I 10 THE MOBNIXG OREGOXIAX, SATURDAY, APRIL, 29, 1922 KhTABMSItED BY EEVBT T PITTOCK. Published by The Oregonian Publishing Co. 135 Sixth Street. Portland, Oregon. C A. 1IORDEN. E. B. PIPER. .Manager. Editor. The Oretonian is a member of the Asso ciated Press. The Associated Press is ex clusively entitled to the use for publication ot all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. Aii rights t publication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. Subscription Kates Invariably in Advance. (By Mail.) Daily, Sunday Included, one year JS.00 lJaily. Sunday included, six months 4.25 Ia:iy. Sunday included, three months . 2.25 Daily, Sunday Included, one month ... .75 Daily, without Sunday, one year 6-00 Daily, without Sunday, six months ... 3.25 Daily, without Sunday, one month .... .60 Sunday, one year 2-50 (By Carrier.) Daily, Sunday Included, one year $9.00 Daily, Sunday included, three months . 2.25 ; Daily, Sunday included, one month ... -75 Daily, without Sunday, one year 7.S0 Daily, without Sunday, three months . 1.95 ' Daily, without Sunday, one month 65 How to Remit Send postoffice money order, express or personal check on your local bank. Stamps, coin or currency are at owner's risk. Give postoffice address in lull, including county and state. Postajre Rates 1 to 16 pages. 1 cent; 18 In 3J pages, 2 cents: 34 to 48 pages, 3 cents; 50 to 64 pages, 4 cents: 66 to 80 pafe-es. 5 cents: 82 to 96 pages. 6 cents. Foreign postage double rate. Kastern Business Office Verree & Conk lip.. 3t0 Madison avenue. New York: Verree A Conk'in, Steger building. Chicago; Verree & Conklin, Free Press building, Detroit, Mich.; Verree & Conklin, Monadnock bulld ing, San Francisco, Cal. WHAT THE FARMERS' BLOC WANTS. . Denunciation of the farm bloc In' congress -would lead one who. had not read Its programme to suppose that It stood for radical legislation favoring the agricultural interest at the expense of other classes. Any person who has that impression would probably be surprised at the moderation of the plans stated by Senator Capper as those put forward in behalf of agriculture. He says: "The farm bloc favors . a. liberal bnt sane appropriation for 1 the department of agriculture." So does everybody else, farmer or not. who realizes that prosperous agri culture Is the foundation of national prosperity, and who appreciates the immense value to the whole nation of the work done by that department in its 30-odd years of life. The words "liberal but sane" may be va riousiy construed. But if congress has a true conception of the relation between the well-being of the farm ers and that of the nation, it will not go wide of the mark. The senator next said: Tie farm bloc believes railway freights mx-e too nign ana must come down. So does everybody else, even in cluding the railroad companies. The only difference of opinion is as to whether rates or wages should come down first, as to which rates should be reduced first and to what extent. As to the next plank in Mr. Cap per's platform there is more debate, but there Is nothing revolutionary about it. It reads: The farm bioo would restore to state railway commissions much of the power taken away from them by an unwarranta ble interpretation of the transportation act by the interstate commerce commission. It is generally agreed that the fed eral commission should have power to bring railroad rates within the slates into harmony with interstate rates and to prevent state commis Fions from enforcing rates which effect discrimination against other plates. But that can be done with out depriving state commissions of control over railroad problems that arise entirely within their states or over other public utilities. These are strictly local affairs, so numer ous that they would swamp the in terstate commission and of such a character that they could not be handled intelligently by a body a thousand or more miles from the scene. The Muscle Shoals project should be developed, says the senator, and tlio government should resume work on the power and nitrate plants on the Tennessee river, so the nation's annual fertilizer bill of $250,000,000 could be reduced. There are prob ably no two opinions on the proposal that the plants be finished and that precaution should be taken for cheap fertilizer to be furnished by them, but many believe that the work could be done more promptly nnd more economically by private enterprise under lease strictly safe guarding the public interest than by the government. That is one sub ject on which the bloc seems to ns too radical. Credit reform is demanded in or der that the farmer may have more money to finance his slow turn-over and that the activities of the farm land banks may be enlarged. As a temporary remedy, extension of the loan powers of the war finance cor poration for one year is proposed. As to financing crops, this is asking no more than, other industries have a banking system fitted to the na ture of their business. As to mort gage loans, it is only proposed to extend a system which did great things for agriculture for the great est farming countries of Europe. Producing farms are the best secur ity in the country, and nothing but organization is needed to obtain low interest for loans on this security. It is provided by a bill which has passed the senate and is pending in the house that in appointing mem bers of the federal reserve aoard the president "shall have due regard to a fair representation of the different agricultural, commercial, industrial and geographic divisions of the rountry." the only change from ex isting law being insertion of the word "agricultural." Agriculture equals in magnitude any of the other interests named and has a just claim to equal consideration. There is nothing to justify alarm in any of these