8 THE MORNING OREGONIAN. THURSDAY, APRIL 6, 1923 ESTABLISHED BT H EX BY I. PITTOCK. Published by The Oregonian Publishing Co. 135 Sixth Street, Portland, Oregon. C. A. MOfiDK-N, B. B. P1PBR. Manager. editor. The Oregonian-is a member of th Asso ciated Press. The Associated Press is ex clusively entitled to the use for publication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. Subscription Rates Invariably in Advance. (By Mall.) Daily, Sunday included, one year. ... $8.00 Dally, Sunday Included, six months., 4.25 Daily, Sunday included, three months. 2.25 Daily, Sunday included, one month.... .75 laily, without Sunday, one year 6.00 Daily, without Sunday, six months.... 3.25 Diiily. without Sunday, one month 60 Sunday, on year 2.50 (By Carrier.) 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The views of Municipal Judge Rossman, who has observed the op eration of tne so-called melting pot from the vantage point of the police court bench, coincide with those of President Harding's special commis sioner to Europe, Mrs. Alexander P. Moore, better known as Lillian Rus sell, who has just returned from Europe, where she went to make a study of immigration problems. We thus have first-hand information from both ends of the immigration line. Mrs. Moore finds from her ob servations in foreign countries that "the immigration of recent years has been from the class of people which arrests rather than aids the develop- - ment of any nation." Judge Ross- man says: "Our melting pot is not melting. . . . P o 1 1c e records, carefully checked by myself, show that nearly one-third of all the per sons arrested by the Portland police last year were born in foreign coun tries." The association and the in ference are plain. It is better, says President Hard- - ing's envoy, to put out the fires under the melting pot, which has boiled too quickly and is running over, and allow its contents to soli- ' dify before adding' more raw ma terial. Nearly all the moonshiners, narcotic peddlers, and others of their ilk, observes the Portland jurist, are persons born across the water. Again a correspondence of findings which is in all probability more than a mere coincidence. It is noteworthy, too, . that neither commentator de spairs of the ultimate salvation of the immigrant. If these newcomers can be properly educated and made to understand the laws of this coun try there is agreement upon this point it is thought that the inci dence of crime can be reduced. It is not a confession of weakness for which there is need to be ashamed; only a plain statement that the ca pacity of the melting pot has been exceeded. Never in the history of the world has an institution been so' heavily taxed. There is no counterpart in all the ages for the movement which has brought to America from foreign lands a total of 34,435,332 aliens in a century, a number equal to "prac tically a. third of the entire present population. There seems to be sound reason for the statement that "if we do not put up the bars and make them higher and stronger, there will no longer be an America for Ameri cans." So Miss Russell believes, after having inspected the immi grant of the present at his port of embarkation. Miss Russell urges an immigration holiday of about five years. Yet she realizes that this may work hardship in individual instances. It would prevent the reuniting of families in cases where some members have al ready come to the United States and it would in some particulars check the flow of desirable immigration. The alternative of more drastic supervision in the countries of origin seems reasonable, if practical details can be worked out. Undoubtedly it would be well if consuls might be authorized to refuse to vise all unfit persons, though this would involve strengthening the consular service and furnishing It with the personnel needful to obtain accurate data. The physical condition of the alien ought of course, to be ascertained, but it is still more essential that his moral health should be up to our standard. In a peculiar sense the immigrant of 1922 is on the defensive. France and Italy are cited by the former actress as illustrious examples of countries wnere every aole-oodiea patriot is at work, and it is easy to believe that "most of those non coming here have little of the in spiration of the early settlers from abroad." Those regarded as useless in the reconstruction of their own lands are the. ones most likely now to be seeking asylum in America. The percentage system by which admission of aliens is now regu lated is good only so far as it goea It needs to be supplemented by some method by which quality as well as quantity can be controlled". This is a matter of administrative detail, but it is requisite that we shall take at least as much pains to determine the nature of our future citizens as we now take in regulating the impor tation of plants and livestock, which are instantly prohibited whenever it appears that they are about to be come a menace. So, too, it would be helpful if a due proportion of im migrants were disbarked at other ports than New York, in order to assure more rapid economic assim ilation. Yet even this measure pre supposes that other communities shall be prepared to take care of the newcomers, and it is conceded that under any circumstance our facilities for their reception already are taxed to the limit of capacity. The same vigilance which has uni formly kept us free from the bu bonic plague, and from trachoma and measurably from leprosy will be suficient to bar typhus, now raging in parts of Russia, in the Balkans and in Asia Minor, from the country. There is probably no occasion for alarm, since the disease is conspicu ously one which breeds in filth and consequently is easily detected and is t amenable to sanitation and quaran tine. It emphasizes, however, the sense of responsibility which has led humanitarians to send relief to for eign countries instead of waiting for typhus to slip by the out pasta and get a foothold in the United States. As1 a last resort we know that soap and water will