. i n a -aa-I T Tt 1 t I Dn"- Tf I. cm Mor8 American citizens . know dent of the assembly, Clarke Silver- about Blaine. Wash., than they did nail Is vice-president ana art airec- I a few years ago. 'Blaine is on th tor. Frank Doane Is the secretaryand I paved highway in Washington, an Rrandon Hurst, has been delegated I It is also on the international bound i. v.- e tha funda I ary line. Blaine is the place where John Brunton is to be the techni- . moto returning from cal director. I British Columbia and search the ma The objects of the Players' Assem- chines for contraband, such as bly," the bulletin sets forth, "will be liquor. What the inspectors do with t,,.., tiIotto nf rfiatinr-tlnn and the liquor they seize has nothing t eventually to establish a permanent 1 players company in New York. vent Drohibition. which has made Vancouver. B. C. such a noDuiar des. Ethel uarrymore .is striKing out on i tlnation for coast residents, Biain the long trail to the Pacific coast. She I was as unknown as Cherry Grove, will Dlav about the middle west for a Or., but now .its name is as familiar short time before starting the long " X,"'1,. jumps i;ius iUD . arrivals at the Multnomah. tains, sne is playing -ueciasseo m the largest receipts In her career. Her I While lee nine Inches thick in anagement denies the report that '5, -""" she will act "As You Like It" next Burroughs Nature Club. Copyright, Honghton-MlffUn Co. "Wouldn't It be a fine thing If we always thought of Oregon first, and presented our best side instead of calling attention to shortcomings?" asked James Linn, In a philosophical mood at the Imperial. "We have more things to boast of than almost any other state In the union, yet what at- tempt are we making to advertise these advantages and resources? You never hear of a, California resident knocking his state, "but on the con trary he never overlooks an oppor tunity to do a little bragging. Even when they have an earthquake they call It a fire or Insist that the earth shocks are .caused by heav- gun and store for summer. cake 32 inches thick Joha Gray's "The Beggar's Opera,' which was at the Heilig this year, to cut Banff deemed the right size for storing for the Canadian Pacific railroad. Nine of these cakes, each weighing 960 pounds, are loaded every half min ute on sledges and every 12 minutes is making its way back from th a freight car is loaded and ready for Pacific coast to Chicago. It will stop shipment. It requires 22,000 ton3 of at the Central theater to stay a little ice to take care of the demands of while, and then proceeding eastward will play New York, Boston and rhil- adelphia before returning to Eng ine railroad system and carry through the summer. Such is the In formation given by H. F. Beechman of Battle Creek. Mich., who arrived land. The company now singing this j at the Multnomah yesterday with his Adam of all the musical shows began its tour eome months ago in eastern Canada, and then made wife. They are touring the country and find that there are a great many It's hard to believe those stories about unemployment In Chicago after the news dispatches had led one to believe that everybody there had a good job bootlegging. Portland people who have had' to be dug out of drifts in California will join In the chorus of "Never again!" Really, "there's no place like home" in winter. Despite midwinter, January was a good building month in Portland, permits for dwellings numbering 203, The fact is, any month is a good month in Portland. When the groundhog sees his shadow and spring is delayed until the middle of March the year Is good for things that grow in and above the ground. Union hours and no "visiting" on the rock pile after this.' The sheriff Is in the crushed-rock trade and will fill orders with lightning' dispatch. American scenery Is to be shown in France, a sort of reciprocity, as it were. America Is pretty well fed up "on French "scenery" of varying kind. t The highway may as well be cleared full width and as much- as possible by hand labor. That course will relieve two situations at once. Thanks to Mr. Hughes, the old Oregon will not be scrapped. - We shall have her floating in home waters some day. Russia declines to discuss her debts by wireless, possibly fearing that a request would follow to pay them by wire. A rOPCLAR SHIPPING POLICY. One of the many changes In Amer ican public opinion that have been produced by the war concerns the merchant marine. For many years efforts had been made to pass through congress bills granting sub sidies for operation of American built ships by American owners under the American flag, but they failed In consequence of popular op position and at the advent of the Wilson administration the effort had been abandoned. A plan of that administration that the government build and own merchant ships was It's getting so that half the men with satchels are suspected and in some cases suspicion is more than half right. That ten or twenty you are feeling In a trousers pocket belongs in the chest. Why delay loosening up? ' J 1 J .. .. .