THE MORNING OREGONIAN, SATURDAY. FEBRUARY So. 1932 ESTABLISHED BK HENRY L. PITTOCK Published, by The Oregonian Publishing Co., 135 Sixth Street. Portland. Oregon. C A. MORDBN. B. B. PIPER. Manager. Editor. The Orejonlan 1 a member of the Asso ciated Preu. The Associated Press la ex clusively entitled to the ubs tor publication ol all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In this paper and also the local news published herein. AH rights of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. Subscription Bates Invariablyln Advance (By Mall.) Paily. Sunday Included, one year J8.00 Da ly, Sunday Included, six months ... 4.2-1 pally, Sunday Included, three months . 2.25 JiRily, Sunday Included, one month 75 Dally, without Sunday, one year 6.00 Baily, without Sunday, six months ... 8.2fi Dully, without Sunday, ona month... .60 Sunday, one year 2.50 (By Carrier.) Iaily, Sunday Included, ona year ......9.00 Dally, Sunday Included, three months.. 2.25 Dally, Sunday Included, one month T5 Bally, without Sunday, one year.... 7.80 pally, without Sunday, three months .. 1.85 Daily, without Sunday, one month 65 How to Remit Send postofflce money order, express or personal check on your local bank, stamps, coin or currency are at owner's risk. Give postofflce address In lull. Including county and state. Postage Rates 1 to 19 pages. 1 cent: IS to 82 pages, 2 cents; 34 to 48 pages, 3 cents; 50 to 64 pages, 4 cents: 60 to 80 pages, 6 cents; 82 to 96 pages. 6 cents. Foreign postage double rate. Eastern Business Office Verree ft Conk Jin, 300 Madifon avenue. New York; Verree & Conklin, Sieger building, Chicago: Ver ree & Conklin, Free Press building. De troit, Mich.; Verree & Conklin, Monadnock bui)dln4 San Francisco, Cal. .THE DESIRED IMPOSSIBLE. There was printed the other day in a New York newspaper a picture of one of the school houses newly erected in Brooklyn. In the text that went with the illustration there was no description of the facilities for study or recitation, such as would have interested the public a few years ago. The facts about the building that most impressed the writer were that It had an enormous gymnasium and a model five-room flat. The model flat, it appears, was not for the convenience of the cus todian but for use in teaching the art of housekeeping. The gymnasium, as an evidence of modernity in school structures, is familiar enough, but the model fiat as a school appurtenance, so far. as we know, has not yet got this far west. I'robably ft is on its way. We are unwisely prone to assume that that which is demanded of schools by the crowded conditions and habits of life in a metropolis are in themselves valuable additions to schools anywhere. A school gymnasium in a crowded section of New York, or of Portland for that matter, may be a valuable inducement to health and in turn to education. In a district where are lawns for young folk to mow, flower beds to spade, and vacant lots to play on, a school gymnasium, while nice to have, is more or less of a public extravagance. But emulation of city metropolitan schools has gone beyond the city suburbs. We have in mind a handsome rural high school building, seventy miles or so from Portland. It stands on an eminence where it is conspicu ous for its detachment even from farm houses. P.olling meadows and wooded hills stretch away as far as the eye can see. There is all out doors for -the pupils to play ball or other games or run races in. The homes are plainly so far away that unless the energy of students is con served by ure of automobiles, the valuable exercise of walking is in dulged in freely. Yet this rural high school has an attached structure, almost as large as the pretentious building devoted to study, and this addition bears the bold sign, "Gym nasium." Quite likely this Is not the only rural school which has a gymna sium. Of course there is nothing I wrong about gymnasiums. The rural ! folk and the suburban folk are wholly entitled to have them if they are willing to pay for them. But just now there is complaint of high taxes. The tax Investigation commission has compiled figures which show that of the $41,000,000 1 raised in "Oregon by taxation yearly, $18,000,000, or nearly one-half, goes for education. In the state of Wash ington a similar body has virtually declared its purpose to combat in creases in school taxes unless a new and more economical method of ad ministration is adopted. Education ha"s an advantage over any other public enterprise in its de mand for support. It is so funda mentally desirable that there is no disposition to deny Its need. Yet the public is often unmindful of the fact that an apportionment of public money to the most worthy of objects may in its volume and in some of its uses be extravagant. It is not the intent herein to charge that school extravagance exists only in the sub urbs and rural districts. The con veniences and appurtenances un heard of and not thought of a gen eration ago progress in elegance and variety from the country school up to the school in the congested city district. It is not much of a step from expensive playgrounds, swim ming tanks and auditoriums to the incorporation of model flats in out city schools. But just as those of us who are not permanent flat-dwellers do not need model flats in our school buildings, those others of us who have all the opportunity in the world for exercise in the open air do not need school gymnasiums. A correspondent the other day wrote with a measure of truth that part of the high cost of government is due to our emulation of larger communities of much greater total wealth. We do things or have things we do not really need because others who do need them do them or have them. "We are "keeping up with the Joneses" in nearly every govern mental activity, by no means ex cluding the matters that