do wonders, that isolation of suspected cases is pos sible here as It is nowhere else in the world and that the habits of Ameri cans are not conducive to the spread of such a plague. Above all is gen eral observance of the common rules of health and hygiene, which if not quite a specific is a means of pre vention available to all and is made more than ever expedient by the run-down condition of the health of the people of the rest of the world. WOODEN MOTOKSHIPS THAT PAY. Those shipping board officials and eastern shipping men who condemn at one sweep all the wooden ships that were built by a former shipping board during the war would profit by reading an article in the Motor ship on "Wooden Ships that Pay." It tells of three wooden ships built on the Pacific coast and operated by the Ocean Motorship company be tween Portland and California ports with Diesel engines. They carry only twenty officers and men, as com pared with thirty on a steamship of the same size, and one or them re cently made the voyage from Port land to San Francisco in 72 hours 20 minutes at an average speed of 9.6 knots at economies - in operation which "have enabled these wooden craft to compete successfully with steel steamships at rates under which no wooden steamship would have been able to operate." "In fact," says the Motorship, "they have been able to make paying voyages at rates which kept steel steamships tied up." Sister wooden steamships have 46,740 cubic feet less cargo space and carry 533 tons more fuel, while the steam plant weighs 58 tons more than the Diesel machinery. Another wooden motorship runs from Puget sound to San Pedro carrying 200,000 feet more lumber than a steamship of the same size. The shipping board advertises nineteen steel cargo vessels for in stallation of Diesel machinery. It might do worse than invite bids for the best of its wooden ships for the same purpose. .evidently economy of fuel and wages and increase of cargo space make them profitable, at. least on short runs. For that service they should be worth consid. erably more than junk. THE WAY TO REDUCE. Proof of criminality should not be considered necessary to the process of reducing the cost of government. By -every means of making them selves heard the American people have declared their desire to cut down public expenses; by every means of reassuring the people the national administration has declared its purpose to fulfill that desire. The ends sought and promised can not be attained except by very direct methods. A number of years ago the way to resumption of specie pay ment was discovered in the simple formula "the way to resume, is to resume." So now, the way to reduce is to reduce. Reorganization of the federal bu reau of engraving and printing is a case in point. No need, for the pres ent at any rate, to speculate on the merits of the case; no occasion tp defend or to criticize -the executive order by which the sweeping change was made in the direction and per sonnel of the bureau. The immedi ately convincing fact is that all the existing bureaus, commissions, agen cies and other branches of the fed eral government cannot continue in conduct along lines that call for con stantly increasing expenditures if there is any sincerity of- purpose to cut government costs. The displaced employes of the bu reau of engraving are asking ex planations. The secretary of the treasury has promptly .relieved them of any suspicion of criminal or othej conduct that would reflect against their probity. The change was made to secure increased efficiency; for the good of the service. Resolu tions asking detailed information and proposing an investigation have promptly appeared' in both senate and house of 1 representatives. As the first case in which a change so general has been thought expedient or necessary, it would perhaps be well to give it a thorough airing for the benefit of congress and the coun try. There is no question that the se curity of civil service is enervating to a certain class of public servants. The quality of service given, as well as the quantity, sometimes indicates that the advantages are all on one side- and that is not the public's side. If government costs are to be cut, if the work of Budget Director Dawes is to be given any appreciable effect, changes in methods must be made; inefficient employes must yield their places; pay-rolls must be lowered, not necessarily by the slashing of wages, but at least by re ducing the number of those em ployed; the departments of govern ment must be given service and sys tematic efficiency for every dollar expended. Public demand and declared ex ecutive purpose run together in the direction of some such ideal condi tion never, perhaps, to be fully realized; but surely worth all honest effort in the striving. , THE IMPUDENCE OF TONGS. Origin of the animosities that cul minate in "tong murder" lies far back in the remote recesses of oriental character, beyond reach of the de ductive methods of the most ad vanced criminology. When murder has been attempted or done, the po lice may capture or kill, the courts of the country may mete out such punishment as seems to fit the case; but the cause or motive of the crime remains obscure. The laws of the land wherein the crime is commit ted, the warnings of the police and the retribution of the courts, seem powerless to check the recurrence of oriental outbreak. Cynical occidentals may remark that the killing of a Chinaman now and then is no great matter. The remark would go wide of the point. Murder is murder, wherever it may be done; and murder is a crime for which some form of punishment has been prescribed in all countries and under the crudest forms of govern ment. The killing of any man, yel low, black or white, Is not to be dis missed as of trivial importance, nor to be in any way condoned because the springs of the impulse to kill are removed from common comprehen sion. Only by merest chance may the police of such a city learn in ad vance of a plan for tong murder. They have learned, by long experi ence, that when one murder has