10, TSTE MORNING OHEGONIAN, SATURDAY, MARCH 4, 1923 13IAEUSHED BY I1ENKY I PITTOCK. rubllftied by The Oregonian Publishing Co. 13S Sixth Street, Portland, Oregon. C A. MOHDBN, E. B. PIPER. Alanager. Editor. The Oregonian ts a member of the Asso ciated Press. The Associated Press is ex clusively entitled to the use tor publication of ail new, dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited In this paper and also th local news published herein. All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. Subscription Kates Invariably in Advance. (By Mali.) fally, Sunday included, one year $8.00 Daily, Sunday Included, six months... 4.25 Dally, Sunday included, three months. 2.26 Ia!ly. Sunday included, one month ... .75 pally, without Sunday, one year 6.00 tally, without Sunday, six months 3.25 Daily, without Sunday, one month.... .60 Sunday, on year 2.5fl (By Carrier.) TaI1y. Sunday Included, one year $9. lal!y, Sunday included, three months. 2.25 Ially, Sunday included, one month... .T5 Daily, without Sunday, one year 7.80 -.-- .7 , wuauui ounaay, tnree montns.. x.u. Dally, without Sunday, one month...-. .63 How to Remit Send nostofflce money order, express or personal check on your oanav. stamps, coin or currency are at owner's rlslt. Give postoffice address in lull, including county and state. Postage Rates 1 to 16 pages, 1 cent: 18 " -J- pages, z rents; a to 4S pages, a rents; 50 to 64 pages, 4 cents; 66 to 80 j'ages, a cents; 82 to 86 pages, o cents. foreign postage double rate. Kaatern BiisiQfwM Offir- V erree & Conk' lin, S00 Aladlscn avenue. New York; Verree c ionuiin, steger building, Chicago; ver ree & Conklln. Free Press building. De troit. Mich.; Verree & Conklln. aionaUnock building. San Francisco. Cal. HABDING'S FIRST YEAR. After one year as president, how m does Warren G. Harding stand In the eyes of the American people? Z, That is the question which the first " anniversary of his inauguration - brings to many minds. From a po sition In the senate where he had not taken first rank before the peo pie, though he had won the respect and confidence of his colleagues, he was raised to the presidency by an overwhelming majority at a time wherthe nation's affairs, both do mestic and foreign, were in worse confusion than In apy year since the close of the civil war. Great expec tations were raised by the tone and trend of his campaign speeches and by the power that he should derive from support of large majorities in both branches, of congress. How has his performance measured up to these expectations? Mr. Harding established himself firmly in public confidence, by choosing men of the highest char acter, ability and experience for his cabinet, and by giving them wide discretion in dealing with the many knotty questions which confronted them. He did not try to do all the work himself and he showed no jealous fear that his able lieutenants would eclipse him. That was recog nized as an element of greatness, and it went to his credit. President Harding found the country still nominally at war with Germany and the remnants of the Hapsburg monarchy, isolated from the allies by the rejection of the Ver sailles treaty, and with sharp con troversies with Japan drawing to a head; while that country was still al lied to Great Britain, with which we were most loath to fight. This situ ation dictated that we should greatly enlarge our navy in preparation for evil eventualities. But not only the people's instinctive aversion for war but the state of internal affairs de manded that we should "reduce our armament and peacefully compose our difference's with foreign powers. He found the country suffering from a collapse of prices, from depression in the market for farm products and j from a severe shrinkage of foreign trade which" extended the depression to all industry and to mercantile pursuits, railroads and shipping. Government expenses had swollen to billions a year,' revenue barely suf ficed to meet them, the floating debt was enormous, yet the people called for relief from a taxation which slowed down industry and artifi cially raised prices when means of paying them had shrunk. This was an appalling sea of troubles. farmers' programme, .cut off Its radical excesses, procured its adop tion by his party and put it through. In regard to the soldiers' bonus, Mr. Harding again showed of what he was capable when he exerted his latent power. Committed though he was to support that measure, he realized last summer that to act then in the existing disordered state of the national finances and while de pressed industry was already over loaded with taxes would be disas trous. Congress also realized this, but had not courage on its own ini tiative to act on its knowledge. Fear less of political consequences, the president came forward with a warning to defer action till funds could safely be provided. Congress readily acceded, gladly letting him take the responsibility. Since that episode and on other matters the president has not had equal success. His hold on congress has beei slipping, not that he has hesitated to express his opinion, but that he has not backed it with the power conferred by the instruments that his office places in his hands. He has insisted that a bonus bill must be accompanied by a tax pro viding the necessary funds, nut con gress inclines to evade its plain duty by voting the bonus without the tax, and he hesitates to insist that it vote both or neither and face the result ing unpopularity. He has opposed high Income surtaxes. and has advo cated a sales tax, but has exerted no pressure to have his. advice followed and It has been set at naught deference to ignorance and dema gogy. Senate and house, committees nave Decome aeaaiocKea on tne tariff bill, but he is loath to force them into agreement by judicious use of his