- -, V. 11.. . , V. J 1 T A II . r li 1 11 c I JV, Ul ... I, DUUll ll 111 U 111 111UU Wl jump uum "- 'handling the ice at Banff. it has tnrivea in me west. i xo get from wapinitia to Portland Bdgar Selwyn has written a one-act now, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Cantrell, at dramatic playlet as a vaudeville ve- tne imperial, nave to mane a rounQ- f- fln,.nn. Bno.1 legitimate ouuui. i"li, B"'"B " auu ' i down the Holumbia. A mrr rtirent star, wnu i -. ppi I route is being promoted with the as circuit. The piece is 'Tne itoyai I sistance of the United States forest Rendezvous." Miss Reed will have a service. This bureau has eet aside a supporting company of four. After a I large sum of money to build a road preliminary season out of New York om Wapinitia to connect with the the offering will be seen In the K, 1th - posSle thl"t two-a-day house starting the latter the work will be advertised, let and part of February. I started in the current year. The state highway commission will co-onerate Kav Laurel, artists' model ana ror- I in the undertaking. The Wapinitia mer Ziegfeld professional beauty, will cutoff will connect with The Dalles- make her Broadway vaudeville debut -mi"ia u.B -. at Keith's Colonial theater, this week. Nine miles from Pasco, Wash., there She will appear in a comedy orama 19 an Ice jam several miles long and w.. T7iFAa T,.Vann "The MflllchtV lPOm to fieet th.ick. reiOorts J TT. Wife." Miss Laurel will be supported 1 o ocstiuc, unmwiv 01 by a company of four, including Sid ney Booth. a The Selwyns have decided to ex tend the engagement of Madame Pe- trova in "The White Peacock" at the Idaho, who is registered at the Mult noLh. The Ice jam is threatening tne ondge trom fsisao to Kennewick, which spans the Columbia, river. This bridige, according to -Mr. McPherson, will be or great value to Portland, as it will be possible to reach Spokane Comedy theater indefinitely. It was hajj ,n part finan:ed Pusfet originally planned to send thj pro- soudoin tltue theory that the traffic duction on tour for the spring en- wan go direct to Seattle instead of gagement, but since its opening on coming drawn the Columbia river high Christmas eve the """-medy theate. way to Portland. , oox onice nas snown u; fa at)eoiuteIy necessary that no crease of business as to justiry an I time be and th woi-k be pushed indefinite extension- of the New York j aa rapidly ad poasibie if we are to run. I have an exposition In 1925," stated ufarlama Petravn'. exnerience in redencK vining mslier 01 Idaho, Th. White P.arock" has been some- ""V "l U"-K"8 lur ' --' " I lUOE Tin a,T, aav . li nrinnln I what similar to that of "A Bit of Di- rton ,ast r ..Ttbe dlferen; plans vorcement," the latter play - being should be carefully oomsidered and all builded from the first two weeks of get together utider one definite pro- a verv small business to patronage gramme aaid make every dollar and J . . . . . . rr.1. ... , ..1 1 n which taxed the capacity of the l; - .".- a 110 Times Square theater thereafter. - , r,? . - - The White Peacock" has done the! same thing, playing now to capacity w0 "rm on the water-wagon," ad- business at the Comedy theater after J mltted a man at the Hotel Portland i small beginning in that playhouse yesterday. "I was one of a crowd of e ' m 1 live wno were mizea up witn mo-on- The register kept In the Blackstone shine in Seattle) a year ago. Maybe theater in Chicago, where Frank ' im ." 1 m ; These earthquakes must be ex pected from time to time until pro hibition actually prohibits. ' Poland has decided for per cent beer. That ought to keep the Polish force busy. Nobody seems to have guessed the late earthquake was due to heavy submarine firing. The rules of international cour tesy require the weaker nation to tip its hat first. The best time to start a law-enforcement crusade is just before an election. The reduction in the price of footv stuffs hasn't yet reached eating to- Kinr-lrcd in Rpveral KP-Ssinno Kt monv proportions of a national disgrace. ! democrats as well as republicans bacco. The recent pas-sage of the Towner- and was finally adopted or? the I " Sterling bill for federal aid In edu- ground that ships were needed as Don't "let the other fellow do it" cation, while in no sense punitive, J uaal auxiliaries and as army trans- all. m , ,iT 1 , . , .f I UiX UCI 9 O- L 1 1 111 O. A t-V J Wa. a.ll-C all Cal Bacon performs in Llghtmn , now m th6 becam6 wjnd and anotiner snows moro man imiuca