proposals. In fact alarm is aroused by the fact the pro ponents of the farmers' programme have come together in a bloc rather than by the programme itself. There have been "blocs" in congress be fore, as sponsors for particular in terests, though not called by that name. They have been short-lived affairs, falling apart when some par ticular end was gained or hopelessly lost. So we may expect it to be with the farmers' bloc. It came into be ing to compel attention to a great industry which was in deep distress and which had been neglected. It is likely to dissolve spontaneously when the need has passed. If it should attempt to live too long and to abuse its power, there will surely be an uprising against it, as there has been ogainst former blocs, and it will be broken up. The creator of Nick Carter died with a conscience less burdened than that of many an author of the mod ern successor to the dime novel will le. Nick Carter was pure trash, but he at least omitted the appeal to the prurient mind and he did not distort sex. The oid 10-cent thrillers were innocuous by comparison with some of their $2.50. successors that retail at A CAMPAIGN TRIC5IPH. Let us all be thankful for the wis dom of the lawmakers in putting the dates of the primary and the spring taxpaying period so close together. By close economy between now and May 19, the county of Multnomah may be able to go over the top with out a treasury deficit. Whereas yes terday there was an apparent deficit of $106,000, today by dexterous transfer of funds there is a surplus of $109,000 in the general fund. County finances are thus placed on a rock foundation, at least until the election is over. Ko special tax to clear up out standing county warrants wl be needed not right now. Of course $109,000 is only chicken feed for a county the size of Multnomah and there will be nothing more coming in, except a few scattering thou sands, until next October. But, as said before, the emergency of a deficit right in the middle of a pri mary campaign has been met. The amount the county will go in the hole before the next tax revenues are paid -need not worry us now. All's right with the world. Still we are intrigued by Commis sioner Holman's ingenious explana tion of the why of a deficit at any time during the year. It appears that it is due to the fact that war rants issued in the early part of the year cannot be paid until taxes roll in. Tet under other administrations the county came up to the first of each year with cash on hand to tide it over until the taxes were due There was no deficit for years and years. What happened to the sur plus? What is the true analysis of conn ty finances not the condition of the treasury at the moment, when spring taxes have just been turned over and current indebtedness barely met? What orderly, intelligent plan for clearing up the current indebtedness that will Inevitably recur before Jun 1 and continue to mount until the end of the year has been pre pared by the commissioners? 19 IT WORTH WHILE? A Detroit man is pictured in one of the home newspapers as fishing from a wharf, a radio telephone re ceiver attached to his head, from which he is receiving the latest news of what is going on in the world. The fish line is used as an antenna. When the news is not coming he listens to a concert. When he gets a bite, the fish is presumed to be a sufficient recompense for the mo mentaxy interruption of his other pleasures. The picture represents him as wearing an expression of blissful contentment. He need be out of touch with the world for only a few seconds at a time night or day. Yet we are convinced that the re porter who wrote the text accom panying the photograph has never been a fisherman and moreover that he hasn't the making of one in him. For example, he says: "Fishing is a great sport, but it is a very tire some and lonesome pleasure when the fish don't bite. However, with the present-day craze for radio, fish ing kits will Include one of the sets shown here. Anyone who doesn't know that part of the pleasure of fishing is getting away from the current of events would better take down his Isaak Walton and read it again. A sport for contemplative men, not a trifling episode snatched from the crevices of a busy life, fishing owes its fascination to the opportunity it affords for reflection, for complete idleness or the next thing to it, for isolation from the excitement of a hurly-burly world. If the fish con servationists were seeking a way to destroy the sport, they could find no better one than to make use of one of these news-casting devices com pulsory. Time-saying devices multiply,, not withstanding which we don't seem to have any more leisure than our grandfathers had. . All is dynamic, nothing is static, every minute must be made to count, cessation of ac tivity is waste. As an isolated in stance the radio fisherman is insig nificant, as a symbol he looms im mense. But there is reasonable ground for wondering, whether it is worth while. Every time-saving ap pliance but gives us more time 'in which to invent other time-saving appliances. Not even the fisherman is left alone to let his thoughts dwell on the inner philosophies of life. THE HOPES OF ZIONISM. The issuance of the British govern ment's order in council for the or ganization of the government of Pal estine, in furtherance of the promise made five years ago to establish a national home for the Jewish people, will cause reflection on the -difficulties attending the fulfillment of that promise. Undoubtedly it has been the desire of British officials to keep faith with the Zionists who have pinned hopes on the development of a social order of their own on the soil made sacred to them by tradi tion. At the same time it happens that the present population, of the country is