influence. fit them to be better citizens, it will support. It has never opposed a tax measure for their betterment. It will not begin now. But it will say to the directors that economy in the schools is just as much In order now as in any other department o the public service. In his first year Mr. Harding has done great things and has displayed many qualities of the statesman, but he has fallen short in. that political leadership by means of which states men achieve success. By nature amiable and prone to conciliate, to coax when a not too gentle push is required, he is further restrained by the ties of friendship that he formed and by, the traditions of congres sional prerogative that he learned when in the senate. Absence of se vere criticism in the newspapers, of savage caricature in cartoons. Is not a favorable sign, but the reverse. In politics men are not so mild with opponents whom they fear. If he were dally excoriated, lampooned and hideously caricatured in the newspapers and speeches of the op position, that would be evidence that he had displayed power, scored tell ing points on his adversaries and in spired fear. He is nominally sup ported ii congress by majorities so great that confidence in their num bers has impaired their discipline. Elected by methods which weaken party fealty, they resemble a herd of untamed steers, which need a-ekill ful driver to round them up. That is the part for Mr. Harding to play. The president has succeeded so well in so many and so great things that he certainly has it in him to. win success in his management of con gress. He still has three years in which to establish firmly his right to fame. If he will profit by the few failures of his first year, he can per fect his record in the remaining three years. But it is not well with him when all men speak well of him, or when very few speak very ill of him. ; By the way in which Mr. Harding began he showed a clear conception of the course to be taken In foreign ' affairs. After snuffing out German hopes or mediation in regard to reparation, he approved a resolution of peace and followed that with ! treaties of peace and resumption of relations. While congress with its - naval limitation resolution treated symptoms of trouble in the far east. he did not interfere but he attacked '- the cause of the disease by calling the Washington conference to deal not only with that subject but with all far eastern and Pacific affairs; His fine character and temperament never showed to better advantage than when he associated the leading1 , senators of both parties in that work and left the master hand of Secre tary Hughes to carry it through. opening and close. He thus gave an example of confidence ia his secre tary of state and of teamwork with lijc ocuaic, uiuugui tile tuiteu States again into co-operation with and leadership of other nations, cleared away the whole tangle of far U eastern difficulties and started the world on the work of actual arms reduction, all by one stroke of policy. Thanks to this achievement, Mr. Harding had attained a position of moral power far transcending that of his Tiartv Whpn thf ilramaMn opening of the conference assured its success. He showed wisdom in picking a strong man to conduct the campaign for economy, in giving , him a free hand and ill backing him nuuuui sum. j.iie one point or weakness has been in his manage ment of congress. His experience in the senate had given him an under standing of the congressman's mind, and sympathy with it; his predispo sition for harmony and his aversion against any species of compulsion. Yet, if congress was to carry out a sane programme or to adhere to any programme at all, never was it in greater need of a strong leader and it, was i.i.-fviiis in uteri ui tne ngm calibre that the president alone could fill the gap. On two notable occasions he rose to the occasion. So acute was agri cultural distress that men of both parties combined to pass measures cf relief, threatening neglect of that which he deemed essential. Con servative republicans opposed the bloc, democrats supported it in de light at the opportunity of partisan advantage, and break-up of the re- - ECONOMY IN THE SCHOOLS. The Oregonian sought the other day to describe the method by which the common schools have grown from an elementary institution, in which the three R's and ' little else constituted the basic curriculum, into a vast establishment, with many de partments, many specialties, many fads, and some extravagances. Now School Director Woodward, profess ing and doubtless feeling deep sym pathy with the universal demand for economy, makes what amounts to a challenge to The Oregonian to men tion any extravagances of the school district i the past five years and to indicate what may properly be cut out at this time. The Oregonian, it happens, is not a member of the school board; and it offers no dissent from Mr. Wood ward's Insistence that the school management is doing all it can to hold down expenses. The present school system is not the creation of the past five years, but largely of the uecade immediately preceding. The Oregonian knows, as every informed person knows, why 'the public schools cost vastly more than they once did; and it knows, too, that no proposal to reduce materially . the : present wide scope of public school activities would meet, with public favor. The board is helpless to make any radical changes in method or policy; but it is none the less the duty of "the directors to make the hard-earned dollar of the taxpayer go as far as possible. It has not Been so many years since there was only one high school in Portland; now there are-eight. It is not difficult for men and women of middle age themselves the prod uct of a fairly efficient and satisfac tory school system to recall the time when there were