ui 1 paralyzed. The blind men are ont-of-town visioners of the drama I nt HI Ri-hitlesn and tha man who was since October. paralyzed ha,sn't been able to move finger snnoe. lm tnonougn, De- Here's the latest angle on the neve me. Kitty Gordon-Ralph Ranlet romance. . , r. '.,., rf T. s -iL,.. i-it. i A W. WheeWiouse of Arlington, Or., In Des; Moines, where Kitty is play- wjMjre he ,g the current mayor jg lng, she said she had received a mes- registered at the Imperial. He re sage from the broker which read: ports that winter conditions are still All my love. I prevalent in tha.t eection and that in H InTM ma I can't understand the (Columbia river tnere is an amina- why he holds out on me," said Kitty "" of ioe foT vrhich 110 ono has on receipt of the telegram. "I am go- ing to talk to him, on long distance Mrs. R. T. Parker and children tonight, and believe me, he will be arrived at the Perkins last evening glad to affirm our engagement when from Reliance, where Mr. Parker was x .. i,.nn toiwiTi with hin killed Tuesday afternoon when a In Tnrlt Vr -Ranlet xt-hr, la '"66'6 "6"' " " ... - , ' trestle. Reliance is a losrfirlne- sta- oroiter. says. I tion on the Tillamook railroad. "A gentleman dislikes to contradict f - i.t n.Minni,riT tha l.j. jj j.-TOiana, wno nas uvea, dov , . ......,. .. . . I auu ixiiMi, . i .. J t. ti i . v.., .a leisiB- ua "s"";u. tered at the Imperial from . that mm. Dut tnere are times wnen it must French prairie sown, which was set be done." ' I tied by the pioneers. Mr. Ranlet admitted the embarrass- I ment of this situation when shown jp de a'n 'Unsuccessful dispatches from Des Moines in which attempt to short change the cashier Cam Yon Answer These Questions' 1. Is there such a thing as a mer- maiQ- 2. Do barn pigeons ever alight on a ience7 S. Why do some fishes have more bones than others? Answers In- tomorrow's nature notes.. Answer a to Previous Questions. 1. Do insects breathe? Yes, but not the way most animals do, taking air into lungs through mouth or nostrils, and In the lunge exchanging oxygen for carbondiox lde through the blood. Jnsects have tiny breathing tubes like hairs, reaching to openings in the sides of the body. Muscles in the body ex pand and contract these tubes. 2. What makes milk "ropy"T This condition Is due to the action of certain bacteria which are sup posed normally to live in water. They may be . communicated to the milk through washing utensils in water thus contaminated; or they may be ia a brook or pond in which the cow wades. If the latter, they dron from the cow's body at milking time, and'l start growing, forming a slimy viscid, stringy condition in the milk. 8. Is It unkind or any harm to take a bird's egg from a nest If you intend it for museum specimen? In some cases It Is possible to ab etraot an egg without alarming the parent birds or causing them to aban don the nest; but more often they do notice the "disturbance and refuse to incubate what eggs are left. Quail are particularly sensitive in this re spect. The great harm is that in ap proaching a nest a trail is uncon sciously made, And this serves as a signal to prowling skunks, weasels, red squirrels, etc., where to find a dinner. KELSAY PAROLE STILL RANKLES Inquiry Hade aa to Why Some Action Ia Not Had Regarding Caae. FOSSIL. Or., Jan. 30. (To the Edi tor.) It is now several weeks since I have seen anything in The Oregonlan about the Sheriff Kelsay case. Every day have I examined the pages of the paper to see the explanation by Judge Parker of his parole of Sheriff Kelsay, but all in vain. If it Is true that the Oregon law has In It a proviso to the effect that no pa role can be granted by a judge when the sentence is for a longer time than ten years, as stated in one of your edi torials, let me ask, where did he eet the power legally to parole Sheriff jieisayr ir tne law is as you sav. can he toss it into a scrap heap and treat it HKe a scrap of paper, as the Ger mans did when they violated Belgium, or is he bound .to respct that law like the rest of the people of Oregon? If ne is not a Dove the law how can he ignore it and become a law unto him self? These are all very important questions of grave public concern and should be answered by Judge Parker for the good of all law-and-order Deo- ple. It is beyond my powers of under standing why this important mystery Is not run down by the governor of Oregon or some other officer of the law who is charged with the dutv of enforcing its criminal laws. There Is something seriously wrong with our laws when a trusted public official can embezzle almost J20,000 of the peo ple's money and that same official can come before the court and say, "I am guilty," then be sentenced for 15 years in the pen and then, without serving a single day of that