overwhelmingly Arab. The Mohammedans claim through their representatives to number some 600, 000. The remaining 120,000 at the time the count was made, about a year ago, are about evenly divided between Christians and Jews. Here the problem of doing justice to conflicting elements is a knotty one, involving considerations of which a homogeneous people cannot easily conceive. The present generation of Arabs feel that whatever the sins of their forefathers may have been, they themselves have rights of which they cannot be violently dispossessed. That the numerical balance will be changed when the Zionist immigra tion gets fully under way is a fact ; tending to work toward eventual domination by the newcomers, but if they are to enjoy the benefit of their preponderance later on they must be careful not to establish vexatious precedents while they are in the minority. The issues are so complex that it will be no wonder if there has been failure to please everybody in the solution. There has been an attempt to safe guard the principle of religious lib erty, which is an even more difficult matter in the old world than in the new. Each religious community has Veen placed on an equal basis, no sect having authority over another, while an intensely complicated basis of representation in the legislative council hag been deemed necessary to carry these plans into effect. Of , twe'nty-five members of the council. twelve are elected by secondary electoral bodies or colleges chosen by the people; three are chosen by cer tain representative bodies, and ten are appointed. The acts of the coun cil are subject to disapproval by the imperial government. The present character of the population makes it impracticable to guarantee against a non-Jewish legislative body, but the order in council, which promul gates what amounts to a constitution for' Palestine, prohibits the enact ment of any laws restricting re ligious freedom. For the time being, however, the majority of the legis lators will be Mohammedans. The feature of interest to the Zion ists is that the immigration move ment is growing rapidly, in response to the success of those who have already established themselves in Palestine. Manufacturing is alread being undertaken on a large scale. The strongly individualistic character of the newcomers has made for en terprise: capital has taken the ini tiative in discovering the need of the world and in developing markets for goods. The hum of the loom and the clatter of machinery are in strange contrast to the pastoral still ness that has reigned during the entire period of Arab possession. COMMON INTERESTS. A writer in Leslie's Weekly, dis cussing the momentous question, "Are the railroads doomed?" uses as an illustration of the growing conflict between the railroad train and the automotive method of trans portation a recent deadlock between the people of Linnton and the United Railways, as the result of which the latter abandoned its line between Portland and Linnton and the people of the latter community were left with auto busses and auto trucks as their only convenient public means of communication. The citation fur nishes material for reflection upon an incident in which we think it will now be conceded that both sides were at fault. A spirit of concession would have resulted advantageously both for the people of Linnton by hastening development and for the railroads by fostering increased busi ness for the steam line which had exclusive access to it. . Insistence by the United Railways, the Hill subsidiary, on a 10 or 15 cent fare and by citizens on the terms of an utdated franchise which called for a 5-cent rate, in the light of subsequent events, has demonstrated the folly of acrimony in dealing with what is essentially a purely business proposition. On the one hand it now appears that the people would have been wise to ac cept a means of communication without which the building up of new industries was bound to be retarded; on the other it is probable the railroads would have profited in the long run by willingness to absorb a loss on local passenger business, since a larger volume of freight traffic to which they alone woufu have been entitled would have there by been created. As it is, the people have the du bious satisfaction of having driven a railroad company to tear up its tracks and a corporation has won another Pyrrhic victory. The 10- cent jitneys, once utilized by the citi zens as an argument-against a 15 cent fare, have ceased to function; I their autobus successors can by no stretch of the imagination be re garded as being as satisfactory as a well-regulated street railway service would have been, the railroad will be a long time regaining public favor in that quarter, and all parties to the transaction seem to - have lost ground. The writer in Leslies deduces from these incidents that "even au tomotive transportation, for the peo ple, may not be all peaches and cream, and that there is over whelming evidence that the pioneer automobile operators are behaving very much as the pioneer railroad operators behaved." Both were after all the traffic will bear. May It not be pertinent to suggest also that in view of the situation it would be wisdom on the part of both the citizens and the transportation inter ests, here and elsewhere, to get to gether in the spirit of readjustment. It has been, a good while coming, but the day when the people and the railroads have a common interest seems already to have dawned. ONTARIO TESTS A THEORY Good material for study by Oregon advocates1 of public ownership of hydro-electric plants is to be found in the report of W. S. Murray and Henry Flood Jr. on the results of that policy in Ontario by comparison with private ownership under public regulation in Quebec and adjacent parts of the