no trade or commercial schools, no polytechnic schools, no sewing, or cooking, or gardening, or manual training, or millinery, or industrial art, or metal art, or pedagogy, or public speaking, or any one. of many new courses now a permament feature of the school system. Nor were there pretentious and elegant buildings with audito riums, gymnasiums, and swimming pools, and more or less elaborate conveniences of various kinds for teachers and pupils. The little old red school house is only a memory. All these elaborations mean a greatly increased cost of mainte nance, a vastly enlarged adminis trative and teaching staff, and coin cidental expenditures of all sorts. It explains the startling fact that the school lax in Portland which was 2 mills In 1875 and was about 3 mills, or a trifle more, on the average, for thirty years, began to climb rapidly i at the end of that period until in j 1920 it was 9.8 mills and In 1921 6.7 mills (not counting the two-mill state educational tax, from which Portland derives a proportional benefit). v - The Oregonian frankly finds dif ficulty in saying where to begin to cut down. It would deprive no youth or maiden of an opportunity for education. It has much concern about the public school system, loyal appreciation of the fundamental and indispensable character of its service to all American citizens, an abiding faith in its future. Its purpose is - MENTAL SIICIDK. The term "mental suicide" Is suit able enough as a. description of the man who was hanged in Chicago for murder of a particularly atrocious and premeditated type. It is not what the professors of psychology would call technical, but it serves. There is lacking only the element of volitiorwto make Church's condi tion suicide in fact. But the -case in all its aspects presents interest ing material for study by those who believe in the predominant influ ences of the mental over the physi cal in human conduct. Church began by attempting to starve himself in an effort to cheat the gallows, but it is agreed that his unconscious condition at the end was not the result of physical weak ness. His plight so wortced on his mind that the center of conscious ness succumbed, just as men in moments of great fear have stood benumbed and unable to act. The mental shock, as the mentalists would call it, or the lesion, as It might be termed by those who look for a physical cause for everything, was so great in Church's case that he did not recover. He was almost literally "scared to death." That much seems to bo .undisputed, though scientists are not In agree ment as to the steps by which Church's . condition was brought about. Of greater importance than the profound effect of fear upon this condemned murderer are the possi bilities which would seem to be in dicated if the process might be re versed. If a man may think himself to the verge of death, as Church did, why may he not also think himself into a state which is the opposite to that of death? As a matter of fact there is evidence that men, moved there was a great to-do if a baron married the daughter of a merchant, though he might be penniless and she wealthy. The ideas which Ger man princes imported to England were repugnant to the people, and they rejoiced when their princesses married Britons rather than strut ting petty princes who in their every act expressed 'their belief that rank divided them from lower mortals by an impassable barrier. - One blessed effect of the revolu tion was that it made the oppor tunity for Americans to wipe out all distinction of class and saved us from- the necessity of an illogical compromise between monarchy with its accompanying . aristocracy and democracy. Yet we may try to un derstand the point of view of the Briton who cheers a princess at her wedding, but. heckles a lord at a political meeting. by the spirit of high exaltation, have done virtually that very thing. Com mon . manifestations of this phe nomenon are the immunity to physl cal weariness of those laboring under a vast intellectual inspiration, and the Insensibility of soldiers to minor wounds when greatly excited by events around them. But they are also seen In another phase in the at titudes of those whose work, is agreeable to them, or irks them, as the case may be. The greater ca pacity of men for achievement in compatible than in incompatible vo cations is not remotely associated with the phenomenon of a man liter ally paralyzed with fear. A BLOW AT PUBLIC- REGULATION. i In a letter to his home paper Public Service Commissioner Corey makes a defense of the commission's order sustaining Increased telephone rates and says that "order gives point to-what Theodore Roosevelt said to the California commission twelve years ago at the beginning of public utility regulation in that state," then quotes from Roosevelt: Your first task will be easy. Elected, as you will be, under a movement respon sive to the people and independent of the corporations, you will find it easy to re duce rates where they are too high, and you will find many rates are too high. Your real task will come later, when you have to do Justice to the corporations and raise rates in spite of the public clamor to lower them. The test of public regula tion will be the ability of public men to do that and to maintain popular confi dence in doing it. , ' , - That Is the more reason that the Oregon commission should have given full consideration to all reasons advanced for revision of its original order and, if it found that revision was not justified, should have told the people so in respectful terms. A critical stage in establish ment of the principle of public regulation had been reached and, In order that that principle might be maintained, it was more than usually nnblican majority into factions was threatened. Mr. Harding came for- to educate, so