been done, a retaliatory murder is bound to be committed; but how, when, where and by whom will lead the most astute detectives down a long trail of futile speculation. The cause the occasion, the issuance of the order to kill, and the choice of the human instrument of revenge, are things not to be ascertained by any of the processes commonly employed in dealing with other classes. The restriction of tong feuds to the Chinese, the apparent Immunity of Americans and other residents from tong vengeance give no excuse for toleration. ,In such an affray as that which occurred in mis city Tuesday night anyone might have been hurt or killed. In any case, and in its mildest aspect, this war ring. of the tongs is a disturbance of the peace of a community which has no interest in the deadly contro versies of oriental sojourners. The tongs are organized and officered; and if murders of Chinese are tong murders, the gunmen are but the instruments of deliberately planned homicides and no " more culpable than those who did the planning. Our own legal formalities and ori ental secretiveness protect the in stigators but it should he possible for the agencies of the federal gov ernment to break them up. The de portation of tong men, including an intelligent selection of the higher ups, should have a corrective effect. If these people wish to remain in the United States they should be made to understand that our laws are in tended to secure their good behavior, no matter what may be the peculiar or savajge character of their differ ences among themselves. HOW TO FIIX THE DEFICIT VACUUM. Secretary Mellon's announcement that revenue from income tax will fall $215,000,000 short of the esti mate on which the budget is based confirms the opinion expressed when surtaxes were under discussion that the percentages fixed in the last tax law have dried up that source of revenue by driving men of large for tune to invest their surplus income in tax-exempt securities. Either that or the process of deflation which continued throughput the year 1921 caused a greater shrinkage in in comes as compared with 1928 than the treasury department, experts had calculated. v The necessity of making up this deficit will turn attention once more to the sales tax, though the opposi tion of labor unions and farmers' organizations causes many congress men to shrink from it as if it would burn their fingers. Its merits are better understood since a party of congressmen examined its working at first hand in Canada. In that country escape is prevented by re quiring all manufacturers and wholesalers to take a license, . Half the tax, which is 3 per cent, is col lected from the manufacturer and half from the wholesaler monthly and the whole is included in the wholesale price of goods, therefore-is called painless to the consumers. In its first year it yielded ,79,000,000 and cost less than 1 percent to col lect. The central office employs less than 40 .persons besides 30 traveling auditors and the administrator. Ex eruption is granted to necessities of life, foodstuffs in their natural state, initial sales of farm produce by the farmer himself, and first products of fisheries, mines and for ests. The sales tax proposed by Senator Smoot was to have been collected from manufacturers only, and profit on it, as part of the price of goods, would have been added by whole salers and retailers. While this would be pyramiding, no great pyramid could be erected on a 1 per cent tax, which is all that was proposed, and the ease and simplicity of collection would contrast strongly with the cumbersome, costly machinery of the income tax. If, as now seems probable, the bonus bill should be passed, congress will be compelled to find some new source of revenue. and it may be driven to the sales tax as a last resort. THE JRREPRESSIBLE WELSHMAN. Lloyd George won another trl umph by defying the British parlia ment to get along without him. On all sides was raised the cry: "Dis solve the coalition and; let each party stand by Its own 'strength." It seemed that the premier, who rep resented a decidedly minority party in the coalition, had hardly a friend in the world. But he no sooner asks for a vote of confidence, plainly in timating that, if it is denied, he will resign, than it is given by a majority almost as great as any since the khaki election of 1918. The clever little Welshman has maneuvered the Unionists into a po sition where they cannot get along without him or are afraid to try. They have a majority over all other parties in the house of commons, but their leaders have become so com promised by their support of the George policy as to be sadly em barrassed if they should open politi cal warfare upon him. They have forsaken the very principle that is expressed by their, party name unionist for their leaders took part in making the treaty which dissolves the union by establishing the Irish free state, and all the unionists in parliament except about fifty die hards voted to ratify that treaty. If they should undertake to form a cabinet, they could not adopt a dis tinct programme without repudiat ing and attacking much that their leaders have done as members of the coalition. The history of the coalition is the story of surrenders of principle by first one, then the other, of its two component parts.' For example, the unionists abandoned the union par liament, the liberals abandoned free trade, each on the opportunist plea that a great emergency demanded iC The- unionists, who have inherited the tory tradition, would like , to make protection and the hereditary house of lords the leading planks in their platforms, but they know that downfall of the coalition must be quickly followed by an election, and they know that democratic and free trade opinion is so strong that they dare not face the issue all except the die-hards, who would glory in defeat for a principle, but they are not practical politicians. What would follow if the coalition should break up, a tory cabinet ap peal for a popular mandate, and the coalition liberals be left free to play