United States. As power s taken from Niagara b alls for both Ontario and the Buffalo district, the two policies are brought into con trast under closely similar condi tions. Public ownership has a de cided advantage in this comparison. for the Ontario hydro-electric power commission constructed only 23 per cent of its capacity, having acquired the rest from private investors, who had constructed It at their own ini tiative and risk, and it did not pay anything for franchises and good will. The Ontario commission generates power, distributes it to aDout zuu municipalities, and is compelled by law to sell it at cost, which varies with distance and other factors, while in the Ignited States under public regulation the price to airier- ent communities is equalized as far as possible' and includes taxes and profit. The Ontario system is brought into close comparison with that of private ownership, for pri vate companies deliver power to cities in the same zone as those that are served by the commission. Power from the government owned plants in the Niagara district of Ontario costs an average of 9.25 mills per kilowatt hour, while that from private plants in the same dis- trict costs 7.6 mills, and that from the Niagara zone in the United States costs 7.65 mills. In Quebec, where 9 6 per cent of the power is generated by private enterprise and where the zone of transmission re sembles that of Ontario, the cost to the consumer is 6. 6. mills. In these figures taxes are deducted from the cost by private enterprise, as none are paid on public plants, though in fact the consumer is relieved of them and tlie sum exacted from the whole body of taxpayers is correspondingly increased. On this basis the cost of power to the consumer in 1920 was 29 per cent greater from the local system in Toronto under public own ership than in MontreaJ and 25 per cent greater than in Buffalo, the two latter cities relying on private enter prise. More strongly adverse to the On tario policy is the comparison of its results with those of regulated pri vate enterprise in California.- The report says that "Niagara Falls should make the production of con tinuous power the cheapest for any part of the American continent," while in California "the hydro-electric power developments are small in capacity and are. subject to vari ation in streamflow, thus requiring that their systems be supplemented with steam electric plants." Also Ontario has only 35 per cent as many miles of transmission lines as California, and the, area served has 483 inhabitants per square mile in California against 587 in Ontario. Tet the cost to the people is 4 per cent-less in California than in On tario, though it includes profit, while Ontario power is sold at cost. The elements working in favor of economy in public ownership that are cited by its advocates are cited as: Elimination of taxes. Elimination of dividends. Elimination of high-salaried executives. More economical wage and higher effi ciency in labor, scale. Taxes are not eliminated. Those which would under private owner ship be paid on power property, ul timately by the consumer, are sim ply transferred to taxpayers in gen eral. As power is sold cheaper un der private than under public owner ship, even after dividends and high salaries to executives have been paid, the economy effected under these heads and through higher efficiency of labor is evidently a fiction. That it is true economy to employ skilled business men at high salaries in stead of politicians to run the power business- is indicated by this para graph from the report: The revenue per dollar of salary paid employes of electric power plants is almost 35.2 per cent greater in Quebec than in Ontario, and the revenue per employe earned by private electric companies in Ontario is 81.5 per cent greater than that earned from government-owned utilities. whereas the revenue per employe earned in the province of Quebec is 42 per cent greater than that for the governmentally owned and operated properties of Ontario. By paying its managers well and by judging whether they have made good by their efficiency in business, not in politics, private companies get more ' per dollar paid out than does a government commission. This is the whole case against government in business, stated in a sentence. It is as true in Oregon as in Ontario, in the United States as in Russia, but the mixers of government with busi ness will never admit it. Their only chance of being trusted to run a business is that they be judged by their political, not their business, qualifications. That is why they try to put the government in business and why they exclude business con siderations from the operation of government. Mr. Wells, who "keeps store" with weather, says officially there is a deficiency of five inches in rainfall just now. Very well; nobody dis putes it; but the lack need not be made up- during ball weeks nor until after the rose festival. The ground now is soaked and the season is late, One court rules that a husband Is under no obligations to furnish his wife with anything higher-toned than a flivver, and another holds that it isn't right for a wife to pur sue her husband with a pitchfork. Even justice as between the sexes is mighty and is bound to prevail. When the last man shall have passed from the American side of the globe the floods in the Missis sippi valley will have ceased, for one of the causes in -elimination of man will have been no more rainfall. ' A burglar overpowered by mem bers of the family in Vancouver, B. C, had three sticks of dynamite. They1 took a big chance without knowing it. There may be safety in keeping, heads under blankets. New York is to have a ninerstory church. That is either too large or too small not large enough to ac commodate all the sinners