as to qualify our boys ward none too soon, adopted all that and girls for useful life and intelli waa sound and necessary of the gent work. Whatever will serve to THE BRITISH PARADOX. When a people so proud of their democracy as the British turn out in their millions to rejoice at the mar riage of a princess, we wonder at such devotion to anything that smacks of monarchy. It is one of the paradoxes of the British charac ter, which the Briton explains to his own satisfaction, and he does not care whether his reasons satisfy others. He loves his democracy and his royal family, both at the same time. But there are particular explana tions for the popularity of Princess Mary's marriage. She has endeared herself to the people by her work in war hospitals and by being a natural, lovable, clever woman. Her choice or a husband is popular, both be cause the match Is believed to have been made by Jove and because Vis count Lascelles Is an Englishman who fought in the war. When Prin cess Louise, daughter of Queen Vic toria, married the marquis of Lorne, she was the first member of the royal family in modern times to wed one not of royal blood nor member of a reigning family, the Innova tion was welcome, for the people were weary of seeing Queen Vic toria's numerous progeny bring home German princes and prin cesses, man of whose domains were o larger tnan an average American county, and they considered their own nobility as good as any German grand duke. The war and the Ger man revolution ended that custom once for all, for German royalty is ow out of a job and on the blacklist. There being objections to intermar riage with Catholic dynasties, the field for matrimony among royal families is so narrowed that King George's children perforce look at ome for mates, and they find the people better pleased. - Thi3 is one of the several explana tions of the contradiction between tfTe well founded priue or tne British people in being pioneers of demo cratic government in Europe and their devotion to the monarchy. When King Charles I tried to rule by divine right," they made war on him, deposed him and chopped off his head. When King George V cheerfully lets them rule, they sing "God Save the King," all turn out to his daughter's wedding, stay out all night in the rain in order not to miss a glimpse of her, cheer themselves hoarse arid shower her with gifts. Though the British people are so cially divided into classes, the line of division is not discoverable. This arises from the . law and custom which make the younger children of a peer commoners, the eldest son alone remaining a lord. These younger children are still held the social equals of the eldest, but they preserve no mark of distinction ex cept the prefix "honorable to their names and any that they may ac quire by public service or favor, and their children are. plain "Mr.," "Mrs." and "Miss," as middle-class commoners. Thereafter their tise or fall in rank depends on their own merits. Many become simple work men. There is in Oxfordshire a large family of farmers and farm laborers whoy can trace their legitimate de scent from the earl of Warwick, "the kingmaker." The same rule works more slowly with younger, members of the royal family who marry into the nobility. There are men in humble circumstances who have claimed 'legitimate descent from long dead kings, and some of their- claims have been substantiated. Thus no lines of demarcation can be found, but one class shades off im perceptibly into another, from roy alty all the way to the humblest citizen. It was far otherwise' In the em pires that are no more. Germany was sharply divided into nobles, merchants, and peasants with whom workmen were included. All the sons and descendants of a noble were noble or "highborn,' though poor as the proverbial church mouse. The line must not be crossed I on . pain of social ostracism, and.) 1 necessary that the commission should exercise the highest intelli gence and tact. But the commission not only denied the petition; it ridiculed and rebuked the petitioners for having wasted its time and the people's money in hearing a case which it considered weak. Conceding for the sake of argu ment all that the commission says in behalf of Its rate order, a sudden increase ranging from 30 to 200 per cent would certainly cause a shock to the people, and they would ask for very convincing reasons before they would be reconciled to It. They may not have backed up their pro tests with as great weight of testi mony as would have been possible if they had been able to command as much money And expert knowl edge as did the telephone company, The people were confronted with one among a great league of corporations Which almost monopolizes the tele phone business and consequently the services of the men who are quali fied to testify regarding it. Against these were available few men inde pendent of the company and possess ing the requisite information and expert judgment. Tet the people are rebuked by their own elected officials for presenting a weak case against such odds. The commission should rather have done its utmost to insure that the case for the people should be -as fully and skilfully presented as that for the company. The commission did not heed the warning of Roosevelt, Jt so acted that, while defying public clamor, it forfeited the public confidence, which it shorlid have sought to retain. It was established as a way of escape from undue exactions of public corporations on the one hand, from political corporation-baiting on the other, as a means of securing just rates and good service for the people, a fair, stable Income for the public utilities. The commissioners have not only committed political suicide; they have struck a severe blow at the system of public regula tion which they were elected to administer