their own part in the campaign, is a fruitful field for speculation. The unionists have learned to fear the resourcefulness and magnetism of Lloyd George. He has been working to form a center party composed of his liberal followers and the moder ate unionists, which would fight against the die-hard unionists on one hand, the independent liberals and Iaborites ' on . the other. He has branded the Iaborites as socialists aiming at revolution, and the grow ing co-operation between that party and the Asquith liberals might give him opportunity to tar the latter party with the same brush. He might renew the center party scheme and attract to his standard all . unionists except the irreconcil ables, also many independent liber als, by raising the alarm about so cialism. Silenced as to his "past acts by their joint responsibility for them and having echoed his attacks on the Iaborites, his present unionist col leagues might see no other choice than to join him. They remain his faithful followers lest he turn and rend them, for they have a lively memory of what he used to say about the dukes in his radical days. All of this seems to have little to do with the Genoa conference, which was the immediate occasion for Lloyd George's demand for a vote of confidence, but the calling of that conference was in fact a play In do mestic politics by both the British and French premiers. It was one of those brilliant improvisations In statesmanship by which the agile Welshman has squeezed through many a tight place and has held of fice long after the fall of every lead ing politician of the other great powers that met at Paris. He is the sole survivor of the big four, and for three years he has bent other pre miers to his will, shaping events on the continent while he tamed the revolutionary spirit which underlay great strikes at home. . When he went to Cannes he faced another emergency, for foreign trade had shrunk, taxes were crushing, two million men were unemployed and were supported by the government at a cost of half a billion dollars a year. Relief from this situation could be obtained only by stabilizing economic conditions in Europe. The chief requisite was to oen Russia to British and German trade and in vestment. That would give work to the unemployed, expand commerce, enable Germany to pay reparations, thereby enabling him to reduce taxes and to quiet the clamor of France. If he could, by the promise of economic aid and ultimate recog nition, induce the bolshevist chiefs to renounce communism finally, to compensate those whom they had robbed, to recognize old debts, and to throw Russia open to trade under accepted principles, he would start Europe toward prosperity and would score a triumph that would seat him firmly on his shaky seat.- He would at one stroke benefit Great Britain all Europe and himself. The fall of Briand seemed to doom him to failure for he could not easily manage Poincare, who stands for complete fulfilment of treaties and for no recognition of the soviet ex cept on French terms. The French premier stood pat and there seemed to be a hopeless deadlock, but Pre mier Benes of Czecho-SIovakia medi ated between them and after a four hour interview at Bologne Lloyd George and Poincare agreed on a de fensive alliance against Germany and on French representation at Genoa, but on Poincare's' terms. It remains for Lloyd George to bring the soviet delegates to the terms on which alone France will deal with 'them at all a n d more difficult still to make them live up to their bargain. He has safely navigated one dan gerous rapid; can he steer through the next? The bug of ambition seized the Tillamook Headlight, one of the best "country" papers of the state, awhile ago and for a month it was pub lished twice a week as an experi ment; but the innovation was ahead of city and time, and weekly pub lication has been resumed. It was a great paper ana gave an indi cation of what "can happen, maybe, some time." The postmaster-general favors the plan and soon the parcel post driver will be weighing the baby on de mand of its mother. Its weight best tells the condition of a child's health and paternally your Uncle Sam has much interest in the rising gener ation. Those Yakima potato growers, cow, stepping around on the sides of their feet at times because of the ex cellence of their product, are buying seed grown on the Deschutes. For the best of everything, come to Ore gon. . A musical enthusiast in New York favors putting pianos In the' homes of burglars to influence them to be good. This proposal ought to "par alyze" even the talented men who write ads for the piano houses. There is possibility that these chaps who advocate saving daylight are the fellows who must arise early to make garden under direction of the major fraction of the family. The Florida candidate for mayor who declared In favor of the one piece bathing suit was elected by a large majority. "Vamps' are bound to win at a watering place. Twenty chorus girls were lucky in a hotel lire in an umo town tne other night in being able to flee "in night attire." Suppose they had been "dressed" for the stage! It is not agitation over the reor ganization of the bureau of engrav ing as it is fear of what may be com ing. Democrats, it seems, are doing all the worrying. More women aspire to be in the next congress. Nominations for the next legislature might be in order, now that the time is getting short. The ex-kaiser is reading a book called "Man and God," something al together different from the way he used to say it. The penitentiary is becoming crowded, but, like the circus tent. there always is room for one more. Detective "Wright is one of the good shots on the force who save! land. Wash. court expenses at times. 