In New Tork, but about nine times too large to hold the repentant ones. In place of being merely high commissioner of baseball. Judge Landis should go in for the playing end of the game. He'd bring the spectators to their feet with a grand stand play every inning. A miss is as good as a mile for president or citizen. Harding was on another boat when the one he intended taking met disaster. Some may call it luck, but the' better word is "providential." Congratulations to Seattle on land ing the next triennial conclave. Portland will see much of the Knights and some drills by them, for that will be in "Oregon 1925" year. A man convicted of stealing an automobile said he was "vamped" by an "attractive widow." How like! His first ancestor lost a fine country estate by blaming it on the woman. Kipling a generation ago rejoiced that he had "lived" after landing a big salmon in the Clackamas river; but a Canby man presses the record with a 58-pounder a day or two ago. Replying to an inquiry a short time ago, the Sacramento Bee said the next world's fair will be held in Philadelphia in 1926, which is a few thousand miles and a year off. When the Shriners' hospital for crippled children is erected on the Columbia highway at the edge of the city, every tourist will see something to tell about at home. While England is pepping up on American jazz, a good many Ameri cans are jazzing up on British Scotch. Balance of trade heavily British. Striking stevedores are becoming boisterous, to say the least. It is a free country for the man who wants work and can get it and do it- The ex-kaiser is said to have turned prohibitionist. He's a trifle late with that. issue to get anywhere in politics. Preserving scenery is not wholly a forestry service job. Some women do it with rag and puff. Sugar has started upward to meet the strawberry coming down. I EAKXT TRIP TO HOT SPRINGS. Onr-Armed Dutchman Not First White Man at Breitenbush. WARRKNTTON. Or., April 27. (To the Editor.) In an article appearing in The Sunday Oregonian April 16 describing the mineral springs of Oregon, a pioneer called the one armed Dutchman is given credit for the discovery of the hot springs on the Breitenbush. My father, Don A. Smith, a pioneer of the North Santiam country, calls my attention to the fact that several white men had vis ited the springs before the advent of the one-armed Dutchman. In the early 70s John B. Waldo and Henry States came to King s prairie on the North Santiam, and invited my father to join them in a trip-up the Santiam. As a sidelight on the en ergy and endurance of Judge Waldo I will mention that my father tooK Henry States aside and pointed out the folly of- undertaking a mountain trip with a man as frail as Waldo. "Why, he is practically a corpse," said my father. Henry States laughed and gave as surance that the "corpse" would keep the rest of the party bpsy taking care of themselves. Tears afterward Don A. Smith acknowledged that Judge Waldo was the one man who had given him all the walking he wanted. My father agreed to join the party provided the trip should be made up what is now called the Breitenbush. His reason for this choice was that prior to that time the Thomas broth ers of Kings Prairie had ascended the Breitenbush some five miles and re turned with flattering stories of the region. The Waldo party on their way up the Breitenbush camped at the hot springs and were told by some Warm Springs Indians that - aside from the French trappers of an early day, only three white men, so far as they knew, "had visited the springs before the Waldo party. These three men, the Indians said, had come in with the Indians about 1860. Two of the men were from The Dalles. The names of the three were carved on trees at the springs. No other trace of white men was found there. From the springs the Waldo party followed the stream to near its source, climbed the divide west of Olallie mountain and traveled north two days before turning back. On their way out they found Elk lake. Indians were camped there also, hunting elk. Returning to King's prairie and the Willamette valley after 17 days of tramping, the Waldo party found the people inclined to take the proverbial grain of salt with that part of the story concerning the existence of hot springs in the Santiam country. Before this time, my grandfather. Captain David B. Smith, and Ephriam Henness of King's prairie, had taken a skiff up the North Santiam as far as the glades, which they named In dependence prairie. On their return they - reported an open pass through the mountains by way or lnaependence Prairie, John Minto of Salem at once enlisted the interest of Henry States and together they explored the pass through into the pine belt. Thereafter John Minto's purpose never wavered until he had established the Minto trail through the mountains to eastern Oregon. , DAVID. B. SMITH. DARWINISM MISREPRESENTED Doctrine of Maii's Descent From Mon keys Not TnuKbt, Says Writer. PORTLAND,' April 28. (To the Ed itor.) Every few years some one feels called upon to air the orthodox repu diation of what is generally termed "Darwinian theory" without taking the pains to find out what Darwin's theory really was. The latest effort comes from W. J. Bryan, who, like all the rest, feels solicitude for his an cestry and does not want to believe that he "descended" from monkeys. Darwin wrote for thoughtful people and whoever reads his "Origin of Species" or "Descent of Man" with the intention of finding out what he actually taught will not fall into the error for such it is of believing that he formed any such conclusion. A careful perusal of these works cannot fail to impress one of Dar w'n's absolute fairness and honesty and, whatever one may think of his conclusions, no one can fail to recog nize the truth