and safeguard. A philosophy of the migration of culture might be written with the protest of leading' Englishmen against the exportation of art ob jects to America as a text. Europe, being impoverished,, has an oppor tunity" to turn into cash certain treasures by selling them to Amer ica, which has money with which to buy them. In a way it is part of the penalty Europe pays for having per mitted herself to be drawn into a devastating conflict. Europe's need is America's opportunity and so far as we confine our acquisitions to legitimate purchases in open mar kets the exchange is fair. Neverthe less it is Impossible not to sympa thize to a certain extent with the point of view of those who would hold fast to their objects of art. They oppose readjustment of the cultural balance because they believe, no doubt, that they' peed the finer things of life more than ever before, and think that these will help them to readjust themselves in a different way. Meanwhile, especially for Europe, it is a hardv question to de cide, for the temptation of one in want of actual necessities is strong, and for such articles as art Ameri cans are about the only people pos sessing the means to pay. BOARD'S PURPOSE MISCONSTRUED Public Service Commission. Not to Uphold Public Right or Vrongr. BOARDMAN. Or., March 2. (To the Editor.) A state toscin rings for a public service commission. Great and small have their thumbs down for this errant child of the people. The public service commission in its rehearing on telephone rates upheld the decision of its first hearing, which was in favor of the telephone company. Hence the call for a re call. - Did you ever look for the psychol ogy of this commission? First, it was born of the people. It was christened "public- service." It was nourished from the public breast with the idea that its life duty was to serve only the parent which gave it its life. .That there might be two sides to a question was "never con sidered. - We. christened it "public service," and that service we demand, though it -robbed to give it. The commission was conceived because corporations had no public soul. The commission was to be the people's soul within the corporation. For this soul to give solace to the corporation is treason, and betrayed parents demand a sacrifice. Our in dignation may only be satisfied by the sight of warm blood, so on with this recall and death to these -Judases. The public service commission com prises the following gentlemen: F. G. Buchtel, F. A. Williams and H. H Corey. For two years they studied the telephone company at "long dis tance." Fourteen months was given to hearings and. investigations. The last two hearings consumed 88 diays. Four hundred exhibits were displayed (we don't know what proportion of this run to hello girls) and 7000 type written pages of testimony were taken. The cost to state and cor poration is $300,000. As an employer of this commission do" you think they gave a proper amount of time for investigation? Did they secure enough testimony to give a proper decision? Did they secure too much testimony to give a proper decision? Are these commissioners men of thought or trailers of sheep? Do tfieyv willfully betray the people or honestly decide the case from the evid-ence that is given? I plead no brief for commission or corporation but J do plead for fair play. - If a man be not honest with himself can he be honest to his neigh bor? Does an off-hand, thumbs-down decision contain the thought of 7000 pages of evidence? Ra not thought centered more on the "exhibit" than the evidence? We all love and re spect a fighter. The child has pub licly spanked the parent. We "see red" with mortification. To chastise the child, we must. That we may be wrong never enters our head. What of the psychology of this commission if its parents had christened it "cor poration service commission"? What's in a name? Everything. Bring on the sacrifice if you must, but temper It with a seasoning of fairness. S. II. BOARDMAN. Those Who Come and Go. Tales of Folks at the Hotel. More Truth Than Poetry. ,. By James J. Montague. ARB SCHOOLS KXTRAVACAKT? Director Woodward Wants td Know Where to Cut Dot. PORTLAND, March 3. (To the Edi tor.) The Oregonian editorial article, "The Desired Impossible," calls atten tion to a model five-room flat as one of the latest educational features in a new school house recently erect ed in Brooklyn, N. Y. " The matter attached is at once Interesting, if not wholly pertinent. Directors of school district No. 1 view with much concern the present financial status of the district. They have little thought of installing model flats, their prayer being that the taxpayers will give to the coming hundreds of school children, next autumn, necessary roofs for their bodies. Swimming pools, let alone other so-called "frills," have long since been dismissed from our serious consideration. The Item concerning gymnasia and the inference that such a build ing in a rural district is hardly necessary Is only measurably true in Oregon's cUmate, where the suitable exercise of several hundred children as a part of the daily school exercise in this climate, through the winter months, is seldom possible (although required under state law), uniformly out of doors. The writer sincerely requests that The Oregonian set forth tentatively the extravagances of onr school dis trict, during the past five years, for instance, and tuggestions as to what properly might be lopped off at the present time. He speak ; in all sincerity when he declares that the present members of the board are deeply, Blncerely of a common mind in seeKing out true economy and common sense in our school administration. WILLIAM F. WOODWARD. Director. 