13. That is incorrect. m Stars and Starmakers. By Leone Can Ban, News of Nancy Duncan, ' once a Baker stock player, is contained in an announcement from Battle Creek. Mich. Nancy is heading the Bijou stock company. When Adele Ritchie married Guy Bates Post she said she was givingf up the stage. Now the Pasadena papers are recalling her avowal and mentioning that she has evidently changed her mind, since- she is en gaged as director of the Pasadena Little Players. If you've ever seen a group of "Little Players" play you'll realize that the Pasadena papers are wrong and that Adele has not "re turned to the footlights." She is merely turning a nice penny or two for herself by directing a flock of folk who are determined to act, the ambitious amateurs who say that "they want to act so badly" and do. They are not indigenous to Pasadena. In the meantime Adele's husband, Guy Bates Post, is making a cellu loid version of "The Masquerader" in Los Angeles. This picture will mark the first film production of Richard Walton Tullyi A little matter of billing interfered with a vaudeville route of Mrs. Lydig Hoyt, the New York society beauty who has had a fling in film and ap peared with William Faversham in his revival of "The Squaw Man." Mrs, Hoyt, who is a sort of Edna Good rich kind -of actress, beautiful but dumb, was to be a headline In vaude ville, and the agents insisted on ad vertising her as Mrs. Lydig Hoyt Mr. Lydig objected. Not only does he object to his wife appearing on the stage, but he violently opposes the use of his name on the advertis ing. So she agreed to be billed as Julia Hoyt, and the agents promptly ended the hooking, saying that Julia Hoyt had no box-of fiee drawing power, but that Mrs. Lydig Hoyt would draw. So Julia must realize that it wasn't her talent that at tracted. Beauty may be only skin deep, but little Evelyn Greer, a one time stenographer in a Montreal office, is having a right nice time on the depth of her epidermis. Evelyn was voted the prettiest girl in all Canada in a recent content, in which photo graphs of Canada's fairest maids were sent in competition. Evelyn is brunette and they say she won in walk. At any rate she's going to be filmed in a Los Angeles picture pro duction, but in the meantime she being shown New York as a part of her winnings. Olaire Sinclair, formerly of the Baker stock, is playing with the Woodward stock company in Seattle Nina Payne, a Seattle girl who has distinguished herself as an interpre tative dancer in this country, is just now creating a sensation with her Egyptian dances and odd costumes in the Folles Bergere in Paris. Miss Payne is said to be the most com pletely dressed player on the Folles stage. Heywood Broun has been appointed dramatic editor of the New York World, in succession to Louis V. DeFoe, whose recent death ended his career of almost a quarter of a cen tury on the World. Martha Hedman is to play the lead in ""My Lady's Lips." a new play by Edward Locke. There are to be onlj three characters In the play. The other two players are William Powell, who was at one time a member of the Baker stock company. Gilda Leary is the third player. - Pauline Frederick is sailing this month for London to appear in "Law ful Larceny," one of the A. H Woods productions. Miss Frederick has signed a five-year contract with Woods. Sarah Bernhardt has announced she will play the role of Eve in the four-act play, "Adam and Eve," writ ten by Saoha Guitry, whose father will be Adam in the production. Mme. Bernhardt will play Eve as being 79 years old, and Adam is to be im personated as seven years her Junior. www Ossip Dymow wrote a play four yearS ago, He wrote It In his native language, and you would know it was Russian by glancing again at Ossip's name. The play was pro duced by the Yiddish Art theater in New York under a title of Ossip's choosing in 199, and then it lay shrouded in dust on Ossip's shelves, save when he dusted It off and took it to some prospective purchaser. At last he connected with the Coburns (Mr. and Mrs.), who put on "The Better 'Ole" and who go in for artis tic plays. They got Owen Davis to rewrite Ossip's play for adaptation on the American stage and they've re named it "The Bronx Express." It is scheduled to open" sometime this month. a Lester Lonergan has been engaged as stage director of "The Shadow, from the novel by Eden Phillpotts, to be produced soon by Marc Klaw. Chauncey Olcott opens an engage ment In San Francisco next week. He is appearing in a revival of "Ragged Robin." Trixie Friganza is headed in this direction over the Orpheum circuit. This week she is in St. Paul. Location of Willamette Meridian. VANCOUVER, Wash., April 4. (To the Editor.) (1) What Is the differ ence in Portland between solar time and the official time? (2) Where does the Willamette meridian cross a line running east and west through Port land? Give the names of two or three towns in Oregon and Washington situ ated on, or near by, the Willamette meridian. (3) I have heard it stated that the Beaverton-Hillsboro road runs exactly on one of the earth's parallels. Is that statement correct? If so, what parallel is it? J. S. 1. Standard time is 11 minutes faster than solar time at Portland. 2. The Willamette meridian passes west of Portland proper and for a portion of the way forms the dividing line between Multnomah and Wash ington counties. It cuts the district of St. Johns about the center and touches the lower point of Hayden island. It goes through Just east of Aurora, Or., and almost touches Wood- OPPORTUNITY AWAITS CAPITA!. Rogue River Valley Inviting; Field for Nitrogen and Dehydration Plants GOLD HILL, Or., April 4. (To the Editor.) For several years the state has been experimenting in the prep aration of lime fertilizer at its plant at Gold Hill. This gives an added interest to the Muscle Shoals proposi tion, which is being so extensively advertised at this time. Here we have the water power in great quan tity in Rogue river. We have the lime and our atmosphere is filled with nitrogen. Henry Ford is exer cising himself to get control of the Muscle Shoals proposition for the pur pose of manufacturing fertilizer for the run-down farms of the east. It seems to be a settled fact that with an abundance of water power, lime and nitrogen, the best and cheapest fertilizer In the world, can be man ufactured with little cost. Is there not a Henry Ford in Oregon