that he was a most conscientious and painstaking col lector of facts. This sterling quality is what has attracted the scientific wond to his work and won for him the eternal admiration and gratitude of all thinking -men. All through Darwin's work one finds ample proof that he held no such theory as is so ignorantly urged against him. On page 162 of the 1910 edition of "Origin of Species" he says: The affinities of all beings of the same class have sometimes been represented by a great tree. The green and budding twigs may represent existing species; and those produced during former years may repre sent the long succession of extinct species. At each period of growth all the growing twigs have tried-to branch out on all sides, and to overtop and kill the surrounding twigs and branches, in the same manner as species and groups of species have at all times overmastered other species in the great battle for life. ... Of many twigs which flourished when the tree was a mere bush only two or three, now grown into great branches, yet survive and bear the other branches; so with the species which lived during the long past geological periods, very few have left living and mod ified descendants. On page 193 we find: "I look at all species of the same genus as having as certainly descended from a com mon progenitor as have the two sexes of any one species." Nowhere in the work have I been able to find anything that indicates the idea that one branch of a tree is the progeni tor, or has -descended from another. I know two families of double cousins, brothers having married sisters, yet no one, although admitting the abso lute identity of their blood or pro geniture, would claim that either of these cousins was the descendant of the others. They and their descend ants are merely the branches of the tree. Much of this misunderstanding arises from those of Darwin's follow ers who carelessly accept this "mon key business" without trying to find out what he really taught, just as many a worthy cause has been dis credited by its indiscreet "friends." Read Darwin with the same open mind and fearless devotion to facts and you can hardly reach any other conclusion than that, here is truth. Darwin, as I understand, was a de vout man, certainly not an atheist, and one reading his works with care and discrimination need npt drop the essential principles upon which the modern creeds are founded. T. S. WILKES. THE WIND. Wind, when thou blowest fierce and strong. Driving the sullen clouds along Across the sky, My timid soul in terror cowers Before the grandeur of thy powers A-rushing b. When autumn comes with falling leaves. Inside the chimney 'neath the eaves I hear thee sigh. Is it remorse that makes thee moan? A sin, for which thou wouldst atone Of days gone by? But. oh, dear wind, I love thee best, When, warm, thou comest from the west. And whispering low. Weave softly through the lazy grass. Telling the buds, as thou dost pass, 'Tis time to blow. ANNIE M. REALS. Corvallis, Or. Those Who Come and Go. Tales of Folks at the Hotels. It was 13 years ago that T. W. Russell left Portland for Los Angeles. He returned yesterday for the first time since his departure long ago. Mr. Russell at one time was well known here, for he founded the La Grande creamery and operated it at Third and Tamhill streets when no one' thought of such a thing as a public market. In those earlier days Mr. Russell used to sell butter in little earthen jars and after the but ter was used the jar came In handy for preserves, or salt or almost any thing. Mr. Russell sold out and went to -Los Angeles, where he has been successful in the real estate business, buying and selling houses, and has a fine home on Peco street, about five miles out. The reason Mr. Russell is here now is to dispose of five houses which he owns on the east side and clean out his holdings in this city. He observed yesterday that Portland had greatly changed since he lived here and there was a notable absence of familiar faces. Fossil' remains of a whale are being excavated in the southeastern section of Crook county, according to stranger, who informed a group in the Imperial lobby. In the past fossil remains nf camels, rhinoceros, the three-toed horse, elephJnts and other land animals have been uncovered and have found their way to mu seums, but a fossil whale is some thing new. Of course, as is generally known, Oregon was once covered by a sea and marine shells are round on mountain tops in many parts of the state, so there were probably whales and other creatures of the deep pad dling around what is now central Oregon, these being subsequently fol lewed by the camels, horses and rhi noceros. The stranger said that the whale is being taken from its bed by an expedition from an eastern insti tution. "It looks as though the controversy over- the courthouses in Klamath county will be settled," predicted E. 'B. Hall, hotelman of Klamath Falls, registered at the Imperial. Mr. Hall is here to attend a meeting of the state chamber of commerce. The Main-street courthouse, under the proposed arrangement, is to be used as a county building wniie me other courthouse can be used as a high school. We need a new high school and by using the courthouse building for that purpose it will serve valuable requirement. Mr. Man says that Klamath Falls is tied up by the strike among the mill workers. The mills, which are largely respon sible for prosperity in Klamath Falls, have been virtually shut down by the strike and the market is being invaded by the product of California lumber mills. Among the local hotel fraternity there is a candidate for political of fice. Probably because he saw so many politicians around the lobby he caught the fever, but be that as it may, A. H. Meyers, manager of the Hotel Oregon, has become