1 Sometimes one must grin and ad mire a lawyer. ," A fellow convicted for forgery and "paroled because an officer is waiting to take him to California has what appears a good defense against extradition when his attorney asserts he cannot leave the state on 'account of the parole given him. The six-day law must be invoked on that Salem hen that lays two eggs- every day. She is violating every rule of the egg layers' union and helping depress a market to two bits a dozen now. WHY FEW ARE ASKED TO RIDE Not Only Bother, Bnt Liability In Case of Accident Influences Drivers. PORTLAND, March 3. (To the Edi tor.) The Oregonian recently car ried an editorial raising the question as to why drivers of autos with empty seats so seldom offer a lift to pedestrians. It is the guess of one of these drivers that the answer is compound ed of many elements. A too large part is to be ascribed to a lack of the miik of human kindness. We do not like to unbutton our curtains on a cold, windy morning, or we have again and again had the experience that the passenger we hftve picked up falls to rebutton them either when he gets in or when he gets out. Then there is another reason which puts the auto owner on his guard. If he asks the pedestrian to riae, ne the auto owner, Is liable, under our Oregon law, for any damage which may result to the passenger in case or accident. A well-known resident of Portland has but recently been the defendant in a suit for damages in the sum of $75,000, where a pedestrian whom he had Invited to ride was injured in a subsequent collision. The existence of this law Is not calculated to fur ther the practice of helping the other fellow which The Oregonian contends for, since the auto owner is compelled to provide insurance as well as trans portation whenever he tenders the latter. I believe the repeal or modification of this law would help to solve tha problem. GEORGE C. HOWARD. J "Panama and Colombia, Central America, are all right for anyone who likes a hot climate, says B. E. Ken nedy, who is in Portland on his way to eastern Oregon after three years in the canal zone and Colombia. "If a person can get in the trade winds he remains reasonably comfortable, but other wise the weather is too hot for the average individual. And speaking of rain, when it rains in .Panama the cloudbursts of eastern Oregon are like mist. I have seen it rain four inches in ten minutes. In the wet season your , shoes are covered with mildew over night and your clothing is soggy. One way of overcoming this is to place garments in a closet which is heated." Mr. Kennedy says that there is the richest kind of min ing property in Colombia, the proper ties being richer than anything he has ever seen In the Baker district. The gold is not being taken out very rapidly as no one is willing to do to day what can be put off until to morrow. For about a year Mr. Ken nedy was in the government service in Panama. Once upon a time Mr. Kennedy was proprietor of the Baker Herald and later pwned extensive wheat lands In Alberta. He came to Portland, became interested in poli tics, associating with the progressive republicans, and was the "bull moose" candidate for secretary of state. John Bentley, a pioneer of Uma tilla county, Is seriously 111 at the Perkins. So grave is his condition that relatives have been sent for. Mr. Bentley, who was 81 years old last month, became suddenly ill upon re ceipt of a message stating that his brother, at Modesto, Cal., was dying. The brother, 95 years old, expired about an hour after Mr. Bentley re ceived word of his failing. A nephew telegraphed Mr. Bentley, at the Per kins, to . hurry to Modesto, but the Pendletonlan replied that he was not physically able at the time. The news of his brother's fatal illness appar ently brought on the illness of John Bentley. Mrs. M. N. Blumenstaadt of Rainier, a daughter, arrived at the Perkins yesterday and R. N. Bentley of Pendleton, a nephew, has also ar rived. John Bentley went to Pen dleton when the town was little more than a settlement and was active in public life there. He was a sheriff of Umatilla county and chief of police of Pendleton. For years he has al ways been given star No. 1 of the Pendleton police, as a sort of compli ment. Recently he has been in the insurance business. The dozen or so irrigation projects scattered around Oregon will be in terested in learning that the bonds of the Crook county irrigation dis trict No. 1 have been disposed of at par. So far as known, this is the first instance where irrigation se curities In this state have commanded par price. Some of the bonds were sold and others will be accepted at par for installation of the system. The project embraces about 1536 acres and the total cost will be in the neighbor hood of $150,000, according to Denton G. Burdick of Redmond, Or. State Senator Hare of Washington county, who organized a sort of "west side bloc" in the legislative session of 1919 when a member of the lower i house, is in the city attending to business in the federal court. Senator Hare has been mentioned as a pros pective candidate for representative in the first congressional district, du declares that his plans do not includ such a thing at least for the present When the, 1925 fair was being debated in the senate in the special session Senator Hare was one of the strong est advocates o the exposition pro gramme. r Weather, erood or bad, starts at As toria. Sam Webb of that city confided to the clerk at the Hotel Portland yesterday. According to Mr. Webb, a real estate operator, the bad weather is over and good weather is now about ready to start in. About lo minutes after this prediction a young gale was sweeping the street intersection outside of the hotel, playing pranks with short skirts and reducing um brellas to wrecks. Ernest E. Hyland of Oakridge on the upper waters of the Willamette river, is registered at the Hotel Ore gon. Oakridge was located