who can be induced to take over the state's lime plant here and do this thing for this state? Perhaps the state itself can be induced to change its present unsatisfactory lime plant to one that shall manufacture this nitrogenous fertilizer from the materials at hand. Gold Hill now has 'the chief man ufacturing olant of southern Oregon, putting out 1200 barrels of Portland cement every 24 hours and employ ing many men. Why not establish a dehydration plant on the banks of this wonderful stream? we ve got tne power going to waste. Each year hundreds of tons, perhaps thousands of tons of al'l kinds of fruit and vegetables are wasted in Rogue river valley for want ot some metnoa oi utilizing them. Rogue river valley needs no advertising to let people know of its wonders in fruit ana vegetables, only the choicest or wnicn are used, because it does not pay to ship them. Gold Hill is the logical nlace for such an institution, lying, as it does, at the foot of the valley, with oaved highway and down grade. No country can exceed this valley in its grapes, cherries, strawoerries, los-anberries. gooseberries, currants, ap ples, pears, peaches; its great varieties of vegetable productions, which only require the dehydration process to ex tract the water and preserve the meat for shipment to a hungry world, and an added plant to extract tne juices from our berries and grapes. We are too far away from metropolitan cen ters to market our perishable prod uce and freights are too high to pay for shipping in their natural conai tion. Saueeze out the Juice which everybody drinks, or uses in one way or another, irom our Dems smaller fruits and reduce freight chare-es from our shipments of vege- ishisi hv trertiner rid of the water and reducing the bulk, which dehydra tion treatment does. Here is a great field for someone s spare capital and a chance to make for the happiness of regions that are denied these luxuries. G. B. WATSON, Radio, Composer and Opera. PORTLAND. April 5.. (To the Edi tor.) 1. What kind of an apparatus or contrivance will it require so mat r ppn hpar The Oregonian's radio phone concerts in my house? . In 1860-61 I, knew, in New York, the, nomDoaer Stephen. C. Foster. Could you tell me the dates of his birth and' aeatn .' 3. Richard Wagner in his opera "Tannhausar" uses the incident of the "Sangerkrieg on the Wartburg" as hisi text. In, the smaller of the two halls on the Wartburg where the singing contest took place is a lare-e oil painting of the five partici Dants. When I was there in 1914 I got their names from the caretaker, but I have lost the memorandum Still I remember three of them, i. e., Wolfram von Eschenbach. Walther von der Vigelweide, Heinrich Von Afferding. Which was the real Tann hauser. He lost the contest and for feited his life, but at the interces sion of Elizabeth, the landgrave's daughter, was repreived so he might make a pilgrimage to Rome. How or where could I find the names of the other contestants PAUL PFERDXER. 1. You need antenna supported in the air in some way outside your residence and a receiving set. The latter come in a great variety of prices receiving ranges, styles and efficiencies. You should see a dealer In electrical appliances or visit one of the radio supply houses in Port land. 2. Stephen. C. Foster was born July 4, 1826, and died January 13, 1864. 3. The other two singers besides Tannhauser are Biterolf and Relmar von Zweter. upera-uoers complete Guide," obtainable at book stores, has descriptions of all standard operas. That or similar works may be consulted at the public library. Farmers and Compensation Law. VALSETZ. (To the Editor.) Please tell me if the working men's compensation, law in any state coveTS domestic and) farm labor. I under stood it does not. My friend says in Washington it does. CHARLES E. YOUNG. The common practice is -to exclude- farm and domestic labor, but in sev eral states this exclusion is' condi tional or inclusion may be had by affirmative election. In Oregon any excluded employment maybe brought under the act by application by the ndividual employer with the acquies- ance of his employes. Customs at Funerals. PORTLAND, April 6. (To the Edi tor.) 1. Is it customary to disregard the expressed wishes of the deceased as to having the funeral rites per formed by one of the fraternal so cieties of which he was a member? 2. Is a private funeral so private that a virtually life-long friend, even attending him during hij last illness, can be denied admission to the fu neral services? JULIUS ADLER. 1. Expressed wishes are usually obeyed. 2. A friend has no rights that the family of the deceased are. legally compelled to respect. Symptoms ot Septic Sore Throat. PORTLAND, April 5. (To the Edi tor.) How can one tell the differ ence between a common sore throat and1 septic sore throat? CONSTANT READER. The disease Is Identified, by bac teriological tests of cultures taken from the throat of the patients. There is no home test for the disease In Its early stages. Advanced or severe cases are at tended' by high fever, severe head ache and pains in back andi limbs. HOME. Our ship came in today. At first a ribbon of black smoke, Then stately hull swung into view, Was quickly seized by pigmy tug. And led, like Gulliver, to pier. Its cargo, precious beyond price, No joyous exultation caused. Its flag, midmast, dejected hung. Called forth no cheer from harbor fleet. In solemn state the passengers. With sightless eyes and voiceless tongues. To land that gave them birth returned. Clad as Crusaders for the fray. Around them flag of freedom draped; Their passport to immortal fame. Our ship came in today. si, E. ANDERSON. Those Who Come and Go. Talea of Folks at ike Hotels. Goodness knows where Seaside will stop. Some day not so many years hence, the cottages will be clear over the hill, built solid to Ecola, where Lewis and Clark found the Clatsop Indians cutting up the dead whale. F. M. Cole, who is registered at the Perkins from Seaside, where he Is a real estate dealer, Bays that tomor row work will start opening up a new addition to