a full fledged candidate. He aspires to the position of precinct committeeman, which is the lowest rung of the po litical ladder. As there is another candidate for the same place, the campaign which Manager Meyers makes will be watched "with Interest by the other hotel men of the city. By traveling only in daytime, Monte M. Gwinn drove from San Francisco to Portland in three days. Mr. Gwinn reports that the roads are in excellent condition. Throughout Idaho and Oregon there is no one better known in the sheep business than Mr. Gwinn, whose headquarters are at Boise. He has been an exten sive operator for years and if he had a dollar for every sheep that he has bought or sold he would have to build libraries or something to get rid of it. A group of eastern Oregon women are at the Benson. They are Mrs. N. R. Martin of Pendleton, Martha L. McCully of La Grande, Katie J. Heyde and Hester L. Nichols of Baker and Hilda M. Mulcare of Canyon City. Edward McCabe, who has a lumber camn near Timber, Or., is at the Perkins. Once upon a time the tallest flae-Dole in America was at Timber, but that was before the forest in that section was wiped out. F. G. Bruce of the Boise Stone com pany is at the Multnomah. He is here negotiating a deal for the use of Idaho stone in some contemplated local construction. W. R. Lalond of Independence, lumberman, came to Portland by train, registered at the Hotel Port land, went out and bought a six-cylinder sedan and drove home in it. Dan Moore, hotelman. is recovering from an operation for mastoid, caused by his attack of the influenza. Mr. Moore is at the Portland Surgical hospital.- . . Having been in California for a few weeks. G. Scott Anderson, mining man and hardware dealer at Wallace,, Idaho, is at the Hotel Portland on his way home. W. R. Putnam ot Boise is at the Hotel Portland. He is the general manager of the Idaho Power com pany and has been in the city on power matters. Mrs. G. A. Bell, Dorothy Messinger and W. S. Chinault of Hood River, where Mrs. Bell's husband is in the hotel business, are at the Multnomah. E. S. Chadwick, the vice-president and general manager of the Idaho Life Insurance company, is among the Hotel Portland arrivals. Visiting- Nurses Association. PORTLAND, April 28. (To the Edi tor.) 1. Is the visiting nurse asso ciation a charity? If it is not how then would you classify such an or ganization? . 2. What Is its main source of in come? 3. What percentage of the total costs of running this Institution is paid bv the recipients of this benefit? M. B. W. C. 1. Charity, but encourages those who can pay to pay if only a few cents to ward, the support of the organizaiton. 2. From community chest, about $25,000; from city for tuberculous work, 5000. . ' 3. Very small percentage, at the most not more than $600 a year. Most of the patients are unable to pay any thing. The association will be glad to answer all questions if you care to call upon them at their office, 1004 Spalding building. Value of Indian Rupees. PORTLAND, April 28. (To the Edi tor.) I want to subscribe for a paper published in Bombay, India. The sub scription price as published in the pa per is as follows: Terms for the Ex aminei -. Indian Post, Rs. 8. Foreign Post, Rs. 9. in advance. Back num bers 3 Annas. Address: trjuitor or Manager), Examiner Press, Fort. Bombay. Can you translate this into our money. E. T. O. Rupees'are quoted at $28.10 per An anna is 1-16 of a rupee. 100. More Truth Than Poetry. By James J. Montacae. WHAT'S THE I'SEf It was the man of science. Who to the flapper said. "I see a trace upon your face Of arsenate of lead. My duty is to warn you That, if you don't eschew The powder rag, you'll be & hag Before you're forty-two! "A'nd as for pamt. It's poison; That lovely shade of pink You dab in streaks across your cheeks, - Is carbureted zinc. It ruins the complexion. And kills the appetite; At forty-three you're bound to be A most appalling sight." It was the placid flapper Who heard the words we quote. And went ahead and powdered lead Upon her face and throat. And also daily tinted Her full and rounded cheeks. A lovely pink with gobs of zinc. In undulating streaks. For flappers are but flappers. And that's the reason why They take advice with looks of ice. And scorn to make reply. And if they're old and ugly, - When they are forty-two. They'll slap on paint without re straint The way their mothers do. Absolutely Necessary. In answer to a correspondent who wants to know the reasons for frosts in May.-we reply that this is the only means of insuring the failure of the Delaware peach crop. Ineffective. Despite Mr. Bryan's instructions, evolution Is still going on. Class Will Tell. Wages are still ahead in the down hill race with the cost of living. (Copyright by the Bell Syndicate. Inc.) Burroughs Nature Club. Copyright, Hongfc ton-Miff Itn Co. Can Von Answer These Qnestlonsf 1. What sort of nest does the crow use, and what do its eggs look like? 2. How can a lizard shed its tail? 3. How does the caterpillar of the black swallowtail butterfly escape being eaten by birds? Answers in tomorrow's Nature Notes. e Answers to Previous Questions. 1. How do shrikes kill their prey? They have strong muscles in the head and neck, and are said to grab the victim with a powerful nip of the stout bill, by the neck, pinching the latter until breath iR shut off and the prey strangled. They use the bill, not the feet, to tear their food, con trary to the custom of the regular bird of prey, which has talons for tearing up its victim. . 2. Why do some oaKs have acorns on them all winter, while others do not? There may be several explanations. The tree may be too young to hear acorns. It is more likely the acorn less specimens belong to the white- oak group, whose acorns ripen in one year and fall. This kind is sweet flavor. The black-oak group takes two years to mature acorns, so the latter are on the tree the first winter. They are bitter. 