go to make up the other half of public expen ditures not chargeable to schools. And jt h e thing seemingly most ardently wished for is a scheme which, while reducing taxes, will permit us to keep up the present lick. It is a vain hope. That is why tax supervising boards and tax in vestigating commissions are not very popular after they submit their re ports. They cannot do the desired ' impossible. The increase in population through the arrival of aliens has been cut from more than half a million in 1920- 1 to less than 45,000 for the first six months of the fiscal year 1921- 2, a figure arrived at by de ducting the number of out-going from incoming aliens during the years in question. With the exception of a single year, It is the smallest guin in population from this source since the inception of the great im migration movement in the decade following the civil war, and it ought to simplify somewhat the task of Americanization which iasuperseding the melting pot theory in the plans of hard-headed and practical citizens. Moreover, it is shown that for the remainder of the present fiscal year, at least, there will be no Immigra tion problem of consequence. The Quotas of sixteen countries have already been exhausted- under 'the new law and these are countries from which immigration is heaviest. It will be up to congress before June 30 next to make possible a continuance of the Rood work. WHAT THE COUNTRY IS TIRED OF. Senator Norris, who was elected as a republican but seldom acts or. talks as one, says: "There is no doubt that the country Is already tired of the republican party." On the contrary the country is proud of what the republican president and his cabinet have accomplished and of Mr. Harding's courageous stand on the bonus. It is only tired of the lack of leadership, party discipline and nerve on the part of the re publican majority in congress. That can be mended without sub stituting a democratic majority. The country needs only to change the composition o'f the republican ma jority by electing men who can read the thoughts of the silent majority among the people, who think with them, and who cannot be terrorized by the clamor of minorities. There have been some shining examples of men who won the support of that majority by defying the noisy and menacing few. Their success should bring others to the front who would show the game qualities. To elect a cowardly democratic majority in place of a cowardly re publican majority would be no im provement. Neither party has a monopoly of moral courage or of its opposite. The democratic party proved that in 1916, when it passed the Adamson law in a panic under threat of a railroad strike. Such a majority would have courage only to obstruct the republican president at every step. v That' would be a bleak prospect to hold before the country in the present critical state of its affairs. With all its faults the present congress, through being of the same party as the president, has done great things which could not have been done if control of the gov ernment had been divided. TOO MANY LAWYERS. ' Because Senator Walsh of Mon tana has doubts about the legality of the appointment of Senator Smoot and Representative Burton on the allied debt refunding commission while they retain their seats in con gress, confirmation of the members of tlje commission must be held up for several days, perhaps weeks. Mr. Smoot and Mr. Burton were no doubt appointed by President Hard ing to satisfy the evident desire of congress to have a hand in the set tlements to be made. Congressmen have served on former commissions established by congress, notably on the monetary commission, which laid the foundation for the federal reserve system. But all proceedings regarding the allied debt must wait till Mr. Walsh's legal scruples are removed. Uncertainty as to the terms for settlement of their debt to the United States is one of the causes of economic confusion in the Euro pean states, and that in turn is the main, cau.se of trade depression in tha United States. Under the law creating the commission, that body has authority to defer payment of the Austrian debt for reiief supplies for a long period, as all of Austria's other creditors have done. When those debts are deferred, bankers are ready to make a loan sufficient to nut AllHtrin's finances In nrrlpp tft enable it to export and import and to develop its resources. A sorelv distressed nation hovers on the brink of ruin and may fall over while Mr. Walsh's doubts are being removed. This leads us to indorse the re mark of Chief Justice Taft that "we have all the lawyers we need now, and there Is likely to be no dearth of them." We have more lawyers in congress than we need. Mr. Walsh a lawyer as well as a senator, and j would probably have been as good a senator if he had not been a lawyer. The slowness and prolixity of sena tors and the fuss they make about inconsequential things is due to the fact that so many of them are law yers, for they often lose sight of the big thing to be done in their scrupulosity about the precisely cor rect mode of procedure. It is no mere coincidence that of the .three senators who see jokers in the plain words of a treaty, who wish to de fine exactly the meaning of termt and w;ho are always ready with reservations or objections Johnson, Borah and Reed are lawyers. If there were fewer lawyers In con gress and more practical men of af fairs who would cut their way through the barbed" wire entangle ments that lawyers set up, public business would make better progress. TACTFUL PRINCESS MARY. Royalty seldom appears in a more favorable light than that with which Princess Mary has invested it in her determination to reduce the list of invitations to her forthcoming wed- ding to its lowest possible terms. For example, only sixty-seven peers will be bidden