time in prison, be paroled at a time when only about five people were in court. . It is, I say, very unusual, to say the least. Only a few months ago over in Gil liam county a young man, a stranger over there, stole a horse which I un derstand was worth about J25. The young man told the judge he was guilty. Judge Parker sent him to the pen for several years. He, also, was entitled to some consideration because he had seen service overseas and his frail body, I am told, indicated that he was not in the best of health. But he was without any friends, so he is now in the pen. Is that even justice or consistency? TAXPAYER. More Truth Than Poetry- By James J. Montague. In Other Days. Twenty-five Yeara Ago,. Prom The Oregronlan February 2, ItSBT. -Washington, D. C. The Nicaragua canal bill occupied the senate most of the day, but no progress was made toward a vote. . The Gold Hill mine, said to have produced from $180,000 to $600,000 In one pocket in early days, is being de veloped by a cross-cut tunnel. From $4 to $6 is being offered In Coqullle valley for next season's., calves. Carson, Nev. The woman suffrage bill was a special order in the senate last night. The Oregonlan simply directed an inquiry as to the meaning of the law (Sec 1586 Oregon Laws) which limits exercise! of parole by the circuit court to first offenders sentenced for not to exceed ten years. It is suggested by some lawyers that sentences being in determinate in this case 1 to 15 years the court would have the necessary parole authority. Others Insist that inasmuch as length of time actually served under an Indeterminate sen tence is fixed by the parole board and not by the court, an indeterminate sentence of 15 years bars parole. There is a question also as to whether mandamus proceedings in this case could be instituted until after the expiration of the present term of court. . The Oregonlan is informed that cer tain officials and responsible citizens are investigating the law and the facts and expect to take some action as .soon as a proper course is decided upon. Fifty Years Ago. From The OrefronJan, Februry 2, 1872. Albany, N. Y. The trial of Tweed will not take place until the March term. It is probable that Tweed will now take his seat. News from The Dalles yesterday was to the effect that the thermom eter was 28 degrees and Ice was run ning freely in the river. A temperance rally and mass meet ing will be held at he courthouse on Wednesday evening. Come one, come all! At Salem the river Is within three feet of being as low as it was las'. ' summer. MOUNTAIN HAS STEAMED BEFORE WHISKY PRESENTS WEAK CASE Miss Gordon announced her deter mination to wed him. "I am, of course, highly compli mented by the expressed esteem in which Miss Gordon appears to hold me," he said, "but honestly this is the first time I have heard of It and I should assume that I might have been consulted on it before the Des Moines announcement was made. "Miss Gordon and I have been friends for years. and I cannot but be lieve that somebody has mistaken Miss Gordon's casual expression of friendship for something more serious." of the Imperial out of $20. A C. Marsters, former member of the state senate and In the banking business at Roseburg, is in the city on business. Profit on Poataffe Stamps. ASHLAND, Or., Jan. SO. (To the Editor.) Can a postmaster or anyone else lawfully, sell government postage stamps for more than their face value? SUBSCRIBER. More Evidence Is Cited Against Its Value aa Medicine. CORVALLIS, Or., Jan. 31. To the Editor.) The Oregonian's editorial. Physicians and Liquor," gives an easily understood summary, and also comments based on sound reasoning concerning this questionnaire of tha Journal of the American Medical As sociation. As one of your readers. wish to mention my appreciation f it. From one point of view, it Is an ther illustration of how easy it is to gather a mass of figures, while ' it is quite another matter to inter pret the significance of those figures. Three items have come to my mind that might influence a person's in terpretation, but which I believe your editorial did not mention. One, that several years ago, the American Medical association officially with drew its approval of "whisky as a medicine," by removing whisky from the American pharmacopeia. It is my impression that this action took place before the advent of national prohibition, and that the action was supported by a large majority. Two That, according to a state ment of the National W. C. T. TJ., un der national prohibition. In 24 out of our 48 states, not even one physi cian took out a license to prescribe alcoholics. Three That, according to statement clipped from the Telegram, some of the physicians who attributed "un necessary suffering or death" to tha