on the old military road between Eugene and Klamath Falls and the forestry bu reau is desirous of having this road improved under the name of Willam ette highway. Lane county has about $200,000 of road bonds voted for the development of the road. - THE FAINT HEART. Half a dozen blackbuhds 1 In the apple tree, Jes' about ernough to make A pie fo' me. . Go an' git de musket Off de pantry ho oik Fix de fat an' flouh. -Ready fo' to cook. Amble thoo de orchahd, Stickin' near de ground, Blackbuhd he aint stay dere Ef I makes a sound. Gittin' nigh en nigher. Quiet as er ghost, Buhds is busy talkln En I comes right clost. Musket to mah shoulder Pointin' towahd de sky. Golly goodness gracious! I kin taste dat pie! Blackbuhds cock they haids up, Lookin' mighty cute. Right laik pickanninnies. En I jes' cain't shoot! Home I goes to dinner Feeyn' soht o' beat, A mess o' fat an' flouh All I got to eat. Blackbuhds know dls nlggah . Got er chicken heaht; Glory goodness, mister. But dem fowls am smaht! Only Exchange Value. Tou can buy 3600 rubles for a dol lar, but we wouldn't adviso you to do it. " Bad Sign. We always suspected our statesmen were getting superannuated, and now we find them, in their second child hood, playing with blocs. The Exception. Tou can get used to almost any thing except an income tax. (Copyright by the Hell Syndicate, Inc.) Burroughs Nature Club. Copyright, Housnton-Mlfflln Co. ' Postmaster Jones gives good ser vice in telling the closing hours for early evening mails. Those are the kind of things people want to know. Pronunciation of Names. OREGON CITY, Or., March 2. (To the Editor.) What is the correct way to pronounce Lascelles, English sur name: also Curie, a person of that I name who is a well-known scientist of Lascelles La-selz, "a" as in "cat,' accent on second syllable. Curie Ku-re. - Both ' vowels havo long sound, accent on second syllable. Mayor Gates of Medford elimin ated himself from the race for govr ernor, though Gates was, a name to conjure with. Ever notice the loafers wjbo stand in sheltered spots at the city canyon corners when a gale is blowing? The fourth week is ending and Portland stiil lacks much on Its chest. Shoo, flu; rain's here! Address of Rockefeller. BEND, Or., March 2. (To the Edi tor.) Will you please give me the address of John D; Rockefeller? P. P. Pocantico Hills, Tarry town, N. Y. Carl J. Hackland of Cove, Or., Is among the arrivals at the Perkins Cove is a little-known community in eastern Oregon in the northern part of Union counts. It. is located in fruit belt and is the , shipping point for fruit and berry growers, the prod uct being transported to the main line of the Union Pacific system at Island City. Governor Hart of Washington was registered at the Imperial yesterday, but immediately left for Vancouver, which is within his own domain. J R. F. Servaes, marine Insurance agent of San Francisco, is registered at the Benson. Eligibility to Soldier's Loan. PORTLAND, March 3. (To the Edi tor.) I have been a citizen of Ore gon for 14 years and own city prop erty, but enlisted from the state of Washington, served over seas and drew bonus from Washington. Would I be able to get Oregon bonus loan from the state? READER. A person In order to obtain the loan must be "fully qualified" to . receive either loan or bonus. You would be qualified to receive only the differ ence between the Washington and Oregon bonus, provided the former was less than the latter, and therefore not entitled to loan. This is only an opinion. Better write to the world war veterans' state aid commission, Salem, to make sure. Indian Lands In California. ASHLAND, Or., March 2. (To the Editor. Please advise if there are any Indian lands in Siskiyou county for sale. Also advise the name of the agency to write to regarding them. . D. A. A. Write to United States land office, Sacramento, Cal. Cnn Yon Answer These Questions? 1. What is meant by "eclipse plumage" in description of birds? 2. As watermelon does best in a dry soil, why does it contain so much more moisture than other fruit and vegetables? 3. For what Is the wool of South Dakota and Wyoming used? Local merchants tell me it is not used for clothing, as wool for that purpose is imported. Answers in tomorrow's nature notes. Answers to Previous Questions. 1. Does the wild turkey ever drum like a grouse? No. Its wings make a loud swish ing noise in flight, but it does not drum by fanning the air grouse-style. The wild turkey has a loud vocal note and does not need to resort to drum ming to summon a mate. 2. Is the arbutus tree of British Columbia evergreen? Does it bloom? Yes; we suppose you mean arbutus menzipsii, pursh., commonly called madrona. The flowers grow In racemes, with terminal clusters from 5 to 6 inches long. The fruit ripens in the autumn, is bright orange-red and is liked by the Indians of the locality. 3. Due to some hot discussion, I want to know if a rattlesnake will conceal itself in a banana stalk or make its home there? Rattlesnakes in different parts o the country have different hablta Those of the north commonly fre quent ledgy mountainous ground, but in the south swampy ground, cane brakes, etc., may be preferred for a habitat. Ditmars' "The Reptile Book mentions a diamond-backed rattle- snaKe or tsoutn Carolina that was known to make a. home in a hollo stump. There are some varieties o rattlesnakes in Central and South America, and possibly in a region where banana trees grow, an Individ ual might make a retreat in a tree We cannot lay down any general rule here. High Lights on The Snuday Oregonian Tomorrow In Other Days. Twenty-Five Years Ago. From The Oregonian of March 4. JS!7. Washington. On the eve of the final adjournment of the 54th con gress, the house voted, 193 to 37, to override President Cleveland's veto of tha immigration