to attend the cere mony, although some seven hundred would be eligible by reason of their rank. Of the list of the bride groom's acquaintances which was recently submitted, it was found ex pedient to cut out more than one half, "all of whom," says a dispatch, "w o u 1 d be considered welcome guests at any other wedding." West minster Abbey seems to have been chosen deliberately as the place for the ceremony because of its rela tively small seating capacity. Mary may be a princess, but she has a real commoner's sense of proportion and a truly democratic view of the fitness of things. It is desired, we are told, that as few people as possible should be placed in a position, through the etiquette of the occasion, to spend money unduly on dresses or clothes. Aristocracy in Great Britain, as has been made plain recently, is in pecu niary straits; yet we know that noth ing is quite so exacting as the re quirements of noblesse oblige. The princess seems to understand that royal splendor would be but tawdry show if, for example, it wee put on at the enormous sacrifice which a royal display would entail at this time. Not so many tradesmen, per haps, will receive orders for gew gaws as if the old order prevailed, but a greater proportion, no doubt. will receive their money when it is due. The loss will fall chiefly on. the profiteers. We voV not often associate econ omy with a royal wedding. The ex travagance of kings and queens, perhaps as much as their gift for misrule, has brought their own houses tumbling about their heads. But Princess Mary and those who are so wisely advising her propose that the charge shall not be laid at her door. Her trousseau a fairly elaborate one, to be sure is only relatively expensive and will serve as the symbol of desire to set the example of sane repression in mat ters of that kind. It is noted too that it has been purchased for the most part from relatively incon spicuous costumers, "who do- not charge exorbitant prices for the ad ventitious honor of being purveyors to aristocracy" and who presumably put value into their goods. Here the princess sets an example that goes rather more deeply to the economic heart of things than a mere pruning of expenditures would do. Evidently the princess has been "shopping around," perhaps even pursuing a bargain here and there, comparing qualities and asking about prices. It is not easy to picture a princess in this guise, but we hope the story is true. The ancient prac tice of insisting on one's money's worth might profitably be revived. , MARRIAGE IN SWITZERLAND: The marriage of Mathilde McCor mick to Max Oser, which it now seems will come- to pass in due course, will not in any event be a hasty affair. Swiss law has no loop holes fjr elopers. The news dis patches from Zurich tell how "the couple must have their full names, ages, professions and residences placed in large print on the wall of the town hall facing the street for three weeks before the ceremony." The one opportunity that used to be given to foreigners to take refuge behind the laws of their own coun tries under the flag of a consulate is now denied them. It is plain that the Swiss regard marriage as a serious affair, as for that matter all right-thinking people do, although our faith Is sometimes shaken by reading the very latest statistics of divorce. Yet it is perti nent to observe that the divorce rate in Switzerland is somewhat less than half that of the United States. We wonder whether there may not be a definite association between a low divorce rate and the circumstance that snap-judgment marriage is made difficult by Swiss law. The same general relation holds good' as to other, countries in which the cus tom of publishing the banns, or its equivalent, prevails. Not all ill-considered marriages are hasty ones, by any means. The impending Oser-McCormick affair, which the public seems to refuse to regard as a romance but onlyper sists in viewing as a bit of rather disgusting waywardness, is an ex ample of this. But the bride-to-be still has some three weeks in which to reconsider and perhaps repent, and with the helpful counsel of wiser parents and grandparents it is quite possible that she might even now be led to see the error of her ways. The Swiss system in any event furnishes opportunity for re flection upon the gravity and the sanctity of the marriage relation and in large proportion of cases, we think, this would forestall the trag edy that is apt to attend on alliance of an emotional and badly consid ered sort. FEDERAL RESERVE BANKS VINDI CATED. The adversity of, the farmers lias been the opportunity of the political demagogues. In order to Justify their pose as the farmers' friends and to make political capital tor themselves these ' versatile but un scrupulous fellows had to find some institution which the farmers could hold responsible for their misfor tunes. The habit of thought sur viving from the days when "the crime of ;'73," "goldbugs of Wall street", and "money trust" were cur rent political -phrases caused them to turn on the banking system. As the federal reserve board now stands jn the public eye for alI the banks,' they turned their mud-batteries on it. The most vociferous among them are democrats, in whose minds banks are identified with the re publican party, therefore lawful po litical targets, o such verbal gey sers as Senators Heflin and Watson of Georgia spouted away at the fed eral reserve board. They forgot that the federal re serve system is the pride of the Wil son administration and that Senator Glass of Virginia, as chairman of the house committee on banking, had been its chief architect. They drew fire from him, and for two days he blazed away. When he ceased fir ing, he had demolished their posi tions. He showed that they had been using against the federal re serve system ammunition