the south. This addition will consist of 90 acres and will be spread about Tillamook Head. Not so many years ago Tillamook Head was considered a long way from Seaside proper, but the demand for beach homes is causing the land) to be cut up into lots and placed on the mar ket. For the past two winters, says Mr. Cole, there has not been a vacant house in Seaside, as people of th interior discover that Seaside Is a winter resort as well as a summer playground. Wealthy wheat farmers of the Inland Empire have found Seaside fascinating and are buying in that city. Eight years ago Mr. Cole arrived at Seasdde from New York and decided to remain. In his youth he was a printer, in the days when type was set by hand and when tramp printers ambled into print shops, worked a few days and am bled off to the next town. "Sugar Is the most Important staple in the grocery business," declared F. O. Burns of Salem, district manager for a chain of grocery stores, while In the Benson yesterday. "Sugar takes precedence of everything else and people judge a store by what the store charges for sugar. Grocers rarely make money on sugar, for this article is always used for a fight. I don't know why sugar has been selected instead of half a dozen other staples, but the fact remains that sugar is where the battle rages and where It always has." Mr. Burns says that retailing groceries is the most precarious business in the world, for statistics show that about 90 per cent of the mere who start retail groceries go broke. The cause is attributed to charge accounts and deliveries, and the way for a grocer to get ahead of the. game is to sell for cash and have customers carry their packages home. The five Indians who are at the Multnomah from Pendleton are com mercial. Realizing their value for photographic purposes, they insist on charging a fee for posing for snap shotters, which proves conclusively that the wild west isn't wild any more and lo, the simple redskin, has become mercenary. These Indians are part of the local color supplied at the Round up each year. By way of information be it known that their breakfast yes terday consisted of pork chops, fried eggs and ice cream. "Follow the man from Cook's." He is the chap who leads tourists from place to place, giving a complete lec ture in the shortest possible time and then rushing his crowd to the next point of interest. Cook's tourists are not as common on the Pacific coast as they are in Europe, but the firm has Its representatives everywhere. Charles E. Stokes, representing the tourist company, is at the Hotel Port land from San Francisco. He is here looking over the territory. They know the first name of every employe in the Hotel Portland, do Jane, aged 5, and Niokey, aged 4, chil dren of Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Sinclair of Ilwaco, Wash. The youngsters ar rived at the hotel yesterday from Los Angeles, where they have been for the last five months, and are on their way home. The weather In southern California all winter has been cold and disagreeable and the youngsters are glad to be back whore it Is warmer and more comfortable. Thieves are no respectors of per sons. P. K. Ahern of Seattle, wnere he manages the office of a nationally known detective bureau, discovered that someone stole a shirt from his room in the Hotel Portland. Rather than work on the case, the clews being very few. Detective Ahern solved the problem by putting in a bill to the hotel for $8 to replace the garment, and insisted that it was an ?8 shirt. A bunch of Rotarians arrived at the Benson yesterday from attending the international meeting in BritiKh Co lumbia.' In the group was Charles It. Perry of Chicago, who is the secretary-general. Others In the party were Crawford C. McCullough of Fort Williams, Ontario; H. J. Stark and wife of Orange. Texas; William Cop poch of Council Bluffs, Iowa; J. M. Bechtold of Chicago and O. J. Behrena of New York. Great excitement prevailed In the hotel lobbies yesterday when a stranger visited them wearing a straw hat. It was the first of the season in Portland and It was very palpably last year's hat and hadn't been sent to a cleaner. P. A. Young is the mayor of Albany, but that isn't all, for he is also- presi dent of the First National bank In that town. Mr. Young is registered at the Hotel Portland while here to i meet with the officials of the war finance corporation. Alex Powers, banker of Lebanon and George Buhl, who always comes to Portland with him, are at the Hotel Portland, They are among the many out-of-town financiers who are here to attend conferences with the war finance corporation. J. M. Devers, counsel for the state highway department, is In the city to arrange for securing depositions in the east for the case which is to be brought to test the validity of the patents on pavement. Robert H. Elder of Cour d'Alene Idaho, arrived at the Hotel Portland yesterday. He is here to be admitted to practice in the federal court. Mr. Elder is the democratio national com mltteeman for the Gem state. C. E. Hall, cashier of the bank at Prineville, is at the Imperial. Like a score of others, he is attracted hither by the presence of the finance officials from Washington, D. C. O. E. Teel, after whom an Irriga tion project has been named In east ern Oregon, is in the city on irriga tion matters. Mr. Teel Is registered at the Imperial from Echo. C. S. Knowles of Kennewlck, Wash., where he is construction superintend ent for the Pacific Power & Light company, is registered at the Hotel Oregon. John C. Davles, lumber exporter of Coos bay, who is specializing in white cedar for the Japanese market. Is an arrival at the Benson. Mrs. Minnie C. Letson ef Ontario, Or., is at the Imperial while making a tour as worthy grand matron of the Eastern Star. Dr. C. H. Mayo, one of the noted Mayo brothers of Rochester, Minn, Is at the Benson with his wife. Parrot Makes a Remark. Boston Transcript. A man who believed he knew all about parrots undertook to teach what he thought to be a young mute bird to say "Hello!" In one lesson. Going up to