bill. President-elect McKinley's cabinet was completed with the addition of Cornelius N. Bliss of New York as secretary of the Interior. San Francisco. The supreme court this afternoon affirmed the decision of the lower. court in the case of Theodore Durrant, found guilty of the murder of Blanche Lam on t in Emanuel church, two years ago. Lewi-s W. Robertson, chief of the Portland police department, has re signed. Claiming that the new exponent of modern journalism Is too racy and naughty, the Portland Library asso elation ordered the San Francisco Examiner taken off its list. Mining Assessment Extension. PORTLAND, March 3. (To the Edi tor.) Was the time limit for assess ment work on mineral claims ex tended until July of succeeding year instead of January 1 as formerly? , MiNER. It was. Transportation of Connty Officers. BEND, Or., March 2. (To the Edi tor.) Would anyone working in a county office b entitled to free rail way transportation under the inter state commerce law? W. S. No. - Type of Hawthorne Bridge. BEND, Or., March 2. -To the Edi tor.) How does the Hawthorne-street bridge open? Is the draw elevated or is it a swing? This is to settle a bet. COUI LE OF NUTS. It is a lift bridge. Date 'of Lusltanla Sinking. PRESCOTT, Or., March 2. (To the Editor.) Please let us know the date of the sinking of the Lusitania. CONSTANT READER. May 7, 1915. - Fifty' Years Ago. From The Oregonian of March 4. 1872. The Plank Road company is propos ng to build a road from Portland to WilkinS' place 12 miles away. Tonight Shakespeare's great drama of "King Lear" will be -produced at the Oro Fino theater. New York. A dispatch says a strike occurred at Columbia, S. C, among the postoffice laborers there, because he superintendent prescribes ten hours as a day's work. Prescott, Ariz. At Mineral park camp where there are 500 miners, there was not one day's- rations of anything except wheat and corn in the ear, intended for horse feed. The Iridians are destitute and are stealing stock and threatening to attack the town. Educational Aid for Service Men. PORTLAND, March 3. (To the Edi tor.) I am an ex-service man and am taking advantage of the state aid for vocational training. I am taking a course that requires the purchase of instruments. In a local paper a few days ago it was stated that the state would allow $800 for vocational training. I will use about $400. and want to know if the stats will allow me the other $400 to pur chase the instruments with. A. H. M. Soldiers obtaining vocational aifi are not entitled to a specific sum The law names three maximums not more than $25 a month for not to exceed eight months in any one year for not longer than four years may i be paid by the state in the soldier'! behalf. The executive head of ths institution you are attending should able to explain to you your rights dcr the law. inE Jbe I un IN THE MAGAZINE The Romance of the Girl on the Dollar How the face that to the world symbolizes peace, stands for love and faith to the strugKlino; sculptor who has won fame at last. Old-Pashioned Girl's Triumph "Bobbed hair passe," eayt fashion, and the long-haired lass laughs, but an eminent doctor tells how scientific ally to reprow locks . that havo been clipped. Another of Those Exclusive Stories "The Culvert" by J. J. Bell, which is the fiction feature for tomorrow, is fully up to tho high standard of prev ious stories. Never printed before. News of World Seen by Camera More of those interesting pictures of persons and events in the news. Loom and Spinning Wheel Little Alike The development of the in dustry of. weaving and how Oregon is taking its place as a center for wool and wool products. Curious Tangle of Second Alarriage Failures How a chain of divorces in three prominent families has raised the question whether a man who has brought unhappiness to one wife can bring happiness to another. The Purity of Our Nation's Food What has been wrought within 15 years by the bureau of chemistry of the department of agriculture. OTHER FEATURES James J. Alontague's Humorous Feature One of the products of this famous humorist's facile typewriter will appear in The Sunday Oregonian. Bridge Whist Popular Column The latest news. and inter esting problems relating to this popular game are treated. Special Department for Radio Fans The news and gossip for radiophone users has aroused wide interest. Look for it tomorrow. Literary Gossip and Book Reviews The latest in books is told in comments, including "The Literary reriscope. For the Chess and Checker Fans There is a special depart ment which works out some interesting problems and gives the latest news. Dean Straub, Pioneer of University Campus How this well-known edu cator has endeared himself to hundreds of students of -the University of Oregon during his many years there. Road Building Brings New Era at Coos Bay Many students who formerly had to go to school by boat may soon travel the new highways in that section. Sporting Features Are the Best by Robert Edgren and Jock Hutchison, considered two of the best sports writers in the country. Baseball News From the Training Camp is now being sent by Harry Grayson, former sport writer on The Oregonian. L. H. Gregory, sports editor, is now en route to Pasadena. And Then There Is the Comic Section With "Polly and Her Tals" and numerous other features of interest to old and young. MANY OTHER FEATURES The Oregonian Leads the West for the variety of its depart ments and news features 'catering to all classes, of readers. There are the so ciety, clubs and fashion departments for the woman ; business, financial and real estate features for the busi ness man; school news for the young people; and automobile, moving picture, theater and magazine feat ures for all members of the family. All the news of all the world The Sunday Oregonian Jnst 5 Cents