that had been designed for use against the very evils that it had cured, and he exposed their whole campaign as based on "misconceptions and mis representations," branding them as "restless political agitators." Though claiming an undue share of credit for the democratic 63rd 1 congress and not giving enough to the Aidrich monetary commission, on whose work the present law wis founded, Mr. GISss completely vindi cated the federal reserve system as the financial savior of the country in and since the war, and disproved the charges made by agitators who ex ploit the farmers' troubles for their own political gain, that the federal reserve board or banks precipitated the fall of prices by refusing ;credit to the farmers. He drew a faithful picture of the pernicious working of the old national bank system, and he showed how the new system has made the volume of credit and cur rency responsive to the needs of business. One by ode he exposed the falsehoods of the agitators and set forth the facts in contrast. The federal reserve system makes available $369,000,000 of bank funds for loan on farm, mortgages up to five years. Tl old law forbade such loans. Regional banks are self-governing, operated in their own territory by their boards of directors, owned by the banks, the government hav ing contributed not a dollar to their capital. They make loans to the member banks, but cannot loan a dollar to any individual - or corpor ation. Member banks make loans to their customers, then borrow the amount from the reserve bank. The federal reserve 'board is a supervisory board over the 12 re- j gional reserve banks. Itcannot loan a. dollar to anybody, for it has no money to loan. It cannot order regional banks to discount notes, nor prohibit them to do so if rtiey have eligible paper. It may in case of necessity, by a vote of five to two, order one regional bank to extend aid to another. It may refuse to is- I sue currency when requested by a regional bank, but it has never done so. It may tax federal reserve notes, but has never levied a penny. Never has the board "offered 'a suggestion to a federal reserve bank that it should or should not make rediscounts or apply for currency." Senator Jones of New Mexico said the charge had been made that the board "had made a direct request of the regional banks in certain sec tions of the country, as well aa mem ber banks, that no more loans of a certain character should be made; for instance, upon livestock." Mr. Glass replied: I know' it is not true. The federal re serve board at one time did what senator after senator upon this, floor did. It sug gested that there ought to be a cessation of extravagance In- this country; that the credits of the country should be devoted to taking care of the necessities of the people rather than the luxuries. The board has never at any time Indicated to a bank that it should not engage In lawful and proper rediscount activities, and has never denied the application of a regional bank for one dollar of federal currency. He proved that the exact reverse was true. He quoted the prices of cotton, wheat, corn and oats in each month from July, 1919, to January, 1921, inclusive, showing that the fall of,prices began in August, 1920. He then quoted the amount of redis counted paper held by federal re serve banks on January, 1920, and 1921, respectively. This showed an increase of $472,088,000, though values had fallen about two-thirds from the level of July, 1920. Circu lation in the year 1920 increased $328,403,000. Credit was expanded in a period when prices were falling, and the greatest increases were in the agricultural regions, the regional banks which serve the industrial centers showing hardly any increase. One reserve bank barely escaped having its gold reserve wiped out and had to borrow from another in the north. So far was it from the truth that loans on agricultural and livestock paper were stopped when deflation began that they continued to grow from $56,905,000 in Jan uary, 1 9 2 0, to $216,2.78,000 in August, when prices began to tumble, and still grew until in De cember the total was $246,940,000, Deflation was not caused by the federal reserve system, but by the fall in prices of commodities in all countries, beginning with silk in Japan in March, 1920; Down to that month the oracles of discontent de nounced profiteers for high prices. "When the drop came," said Mr. Glass, "these impatient souls de nounced the federal reserve board." Prices fell, not for lack of credit, but for lack of markets for farm prod ucts. The member banks which borrowed most heavily are in the agricultural states, and many bor rowed far more than their quota from the reserve banks. Some which had exhausted their resources falsely accused the federal reserve banks of refusing to rediscount, others "passed the buck" to the fed eral reserve board, which exposed the fraud. As to the charge that usurious in terest was extorted, Mr. Glass showed that the foundation was the provision for progressively rising rates of discount for banks that ex ceed their quota, which was adopted by congress three years ago. This extra charge was put in ieffect in only four, of the twelve districts, and was applied only to a few "incor rigible offenders." One bank in the Atlanta district which walled loudest "exceeded its basic line of credit nearly ten times and loaned 90 per cent of its eapital on notes indorsed by its. president." Mr, Glass pointed out the true way out of the farmers' troubles when he said to their pretended champions: Why not tell the farmer the truth and adviee him, If he would escape the con sequences of another such disaster, he should organize; organize not to be the plaything or the instrument of designing politicians, but organize for an intelligent investigation and pursuit of economics; organize for