enforcement of prohibition were al luding to cases of poisoning from moonshine and wood alcohol. If such answers put a fair Inter pretation on the question, it should be clearly explained that such is their interpretation. Otherwise some read ers might suppose that in the opin ion of those physicians wnisKy was No, except in the case of stamp vending machines which operate un-i necessary to relieve suffering, or was der a special permit irom the de- i indispensable to maintain life, partment. J ' . M. R. Correspondent Tells of Viewing: Phe nomenon Several Yeara Ago. PORTLAND, Feb. 1. (To the Edi tor.) There still seems to be more or less mystery about the smoke or steam occasionally reported to have been seen rising from Mount Hood. I will add my testimony to others of similar character. About six or seven years ago, while,' living on my place at Cherryville, my family and I witnessed this spectacle under peculiarly favorable circum stances. My place, which is on the high bench to the north of the post office at Cherryville, commands a perfect view of practically the whole of the mountain and is far enough away to give a natural horizontal perspective of it. Toward evening of a clear, calm day I observed a column arising from the depression to the southwest and considerably below the top of the mountain. I have a powerful field glass, with which we viewed the spec tacle for an hour or so until dusk came on. Coming, as the column did, from the depression mentioned, we saw it against a background of the higher ridge beyond. It had the appearance of a column of steam, and the glass clearly showed the rolling, ascending, motion, such as steam would have in a perfectly still atmosphere. It had color enough to make a contrast with the white snow background, but was not dark enough to indicate much, if any, 3moke. It ascended in an almost ver tical direction and the slight varia tion from this position during the hour or so that we observed it re moved from our minds any possibility that it was the resujjys of wind-blown snow. I think it was nearer spring than this date, but the mountain was still completely covered with snow and the air so clear that every detail of the surface was brought out by the glass. GEO. B. COUPER. CHRISTMAS AFTERMATH. X saxophone he longed to play She gave him one on Christmas day. And he is learning, 'cross the way My neiaThbor. He plays staccato notes, off time. While I am struggling with rhyme; He strikes them mgii, he hits them low. He whines and moans them fast and slow- But never does he cease to blow My neighbor. a He's at it mow. He never Jtops He's syncopating skips and hops. And now and then a note he Tlrops ? My neighbor. I hear it beating In my brain; It sounds as if he were in pain. Yet more and more he seems to gain Momentum. I think, I dream, of bombs and things Attached bo. slowly burning strings. And if the mail a package brings- He'll never know wh,6 sent 'era, MICKEY. Woman's Reason Ia Given. Judge. "Why did you go and tell your chum I am giving a party?" "Because I knew she wasn't asked." THE WROKO METHOD. No longer the criminal expert of France, With a fierce and Svengalio ex pression. Can put a poor crook In a hypnotlo trance And thereby extort a confession. No longer, whenever he happens to think That a man would be ' willing to burgle, Can he cow with wink after bulldoz ing wink, -Till his weakness he owns with a gurgle. Time was when a man who was thought to hae done A plain or a fancy garroting. Who an Illicit wine shop had braz enly run Or was summonsed for Illegal ""voting. Was clamped in a chair, while another man's eye t Was fixed on his face, till, all wilty And shrunken and droopy and ready to die. He wearily owned himself guilty. The'scheme was a good one wherever applied Wherever a crime was committed; The prisoner owned It before he was tried. And no one was ever acquitted. However, it's lately been put to the test. And a doubt of Its worth has arisen. ' For they find that the innocent only confessed While the guilty all kept out of prison. Fo only a person who Isn't a crook Will submit to the hypnotio power; A rascal will stare at each withering look With never a cringe or a cower. The experts declare the new method today Is foolish and futile and silly, So they seek for confessions the old fashioned way By knocking 'em down with a billy, s Supererogatory. We can think of nothing more fool ish than to say that people who drink wood alcohol ought to die.. They al ways do. a a - Boosting Home Iadnatry. The elevation -of Will Hays to the movie chieftainship ought to be a big thing for all those Indiana writers, ass Judging By Resolts. Among the new Idle rich may be numbered prohibition enforcement of ficers. (Copyright by the Bell Srnfli-'ats, Trie.) i 4