its cage he repeated that word In a clear voice for several min utes, the parrot paying not the slight est attention. At the final "Hello!" the b'rd opened one eye, gazed at the man. and snapped, out: "Line's busy!" WHAT SPIRIT NOISES MAT DB Rosined Srrlnc la Effective Death Watch Beetle Hakes Good Ghost. EUGENE, Or., April 4 (To the Ed itor.) I read with Interest The Ore gonian's editorial In which you sur gest that the rapping around ths ghost-Infested house In Portland might be due in part to the well known form of annoyance, the roslnrd string or tick-tack. And one with a little Ingenuity could arrange this so that It could be well:onceled and be operated from a distance. This would make a terrific noise If at tached to an easily vibrating house. Any one Intent on running out the occupants might use this very effect ively. Another thing that may explain the lighter tappings in a case of this sort is the noise made by the doath-watrh beetle working In the walls. The sound Is made by the Insect tapping Its head as it bores In the wood. I have often heard its tlc-tic-tlc-tio at the rate of five or six per second, continuing for several seconds. It sounds a great deal like the rapid, light tapping of a pencil point on a table. Those Inside the house would swear that the sound came from the outside, and vice-versa. A descrip tion may be found In Kellogg's book, "American Insects." The electrical display from the tree tops Is likely nothing more than the discharge from points. Examples are the Andean light, St. Elmo's fire on the masts of ships and brush dis charges of many kinds produced la the laboratory. J. HUGH FUUETT. Veterans' Tax Exemption. PORTLAND. April 6. (To the Edi tor.) I followed thp Sioux Indians under Little Wound throuuh the bad lands of South Dakota In the winter of 18D0 and 18!H a member of company H, Id United States Infantry. My discharge says I was on a cam paign. There were quite few Indians and soldiers killed that winter. Among the killed were Sitting Hull and about 40 enlisted men and offl cera of the 7th cavalry, Custer's old regiment, ricaso Inform me whether I derive any benefits from the state tax exemption. Another veteran who followed (lornnlmn in Arizona claims that we are both Included under this law. I nm of the opinion that we are excluded from any ben efits. As there is a great deal of doubt In the matter, will you plcntm explain the law? I cannot understand why one Indian war veteran should be exempted from taxation nm! an other Indian war veteran taxed t support him. ROUKRT HICKS. The law reads: "There shall be ex empt from taxation property not te exceed in taxable value 11000 of any honorably discharged union soldier or sailor of the Mexican war, the war of the rebellion or the Indian wars of the Btate of Oregon, or of the widow remaining unmarried of such soldier or sailor." We can only tell what the law Is. but not why It Is not something else. Gold Reserves and Paper Money. SWKET HOME, Or., April 4. (To the Kditor.) A argues that the gov ernment has only 40 cents to back every II In greenbacks Issued. B thinks K has $1 for II. Whirh is right? A CONSTANT READKIt.. In general there are three kinds of "greenbacks," or paper money, In circulation. Treasury notes are se cured by equal depot-It of gold and silver and are known in gold and silver certrficatea, National bank notes are secured by deposit In the national treasury of their equivalent In certain government bonds. Federal reserve notes are secured by 40 per cent in gold and 60 per cent In ngrl cultural and Industrial notes, drafts, bills of exchanite or acceptances. These notes can also be secured by 100 per cent In gold. National bank notes are subject to retirement under a method by which they are replaced by Issues of reserve bank notes se cured by government bonds. Some of the United States treasury notes Is sued during the civil war are still In circulation and a gold rrseirve of ap proximately 42 per cent Is held agaln-st them. Positions in Fostoffte. PORTLAND. April B. (To the IldU tor.) 1. Kindly Inform me throuirh The Oregonian what the salary Is of second, third and fourth class pnt offiocs. A population of about I.'.OO would be under what class? Is a postmaster allowed to have all of his family employed without civil serv ice examinations? 3. Is a democrat appointed in republican times as postmaster? 4. How would one go about and whom should one apply to for position of that nature? OLD SUBSCRIBER. 1. Salaries of second-class post masters range from 12300 to i:00; third-class from 11100 to $::0O; fourth-class about 1000 per year. Receipts of an office and not the pop ulation of a town decide the class of a postoffice. 2. A postmaster Is permitted te appoint hie assistant outside of the civil service. If clerks are employed In addition, they would be subject to civil service rules. S. Yes. 4. Vacancies are announced as fhey o-TCur and examinations are held pre vious to appointment. In Other Days. Twenty-five Years An. Prom The Orenonlan of April 6. 117. Chicago. The mayoralty election today resulted In a decisive victory for Carter H. Harrison, democratla nominee, over Sears, republican, and Harlan, the Independent candidate. The mountains are full of snow, there being much more than la usual at this time of year, and flood condi tions In the Willamette nre highly probable, according to Forecaster Pague. Annual commencement exercises of the medical department. University of Oregon, were held In the high school last night, 33 graduates receiving diplomas. Colonel Owen Summers has received word from Washington that his ap plication for the position of United States marshal has been received and filed. TO TTII3 DAFFODIL. Did sunlight spill O Daffodil. That thou art hers. Dispensing cheer. In narrow yard. On wide greenswards In sunny group. By quaint old stoop; Or straggling lone -In grass o'ergrown Mayhap astray Near some byway Or solemn wood. With cheer Imbued? O Daffodil Bide with us still, Tho" night portend And sunlight end O Daffodil. Blest Daffodil! r-JE3S CaMTBELX Newport. O. ?