co-operative marketing of his product: organize, if it may seem desir able, for the co-operative purchase of hi requirements: organise for an Intelligent understanding or the source and volume of demand for (arm products. . When we consider what the fed eral reserve system did to pull the farmers through, and what might have been their predicament if there had been no such system, we can only conclude that their worst ene mies are their false friends and their fool friends. In all the treasury departments of Europe there is great industry in the manufacture, of excuses to the debt collector from this side of the Atlantic. President Harding might send Dawes over 'to show the spend thrift nations where they can cut expenses. ' People In whose homes fire starts can be charged generally with care lessness not with criminal intent, but due to thoughtlessness. The damper in the pipe is the safety valve if they use it. Chief Justice Taft says the country has about all the lawyers it needs. Still, it requires a large supply of them to keep up the membership of congress and the various state legis latures. A dealer who buys stolen property is hard to convict on just the word of the thief, but sometimes he is caught and paroled. Then the po lice blow off steam. Officially Dr. Morrow makes known his desire again to be demo cratic national committeeman. Gen erally the doctor gets what he wants from his party. Mr. Hays has the distinction of being about the first politician who ever resignea a jod voluntarily. Long terms in prison may check a wave of crime, but they make nec essary a larger penitentiary. How many who do not own cars ever take a ride around town to see what a big city we have? Mr. Oser says he has no relatives in America. That saves wear on the McCormick backdoor. One pitcher will not go to the well too often. Ruth Law has retired from flying. ... Many a girl is not half as bad as she's painted. An east wind is spring tonic for the earth. . " , . , The Listening Post, By UeWltt Harry- T"S impossible to acknowledge all the letters that have been received from old friends of Paul Bunyan and i we can only wish that Paul were here with his famous clerk, who had the fountain pen connected with a barrel of ink by an inch hose, so that they could attend to tne correspondence. However, as some Of the regular read ers have expressed a fear that Paul's adventures all have been told we can assure them that there are many more to come and thank them for their interest. Now comes Hick Carlson of this very city and questions some of the alleged veracious accounts of Paul's birthplace and of his childhood days. Hick says: Some of these wise guys get my goat Paul Bunyan was not a Michi gander, but a moss-back Oregonian. I knew him well. - His grandfather and my grandfather were little grandfathers together. 'Paul came from an old and re spected pioneer family that crossed the plains In '49. On their arrival In Oregon th6 Bunyans settled at the foot of Onion peak, near Garlio river. Twins were born to the new settlers. Paul and Pauline. Paulina, an old Crook county town, was named after the twins. Not being prepared for the double event and their quarters being: limited, one of the babies had to sleep on the ground in the log hut. Now, the soil In Oregon being the most fertile in the world and any thing that touches it having an astounding growth, little Paul, from sleeping on the ground, grew to be just twice the size of the ordinary man. The blue ox slept on the ground near Paul and had a similar growth. "I have often heard Paul tell ot one of his childrrood baseball games. He was so strong that he broke all the bats. In one game, a 2-2 tie af fair, Paul came up in the 47th inning and all he could find was an axe to strike with. Paul swung at the first ball, hit the pill square and the left fielder caught one half of the ball, the other half going over the fence. Paul circled the bases and the umpire ruled him half out and half safe and his side won the game, 2 to 2.'.' One of the banes of an editorial ex istence is the embryo poet. Verse seems to be a drug on the market. Of course there are amateurs in every line, but the mass of manuscript that reaches the average editorial desk would appall any ordinary man. However, the versifiers seem to get a more inflated idea of their talent and ability "than do those who revel in prose. a week or so ago a contributor to this column called attention to a sonnet of more than ordinary merit, appearing in a local trade magazine and it was reprinted with a few lines of explanation. The author, not knowing it had appeared, was shown the verse. The unassuming poet Bays: Recently a friend called my at tention to a kind little notice which ppearea in your column about a verse that I had written. As it was the first of its kind, you will pardon my pride in it, and of course will understand I am not pleading for notice, as I know that the worst thing a poet can receive is any notice that is not actually deserved by his product, and I have enough sense to know that the writer of a verse is not a good judge of its merits. All babies are beautiful to their mother's eyes." The downtown pigeons lose one friend after another. First Joe Harty was their boon companion, and then a heartless police department ruled that he was obstructing traffic and forbade him to feed his pets. So the pigeons went across the street, where a red-headed girl worked 'In a candy store and there they dined sumptu ously from her hand and had plenty ot unpopped popcorn. But the march of progress forced the red-headed girl and the candy store to move and now the. pigeons sit each day, disconsolate, and strut back and for wards and try their hardest to talk, but their coaxing fails. Their friend is gone. And right in the middle of the side walk, near where the