3. Are the young of pronghorn an telope spotted? I have lived around these animals for 16 years, but now I want some information, can't find it in books available. The young, usually two, are borh In May or early June, in secret places where the mothers hide. The fawns are plain dun color, like tiny repro ductions of the mother. Ingersoll's Life of Animals: Mammals, and the Riverside Natural History, both take up this point; also about structure of horns. In Other Days. Twenty-five Tears Ann. From The Oregonian of April 29. 1807. Guthrie, O. T. The Canadian val ley is completely inundated by a dev astating flood which swept over Ok lahoma, drowning and killing hun dreds of persons. Constantinople. Great Britain, Rus sia and France having officially no tified the Turkish government that they will protect the Greeks in Tur key. ' Coroner Koehler yesterday sum moned a jury to determine the cause of the street car accident on East Morrison street in which three were killed when the car went Into the slough. An eavesdropper fell through ths ceiling over Turn Verein hall during the course of a meeting last night and caused a panic Fifty Years Aa-o. From The Oregonian of April 29, 1872. Chicago. The presidential nomina tions at the Cincinnati convention are privately reported to be narrowed down to Adams and Davis, with Davis almost certain of nomination. Colonel Chapman will return from Washington within a few days with plans for the bridge across the Wil lamete, approved by the secretary of state, and with assurance that it will be rushed to completion. A party of surveys are locating the line of the Oregon Central railroad across the Tamhill river. New gates have been swung at each end of the Stark-street ferryboat to eliminate the danger ot teams back ing off into the river. Stars in Daytime. PORTLAND, April 28. (To the Ed itor.; 1. Is the north star directly in the north? 2. Is it visible in the daytime? 3. - Is the-group of stars called the "big dipper" visible from here, say at 12 noon? I mean, would they be visible with out aid of telescope, the same as at night? 33d DEGREE. 1. No. It is about lhi degrees from the pole. It Is generally moving nearer, owing to- the motion of the polo of the heavens around the pole of the ecliptic. It is expected that w'thin the next few centuries It will gradually approach to a distance of one-half degree of the pole and then recede. 2. No. 4. The big dipper or great bear Is visible at 12 noon only by the aid of a telescope. How it Ts in Berlin. s Exchange. "That's Herr Glantzmuller. Made a colossal fortune in marks this year." "Ach. so! Speculation?" . "No, he. controls the paper trust." Fairy Lore Is Surpassed by The Sunday Oregonian's New Invisible Color Book All the kiddies are delighted with this new addition to the Sunday paper. Just brush the picture with a moist brush er a ball of cotton and see the hid den colors come out like magic. Final Design for Roosevelt Statue President Harding: to attend ceremony to be held here dur ing; summer. The Sunday paper has a large colored illus tration of the final model just completed. Intimate Incidents From Grant's Life Story in tomorrow's paper gives anecdotes and stories of the life of the great leader as related to a friend by the late George H. Williams. Another of Lady Asquith's Articles The famous Englishwoman gives more of her impressions gained during her trip through this country. In the Magazine When Mixed Juries Are Locked Up How the need of a new code of etiquette to supplement court room procedure has grown out of "equal wrongs for women." Does a Countess Mend Your Clothes? These are parlous times for noblemen. One czar's favorite is now a public singer and a princess came as a stowaway. Another Fiction Feature Hitherto Unpublished "Sister Anne," by Henry Kitchell Webster, tells what happens sometimes when one sister tries to vamp another's husband. Soldiers of War Prepare for Peace Six thousand Oregon men in jured or handicapped in army being fitted to cope with life. Moonshiners Lured by Commercialism Dollars and cents behind war fare in southern mountains romance has waned. Would Give Hearts But Keep Names Brides prepare for nation-wide organization to reject prefix "Mrs." "Spring in the Air" Another of those delightful series of Hill's cartoons "Among Us Mortals." Other Features A'etv Bust of General Grant Work is unveiled in the hall of fame for great Americans at New York university. New Church Is Dedicated Portland council of churches announces series of confer ences. All the church news on the church page. Lamp Is New Radio Receiving Source New invention of army man told of in radio department, to gether with other wireless gos sip and doings. "Married Life of Helen and Warren" How a day of polite effusions over a country home leaves both exhausted. Cactus Dahlias Are Popular Tips of planting various kinds of dahlias given in the garden department of the Sunday paper. Dope on the Games For the Baseball Fan Box scores of all the big games, together with stories on the Pacific Coast league, in the sporting department. Moving Pictures Coming Back Magnate says the cinema busi ness is due for a revival. All the late gossip on the movies. Many Other Features Are to Be Found The Sunday Oregonian appeals to every member of the family and in that respect is pre-eminently the family paper. Its editorial page is turned to by the man of affairs on world topics. In addition society, women's clubs, the drama, building and real estate news, financial news, comics and vari ous other features are bandied in departments. All the News of All the World in The Sunday Oregonian Just 5 Cents i L 1