lonely pigeons rested, was an Airedale lying on a steel grating. Poor" fellow, bitter cold day, yet he lay there and napped, Then to cap the climax W. A. Van Scoy, the man out on Simpson street who has had the yellowhammer boarder for three straight years past, reports that hie bird has flown. The steady boarder was somewhat dis couraged during the December cold snap, yet stuck around, but in Janu ary he went away for a few days, possibly trying to thaw out. This last bit of weather must have been the last straw, for Mr. Yellowhammer has been absent from his roost in the nook under the eaves and near tho chimney for over a week now. If you see a stray yellowhammer who is making queer throaty noises, call Van up, as he's lonesome. - Appropos of changing conditions of our modern civilization and the ad vent of all manner of refinements such as jazz, dancing with meals. cabarets, "petting" parties, W. A. P, wants to know if the home standards for raising children have changed materially. He says that street re ligion is "put over" to the tune of banjo and saxophone and churches have actresses lecturing from the pulpit and "snappy sermons" with the old hymns so revamped to late or chestration as hardly to be recog nized. ' "When I was a child I went to Sunday school," Is the ending of the letter, "and every night I used to say my prayers. I wonder how many children of today are taught to say, 'Now I lay me down to sleep?' " t A correspondent writes: ''Please give us a little space in Your Columns Regarding a Meeting. The Tellephone Employees Associa tion will Entertain Us with Their Practical Demonstration of how to use the Tellephone and so on and after Refreshment we will Proceed to Dance the rest of the evening the Entertainment is Free to anny one that belives in a higher Education for our rising Generation as this is our aim and we have a Educational Memorial Foundation and granted 20 Schollarshipa las Year and expect to grant at least that manny this Year." " - The prize brewer of Albina says he attributes the success of his last batch to a recent discovery. He ex plains, "I now strain my beer through an I. W. W. sock so that it will not work." - Those Who Come and Go. Tale of Folks at the Hotels. According to William (Bill) Johns tone of The Dalles, there was no excitement when the principal bank there closed its - doors Thursday. People read- the notice) on the door and passed on, firm in the belief that the bank will come out all right. There are two or three residents of The Dalles who planned to be initiated Into the Shrine in Portland tonight and these decided they would have to postpone the journey across the hot sands because their checking accounts were in the -French bank. Mr. Johnstone, however, says that the neophites will not miss the ex perience of their lives, for good Shriners In The Dalles have advanced the necessary funds for the candi dates. Harry L. Kuck. the fiehtinfr editor of the Pendleton Tribune, is at the Hotel Oregon. Mr.' Kuck has stirred up the animals tn Pendleton in the past three months, going after offi cials and others. Now, as a result of his crusade, he is the defendant in libel suit or two, which are not causing him any loss of sleep, for when the libel suit is tried he can then present a quantity of material in justification of the articles he has written and the animals will be more stirred up than ever, he says. ' Mr. Kuckr is a young man, member of the American Legion and the way he is fighting in Pendleton gives the im pression that he doesn't think the , war is over yet. Murray Wade of Salem, breezed through town yesterday with a pole of new arrangement. On the pole, about a foot from the base, is a small arm, upon which to rest the feet. These arms are connected with spring. The idea is to get upon the foot rests, hold onto the handle of the pole and then jump. By the exercise of skill and control of the equilibrium, the person on the pole can jump along the sidewalk faster than an individual can walk. Mur ray had a lot of fun watching people try to work the device. The general impression is that of a person stand ing on a broom, hanging onto the handle and going crazy. 'Since 1658 there have been decided in the United States in the courts of last resort 1,250,000, and with an ad dition of about 25,000 each year the problem of finding cases to substan tiate a case being tried is often hard, so we find it necessary to have ex perts visit the law colleges to lecture on the most modern way of finding cases," says L. S. Mercer of the West Publishing company of St. Faul, who is at the Multnomah. "If we could only have uniform laws in the states of the union millions of dollars would be saved and trial cases would be speeded up and litigation be reduced." P. D. Ott of Hebo, Tillamook county. is at the Imperial. There is now under way a road from Hebo to Neskowin, on the coast, being con structed by the county, and a quarry tias been opened and the county, is about ready to take another bite' at the road. The plan is to extend this road to the Lincoln county line and then from that point the road will be carried on to Salmon river, on the ooast. The stretch from Hebo to Salmon river will be part of the P.oosevelt Highway. Money is now available for building a section south of Salmon river toward Newport; Members of the state highway com mission, R. A. Booth, John B. Yeon and W. B. Barratt, have gone to Albany to attend a hearing for the creation of a road district. This dis trict is intended to raise funds for the Improvement of a highway from Albany, through Lebanon as far as Cascadia. Some of the Linn county people want the district enlarged so that the road can be built not only to Cascadia, but on to the Deschutes County line, through Hogg pass, mak ing a connection near bisters. "Now that we have found how to cook products in glass jars the same as in tin cans, canners are putting up a finer article than ever," said H. Q. Mills, representing a glass concern in San Francisco. "By forcing com pressed air into the container where the products are being cooked mak ing the pressure equal to the pressure Inside the glass container, we find the jar will not crack and a good operator can prepare about 45 jars a minute. Jordan Valley, from where J. B. Duncan comes to the Perkins, is one of the little-known sections of Ore gon. It is on the eastern edge and Idaho has been bidding for the Jor dan Valley trade for years. With the Improvement ot roada toward Ontario, the volume of business of Jordan, Val ley is steadily increasing. St. Peter's business Is so good that he needs more rooms. No, he isn't the St. Peter you have in mind, but George St. Peter, proprietor of the New York hotel, at Hoquiam, Wash., wno is registered at tne iviuitnoiiiH.n. As the hotel 'business is good In that town, Mr. St. Peter plans the erection of a six-story hotel. A cheese maker is A. M. Myer of Clatskanie, Or., who is registered at the Hotel Oregon. The cheese In dustry in Columbia county is rapidly developing in importance and the makers are giving more attention to quality than to quantity production. Evidently the postmaster of one Oregon town hasn't much faith in the future of his community, for upon a letter returned to the Multnomah ad dressed to the president of the bank in that town the postmaster wrote: "No bank here never was never will be. See?" Thomas Jones, register of the United States land office at Vale, the most active land office in the state because of the desert land entries, has returned home after attending sessions of the federal grand Jury as a witness. Frederick T. Boles of Chicago Is at the Hotel Portland. Mr. Boles has been associated with the legal pro ceedings involving the Smith Lumber company in Coos county. Harry Sackett, . county clerk of Malheur county, who has been in Portland as a witness before the fed eral grand Jury, has checked out for home. Harry C. Betz, a locomotive engi neer of The Dalles, is among the ar rivals at the Imperial. T. P. Fahey, a clothing merchant of Seattle and Portland, is at the Hotel Oregon from Puget sound. n Regarding; Income Tax. NORTH BEND, Or., Feb 23. (To the Editor.) (1) How is a man rated who his been divorced but is paying alimony? (2) When a man is getting, say $1000 per year and found (board), how is he compared to a man getting $1200 per year and paying his own board? (31 Are enlisted men in the naval or military service subjected to income tax, even though they make the required amount and over? ROBERT CROUCH. 1. Alimony cannot be deducted from Income. A man paying alimony is on the same status as a single man. 2. The value of board received in lieu of wages or salary must be In cluded in your tax statement. 3. Men in military or naval service must pay income taxes on the same basis as civilians. - More Truth Than Poetry. By Jaaei J. Blontaztie. A DIRGE OF LIFE. (By a Flu Victim,) Tell us not, in Joyful ditties, That our luck Is going to mend. In life's poker game, the kitties Get the winnings in the end. Life is glum and life is cheerless. Crooks succeed and good men fail. And if you're the least bit keerless You will finish it in jail. Christmas may be far behind! you, But, within a day or two, Mr. Mellon will remind you That your income tax is due. If a pleasant thought you harbor . As an antidote to care, ' You're admonished by your barber That you're losing all your hair. Though the war at last has ended You're aware that in your heart For a year you've apprehended That another's going to start. Though the balmy spring-like breezes Tend to make your spirit glad, They are laden with diseases. Some of which you haven't had. Lives of other men alarm you. For they amply illustrate How the years are bound to harm you And how terrible is fate. So you sit here, steeped in sorrow And irradiating gloom. Knowing: well that each tomorrow Brings you nearer to the tomb! The Exceptions. Lenine and Trotzky decline to go to Genoa on the ground that they don't want to leave Russia. In this re spect they are unique among their rellow countrymen. But This Wl Written Some Time Ago. Up to the hour of submitting this paragraph to the editor, no movie concern has offered a job to Presi dent Harding. He Helped. The ex - German crown prince has written a book explaining how the war was lost, a subject upon which he is a real authority. (Copyright by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) Burroughs Nature Club. Copyright, Houghton-Mifflin Co. Con You Answer These Questional 1. Why does milk turn sour? 2. Are a colt's legs as long at birth as at full growth? 3. What is the difference between a pigeon and a dove? Answers in tomorrow's Nature Notes. Answers to Previous Questions. 1. Why do canaries want cuttle bone? They need it for the salt and lime it contains. All birds require some min eral substance to form the shell of their eggs. Bigger breeds can take coarser material, as oyster shell, rock salt, charcoal, etc., or even coarse mortar. The cuttle bone is a refined form of mineral well adapted to the canary's bill. 2. What makes a bird dog gun-shy and how can it be cured? We hardly consider this a fair na ture question. Most likely the dog while being trained got hit by some of the shot and was frightened' and slightly hurt. He quickly learned to associate the hurt with the gun and 'dodged at the sight of the latter. The only cure we can suggest Is petting and kindness, showing him the gun and trying to overcome his dread. 3. ' I have a collared lizard. How can I keep it? This lizard lives naturally in. hot, dry country, and should have a box of warm, dry sand. Do not .put other varieties of small life In the same pen, except as food, for this lizard is cannibal and will eat specimens al most as large as Itself, even taking young snakes. Grasshoppers, crickets and: mealworms may be -used to help out the diet. Oddly enough, a favorite tidbit is flowers. Red clover and dan delion are liked. In Other Days. Twenty-Five Years Ago. From The Oregonian of February 2B, 188T. Salem Mitchell has quit. His con tingent assumed to adjourn the legis lature yesterday and the senator has altogether abandoned his fight. London The powers have agreed to give Crete extensive autonomy. Turk ish troops and administration will be withdrawn and Greece will be re quired to evacuate and withdraw all ships. Washington The senate is aroused over the Cuban situation and three resolutions were passed yesterday aiming to check Spanish inhumanities and protect Americans on the island. Little Mildred will appear at the Marquam Grand theater next week in "Little Lord Fauntleroy." SWEEPING BOMJS IS OPPOSED Volunteer In War With Spain Says Help Only the Disabled. VANCOUVER. Wash., Feb. 23. (To the Editor.) 1 believe quite a number of the states of the union have granted a bonus sum to the veterans of the late world war, and now we notice some agitation on the part of the ex-service men for a gov ernment bonus. In the event that the United States government "comes through," we suppose that it will not be long ere the service men will be demanding a county bonus and then a precinct bonus. As far as some of us are concerned, we should raise no objection to the United State making adequate provisions for the care and maintenance of those who returned from foreign shores maimed and physically incapacitated for making a livelihood, but when it comes to a proposition of burdening the people of this country with a cumbersome tax in order to donate a fixed sum to young men who returned safe and sound from the war and who are as capable of battling life's problems as we older- ones, then the thing re solves Itself Into another question. I am one of those who, almost a quarter of a century ago, answered our president's call for volunteers for two years, or more, or until the end of the conflict with Spain. In those days there was not even a suggestion of a draft. Men volunteered through a sense of duty to their country, and as far as a monetary consideration was concerned, we received $15.60 per month, as compared with a sum almost double that amount, paid to soldiers in the late war. Those of us who returned home from the fields of strife physically fit have, in the intervening years, been engaged in earning ouf own way unassisted by such things as bonuses. Quite a number of the veterans ol long ago have made good on their own initiative. We are aging, grow ing gray, etc., yet. speaking for my eelf, I will state that I have never expected, or do I ever expect any further remembrance from the United States. People who worked and strove on this side of the pond during the late world war to maintain the American forces overseas are en titled to as much consideration as members of the American Legion. VETERAN OF '$. High LigntS The Sunday Oregonian Tomorrow - IN THE MAGAZINE A College Degree Won by Vamping The' potency of the powder puff and the coy glances in winning high marks for co eds. ' Embarrassment of Being Prize Beauty One thousand men propose to California girl, but she still awaits the right one. Brand-New Story by Elizabeth Jordan "Their Treasures Here Be low" is fascinating tale. AH of The Oregonian fiction is "first run." The Movie Face Is Now Charted This article tells what tests the screen beauty must meet to be found perfect. Uncle Sam After Income Tax Dodger Elmer E. Dover, who su pervises collections, tells of tricks adopted by the artful citizen. Experts Who Fix Value of Forests Picturesque work of tim ber cruisers, on whose word great transactions depend. Page of Sketches From Pen of W. E. Hill This is the best page of its kind in America, "Around the Hotel Switchboard" is this week's subject. OTHER FEATURES Radio Oregonian's New Department Gossip of this interesting method o f communication. Also the latest news and helps for amateurs. New Masonic Home at Forest Grove Tire completion of this insti tution and what it means to Oregon Masonry related with illustrations of the ' home. Usual Sermon by Dr. Bowman Eeligion cannot close door to science, declares pastor, who disagrees with Bryan. Robert Edgren Now on Sport Pages This writer's illustrated fight stories are without equal. The Oregonian's sport department is recog nized as the best on tho Pacific coast. Flowers for the Home and Garden This special department on gardening questions is han dled by an expert and gives the amateur gardener just the information he needs. Darling's Cartoons on Topics of Day Darling is America's leading cartoonist. He treats with his pen some of the live questions now confronting the country. Many Dressmaking Problems Answered Madam Richet, Portland au thority on practical dress making, is now answering about 100 letters a week from readers of The Ore gonian. Lillian Tingle's Question Department Questions ranging from how to make different varieties of cakes to matters no per taining to cooking are an swered in this department, Latest Styles Shown in Fashion Columns The latest in dress from Parisian and New YoTk style centers is portrayed. Beau tifully colored illustrations. Supreme in Business News The Oregonian's new Wall street letters, used daily, and supplemented with ex haustive reports, give it leadership in this field. AND MANY OTHERS No Sunday Paper in the West has a greater variety of fea tures and of news. Society, women's clubs, real estate, automobiles, churches, schools, markets, marine are all found in complete de partments. All the news of all the world ' The Sanday Oregonian Just S Cents -